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Jeff Munn, Creating Extraordinary Futures

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September 13, 2023 by Jeff

What if Generational Wealth is the Wrong Goal?

Wealth, Generational Wealth
What if Generational Wealth is the Wrong Goal?

When a successful founder thinks about selling, the goal is often something related to generational wealth.

That the proceeds from the sale can not only take care of the founder’s children, but multiple generations. That the family can be taken care of, forever.

The founders that I have talked to about this have never questioned this goal. It is taken as a given—that along with charity, taking care of the family forever is one of the principle benefits of building and selling a successful company.

While I have no issues with wealth creation, I question whether “generational wealth” is actually the right goal, or even a good one.

The Messed-Up Trust Fund Kid

What if never having to work is the worst possible result for someone?

Many of us know people who have been fortunate enough to have been born into wealth.

There are a few who use that wealth responsibly. They live within their means, they try to make meaningful contributions to society and to raise their children responsibly, for example.

Along with their money, they were gifted a set of values, including gratitude and responsibility to their fellow human beings.

They have a certain humility.

At the other end of the spectrum, we know the “trust fund kid” who blows through their inheritance and then wonders where the money went.

The More Important Inheritance

What if the most important thing you could gift to future generations was not your money but your time?

What if you weren’t the workaholic parent whose children accepted your gifts as a hollow excuse for your absence?

What if instead, you were there to teach them the values that enabled you to build your own financial independence, so that they knew they could do that for themselves?

To teach them to fish?

How powerful would that feel, to know that your influence had taught generations of your family how to both provide, for themselves and their families, but to love and be there for them, too.

Your Business is Better Without You

Your goal in building a business is that you be totally unnecessary to it.

That it run without you better than with you.

And yet that goal goes completely against why most people start a business.

They start a business to prove they are enough, that they are needed, that their parents were wrong about them.

And now they are showing their spouses, their own children that they would rather make money than spend time with them.

What if a different path were possible?

Are You Better Without Your Business?

I’m working with one of my clients on creating freedom for him. For the longest time, whenever I would talk about freedom, he would say that it meant “lifestyle cash.” And he would proceed to build more and more.

After a long weekend together, he realized what he most wanted was to be close to his family. And that he had no idea how to do that because he had not felt that growing up.

He had developed all these mechanisms to make himself feel safe and useful and that they were now isolating him.

Building a business can be like an addiction. There is never enough. 8 figures turns into 9 turns into 10 and still more beckons.

There is no number of homes or boats or planes that will produce freedom.

Because freedom is already there. You are made of it.

You only need to see it. Over and over and over.

But when you see it, it is always yours.

Freedom Is Always an Inside Game

Freedom can mean a lot of things.

Freedom fromthings like stress and negative self-talk.

Freedom to create in a more conscious way.

Including the power to create your legacy. To help your children see that they always have the capacity to create the future that they want.

Instead of relying on their trust fund.

How to Begin

If you are a founder wanting to scale and sell your company, there are three shifts in identity (thought) that can help you do so with twice the impact and half the stress. Take a look at this video.

If building a sustainable coaching business that will replace your corporate income is calling you, here’s a video where I share the top three mistakes I see coaches make when trying to build a sustainable business—

http://bit.ly/creatingextraordinarycoaches

You can subscribe to my YouTube channel here.

You can follow me on LinkedIn to make sure you never miss a post by hitting the bell on my profile.

If you want to subscribe to this Creating Extraordinary Futures newsletter, you can do so here.

And when you’re ready to go even deeper, send me a private message or an email. I’m happy to help you in any way I can.

#insight #leapoffaith #innatewisdom #founder #founders #executivecoach

Filed Under: Coaches, Founders Tagged With: ceo, executive coaching, founder journey

August 16, 2023 by Jeff

Managing My Own Obsessive Nature (While Becoming The Best Coach I Can)

executive coaches
Managing My Own Obsessive Nature

It hit me this morning as I was listening to the recent Fresh Air podcast interview with Christopher Nolan talking about his new movie, Oppenheimer.

I am obsessive.

Those of you who have been following me for a while know that I’m a big Christopher Nolan fan.

And one thing I have noticed is how often people use the word “obsessed” when they talk about him.

Obsessed about his audience’s experience of his films. Obsessed about using the best tools to create that experience (even inventing new tools in the process). Obsessed about writing. Obsessed about time.

Admitting I Have A Problem…

I’ve noticed (and resisted as my wife continually pointed it out to me) that I have those same qualities. And that I gravitate toward the greats in many fields. Movies. Sports. Standup comedy. Even sales and storytelling.

Those who have, to paraphrase Tim Ferriss, deconstructed excellence. Who have obsessed about it to the level of replicating every detail. Even while recognizing the things that simply cannot be replicated.

I’ve been a coach for many years, and a full time professional coach for the last seven. I am coming to understand that my own obsessions about the nature and malleability of our human experience, and the process of sharing my learnings, have led me deeper and deeper into the possibilities of coaching as a catalyst for human change.

