Rags to Riches | Justin Prince | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this uplifting and high-energy episode of The Homefront, Jeff Dudan sits down with Justin Prince—a global entrepreneur, keynote speaker, and author of Be the One. From selling Bible videos at a mall kiosk to building five multimillion-dollar businesses with over $2 billion in sales, Justin’s journey is raw, real, and remarkable. With powerful insights on mindset, leadership, identity, and financial freedom, this episode will fire up anyone ready to rewrite their story and build a life they love.
Key Takeaways
- Success begins with possibility, ends with inevitability. Justin teaches five levels of belief and how to move from “impossible” to “inevitable.”
- Maximize income, minimize expenses, and build assets. His 3-step wealth-building framework offers a clear path to long-term financial freedom.
- Social retail empowers everyday entrepreneurs. Justin's reimagined model fuses e-commerce and influencer marketing into a frictionless business opportunity.
- Identity drives behavior. You’ll never outperform how you see yourself—so rewrite your inner story and raise your expectations.
- Win both races. Don’t just chase professional success; succeed at home as a parent, partner, and leader of legacy.
- Be the one. The difference-maker in your family, your community, and your own life is already you—now it’s time to act.
FEATURED QUOTE
“You already are the one. The challenge is to go be that one—today.”
TRANSCRIPT
Justin Prince’s Origin Story: From Bible Videos to Billion-Dollar Brands
Jeff Dudan (00:02.607)
I am Jeff Duden and we are on the home front. As always, this podcast is brought to you by home front brands, simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action, to transform their lives, impact communities, and enhance the lives of the people they care the most about all the while delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the home front, where it counts. If this sounds like you check us out at homefrontbrands.com today.
and start your next chapter of greatness, building your dynasty on the home front. And I will be looking for you here. And today we have the huge honor of having Justin Prince on the podcast. Welcome, Justin.
Justin Prince (00:44.926)
Hey man, honor to be with you. Appreciate you inviting me on.
Jeff Dudan (00:47.559)
Oh, 100%. So I'll do a little bit of background and catch everybody up. So Justin Prince is a global entrepreneur who has built five multi-million dollar businesses that have generated more than $2 billion in revenue. An acclaimed keynote speaker who has shared stages around the world with icons such as John Maxwell, Jamie Kerm Lima, Ed Milett, you know those names, and a heart-centered husband and proud father of four. We share that. Well, I've only got three, so you're one up on me there.
Yet he was raised in a broken home, has no college education, and began his professional career working construction, flipping pizzas, and selling animated Bible videos from a mall kiosk. In fact, his very first business venture left him below zero financially, and his first sliver of success came while raising his kids in a one-room loft above his in-law's garage.
Justin's unexpected rise, proven personal development strategies, and tailored success systems have moved and motivated millions of people to create, design, and live an unforgettable life. In his latest book, Be the One, Justin shares precise tools, habits, and action steps to help any reader do the same. With a focus on practical and actionable advice, this book serves as an easy-to-follow instruction manual for anyone, too, as Justin puts it. Be the One. Welcome, sir.
Justin Prince (02:04.342)
Man, thank you for having me, uh, really admire and appreciate what we're doing. I'm, I'm, uh, I'm repping the Jeff dude in life over here, man. So I really appreciate it. I'm excited to be here with you.
Jeff Dudan (02:14.459)
Oh man, good. Let me know what you think. Let me know what you think of that those words there. It'd mean a lot So I'd love to start out and just I know that was a pretty it was a high-level bio But can you fill in kind of early life? I mean from observationally from From what I've learned. I mean, obviously you're an athlete. You're in really good shape, man I see evidence of that on your on your videos and maybe a little bit of boxing but like where'd you grow up? How'd you grow up? Can you can you color that up for us?
And that would be just a great place to start.
Justin Prince (02:44.71)
Yeah, well, I don't know. I don't know. Definitely don't know if I'm a great athlete. Now I was probably a decent athlete growing up, but played four sports, basketball, football track, and then I used to box. And by the way, I want to point out Jeff, the older I get, the better I was all four of those. So I'm getting better. I'm getting better every year.
Jeff Dudan (03:01.656)
100%. Well, there's less witnesses out there.
