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March 6, 2025 80 mins

Welcome to another impactful episode of the “On The Pursuit Podcast,” where we sit down with entrepreneur Damont Nickson. In this conversation, Damont shares his compelling story of navigating the challenges of entrepreneurship while emphasizing the critical need for financial education and literacy.  He discusses how a well-structured trust could have transformed his family’s legacy, offering listeners valuable insights into the importance of preparing for the future. 

From learning how to leverage financial resources to understanding the significance of mentorship, this episode is packed with actionable advice for anyone looking to secure their financial future. Tune in and discover how you can take control of your financial destiny!

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I don't want to be one of those persons that just
came to this earth just to weara Balenciaga and wear a Louis
Vuitton.
In the seventh generation,nobody even knew that I existed.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Let's talk about the Rockefeller mastermind first,
what you were doing then and howwe got to transition to Tycoon
Capital Everything.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
I do.
I pretty much want to make it.
I want to plant the seed toshow people that it's possible.
I want our families to be ableto say you know what, we're
leaving this, we're leaving this, we're leaving that, and that's
proper generational wealth,like I want us to be able to
leave an inheritance for ourchildren's children.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
That's what the good news and if someone that you're
working with, you know, or doingit on their own, fixes their
credit to a nice, respectablenumber like such, what are they
actually able to do with it?
I?

Speaker 1 (00:52):
think credit and either a mentor or some level of
um investment.
Uh, some type of investment,mentor or knowledge should go.
It goes together.
Imagine how many people duringkobe got a hundred thousand
dollars and they don't have anymoney today it's not more money
we need my billionaire mentor.

(01:13):
He said, damont, I've never hada great idea.
I've never.
He said.
I'm a billionaire, my family,yes, I was born into wealth, but
I've never had a good idea.
He said the only reason that Ihave be became as successful as
I am is because I invest inpeople that have great ideas.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Welcome to another episode of the Honor Pursuit
Podcast.
We interview six, seven, eightfigure entrepreneurs, and we're
back in Atlanta, and what'sreally cool about this episode
is I have an opportunity toconnect with, uh, one of our
friends in entrepreneurship, orone of our brothers in
entrepreneurship.
He's doing a lot of amazingthings, um, and he's also in a
lot of areas that typically alot of us aren't really paying

(02:01):
attention in, you know, we'renot really building
opportunities and so, so it'sreally amazing that he's in this
space and, uh, not only is he'sin it and building, he's
teaching so many people, likethousands of people, how they
can, um, you know, navigate inthese areas.
Um, and a couple of months ago,we, we had a podcast.

(02:22):
Yeah right, all right.
So we was in hou, we had apodcast, yeah, right, so we was
in Houston, we had a podcast andsomething happened to the Files
.
You know, it was a good podcast, it was pretty good, yeah, yeah
, yeah, it was good, it was good.
Shout out to my guy Studio Outthat Way LP, and what I said to
him was you know what, how about?
I fly to whatever city you'reat and we run it back, yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
So this is going to be more incredible.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
I mean, listen, it's going to be more incredible.
We got a studio audience todayand this individual not only has
been through so much and hassuch a tremendous story, he's
building capital and makingmillionaires.
So, without further ado, coachDeMott, welcome back to the
podcast.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Thank you for having me man.
I appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
I'm slightly disappointed because I thought
you was going to wear your brand.
I feel like every time I seeyou online, you got the brand on
.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
I was looking at going another direction today,
but I brought you a few gifts.

Speaker 2 (03:17):
Do I got a coach hat.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
No.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
Come on man.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
I brought you a Tycoon shirt.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
Okay, that's cool.
Some other things for yourChristmas gift, but yes, what
cartoon back in the day used toincorporate the word tycoon?
It seems like it's like vaguelycoming back to my mind.
Does that ring something to you?

Speaker 1 (03:36):
You're a little older than me, so I'm not for sure?
Yeah, I think you are.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
I mean, it's possibly Since I've been doing this
biohacking.
Nobody knows how old I am.
You know, what I mean.
You look good for your age.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
I appreciate you, brother, I appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
So Tycoon Capital, that's your business.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Tycoon.
I'm the CEO of Tycoon Capital.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
Yes, but prior to that, you and I met.
What was it?
Almost like?
A year and a half ago, almosttwo years ago, you had this big
event, and what was cool aboutit is I learned of you through a
mutual friend and he was justlike yo you got to come to this
event, I want you to speak at it.

(04:18):
And I didn't know you at thetime.
So he was just like yo comespeak at it.
It's in Atlanta.
I'm like all right, cool, I'mgoing to pull up, and you know.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
So he was just like yo come speak at it.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
It's in Atlanta, I'm like, all right, cool, I'm going
to pull up and I was aRockefeller mastermind.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah, I was very impressed.
So I was very impressed notonly at the information that was
there, that was available, theamount of people there,
especially learning that was,that was one of your first
in-person events but theproduction value.
I think the production value, Ithink the production value was

(04:47):
top notch.
The production value really,like you know, kind of blew my
mind, you know.
So it was like a really reallydope event.
But tell me, why don't we startthere?
So the Rockefeller Mastermind,there was no Tycoon Capital at
the time, or was it just kind oflike slowly developing?

Speaker 1 (05:04):
It was like an idea okay but.
But I guess what I'm saying itwasn't my company at that time
was the tycoon agency it wasn'tat the forefront, it wasn't okay
, so I didn't have therelationships and partnerships
that I have now so let's talkabout let's talk about the
rockefeller mastermind.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
First, is your podcast still not monetized?
Apple has over 2 millionpodcasts on their platform, but
only 450,000 of them are active.
The truth is, 90% of podcastsquit before episode 10.
And of the remaining podcasts,only half of them really know
how to get money and they relyon brand deals, sponsorships and
a large audience.
So if you're really ready toscale your podcast to a hundred

(05:40):
K, click the link below, book acall and let's see if you're a
good fit for the program, whatyou were doing then and how we
got to transition to TycoonCapital OK, so when I did the
Rockefeller Mastermind which I'mgoing to do again this year,
but when I did the RockefellerMastermind, I just everything I

(06:00):
do, I pretty much want to makeit.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
I want to plant the seed, to show people that it's
possible, like I want to showthem, and that's why I brought
in people like you and someother incredible people that
came and spoke Like I just wantto show, I want to.
I want to, I want to showpeople and invite people into
rooms that they typically maynot have been able to be invited
into, invite people into roomsthat they typically may not have
been able to be invited into.
So at that time when I wasdoing Rockefeller, uh,

(06:27):
mastermind, I pretty much woulddidn't live in Atlanta at that
time, um, but I lived in Miami,la, but I wanted to um plant
some seeds here in Atlanta.
So that's a good, that's a goodway to do it.
A lot of my mentees flew in andwe did a whole weekend of

(06:48):
pretty much um, the rockefellerblueprint, pretty much what,
what you should have.
Smitty came in, did uh, spokeabout funding.
You came in, had a lot ofincredible speakers, you know,
and uh, uh, and I think it wasan incredible weekend.
What actually is the rockefellerblueprint?
The rockefeller blueprint ispretty much you have to start
with a structure.
So we know of John Rockefeller.
More families know of theRockefeller family and John

(07:10):
Rockefeller than they know oftheir great, great grandparents,
and that is because JohnRockefeller built the structure
of the Rockefeller family.
That's why we know theRockefeller name.
So we don't know a lot about.
You know how he obtained hiswealth, but his family does and
they will always know because hehe built a structure.
And so if John Rockefellerdidn't have a trust, then the

(07:34):
second generation, thirdgeneration, fourth generation,
fifth generation wealth theycould have just blew it off, you
know.
But because he had thatstructure, every generation
coming after him will know whoJohn Rockefeller was.
So I want our families to bethe John Rockefellers.
I want our families to be ableto say you know what, we're
leaving this, we're leaving this, we're leaving that, and that's

(07:56):
proper generational wealth,versus us saying you know, we
got Louis Vuitton, a purse, orwe got a Mercedes Benz in the
driveway, or we live in a housethat's really, you know, owned
by the bank, like, I want us tobe able to leave an inheritance
for our children's children.
That's what the good book says.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
So when we're talking about a structure, let's say
you got two families right.
Let's say one family's leaving,let's say $10 million, and the
other family has that 10 milliondollars structured right.
What's the difference betweenone family that has it
structured out maybe therockefeller structure with

(08:35):
that's that seed money right andthen the other family with no
structure but just has a 10million, let's just say in a
bank or a couple of accounts,what, what?

Speaker 1 (08:42):
what's the difference ?
Well, statistics say that blackwealth doesn't make it past the
second generation.
So if it doesn't make it pastthe second generation, then
that's not proper generationalwealth so I mean they gotta
start over again so structuremeans that I'm able to say, or
just say, you, you're able tosay, if, if my child gets

(09:03):
married, I want to make surethat my child has $10,000
towards their wedding, but theycan't just take the whole family
inheritance and go have a greatwedding.
Or you're able to say, hey, Idon't ever want the land in our
family ever sold, or the house,the family house, we want to
keep the family house.
So if somebody needs to rent itout or Airbnb it or keep it

(09:28):
somehow, but it never can besold If a person doesn't have a
structure, which is a contract,a trust is a contract.
So if I create the JohnRockefeller contract, that means
that no one coming after me canever change it.
So literally from the grave,you're still controlling your
family, the family without astructure, then you know, cousin

(09:52):
Bobo can come in twogenerations and decide that he
wants to invest it and go toVegas and spend it all and
literally lose it, and thenthat's your whole, that's your
whole, that's your whole, yourwhole, your whole, that's a
whole, your whole.
You know generational wealththat you thought you were
building, but you didn't have astructure.
Most people think, oh, I have alife insurance policy.

