Episode #201 – Erik Stafford On Overcoming The “Secret Sadness” of Business.
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Manage episode 258580307 series 1567841
I conducted this interview with Erik back in November of 2016.
Intended to release it under the Takeover Tuesday banner, I held it back when I came over to the McMethod.
It is a very important episode and one every entrepreneur should listen to.
A great many of you will have experienced exactly what Erik speaks of.
The “secret sadness”.
He has had this particular “sadness” inflict itself on his life three times.
Each of these events spiked with a “harajuku” moment.
A realization which said he could not move further down the path.
Erik admits much of this is painful to state.
Vulnerability is not seen as an admirable business trait.
By talking about this though it will shift into the open.
Freeing others to talk about it too.
What impact does this have on your life?
Your family?
Your clients?
Erik goes into painstaking detail about this most intimate subject.
This is a superb episode.
In this episode, you’ll discover:
- The stunning “kids and I will be homeless” email he woke up to one morning.
- The truth behind the 5 options you have of dealing with your “harajuku” moment.
- A little-known secret can steer you through these type of events with confidence.
- How to avoid falling into the “prostitutes, drugs and alcohol” scenarios.
- The “seat-belt” moment which instigated Erik losing 60 pounds.
Mentioned:
Intro and outro backing music: Forever More by CREO
David Allan: Hey, everybody today on the show we have Eric Stafford. I think I first heard about Eric from buddy of mine
Colin Theriot, and you guys are good buddies Eric?
Erik Stafford: We are. I’ve known Colin for a number of years he’s a very good dude.
David Allan: Now you come from an advertising and design background you’ve won a bunch of awards and you’ve been a serial
entrepreneur, product creator and soforth lending your expertise to multiple businesses over time how did you get into the, you know, the advertising world and maybe take us through your sort of
superhero origin story about how you got into all this.
Erik Stafford: No sure absolutely so on you know I guess you could probably say gave that my life has been a series of realizations and moments where I just you know sort of was like well this just isn’t gonna cut it anymore and I’m not sure if you could say that’s true about everyone but I think that’s probably true about most people I thinkmost people you know when they look back on their life with a critical eye they can kind of see where they had these very specific moments where they just decided look something’s got to change
right and I know that I’m a marketing wonk so I read a lot of books I know that Malcolm Gladwell called this a Harajuku moment. A moment… a defining moment right? And I think Tim Ferriss may
have had stolen that from him and used it and what his folks as well but the first one that I can think of specifically as it relates to busines was you know I had two young kids and we had built a very successful advertising agency here in Southwest Florida but I
was working 80-hour weeks and I just you know I just one morning realize look you know I can’t do this I can’t do this forever you know I I will work my way into a grave and my kids will be you
know grown and gone and I won’t I will never know them and you know it’s a painful realization because my entire life I had wanted growing up to be a creative director in an ad agency right and so I you know I out there and I got to that point and realized well you know I’m not happy and you know we were winning all these
incredible awards addy awards and Art
Awards and um we’re even featured in all
sorts of press we’re doing incredible
work for clients that really inspired me
but it just it just wasn’t sustainable
as far as I was concerned and so I
realized I had to make a change and so
you know I majored in fine art grew up
got to the position that I wanted to be
in in sort of the creative world I was
running an ad agency the creative to the
creative department of an ad agency and
so I realized something had to change
and so I started researching different
businesses that I may start and that led
me into internet marketing and led me to
creating my first products and things of
that nature and I developed a bunch of
digital products I hadn’t built an
incredibly successful business and then
one morning woke up and realized that I
was unhappy with that business and I
understand right now that I’m probably
coming across as the most ungrateful
turd on the planet but but that’s
literally what happens to me yeah
well that’s exactly why I wanted you on
the show I’d seen a video yours I think
you went on so Facebook live or
something and you were talking about you
know how you woke up one day and just
realized and it sounds like for the
second time or more that this wasn’t
what you wanted to be doing and you know
I have definitely felt that way for sure
I definitely instantly related to that
I’d started other businesses in the past
and and gone on for some cases years and
then realized this is just not what I
thought it would be and definitely don’t
want to do this anymore and you know I I
would just outright just quit like that
day basic right as if as if I was never
interested in it at all and so that’s
that’s so maybe talk about that I mean
I think it takes a while to get to that
point to that maybe people don’t even
realize because I know I didn’t yeah I