Raised by a Single Mom: 13 Moves in 7 Years and a Flea-Sized Ceiling
Justin Prince (03:06.074)
Exactly, yeah, there's less people that can't validate that story. So no, so I grew up in a kind of a middle class family in a place called Sandy, Utah. And my folks got divorced when I was 12. We moved 13 times in the seven years to the teenage years. I was my mom's oldest child. And so we moved, kind of just bounced around with a single mom. I have a special place in my heart for single moms. I was raised by single parents. And
During that time, you're kind of going through high school, you're playing sports. I was hyper competitive. I was, you know, driven to succeed in sports. And, you know, I went to college for about a semester and a half and I'm sitting there and I'm like, I hate this. Like, what am I doing here? So I was introduced to sales. I had no prior professional background. I was making pizzas. I was doing construction work. And so I worked at a mall kiosk selling animated Bible videos. I was the guy you tried to avoid at the mall. I tease people that the malls where all of us older people used to go when the Amazon was a river.
you know, we would like walk around these places and there was these kiosk workers you try to not make eye contact with. That was my job. And I sold these Bible videos and I always had big dreams and big goals. I always really wanted to do something with my life. My guess is your audience relates with that. You just kind of feel this like burn and this desire to really, you know, make your kids proud, make your spouse proud, like living a significant life. And when I was 25, I started my first business. I just went for it. Just kind of went.
all in headlong. It was in the nutrition world. I was marketing a nutritional product. And the company that we were distributing the products for, our overall distribution company, they went out of business. So when that happened, I was below zero financially. Back on credit cards, I was behind on taxes. Left me in a really precarious financial situation. And so that's when we moved into the loft of my wife's parents' garage. I started another business. I went got two part-time jobs. I was working on the weekday on one job. The weekends traveling for the other job.
just that grind of just trying to make it happen. And I remember coming home many nights, you know, it's pitch black and I'd kiss my little babies on the cheek. They're they slept in the closet. I would leave in the morning early. They would be asleep in the closet. I remember, you know, one in the morning asked my wife, I'm like, Are you awake? And she goes, Yeah, she goes, Are you awake? I'm like, Yeah, I'm like, honey, am I crazy? Like am I chasing a fake dream? And my guess is some people can relate to that. You just wonder. Like, it's like.
“Am I Chasing a Fake Dream?”: Credit Cards, Closets, and Comebacks
Justin Prince (05:25.778)
I know it's possible for Jeff. I know it's possible for other people. Is it ever going to be possible for me? I remember listening to an audio series by a guy named Jim Rome. So I think a lot of us have heard of Tony Robbins. Jim Rome was Tony Robbins' original mentor. And he had all of these great speakers at a big event. And he spoke, and then they would all speak and share their story, share their testimonials. So he stands up on the stage to close the event. He says, we now have enough testimonials and enough personal experiences to conclude that it's possible.
Jeff Dudan (05:36.795)
That's right.
Justin Prince (05:54.114)
to create and to design an extraordinary life. And I remember hearing that thinking to myself, I knew it was possible for all of those people to do it. I just didn't know if it would be possible for me. And with that business, I eventually got to a point where the business, I could get rid of one of the part-time jobs and I got the business big enough, the income big enough where he gets rid of the second part-time job. We eventually moved out of the loft of my wife's parents' garage, moved into a, at the time, like a 5,600 square foot home. And I went from a 250,000 mile wide Toyota Corolla to a five series BMW. And I was like, oh my gosh, I paid off my.
credit cards, paid off my taxes. I was like, I'm like living the dream, you know. Anyway, I ultimately sold that business. I did private equity consulting for two years and my current business, I came into a company, so check this out, Jeff. It was a company that was a couple hundred million dollars a year in revenue. I've been in business for 25 years. I was doing business in 20-plus countries around the world. 250 different SKUs.
but it had had eight years of consecutive double digit per year decline in revenue. So in other words, revenues are going the wrong direction. It's written in kind of a really vulnerable situation. So I came in as part of a consulting team to see if we could help transform this company. And in that process, we created a business model called social retail, kind of a super simple sharing model. We created a new company called Modair. And we were just like, man, we thought we had a big, I remember thinking, I was like, we have a billion dollar idea. Like this is a big idea. So.
I went into it, started like leading the sales, like basically like heading up all of our sales organization. And in that process, I was wrong. It wasn't a billion dollar idea. You know, today, you know, nine years in, we've done over 2.4 billion. So it was bigger than I maybe even anticipated originally. We've acquired over well over 4 million customers and we've paid out over well over a billion in commissions because our model is we're building like these everyday what I call everyday entrepreneurs, just normal folks that are sharing a discount code. And so that model.
Jeff Dudan (07:41.91)
Mm-hmm.
How Justin Helped Revive a Failing Company With Social Retail
Justin Prince (07:44.734)
has created a lot of success for a lot of folks. It's been a really cool, cool thing to watch. And so I now get to share with people, I've spoken now in 30 countries around the world, well over 100 million views on social media, done a couple billion dollars in revenue, and I share now with people that are your listeners that I now can share from my own personal experience and my own testimonial that it is possible.
that it's possible for you listening to create and to design an extraordinary life. Even though those of you that are wondering man is it even possible? Just remember this. There's basically five levels of certainty. The lowest level of certainty and by the way, certainty is an interesting word, right? Certainty is guess how certain you are of certain things you're certain of. Like you're pretty committed to this stuff, right? So there's five levels. The lowest level would be it's impossible. If something is impossible, guess how much time energy?
you're going to put into something that's completely impossible. Like, well, not very much because it's not even possible. The next level up would be it's possible. So that's where it all starts is at least it's possible. It's possible for me. It's possible for you to create an extraordinary life. Next would be improbable. Yes, it's possible, but it is improbable for me. Like in other words, I know it's possible in the world, but the odds of me doing it are improbable next would be up as probable. The next level would be it's, it's probable. And then the lastly is it's inevitable.