(10:13):
Life insurance policy is notgenerations of wealth, because
you're not controlling anything.
So I don't know if you watch apower, but but Tariq had to go
to school in order for him toreceive the inheritance that
Ghost left him.
Right, he couldn't receive itif he didn't go to school
because he's a trust fund baby.
So that's because Ghost leftthe structure for him to abide

(10:36):
by.
Then we have people like, youknow, aretha Franklin or Michael
Jackson, or Whitney Houston, orPrince or Bob Marley or you
know.
All of those people take offlike that.
Didn't have those structures,so now it has to go to probate
and then now probate has todetermine what's going to happen
to that.
That means you didn't have astructure.

(10:58):
Well, nipsey Hussle had astructure.
So now Puma's paying it toNipsey Hussle's trust fund every
single year to his children.
So Nipsey Hussle's trust fundevery single year to his
children.
So Nipsey Hussle is the JohnRockefeller.
His family is five, six, seven,eight generations.
His family still don't know whohe is because my billionaire
mentor he said, he said if youwant them to know who you are in
seven generations, you got toleave them something.

(11:18):
If you don't leave them nothing, then they're not even going to
know who you are.
And I don't want to be one ofthose people that Les Brown
talked about when he talkedabout in the graveyard.
There's dreams that that thatwere not manifested, there's
cures that would not produce.
There's all different types ofthings that didn't happen.
I don't want to be one of thosepersons that just came to this
earth just to wear Balenciagaand wear Louis Vuitton and live

(11:42):
in a nice house and drive a nicecar.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
And the seven generations.
Nobody even knew that I existed.
Yeah, uh, so that was me forsure, because, like my grandmom,
so so my grandmother and um, myuncle, my great uncle and um,
maybe my, maybe my great, maybemy great grandma, anyway, but
they was in Jersey.
When they moved from Jersey toBoston, my grandmother, she, was
the majority owner.
Like they bought a three familyhouse.
So, there was no structure andyou know, you know a little bit

(12:15):
of my story.
But you know, by the time I'm16, grandmother passed.
You know, grandmother passed,moms died, dads died.
I'm in my 20s and then my aunt,uncle, great-grandmother passed
away.
So I get the house and mygrandmother left me about a buck
and a half through lifeinsurance.
I didn't have the structure, Ididn't mentorship, I didn't have

(12:37):
any older relatives, no one hadthe financial literacy.
So so, to your point, thegenerational wealth that would
have passed on from thatgeneration is lost.
It's lost, it's gone.
So it's like part of my storynow is rebuilding that, because

(13:02):
I was at a younger age so I wasable to see myself mismanage it.
You know what I'm saying loseit like, be irresponsible.
And then now, as a mature man,now I'm building loss, because
now I have this self-awarenessright.
But to your point, that'sexactly where it is, because to

(13:22):
me it's like a lot of families,lot of families, you know,
families of color.
They may not even have theinformation.
You know I'm saying like, orthey're separated from the
information.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Well, I think we're just now getting into a
generation where people won'teven talk about death or want to
talk about organization.
You think that's still the case.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
I think we's still the case, I think we're getting
closer.
You think we're getting closerto having a conversation?

Speaker 1 (13:49):
Yes, I think we're getting closer to having a
conversation back when inearlier days, if you talked
about death, I don't want totalk about death I ain't
speaking that into existence.
I don't want to deal with that.
Then, when somebody dies, thenwe got to try to figure out well
, what school did they go to?

Speaker 2 (14:05):
how we go, right you gotta get the thousand gold,
gold funnies.

Speaker 1 (14:08):
But but in other cultures they talk about death
at dinner.
Yeah well, this is my legacy,this is who is going to take
over.
So they're preparing theirfamily for what's going to
happen when they go, because weall have to go yeah, and death
is just a part of life.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
At the end, it's a part of life, so they prepare
their loved ones for that.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
So there's no, there's no, no gray areas.
You know so oftentimes in ourfamilies they split after the,
the, the matriarchs or the, thepioneers of the family, die
because people oh, I didn't knowthey was gonna get that lamp,
oh, they got the car, oh, theygot.
Well, in other cultures they'repreparing people for and they
put it on paper.

(14:47):
Yeah.
So if it's on paper, then youcan't say, oh well, they didn't
want that.
You know Aretha Franklin.
She has seven wheels.
So her wheels were contestedbecause family members said well
, no, the the, the wheel underthe couch was her last will.
No, the wheel that that I haveis the last one.
So a judge had to go and ruleon what the couch was her last
will.
No, the will that that I haveis the last one.
So a judge had to go and ruleon what the family was going to

(15:09):
get and how they was.
It was going to be split up.
So now you're allowing otherpeople into your family business
, now you're having to pay othertaxes and things like that.
But I have a question for you.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
I know this isn't my podcast, but go ahead, bro,
listen, listen, I mean you cancall hostess joint.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
What if your grandmother had a trust and she
had said, hey, I want.
She set milestones For you.
She said in order for you Toget this, you got to do this.
In order for you to get this,you have to Take some financial
literacy classes.
In order for you to get thisand release this, you have to

(15:43):
Meet this milestone.
So it was not given to you allat one time.
It was given to you over time,while it was somewhere making
money for you 100% yeah so.
So Warren Buffett said, if youdon't finally make money in your
sleep, you gonna work until youdie.
So that money was somewheremaking money for you while you
were growing and while you weregetting more wisdom.
So what?

(16:04):
If that had been your story?
You would still have themajority or you would still have
all of what she left, it wouldhave it would have been.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
It would have been all of what she left and some
plus, because you mentioned thefinancial literacy, the
financial literacy piece.
I don't know if you know thisother part of my story.
I don't know is this yourpodcast, but we still can just
throw this in there.
You know I'm saying, um, so, meand a business partner, we had
a clothing company and, um, youknow, I'm pretty sure you're
familiar with, like joggersweatpants, you know I'm saying

(16:33):
so, basically jogger sweatpantsor sweatpants, and they got the
cuff at the bottom and it allowsyou, it kind of accentuates
your footwear, it, you know, itallows your footwear to pop
right.
So three black dudes in bostoncreated that.
That was me, my businesspartner, and then some input for
one of the buyers from karmaloop.
Okay, so the same thing we'retalking about, right, without

(16:56):
the absence of information,entrepreneurship.
I mean, uh, absence ofinformation, mentorship,
coaching, some level ofstructure.
Right, we didn't even knowabout mechanical patents, so we
couldn't, we couldn't patentthat idea because we didn't know
that was an idea that we couldpatent.
So, yeah, everything with, with, with, uh, grandma, family

(17:17):
structure, and then, obviously,with with your entrepreneurship,
which is why I think whatyou're doing is amazing, because
you're you know, you'recoaching and leading and
mentoring so many people, andeven some of the stuff that
we're just talking right nowtalking about right now, it just
is is really vital.
But, yeah, if I would haveaccess to, if she would have set
it up and it would have beenmilestones, not only would I

(17:39):
have earned it, I would have itright and I would have been more
wise along the way.
And then, with the clothingside, the same thing.
It's like that would that?
Not only it would have just setme up for the future and the
family members plus I would havehad that, you know, that
knowledge that would have beenbestowed from, from the family
structure, but with all duerespect, grandma did the best

(18:02):
she could do with what she had.

Speaker 1 (18:04):
No 100%, and most people they don't even get left
that Facts.
So to know better is to dobetter.
So we're in a day and time notthat grandma lived in where we
have access to more information.
We have access to morementorships, we have access to
more data, we have access tomore people's story.
So for us to put, a guy told me, uh, recently in philly he said

(18:28):
he said, coach, the trust isjust.
He said I'm gonna get it butthe trust is just boring.
You know people when they thinkof it it's boring, but we can't
talk about generational wealthwithout it.
Because god forbid.
I mean whitney houston got inthe bathtub and never woke back
up.
Michael jackson, laid down,went to sleep and never woke
back up.
Michael Jackson, laid down,went to sleep and never woke
back up.
Prince got in the elevator togo to the second floor of his

(18:49):
house and never got out.
So we don't know the day northe hour when we're going to go.
So if we're trying to make ourlife, make a difference, we have
to start leaving the structurefor the things that we have,
because we we don't want more ofthose stories that you just
told 100%.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
Not only do we want, not want more of those stories
like some people may not recoverfrom that.
Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
Like especially if they're weak.
And they they deal with.
They deal with addictions,whatever those addictions are.
Yeah, it could.
It could take them down thespiral.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
Yeah, or or just the embarrassment, because I mean,
yeah, I think for about a coupleyears I felt really embarrassed
to even share the story, youknow.
I mean because it's like, yeah,like I was telling a lot, like
yo, I sold the house, like youknow.
I'm saying just so I just feelbetter.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
Did you feel like that you had disappointed your
grandmother?

