Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Your Pain is Your Power


Check out this episode!



Your Pain is Your Power

I use to think that my pity  . . . was  . . . my  . . . place of pain
Now I think completely different
Now I think about  . . .my pity  . . . or the things that I go thru my life
Is actually my power
That’s the way that I can relate with other people
That way I can encourage them thru something I’ve been thru in my life
Like a divorce
or  . . . almost declared bankruptcy
or  . . . failing at multiple businesses
As someone that has been there, done that, but got into the other side
And I can show someone  . . . how  . . . I’ve been able to overcome those things
And because of that relational  . . . power, that come from my pain and my pity
That’s a complete re-frame, and that’s a Mindset thing
That’s how entrepreneurs become successful, they re-frame things,
and they change the way they think about ‘em,
which changes that the way they think about everything.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Cory's Inspiring Keynote Speech at Harvard



TALK S HIGHLIGHTS
[00:04:17]        My name's Cory Boatright
[00:04:25]        I want to talk to you about the 3M success formula
[00:06:35]        You take a step out, right when the door opens
[00:08:53]        I am from Oklahoma, a little town called Weatherford
[00:12:25]        I got a GED,  a 'Good Enough' diploma, or in Oklahoma, a 'Git 'er done."
[00:14:15]        with losers, you're hanging out with people who are pulling you down.
[00:15;15]        two of them succeeded, the other thirty-eight I call business therapy
[00:15:37]        This is called the 3M's for Success. It's very powerful
[00:15:53]        The First thing is MINDSET
[00:16:42]        Seventy percent of the time, it's the mindset thing
[00:18:20]        You've got to get in there and go for it.
[00:18:58]        I was pretty good at math, so I'm playing a little game here at Harvard.
[00:20:17]        Well, courage only equals seventy (70%) percent.
[00:20:35]        HARDWORK only 98%
[00:20:45]        Knowledge is not quiet there either . . . only 96%
[00:21:40]        What makes a hundred (100%) percent is attitude
[00:22:00]        Discipline equals a hundred (100%) percent
[00:22:32]        You can do it, because it takes discipline . . . from there, the attitude happens.
[00:23:50]        You can overcome fear by discovering your success.
[00:23:56]        The second 'M' is MECHANICS
[00:25:21]        Operating procedures. Think about synergy and masterminds.
[00:25:40]        Teamwork and intelligence wins games
[00:27:15]        The last 'M' is MONEY
[00:28:50]        I have a little bucket list I've made. One of them was to speak at Harvard
[00:29:23]        Remember and be a servant
[00:29:35]        "My worst day is somebody else's paradise."

All right. So, I'm conflicted here. I need your help. I normally put together a little presentation and I talk about the Three M's of success. I'm going to do that, but I've been absorbing how everyone's presentations are going so far. I have kind of two presentations, so I need your help. First presentation, I've done a thousand times. You'll get some nuggets from it and we can go on our merry way. The second presentation, I've been back here kind of making some changes. The second presentation, let me just be really transparent here with you, I have never showed anybody. (audience laughter) Wait! Wait! It's border line offensive.
Audience Member:             [inaudible ]
It is dangerous, but it is a dog eat dog, real what it takes for having success for, and the mindset of success would be an entrepreneur. I think I already know. I have the presentation loaded right now, but if you need me to change it, I will. Show of hands, who wants the boring presentation? Who wants the one that's boarder line offensive? (audience cheers) Okay! Fantastic! Here we go. Lesson one, right here in Harvard, formal education means nothing! See you later.
Audience Member:             Boo!
Yeah, right? Let me tell you something. I'm going to qualify that statement, okay? Because lesson two is this, specialized knowledge, that means everything, period. Everything. Period. Let me ask you a question, who is more successful, the general practice attorney or the specialized attorney?
Audience Member:             Specialized.
Who is more successful, the specialized doctor or the general doctor?
Audience Member:             Specialized.
Specialized, right? Flipped around on you that way. Specialized knowledge means absolutely everything. You can be a master of whatever it is you want. You can focus on that, or you can be a jack of all trades, learn a lot about a lot of things and really not make much difference in the world. I'm a fan of education. However, I will tell you that I have friends that went to Fantastic Ivy League Colleges and they don't have what they would even consider success, much less what other people would say is successful. Some of them actually work as waiters.
It's interesting to me because you take a lot of time, money and energy to devote and put it into learning things, the education. The challenge is that you become usually really, really good at like, answering all the questions for Jeopardy, (laughs) right? But when you get out in the dog eat dog world, you know what really happens, is that doesn't really matter. What really matters is the bigger part of coming to a University like this, is your network. How many people agree with that?