Jeff Dudan (09:07.441)
Oh, I love it.
Justin Prince (09:07.442)
And my friends, what I love to help people do is go from like, is my success, you have to believe it's at least possible, but I like taking it from impossible to possible and then ultimately from impossible to inevitable where your success is guaranteed. You know that you have the components, the tactical skill sets, the strategies, the mindsets to actually go make your success not hopeful or possible, but actually, you know, inevitable. And that's what I love to help entrepreneurs do now.
Jeff Dudan (09:35.552)
Well, I tell you that's such a mouthful of truth because what I've learned and like right now I have my hands in 31 businesses, which is ridiculous, right? But what I've learned is you don't fail, you just quit before you're done. And if you know what you're doing and you like if you've...
If you've got an idea and it's got legs, or even if it's a basic business that competes kind of in a red ocean, but you know, it's a money-making business and you can compete as well as anybody else. A lot of times, but every, every business idea dies three, four, five, 10 times. We were forward finally gets the right mix of talent and technology and marketing and, and funding and everything that it needs to go forward. And, and I think people that have lost.
so many battles, I think, tend to think that, you know, I feel a little bit bulletproof, right? I think if I'm willing to stick with anything long enough that I can make it work. Now here's the question I've learned to ask, because I've been around people, billionaires and things like that. You know, I've got one of friends, he's a billionaire, and he was in the dental insurance industry and really revolutionized it.
And I'll bring him a concept and we'll be talking about it. And he'll say, okay, that's great. But is that the easiest dollar we can make? You know, because there's a trade-off in your time and your energy, like, yeah, you can make money doing almost anything, but like, is the friction and the juice worth the squeeze on that? Really love what you said there.
Justin Prince (11:00.83)
Yeah. Yes.
Jeff Dudan (11:14.551)
I want to get into this concept because I saw a video that you did online about social retail and you compared it to multi-level marketing and you kind of compared and contrasted the differences to it. So it looks like you took a model that says I'm going to lean into this gig economy. I'm going to lean into products that people use every day, but I'm not going to do that old model. I'm going to turn this into a digital, into a social model and I'm going to create more leverage and I'm going to create less friction.
Justin Prince (11:21.803)
Mm-hmm.
Jeff Dudan (11:42.547)
And it sounds like you turned that company around in a big way. Is that basically what you did is you really put a new spin on kind of a, of a multi-level like model. And was that why you compare the two?
Social Retail vs. MLM: What Makes Justin’s Model Different?
Justin Prince (11:56.15)
Yeah, yeah, that angle, there's really, there's really, there's really two models combined that created social retail. The first is the online, just this drive to online shopping and you have these, it's kind of like called social shopping where we have companies that are doing billions in revenue, they have millions of customers and they have no stores. Like they're just doing it all through basically the power of word of mouth. And then the second one is the direct sales or network marketing or multiple marketing model, which the power of that one is, is these incredible people.
You know, these incredible like entrepreneurial people that are out there passionately sharing about products or services that they like. Both those models have limitations. You know, I've worked with a bunch of people from – they come from the retail space. They're like, God, it's just so hard to get people to talk about our stuff and how do we incentivize them and how do we like get our brand up off the ground? And then in the network marketing model, the network marketing model or the multi-level marketing model, maybe the biggest fundamental flaw that that model's had is that let's say the company does a hundred million dollars in sales. The overwhelming majority of that revenue, that hundred million –
comes from the distributor base or the representatives of that company consuming the products themselves. It's what's called a self-consumption model, which means they're buying and consuming the products themselves, which I have no problem with them consuming the products. That's great, I have no problem. They're passionate about it, I think it's great. But yeah, but if you don't have end of the line consumers, not people that have signed up to make it all, or not people that have even signed up, period, but just end of the line consumers. First of all, the FTC and government regulatory agencies don't like it, but more importantly, it's like a...
Jeff Dudan (13:09.109)
Amway, right?
Justin Prince (13:25.142)
Fundamentally kind of broken model would be like it'd be like most of the sales from the car dealership are coming from the car sells people You'd be like that doesn't make sense for most of the food at the restaurant is being consumed by the waiters and waitresses Like that wouldn't make sense. So
Jeff Dudan (13:33.171)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (13:38.027)
Yeah, there's only so much toothpaste that we can actually use ourselves, right? And most people, most people would say I should use a little more.