Speaker 2 (19:40):
I feel more so like, yeah, like I let her down, but I
also let myself down.
Remember, like I was journalingheavy like, because that was
like around the time I was freshout of college, so a lot of
things that I was even dealingwith was, like you know, healing
from the pain of all this lossthat I was experiencing, right.
So I was like writing to myjournals crazy.
And I remember, I remember whenI signed on the mortgage to

(20:02):
receive the home, I think thatsame day I was like can't lose
the house, like you know.
You know what I'm saying yeah,can't lose the house.
So so, yeah, I think I carriedthat burden for a couple of
years and stuff like that.
But the thing about it back toyour point it's like people may
not recover from that and wewant we want to make sure those

(20:27):
things don't happen.
So, like, even when you'retalking about the structure in
in rockefeller, one of the otherkey components of that was, you
know, he had that lifeinsurance, which is like I think
you and I talked about a littlebit, like I'm interested in,
like, um, you know, mergers andacquisitions.
One of the things I do want tobuy is a life insurance company,
even if it's like a, you know,like a, like a starter brokerage
.
You know I'm saying becausethey might need that marketing,
they may need that exposure, butthose life insurers products

(20:49):
are very important.
So so you have your, your um,your trust and you have your
life insurance.
Those are basically the some ofthe basic pillars that's in
that rockefeller structure, thepillars yes, not having one
without the other exactly,exactly so they, they work
together yeah.
So talk to me about this debtdeletion thing a little bit,

(21:11):
because again back in the time,when you know I first first
connected, I knew you was doingthe trust, yeah, and then you
was doing debt deletion.
So talk to me a little bitabout that, so debt deletion.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
Well, my background is in credit, so I started doing
credit repair when I was 20years old.
This is my 25th anniversary.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
Bro, everybody does credit repair yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Well, when I started in 2000, everybody didn't do
credit repair, so it was onlyLexington Law creditrepaircom.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So now, 25 years later,everybody does credit repair.
So my billionaire mentor set medown a few years ago and showed
me he's the one who taught meabout trust law and and equity
law and all of those differentlaws.

(21:50):
And he mentored me for a fewyears, and still to this day,
and and showed me how actuallyhis great great grandfather was
friends with the rockefellers,you know so, and the trump
father and all of those things.
So he showed me the privatestructure that those families
build on.
So he showed me that deletionbecause I was doing credit.

(22:10):
He told me I was doing creditwrong.
He said credit is temporary.
Credit repair is temporaryCredit repair.
You still could be sued, youstill could be garnished, you
still owe the debt.
So he said, would you want torepair your credit?
Would you want to delete thenegative things on your credit?
So he started educating me onit and uh and I rolled out a um,

(22:31):
a product called debt deletion.
So I got it patented, I got itcopyrighted and uh, um later
turned it to debt deletion.
Ai did a partnership with someyou know individuals that were
my friends at the time androlled out debt deletion.
Thousands of people signed upfor it.
I wasn't ready.
I wasn't ready, hadn't beenthrough beta, it hadn't.

(22:53):
I understood the process.
I just didn't have all of thesystems in place to be able to
do debt deletion properly.
Debt deletion done properly iswhen you're able to transfer
debt over to a trust, you'reable to go through the
invalidation process, you'reable to go through litigation
and that debt becomes deletedafter going through the

(23:15):
litigation process.
So you know, things happen fora reason and, like you said, I
deemed it as failure because Ididn't.
I went from doing credit repairto doing debt deletion, which
was a new product.
Everybody didn't know about it.
I had to educate people on it.
People signed up for it, but Ididn't have the.
I wasn't equipped to do it.

(23:36):
So fast forward.
I um.
I've helped thousands of peoplethrough debt deletion, but
there's also it also are therealso are people that were either
lost in the sauce or theydidn't get the best results that
they needed.
Taking mine, I've been doingcredit since I was 20.

(23:57):
So I've helped tens ofthousands of people get to a
seven or 800 credit score.
So what I had to do this year Iretired, so I retired from
doing credit.
I'm no longer sending anyletters.
I'm not doing credit, nothinglike I'm.
I'm teaching people.
I just launched the debtdeletion academy, so I'm
teaching people how to do debtdeletion on their own.
Yeah, on their own uh, so I havea diy program and then I have a

(24:21):
program where I give them a vaso the VA does everything for
them and gets them all the wayup to the litigation process and
then they go through thelitigation process.
They already have all of theirexhibits and they're able to now
properly legally go through thedebt deletion process in less
than 90 days versus depending onmyself and my.
I've had shifts of teams.

(24:41):
I've had teams come and try tolearn what I do and then now
they're doing credit or nowthey're doing trust, like it's
all those types of things thatare going on behind the scenes
that happens.
Yeah, that nobody knew about.
So then I did a split in apartnership that I had, so there
was a lot of things thathappened through business.

(25:01):
So debt deletion is a greatproduct and now I'm teaching
people how to do it themselves,just like my billionaire mentor
showed me, and how to get to an800 credit score.
I want to be known for gettingmillions of people to 800 credit
score what?

Speaker 2 (25:15):
what does an 800 credit score do do for people,
though?
Because I mean, for some people?
There could be some peopleright now that have an 800
credit score.
I have a seven, you know a highseven credit score.
That's just chilling with it.
So so what if you, if you're inposition right now that have an
800 credit score?
I have a seven, you know a highseven credit score.
That's just chilling with it.
So so what if you, if you're inposition right now, like you
listen to podcasts, watchingthis podcast right now, and
maybe you haven't looked at yourcredit in a minute, or you know
that your credit score is good,what can they actually do with

(25:38):
it?
And if someone that you'reworking with, you know know, or
doing it on their own, fixestheir credit to a nice,
respectable number like such,what are they actually able to
do with it?

Speaker 1 (25:47):
I think that, just like we just talked about, uh,
life insurance policy and thetrust should go hand in hand.
I think credit and either amentor or some level of um
investment, uh, some type ofinvestment, mentor or knowledge
should go.
It goes together.

(26:08):
So, um, one could be dangerouswithout the other.
So if, if I have an 800 creditscore and I don't, and I'm still
, you know, robbing peter to paypaul and or I'm still
struggling, um, because you know, I was taught, uh, when we talk
about, you know, learning tounlearn and things that we were
taught by previous generations.

(26:29):
Previous generations taught usand planted seeds into us not to
get into debt, not to owe noman, nothing Not to.
My uncle used to tell me if youcan't pay cash for it, you
don't need it.
They call that cash and carry.
So we were taught by ageneration that told us that we
didn't, we shouldn't have credit, we shouldn't do anything that,

(26:49):
um, we can't pay cash for it.
So then I meet a billionairementor and the billionaire
mentor says, no, you needrelationships.
You're trying to do real estatedevelopment, you're trying to
do all these levels of ofinvesting.
You're trying to uh, um, startbusinesses.
You need business credit.
You need all these differenttypes of levels of investing.
You're trying to startbusinesses.
You need business credit.
You need all these differenttypes of levels of credit.
You need to use OPM otherpeople's money.

(27:10):
So in order to use OPM, youhave to have credit.
So those levels are things.
Again, I would change mymindset.
So credit doesn't come with.
Most people say, oh, I'm goingto get credit, now I'm going to
go get funding, and then in sixmonths they're coming back
saying hey.
Say, oh, I'm going to getcredit, now I'm going to go get
funding.
And then in six months they'recoming back saying, hey, can you
fix my credit again?
You know how many people In 25years I fixed their credit Over
five or six times?
Because every five years orfour years, they're back in the

(27:32):
same situation.
That's because they're takingthemselves, just like you,
taking yourself Back into asituation With a woman and y'all
having issues Every singlesingle time.
But you thinking that, oh, if Iget a new woman, it's gonna
change.
Yeah, oh, if I go get anotherone, it's gonna change.
No, you're taking yourself.
You're the problem.
You're taking yourself.
You don't have any discipline.
You're not.
You don't know about investing.

(27:52):
You don't know about financing,you don't know how to save, you
don't know how to do any ofthose things, but you think that
if funding is going to changeyour life, I don't think funding
changes your life.
I think the knowledge ofknowing how to invest changes
your life.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
Yeah, I would agree with that.

Speaker 1 (28:08):
Imagine how many people got money during COVID
Money, six figures, PPP, SBA.
Most people were getting atleast $100,000.
So imagine how many peopleduring COVID got $100,000 and
they don't have any money today.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
It's not more money we today, it's not more money we
need, it's not more money.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
It's a combination of education.
It's a combination of findingsomebody that can help, mentor
you and guide you.
When you look at the wealthyand the elite, they find people
that are qualified in thoseareas to coach and help them.
They have teams that they puttogether to say counsel.
They go seek wise counsel.
My billionaire mentor he said,demont, I've never had a great

(28:49):
idea.
I've never.
He said I'm a billionaire.
My family, yes, I was born intowealth, but I've never had a
good idea.
He said the only reason that Ihave became as successful as I
am is because I invest in peoplethat have great ideas.
So it doesn't always take thebest idea.
It takes you being able to beopen to say you know what?
I just came.

(29:11):
I got $100,000 in my 401k.
It's just sitting there.
My job is making the money onthe 401k.
I'm not making anything and,realistically, if I retire, that
401k is not gonna hold me mefor a long time.
I'm going to have to go getanother job to sustain my
lifestyle.
So how do I go find somebodythat can help me to multiply

(29:33):
this 401k, whether it's in realestate, whether it's in stocks,
whether it's in whatever typesof portfolio that?
I'm going to build insurance andso I can borrow against it, or
whatever the case may be, how doI find someone that can help me
to take this and make this anexponential investment?
Most people don't trust nobody.
So if you don't trust nobody,you don't have any financial

(29:55):
education, you're notdisciplined.
The only reason you even havethe 401k is because your job
took your money from you so thatyou didn't spend it.
Then it's almost impossible tosay if I had an 800 credit score
, I could make it a milliondollars.
That's a fact.
Yeah, so we have to be.
I tell my mentees you have tofirst be honest with yourself
and quit lying to yourself.

