Eric Gilbert Williams

Episode
Eric Gilbert Williams is a Canadian entrepreneur, business mentor, inventor and author in progress. He grew his last venture to...
Key takeaways
- Entrepreneurs must become business people by developing skills beyond their core strengths and embracing the role of a specialized generalist who can flex into whatever the organization needs at any moment.
- Focus on fundamental business basics and incremental progress through singles and doubles rather than chasing home runs, as consistent small steps forward ultimately lead to sustainable success.
- Every business goes through distinct maturity phases from zero to five employees up to larger teams, and each phase requires completely different skill sets and leadership approaches to navigate successfully.
- Starting each morning by writing three things you're grateful for and actually feeling that gratitude before writing helps you respond better to challenges rather than simply reacting emotionally.
- During economic downturns, return to core values and ask why you're in business, focus on improving customer experience incrementally, and inspire your team by being the best version of yourself one day at a time.
Transcript
Full transcript page · Interactive episode
============================================================ TRANSCRIPTION WITH SPEAKERS ============================================================ [00:00] SPEAKER_01: It's Calgary's podcast on the Canada's podcast network. [00:14] SPEAKER_01: Hello, this is Bonnie Elchie coming to you today with Calgary's podcast, a member of the Canada's [00:20] SPEAKER_01: podcast network, where we talk to the entrepreneurs who are making it happen here in the city of [00:26] SPEAKER_01: Calgary, Alberta, so you can listen, discover and engage. [00:30] SPEAKER_01: Today's guest is Eric Gilbert Williams. Eric is a Canadian entrepreneur, business mentor, [00:37] SPEAKER_01: inventor, and author in progress. He grew his last venture to 60 people, several million [00:44] SPEAKER_01: dollars in annual revenue, and reached the number 20 spot for the fastest growing company [00:49] SPEAKER_01: in Canada, as per the growth 500 list. As a teenager, Eric struggled with drugs and gangs, [00:55] SPEAKER_01: but he found redemption through embracing the entrepreneurial spirit with a laser-like [01:00] SPEAKER_01: intensity. Eric is now helping other entrepreneurs with their business and writing a book to help [01:06] SPEAKER_01: struggling teenagers and their families experience a similar type of redemption and success in life. [01:13] SPEAKER_01: So Eric, thanks for joining us today and welcome to the show. [01:17] SPEAKER_00: Thank you, Bonnie, for the great introduction and I appreciate your time and excited to [01:20] SPEAKER_00: be here. [01:21] SPEAKER_01: Why don't we jump right in and you can tell me a little bit about how you actually got started [01:26] SPEAKER_01: in your business that you've recently sold and just a little bit about your entrepreneurial [01:32] SPEAKER_01: journey. So our listeners have an opportunity to get to know you a bit. [01:36] SPEAKER_00: Sure, sure. And it depends on how far back we want to go, right? And you know, from the [01:41] SPEAKER_00: Calgary perspective, I moved to Calgary from Kitchener, Ontario in November 2006 and I [01:48] SPEAKER_00: moved out while the construction season was in Boone time, where oil was in Boone and of [01:53] SPEAKER_00: course the down effect and the consequences positive on construction. So I moved from Kitchener [01:59] SPEAKER_00: in my rusty old van all the way across country with an old friend of mine and we came to Calgary [02:04] SPEAKER_00: to do construction to do roofing specifically and over the years that have all to be more [02:08] SPEAKER_00: general construction and getting involved with mostly exterior of residential like townhouses [02:14] SPEAKER_00: and that type of work. And since then I've made Calgary a home. I love it there. It's [02:19] SPEAKER_00: great and it still is my home and I can see myself there for a long time. And that was, [02:25] SPEAKER_00: but that's kind of jumping in middle of the story. Going back further from there, I was [02:30] SPEAKER_00: always feeling like an entrepreneur when I was little. I didn't know what the word was. [02:35] SPEAKER_00: Cutting lawns is something that a lot people would do and I did that too. But I like to sell [02:39] SPEAKER_00: more. I would buy them and sell them, right? And I like trading card games and other kids [02:43] SPEAKER_00: did too. But next thing I know I'm tall, I'm really dealing with the card store owners [02:48] SPEAKER_00: to buy his bulk inventory. And I was selling them through the newspaper class by dad's because [02:53] SPEAKER_00: of course the internet and you know, I was less than because you weren't really around at that [02:57] SPEAKER_00: time. So I was always doing these really deal type of ventures and ideas. I was breeding fish [03:02] SPEAKER_00: at one point when I was like 13. And it just all these weird things and I was really little. [03:07] SPEAKER_00: And it just, last long, I loved it. I found excitement and passion on doing these, [03:12] SPEAKER_00: hey, let's create something ideas and nothing. So everyone's got their own different passion, [03:16] SPEAKER_00: whether