mean it depends you know I tend to think
that entrepreneurs are wired a little
bit differently than the normal people
and you know most entrepreneurs myself
included aren’t willing really so much
to settle and so even if I were willing
to settle I don’t think the universe is
willing to let me settle and so that’s
the whole reason that I quote-unquote
quit my job to begin with was because I
just didn’t didn’t feel that working
that many hours and missing that much of
my kid’s life was something that I could
put up with right and so that’s why I
quit my job to begin with and so when
this happened the second time in my
business when I fast forward from you
know from the early two-thousands to
like 2008 and this happened in my own
business it was a very sort of similar
thing it was like you know I’ve woke up
and realized I hated my business but it
was quite a bit it was quite a bit
harder for me to get my head around and
it was quite a bit harder for me to
stomach but it’s it’s a very similar
feeling it’s like right well you know
I’m not willing to do this anymore this
just doesn’t work for me anymore but
when you’re an entrepreneur and it’s
your own business and it’s something
you’ve built with your own two hands
from scratch especially you know when
you’re in an industry you know sort of
similar to the industry that I was
working and at the time you know is
working in sort of like personal
development online marketing digital
digital product development things like
that it’s very difficult it’s very
difficult to admit and and I think this
may be true for a lot of business owners
difficult to admit that you’re unhappy
when you’ve worked so hard to build
something that on the surface appears to
be going so well right right and so you
know at the time I was spending all the
time in the world that I wanted with my
kids my wife and I were extremely happy
I built an engineer to life that I
really wanted but I really had always
envisioned but the physical act of doing
the work that it took to live that life
I hated it
and it’s it’s tough to admit that you
know there’s people that subscribe to
entrepreneurial style followings there’s
a lot of talk about being grateful and
about gratitude and about abundance and
so it’s very difficult you know to say
that you’re unhappy you can be grateful
and yet I’m happy but I didn’t quite
understand the distinction at the time
and so I just remember a very long
period of time
of me sort of thinking myself like Eric
what’s wrong with you man why are you so
on the motivated are you say depressed
like look at you know look at the money
you make and look at how you get to live
your life like if you told any of your
friends that you felt this way they
would they would laugh at you they would
think you’re in it but I couldn’t hide I
couldn’t hide from those feelings I you
know I I clearly was not happy and so
it’s a very difficult thing when you’re
an entrepreneur to sort of own that and
separate it from thoughts of like not
being grateful or not feeling fun the
secret sadness it is yeah it’s sort of
this painful solo you know journey that
entrepreneurs have to take and you know
I’ve not heard anyone else talking about
this and yet I know it to be true for a
lot of my peers and my colleagues and my
friends and you know I’m I’m grateful
that when I went through this process
and as you said I’ve gone through this
process three times now but I’m grateful
that uh you know I kept the rails on
somewhat for each of those three
transitions right but you know I know a
lot of people where this process is led
to you know heavy heavy alcohol abuse
and heavy drug abuse and lots of you
know trips to Vegas and full of spending
of money interactions with prostitutes
cheating on spouses even in some cases
suicide and it’s just it’s a it’s a
secret sadness that not many
entrepreneurs are really able to talk
about or discuss and an own you know
it’s really difficult to aim the lens at
yourself and I certainly know I didn’t
feel like I could talk with my wife
about this you know my wife just wanted
to know that
everything was gonna be fine and that we
would still be able to get Evan the
private soccer lessons and that we’d
still be able to take the summer road
trip and um you know so I very much felt
alone in this journey I didn’t feel like
I could speak with any of my colleagues
or peers I didn’t want anyone to
perceive me as being weak and so it just
was that sort of thing I just sort of
sat with yeah I think that’s uh that’s
I’ve seen that I think I saw it until we
started talking here just recently about
this I you know I sort of reflected
knowing that you were coming on the show
just kind of like you know where have I
seen this elsewhere you know and I was
just like yeah you know I can pinpoint a
few other people where I just like they
said things to me at the time which
didn’t really register and I thought to
myself probably what you like you were
saying about your friends how they would
have judged you I think I probably I
never said it to their face but if I
judge a thing like man you know talking
about but I was just kind of like oh man
I’m sure it’ll pass kind of thing you
know and then and then I had it happen
to me in at least one occasion where I
was just like man I just don’t want to
do this I just and I think it was a sort
of multifactorial problem that sort of I
came into and that I really just wasn’t
what I thought it was I didn’t really
want to do it anymore because I aspect
of it but not the other six you know
yeah I could I remember thinking myself