Justin Prince (13:41.406)
Yeah, that's right. You got to build a
Justin Prince (13:47.266)
Yeah, you got to over time build a massive community of online customers. So now here's the flip side to that. My passion was to create opportunity for entrepreneurs. That's what woke me up in the morning is to create opportunity for entrepreneurs. That billion plus that we've paid out in commissions, that fires me up. We can go serve people at a high level and go help families.
in individuals to change their financial situation.
Jeff Dudan (14:16.631)
Yeah, so who do you help? Like who benefits from getting involved with your platform? Is it somebody who's got a nine to five job and then they're gonna do this after hours and they're gonna start slow and then ultimately maybe replace their nine to five with what you're doing?
Who Thrives in Social Retail? Moms, Hustlers, and Everyday Influencers
Justin Prince (14:30.654)
Yeah, I think generally speaking it's someone that has you know other things happening another career Maybe they're a mom they got raising a family and they're looking for additional supplemental income That's that's definitely like the mass of who we serve and they're looking for You know hundreds or thousands of dollars of additional income, you know per per month With that said though, we have some really sophisticated people that see what we're doing They see that they can create, you know a leveraged a leveraged income a leveraged business
and really create something really significant. So we attract those folks as well. But those are like your one percenters versus the 99 percenters. And then we've also had some folks that have been really high level influencer people. Our model, I would say, is kind of that like 1,000 to 10,000 people on social media. We've had people that have succeeded with less followers than this. But to me, that little nano influencer, so not even a micro influencer, they're like a step below that. Like they have...
You know, they're on social and they have a little following, but they're following likes and trusts. Man, we can help those people to start monetizing this time that they're spending on social media and start learning how to make money online. And here's the thing, Jeff, there's a chasm and the chasm is continuing to grow. A chasm in the world of do you know how to make money online or do you not? And that's you want to learn how to be on the side of people that know how to generate income online.
And we specialize in that. You know, we've become one of the kind of preeminent opportunities for people to generate income from their phones, like literally income from anywhere. So you versus just, you know, working in a, in a traditional store, like a brick and mortar store where there's geographic restrictions, meaning if I move from Kentucky to, you know, California and I run that store, I might be in trouble with our business. You could, you know, there's no geographic restrictions. And then the other thing I think is happening a lot with this economy with both inflation and
either we're either in a recession or heading into one depending on how you want to look at it, is one of the things that keeps us playing small, whether it's just kind of as an employee or just kind of in our life, is the risk, the swallow of risk. It's like, man, I've got to go spend 50 grand to get this thing up off the ground or 100 grand or 500 grand depending on what the business looks like. And not to mention the sweat equity, but the risk, the cash or credit risk. With our business, there's really no downside. For a couple hundred bucks, someone's fully in business.
Justin Prince (16:54.622)
And so even if you're just terrible at it, even if you're like the worst, you walk away and you're not financially damaged, where if you're good at it, you can start to generate income and our goal is to help someone to get into the profit right away. But even if you're just terrible at it, it wasn't your thing. You don't leave it just in shambles. So you just kind of play small your whole life. You actually can go for it. And so it's a low risk, high upside business.
because there's low cash incentive or no credit incentive to get started. So that's what we've done and it's been a super, super rewarding thing to watch this kind of come to life.
Jeff Dudan (17:32.091)
Do you find that many people that join you in this, it's their first entrepreneurial experience?
Wealth Building 101: Maximize, Minimize, Build Cash-Flowing Assets
Justin Prince (17:39.306)
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. They're what I call everyday entrepreneurs. So an everyday entrepreneur for me is they're not this huge business person. They're just a normal person like you and I. And they've got a little bit of hustle. They're willing to follow some directions. And they're willing to go for it, put themselves out there a little bit. And we can help that person to start to generate income. So again, it's that mom that's raising these two little babies and she's.
you know, maybe looking for some ways to supplement the income. Or it's a dad that's got a career, but he's looking to find a way to supplement the income and change their financial situation. I teach three steps in wealth building. I was taught these by a billionaire mentor of mine that I've modeled so much of my life after. And the three steps are, number one, maximize income. So most people, like in the United States, our median income is about $54,000. So you. You.
you wanna maximize it. Most people they make what they make basically through their current. Now we'll make a little bit more just over time because of you know to keep up with the regular inflation but just you know we basically make what we make from 25 to 30 to 50 to 60. We just sort of make you know we're a nurse and we just sort of make what we make you know. You wanna maximize you want your trend lines to go up as far as income so you start finding a way to make more. So you make $500 extra a month.