it's art or dance or business or like learning or teaching or exploring or nature. [03:23] SPEAKER_00: Like everyone's got their own specific niche that they really, really enjoy. And I'm not [03:28] SPEAKER_00: going to try and guess what it is. But for me, I found that in being entrepreneur and [03:31] SPEAKER_00: and nurtured that when I was very young. I got into a lot of trouble when I was 16. [03:36] SPEAKER_00: You know, cannabis is a pretty cool business right now. I got a lot of friends that are [03:39] SPEAKER_00: doing some great stuff in it. My cannabis business didn't work out too good. We could say, [03:44] SPEAKER_00: I got in a little bit too early. I didn't have government support back then. So that was a problem [03:50] SPEAKER_00: when I was a teenager. Basically, I'm saying I was selling cannabis when I was a teenager. And it [03:54] SPEAKER_00: was a bad idea. I got in a lot of trouble, right? I got arrested. It was terrible. And I ended up [03:58] SPEAKER_00: dropping out of school. I kicked out of the house type of thing. It was a, it was a bad scenario. [04:04] SPEAKER_00: Right? I was in a lot of trouble. I was living in a drug house. I was there was gangs. There was a [04:07] SPEAKER_00: lot of violence. Frank people started to die. It was really, really bad. And the more I was there, [04:13] SPEAKER_00: the less exciting it was, the less fun it was, right? The more reality sunk in, the less I felt [04:19] SPEAKER_00: like I was moving forward. But I got into all that because I was escaping these feelings that I [04:24] SPEAKER_00: had as a kid, a feeling trapped. And this is a side subject that I think will come back to, [04:30] SPEAKER_00: that I feel very passionate about on the subjects of teen suicide, teen violence, and drugs itself. [04:36] SPEAKER_00: And this is what my book is about. It's a deep dive into what the heck's going on and how can we [04:41] SPEAKER_00: decrease the impact of, you know, and in the occurrence of this type of tragedy in our society? [04:46] SPEAKER_00: So that's why my book is about me. We'll come back to that later. The point is, I got in a lot of trouble. [04:51] SPEAKER_00: By the time I was 18, I realized I really, really wanted to change. I didn't want to have that [04:56] SPEAKER_00: life anymore. I wanted to do something better, wanted to make a difference. So I wanted to be [05:00] SPEAKER_00: the best version of myself, which my crowd at the time was not going to let me do, right? And it's [05:06] SPEAKER_00: not that they didn't want me to. It's that it just wouldn't happen, right? You are who you're [05:09] SPEAKER_00: hanging around. So when I was 18, I got recruited into a direct sales organization. And the [05:15] SPEAKER_00: the guy that recruited me in, he wanted to help me out, sure that's true, but he also wanted to [05:18] SPEAKER_00: recruit people that could sell. And he said, you know, I don't, he says, I don't care what you've [05:22] SPEAKER_00: done in the past. I just care what you've done now. He really gave me a chance to be someone [05:27] SPEAKER_00: different and start over. And I embraced it with everything that I had. And I learned how to sell [05:32] SPEAKER_00: in a professional way, right? I'm not talking about sleazy car salesman type stuff. I'm talking [05:36] SPEAKER_00: about actually helping people and improving their lives in a way that's profitable for both [05:41] SPEAKER_00: parties, right? That's what professional sales is. I launched onto that, learned how to do this, [05:45] SPEAKER_00: ended up growing to the top spot in the company really, really fast. I helped them expand across [05:50] SPEAKER_00: Canada at the time. And that was really really cool. I was that was my, that was my first authentic [05:55] SPEAKER_00: venture that I got to grow on. And it also taught me and exposed me to personal, all the books, [06:00] SPEAKER_00: you know, workshop seminars, set tapes at the time, right? And all that kind of good positive [06:05] SPEAKER_00: vibe, right? That company ended up on their own, you know, on the founder level ended up not working [06:11] SPEAKER_00: out, which was devastating for me, of course. But what am I going to do? I was, you know, 19, 20 at the time. [06:16] SPEAKER_00: So then I ended up kind of feeling lost for a bit. And there's a couple little little [06:20] SPEAKER_00: little ventures I've played with there that I'll skip to because they're not really relevant. [06:23] SPEAKER_00: I ended up doing a event production company in the Turner Toronto area. And I would host events, [06:29] SPEAKER_00: fly in keynote speakers, trade shows, boost. And I was about 20 years old at that point. So it was [06:34] SPEAKER_00: just amazing. I got to be in front of the stage. You know, I was a really, really awkward kid growing up [06:38] SPEAKER_00: and doing this kind of stuff forced me to come out of my shell and find a way to communicate [06:42] SPEAKER_00: with the rest of the world. So I did this event production company for a while and I ended up [06:47] SPEAKER_00: hiring my first business coach who, you know, was amazing guy. He's still my friend at the [06:51] SPEAKER_00: stage and he helped me a lot. But he was also a bit of an asshole because you see, he taught me [06:56] SPEAKER_00: about burn rates, which I did not understand at