like really I worked so hard for this
and it’s finally I was finally going
successful yeah but you could see that
it was going to be so for you and you’ve
done this now three times where did you
start with at first did you realize like
I got a I mean obviously quit but but I
mean did you have a specific plan of
action that you were gonna take or did
you later come into that well I mean I
think it all starts with that sort of
harajuku moment that moment where you’re
like shit what have I done like a moment
that moment where you go how did I how
did I get here you know and it’s funny
because you know I can track moments
like that throughout my life
now that I know what to look for in
terms of you know relationships or in
terms of my health you know if if you’re
overweight you know you you will never
lose the weight that you want until you
have that moment no amount of your
spouse beating on you you know I speak
from experience I lost 60 pounds over
the last several years and it wasn’t
easy yeah yeah thank you man I
appreciate it it wasn’t easy but it
became so much easier once I had that
moment and that moment in terms of my
weight loss was I actually was flying
somewhere and couldn’t get a seatbelt
around right and the stewardess said to
me do you want a seatbelt extender which
apparently in America is a thing which
is even creepier but but anyway that was
the moment dude where I was like this
has to change this this this is
embarrassing this is shocking this is
shin I hate this this has to change and
so it starts with that moment and the
moment with the ad agency with with my
sort of first career was I lived about
about a 20 mile drive from the office
but during season you know Florida’s
very seasonal during seasons sometimes
that drive could take upwards of two
hours and so during season I would I
would try and go to the office really
early to avoid traffic and then come
home either early in the day if possible
which never happened or late at night
and one night I was driving home late at
night and I started to fall asleep at
the wheel and I opened my eyes and
snapped out of it and realized I was in
the middle of a red light and so I
slammed on the brakes and my Jeep sort
of fishtailed and did this earth thing
and I stopped at 2:30 in the morning in
the middle of a red light with no other
cars around anywhere if there had been a
car there I would have been killed and
that was the moment where I was like
yeah I got to do something about this
and so it starts with that moment and
it’s funny dude you had said you know
that you know there’s been a couple
times in your life where you found
yourself in situations where you’re like
yeah right this doesn’t work for me I’m
blowing this up I’ve done and that
certainly is you know one of the op
in my experience when this happens
there’s there’s four options the first
option is to ignore it and do nothing
which we’ve talked about a little bit I
don’t know for most people especially
entrepreneurs I don’t know that that’s
really an option right I don’t think
entrepreneurs are really wired that way
and I think you know we might be able to
ignore for a little while because we
like you know we like giant incomes and
we like being able to have that car or
we like being able to live the life we
live or whatever but right I don’t I
don’t think for most of us we can ignore
it forever so I don’t really see the
first option as an option the second
option is to quite simply get fed up and
blow it up and just walk away again I
don’t know that that’s the best option
but again we’re finicky beasts us
entrepreneurs and sometimes we’ve just
had enough and that’s it right so um
that certainly is what happened in 2010
or so with the first internet business
that I had built I woke up one morning I
received an email from a customer a guy
that had purchased one of my courses in
the middle of the night and he emailed
me and said hey bro I bought your course
in the middle of the night it really
needs to work for me because if it
doesn’t I need to make five grand by
this might even three grand I need to
make several grand by this weekend
otherwise my kids and I will be homeless
Wow and I was like yep I’m done you know
because my sales letters never promised
any sort of money from the sky or any
other yeah but at the time you know it
was 2010 and the the housing crisis was
becoming a very real situation that the
banking collapse was looming and it was
just a very difficult time for a lot of
people and my systems and my lead
generation systems my affiliate stuff
was geared to bring me those people and
I didn’t realize it until that moment
and and at that point I blew that
business up I literally uh I logged in
oh my god I can’t believe him tell
people I logged into autoresponder I
deleted 75,000 people from my email us
Wow and then I logged into my CMS or
whatever and I deleted all of my monthly
members I had over a thousand people
paying us $50 a month for a monthly
membership for training and stuff and I
logged into my FTP client deleted all my
websites and I basically blew it up I
blew it up and I walked away and I like
to tell people that you know I had
sunglasses on I was walking slowly it
was exploding behind me it was very cool
there were kittens involved like it you
know that’s but no in truth told brother
it was extremely painful I spent I spent
a long time right it’s just not
understanding what had happened how I
built a business I hated and not
understanding what to do next
worried about my family and not sleeping