500 extra 6,000 a year at 60,000 over 10. Like, whoa, like you start maximizing your potential. $1,000 a month is 12,000 a year. It's 120,000 over 10. So you start to maximize that income. That's just step one of wealth building. Step two is minimize expenses. So you create a maximum of mizes going up and then you start creating a trend line going down where you're getting rid of like the gym membership you haven't gone to in four years or just the goofy crap that you're spending money on. And you start to create a gap.
between your income going up and your expenses going down. That gap is where you can do step three, which is to build cash flowing assets. And what I love about our business is, I can help someone to create a leveraged income so they maximize their income, they keep their job and maximize their income, teach them how to minimize their expenses. So you just get a little bit more financial literacy. And then ultimately to create cash flowing assets because you create a leveraged income that you leverage again into cash flowing assets.
Justin Prince (19:53.398)
I mean with that strategy, first of all, that strategy changed my whole life. You know, I went from a guy that, you know, to like had no business being in business at all, zero financial literacy, zero, you know, educational background to becoming, you know, you know, a relatively successful dude, you know, and I look at that, so it's maximize, minimize, build three steps. And so I love to help people to maximize, like that's what I love about our business. We can help them to start adding more cash flow to their business.
to their life. And that is such an important step in wealth building.
Jeff Dudan (20:27.82)
You appear to be passionate about speaking, and it looks like it's something you do a lot of and something that you're exceptional at. How does that fit into what you do? Is it a big part of what you do? Is it kind of an occasional thing? What does your life look like today?
Entrepreneur vs. Speaker: How Justin Uses the Stage to Serve, Not Survive
Justin Prince (20:46.186)
Yeah, that's a great question. I speak all the time. I've spoken literally all over the world, just in Australia a couple weeks ago speaking. But here's how I would say it. I have friends of mine who are speakers who speak. That is what they do for a living. That's their career. I'm an entrepreneur who speaks. So I don't want to be on a plane for four or five days a week speaking. That would not be the life I'm trying to create. I'm all about leverage. I'm all about residual cash flow.
Like just getting a speaker's fee and just grinding away on planes is not the life I'm trying to build. And so I love to do it because I love to serve people. I love to do it because it's a it's a gifting, you know, you kind of figure out some of your giftings that you have over time. But I can pick my spots. I don't I don't have to do it to like make a living. Like I pick my spots and so I can do it where I can add the most value and serve at the highest level and really see if I can move people's hearts. So.
That's how I do it. I speak all the time, but I do it kind of, I get to pick my spots. My primary business is my business. And so a lot of the insights and tips and strategies I have, this is not theory. You know how it is, dude. Like if you're involved in 31 businesses, man, you start picking up some stuff that you don't necessarily read in a book. It's just stuff you learn on the job and in the trenches and in the fight that you just can't learn any other way. Some things you can only learn through experience. And so a lot of the stuff I teach is not like,
regurgitated stuff from personal development. It's stuff that you learn as you're winning and losing as an entrepreneur.
Jeff Dudan (22:16.439)
Yeah, so everything's a compilation in life. I've got two books out, Discernment's definitely a compilation of what I learned building a national franchise to 240 locations. I wrote another book called Hey Coach, and that was a compilation that happened from coaching 30 seasons of my kid's sport. So when I get to the end of a chapter or an era, I was done coaching my last kid and I'm like, okay, well I've got a file cabinet full of...
how we went about this. So I'm gonna put that into a book so that anybody else, you know, it's not gonna die with me inside of my skull. Same thing with discernment. I sold my business in January of 2019. The book came out later that year. And I just wanted to really memorialize, like who helped me along the way? What did I learn? And what do I have that I can communicate that might help other people who are trying to accomplish something or similar?
And it's very fulfilling for me. So yeah, a hundred percent. And I've got so much stuff. So now of course, I just keep it on a little phone, right? So I'll be having a thought about a business meeting that I had and I'll just connect three or four disparate dots and I'll make sure that I capture that. And I encourage people to do that. Like if, you know, they used to say journaling and I don't know if you've ever done any journaling, my journaling is just into Microsoft to do's, but I've got 19 folders of different types of things.
Because if you don't get it down right when you do it, it's gone. It's gone forever. And then that's actually, when I look back and I look at all of it, that's what I use in my speaking engagements and my keynotes. And I'll, so I'll write, you know, I'll have a thought, a connected thought, and then I'll develop that into a bit per se. And then that'll, you know, I'll say, well, I'm gonna end that next keynote with that. And that's, well, and then you'll see how it goes, right? It doesn't, not everything works all the time, but.
Justin Prince (24:04.556)
I love that.
Jeff Dudan (24:09.075)
Yeah, so, and I think to a certain extent, Justin, and I can see that you are a very charitable man. And I do want to talk about your family, and I know that's important, but like we have an obligation to take all of this road rash and everything and all of the failures and fights and successes. And we have some sort of an obligation, I think to the broader society, to this economy, to the country.
to maintain, to pour into entrepreneurs, because that is Main Street USA, and small business is the engine of our economy. 100%. So I really admire what you're doing, and I really admire why you're doing it. So one of the things, I'd love to hear some philosophies about your kids, and how you think about, like how do you...