the time. I was an entrepreneur at the time, right? [07:00] SPEAKER_00: I got marketing, inspiration, I got leadership, I had vision, you know, I was innovative, [07:05] SPEAKER_00: you know, I was excited, I had lots of enthusiasm, but I didn't understand business. [07:09] SPEAKER_00: At the time, I didn't understand what accounting was or how, you know, all the structure and [07:13] SPEAKER_00: formality of the key performance indicators and timelines and putting together a proper financial [07:19] SPEAKER_00: forecast. And so anyways, I was broke. I had maxed out my third line of credit and I was going [07:24] SPEAKER_00: under game over. So I went through a bit of a withdrawal for a few months. I was a nighttime [07:29] SPEAKER_00: janitor cleaning up the most disgusting floors you can possibly imagine at the worst bars that [07:35] SPEAKER_00: exist in Waterloo University, and if you went to school in Waterloo, you know exactly what [07:39] SPEAKER_00: I'm talking about. And I was the janitor cleaning it, and all the night. And finally, my coach said, [07:44] SPEAKER_00: why don't you try construction? You know, I had been roofing as an employee off and on because [07:48] SPEAKER_00: why don't you give this a shot? I did my first contract through a friend of mine in, that was in [07:59] SPEAKER_00: just sweating and looking at my finished product. And ended up making a lot of money at it too. [08:03] SPEAKER_00: This is really great. Calgary was in boom time. So I did the logical thing, moved to Calgary in the [08:08] SPEAKER_00: middle of winter. It was like minus 35 degrees, and I was there to do roofing, which was a horrible [08:13] SPEAKER_00: idea. Right. The worst thing you can imagine. I didn't think very much. I was just excited. I was [08:18] SPEAKER_00: in it. I was a typical, excited entrepreneur that just moved forward without thinking and made it [08:25] SPEAKER_00: ultimately. Right. And then the company grew to 60 people, built up a lot of revenue and sold it. [08:30] SPEAKER_00: And yeah, that's kind of an nutshell. I probably rambled too much there. No, it's all good. It's [08:34] SPEAKER_01: all good. And so you come to Calgary in the middle of the winter and end up having a very successful [08:40] SPEAKER_01: company. So looking at kind of that part of your journey, what were some of the greatest challenges [08:47] SPEAKER_01: that you faced? Here specifically in Calgary. And then the follow-up question to that on the flip side [08:53] SPEAKER_01: is what were some of the greatest successes or what were the best things about doing business here? [08:58] SPEAKER_00: Sure. Yeah. Some of the early first challenges were to deal with boom time. When boom time [09:06] SPEAKER_00: is happening and everyone who's in Calgary who is around for this, when boom time hits, [09:12] SPEAKER_00: there is a lot of shit that you need to get done immediately. There is no time left. There's no [09:16] SPEAKER_00: time limit, especially in construction. If the house isn't built or the building isn't built by a [09:20] SPEAKER_00: certain schedule, huge penalties fall on the powers that be, which rolls downhill. We have to deal [09:27] SPEAKER_00: with a large volume and maintain the same quality. How do you hire when there's no one there to hire [09:33] SPEAKER_00: because they're being poached every second day? How do you get 10 jobs done when you only have time [09:38] SPEAKER_00: for five? How do you keep quality to a level where you're feeling good about your own work and [09:44] SPEAKER_00: you're giving a good product while hitting these timelines? These were the early challenges that [09:49] SPEAKER_00: were happening from 2006. Probably realistic for a few years. 2009 wasn't a really good year in [09:56] SPEAKER_00: Calgary, which for construction was the second challenge I mean to say was dealing with the [10:02] SPEAKER_00: down times. 2009-ish was not as pleasant as earlier and then of course 2014-15 was pretty rough. [10:11] SPEAKER_00: I'm out of that business now so I'm not having to deal with the reality of the difficult [10:15] SPEAKER_00: situations that have continued. Big election just happened. I'm not going to get into that but we'll [10:20] SPEAKER_01: see where that goes. Well and I guess you know that's a really timely point because we are still [10:25] SPEAKER_01: struggling economically in the city and so in those years when you were running your company here, [10:33] SPEAKER_01: what were some of the things that you did to keep it going and to be successful and what advice could [10:38] SPEAKER_01: you pass on to entrepreneurs who are maybe in the same boat now because of the reality of the economy [10:43] SPEAKER_00: maybe? How rough? Well, what's saying earlier that I was an entrepreneur I wasn't a business person [10:48] SPEAKER_00: and I feel like you know so many people out there get excited about it and idea we wake up and say [10:53] SPEAKER_00: I'm going to do something better work and like I can do a better my boss he's an idiot or [10:56] SPEAKER_00: you know I'm going to change the world we just have this blinding flash of inspiration that's an [11:00] SPEAKER_00: entrepreneur and you know entrepreneurs need to become business people. They're not the same thing [11:06] SPEAKER_00: right and vice versa true too. A business