it was a terrible time when I felt like
a failure dude because you know who he
does that right and so I think the first
step is that Harajuku moment of
realizing that you are no longer
comfortable where you’re at and you’re
no longer willing to settle with where
you’re at and then the second step is
understanding that it’s okay and
understanding that all businesses go
through silence and that all
entrepreneurs shift and change goals
shift and change a good example of that
being Netflix you know your your your
longer in the tooth like I am you
remember when Netflix used to just be a
DVD company they would send you DVDs in
the mail and they transitioned from that
to being an online service and now
they’re transitioning from that into
being a movie studio yeah right and so
on
you know this stuff it when you
understand that this stuff is inevitable
and that it’s natural and it doesn’t
mean that you’re a failure then you can
start to look at other options besides
the first two which are to ignore it or
to blow it up right okay you see a lot
of people serve and that maybe that’s
exactly why is you know you see people
pivoting their businesses and so forth
and you think to yourself oh this guy’s
just being very clever
trying to get into something new but I’m
thinking about it now I’m probably sure
there’s a lot of those scenarios with a
person well that’s how they got out of
where they were yeah if they’re smart I
mean it it definitely takes a lot of
self-awareness and it takes a lot of a
willingness to really aim the lens at
your own self which can which can be
painful it’s it’s not always been an
easy process but but I you know I will
say that when you understand that this
sort of thing happens you know I was
chatting I was chatting with one of my
favorite authors a guy named Marty
Neumayer who wrote a book called the
brand gap and he wrote also called zag
which are incredible marketing books but
I was chatting with him once and and I
was explaining this to him and he goes
oh yeah dude like that’s happened to me
like six times in my life that happens
to me like every two years
and I was like shut up really I don’t
hear about this on you know on podcaster
in the interview I don’t hear anyone
talking about this and he’s like now
dude it’s totally natural like you know
everyone pivots my first business was
designing software boxes there’s not
even software boxes anymore let alone a
computer stores to buy software and I
had changed my business and I was like
oh wow shit and so um yeah I mean
understanding it and owning it allows
you to look at like you had just
mentioned the other two options which
are you know to remove yourself from
your business you know methodically
remove yourself whether it’s something
as simple as just starting to outsource
some of the things that make you the
most unhappy document what you’re doing
and outsource it or hire someone to come
in and and do those tasks so that you
don’t have to and you can focus on other
more more liberating and more more soul
filling tasks in your business or you
know to go as deep as to remove yourself
completely you know to hire an
Operations Manager and pay him a large
salary and just take a smaller
percentage of the business and let
someone else run it or even sell your
business right that’s certainly an
option and then you know the fourth
option is to realign your business which
you had mentioned it’s to sort of pivot
and and move
your business back into alignment with
your ethics and with with you know where
you’re at and what your goals are right
you’ve seen that over time with a few
I’m trying to think it doesn’t matter
even to mention you know names but you
certainly have seen that in the internet
marketing thing over time you’ve seen a
few people go through that where they
chose to rely in they’re there for
ethical issues or whatever their reasons
were you can sort of see you know coming
up born-again marketer almost of thing
right that yeah it’s tough man it’s
tough to separate it’s tough to separate
the reality from the chaff because you
know I know certain markers who have a
retirement sale every year right so I
mean it’s um it’s a very strange place
it’s a you know it’s not an
entrepreneurial it’s not commonly seen
to be an entrepreneurial trait to be
vulnerable right and to be open and to
be shamelessly honest with yourself
everyone needs to appear bullet right
and so it requires a certain level of
vulnerability to really look at where
you’re at and say you know look I’m
grateful I’m grateful but I’m unhappy
there’s a big big difference the most
recent time that this realignment
occurred for me was at the beginning of
the summer and at the time you know I
loved everything about my life except
what I had to do to live it that was
super happy we were making great money
I was never wearing shoes I was working
on my lanai in the beautiful Florida
weather I was working out at the gym a
lot I was going to yoga a lot I was
eating lunch with my friends almost
every day I was watching a ton of
European soccer yeah life was a really
good man but you know I would open my
laptop in the morning and just go oh
like really I got to do this today
yeah well that’s interesting too because
from seeing like you know we’re friends
on Facebook and so forth you know just
watching you
from a distance and that’s what was
probably you know real surprising to me
when you put up the video and I thought
okay well that’s interesting because I’d
see your stuff popping up you know you
would take your family to Vegas in the