My obsessions have not only made me a better coach, they have made me better at building a coaching business.

Others have asked me how I have been able to build a one-on-one coaching business that replaced my corporate income, with only a few clients.

How I was able to enroll clients for a year of conversation at fees that exceed the cost of most automobiles.

I have taken the last year deconstructing how I do that, so that I can do it more effectively. And my obsession has had an unexpected side effect.

Obsessing About Teaching My Obsessions

I now understand my thinking and my methods well enough to teach them to other coaches.

What was implicit has become explicit.

The Art of Coaching

There is an art to coaching.

When I am fully present, I not only know what to say next, but it simply pops into my head. And that presence someone creates a space for my client to have new insights as well.

Together, we literally create things that have not seemed possible before.

My capacity to be present has been the strongest driver of my coaching success. That capacity was built over thirty years of personal development work. Meditation. Retreats. Studying with teachers. Every successful coach I know has done a lot of this kind of work.

But there is another part to this that is more predictable. More explainable. More teachable.

The Science of Coaching

There is also a science to coaching. A “how to.” A process that can be replicated.

What is the best way to build a coaching business?

What is the best way to reach out to someone?

What is the best way to get a conversation?

What is the best way to, within the context of that conversation, introduce them to the idea of and experience of coaching?

What is the best way to enroll them in a coaching journey, one that could take a year or longer, and could change their lives and everyone around them?

These are the questions I obsess about. The questions that increase my capacity to connect with the people I most want to connect with.

And the answers to these questions are what I can now teach.

Do you have a particular question? A particular type of coaching business you would like to build?

Chances are, I have spent a great deal of time obsessing over that very thing.

It’s just what I do.

Discovering WHAT people need to do, and then helping them practice HOW to do it.

Like learning a martial art or a musical instrument, for example, you have to be willing to do the same things, over and over, to learn and practice the skills that you need.

Having a group of people around you who are committed to the same thing is incredibly helpful. Had I had a similar group I think it could have saved me years.

I am creating a Group Apprentice Program to teach everything I have learned.

If you want to learn more, here’s how to start.

How to Start

If a building a sustainable coaching business that will replace your corporate income is calling you, here’s a video where I share the the top three mistakes I see coaches make when trying to build a sustainable business—

http://bit.ly/creatingextraordinarycoaches

You will also get a link to my calendar to ask the question YOU have been obsessing about.

You can subscribe to my YouTube channel here—

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4FuzFAukDC_3nEGQB6AYbQ?sub_confirmation=1

You can follow me on LinkedIn and never miss a post: www.linkedin.com/comm/mynetwork/discovery-see-all?usecase=PEOPLE_FOLLOWS&followMember=jeffmunn

If you’re not already subscribed to my newsletters, you can do so here:

https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/creating-monthly-6930267414546821120

And when you’re ready to go even deeper, send me a private message or an email. I’m happy to help you any way I can.

hashtag#leapoffaith hashtag#coach hashtag#founder hashtag#founders

Filed Under: Coaches Tagged With: advice, coaches, coaching

July 31, 2023 by Jeff

What I’ve Learned In Seven Years of Building a Coaching Business

coaches, executive coaching
What I’ve Learned In Seven Years of Building a Coaching Business

Seven years ago today, on August 2, 2016, I was laid off from my last corporate job at Fidelity Investments. I was let go along with 155 of my colleagues, at it was almost a total surprise.

I had been laid off once before, in 2003, and had found another job at the same company. (I worked there 8 more years.) So my first thought was that I would do that again. Even a few months of that would make a big difference in the long-term payouts that I would vest it.

But I quickly figured out that was not going to happen.

That’s when the panic set in.

I realized later that I was operating under the assumption that there was no way I could replace my generous corporate income by coaching. I knew I didn’t want to take another “jobby job” as one of my corporate friends liked to call it, but I thought that given my health care expertise would qualify me to go out on my own as a consultant.

That resulted in some offers for job interviews, but no consulting gigs.

More panic.

Another of my corporate friends effectively slapped me across the face and said, “What are you doing? You say you want to coach. Coach!”

And at that point I started thinking about building a coaching business.

Learning Number One—No One Knows What Coaching Is

When I started reaching out to people in my network to tell them I was now a coach, the most common reaction was, “What sport?”

And when I tried to tell them about coaching, and specifically MY coaching, I fumbled a lot. I hired a well-known coach, Rich Litvin, to help me build my business before I had any paying clients, and the work that we did together was all about that part of it—determining who I wanted to help and how I was going to help them. And talking about it in a way that they would see the wisdom of paying me handsomely to work together.

It was a struggle. It challenged everything in me. Just to say what I did in a compelling way was an ongoing battle.

Learning Number Two—I Had to Figure Out How to Spend My Time

For years I had worked in companies in roles where I had some degree of freedom (certainly compared with most people), but there was still a lot of structure. In a given day I had meetings and calls and there was weekly travel and I generally knew what I was doing and what I was supposed to be doing.

