Mick Hunt: U.S. Business Blueprint 2024 | On The Homefront with Jeff Dudan

Brief Summary
Jeff Dudan sits down with Mick Hunt, founder of Premier Strategy Box and host of the Mick Unplugged podcast, for a powerful conversation on scaling businesses, living with purpose, and using technology to stay ahead. From a childhood promise to his mother to leading high-growth companies across industries, Mick shares the origin of his drive, the evolution of the modern buyer, and his unique leadership framework called The M.I.C.K. Factor. This episode is packed with heart, grit, and actionable insight for entrepreneurs looking to grow with integrity.
Key Takeaways
- Business Was the Way Out: Mick’s entrepreneurial journey began with a promise to help his mother escape an abusive home—everything he built was rooted in that mission.
- KPIs Are King: He scaled and sold his first business by tracking key performance indicators and running it like a true CEO—not just a founder.
- Modern Buyers Think Differently: Businesses must evolve to meet the expectations of today’s consumer—who could be your grandma buying groceries on an app.
- Embrace AI or Get Left Behind: The rapid pace of AI means small businesses that don’t adopt tech are at risk of obsolescence or forced acquisition.
- The M.I.C.K. Factor: Mick’s leadership framework stands for Mental resiliency, Imagination, Character, and Knowing yourself—the traits that separate good from great.
- "Because" Beats "Why": A deeper reason—your “because”—drives long-term action. Mick helps businesses find this clarity beyond mission statements.
- Build With Purpose: Business ownership isn’t just a wealth strategy; it’s a path to leave a legacy and protect the middle class from being squeezed out.
Featured Quote
“Your vision shows you where to go. Your imagination is how you get there.”
— Mick Hunt
TRANSCRIPT
Mick Hunt’s Origin Story: A Promise to His Mom That Changed Everything
Jeff Dudan (00:04.502)
Hey, everybody out there. Thank you for jumping on the home front. I am Jeff Duden. And today we are with Mick Hunt. Mick, welcome.
Mick (00:12.814)
Jeff, thanks for having me on brother.
Jeff Dudan (00:14.774)
Yeah, absolutely. I've been watching your podcast grow and we got a little bit fascinated with it. So I'm excited to have you on the show here today.
Mick (00:24.27)
I'm excited to be on as well, man. And I love your podcast as well. So I'm a huge fan. So when your team reached out, I was like, absolutely. Jeff and I are about to crush this one today.
Jeff Dudan (00:32.31)
100%. Great. Mick, would you share a little bit about who you are, how you grew up?
Mick (00:42.382)
Yeah, man. So I am Mick Hunt, obviously. I'm a Leo. I like running on the beach. I like sand in between my. That's not what you wanted, Jeff. My bad, my bad. No, so grew up in Greenville, South Carolina, went to college at the University of North Carolina. So I'm a tar heel through and through. But my journey, Jeff, man, started with a promise that I made my mom at the age of 10.
Jeff Dudan (00:50.294)
Well, no, it is. I usually just get that after.
Mick (01:11.246)
And a lot of folks that know me know a little bit about this story, but I'm gonna go deep with you, Jeff. So, you know, 10 years old, for 10 years, I had been watching my mom go through physical, emotional, psychological, financial abuse from my father. And at 10, I'm sitting at the edge of my bed and I have tears running down my face. But the tears aren't mine, they're the tears of my mom who had just suffered a horrific night, right?
And so I'm sitting there and I'm telling my mom like, leave, like, please just leave. Like, I'll deal with it. You and my sister go, I'll handle it. And my mom looked at me and said, no, because I love you, I'm not gonna let you suffer. If one suffers, we all suffer. And that stuck with me. And so that moment.
Jeff, I decided that I was at some point going to get my mom out of that torment. And I didn't know what that looked like at 10. Like, I'm not going to lie to the audience. I didn't have the answers at 10. But at 10, I made the decision that I was going to change my mom's life. And so everything that I did growing up was for that reason, was to get my mom out of that situation, to get my sister out of that situation, my brother who was born later, to get him out of that situation.
And so growing up where I grew up, Jeff, and I know you're from this or you live in the South now. I don't know if you're from the South, but when I grew up, you saw success as either being an athlete or entertainer, right? Or a doctor or a lawyer. Like that pretty much was what success looked like. And so I was going to be one of those four things. I was going to be a doctor, a lawyer, an entertainer or athlete.
Jeff Dudan (02:41.014)
That's right.
Mick (02:48.142)
And so everything that I did in life was striving to be the best. Went to college and was not either of those four things, but what I realized was that business was a way to make all of your dreams come true, so to say. So started my career as an insurance agent.
realized that I was helping someone live their dreams. You know, I tell this story, you know, he was winning trips to like to Paris, to Rome, Italy, to Banff, Canada, to Atlantis. And then he was sending me on trips to Atlanta. Right. And I don't know if you know this, Jeff, but Atlantis and Atlanta are not the same thing. And so that sparked me to start my own business so that I could fulfill the promise that I made to my mom. So I was an entrepreneur, business owner at the age of twenty seven.
and I've never looked back and like that has really driven me, but the drive really was the promise that I made my mom.
Jeff Dudan (03:43.798)
Greenville, South Carolina. Went to school at Chapel Hill. Now, did your sister and brother also get out of Greenville?
Mick (03:56.75)
No, so long story, my parents ended up divorcing my sophomore year of college and I'm the oldest. So my sister, I think, was a junior in high school. My brother was like five years old. So it was one of those things where it was a later deal, but they all live in South Carolina now.