Pacific Northwest and so forth and you
look like you’re just living the life
you know and again that’s part of that
you know no one I would have never
suspected for a second that you weren’t
happy with what you were doing because
you know you get the suppression of
people based on a series of photos
videos or snapshots on the internet or
whatever yeah yeah for sure I mean I
don’t feel that I was intentionally
deceiving people I think I was deceiving
myself yeah because I didn’t want to
admit it I didn’t want to look at it I
didn’t want to cast the lens at myself
and and like I had said you know I loved
almost every aspect of my life during
that time except one and so for me too
for me to go really am I gonna I gonna
blow something up again or am I gonna I
gonna do this again
really but like I had said you know as
I’ve done this now several times it’s it
I will say to those of you listening
that it gets less painful every time and
it takes less time every time and at
least for me it’s been a less radical
shift every time so this last time that
this happened it was a a slight
realignment that really has brought me
immense pleasure and happiness and
working again that’s great to hear man
yeah that sounds like you’ve learned
lessons of course from the previous
realignments if that’s the term we’re
going to use
and so yeah the fact that happens
quicker and stuff it’s not such a
colossal ordeal where you have all these
doubts cuz you’ve had these things
before and you realize what it is yeah
yep yeah the first time it happened I
switched entire careers right right and
the second time it happened I blew
everything up and started over the third
time it happened it was merely a
realignment a slight adjustment in my
path based on my shifting goals okay so
let’s take you back to begin let’s take
it back to the beginning of the summer
what was your business then and what did
you realign so I had built I had built a
business where I was doing conversion
consulting based on my experience in in
in the agency world and also in
participating in a lot of high-end
launches launching my own product split
testing a lot of my own pages and a lot
of my own assets and then working with
clients for so many years but I built a
business where I was just consulting and
helping other entrepreneurs with their
conversions and it was it was a great
business it was a really really
lucrative business we charged a $2,500 a
month flat retainer and we would meet
with our clients once a week or twice a
month depending on what suited them and
you don’t need a whole lot of clients at
$2,500 a month to live a very good life
but what had happened is a couple of
things the first thing that it happened
was I let I let some of my clients
readjust our arrangement to better suit
them and I loved I loved all of the
people that I was working with at the
time and I don’t think it was malicious
but I do think it’s human nature to try
and get as much as you possibly can out
of any situation that’s why people eat
at buffets right and so could you know a
couple of my clients one of them in
particular they were like oh well you
know we fired our in-house team and so
is there any way that you could just
update all the split tests this week and
and because I love watching European
soccer and going to yoga and hanging out
with my kids I said yeah sure no problem
and suddenly I was doing all of the
implementation instead of consulting
which is how I’d originally envisioned
isness right and so there was a lot of
school
creep there and there was a lot of extra
hours that were happening suddenly there
and I just didn’t have the balls to tell
them no because I loved everything else
about my life and so that happened with
a couple of my clients one of them
I went from consulting to actually
writing their emails okay and part of
this also is you know I feel a strong
sense of responsibility and I wanted my
clients to get results and a lot of
times I would just say to myself look
you know this this guy that’s working
for my client is an idiot I’m just gonna
do it like just tell your guys to leave
this alone I got this yeah because I
wanted my clients to get results right
and so the business sort of crept up on
the intern into something where I was
back to doing a lot of pixel pushing and
a lot of copy writing and a lot of
implementation which is not how I had
envisioned the business right another
one of my clients landed their dream
contract and literally got so busy that
they were no longer able to get on the
phone with me right and so you know I
would I would send them all my
recommendations I would send them my
conversion on it and I would say hey man
look let’s get on the phone next week
and they go yeah yeah definitely and
then we just never would and so you know
man just send the invoice it’s all good
we’re just slam and I just I was feeling
these people $2,500 a month and
literally doing nothing for right it
just didn’t sit well with me you know it
was minor things and again I understand
that I sound like the world’s biggest
herb for for being unhappy right to kill
someone for doing nothing I you know but
but again I mean you only live this life
once I think that when you can build a
business that’s in such alignment with
who you are and with your passions and
your goals that it literally is seamless
and you show up you know for your wife
the same way you show up for your kids
and the same exact way that you show up
for your clients it is so integrated
with how you want to live your life and
how you want to show up that there is no