person is not an entrepreneur you can have as much [11:11] SPEAKER_00: schooling as you possibly want you can have you know as much experience dealing with an organization [11:14] SPEAKER_00: or a healthy mature company as you want that's great but if you don't have that entrepreneurial spirit [11:19] SPEAKER_00: you're kind of like a watchdog you're like a guardian over something that already exists without [11:24] SPEAKER_00: being able to create something new and if you want to look at you know the HP story and what [11:28] SPEAKER_00: happened with HP over the last 20 years and watch that evolution for where they are today you know [11:32] SPEAKER_00: there's a class example of that you know the entrepreneurial division and the business you know watchdog [11:38] SPEAKER_00: division so I won't get into that right now but think about this if if you're an entrepreneur and [11:43] SPEAKER_00: you got excited about an idea and you're driving on a few key strengths that you have remember that [11:49] SPEAKER_00: your few key strengths are only a few key strengths they're not all the key strengths and if you really [11:53] SPEAKER_00: need if you're going to get successful you're going to make it through downtime if you're going to [11:57] SPEAKER_00: make it through boom time if you're going to make it through you know that that first five or ten [12:01] SPEAKER_00: years where most companies fail you need to be something called the specialized generalist you [12:07] SPEAKER_00: need to be able to flex into what your organization needs at any moment at any time forever we can't [12:14] SPEAKER_00: force your way through an accounting issue by being good at sales and you can't force yourself [12:18] SPEAKER_00: through a sales situation by being good at the law right they're just different departments and if [12:24] SPEAKER_00: you so many entrepreneurs get to get an early success get early starts by being exemplary by [12:31] SPEAKER_00: top of their game and then some at one or two specific areas of the business and so I'm going [12:36] SPEAKER_00: to suggest you to you know step off the high horse a little bit right the tuck away that you go and [12:41] SPEAKER_00: look at what you're not good at and just be vulnerable about it be honest about it ask for help [12:45] SPEAKER_00: about it grow and learn about it right don't pretend that you can hide those flaws and hide [12:51] SPEAKER_00: those weaknesses forever because they will serve us and the longer you delay them or postpone it [12:56] SPEAKER_00: the more they're going to explode kind of like keeping a volcano underground too long the [13:00] SPEAKER_00: pressure just builds up until eventually and it will you know pop through the surface you can [13:05] SPEAKER_00: have to deal with all that lava burning down all around you right we don't want to burn down your [13:09] SPEAKER_00: business a company goes through what I call this business purity phases and you know I can only [13:14] SPEAKER_00: speak to organizations up to you know about 60 say I could I'd be comfortable around a hundred [13:19] SPEAKER_00: in size so there's a lot of guys out there dealing with thousands of people and yeah that's just [13:23] SPEAKER_00: not my round yet right maybe next time we talk it will be but this business purity from a [13:27] SPEAKER_00: zero to five employees is an awkward phase five to ten is a different skill set completely [13:32] SPEAKER_00: uh ten to twenty is going to you know take your leadership and your and your ability to manage [13:36] SPEAKER_00: to a whole new level and and you know twenty to forty forty to eighty these are the different phases [13:42] SPEAKER_00: of business purity and there is awkward as anything else sweaty palms you know your voice gets [13:46] SPEAKER_00: all weird you're trying to do a big sales contract and you just can't speak anymore and you feel [13:50] SPEAKER_00: all stupid right that's what I'm talking about and you know you're gonna be ready for those things [13:54] SPEAKER_00: and you know think about them and plan for my best so when you think about your experiences here [14:00] SPEAKER_01: in Calgary and I think you're right you know this is a time maybe of trepidation here and a bit of [14:05] SPEAKER_01: anxiety but what were some of the best things the city had to offer and I think you bring a great [14:11] SPEAKER_01: perspective because you have worked you know in in Ontario and grown your company to such a successful [14:17] SPEAKER_01: size but what was it that really kept you in Calgary all those years you know Calgary is just a [14:24] SPEAKER_00: great city right there's friendly people they're welcoming it's like a land of opportunity to me [14:28] SPEAKER_00: it's it's not the most entrepreneurial part and and I can write a little more broadly say about [14:32] SPEAKER_00: Alberta but you know I'm a little biased towards Calgary if it's not the most entrepreneurial you know [14:37] SPEAKER_00: spirit that there is in Canada then it's pretty close right there's there's just there's just a lot [14:41] SPEAKER_00: of people that want to do sex they want to create and and you know I go to a lot of the meet-ups [14:45] SPEAKER_00: in different meetings and meet a lot of people and and people in my network too there's some cool [14:49] SPEAKER_00: stuff right like