Jeff Dudan (04:20.054)
somehow between the age of 27 starting your own business and then today you've become a very successful podcaster, a sought after speaker, a consultant, a business consultant. It looks like walk me through that first business and maybe the decision to make that business and then how did that lead to who make us today?
From Insurance to Millionaire: Building and Selling His First Business by 31
Mick (04:44.27)
Yeah, that's a great question and a great story. So again, I started in the insurance industry. So I was a sales manager for an agent, helping grow that business. He had goals of being like the biggest, baddest agent in the country. And we made that happen. But what I realized was that I could do that for myself. So the catapult for me at 27 was proving that I could do it.
And I built one of the fastest growing insurance agencies without merger without acquisition in a three year period Ended up selling that business at the age of 31 for Several million dollars. I'll just put it that way what wasn't looking to sell But it was one of those things where like the Godfather movie, right? Like put a napkin on a table and I was like, yeah, if this is real then let's go make this happen So sold my agency went to go head up another
Jeff Dudan (05:25.398)
Awesome.
Mick (05:39.488)
large business where I just implemented the strategies that I had in my existing business and that that company went from 50 million of revenue to 70 million of revenue in four years and that's when I said Jeff you know what I want to show other business owners how to do this because a lot of times we make growth and scaling much harder than it needs to be I'm not gonna exaggerate and say that it's easy but when you focus on the right key performance indicators
and you really run your business like a CEO, growth and scale becomes the output of that. And so from.
Jeff Dudan (06:37.933)
Okay, so we're picking it back up. We good?
Mick (06:41.262)
Yeah, you're back now. Yeah, you were frozen on my end. I just kept going because it happens.
Jeff Dudan (06:44.973)
Yeah, it was still recording and stuff, so hopefully we're good here and we don't have an issue. We recorded one earlier today and it went fine. Okay, so KPI, 50 million to 70 million dollars, KPI is growing a business, and then you made a decision.
Scaling With KPIs: Why Strategy, Not Hustle, Drives Growth
Mick (07:06.67)
Yeah, I made a decision that I wanted to help business owners do this, right? And so again, focus on the right KPI is running it like a true CEO was really what I was doing. And so I created a consulting firm, you know, consultants kind of have a bad name, right? Bad image, you hire this company and they're going to come give you some rule books, but they don't know your business. They don't know how to do it. But I've been very successful.
Jeff Dudan (07:29.165)
Well, I'll tell you what I told my wife consultants are is somebody that you pay so much money to tell you what you already know to do, but you've paid them so much that you will actually do it. Yeah. And there's accountability, right?
Mick (07:42.414)
Exactly. And that literally, and that's what I and my team become. We become, we like to say we're your chief revenue officer, your outsource chief revenue officer, but more importantly, we're your account, we're your accountability. We're gonna make sure that the things that we're gonna accomplish are the things that we actually are gonna accomplish and do it together.
But that's been my thing, Jeff, is really helping businesses become who they are. But it all goes back to my core principles of I made promises, right? And so I talk to business leaders about what's your real why? Not the superficial why, but I call it your because. What's your because? What's that real reason that you're doing what you do? And let's do everything around that.
And so that's been who I've been, Jeff, since the day I started my company.
Jeff Dudan (08:33.485)
Okay, Mick, who's a typical client for you? What do they look like? Is it five million, 10 million, 20 million in revenue? What's it look like?
Attracting the Modern Buyer: Why Business Must Evolve or Die
Mick (08:42.67)
Yeah, so I'd say typically anywhere from small, say three to five million revenue, but then I have a couple of Fortune 500 companies as well, different dynamics, but I can tell you the problem that we solve or where most people are looking to hire me or my team. It's really, you're stuck. Like you're stuck with how do I grow?
And more importantly, how do I attract the new modern customer? And then how do I provide that experience? Because, Jeff, like all of us are the modern buyer now, right? Like when people hear modern buyer, they immediately think age. Well, that's not the truth, right? Like we all buy differently. My mom now, Jeff, buys her groceries with an app and just pulls her car up and has them delivered to her car.
Right? My mom's not a 20 year old. My mom's not a millennial or whatever the new generation is. But that's how we all buy. And so I help businesses. We really help businesses that are stuck with this new modern buyer. And then more importantly, once they are a customer, the experience that they should have with it.
Jeff Dudan (09:51.949)
Yeah, so million dollar business, it used to be that one million dollar businesses were the absolute hardest size of business to run because you don't have enough revenue to hire real qualified middle management. You don't have enough revenue to hire a seasoned, experienced executive team. But yet you still have all the functions of a billion dollar business. You've got sales, accounting, finance, technology.
Mick (09:56.91)
Mm -hmm.
Mick (10:16.558)
Absolutely.
Jeff Dudan (10:18.445)
And if you can't pay attention, if you're just executing inside of a business like that, and maybe that's a three to $5 million business today, and you don't have your head up on the horizon, especially now with AI and how fast things are changing. And, you know, there's things that I literally looking at things today for our business that used to be a four month project with a project manager, with some technologists.
assessing and integrating some software technology into something. And at the end of it, you would have this outcome. And we were all doing those projects. Maybe it's a hundred and hundred or $200 ,000 project to get this thing implemented. And then I'm on the phone with somebody, you know, an ex naval military intelligence officer who's been working in AI for three years. And he's like, here, this does everything. I can install it in a week and it's $300 for your whole company. And I'm like, okay.
And it does it does it all. So like if you're not out there, I'm spending more and probably 50 % of my travel time is split between recruiting the right people to lead our businesses and then out there figuring out who's got that customer acquisition cocktail that includes intelligent consumer engagement.