distinction that that was my goal and
and so I had I had to I had to change it
so you made these so this sort of
as you were going along and then and
what way did you decide okay this is the
buck stops here we’re doing this from
now on yeah so what happened what
happened at the beginning of the summer
was that as soon as I sort of realized
that I was no longer able to deal with
this I think it became very apparent and
the work that we were doing for our
clients they were still getting results
but our heart wasn’t in it within a very
short period of time I gently let go of
or was let go of by almost all of our
clients within the space of six weeks we
sort of separated and went our separate
ways from nearly all of our clients
within six weeks within eight weeks all
of them were gone Wow and I tell you
what though dude
like no joke it was the most liberating
feeling in the world because it created
space for me to really spend some time
over the summer sitting and reflecting
on what that ideal business might look
like and where I might transition to to
fill me up and to make me happy does
sound liberating and I could tell just
by the way talked about it that it was
like this yeah it’s so true and you know
it’s an emotional thing for me to
discuss because you know I’d said
earlier that each time that I’ve gone
through this process it’s taken less
time and it’s become easier and it’s
also it’s also become more liberated and
more free and you know I I quite
honestly I never I never really thought
that it was possible to build a business
that I enjoyed so much I never thought
that it was possible to do something to
where I felt in alignment with with
really what I feel I do best for people
and how I want to show up and and the
results that I get for people the
Japanese have a a term for this actually
it’s called I key guy i ki GA I I
believe but it basically means your
reason for being and it’s a combination
between that which you love to do and
that which the world needs and that
which you are very good at and when all
of
those are in alignment with that which
makes you money then you have found your
IQ guys according to the Japanese you
found your reason for being I found mine
I found that yeah it’s no it’s like I
don’t know I feel like that scene in the
matrix right where every morning I wake
up and I grab my bulletproof coffee and
it’s like I see the code Wow check this
out
very cool that’s the slight real in a
long roundabout way I’m sorry I didn’t
answer your question but the sly tree
line that I made was I realized that the
best way for me to serve my clients and
the thing that I am best at and that
which inspires me is to help businesses
through this process it’s to help
entrepreneurs build businesses or
recreate or reinvent their businesses
into something that not only makes them
more money but also makes them happy
right that’s great ma’am it sounds like
you really have found that that
intersection people need and obviously
what you want to do so that’s that’s a
great realization
thanks man yeah it feels very good so
what is the immediate future hold for
Eric Stafford are you going to it’s it’s
not a sort of situation where it’s like
great let’s build a sales team and I’m
gonna build a webinar we’re gonna we’re
gonna blow this up and you know like
like I had mentioned I’m really quite
happy with every other aspect of my life
and so for me it’s just a matter of
putting that intention out there and
understanding that this message will
resonate with the right people and if if
that looks like a great fit for us to
work together then I’m certainly open to
that and if it isn’t then it isn’t and
that’s just out of this and again it’s
just super liberating to not feel tied
to those outcomes it’s just liberating
to know that I’m doing what I’m what I’m
here to do and so the clients the
clients understand and the right people
have showed up and I’m working several
clients and
and it’s incredibly rewarding now if
people do want to get a hold of you and
they listen to this and they they feel
like they may be in this or quagmire
were there you know secretly sad but the
what what they want and they’re thinking
about pivoting or blowing it up or we’re
just suffering and needlessly in
desolation that how do people get a hold
of you so the best way to reach me you
can certainly find me on Facebook I’m
guessing if you’re listening to this we
probably share some similar friends you
can find me on Facebook Eric Stafford on
Facebook or you can check out Stafford
marketing.com
or Eric Stafford calm those are my
websites awesome this is something that
virtually nobody talks about I’ve never
heard another not listen to every
podcast on earth but I’ve certainly
listened to a lot of the major ones and
I’ve never heard anyone I’m really
delving into this this is something I
think that exists probably in a much
greater number than anyone wants to talk
about or even understands kind of the
tip of the iceberg idea there but you
have some real good strategies and I
haven’t gone through it yourself Eric it
sounds like you got a grip on this thing
well thank you very much man I
appreciate you having me and uh and I
respect what you do so I’m proud to be a
part of it thanks a lot Matt and we’ll
be back again to the next episode and
hopefully we’ll have someone as real and
authentic and as kick-ass is Eric
The post Episode #201 – Erik Stafford On Overcoming The “Secret Sadness” of Business. appeared first on Drop Dead Copy.
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