(30:16):
Quit lying to yourself andsaying that more money is going
to change your life.
No, you have to literally workwith what you have and be able
to be disciplined with what.
You have to literally work withwhat you have and be able to be
disciplined with what you haveso that God will bless you with
more.
It's impossible for me to saythat more money is going to
change my life.
I believe that relationships,connections, opportunities can
change my life.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
But yeah, you got to go back.
Well, first of all, man, let meclap it up for that bro.
You went kind of crazy rightthere, clap it up for that real
quick.
Um, they got to do work beforethat, bro.
They got to do that mindsetwork.
Nobody wants to do that mindsetwork.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
We talked about that a lot.
We talked about that a lot.
Yeah, we talked about that.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
The other day.
So the thing about the mindsetis, even when you were saying
how the previous generation are,like you know, you made that
cash and calorie reference right.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
So the previous generations are instillingilling
beliefs, yes, into you andbased upon what they had, what
they had to work with.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Yes, and then some generations aren't going out
seeking new information, so theystill operate on that old ios,
right?

Speaker 1 (31:21):
right, I mean the iphone getting smarter than us,
right?
My grandmama told me this.
My grandfather, my father, didit this way right my uncle did
it that way.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
Yeah, so it's like.
It's like okay, the biggestissue that people are having is
the battle within themselves,right?

Speaker 1 (31:36):
so, which requires unlearning the old information
and relearning new informationthat's true.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
But the thing that I think is a challenge for a lot
of individuals, especially ifthey're on a journey by
themselves, right, is that if Idecide that you know what, after
this podcast, I want to getsome financial literacy.
You know what I'm doinginventory.
I want to change some things.
I want to protect my family.
I want to get a structure.

(32:04):
You know what we're going to betalking about.
All the amazing things you'redoing with Tycoon Capital, you
know.
Know, I want to put myself inposition.
The issue is, if you've beendoing this for like a year and
you've been on that journeylet's say you 39 years old, you
got 38 years of how you've beenthinking, how you've been
operating.

(32:25):
You got all that energy let'scall it dark energy, just for
the sense of dramatic right andyou got one year energy let's
call it dark energy just for thesense of dramatic right, yes,
and you got one year to light.
So now you're battling withinyourself when it comes to, like,
habits, disciplines.
Do I want to do certain things?
You know, uh, wasting time,self-belief.
So it's that internal battlefirst which requires personal

(32:46):
development, which requires alot of personal development, and
it's going to also require youto be in different environments,
different situations.
You know open to that and yeah,and be open to it.
So you know, I coach as welland and that's what I'm noticing
the most of like I can give allthe strategies.
Oh yes, you know I can get.
I can say this is what we'redoing today.

(33:07):
Yes, you know I can say this iswhat we're doing today.
You know I can say listen, thisis your accountability partner.
Everything is sound all goodwhen we're in the sessions, and
then next week come around andthere's no movement, right?

Speaker 1 (33:19):
And then they'll find a way to make it seem like it's
your fault.
No, no, 100%, 100%.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
So in those moments moments that's real, because I
felt like that right.
I remember like there's sometimes where, because I've had
some really some really bigadvancements in personal
development, right, and then Iremember there was moments where
, like I felt like I was stuckagain like at this new level
that I couldn't really breakthrough, and then I had to

(33:46):
internalize it and what Irealized it's like it's your
previous self wanting to staycomfortable right, wanting to
keep you in a situation, even ifeven if it's not the best
situation, but it's acomfortable situation because
you've been operating in certainpatterns and your subconscious
has been moving a certain way.
But this new version of you,that that you know that you're

(34:07):
designing that, the godlikeversion, you know that the
highest level version of you isstill young.
It's kind of like the david andgoliath story, but you're
really battling yourself, yeah.
So I think that's really thebiggest thing.
If people can work throughtheir own limitations and free
themselves themselves, raisetheir level of expectation, then

(34:29):
they could get to some of thesesuccesses or be more open to
receive some help, some support.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
Take a hand.
The first step to recovery isadmitting that you have a
problem.
I mean, yeah, that's true too,right?
So if a person comes to me andsays, coach, I've seen how
you've helped people become amillionaire in one year.
How can I reach seven figuresin one year?
And I tell them you got tostart by transforming your mind.
And then they spend six weekswith me and then seventh week,

(34:59):
they don't want to stayconsistent because they say, oh,
my struggle is procrastination,or I have trauma, or I have
this or I have that.
And I say, well, well, you findmoney to buy weed, you find
money to do all the things butall of that is the previous self
.

Speaker 2 (35:14):
That's the dark, that's the previous self.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
You find money to do everything that you want to do.
But then when I say, well, yougot to invest to make some money
, not even in me, you don't haveto pay me, but you got to find
something to invest in to makemore money, then then it's
struggle.
So I think that we've come along way, but we have a long way
to go.
Yeah yeah, I agree, until youget clear.

(35:37):
I had to get clear on my trauma.
I had to understand that, thefact that I had daddy issues.
So if I had daddy issues andthen I meet this man, multiple
men that wanted to invest in menot money, but they just wanted
to help me they saw something inme.
They, they, they, they, they.
They saw another level of methat I hadn't seen to myself.

(35:58):
But in my mind I'm saying whatdo they want from me?
Nah, they gonna hurt me, theygonna leave me, like my father.
They go, they go, they goabandon me.
So that's what I'm saying asthe man.
I'm not telling them becauseI'm too strong and I'm too I'm
too, I'm too bold to do thatright.
But I don't allow myself to getclose to these men who could

(36:21):
transform my life because I had,I had struggled with forgiving
my father.
So until I forgave my father,who was no longer even on this
earth, my father, I didn't meetmy father.
So until I forgave my father,who was no longer even on this
earth, my father.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
I didn't meet my father, so I was 15 years old
Energy crazy my father.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
I didn't meet my father.
So I was 15 years old in themall and literally I saw this is
what my Ted talk was about.
But I didn't meet my father.
So I was 15 years old in a malland literally five years after
that, and literally five yearsafter that, my father was
diagnosed with stage four cancer.
I spent a year going to hospicebathing my father, wiping my

(36:57):
father's behind clothing myfather and those were.
That was the best year of mylife because I had.
I was able to spend time withmy father his last days and I
don't regret it, but at the endof the day when he died, I still
had a level of why, why weren'tyou there?

Speaker 2 (37:13):
no, why did you leave ?

Speaker 1 (37:14):
me.
You never even apologized, younever even brought it up, but
you.
But I was there for you and youweren't there for me.
You didn't, you didn't wipe mybehind when I was a baby, you
didn't bathe me, but I was therefor you.
So I never told him that out ofrespect, but that's how I felt.
So a year later, I meet mybillionaire mentor in LA at a

(37:35):
house in the hills.
Somebody brought me to a party.
I was sleeping in my car awhole nother story.
But I literally met mybillionaire mentor and he said
he saw something in me and in mymind.
When we met at Starbucks I said21 year old, demont, what does
this man want for me?
And until I was able to getaligned with the fact that god

(37:57):
was blessing me with somethingthat I had never even
experienced, which was love fromanother man who didn't need
anything from me.
He just wanted to help me.
He saw something in in me.
So until I forgave my father, Icouldn't allow this man into my
life.
So that was trauma.
So imagine if I had of neverforgiven my father.

(38:19):
And I said you know what?
I'm not getting close to thisman because he may hurt me.
I'm not getting close to thisman for all these different
things.
Imagine that you, we, wouldn'tbe sitting here talking.
We wouldn't be talking aboutthe thousands of people in my
program.
We wouldn't be talking aboutthe people that have become
debt-free, or the people thathave 800 credit scores, or the
people that have trust, or thepeople the thousands of people
that walked in the bank lastyear and got a trust bank

(38:40):
account and now are setting uptrust funds for their kids and
ladies, single mothers that arein my program that are buying
land, and they crying and theysaying, coach, I've never had
nothing I could leave my kids.
She said I can't have.
I can't leave my kids a housebecause the bank owns it.
I can't leave my kids the carbecause the bank owns it.
But now I got somethingtangible a deed to some land

(39:02):
that I can leave my kids.
So imagine that if I had toclose my mind and my heart and
say you know, know what.
I'm not trusting nobody.
I'm going to allow this traumafrom my childhood to keep me
where I am, it would have been alot of things.
So when you, when you are ableto break free, a lot of that
came from me going throughworking on my mental health, and

(39:23):
a lot of that came from mehaving a mental health coach,
but it came with work.
I had to work because I knewGod created me to be a
multimillionaire.
I knew God created me to changethe world.
I'm a world changer.
I know that all the things thatI've been through were set up
for me to help other people.
So imagine if I had made thedecision to say I'm not going to

(39:43):
.
I'm not going to, I'm not goingto trust any man because I was
hurt by my father.

Speaker 2 (39:49):
We definitely wouldn't be here.
We wouldn't be here, yeah, anda lot of people's lives wouldn't
be affected.

Speaker 1 (39:55):
There are a lot of grown people that are still
little kids because they'restill struggling with the trauma
of their past.

Speaker 2 (39:59):
But I mean, where are they going for that?

Speaker 1 (40:02):
Well, it first starts with again.
The first step to recovery isadmitting that you have a
problem.