people say that Calgary has no tech presence well there's some pretty monster tech [14:53] SPEAKER_00: companies that have come out of Calgary and the same is true with other industries too in [14:58] SPEAKER_00: construction again there's some monsters that came out of Calgary or I've been sent right if you [15:01] SPEAKER_00: look at the stats a little bit Google search for big companies that came out of Alberta right and [15:06] SPEAKER_00: you'll see quite a few so I found it to be a really friendly city I was I felt like I was treated [15:10] SPEAKER_00: and brought in like family I made really really good friends almost immediately when I arrived [15:17] SPEAKER_00: of course being close to the mountains is is just a bonus right to be that close to such beautiful [15:23] SPEAKER_00: nature that you know only exists in certain parts of the world and and I feel like we have a great [15:28] SPEAKER_00: economy we have to just get through this little tough spot right now and there's a lot of division [15:32] SPEAKER_00: about you know who's right and wrong and the political around is you know very clearly in one [15:38] SPEAKER_00: side or the other right there is no confusion about you know what Alberta is really leading towards [15:42] SPEAKER_00: and we've got to get through this right so there's there's a lot for us to work on but you know [15:47] SPEAKER_00: we've gone through a lot we've come a long long way from you know some some of the down times in [15:52] SPEAKER_00: the past and I feel like it's just going to be a matter of time when we come back to that and hopefully [15:56] SPEAKER_00: we end up getting to a position where we can really lead Canada in a more serious way and be taking [16:01] SPEAKER_00: a little more seriously in our opinions that I don't even my hope so I feel like that's something [16:06] SPEAKER_01: that we can really you know bring to the table you've had a very unique experience that I'm not a [16:11] SPEAKER_01: lot of the entrepreneurs that I've interviewed so far have had in that you've sold your company and [16:17] SPEAKER_01: made a significant revenue off of that so what's your next step like where are you going next [16:22] SPEAKER_01: Derek in your career and what do you hope to do well right now I'm going to just take a breather [16:27] SPEAKER_00: and and using that breather to do entrepreneurial things that's just kind of automatic and [16:32] SPEAKER_00: my book right now is really important to me you know I mentioned earlier to me when when kids [16:38] SPEAKER_00: had a breaking point there's one of three things that happened and and the breaking point is [16:41] SPEAKER_00: different for everyone right one of my friends you know it's just such a tragedy you know his [16:46] SPEAKER_00: is some committed suicide and he was a very very young teenager no one saw it coming there was no [16:51] SPEAKER_00: clear indicator it just happened right and and obviously the first thing that comes to you might go [16:56] SPEAKER_00: why why did this happen how did this happen every kid has a breaking point and it looks very [17:00] SPEAKER_00: different for everyone when that happens to me one of three things happen is harm to self extreme [17:05] SPEAKER_00: case suicide was harmed others extreme case is you know shootings in schools and the third one is [17:10] SPEAKER_00: avoidance and that one usually involves drugs that's the one that I went down I didn't choose violence [17:15] SPEAKER_00: in any way I just I hid in drugs because I thought that that would be my easier escape I think that [17:20] SPEAKER_00: this is this is something that doesn't have to be there it is avoidable there's ways to decrease [17:25] SPEAKER_00: the statistics and increase the success and the happiness so for me writing this book is a passion [17:31] SPEAKER_00: project I don't really expect to make fortunes out of that's not really the idea in fact if I do [17:35] SPEAKER_00: I'm probably going to 20 charity I'm focusing on this book with everything that I got I really want [17:39] SPEAKER_00: to make an impact I'm also coaching and mentoring other business people locally in Calgary as well as broad [17:44] SPEAKER_00: abroad it's something I'm very passionate about I've always had a business mentor helping me so now I [17:49] SPEAKER_00: get to be that person in return and that's you know launch my website for that and and we can check that out [17:56] SPEAKER_00: and the next venture that I really latch on to I'm still going to wait another six months because I've [18:00] SPEAKER_00: kind of got my hands tied with the book still but I want to get involved in tech you know I spent a lot [18:06] SPEAKER_00: of time in old school construction and that was great now I really want to do something that's going [18:11] SPEAKER_00: to hit the technology you know hit the IT rounds and I developed software with teams before seven [18:16] SPEAKER_00: software is to be specific somewhere in construction somewhere in sense with analysis and somewhere [18:21] SPEAKER_00: which basically there are just a few different types of technology and types of software I was working [18:24] SPEAKER_00: with and I want to join or build something in that realm so that's what you're probably going to [18:30] SPEAKER_00: see me in the next year I'm being vague by the