Mick (11:15.694)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (11:40.525)
you know, re ranking, who's how to identify out of the massive list of potential customers, who are the five star customers, who's engaging right now, who's ready to be talked to. And I'm telling you, it's, it's every month I'm finding something new. So if you're a three to $5 million business owner and you're just like, you know, I'm really comfortable. I got another 10 years to retirement. I just want to keep doing what I'm doing. You're at risk right now. Like you are at big risk of being either made obsolete.
Mick (11:58.542)
how hard it may.
The AI Wildfire: How Tech Is Disrupting Small Business Valuations
Jeff Dudan (12:10.637)
or somebody coming to you and saying, I'm going to give you pennies on the dollar for your business because it's, you know, or we're just going to, we're going to roll you over and take it.
Mick (12:21.07)
I totally agree. I totally agree. Like I actually just spoke two weeks ago on that very similar topic, Jeff, where I told people literally what you just said. If you're not evolving, like our technology and AI is evolving, you probably won't be here in the next three years.
Because if you're not trying, trust me, other people are. And what Jeff and I are not saying is AI is going to replace humans. That's not what we're saying. But those companies that don't utilize AI, those are the ones that are going to get replaced. Or maybe it's not AI, but maybe it's machine learning, but something. If you're not using some type of advanced technology in your business, you're not going to make it. And you're not going to attract what I'm going to call the modern buyer.
Right, like you're missing customers that you never knew existed, but more importantly, they don't know you exist either. And that's a big dilemma.
Jeff Dudan (13:13.741)
So here's something I'm observing right now.
Like a forest fire or a fast moving brush fire in the mountains, right? The winds are just right. That's what I'm seeing in acquisition of small businesses right now. Because the compelling argument that you can make that if you put your business onto this platform and we put these tools around it, that it is going to drive
five times the value than you're able to drive in keeping it yourself and driving it yourself. And I'm seeing like the roll up game right now. And it doesn't almost matter. It's like, if you have customers in any business, service industry, insurance industry, any of those things, there are people that have constructed these migration implementation platforms. And so they can pay you
a lot for your business because it's worth many times more than that when they get it onto their system. And, you know, and I don't know, you know, I said I probably shouldn't say this, but that's when I go ahead and say it, Mick. So I used to work with a guy, right. And he's you know, we're in Huntersville, North Carolina, and this guy was a second generation real estate guy, residential properties, commercial properties. So their family.
was in Huntersville when there was nobody in Huntersville. So they just bought farmland and they bought houses and they bought buildings and they just ended up with lots and lots of property. And this guy was second generation. So they've been accumulating property for 30 or 40 years. And you can imagine stuff you bought in the 50s, if you still owned it today. And he said to me, and then he said this like 10 or 15 years ago, he said, Jeff, there's just no more stupid farmers left.
Jeff Dudan (15:14.413)
And I mean, he made and you know, that's that sounds horrible to all the farmers out there. But, you know, well, actually, it's just Bill Gates. But, you know, he owns all the farms now. But sorry, Bill. But, you know, he would say, I mean, it was the point was, it's like, I mean, he did a same day. He had a family friend and she was a German lady and they own this beautiful piece of property. And, you know, he had been
Mick (15:25.678)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (15:43.341)
eating Sunday supper with them and all of that kind of stuff. And he went and bought that property from this lady for $200 ,000 and did a same day close to a developer out of Atlanta for three million bucks. And it's like, and you know what I mean? Did he take advantage? Probably. But he had the connections, he had the contacts to do it. And my son said to me the other day, and we're business builders, we're
blue collar guys, we build businesses and then private equity comes in and makes the real money on our lifetime of work that we do. But how many people are out there right now that say, hey, my business is worth $2 million and somebody comes in and offers them four, right? And they're like, this is the greatest and it's a great deal for them and they take it, but it was really worth 12.
Mick (16:36.878)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (16:42.029)
In a different platform, looking at it from a different view with different tools, it was worth more. And I think this value creation through acquisition from a technology enabled position is, like I said, it's a wildfire. And I'm seeing it very quietly start to kick up in different industries and different markets. My question is, what's the earth going to be like after that's done?
Mick (16:42.542)
Right. Right.
Jeff Dudan (17:10.029)
because very few people are going to own a lot more of everything. And we see it in real estate with the private equity firms. Started some years ago, decided we need to own all the homes in America.
Private Equity and the Shrinking Middle Class: Who Will Own Everything?
Mick (17:24.27)
And that's what's going on in the insurance space as well too, right? I mean, I'm sure you can see it. I don't care where you're at now, but go out and look and see how many nationwide state farm all state agencies you see now compared to just even 10 years ago. It's not as many. It's not as many private equities coming to the insurance space and.
Jeff Dudan (17:25.997)
Is it?
Mick (17:43.342)
the exclusives, the independents are all now parts of big conglomerates. It's almost like college football and realignment, right? Soon there's just gonna be two or three conferences. I feel like that's how the insurance industry is gonna be and probably the real estate industry, right? There's gonna be three or four big private equity companies and you're gonna belong to one of them.
Exactly.
Jeff Dudan (18:02.285)
Yeah, yeah, and I think so. It seems to be the way of the world. I just don't know, I don't know what's on the other end of it when so much wealth gets accumulated in such a small place. And I think historically, when the middle class shrinks in other countries, it's usually not a good thing.