Speaker 2 (40:07):
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
So until you admitting that you have a
problem, yeah, that's right.
So until you admit that youhave a problem and you, you have
a problem to where you say, oh,I don't, I don't like, I don't
like, I don't like speaking, Idon't like talking.
Well, where does that come from?
I'm this.
I used to be the same way.
I feared it because I fearedwhat people thought about me.
Yeah, I feared the opinions ofother people.
Now I don't care.
So at the end of the day, itcame from the trauma of my

(40:29):
childhood and the pain and thesuicidal thoughts and all of the
things that I had bottled upinside of me.
And then, eventually, they justburst out.
And when they burst it out, Igot into trouble and I got into
this and I got into that.
So until you, there's a root toevery problem yeah and we're in
the day and time and I'm notgoing deep into this but we're
in the day and time and I'm notgoing deep into this, but we're

(40:50):
in the day and time where it'sso cool for everybody smoking
weed, everybody smoking weed,everybody's doing everything
right now.
Everybody doing everything, butat the end of the day, a lot of
my mentees tell me oh, it'sbecause I have anxiety, I have
this, so there's a root foreverything.
I have this, so there's a rootfor everything.
Whatever, whatever your vice is, there's a root.

(41:10):
Why you, if you have to do it,whether it's smoking, weed,
whether it's sex, whether it'salcohol, whatever the case may
be, whether it's shopping,whether it's eating, all of
those are vices, so there is aroot to it.
So we have to personaldevelopment.
I'm with a personal developmentcoach right now who was helping
me and in order for me to be thebest mentor and coach, I have

(41:31):
to work on being the best myself.
I said I want to be, I want tobe a non-figure earner.
He said you want to be anon-figure earner.
You can't use the sameblueprint that you use to make
six, seven or eight figures.
You can't do it.
So you have to change,literally, you have to change on
every level, which means thatyou have to be okay.
Like you just said, theprevious you, you had to let go

(41:54):
of some things to get to.

Speaker 2 (41:55):
You got to kill it.

Speaker 1 (41:57):
On every level.
You got to kill it.
Yeah, on every level.
If I want to be a billionaire,I have to change the $100,000 or
the million dollar demand.
There's some things that I gotto move around.
I can't live the same way, Ican't have the same mindset.
I have to go higher.
I can't hang around the samepeople, I can't have the same
conversations Because I have thesame time of the day as my

(42:21):
billionaire mentor.
He said, demond, if you want tobe like me, he said, literally,
you have to unlearn everythingthat you have ever learned from
your family.
So imagine about finance.
He said, yes, your grandmotherraised you to be respectful.
Yes, your mother raised you tobe, to be nice and all of those
different things, and theyplanted a lot of great values in
you.
But you need more than values.

(42:43):
You need to understand finance,you need to understand money,
you need to understand thesystem of business.
He said, in order for you to bea billionaire like me, you're
going to have to unlearn allthose out, all that outdated
information, and you're going tohave to be open to personal
development, to finance, tounderstanding.
Uh, um, that you got to trustpeople because, yes, you have

(43:07):
trauma, but you're going to haveto trust some people not some,
some men, some women, whoeverGod sends into your life.
Yes, there may be some peoplethat hurt you, demont, but you
got to deal with it and you gotto keep moving forward.
Yes, there are going to be somepeople that use you as you go
higher, he said, but you got tobe willing to move forward.
So I want to be a billionaire.
I believe that God created meto be the lender and not the

(43:28):
borrower.
He created me to leave aninheritance for my children and
my children's children.
In order to do that, I have tohave a structure.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Yeah, facts.
I like how you brought it backto a structure.
Yes, I like that a lot.
That was cool.

Speaker 1 (43:40):
Did you bring me a structure?
I got a structure, you have tohave a structure B.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
Yeah, have a structure be yeah, no, no, I
mean listen, you have me set up.
They are that first trust.
Now we just gotta, now we justgotta take it to that next level
, because I got it, you know, Igot it you have to be open to
mentorship too, so you have toshow up.

Speaker 1 (43:59):
So you were showing up consistently.
Now you got to show back upshow back up.
Yeah, so that you can, becauseit's one thing to say I have it,
but it's another thing to knowhow to use it.
I could go get you a Bugattiright now, but it's another
thing.
It's going to sit in thedriveway until you learn how to
use it.
Learn how to drive it, learnthe mechanisms of it, learn how

(44:21):
to get it maintenance.
You have to know how to do that.
Michael Jackson had a trust buthe never funded it because he
thought he was going to livelonger His estate to do that
Michael.
Jackson had a trust, but henever funded it because he
thought he was gonna live longer.
Yeah, so his estate still hadto go through probate because
nothing was never in it.
So it's one thing to say I havea trust.
It's another thing to say Ihave a full structure, which is
the Rockefeller structure yeah,I like that, like that.

Speaker 2 (44:41):
So now we on the tycoon capital.
So last time, last time you andI were really connecting, you
was in Vegas and you was helpinga lot of people get access to
land and y'all were doing somerobotic building and stuff like
that.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
Tycoon weekend.

Speaker 2 (44:58):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So breakdown, tycoon weekend.
Let's talk a little bit aboutour tycoon capital.
What were you doing in Vegasand what's going on now?
So Vegas was again.

Speaker 1 (45:09):
I told y'all I always do things because I want to
plant seeds into people, to showthem what where they could be.
So a lot of my mentees camefrom all over.
I had mentees that drove allthe way from the East Coast, you
know.
Some of them flew.
However they got there, theybrought their families them flew

(45:29):
.
However they got there, theybrought their families.
Uh, many of them we participatedin the auction in the in nine
county uh, peru is the name ofthe city right outside of vegas.
So many of them were able tocome and see their land for the
first time.
Many of them were able to comeand experience other people
seeing their land for the firsttime because we bought into the
tax auction, um, so those, thoseare moments that I cherish,

(45:50):
because there are people thatare now able to see life from
another lens.
So a lot of times you can't seelife from another lens because
you've never seen it.
So it's one thing for me to say, oh yes, you can attain this,
or you can do it or you need astructure.
But if you've never seen it,you've never seen the structure,
then it's yeah, you're justsaying it, but I don't

(46:16):
understand it.
We know to get up and brush ourteeth and and and wash our face,
because that's what we've donesince we were kids.
So when you tell somebody, no,get up and speak your
affirmations, and then youmeditate, and then you pray, and
then you, you do all thesedifferent things, taking your
mind, preparing your, your lifefor a new day.
That it takes time to get intothat, because you used to

(46:36):
getting up, brushing your teeth,washing your face.
So it's the same with, with,with this type of thing.
So, um, tycoon weekend was aweekend that I put together to
remind my mentees of theirachievements, and in my
community it's not just aboutone person winning, it's about

(46:57):
everybody winning, so we supporteach other.
So we did Vegas, we had a suitefor the Chris Brown concert, we
had a lot of things that, afull weekend that we did, and it
was a great weekend.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
Yeah, it, I was following it From the story.
I've seen a lot of people happy.
Yes, I've seen a lot.
I've seen the shirts.
Everybody was branded down withthe tycoon, you know, I mean
they had, they had their deedsup, with the deeds up, and it
was just a really goodenvironment with a lot of energy

(47:33):
.
You know what I mean.
It it almost gave you like FOMO, to be honest with you, yeah,
you mean, you see, you see all.
You see this big group of, uh,you know uh, people of color,
you know, all branded up, alltogether, like all positive, all
excited.
You know, uh, with landownership, and then you were
talking about, like, how theycould build on it using robotics

(47:55):
.
Yes, so what, what?

Speaker 1 (47:56):
what's that about?
So we came together tycooncapital and uh, I've been
blessed.
I started doing real estate bwhen I was when I was 20.
I flipped over 100 houses in inIndianapolis and my dream as a
kid had always been to be Iwanted to be an architect.
I always had been infatuatedwith houses and buildings and

(48:20):
now I had the opportunity to.
One of my mentees introduced meto someone that builds robots
and he said Coach, you got tomeet this guy.
So I flew out with my team andmy mentor and we flew out and
met and I had the opportunity ofpurchasing the first 3D printer

(48:43):
.
Not the first in the UnitedStates, but I'm the first black
robotic developer to own a 3Dprinter.
A 3D printer it allows you to beable to build houses much more
rapidly.
So it's a robot that buildshouses with a mixture called
hempcrete.
So it's mold proof, it'stermite proof, it's fireproof

(49:06):
because concrete doesn't burn.
So there's lots of benefits init.
Uh, even as far as uh, the hempabsorbs carbon monoxide, like
the houses that you and I grewup in, we we're able to inhale.
That's why people have carbonmonoxide detectors.
Yes, well, the hemp absorbs it,so there's lots of um benefits

(49:27):
to it.
On top of we've been meetingwith a lot of affordable housing
and mayors and people, landbanks to talk about ways that we
can develop this land for, formy mind just went blank.

Speaker 2 (49:48):
What are you developing the land for?

Speaker 1 (49:51):
For veterans.
There you go For the VA, forveterans and for homeless people
and I met with a big carcompany that's building a lot of
houses in Savannah Georgia andthey want to do a workforce
development community.
So it's lots of opportunitiesout there for housing.

(50:13):
So for us to be able to buildit for $67 a square feet a
square foot, let me say thatagain, $67 a square foot is
impeccable because now we'reable to beat other people's
costs.
You know, and that's why I'mspending a lot of time Teaching
people how to purchase land.
We own and control over 7000Acres of land.