Justin Prince (24:47.718)
It's the lifeblood. I agree with you 100%.
Jeff Dudan (25:05.747)
speak into your kids' lives based on what you learned early in your life and the hardships that you had and the struggle. And I think I saw somewhere your kids were sleeping in the closet in your in-laws thing. Like how have you used your experiences to inform them? And, you know, what lessons are really important to you as you lead your family?
Win Both Races: How to Succeed at Home and at Work
Justin Prince (25:27.102)
And that's a great question. So I have a couple thoughts on this. There's a man named David McKay that's, or David O. McKay that said this. He said, no success outside your home can compensate for failure inside your home. And I believe there's two races that we're trying to win. The first race is the race we all kind of know about. So if you're a competitive driven, maybe former athlete or entrepreneurial or business minded, you kind of want to win. Like, you're not just doing this just to do it. You're trying to like,
Jeff Dudan (25:39.887)
100 percent.
Justin Prince (25:56.466)
succeed. You know, we're trying to win. So you're trying to figure out what the rules are and how it works and how do you win and how do you, you know, so what is winning is, I guess, question one. So the normal race we all try and win is the race of success. So it's like build the business, make the income, build the investment portfolio. You know, get the Instagram following, get the views, speak on stage, whatever your whatever winning looks like in that, you know, have the house, have the car, have all the toys, all that stuff. Okay, cool. To me, the real race is the second race.
The second race is your relationship with your spouse, your relationship with your faith, your relationship with your kids, the way you treat people, like your legacy, like the kind of person that you are. So if you were to win the first race, but you lose the second race, to me, you actually lost the races. So the goal is to win both. Now here's the good news, you can win both. You don't have to be rich and be a punk to everybody, number one, and number two, you don't have to be.
poor but at least you're spiritual. Like it's like no you can win both of these things. Like you can have you can live a really incredible life and do both. Second thing I'd say is when it comes so that's a philosophy that I try and share both with myself but with my kids. Second thing I'd say with my kids is I believe that success is an identity process and you'll never outperform the way that you see yourself. And so if you see yourself as a winner you're not going to roll over and quit like a loser would if you see yourself as a loser you're not going to show up and
pay the price and do the things that a winner would. James Clear wrote Atomic Habits, a famous book. And he said, there was two boys, one of the boys stole the candy. And they said to the first boy, they said, the first child, they said, did you steal the candy? And the little boy said, I didn't steal it. And they said to the second child, did you steal the candy? And the little boy says, I don't steal. I don't steal is a different identity than I didn't steal that particular piece of candy. It'd be like, I don't drink is different than I didn't drink that particular drink.
Right? And so I try and instill in my kids an identity of who they really are. You know, both who they are when it comes to their faith, you know, like they're who they really are. And then also when it comes to success, like my two little girls are in drill, which is like the dance for the school. And I want them to know like your leaders. You know, I tell them like, yo, you guys are leaders, you're influencers, you're people that, your voice matters, I want you to set the tone, set the temperature for the team. We don't gossip. And
The Flea Jar Experiment: Breaking Limiting Beliefs in Your Kids and Yourself
Justin Prince (28:17.374)
you do all those things and the reason why is because you're setting an identity. Here's who you really are. And so they start to step into and perform up to that identity. And you'll never outperform the way that you see yourself. So those self-limiting beliefs, there's a study done years ago where they put little fleas in a little jar. So put a lid on the jar. A flea can jump 36 to 48 inches straight up. So a flea can jump four to three to four feet straight up in the air.
But they put them in this little jar and after three, so Jeff, after three hours, not three years, not three months, not three days, not three weeks, three hours, the little fleas they could take the lid off and the fleas would jump to where the lid once was. They become conditioned to play small. Now here's what's interesting. The next generation of fleas, the fleas would reproduce. The next generation of fleas jumped to where the lid once was as well because that was the example they saw. That was the identity they saw with with the other group. So
Jeff Dudan (28:59.466)
Thank you.
Justin Prince (29:11.33)
they could all jump three or four feet straight out of the jar whenever they wanted but they'd learn to willingly limit their potential because that became their new identity. And so I try and remind my kids like, no, we are not doing that. You can imagine like, like the word I can't. I don't even like, it's not even allowed in our house. Like if my kids are like, I can't do that. I was like, what? You know, like we don't even say that kind of stuff. We don't even say I can't, you know, like it's like.
Jeff Dudan (29:19.808)
Thank you.
Justin Prince (29:37.318)
I choose not to maybe but the not I can't like we can do what we put our hearts to and our minds to and we can build strategies and get resourceful and make things happen. And so I think it's really interesting. I'll say this. My kids, we are so blessed by my wife. My wife is amazing. Like these kids are so blessed by her. Like I had a friend say to me, he goes, dude, you should build a coaching. He goes up, he's calling me. He's like, I'm dead serious. He's like, I'm dead serious. He's a business owner. He goes, would you build a coaching?