Yeah, so that's what we do. I mean, there's really three things we care about at Homefront Brands. And part of it is financial security, economic freedom for families on Main Street USA through business ownership. Businesses are a hedge against inflation. Business ownership lets you take advantage of the tax code. So you can be very tax efficient with your earnings from a business.
not only when you sell it under capital gains, but also when you're building it. Take advantage of all the deductions that you get there. And it's going to move with inflation. So if prices go up, the prices in your business go up. If wages go up, your wages go up. But at least you have a hedge. Businesses are a high class asset, as you found out. And so we care greatly about giving families the opportunity to participate.
in business ownership and it doesn't have to be the only thing that they do, but it can be one of the things that they do because businesses are a high class asset as part of anybody's portfolio. Then the other thing we care about is children. We're committed by 2037 to give away a million books to children and we've partnered with Ben and Candy Carson and Carson Foundation to build reading rooms across the country. We're building two this year. We want to build two or three or four as many as we can.
every year with the Carson family in schools. So Homefront brand reading rooms, and then we care a great deal about transitioning veterans. So we are partnered with Operation Homefront where we support transitioning veterans, anything that they need. Patriotism is way down in this country and the military is about 60 % of where they need to be in terms of volunteer people signing up. And it's a military is a great option for many, many people, especially with the technology.
Jeff Dudan (20:24.525)
today that you can learn and all of that great stuff. So those are the things that we care about. That's what gets us out of bed in the morning here at Homefront Brands. And the business, like, you know, it's build a business for you, build a business for your family.
Mick (20:40.878)
I love that. I love that. That's amazing. So I know Jeff, you're the interviewer, but I've got a question for you though. Like loving everything. Hey, we'll repurpose it or something. Who knows, right? But knowing what I know about Homefront brands and the values that you place.
Jeff Dudan (20:46.285)
Sure, I just took over the interview. I forgot, I thought I was on your show for a minute.
Starting a Business? Here’s What’s Really Holding You Back
Mick (21:02.446)
Where do you think the biggest challenge is for the family or the person that's like, I want to start a business, but I don't know if I can. What do you see as the biggest challenge?
Jeff Dudan (21:14.925)
Look, you just have to commit and you have to decide that that's what you want to do. You can say it's economics, but man, getting into a property service franchise is not expensive. You can, I mean, there's all kinds of different ways to fund these things. You can fund them through a rollover of 401k. You can get an SBA loan. You can, I mean, some of our fees are so low, you can put things on credit cards, but it's really just about deciding that you're at an inflection point.
which usually has three things around it. Number one, people. People that you're responsible for, people that you care about, your mom, your brother and your sister. People that you wanna do something with, or sometimes even people that you wanna get away from. But there's always a people component to an inflection point. Then it's an adventure or an opportunity to do something different, to bet on yourself, to do something great. And then there's a risk of loss, because generally if you're gonna focus on something new,
something's got to come off your plate. And you got to, so you have to make a, it's just really this conscious decision of I'm going to trade this potential future of my life for this other potential future for my life. And then you run the scenarios and you just say, is it worth it? But the deal is, is like once it's like I used to coach little kids in football and the deal was this.
We ran a very autonomous program. I taught them everything in the first third of the season. We coached them the last third of the season and the middle third of the season. And then in the last third of the season, we turned the team over to the kids and we let them be autonomous. And man, dude, they were warming up loose just like a college team and they weren't doing pushups or we didn't have them lined up in lines, but man, they played fast, loose and for each other. And we won more championships than we lost.
So, you know, when you can get people that are playing for themselves and for a purpose and for the person to the left of them and the person to the right of them, anything is possible in this life. So, you know, that's what it has to be. You've got to be committed to building this business. You might not like every piece of it. Nobody does. There's things you have to do. But it always comes down to can't or won't, right? Either, you know, very, very 99 .9 % of the time it's not can't because people can do it.
Mick (23:26.766)
Mm.
Jeff Dudan (23:37.165)
It's just they won't do it. And so that's where that commitment piece comes in. Our businesses work. I mean, they work. They work great, you know, until they don't. You know, and it's usually because you've had a genius attack and you've tried to make this your business in your way instead of doing it our business in our way. But so that's, yeah, that's, you know, so it all comes down to that first step of making a commitment and making a decision.
Mick (23:38.19)
Correct. Correct.
Mick (23:44.992)
Mm -hmm. Mm -hmm.
Mick (23:51.042)
That's right.
Mick (23:58.094)
Of course.
Jeff Dudan (24:06.605)
and all of that. And then, you know, you've got to, because you never know what are the decisions and the roads and the challenges that are going to come up. You just have to realize that it's not fatal. And, you know, chaos will be the norm. And you've got a lot of learning to do. But over time, you will build the muscles and you will build the muscle memory. And you'll start seeing things not for the first time, but for the second, third, fourth and fifth time. And you'll know what to do.
Mick (24:24.942)
Absolutely.
Jeff Dudan (24:37.089)
And then it comes down to, once you establish a beachhead, then it becomes who, not how. Like, who do you put on your, your ability to scale anything is gonna be directly correlated to the people that you can put around you. And that's that. So we work them through, like, so that's what I love, man. I'm a coach. I love working them through these phases. But like I went back to the football analogy, I would teach these kids.
You know, once you step across that white line onto the field, you cannot re -contract.
You cannot decide not to tackle. You cannot decide not to jump on a loose ball. You cannot decide to walk when you need to run. Like it's the decision was made when you saw when your parents signed you up, you know, and if you decide like it's so, you know, you have to shut the door to a failure behind you and you've just got to burn the boats and, you know, move forward with it, which comes back to the whole commitment thing like and that's what life is, man. It's just about picking.
Mick (25:13.23)
Yeah, that's it.
Mick (25:25.55)
Yep, that's it.