(50:34):
So imagine how many familieshave inherited land.
They have what's called Um, um,um.
It's land that's passed downfrom the next generation.
So like if you, if you hadcousins or aunties, like all of
you will receive like part ofthat land.

(50:55):
So they took a lot of land fromour farmers.
But there's still a lot offamilies, like one of a family
in my community just just sayhey, coach, I got 120 acres of
land on the way here.
One of my mentees she said hey,coach, I got, I got 87 acres of
land On the way here.
One of my mentees she said hey,coach, I got 87 acres of land
in California.
You can just, I'm willing topartner with y'all on it.
You know.

(51:15):
So people have land that theycan't develop and for us to be
able to literally come in andbuild a house in less than seven
days, fully and with only threepeople we don't use a drywall,
we don't use wood people, wedon't use uh draw wall, we don't
use wood, we don't use lumber,we don't use any of those things
and we're able, literally asyou're printing the house,

(51:36):
you're putting in theelectricity and then you're
literally putting in the windowsand the doors and and now it's
a whole, it's a.
It's an incredible thing, man,I'm telling you.
So again, it's something thatI've always wanted to do.
Never thought that it would beon the fact of a robot doing it.
We build inside of a tent sowe're able to print 24 hours a
day.
It doesn't matter how cold, howhot, if it's 25 inches of snow,

(52:00):
it doesn't matter.
Like you from Boston, we couldbuild 365 days in Boston.
So there's lots ofopportunities for housing and
for development by doing the 3Dprinting.
So where we are at the stage nowis pretty much.
My team is on board.
I partnered with a Walkerconstruction company out of New

(52:21):
Orleans.
Joe Walker shout out to JoeWalker.
He's our general contractor.
He's getting set up in alldifferent states and literally
we're getting in position forour team to to convert over to
fully being knowledgeable inthis robotic construction, on
top of pulling permits andworking on getting the approvals

(52:42):
in order for us to be able tobuild how, like how long does it
take you to I mean, I know youmentioned like seven, seven days
to build a home.
From start to finish.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
Yeah, build a home.
But like, how long did it takeyou to move the like the robot
over?

Speaker 1 (52:55):
Oh, it takes about 39 minutes to break it up, to
build it up.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
Okay, so you got to put it together and then
dismantle it.

Speaker 1 (53:01):
Yeah, you got to set it up.
It's on what's called a gantrysystem.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
Okay, so you see, like it's like a, a four, uh,
you, you have to, you have tojust send the video, bro.

Speaker 1 (53:11):
Yeah, four posts and you put it up and literally um,
takes about two or three peopleto set it up and then literally
um to move it over.
It's better to do it in whereyou can just move it from lot to
lot, but we could break it down, set it up in a short amount of
time so so far we.

Speaker 2 (53:29):
We touched on like, um, you know, the rockefeller
structure having the trust we wetalked a little bit about the
importance of life insurance.
You said that you're retiringfrom credit repair.

Speaker 1 (53:41):
I've retired, right yeah right, I officially
launched dead deletion academy,so I teach people how to do it
themselves, or I give them avirtual assistant to help them
do it.

Speaker 2 (53:50):
And then now, obviously, with their being able
to teach people how they mayhave some land in their family
that they don't know about, oracquiring land and then, once
you have the land, being able topartner on it or build on that
land.
You're doing a lot of teaching,a lot of education, but there's
something I want to ask you,like I I think there's a lot of
people in this, in this, likethat, that would be in your

(54:13):
position, would be doing a lotof monetization on the education
piece, but but you're doingsomething that's tremendously
interesting, which is, like youknow, you're giving away some
grants, you're giving away somescholarships and you're actually
giving over $15,000 of value ina grant and or sponsorship to

(54:35):
put people in position to getaccess to this information so
they can learn.
So why would you do somethinglike that when we're in an
education age information ageyou got coaches, mentors,
entrepreneurs.
Information age you got uhcoaches, mentors, entrepreneurs,
charging 5k, 10k, 20k, 50k,100k, you know to get access to

(54:57):
information and to learn.
Why would you now go in a totalother direction and just give
away these grants and these andthese uh scholarships so people
can learn for free?

Speaker 1 (55:05):
so b I had.
I've had two near-deathexperiences.
When I was 20 I was shot at anightclub.
The bullet went down, my uhcame in, my mouth went down my
throat came out the back of myneck.
This is a metal plate righthere.
Um, the bullet wasn't meant forme, it was just a straight
bullet.
I was leaving the nightclubwalking to my car.
Straight bullet hit me in my,in my cheek, and literally I had

(55:26):
to learn how to walk again.
I was leaving the club calledthe mecca.
17 years later, on the sameexact day, I was shot again
seven times.
What date is that, bro?
It's december the 27th.
I'm glad that date that's overalready.
That's with les brown.
So I told les brown this story.
I told les brown 22, that'scrazy.
I told les brown this story hesaid he said I'm not gonna call

(55:48):
you the mind anymore, I'm goingto just call you the miracle
child, he said.
But tell me that date again.
So he said make sure I'm notwith you on that date, but that
date is.
I got shot on Martin LutherKing Boulevard and that's a day
that God showed me that he hadgreat things in store for me,
that God showed me that he hadgreat things in store for me.
So those two near-deathexperiences on top of me you

(56:13):
know, making some bad decisionswhen I was younger and having to
go to prison and God rebuildingme and showing me my life, me
being able to give back and mebeing able to, like I told you
earlier, I want people to seethe experiences of me sitting at
the table my billionairementor's house and I'm sitting
with billionaires andmultimillionaires and I'm the

(56:34):
only black man at the table.
I want people to feel that Mebeing able to go on a yacht and
a lot of my friends never evenbeen on a yacht.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
You know, in Miami they can go on a yacht pretty
cheap.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
Exactly, listen, you come to Miami, go on a yacht
pretty cheap, exactly, I mean,listen, you come to miami gonna
yeah well, I'm from people don'tleave maryland county so let
alone go to go to dade county.

Speaker 2 (56:51):
You know, so I got you.

Speaker 1 (56:52):
So being able to open people up to those experiences
I think those experiences iswhat takes the limitations off
some people's mind, believingthat it's possible.
So I want people to understandthat it's possible.
So I give away.
Uh, this year I've dedicated togiving away over $10 million in
scholarships to my TycoonSchool of Entrepreneurs and to

(57:14):
my Rockefeller mentorship.
So I give away to people thatqualify.
I give them a $17,900 grant tomy mentorship it's called the
Rockefeller mentorship wherethey're able to learn the
structure, where they're able tobe a mentor.
Typically, I mean people do payme tens of thousands of dollars

(57:34):
to mentor them, but I wanted tobe able to give it to people
that couldn't normally afford it.
And I want to help people getto 800 credit score.
I want to show them thebenefits of having land and
partnering and literallylearning how to get into the
real estate industry.
Most people want to do what'strendy.
Truck driving was trendy.
Airbnbs was trendy.

(57:56):
I had airbnbs.
I made over a million dollarsin airbnbs.
Toro trendy.
So I don't want to do what'strendy Credit repair trendy.
I don't want to do trendy things.
I want to do things that are onthe path of us being the most
valuable asset at the table.
My billionaire mentor.
He said if I want to do thingsthat are on the path of us being
the most valuable asset at thetable, my billionaire mentor.
He said if you want to make alot of money, you got to make
sure that at every table you'rethe most valuable asset, meaning

(58:17):
that you have more knowledgethan anyone at that table about
what you're talking about.
That's why I have yet to meetanybody in my industry that can
outperform me or out talk me ona trust.
I know trust law, you know.
So when people say, well, youknow, I say how many books have
you read?
Well, I ain't really readnothing.
How many podcasts have youlistened to?

(58:38):
So you can't.
Whatever that one thing is, yougot to master that one thing
you know.
But we cannot talk about wealthwithout talking about investing
.
So we have to talk aboutinvesting, because investing is
not having a 401k or not having,you know, some money in the S&P
500.
Now, that is a part of it.
But you need to understand howto build a portfolio, how to

(59:01):
structure it, all of thosethings.
So I wanted to be able to givepeople those opportunities.
So I had some of my mentees.
We just did a project, we didlegacy letters.
So I have some of my mentees.
We just did a project, we didlegacy letters, so I had them
write.
I learned this from mybillionaire mentor.
So there they have letters fromtheir grandparents and from
their great grandparents thatwere written to them.
And imagine you having a letterfrom your grandmother and you

(59:25):
being able to pick that letterup right now.
And it was written to you's.
It's there to encourage you.
It's there to to motivate you.
It's there to tell you maybesome of her recipes or some of
the sayings or some of thetraditions.
It's, it's literally writtendirectly to you.
So we wrote legacy letters.
That was the most emotionalclass um ever that I've done,

(59:46):
and many people, people wrotered letters to their children
and to their grandchildren andto their and to their sons and
their daughters, some of themwho may not be on the right path
right now, but they wrote theirlegacy letter as if they were
talking to them from the graveand that was one of the most
incredible classes that I'veever done.

Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
How would someone qualify for one of these
scholarships and mentorships?

Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
So they pretty much go to tycoongrantcom and fill
out an application and we lookat all the applications and you
pretty much in.
One of the questions is whyshould you be picked for this,
for this opportunity?
It's a one year opportunity.
It's up to you to take thatopportunity.
Now, after one year, if you getto the finish line, you say you

(01:00:31):
haven't gotten any better oryou're still where you are, then
mentorship is not mentorshipthat you need.
It's not.