Now, the goal was “get people to hire me as a coach.”

But there was little in the way of project plans to help someone do that. The closest thing was a book called, “The Prosperous Coach,” written by Rich Litvin and Steve Chandler, and while it is an incredibly helpful book, advice like “coach people powerfully” didn’t quite give me the structure that I, a corporate refugee, needed.

I had to create my own routine, my own structure, and keep myself from getting distracted from all of the things that looked productive but really were not helpful in building a business. Things like additional trainings and programs and certifications, setting up sales funnels, using Facebook Ads, and so on and so on and so on.

Learning Number Three—Building A Business Is Slower Than I Thought It Would Be

Much slower.

While I didn’t really decide to focus on coaching exclusively until October of 2016, I didn’t get my first paying client until May of 2017. (May 27, to be exact. I still have the check.) My thoughts of getting one new client a month, it turns out, were way off, mainly because I still didn’t know how to explain what I did to people in a way that made them want to pay me money for it.

And there was only one way that I could tell to get better at it.

Conversations. Lots of conversations. Conversations with everyone in my network around what I was doing now, how I was helping people who I wanted to help, who specifically I was looking to work with. Conversations where I proposed that we have coaching conversations. Conversations where I was asking for introductions to people I might want to coach. Conversations where I offered to help people whether I wanted to coach them or not.

An exceedingly small number of these conversations turned into anything. But the ones that did involved two things.

Learning Number Four—The Most Important Skill Is Deep Listening

Most people listen for gaps so they can speak.

Most people have never truly been listened to in their entire lives. Even by their spouses.

When you truly listen, when you practice what my teacher Jack Pransky calls “Deep Listening,” you have nothing on your mind. Nothing that you feel compelled to say, no urge to interrupt.

Until you do. And then, when you do say something, you often are able to observe something about the person in front of you that they might not even realize. You might be able to identify a possibility that they have not even considered.

That is the beginning of coaching. At least the kind of transformational coaching that we can offer if we can create the space for it.

There is one more ingredient that has made a huge difference, especially in the last couple of years.

Learning Number Five—Referrals Are Incredibly Important

My business really didn’t become sustainable until I had a small group of people who regularly referred me work.

And I cultivate referrers just as strongly as I cultivate potential clients. Maybe more so.

I’m not talking about referrals in exchange for fees. I am talking about people who are happy to get someone the help that they need, and who know that I will take care of anyone they send my way, whether I end up working with them or not.

Learning Number Six—Social Media is Important, but Not For The Reason You Think

I started writing on LinkedIn a long time ago. But I rarely get a client because of a piece I wrote on LinkedIn.

I recently expanded my presence to YouTube, and now Facebook and Instagram. But again, I am not sure I have gotten more than an occasional client directly from social media.

But what I have heard is that I am easy to research. From my website, my writing, my video, it is really easy to get a sense of who I am and what I believe. If someone does hear about me from a friend, they can very quickly assess whether it makes sense to have a conversation.

It saves everyone time. And it gets me more committed clients.

And to go back some of the earlier learnings, writing helps me think about how I work with people and who I want to work with and how I can help them. Writing helps accelerate the conversation process.

I am learning about myself just like my clients are.

So let’s say you want to build a sustainable coaching business instead of continuing or going back to the corporate world. What’s the most important learning of all?

Learning Number Seven—All My Learnings Are Learnable. And Teachable.

When other coaches learn what I have been up to—how I have been able to build my business, how it is now both my only source of income and has exceeded the income from the job I was laid off from, they naturally have questions.

I have helped a lot of coaches in this way. I enjoy it. It was never my primary goal, but I do feel a strong desire to help more coaches create sustainable businesses.

And I find that each of the things that I am talking about here is both teachable and learnable.

But like anything, like learning a martial art or a musical instrument, for example, you have to be willing to do the same things, over and over, to learn the skills that you need.

Having a group of people around you who are committed to the same thing is incredibly helpful. Had I had a similar group I think it could have saved me years.

How to Start

If a sustainable business, on your own, outside the corporate world, is calling you, here are three steps you CAN take—

If you would like a video where you learn the the top three mistakes I see coaches make when trying to build a sustainable business, click here—

http://bit.ly/creatingextraordinarycoaches

Subscribe to my YouTube channel here—

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4FuzFAukDC_3nEGQB6AYbQ?sub_confirmation=1

Follow me on LinkedIn and never miss a post: www.linkedin.com/comm/mynetwork/discovery-see-all?usecase=PEOPLE_FOLLOWS&followMember=jeffmunn

If you are not already subscribed to my newsletters, you can do so here:

https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/creating-monthly-6930267414546821120

And when you’re ready to go even deeper, send me a message.

hashtag#leapoffaith hashtag#coach hashtag#founder hashtag#founders

Filed Under: Coaches Tagged With: coach, coaches

Jeff Munn



(970) 922-9272
jeff@jmunn.com


Carbondale, CO

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Phone: (970) 922-9272
Email: jeff@jmunn.com
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