way on purpose because there's a couple of [18:35] SPEAKER_00: ladies involved so sorry if that was a little bit vague but that is all good and we look forward to [18:40] SPEAKER_01: seeing what happens for you next so you mentioned you had a business mentor but what has been the [18:46] SPEAKER_01: best piece of advice that you've ever got either as an entrepreneur or how to grow your business like [18:51] SPEAKER_00: what would you pass along to our listeners today yeah I'd say you know the first thing that comes to mind [18:56] SPEAKER_00: is just come back down the earth you know one of the one of the people I work with was stock you're [19:02] SPEAKER_00: beating himself up saying you know he's trying to find the next greatest idea the next big thing [19:07] SPEAKER_00: that's really not needed right every time I felt really stuck in a company my way always through [19:12] SPEAKER_00: was to come back to the basics right let's look at it from a fundamental business perspective let's [19:17] SPEAKER_00: just do the simple little tiny things every day that we know we'll get us incrementally [19:22] SPEAKER_00: forward and take little steps and interest towards you know whatever objective and goal we have [19:27] SPEAKER_00: right so you know unicorns are great it's a cool little word popped up over the last five years [19:32] SPEAKER_00: right and you know everyone wants to have a unicorn and build an ex-unicorn right wonderful great keep [19:36] SPEAKER_00: that in mind you know that's the home run but home runs aren't really where the baseball game is right [19:41] SPEAKER_00: it's the baseball games are one through singles and doubles right going to fundamental business basics [19:47] SPEAKER_00: uh so that's something I'm going to encourage anyone listening is to look at your business from [19:51] SPEAKER_00: a fundamental ground up perspective what's the little things that you can do right now and what are [19:56] SPEAKER_00: the little things you can inspire your team to do right now that just inch your way forward one [20:01] SPEAKER_00: little step at a time next thing you know that home run will show up but you got to be patient for [20:05] SPEAKER_00: and you got to be positioned for right you want the home run when you got basis full it's such a waste [20:10] SPEAKER_00: to have a home run and no one's on base right so focus on those singles and doubles get those little [20:14] SPEAKER_00: steps forward be the specialized generalists focus on those core fundamental business subjects as a [20:21] SPEAKER_01: priority not the big pine the sky magic silver bowl well now I'd like to shift gears a bit and and [20:27] SPEAKER_01: get to know you a little bit more personally so um we have a number of kind we call them our [20:32] SPEAKER_01: rapid fire questions tell us about a book that you would recommend to all of our listeners to read [20:38] SPEAKER_01: is there one book that's really meant a lot to you over the years uh you know first one that [20:43] SPEAKER_00: comes to mind is uh peaceful warrior by Dan Millman um that's one of my one of my favorite books [20:49] SPEAKER_00: there's a movie about it as well and you can criticize the acting for being cheesy if you would like [20:54] SPEAKER_00: I don't really care I think it's a great movie the concept is about mental toughness and about [20:59] SPEAKER_00: identifying your passion and sticking to it with everything that you've got there's no holds back [21:05] SPEAKER_00: so that's a book that meant a lot to me and I referred back to it many many times through the years [21:10] SPEAKER_00: when I was having my toughest times uh you know dealing with business challenges so that's the [21:15] SPEAKER_01: first one do you have a favorite like podcast or resource or online website that you go to on a [21:22] SPEAKER_01: regular basis that just helps you to continue with your own professional development? [21:26] SPEAKER_00: I follow a lot of podcasts right like you know the daily drawing boiling point uh uh [21:31] SPEAKER_00: kindness podcasts right and uh uh there's a lot there's a lot of uh millenia interviews is [21:36] SPEAKER_00: the cool one as well if i was the same thing audible.com right i am such a busy guy and everyone is [21:41] SPEAKER_00: such a busy person and but everyone can listen to an audio book while you're cooking or have it on [21:47] SPEAKER_00: the radio in your car but you're driving or um listening to it while you're waiting in line some [21:51] SPEAKER_00: and i've just pouted through so many good good books by just you know plugging in those earphones [21:56] SPEAKER_00: and finding what authors doing some cool stuff if you're interested what startups [22:00] SPEAKER_00: read some listen to some cool startup books if you're struggling with management listen to some [22:05] SPEAKER_00: really cool management books uh just there's no excuse you can't you can't say you don't have time [22:09] SPEAKER_00: when audiobooks are available at your fingertips absolutely it's the traveling university right? [22:15] SPEAKER_01: it is well in speaking of traveling so i know you are traveling now but can you share with us a [22:20] SPEAKER_01: couple of your favorite places to be in the world or you know is there some place that you'd like [22:26] SPEAKER_01: to travel that you haven't