Look at all the hands. Keep them up. All the hands in the room. Everyone. Everyone has their hand up, and you're here at Harvard, one of the most prestigious, incredible colleges in the country. I just sat here and border line offended you, and no one's throwing anything at me, so I feel like I'm okay right now. Good. Okay. There's a tomato coming? Okay. It is the truth. It is the absolute truth. My name's Cory Boatright. I'm going to go ahead and tell you just a few things that had success in my life, just brief on that.  
I want to talk to you about the 3M success formula that I think you're going to get a lot from. Just so you know I didn't fall off the turnip truck yesterday, CNN, NBC, a lot of companies have interviewed me. They have talked to me about internet marketing. I've done consulting with several Fortune 500, Fortune 100 companies. Wall Street Journal was one of them that you heard. They interviewed with me. When I grew up, one of my businesses grew it up in my bedroom. It took me about four years, grew it up to four million bucks and I sold it, and that was before the age of twenty-five. It's pretty cool.
Fast company. Did a social media influence project. Out of thirty thousand plus applicants, I was number four, beating out, I think, Justin Beiber and Brittney Spears. (laughter) Justin, Brittney, love ya! I also wrote a best seller on Amazon. What was cool about it was that it went Best Seller the first day. It's called Recession Riches. I'm sharing just some of these things with you, because I want you to just get a little idea of where I'm coming from.
I went and spent some time out of Oklahoma, which is where I'm from. I'll tell you that story in just a second. That's me there in Cinque Terre, Italy. How many of you people have been there? One person? Amazing isn't it?
Audience Member:             It's nice, yeah.
It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable. I went skydiving. How many people have skydived? Yeah? Okay. You know what's interesting about skydiving? Is that the synapses in your brain work differently now, how you think about everything. That gives you another reason, all you 'K's' out there. You green guys, green women, that if you're just thinking like, "Oh, it's just fearful." No. You'll think about things in your life completely different, because you've overcome death. Your mind is telling you, right? Your mind is telling you that this is death.
You take a step out, right when the door opens, you take the step out and there's no coming back. You just made this decision that, "You know what? I potentially can die right now, and I'm okay with it." Your mind thinks differently about everything else. Everything else is dwarfed because you just overcame death. Interesting. I went to the Sistine Chapel. I used to think that was called the Sixteenth, but it's Sistine Chapel. (laughter) That's a little Oklahoma for you. Sixteenth Chapel! So, that's Sistine Chapel. That was amazing. Absolutely, one of the most incredible things.
There in Abbey, went and traveled there. Went to Pompeii. How many people have been to Pompeii? World traveler over here. Neil?
Audience Member:             Incredible.
Wow! To see civilization and see this technology that right around BC times is unreal. The catacombs in London. Where the bodies were buried. You can actually see the skulls, still. Lastly, or almost lastly here, I went over to Indonesia. I went over to, actually, Thailand in this picture and got a chance to walk tigers. Let me tell you, a tiger walks you. You do not walk a tiger. (laughter)
Audience Member:             [I'm a Thai girl]
Hi, girl. This last one here, I think, is the most exciting for me. How many people know where that is?
Audience Member:             Hong Kong.
Hong Kong! Where? The ... Peak. The Peak. The Peak in Hong Kong. Let me tell you why this is significant. The reason this is significant because I'm from Oklahoma. I'm from Oklahoma and this moment right here is when I look over the Peak in Hong Kong, where you can see the whole city, just everything right there in front of you. It literally feels like, "Oh, My gosh! It really happened!" I just had enough belief. I put some effort behind it, took action, and it really happened. Right? This Oklahoma boy. It was pretty powerful.
I am from Oklahoma, a little town called Weatherford. About fifteen thousand people in this town. This is the hard part. I know it's going to be the hard part. This is my dad and my mom. I told you I haven't, I'm just being transparent with you and I need your love. So just give it to me. My mom and dad, they got married and they had three boys. I was the youngest of three. My first ... my brother, is Dusty. He's the oldest and he's the athlete of the family, everything, just athletic. My other brother Brannon, second oldest, he's a mechanic. Can take apart an engine, put it back together. Pretty amazing.