Jeff Dudan (25:41.421)
the right opportunities with the right people and then making sure that you execute on those things. So, which, you know, if we want to transition over to this, I'd love to talk about the make factor philosophy because we, we, four pillars of it. And, I really am very interested in a couple of these, but if you don't mind, would you share a little bit about that? Because I've got some specific questions, but, what is that? Never, I don't want to never answer an unasked question.
Mick (25:41.454)
Mm -hmm.
Mick (25:47.246)
I totally agree.
The M.I.C.K. Factor: 4 Pillars That Shape Resilient Leaders
Jeff Dudan (26:11.533)
So I'm not gonna, I will see what I can learn from you on these four pillars and then I'll maybe have a couple of questions that are just nagging at me.
Mick (26:12.558)
There it is.
Mick (26:21.646)
Yeah, man. So, you know, you probably know this, but Les Brown, motivational speaker, is one of my personal mentors. Les and I have like a father -son relationship. We talk literally four to five times a day. We start our morning talking to each other. We talk to each other right before we go to bed. That's the relationship that we have.
Jeff Dudan (26:28.397)
Yes.
Mick (26:41.998)
And part of what he saw in me were my core beliefs and my core principles. And anyone that's ever worked with Les, he's going to give you an acronym. And he was like, Mick, what you're saying is that you have the Mick factor. And everything that you've been able to do, you've done it because mental resiliency and mastery. So the right? Imagination and innovation, the I.
character and courage to see, knowing yourself and the power to keep going, okay? And so to me, that embodies not just a leader, but also just, I'm gonna say a great human being, right? Because life is about humans being humans. And so I like to impart the MEC factor as a way to always give your best in the situation that you're in.
I never tell people that your yesterday's best should be your today's best, right? Like if Jeff wakes up and he's not feeling 100%, I can't expect him to be who he was yesterday. But I can't expect Jeff to give me the best version of Jeff that he can today. And so that's what the MICK Factor does. It reminds me that, hey, there's things that I've got to make sure that I do. And in order to be the best, again, going back to that 10 -year -old me, in order to be the best, in order to be the kid that made straight A's or the kid that was going to be a first round driver,
or the kid that was going to be a doctor or a lawyer, I had to have mental resiliency. I had to master something, right? Like Bruce Lee says, I fear not the man that practices, you know, over 10 ,000 kicks. I fear the man that practices one kick 10 ,000 times, right? And so you've got to master something. And that goes into what we do with executive coaching as well too. Like what's your business really going to be? And are you going to keep the main thing the main thing? And then as you know, Jeff, with business, especially in today's world, imagination and innovation is.
is huge, right? Like you can't stay the same. And as things evolve, you have to evolve.
Mick (28:35.022)
And so if you're not using your imagination and if you're not using innovation to your advantage, you're not gonna be there. And then with courage and character, you just, you hit it on the head. It was like, I almost asked you that question, right? Like you've got to have the courage to take the first step because you're never gonna take the first step until you take it. And sometimes that takes courage. And then character to me is like the most important thing. Are you really gonna have integrity with what you do? It would have been very easy for me at 31 years old to be at more
I'm a multi -millionaire to forget who I was. And I think for a lot of us, we go through that phase, whether it's relationships, whether it's business, whatever, there's always moments that challenge us and challenge our character. And for anyone listening, don't think it's not gonna happen or it hasn't happened. But are you really gonna be the person that you say you are? And then that leads to know who you are.
Right? Like you've got to know that you have greatness within you as Les Brown would say. I probably owe him $20 for saying that today because that's his deal. But then more importantly, keep going because life is going to life. Right? Like life is really going to smack you at some point. And how do you respond? And are you going to keep going? And if you were to ask me, Jeff, what separates good from great? Because I hate when people try to quantify, you know, here's average, here's good, here's great, here's exceptional.
those rungs on the ladder aren't equal. Like the rung between good and great is really like this. It's not right here. It's not this small little step. But the difference is people are battle tested and they keep going. And at some point you're gonna come on the other side. And so to me that's what the MEC factor really is. It's the core pillars that can make you the best version of you every single day.
Jeff Dudan (30:23.821)
Imagination is an interesting piece. You don't hear a lot about that, but you said something. I read this book, How Google Works, and this is an older book. It's been out for a while. And they talk about how they built that company on smart creatives. And as I think about AI and the ability to fix code and do all this stuff,
Mick (30:36.366)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (30:50.349)
A lot of engineering, a lot of coding type stuff is now getting easier for more people to do through these tools. So smart creatives who can think about the question as opposed to the mechanics of working through to getting to an answer are the ones that are really going to be able to leverage these tools. So I find it interesting that you have imagination in here. And I wonder if you could just
talk a little bit deeper about how you encourage your clients to access their imagination and maybe how it impacts their leadership.
The Power of Imagination in Leadership and Business Strategy
Mick (31:28.27)
Yeah, absolutely. I tell people this all the time, your vision will show you where you want to go. Imagination is actually how you get there. Jeff, to use a football analogy, we know if we started the 20 yard line and we're going to the end zone, our vision shows us how to get there. We know where it is, but our imagination is what takes us to the end zone. Exactly.
Jeff Dudan (31:49.607)
the double reverse pass.
Mick (31:52.91)
Because nothing's gonna be as simple as going from point A to point B. And so for me, that's what imagination as a leader has to be a core principle. Imagination for a business has to be a core principle because you always have to evolve, right? Like if everything were easy and simple, everyone in this world would be billionaires, right? But the one thing that most billionaires have in common, Jeff, is that they had imagination to get to where they were.
I don't know any billionaire, number one, I don't personally know a ton of billionaires, I know a few, but all of them were creative and used imagination to come up with a new answer to a problem or a new question that maybe doesn't exist yet. And so if you talk to a Damon John, a Mark Cuban, they're all gonna tell you they didn't solve today's problem.