yet been left to know a little bit more about your plans that way. [22:31] SPEAKER_00: Sure yeah i did um i did a motorcycle trip down the west coast of Canada i went from Calgary to [22:36] SPEAKER_00: BC down to tuwana and all the way down that coast right and that's such a a beautiful beautiful [22:40] SPEAKER_00: drive you get a chance to check that out it's wonderful same as the i forget what it's called [22:44] SPEAKER_00: it's called a going to the sunroader or to the sun or something like that just uh just south of [22:49] SPEAKER_00: Alberta and um that's something you know it's just some beautiful roads great beside i've written [22:54] SPEAKER_00: our backyard right i'm in in tailand right now in the north part of tailand and man the people are [23:00] SPEAKER_00: so friendly here it's it's strange for a canadian to say that other people are so friendly um i love [23:05] SPEAKER_00: what i'm experiencing out here and i'm probably gonna pop by africa after it and um see what that [23:11] SPEAKER_00: looks like and and you know there's a lot of conflict going around and a lot of areas there so [23:15] SPEAKER_00: kind of bracing myself i definitely want to go to new zeland at some point and it's just one of [23:21] SPEAKER_00: these little things i have this inspiration i want to see the alt blocks i'm gonna get some you know [23:24] SPEAKER_00: infield seats right up close and you know watch a good rugby game uh that's something that's that's [23:30] SPEAKER_00: exciting you know california such a beautiful state as well to go and visit you know i've been there [23:34] SPEAKER_00: a bunch of times and i'll probably be going back soon as i'm later broke trotter those are like all over [23:39] SPEAKER_01: the place i'm wondering do you have like a ritual either in terms of like a morning routine or an [23:47] SPEAKER_01: evening routine that you really just try to follow um religiously to like help either start your day [23:54] SPEAKER_01: on the right tone or end it in the right way um we hear you know a lot of successful entrepreneurs [24:01] SPEAKER_01: have a routine that's really fundamental to part of their success and and their mindset [24:06] SPEAKER_00: yeah um if there if i was to nail down just one that i would call the most important or the most [24:12] SPEAKER_00: significant it's every morning i take up my journal and it's the first thing i do when i wake up [24:17] SPEAKER_00: right so it's it's got it for me it's got to be the first thing and i i write three things that [24:23] SPEAKER_00: i feel very grateful for and the trick is not to just write about it is to experience it right so [24:27] SPEAKER_00: take that pencil hold it on the paper and let's just say that i don't know what to write about [24:32] SPEAKER_00: today so i'm just gonna i'm gonna write down that i feel grateful that my pillow was comfortable [24:37] SPEAKER_00: and it sounds stupid but it's it's just simple things they don't have to be big giant things right [24:42] SPEAKER_00: but before writing the the principle in the concept is to feel it feel that gratitude actually [24:46] SPEAKER_00: go in and imagine what a sleepy on a rock would feel like and then remember you got a pillow right [24:52] SPEAKER_00: i feel grateful that my pillow was comfortable until and once i feel that gratitude then i can [24:58] SPEAKER_00: start to write with meaning right it's not just the word anymore you know words have power when [25:04] SPEAKER_00: there's meaning and when i write that i feel grateful for filling the blank whatever happens to be [25:09] SPEAKER_00: then it triggers my brain to go in a certain direction immediately as soon as i wake up and by [25:13] SPEAKER_00: talking to that three times it's weird but i swear i find that if i do that consistently usually my [25:19] SPEAKER_00: days go a little bit better than otherwise when when really bad things happen i deal with it better [25:24] SPEAKER_00: it's not a magic solution in making everything go perfect it doesn't do that at all [25:27] SPEAKER_00: it just helps me respond better we can't choose what happens to it i can't choose what happens to [25:33] SPEAKER_00: me but i can choose what to do about it and there's a difference between reacting and responding [25:38] SPEAKER_00: or reacting as emotional and negative and responding is oh okay this is what i have to deal with [25:43] SPEAKER_00: right now this is what i'm going to choose to do and the two different things all together so that's [25:47] SPEAKER_01: that's my morning ritual we're wrapping things up i have two more questions for you so the first one [25:53] SPEAKER_01: is a hypothetical question we ask all of our guests and this should be easy to for you to do because [25:59] SPEAKER_01: you're already traveling but if you could imagine that you were um we were to drop you off on a beautiful [26:04] SPEAKER_01: island it was very remote um there is no access to internet wifi that kind of thing so you can't [26:13] SPEAKER_01: bring your phone or tablet or or computer there is a phone booth so when you're ready you can call [26:20] SPEAKER_01: us and we will send the boat Alice survivor style to come get you i'm just curious how long do you [26:27] SPEAKER_01: think you'd last and what would you do while you're there well you know it's funny i think i'd [26:32] SPEAKER_00: probably last out there longer than i would hear you know without the stress of technology and [26:38] SPEAKER_00: pressure and social pressures and i think that it's a healthy good thing medical issues aside to be [26:45] SPEAKER_00: away from technology for whatever period of time it happens to be so i think i would last uh you [26:50] SPEAKER_00: know as long as i as long as i felt like it you know to be honest the more i think the longer that i'm [26:56] SPEAKER_00: away from technology the less you know the less need there is to be back to it as you break the [27:00] SPEAKER_00: addiction then we get to really be more authentic what i would do you know probably after the basic [27:05] SPEAKER_00: survival stuff was all mastered you know maybe do some coconut bowling i don't know that's probably [27:10] SPEAKER_00: a good idea i i i was a harsian at an old costume party years ago i probably you know build a better [27:16] SPEAKER_00: costume instead of a little leaf based clothing line maybe keep myself busy i practiced my yodeling [27:21] SPEAKER_00: with maybe an idea pop scotch in the zi i don't know just the point is have some fun right the point [27:26] SPEAKER_00: is that little kids know how to have fun with anything in any circumstance no matter what's going [27:31] SPEAKER_00: on at any point in any day and as an adult it's so easy to lose that and i feel like it's important [27:36] SPEAKER_00: to be able to tap back in the inner child and be just simple and basic just be fun once in a while [27:42] SPEAKER_00: at least and i think that being stranded on an island might be a great opportunity to do that [27:47] SPEAKER_01: that's great advice we're winding things down here i'm just slandering is there anything else that [27:52] SPEAKER_01: you'd like to say to our listeners or share in terms of either your experiences an entrepreneur [27:57] SPEAKER_01: doing business in calgary or canada before we we go today well you know i think that's specifically [28:04] SPEAKER_00: in calgary there might be some people that are maybe struggling a little more than others in [28:07] SPEAKER_00: their business the med of had some really success and now it's like jeez what do we do now i feel [28:13] SPEAKER_00: like there's there is always a way through it and you know building my company was not easy obviously [28:18] SPEAKER_00: and and you know there's a couple spots where we're skimming you know just skimming above the line [28:22] SPEAKER_00: of financial bankers he's like oh what do we do right and at the end of the day you know sticking [28:27] SPEAKER_00: together and coming back to to good old fashioned core values you know why are we here what's the [28:32] SPEAKER_00: ultimate thing we're trying to do how do we improve our basic quality of experience and customer [28:36] SPEAKER_00: experience and just come back to basics and every single day just do the best you can every day [28:41] SPEAKER_00: you know those expenses you know and make that client a little bit more happy uh inspire your team [28:46] SPEAKER_00: by being a better you and and one day at a time just to get through it and finally you know the [28:51] SPEAKER_00: economy is going to come back around and and we'll know we'll go through this together i think that's [28:55] SPEAKER_01: a great way to end things and we'd love for you to share with our listeners how can they find you [29:00] SPEAKER_01: online where where's the best place to connect with you they can find me on LinkedIn or my website [29:05] SPEAKER_00: it's just my my full personal name Eric Gilbert Williams it's ERIC and then Gilbert Williams [29:11] SPEAKER_00: there's no hyphen so uh Ericobotwames.com is my website or driveupprofits.com the same thing uh [29:17] SPEAKER_00: LinkedIn you can find me there and just you know something message uh i have a twitter account [29:21] SPEAKER_00: and uh uh i don't use it as much as i should but i'm i'm getting there right i was in the [29:26] SPEAKER_00: construction for too long i think yeah man i'd be happy to talk to anyone about their business right i [29:30] SPEAKER_00: uh i find it very enjoyable to help other entrepreneurs you know get from wherever they are to the next [29:36] SPEAKER_00: stuff i'm i'm no Richard Branson right but that's okay because uh neither are you right we're all [29:41] SPEAKER_00: just trying to get from where you are one step forward and i i invite to call well Eric it's been [29:46] SPEAKER_01: great to talk to you your energy and passion is is infectious i really enjoyed our conversation [29:52] SPEAKER_01: so thank you so much for being a guest on on Calgary's podcast today we really enjoyed having you here [29:58] SPEAKER_00: i'm honored to have been a guest and i really appreciate your time thank you very much as well [30:03] SPEAKER_01: hey there it's Bonnie Elchi thanks for taking the time today to listen to Calgary's podcast on the [30:09] SPEAKER_01: Canada's podcast network we hope you enjoyed the show make sure you sign up for our new letters [30:14] SPEAKER_01: and if you have a moment please write a review for us on iTunes you can connect with us on twitter [30:20] SPEAKER_01: facebook instagram and link in at Canada's podcast and make sure you check out whatever entrepreneurs [30:27] SPEAKER_01: are doing across the country