I turned out to be the musician, entrepreneur. (laughs) That picture of my mom, so beautiful. Isn't she? My dad, he passed away when I was nineteen months old, that was one of the only pictures I have of he and I really together, holding me. He died one day before his birthday in an airplane crash. I often wonder what it would be like for me to have fathers growing up. What it would have been like to have that, but I didn't. I made a lot of choices that may not have been the best ones, but I'll tell you that at the end of the day, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. How many people know that? Yeah.
Most of my friends and colleagues and people growing up in this little town of Weatherford, most of the what I would consider a peer group, they all went to prison or boys' homes. I was booted in school, because I was missing so many days of school. It wasn't that I wasn't a bright kid or couldn't pick up things quick, or apply myself, even though I used to have massive arguments with my teachers. One time I used to think that history wasn't even ... I mean, who cared about something that happened twenty years ago. I used to have these big arguments about history. It didn't even mean anything. Now, I love history. I could watch history channel forever.
Those are my colleagues, my peers, most of them, they went to prison. I got a, even though I had three older brothers. God love them. Fantastic in their own right. Done a lot of powerful things in their lives. I respect them each their own, a lot of different ways. How many people know growing up, when you're like maybe eight, and somebody's like, maybe fifteen and thirteen. You don't really want to hang out with an eight or nine year old, right? I actually got a Big Brother. I had to go and get a Big Brother, and that's Dave Storm right there, and that's me. He made a big difference in my life. Even with the big brother, that Big Brother/Sister Program, even with the big brother, I still was making a lot of mistakes, making a lot of mistakes. I had some happened is, who said the PhD is ...?
Audience Member:             [inaudible 00:12:23]
Public High School Diploma? Well, I got a GED, which is a 'Good Enough' diploma, (laughter) or in Oklahoma, a 'Git 'er done." (laughter) If we can come up with another acronym. I dropped out of high school when I was my junior year and making a lot of bad decisions. I just felt like, at that time, my perspective, my chapter in life, was that I didn't really need school. I'm going to go to school to learn to work for somebody else? I'm going to go do my own thing now. I don't need anybody else. I was a very me-istic, myopic type person. It really made a big impact on my life.
What happened was when things started to change, is I started to learn how to play guitar. That's me. Had the hair all the way down to here. Into the 80's bands, rock bands, Nelson, back there. (laughs) Nelson twin. I got into playing guitar and lo and behold, I joined a Christian heavy metal band. I got around some people that really said, "You know what? You can do more than what you think. You don't have to end up in prison, in jail, in boys' homes. We think you're really cool. We think you can do some cool things. We want to do it, work with you."
I want you, if you write ... if you're taking some notes, I don't know if you are, but if you are, I want you to take notes on this because this is pretty powerful. You are the five, right? You are the average of the five people that you spend the most time with. How many people believe that? It's absolutely true. It's absolutely true. If you're hanging out with losers right now, you'rehanging out with people who are pulling you down. You know you need to get away from, maybe there's kind of friends here and there.
You will be the average. That's fine. You've made the decision to hang out with them, but you will be the average of those five people you hang out with. That is a one hundred percent truth. So, along the way, I read a little book called Rich Dad, Poor Dad. How many people read the book?
Audience Member:             [inaudible ]
I'm out of high school now. I start reading book, learning how to play guitar myself, doing all these things. So, I started all these different companies. Let me tell you something. Nine out of ten businesses fail. That's what Rich Dad, Poor Dad said, okay? I had this brilliant idea, being pretty good at math, I started forty different businesses, because what are my odds there, right? (laughter) I mean, one, right? Someday I'm going to get one of them, right? (laughter) What happened was that two of them succeeded, the other thirty-eight I call business therapy.
What I want to talk to you about here, thank you for letting me share my story, is, how many people would like to know a smarter way than starting forty different businesses? Yeah?
This is called the Three M's for Success. It's very powerful. These are things I've learned along the way. These are the things that I want to share with you, that are the most powerful I can get across to you in a thirty minute period. How are we doing on time, by the way?
Audience Member:             [inaudible ]
Fantastic? Good. Okay. The First thing is MINDSET. Mindset, okay? Why is mindset so important. Well, the reason mindset is so important, is because you have to first understand that whatever you are going to do, there is going to be many obstacles that come up along the way. Right, Sherry?
Audience Member:             Right.
A lot of obstacles along the way, you've got to know that when they do, that your mind has got to be prepared to be able to handle it. You've got to be able to get this mindset thing correct. I know it sounds hokey-pokey sometimes, but whenever I done ... because whenever I do some consulting with someone and they pay me a thousand dollars for doing this one or two things. Spend one or two hours with me. Seventy percent of the time, it's the mindset thing. It's thirty percent of the time it's something else. Seventy percent of the time, it's mindset.