They solve the problem that nobody's thinking about. And to me, that's what imagination is, is the ability to see steps beyond steps. And for everyone that's listening or that's watching, literally, for your business, for your personal life, what is the solution that you're providing that no one's thought about? Because to me, that's the essence of true imagination in your business.
Jeff Dudan (33:05.485)
You know, to see things clearly in the future and to have the conviction to pursue them today. There's a Chinese proverb that says brilliance is, and of course I'm gonna butcher this, but, you know, the ability to look like a fool amongst the crowd.
and to withstand it, like brilliances. You've got to be the first one to see it, and you've got to be going after it, and most people are going to... How many of these stories do you hear where, now we had 120 private funding meetings, venture capital meetings, and nobody would fund us, and now it's Uber, or something like that, right? So you've got to be able to stand among the crowd and see it. So we're doing this thing. So one of my buckets, when I sold my business and I...
I tried my best Steve Jobs and I wrote up four pillars on the, four squares on the whiteboard. And I said, you know, when jobs came back and you know, they were in a hundred business lines and he said, we're just going to do these four things. And that's when he came, they recruited them back and he built Apple into what it is today. And so, you know, I, I had a bucket on my future imagination and it was called intellectual property, just IP. And you know, it's.
Okay, what is that? Well, it can be a podcast It can be a book or two. It can be trademarks. It can be speaking But now there's all these little tools out there like where they're either blockchain tools or their IP Repositories where you don't even have to file a trademark or a patent You can just put the idea in there and then because of the blockchain it'll prove that it was your idea on this date so
Mick (34:59.15)
Mm hmm.
Jeff Dudan (34:59.437)
You know, so I'm building, I'm building my team around me, assistance and, and, you know, specialists and stuff like that so that we can really, we can really pursue this IP. But when I have that conversation in a meeting and I'll say, Hey, we're going to use this tool and we're going to use that tool and we're going to use this tool. And, you know, here's all the little things that I want to put in there. And we're just going to start protecting all everything that we come up with. We're just going to start protecting. It might be a hundred bucks to, you know,
I came up with this little phrase, cash is king, but equity is the kingdom, right? I'm like, well, right? Right? That's a tweet, for sure. But, you know, and I've been saying it, and now people are playing it back to me. And I'm like, I should probably protect that. Because unless, you know, there's a chance I heard it somewhere, but I don't think so. So anyway, so, but we're in this room with a diverse set of people.
Mick (35:32.814)
That's it.
Right.
Mick (35:44.974)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (35:55.853)
And they all start coming up with saying, I had this idea about this. I had this idea about that. And it's just a whole fun time of people telling you all the inventions, all the ideas, all the things they think the world needs that don't currently exist that they can't find anywhere online. And they're everywhere. But people don't act on them. They don't write them down.
Mick (36:24.462)
Yep. Yep.
Jeff Dudan (36:25.773)
They don't protect them and they certainly don't say, you know what, I'm gonna give up something to go after this crazy idea that could be the next RJ45 connector that plugs a phone into the wall where the guy made billions of dollars, you know, because he had the patent on that or who knows what it is, you know? And it's so these, you know, the ideas that people can imagine are flowing.
Mick (36:33.678)
Right. Right.
Mick (36:40.846)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (36:53.677)
in and out of people's brains every day, but the conviction to actually say, you know, that's a business because that's a future need that people have. It's fascinating. So I love, and I think today more than ever, I think creativity and imagination channeled the right way, paid attention to, can create dividends for people.
Mick (37:05.569)
Yeah. Yeah, because I think now...
Mick (37:16.59)
No, I agree with that a thousand percent because I think one of the challenges today, especially with, I'm going to say the generation younger than us, Jeff, is that if it can't go on TikTok and go viral, they don't consider it to be a great business idea. Right. And to me, it's there's there's money in the mundane. That's what I tell people. Money in the mundane. So so be mundane sometimes. It's OK.
Jeff Dudan (37:34.797)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (37:39.949)
What's the most viral thing you've ever done, Mick? You got anything that ever went viral?
Mick (37:46.126)
Nope, and I don't even try to think of anything to go viral either. One of my most viewed podcasts is with Les Brown. That's the only thing that's gonna go viral, and it wasn't even me. It was Les doing something silly, but I've never tried to do anything viral. I don't pay attention if something has gone viral. I don't know. What about you?
Jeff Dudan (37:55.789)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (38:06.381)
You know the quarterback Sam Hartman who played for Notre Dame? Yeah, yeah, I had him. I went down and the day before the draft I went down and he's a family friend. So I went down and did him. I the one clip that went viral wasn't my core audience was does Sam Hartman have a girlfriend? That's the most viral thing we've got. I don't know what does it got 3, 400, 500 ,000 views or something like that. It's yeah.
Mick (38:11.822)
and wait for us. Yeah.
Mick (38:28.202)
There you go.
Beyond Mission Statements: Find Your "Because"
Jeff Dudan (38:35.373)
The answer for those wondering, yes, he does. So save yourself the pain of going to find that clip. So when is it you came to understand that because could be more powerful than why?
Mick (38:35.469)
Crazy.
Mick (38:41.602)
You just ruined some hearts, Jeff.
Mick (38:58.286)
That's a great question. So I don't want to be cliche and say when I was 10, but I would say literally halfway through my first business, when I kept going back to the more success I have, the better my mom is going to be. My mom is my why also. But it was because of promise that I made.
Jeff Dudan (39:19.692)
Yeah.