Jeff Dudan (29:53.723)
Thank you.
Justin Prince (30:06.622)
that thing where you teach parents how to raise kids. And I was like, man, I go, here's the problem. I go, there's only three steps. He goes, what's that? I said, step number one is you gotta marry Missy. That's my wife. Step two is have amazing kids. And I go, step three is just don't blow it. So I'm not sure how much, you know, I helped in this whole thing, but Missy's been amazing. My wife's unbelievable. And I have just really, really, really great kids. I've tried to just take these success principles of excellence because excellence is not an act.
Aristotle says it's not an act, it's a habit. He says therefore you are what you repeatedly do. So you build the right habits for these kids. But you build an identity of excellence. So you build the identity of excellence, build the right habits and patterns, speak into it, call them for who they really are and then try and be a model. My son said to me, my son's 19. This is a real sweet compliment he said. But he basically said to me, he goes, dad, he goes.
You know, people ask me, what's it like, whatever. And he goes, it's not what you say, it's what you do. And the essence of leadership is example. So as parents, we gotta make sure our game's on point. You know what I'm saying? Like we've stepped up our game because the essence of leadership is example. They're gonna learn more by what we do versus what we say, like by who we are versus how we, you know, what we try and preach. And you wanna have the tongue in your shoes, not work the tongue in your mouth when it comes to that kind of stuff. So.
That's kind of been my philosophy when it comes to kids.
Leadership, Legacy, and Knowing Yourself
Jeff Dudan (31:34.739)
I love it. I want to expand on something you said because it was so powerful and it was something that I there's a business owner and leader that I really respect and I had this exact conversation with them this morning and we got really passionate about it and it's this concept of knowing thyself and Both of us agreed that until you can see yourself for who you truly are
you are impeded from building great organizations, from building great teams, from building great companies. If you can't be extra perspective, meaning if there was a camera in the corner of the room watching me, am I really objective? Can I get my humility where it needs to be? Can I get my ego out of the way? Because none of us are great at everything. And I mean, I have this little list of all these things that I know I'm not good at.
But on the other side, I've compensated for it with being studious, with being persistent, by truly caring about people. Like every franchise that we have, every employee that we have taking a personal interest, I just can't, I'm highly empathetic. I can't help it because just like these other things are kind of hard coded into me and I can change them to a certain extent, I'm also hard coded on the things that I do and the things that I believe in. So, you know, as business, until you can...
you know, not get out of relative comparisons to other people until, you know, envy is the enemy of enlightenment and fulfillment. So if you're kind of Shaq said one time, I was watching him speak at a conference. He said, don't count other people's money. You know, so like if you can, if you can just get like, get a real objective view on yourself, like that's when you can start to really make some moves. And it's hard to do, right? Because we've got all of this, you know, all of this.
you know, stuff that's coded into us that we kind of have to overcome. But if you work on it, it makes a difference. And then, you know, you've given us a couple of lists. I'm gonna give you three things about my kids that not that you asked, but I'll tell you anyway. Three little things that I've come to believe over the years. So first, as all of our kids are gray, first, always tell them the truth. You know, dog didn't run away, the dog died. You didn't make the team.
Jeff Dudan (33:46.499)
You know, if you want to make that team next year, then you're going to have to practice. Whatever the truth of it is, because I think kids are very astute at knowing when you're lying to them. And if you ever lose that trust, like if they think that you're going to tell them some parent, you know, wash over the truth type thing, then they're going to stop listening to you and you're going to lose that connection. Second thing is, I really like to teach my kids how to think, but not what to think.
And I know that we need to give them our values, but you need to do that by example. We need to give them our work ethic, but we need to do it by example. But man, like if they can solve their own problems, if they can develop their discernment and you give them the tools to that. And the only way that happens is if they get burned by the hot stove. So the other thing is I never will rob my kids from having success on their own.
You know, there's there's so many obstacles that we've removed from these kids in society occasionally You might want to you know Kick a log for him to climb over so that you know, they build that muscle memory and they build that stuff and I'll tell you that it's real simple, but it's kind of easier said than done when situations come up, but You know, I love yeah I love what you had to say about what your son shared about you and and I will say too and I'm interested
I think for the job that my wife did with our kids, that there's no way they can possibly appreciate her enough. And in the things that sometimes mothers do, if they're the ones that are in the home and they're raising it, like they get taken very for granted. And I think that's natural, but I also think that's part of our job as a spouse or a husband and a father to make sure that they appreciate that there was sacrifice to give them.
the rides to drill and all of these other things that they got. And I know that when they get older, they look back and they appreciate it. But a little bit along the way would never hurt.