What you're going to realize is that there's these constraints that we ourselves put up. They aren't really there. What are they called, Will? The big ...? Lie. The big lie, because that's what they are. Our mind tells us a ton of lies. What makes you so special? What makes you so special? Why do you think you can succeed? Look where you're from. You're from a little town in Oklahoma. You can't succeed. Hell, all your buddies, they live for Friday, to go out and drink beer, get fat. Don't care about their bodies. You can't be successful. What are you thinking?
Your mind is telling you these things. Guess what happens whenever you're like, "Oh, yeah? Yeah?" You're listening. You've got to be careful because you're listening. Does that make sense? You are listening. You've got to be like a mouse. Right? Hard headed! (laughter) You've got to be a mouse. You've got to be excited to go in there and get the cheese! Right? I want to be this mouse so bad! Except I would probably, I'm forty, so I'd have pads and shoulders on there, too, but he's got the helmet, it's good.
You've got to be the mouse. Yeah. You've got to be the mouse. You've got to get in there and go for it. What really matters, what really matters are the things sometimes that we don't realize that matter. What really counts are the things that we can't count. Right? How do I know what you're really thinking right now? I can't count that. I don't put a metric to that right now. Guess what? That's what really matters. That's how ... that's the things that count in life. The mindset of where you are. That you can succeed. That you will succeed. That you're going to be the mouse and you're going to be a little hard-headed, and you're going to get the cheese.
Even though I got a GED. Dropped out of high school. I was pretty good at math, so I'm playing a little game here at Harvard. Imagine the alphabet, okay? Imagine every letter represents a number. A is one, B is ...?
Audience Member:             Two.
Cory Boatright:           C is ...?
Audience Member:             Three.
Okay, right. Yeah. So what we're going to do, is we're going to try to equal a hundred. We're going to try to equal a hundred. We're going to do it in an entrepreneurial way. Entrepreneurial way. Many times, people think one of the biggest challenges of being an entrepreneur is what? Name some things out.
Audience Member:             Capital.
Cory Boatright:           What is it?
Audience Member:             Capital.
Cory Boatright:           Capital. What else?
Audience Member:             Sales.
Cory Boatright:           Sales, what else?
Audience Member:             Marketing.
Cory Boatright:           Marketing, what else?
Audience Member:             Time.
Cory Boatright:           Time, one more.
Audience Member:             [inaudible ]
Cory Boatright:           What?
Audience Member:             [inaudible ]
What happens is this. What equals a hundred percent, is not what we think it is. Fear is one of the big ones. Fear is one of the big ones. We think that if we just overcome the fear, if I go skydiving and I jump out of the airplane, then I'll be okay. I'll just get through it. I'll be fine. Fear only equals thirty percent. Courage! Some people are just kind of wimpy. Need to get a little courage. Not being the little cat, be the big lion. Well, courage only equals seventy (70%) percent. Hard work. Hard work. Put in the time effort for the work. Not necessarily work smarter, we hear, but work harder. Industrial age, with what they learned, that's what they teach us. That's not the case. Only ninety eight (98%) percent.
Knowledge, right? How many people just say knowledge is ...? Power, right? Guess what? Knowledge is not quite there either, is it? Love. Aw. (laughter) Love is very, very powerful, but as an entrepreneur, it's not a hundred percent. Unfortunately, I can love you all to death and you can still screw me. As an entrepreneur, it's not a hundred percent. Luck. Who's got lucky? I remember Phil was saying that, you know, [inaudible]just got lucky. I did. I got a little bit lucky, but that wasn't all it took. What makes a hundred percent? Someone yelled it out and I didn't ... You. So smart. Audience Member:       [inaudible)
Not money and it's not leadership. What makes a hundred (100%) percent is attitude. It's a trick question, O'Neil. It's a trick question, because it's almost everything. Do you know what happens before attitude? Discipline. Discipline equals a hundred (100%) percent. You have to have discipline in order to have that positive attitude come out. It begins with discipline. The reason not everyone's going to be able to do it is because they're not disciplined enough, but you can be. You can be.
You can put in a little extra time and effort. You can talk to somebody else. You can knock another door. You can make another phone call. You can get into another network, and another mastermind. You can do what it takes. You can be the one that's up working when everybody else is sleeping. You can do it, because it takes discipline. (audience applause) Then, from there, the attitude happens.