Mick (39:24.75)
It was because I didn't want to let her down. And to me, that was more powerful because I had to look myself in the mirror every day. Right. And did I let my mom down today? Did I give my best? Right. When you know what your why is, it's awesome. Right. Like, I'm sure everyone's kids are their why. Everyone's spouses are their why. Right. But why?
Right? So, so what's the true reason? You know, like if you ask why five or six times, you get to the actual answer, right? Like, I'm sure you've done this with your kids, right? Why? Why? Why? Then you get to the real answer. Right. But well, that six or seventh is your actual because. And so that's why I like to go deeper. And I actually do this exercise with businesses that I coach as well, too, is we get rid of mission and vision statements at your business.
Jeff Dudan (39:58.317)
yeah, I'm pulling my hair out while I'm saying that.
Jeff Dudan (40:04.653)
Okay.
Mick (40:16.686)
Because most of the time, those statements were created by a marketing firm or marketing company or marketing consultant. And no one on your team really embraces or they're not really impacted by your mission and vision statement. And honestly, this was a Harvard Business Review study. Only 8 % of customers even know a mission or vision statement of one of the top brands that they work with or that they do business with. But a because statement can be powerful. So we actually have businesses
Jeff Dudan (40:20.269)
Hmm.
Mick (40:47.086)
go through a because statement exercise and we really boil it down to what's the real reason that your business does what it does for its consumers.
and that should be your because statement. You don't need a mission statement. You don't need a vision statement. I could probably guess everyone who's listening that owns or works at a business, I could probably guess within five words what your mission and vision statement is because most of them all sound the same, right? But if I told you, Jeff, we do what we do at Premier Strategy Box or at Mic Unplugged because results matter to our customers, that means something, right? Because results matter.
Jeff Dudan (41:21.933)
Hmm. Okay.
Mick (41:28.878)
because somebody gave a darn, right? Like those are, that's an example of one that one of my clients changed their suit. Because someone gave a darn, we could start this charitable foundation that we have that gives back to veterans and servicemen. Because someone gave a darn. You're gonna remember that as a consumer. You're gonna connect with that.
If I say our mission is to be the most sought after real estate agency in the country and we have a vision to be the leader in our community, which I'm sure everybody that's listening, you have something like that in your mission and vision statements, I promise you. That doesn't resonate with anyone and I promise you no one on your team can recite them either.
Jeff Dudan (42:09.261)
Yeah, dude, I really, really like that. Yeah, I like that a lot. That makes a lot of sense.
Mick (42:14.894)
Thank you. Yeah, like when I go speak, I'll say, okay, who's the business owner here and who are the employees? And raise your hand, right? If you're the business owner, don't look at me. If you're an employee, look at me. Can you recite your mission and vision statement verbatim right now? And hardly anyone's hands go up and I say, get rid of them.
Don't put them on your website. If they don't connect with you personally, if they don't give you chills when you think about it, get rid of them.
Jeff Dudan (42:45.965)
Yeah, so we have a vision statement and it's long. Our purpose statement is embedded within it and it's impacting future generations and we do that by the three things that I mentioned earlier. So that's tight, but I wonder what the because would be. You know, like why, like why does it matter that we impact future generations? You know, if we did a because statement, exercise.
Mick (42:58.766)
Mm -hmm.
Why Legacy Matters: The Heart Behind Homefront Brands
Mick (43:11.31)
because your legacy matters.
Jeff Dudan (43:13.229)
Hmm.
Mick (43:15.63)
Right? And we could go through an exercise.
Jeff Dudan (43:16.813)
Jen call easy IP and before Mick does and
I don't get that. Is it? All right, make sure we record that. Yeah.
Mick (43:24.141)
That's my gift to you, Jeff. But something like, but knowing what I know about home front brands though, right? Like you do what you do because legacies matter or because your financial legacy should matter, right? But along those lines, right, right.
Jeff Dudan (43:39.981)
Yeah, but it's more than just financial. It's more than that. Yeah, I like, you know, I am impulsive, but that might work its way into the deck or something, you know. I'm definitely gonna do an exercise. I'm definitely gonna look at that. Well, thank you. Thank you so much. And it's Christmas in July.
Mick (43:58.126)
It's my Christmas gift to you, Jeff. It's what I'm here for. It's what I'm here for. Right. Because Christmas happens every year, you know?
Jeff Dudan (44:07.437)
It does. It does. Okay, got it. Because Christmas happened. That could be somebody's because statement. Like the, what is it, Franklin Ministries? Have you ever done that where they pack up all the boxes up here? That's halfway between you. That's down in Fort Mill, I think, right? Yeah. And we've done that as a family. That's pretty cool. What is that? Do you remember the name of that? It's Franklin, it's Billy, it's Franklin Graham, Billy Graham's son.
Mick (44:12.782)
See it?
Great.
Mick (44:22.414)
Mm -hmm. Yeah. Yep. Yep. Yep.
Mick (44:31.982)
I don't. If you wouldn't have asked me, I could have been...
Jeff Dudan (44:37.773)
And they're packing up that's the and you pack up all those boxes and you send them all over the world for Christmas. Yeah, yeah, we did that. That was pretty cool. That would be great. Well, fantastic boy. Enjoyed that so much I've lost my train of thought. I'm all in. You got me all in my belly button now, make I'm thinking about our business. That's not supposed to be thinking about yours, but I guess that's you know what? But that's a testament to what you do.
Mick (44:38.222)
Yep.
Mick (44:44.526)
Mm -hmm. Yeah. That's awesome.
Mick (44:55.118)
Hahaha
Mick (45:02.414)
But so are the listeners.