Justin Prince (35:44.452)
Absolutely agree.
Jeff Dudan (35:46.123)
Yeah, yeah. So resources for people based on what you do. What, where can people reach out to you? What, you know, how do people kind of get into your tractor beam and what would be beneficial if somebody wanted to start investigating, working with you? What would that look like?
Be the One: Where to Find Justin and How to Work With Him
Justin Prince (36:03.294)
Yeah. So you know my site I am Justin Prince.com. So just I am Justin Prince.com. But you know I'm across all social platforms as well. Instagram I am Justin Prince. I am Justin Prince. Facebook I am Justin Prince. And I put out a ton of free content that would really really help you to kind of get your head right and your heart right and build up your level of your skill sets. And then in addition to that I do I'm pretty limited I'm pretty selective on how I do coaching.
because I'm pretty selective on that from, you make sure it's the right fit for me, right fit for them and so on. But I have some really dynamic online courses that people take as well. And then I have people that reach out to me to work with me in my business. And people that are looking to really level up their life and make money online. And that's been a really great thing as well. So, you mentioned this earlier, it's almost like it's our job to give back. So when I was...
I was in the middle of the grind, middle of the struggle back on credit cards, back on taxes. Anyone that knows that feeling or if you're feeling it now, you'll know like you can feel it every time you swallow. This isn't like financial pressure doesn't go away every time you swallow you feel this gulp, you know, a pressure that you feel or the pressure that you feel on your chest, you know, you breathe in, you breathe out, you can feel it. It doesn't it's real. It doesn't go away. Driving down the freeway. Tears in my eyes.
You know, just like tears are gonna roll into my face and I'm having this conversation with myself but I'm really having this conversation out loud, like out loud with God. And I was like, listen, if I ever become successful, I made two promises. Promise number one, I promise I won't forget what it feels like to struggle. Like I won't forget the lump in your throat or the pressure in your chest or the wonder that you have. Is this really gonna pan out? Like do I really have what it takes? And then the second question I, or second promise I made.
was I said, I promise I'll help if I ever become successful as many other people achieve their dreams and achieve their goals as I possibly can. And as I've now become more successful and broken free to where finances aren't your, you know, it's not what you're thinking about all the time, I've tried my very best to wear myself out. And even like a podcast like this, like Jeff, this podcast, taking it to now your audience.
Justin Prince (38:20.69)
If we can leave them better than we found them, leave them more inspired, leave them to go chase that dream, to go become that entrepreneur, to go make things happen, to where they go infect the marketplace in a positive way. I mean, to me, it's all part of, it's like a fulfillment of that, of that promise that I made. And so I appreciate you and your audience allow me to, you know, come on and, you know, see if I can continue to fulfill that promise.
Jeff Dudan (38:40.931)
Yeah, it's been an honor and a pleasure. And I, you know, I have a, an observation that says people that lived for a long time in stressful situations with no safety net develop a resiliency. And it allows them to think about risks differently. And it allows people like you to do great things because you started with nothing. I started with nothing. And I look at every day and every dollar as a bonus.
that I never expected to have. And the kind of people like you, and I'm going to Chicago tomorrow, I'm gonna be in an incredible room with people, the people that I've met in my life, I would never have thought in a moment that this could have possibly happened to me. But it was really just getting the mindset right. And it was being fearless and trusting yourself to take chances and failing fast and moving forward and these types of things. And...
So I really appreciate your perspective and I share the fact that the more successful we become, the deeper inside of our purpose, we have the opportunity to live on a day-to-day basis and impact other people. And with that, I'll ask you the question, what's your impact sentence? If you had one sentence to make an impact in someone's life today, what would that be?
Justin Prince (39:59.882)
Yeah, to me it's super simple. It's three words. It's be the one, you know, be the one that lives a life, be the one that writes a story that future generations of kids that are yet unborn, they look up in their family lineage and they say it was him. It was her. She's the one. She's the one that changed our life forever. He's the one that built the empire of the dynasty, as you mentioned earlier. So to me, it's super simple. It's be the one you'll notice by the way, it's not become the one. In other words, you already are the one. It's the challenge is to go be that one today.
Jeff Dudan (40:28.815)
Perfect. Justin, thank you so much for investing the time with us today. This has been very inspirational, and we're very grateful that you came on today.
Justin Prince (40:38.39)
Yeah, honor to be on with your brother. Great to meet you. Look forward to, you know, collaborating, getting to know you better and moving forward.
Jeff Dudan (40:43.351)
Yeah, 100%. Let's do it. And if this sounds like you that want to reach out to Justin or checking us out on homefrontbrands.com because you're ready to start your next chapter of greatness and to be the one, reach out to either one of us today and we will be looking for you here on the home front. Thank you, Justin.
Justin Prince (41:03.287)
Thanks guys.
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