Let me tell you something. Whenever you get this mindset thing rocking and rolling, you'll find that prayer is a place that you go for solitude. Start really thinking about what matters. The things that count, the things that you can't really count, those are the things that really do count. Kind of interesting to share this. Whenever you pray, (holds up praying hands) what does that look like to you? What number?
Audience Member:             One.
One. One. You know why, because there's a part of you that we abandon. We don't like to think about ourselves. We think we're selfish and all those other things. I'll tell you what once you figure out what it is inside of you, that gives you the abilities of strength, the greatness that I believe God instills in every single person, once you figure that out, then you can serve others in the massive way, the best way possible, because you spent some time working on yourself. You can overcome. You can overcome fear by discovering your success. It's absolutely one hundred percent true.
The second'M' is MECHANICS. The second 'M' is mechanics. Most entrepreneurs, they're just crazy really, because they're self employed and they call themselves business owners, but really they're not. They're not. They're crazy, because why? They work for themselves! Right? They look like this guy. That's not a boss that I want to have. Even though that's what all of us look like when we work for ourselves.
FedEx. Think about this. FedEx is not one big business. It's small businesses duplicated. There's no such thing as a big business any longer, it's small businesses, duplicated. It's not one Wing Nuts, it's fifty, a hundred, a thousand, two thousand, five thousand. Then it just spreads all over the place because it's one little Wing Nuts that works, one little FedEx truck that works and then you can go out and duplicate what's working. It's not that you have to get this one huge business. It is you have to get your mechanics in order.
The first one's Mindset. The second one's Mechanics. Think about a watch. Think about the gears of a watch. Everything's got to be working to get that right. Operating procedures. Think about synergy and masterminds. What Michael Jordan says, you know, it's awesome. He could be the greatest player in the world, but that's not what wins games. What wins games?
Audience Member:             Teamwork and intelligence.
Teamwork and intelligence wins games. That's being a mastermind. That is a synergy. That's thinking and knowing what you can leverage, what you can give and you can help others. That's how you serve others, by creating that synergy and having a mastermind. How can we do it together? Think about the difference of just one makes, just one. Look at the difference, the vast difference. Two plus two is four, four plus two is eight, but just one, and this mindset right here. This, on this side right here, that's a self employed business owner right here.
This is the guy thinking about just himself and he doesn't care about anybody else and he doesn't care about anything he's going to ... impact he's going to make for the world. This guy thinks about synergy and mastermind. He thinks about how he can serve others. He thinks about outside of himself. He wants to give and help. That's the most important thing to him. Look at what one difference makes, just one.
This powerful idea, a mechanics, is something that is really made a huge difference. Think big, really, when you're being a self employed business owner. Got one minute? Think big. As a self-employed business owner, you think a little small. Think a little bit bigger. How can you serve others? How can you help others? How can you get those procedures going. Not just make one Wing Nuts and have a good day. How can you make five thousand and have other people run them. Have other people that like-minded for you that can go spread the word. Spread everything about the story and the vision.
The last 'M,' what do you think? It's money. The last 'M' is MONEY. The reason is, is because being rich, it really isn't about just loving money. It really is having time, having time. This study is very interesting to me. The person that puts the emphasis on, "Oh, my time is worth so much money, it's only worth a thousand dollars or two thousand dollars an hour, of five thousand dollars an hour.", that person, a recent study that was done, has shown that they have less happiness in their lives.
The reason that I had these 3M's' of Success, in this order, Mindset, Mechanics, and Money, is not by accident. It is because whenever you chase money, money runs. It runs fast, but I tell you what, whenever you find other people in masterminds. Whenever you find ways that you can create synergy and you can serve others, which I believe is one of the core components, one of the most incredible ways to have fulfillment in your life is by serving others. Whenever you do that, you attract money into your life. Money comes looking for you. To all the smart people in the room, what's the first 'M'?  
Audience Member:             Mindset.
Cory Boatright:           What's the second 'M'?
Audience Member:             Mechanics.
Cory Boatright:           What's the third one?
Audience Member:             Money.
In that order. I share this last thing with you. Ever since I was twenty one years old, I have a little bucket list I've made. One of them was to speak at Harvard. (audience  . . .  awww)
I really ... (audience applause) I sincerely appreciate taking the time. I do believe it's very valuable. I appreciate Mark, you had me., and to follow up a CEO millionaire is not a bad day, either, is it? Rememberand be a servant. That is one of the most powerful things that I can leave with you, to let you internalize that. Is to remember and serve others. In the shower, I say this when I get up in the morning. "My worst day is somebody else's paradise." Thank you very much. (audience applause)