Jeff Dudan (45:05.357)
What a perfect example of great advisory and great consulting right there in real live action. Yeah, yeah, awesome. So as you imagine your future from here, what types of things do you put in that picture?
Mick (45:12.078)
There you go. Let's go. Let's go.
Mick (45:25.678)
Yeah, so, you know, the reason I moved back home, you and I, we talked offline, right? And part of it is I have nieces and nephews now. And so, you know, I'm such a family person, if you can't tell, family means a lot to me and it's my driver. And so being able to be closer to them and then coming back to the community that I'm going to say shaped some of the ideals that I have and just being able to be active in a community that I care about.
Jeff Dudan (45:33.485)
Mm.
Mick (45:54.286)
And so for me, the future is really just continuing to impact individual lives and businesses through whatever avenues that I can, whether that's building online communities, whether that's doing things in podcasts or.
bringing some of my friends who have been guests on my podcast to actually come speak or just show up at places, right? Like I feel like being a giver and being a servant leader never gets old. And so that's what my future is gonna continue to do.
Jeff Dudan (46:16.109)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (46:26.381)
Coming from Raleigh, which is a fast growing, carry Raleigh area, fast growing, Greenville was one of the fastest growing towns and counties in the United States.
Mick (46:41.102)
It doesn't look like it did when I left when I was 18. And I can promise you.
Jeff Dudan (46:43.221)
No, no, lots of businesses, beautiful downtown area. You got the river there, all kinds of stuff going on. We would stop. My daughter went to Clemson and sorry. Well, you know, yeah, I know it. I know it. So my my son married a Tar Heel and we went to the graduation, what, two years ago, maybe she's in pre -med now. She's at Wake Forest Medical School.
Mick (46:56.586)
I'm a Tar Heel and Tar Heel only.
Mick (47:10.606)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (47:11.949)
And I think it was when, I think you went to the national championship, but I think you didn't quite finish, right? Didn't quite, you just, but you ran out of time, Mick. You didn't lose. You just, you ran out of time. And, but the great thing about that team was they had no expectations of making it that far. And they just went on a run and just really threw some, I think it was a great guard play and.
Mick (47:21.134)
I like that. We didn't finish. Exactly.
We just keep doing what we do.
Jeff Dudan (47:41.197)
You know, I think I remember the season well.
Mick (47:44.334)
I do too. You know what I remember most about that season and probably what I'm most proud of Jeff and I'm going to get real emotional when I say this. I'm going to come into the mic and I'm going to look Jeff in his eyes. We beat Coach K in his last game. To all my dookies out there, that season went very well for us.
Jeff Dudan (48:03.725)
Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know, so you don't you you so Clemson's just you have casual dislike for but Duke you're actively you act now.
Mick (48:18.35)
There's, I don't use the word hate often, but the four letter word that goes with hate is usually Duke. That's how that goes.
Jeff Dudan (48:27.405)
All right, well, we shoot for fair and balanced reporting here on Homefront brands. But, you know, when it comes not except when it comes to college sports in the Carolinas, which is huge. So but yeah, I mean, we would on our way back from visiting her, we would always stop in Greenville. And there's just up to something going somewhere town. And I'm sure you're going to find a lot of yeah, I don't think now your client base because of your affiliations that you that you have with Les Brown and others. I mean, you work nationally or do you try to work to where you can
Mick (48:37.934)
There you go. There you go.
Jeff Dudan (48:57.869)
comfortably and easily get your hands on people. Okay.
Mick (48:58.958)
No, we're internationally for sure, for sure. So we have clients in eight countries and three continents. So yeah, we.
We're out there and I have a team, so it's not just me. Like I promise you, I'm the, purposely, I'm the least smart person on my team. So we have a great team that does amazing things and, you know, COVID introduced the world to remote meetings. And so it makes it a lot easier for us to do what we do as well.
Jeff Dudan (49:18.925)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (49:31.213)
Awesome. Well, fantastic. Mick, is there anything else you'd like to cover before we jump off here today?
Mick (49:40.302)
No, I just appreciate you having me on. Like I said, I've been a fan for a very long time, so this is like almost bucket list for me to be on here with you, Jeff.
Jeff Dudan (49:48.525)
Well, that's very kind. I appreciate it. And you've got a new fan in me. I think this has been great. I really appreciate it. I got a lot of respect for what you do and how you do it. And maybe we can find a way to work together. I can certainly, if I understand who your clients are, as I'm knocking around this world, maybe I can make some introductions for you and vice versa.
Mick (50:12.078)
And same, I was gonna say same, like I reciprocate. So to me again, back to being good humans, that's what good humans do. So that's what I wanna do for you as well.
Jeff Dudan (50:18.189)
Yeah, 100%. Last question for you. If you had one sentence to make an impact in somebody's life, what would that be?
Mick (50:32.878)
Great question, Jeff. You're hitting me hard. If I had one sentence to make an impact on someone's life, what would that be? So I'm gonna, I wanna give the sentence, I don't wanna have to give color around the sentence. Keep your inner circle tight. Keep your inner circle tight. From experience, I will tell you.
Everyone that's for you isn't always for you. So make sure you keep your inner circle tight.
Jeff Dudan (51:05.101)
Got it. Perfectly said. We'll end on that. Mick, thanks for being on.
Mick (51:12.174)
Thank you for having me, brother.
Jeff Dudan (51:12.717)
All right, this has been Mick Hunt with Jeff Duden and we have been on the home front. Thanks for listening.
The body content of your post goes here. To edit this text, click on it and delete this default text and start typing your own or paste your own from a different source.