Speaker 2 (01:00:37):
I don't know, maybe you need that mindset, you need
something in your mindset.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
But we do a lot of mindset stuff.
I bring a lot of my friends.
I have some incredible friends.
You're one of them.
You're speaking tonight.
I bring a lot of my friends tocome in and teach them different
tools and values that they myyou.
You have a mentorship.
You charge for it.
I have all my friends chargebig money for their stuff.
I bring them in to train them.

(01:01:02):
Last night we had a class abouthow to start a event space.
One of my mentees she's built aseven-figure event space and
she dedicated it to me becauseof what she's learned from me by
building business credit andthings like that.

(01:01:22):
So I think that being able toexpose people to other people
that are where they once aspiredto be but was once where they
were, it's more valuable.
So, um, yeah, I love myRockefeller mentorship and my
Tycoon school of entrepreneursis, uh is my purpose.
So, to answer your question,the things that I've been
through, I owed it to God forleaving me here to be able to
give back.

(01:01:43):
And when my billionaire mentor,when we, when we sat down
initially at Starbucks and hestarted teaching me these things
about what the traditions ofhis family and the culture of
his family and the structure ofhis family.
He made me promise that I wouldteach other people, so that's
why I've dedicated my life toteaching other people about a
trust, about structure, aboutcredit, about private capital.

(01:02:08):
That's pretty much what TycoonCapital is.
We lend out private capital topeople that might not qualify
because they don't havefinancials, they don't have the
best credit, they don't havenothing but a plan, and that's
what private capital is.
So when you start talking aboutventure capitalists and hedge
funds, I teach a lot about thatbecause I have a lot of great

(01:02:29):
relationships with hedge funds.
Hedge funds is is is way betterthan going inside chase bank or
wells fargo or bank of america.
You know like it's relationshipbased.
It's.
They buy into what you, whatyou're selling them as far.
They just want to make money.
So I partnered with a deck ofhedge fund and they literally
back um.

(01:02:50):
They've given me an unlimitedamount of capital to back our
financial endeavors as far asland flipping.
So I also have another program,which is the real estate
tycoons, where we teach peoplehow to land flip uh and I.
It's called wi-fi real estate,so I showed them how to flip
land.
I did it for the last 12 monthsand I made over one point one
million dollars and never leftmy house.
So I teach my mentees how to doit by leveraging hedge fund

(01:03:15):
money, private capital, so wegive them the money to close on
those deals.

Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
Who would be ideal to be mentored by you, be coached
by you, because you know theycan go to Tycoonrantcom, they
can fill out the application,they could be selected.
But what does the mindset ofsomeone that would be ripe to
come into this type ofinformation and be successful,
whether it be with all of thedifferent pillars, or at least

(01:03:41):
one of them?

Speaker 1 (01:03:42):
I think people.
I would hope that I attractpeople because I have some
incredible people in mycommunity.
I attract people because I havesome incredible people in my
community.
I attract people like me.
So I would say a person like mewould be a person that I have
three felonies.
I've been in trouble.
I've never had a job.
I've been on my deathbed twice.
I went from just a year beforelast when I went through that

(01:04:06):
split in my business I went downto a 400.
Now I'm back at an 800.
So somebody that's relentless,somebody that has a story,
that's what the church shouldreally say not Balenciaga.
It should say relentless, allover it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
We might have to make that adjustment.

Speaker 1 (01:04:22):
You could follow a shopper.
We A-ed that out.
You could follow a shopper.
So somebody that's relentless,somebody that doesn't use their
past as a crutch on why theycan't move forward, somebody
that's okay with failure andunderstands that failure is a
part of the process.
When you start looking atpeople, I had to go and look at
highly successful people andunderstand Colonel Sanders.

(01:04:44):
His recipe was denied over5,100 times before.
If somebody accepted noweverybody I don't know anybody
that hasn't been the kfc soimagine being told no 5100 times
.
The average person can't betold no 5100 times person can't
be told no one time exactly so.
Those are the people I want.
That I want the people that'swilling to say you know what?

(01:05:04):
No matter what it takes to bethe first millionaire in my
family, that's what I want to do.
No matter what it takes to bethe first millionaire in my
family, that's what I want to do.
No matter what it takes for meto own land, that's what I want.
No matter what it takes for meto have an 800 credit score, I'm
going to do the work.
No matter what it takes for meto be able to be the
generational wealth builder andthe curse breaker in my family.
That's what I'm going to do.
That's what.
That's the type of people thatI have in my program of my

(01:05:32):
program.

Speaker 2 (01:05:32):
So I had a question about um.
That day in december, since youhad two experiences
back-to-back years, do you feltlike you suffered from some type
of like um, like fear or likeum, you know, like mentally you
were you, you felt kind of low,or like when that day comes
around you feel a certain typeof way?
Did that?
Did that follow you for alittle bit?
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
Like that.
12, 22.
Cause like if you get, if youget shot 27,.

Speaker 2 (01:05:54):
My fault 12, 27.
So if you get shot on 12, 27and then you recover and then
the following year you get shotnot, not just in the same exact
day, is this trauma residualtrauma, that that followed a
couple of years?

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
that's a very good question.
There's a very, that's a very.
Do you still?

Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
think about it now at all, when that day comes around
yes, but not as bad.

Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
So because, again, forgiveness was a part of it.
So I'll go into that.
But we do, we do the tycoonprayer every morning and so this
year, the 27th, we was on thetycoon prayer.
I prayed Other people pray aswell, but I prayed and I
literally was liberated from itand I prayed.

(01:06:39):
I showed the video because thatspecific day my mother had sent
me a video of a speech thatMartin Luther King did.
It was about your life'sblueprint.
So I did a seminar that eveningand that's when I got shot
leaving that seminar on MartinLuther King Boulevard.
So I spoke on the prayer and itliterally liberated me from

(01:07:07):
that.
This past one this past year,year prior to that, the trauma
of it, yes, and still, to thisday, I have not been able.
If I go back home, I can't goback, I can't go down that
street.
I was just talking to my motherlast week.
I went back home and she waslike where you at?
I said I can't, I gotta turn.
She said, oh, you must be over,marla king.
I said, yes, so I can't go downthat street just yet, but I'm

(01:07:29):
going to, I'm going to get it,I'm going to get there.
Yeah, but I had to.
The steps that I had to take inthe last year was the person
that I know that shot me.
They're not in jail forshooting me, they're in jail for
another situation.
You know that they got introuble for pretending the drugs
.
You know that they got introuble for pertaining to drugs.
Um, I can't pinpoint that theyshot me, but I almost believe it

(01:07:56):
.
And uh, that person I had toforgive.
So I wrote them a letter, and Iwrote them a letter and I sent
it to them and then I had topray for them and then I so I
had to, I had to do some thingson the personal side to liberate
myself, which has helped me,but it's a process.
So trauma and PTSD, all of thosethings are a part of anyone's

(01:08:19):
process, but that's why I haveprofessional help to help me
with it.
Because I don't want to havemalice, I don't want to live in
fear.
I jumped out of a plane lastyear for my birthday.
I don't want to live in fear.
I jumped out of a plane lastyear for my birthday.
I don't want to live in fear.
I don't want to have malice andoftentimes it may not be
towards that person necessarilybecause you can't access that
person, but I don't want you tofeel like, oh, coach Nemanja is

(01:08:40):
kind of you know, or somebodydoes something to me, like
people have done a lot ofhurtful things to me, even on
social media, and I don't wantto be the person that lashes
back because I have trauma.
I don't want to lash back, Ijust want to love.
So those are things that I haveto personally deal with,
because I'm a leader and I'm aleader and people follow me, and

(01:09:00):
because people follow me, Ihave to carry myself in a
different way.
So I had to forgive that part.
It's like I had to forgive myfather in order to open the door
for all of my mentors is I hadto forgive that person that shot
me, um, because maybe they weredealing with some trauma
themselves, I don't know, um,but I had to forgive that person
in order for me to be liberated, cause I don't want to live to

(01:09:22):
where I'm scared of a day.
So a lady told me that I wascursed right after I got shot.
I lived in Vegas at the time.
A lady told me that I wascursed and it literally for a
few years.
Uh, it, it.
It traumatized me because Ireally thought that, if
initially I thought, well, godloves me, so so he protected me

(01:09:47):
and he has great things in storefor me.
And I got shot on Martin LutherKing because he's building me
up to be a great leader and tobe known by generations to come.
That's what I told myself afterit happened.
And then I meet this lady whowas prophetic in what she said.
She was prophetic and she hassomething she wants to speak
into my life.
And she told me that I wascursed and that's the reason why

(01:10:10):
I got shot on the 27th, on bothtimes, and my life was not
going to be that great and allof those things and it was a
very hurtful thing and theystarted sticking with me.
So every year that would gothrough my mind.
The lady said I was cursed.
And then I met another personand that person year that that

(01:10:30):
would go through my mind.
The lady said I was cursed.
And then I met another personand that person told me that he
said, um, the mantra not curse.
He said the month that, like,how many people can go through
what you've been through andstill and still be able to hold
your head up and still be ableto be a leader?
Like and still be able to buildpeople?
So, um, and then he startedshowing me scriptures and and
showing me how I was encouragedbecause I really was like,

(01:10:51):
because it felt like every timeI would take two steps forward,
I would take three steps back,like, because it wasn't no
longer about money.
I was.
I became a millionaire at 24.
So it wasn't money anymore thatI was seeking.
It was I was seeking the factthat I thought that people
respected me as a leader.
I thought I was motivatingpeople.
But in reality my cousinbrought this to my attention he

(01:11:13):
said he said he said the mind.
He said you are online and youmotivate people.
You're doing all theseconferences, you tour, you're
doing all these things, he said,but in reality, there are some
people that are envious of you.
Yeah, that's a fact.
So I know you would like tothink that you motivate and you
do.
You motivate some people, butthere are some people that
because you came from where theycame from and now you at the

(01:11:37):
awards, or you came from wherethey came from and now you sit
in the tables in billionaireshouses, or you came from where
they came from and they don'thave the peace that you have.
Maybe you know, but that'stheir own.
We have people that are walkinginside schools killing kids.
We have people that are drivingdown, blowing up Teslas,
blowing up Teslas.
We have people that are drivingdown Bourbon Street and killing

(01:12:00):
people.
You know there are people that,mentally, are not there.
So you cannot try to lower yourlife or your mission in life,
because other people have hatein their heart.
So that's why I always reflectto Martin Luther King, you know.
So it doesn't matter whatpeople do to me.
I'm still going to love him,I'm still going to pray for him

(01:12:20):
and yeah, so that's my journey.

Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
I don't know about you, bro, but I think this is
better than Houston, bro.
You think so?
What do you?

Speaker 1 (01:12:26):
think Well, I've been through a little bit more in
life since Houston.

Speaker 2 (01:12:32):
Nah, nah, I think I think it was definitely better
than Houston, cause I feel likeyou know it was way more
intentional.
You know, I think you know youtouched on a lot of I mean
listen, if you're watching orlistening to this, you made it
to the end.
You really caught a lot of, Ifeel like, life-changing
information.
Yeah, you know just, and therewas just moments of just, you

(01:12:54):
know different impact and I feellike anyone that's listening
and watching this could takesomething from this.
I pray so you know what I'msaying.
I mean, this is for somebody forreal, for real, right.
Yes, real for real, right, um,but before we get out of here,
man, is it?
Is there anything elsespecifically you want to make
sure people leave with, or theyknow about what you have in
store for this next season?
And then the other question, orthe final question I have for

(01:13:16):
you is, if you have to lay outlike a four point or five point
blueprint for people to, to um,take advantage of in this season
, what would that be?
All right, let's start with.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
You know I'm old, so let's start with the first one,
all right?

Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
let's go.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
The first one was what's the first one?

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
the first what is, what is?
Is there anything else you wantto share with the people that
you?

Speaker 1 (01:13:36):
feel like they want to leave here.
Anything else, um no, I I thinkwe've covered a lot I mean we
can go back.

Speaker 2 (01:13:42):
I mean listen, it's a whole nother hour we can talk
about the story.

Speaker 1 (01:13:44):
But yeah, no, we we covered a lot I think that, um,
anyone watching this hopefullythey're inspired to, uh, to look
at this situation andunderstand that anything is
possible and that, no matterwhere you came from, you shared
your story.
I shared my story.
No matter where you've comefrom, you can have a pursuit to

(01:14:05):
be happy.
You can have a pursuit to buildnot just wealth but physical
health.
Recently I had a scare with myhealth.
They told me that long story,but anyway I had to go to the
hospital because I have highblood pressure.
Calm down, demont, it's easiersaid than done.
I never thought I never beensick or nothing, but I had to

(01:14:26):
look at life from another lens.
I didn't even have a primarycare doctor.
I was a millionaire.
I didn't even have a healthinsurance, you know, because I
had never been sick, yeah.
So now my stance is look,health is wealth.
It is yes, health is wealth.

Speaker 2 (01:14:42):
You need a primary care doctor, we were talking
about biohacking before you gotup in here.

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
Listen, I'm wire hocking before you got a band.
Listen, I'm an advocate.
Yeah, so I I under.
Now I'm looking at life fromanother lens because I've been.
I'm a workaholic.
I just want to build people andhelp people and guide people
and I've been building this 3dprinting and wi-fi, real estate
and rockefeller, all that stuffand looked up one day and I was
at my office and and I couldn'teven see, like I was just blind,
like my blood, and I didn'trealize it when I got to the
hospital, had on one of myshirts and the man, the one that

(01:15:13):
says Gucci, louis Vuitton, cussyou, and they lines through it.
And the man said oh, what doyou do?
I said I'm a, I'm a wealthcoach, like I help build people
up.
And he said well, you can'tbuild nobody up if you ain't
here.
He said you can have all themoney in the world and have bad
health and you're not going tobe here to spend it.
And literally you could havebought me with a quarter,

(01:15:34):
because it was like an ahamoment for me the month You've
been talking about all theselevels of things but you've been
missing out on, like you justsaid, the mindset part and also
the health element of it.
To where you telling people theycan get life insurance policies
, but they need health.
They need, they need healthinsurance too.

(01:15:54):
You need a primary care doctor,you need all these different
things.
You need to have these certaintests done so that you can do
what's called preventativemaintenance.
So that's been my stance, man,so I got my community.
We're doing a challenge rightnow.
I like it, uh, yeah, so, um, I'mexcited about it, but I, I have
to lead by example and, uh, ifI was to share anything with

(01:16:15):
anybody, closing, I would saythat if God could create me a
person who grew up as a kid notfeeling loved, not not saying I
wasn't loved, but I just didn'tfeel feel loved and I was.
I was a very angry young manbecause I didn't.
I didn't feel like anybodyunderstood me.
I always felt like I was likethe black sheep.

(01:16:38):
I didn't feel like that.
Um, I had guidance.
I didn't feel like that.
I hadn't a mentor or a fatherfigure.
So then, every time I got closeto somebody, then they died or
they left me.
My pastor was a father figure,then he died, you know.
So all of these things, it justseems like the odds were like
stacked up against me and Icould never win.

(01:16:59):
So I'm anybody that's watchingthis that feels like my finances
, I can't win.
My life I can't win.
I don't know my purpose.
I want to be in real estate,but I can barely do what I'm
doing.
I want to have great credit,but I can barely do what I'm
doing.
I want to be closer to God, orI want to be an investor, or I

(01:17:20):
want to change people's lives.
I want to change my family'slives.
I see something more.
I feel like I could be thefirst millionaire in my family
and not the last, but I justdon't know how.
So I'm going to just say findyou a coach or a mentor that you
trust, and find you somebodythat can help you go to the next
level.
You may have to test somepeople out, but find you

(01:17:40):
somebody that can help you,because a coach or a mentor is
where you want to be in 10 to 12years.

Speaker 2 (01:17:45):
I like that man, I think I think that's a good way
to end it.
I would say, cause obviously Iwas going to ask you like well,
what are a couple of things?
I think definitely um findingyourself a coach or mentor,
someone that can guide you,someone that you can trust.
Um taking that selfaccountability so you know your,
your weak spot, your blindspots, so you know what to
really focus on, so they knowalong your weak spots and your

(01:18:07):
blind spots.
And then, um then apply for agrant for my, for my school.
That's why I was gonna I was, Imean, listen you, you beat me
to it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:13):
So where they need to go to get that again.
So you're gonna go totycoongrantcom t-y-c-o-o-n grant
g-r-a-n-tcom, fill out theapplication.
Somebody from my team willreach out to you.
If you qualify and you getright in, jump right in, start
learning, teach the ABCs oftrust, the ABCs of credit, the
ABCs of funding.

(01:18:34):
There's lots of differentopportunities you can sign up
for whatever your pace is, butthe ultimate goal is that you
start learning how to developyour personal development in
your mind and making connections, because it's a network of of.
I have a huge network of peoplein my community, so I have

(01:18:54):
people that are partneringtogether.
I have people that are buyingland together that they've never
even met just through, justthrough online, being a part of
the community.
I have people that aresupporting each other and coming
to the prayer groups, all thosetypes of things.
So I have a lot of it's a lotof great things happening.
So, uh, sign up fortycoongrantcom and, uh, you'll
be able to be invited to seewhat other opportunities are

(01:19:14):
available man, thanks for uh,you know being here again.

Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
Thanks for having me.
I'm glad that we had theopportunity to do it again.
Um, I definitely feel like thiswas better than the last time.
Last time was fire, but I feellike this time was definitely,
definitely, you know, right ontime.
Uh, make sure you guys go totycoongrantcom.
Appreciate you guys forchecking out another episode of
the podcast.
That's coach demont um brennan.
We'll see you on another one.
Is your podcast still notmonetized?

(01:19:38):
Apple has over 2 millionpodcasts on their platform, but
only 450 000 of them are active.
The truth is, 90 of podcasts isquit before episode 10 and of
thecasters, only half of themreally know how to get money and
they rely on brand deals,sponsorships and a large
audience.
So, if you're really ready toscale your podcast to 100K,
click the link below, book acall and let's see if you're a

(01:19:59):
good fit for the program.
Okay, look.
So this is how we're going toget you more exposure using the
pod equals MC square strategy,right?
Then we're going to bring outthe air fryer Air fryer and then
connect it to the toaster ovenmethod right?
I think I wasted my money.
Now, until we do all this,we're going to get you a million
views and millions ofsubscribers.

Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
I have no idea what you're talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
I got you.
Let me go get something.
What's this box about?
Wow, bro, what is that?
So we got your long formpodcast right here.
Right, this is the long formaudio, okay now I'm getting my
money's worth.
We got a service to get moreexposure, to get more views and
get more call to action, to getmore sales.

Speaker 1 (01:20:39):
Let's go.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
This is what you need to do to get more of this Now,
do you understand?
I completely get the vibe nowBefore I don't know what you was
talking about, but this righthere,
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