I Was Homeless... Now I'm Worth $250 Million

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how much have you spent in real estate over the years well over a billion maybe 2 billion this man has a real estate portfolio worth over 200 million dollars he also has one of the most rare car collections in the world and is a gigantic social media following but none of this was handed to him Manny coachpin and his parents immigrated to America from Iran and times were so rough that they all had to live out of a station wagon his parents and multiple siblings what's it like to sleep in a car with six people a lot of cool lights you know sometimes your subconsciously you block it it wasn't easy yeah with no clear path of success Manny dropped out of college and started several businesses that failed one of our friends used to sell gas stations open escrow I put my twenty thousand dollars in a bang turned out to be a con artist I lost only money but despite these setbacks things began to look up for Manny when he discovered real estate and now closes deals that are worth nine figures alone in the real estate portfolio what's been like the biggest win you've had my biggest win 50 million on one property so how did he do it in this video we sit down with Manny Coachman to hear the story of how a failed entrepreneur became one of the most respected names in real estate so I'm Manny koshbed I made my money in real estate primarily commercial real estate I have the passion for cars as you guys can see but my journey wasn't easy I probably went through five or six different businesses I failed many times until I found success in buying real estate adding value flipping it for a profit and I've been doing that for nearly 30 years now and so for your story you grew up in Iran what was going on and what was the story for you to come to America Iran obviously had a history of war with Iraq at the time the war was going on my dad had several brothers that got injured one of them died from chemical bombs they use in the at the war and two weeks before my 14th birthday my Dad decided to you know just take off and avoid me going to the Army because at age 14 they basically you cannot live their country and you gotta submit to an army okay and that's pretty young age and seeing what happened to his brothers he didn't want me to go get killed or get injured so two weeks before my 14th birthday we decided to leave Iran went to Turkey he was about to get a visa and we came to us and none of us I spoke at World of English except my dad my dad had been to us before and you know he was educated and luckily he spoke English but I took three hours of ESL for the first two years in high school when I was here from 14 to 16 because I didn't speak any word of English so a pretty challenging upbringing because we didn't have any money we ran out of money we end up you know living in a car for a few months I think my dad got a job was able to get an apartment and but all that pressure everybody went on there because of me that kind of gave me the guild trip and I turned that into motivation tried to be successful so I can retire my parents pay them back and I did just that yeah after many different failures early on but yeah been a very interesting journey and I'm happy to share it because I know there's a lot of immigrants that come to this country for the American dream and they get discouraged after a couple of failures and that was exactly me but look at me now so when you came to America not speak English remember what your first week was like because I I can't I can't imagine what that experience is like for someone yeah well you're just like on a different planet you know I don't know my way around I don't have any friends I don't speak and I don't have any money so basically you know Americans are born into this country they have all of that which I then have so I had a pretty um roughest start if you want to call it but um yeah as a matter of fact when we first moved here we went to a Motel 6 in Costa Mesa and then after you know a few nights my Dad figured that we're gonna run out of money so we moved into a car but I was at the pool I remember and it was at this young kid it was giving me that bird you know I don't want to and then the other guy was saying somebody was sitting at the pool he goes no that's not good not good I don't know what the heck is going on yeah so I didn't not only I didn't speak English sign language that's crazy what's it like to sleep in a car with six people and like it was at a station it's not good yeah it was a 1972 Datsun a station wagon um a lot of cool lights yeah it wasn't good but you know um I think it was so much suffering and mentally pressure on my mom especially that you know sometimes your subconsciously you block it you don't think about it I look at the good times now yeah but uh it wasn't easy yes I tried yeah no that's good what were your parents telling me during that time I'm Howard oh my parents wanted me to go to college so I attended two weeks of college IBC it's in Irvine and I realized you know everybody's monkeying around throwing paper at each other pens and I'm like I showed up there with a briefcase you know I'm like wearing a suit I'm ready to make money yeah really yeah and then after two weeks I quit and my mom didn't talk to me for like several months she was very depressed and upset but um I was eager to make money right so at age 18 I started my own business selling nuts door to door that was my first business it did great until Health Department fined me they said hey you gotta have helper I met every time you repackage repackage food for resale and I didn't know that so I caused that and I had about 20 000 saved and then I realized you know I mean maybe I should put that to work and one of our friends used to sell gas stations because you know at 20 grand you could buy a Mobile gas station because you get you know 90 financing I'm like really I was 20 I was I I think 20 at the time so we opened escrow I put my 20 000 in a bank give me a loan officer turned out to be a con artist and uh I lost all my money so that was my first real failure back to zero because there's one thing you're not having money and not making it but once you make it and then you go back to zero it's a hard Landing you know yeah so and then I went back to working at Winston tires um to again work for somebody else to save money and I got my real estate license because every time I was uh I was having a Porsche Ferrari coming to a tire shop and I was upselling him you know bricks tires whatever alignment I really I would ask I was hey what do you do for a living and they would say Oh either I'm an attorney but nine out of ten times here they own a mortgage company or a real estate right I'm like wow so real estate's good so I got my license and then one of the customers that used to come to Winston tires hired me as a loan officer so I worked at the loan company for less than a year and then I learned everything and then I opened my own mortgage company and 1993 I was 22 years old um I found a mortgage group I made 290 000 bucks first year and that was my first taste of success real money right at 20 to 23 years old having that kind of money so I bought a 500 SL I bought a small little condo I was wearing three-piece suits smoking cigars that was like I found them on top of the mountain and then rates went up and all my mortgages died because back then there was a refinance boom okay and you wouldn't lock your rates in you would wait you know get all the loans approved and then just lock him at the last minute to get a bigger rebate from the bank so I had 40 loans on my boards rates went up Greenspan 1994 I think he took the rates up three quarters basis point kind of similar to what's happening now you know today the FED increased the rates for the 10 consecutive time right um and all my laws went dead we closed that down and then I figured hey I got a couple hundred thousand dollars saved and I realized discount stores are doing good 99 Only Stores yeah as a one I do 79 cents a store 79 cents plus so I opened a 10 000 square feet store in Santa Ana uh 79 cents plus and start making good money and then I opened the second location that didn't do well I closed that one down and then food for less of it right next to me they start competing with me and I start going from making 20 30 grand a month cash to losing money so at that point I'm like this is my second failure so I start selling my cars I sold my condo and then I after two years I owe 200 some thousand my credit cards paying 20 plus interest rate and everybody told me about bankruptcy because I owed money to PepsiCo Colorado Rock view forms you know all these vendors right they give me 30 days term and so my accounts payable was going up my cash my sales were dropping because this big store opened next to me competing with me and I said I'm not gonna file bankruptcy this country by then I knew you know because I was a mortgage business this country is built on credit if I file bankruptcy I'm dead right so I fought and basically fired I'm not fired but let go of about several employees and I call my parents to come and become cashiers so I took me two or two and a half years to kind of get to a positive cash flow and I end up selling it for 185 000 and then I still owe more than I got from escrow from selling the store so I'm like okay if I pay my credit cards I'm still going to be in the hole so I opened the e-trade account this was December 1998 I opened an e-trade account I started trading stocks so I got it up to 700 Grand by September 1999 then I pulled most of it out and I bought a shopping center and two REO Homes and that's how I started my real estate what were the skills that you developed at this early time that other people should be learning from because I definitely think one that sounds like selling and another thing you did which I thought was amazing is that if you're seeing someone that has something you're interested in you asked it sounded like when you saw these people bringing nice cars like what are you doing because yeah and that could maybe copy what they're doing I would say definitely be curious always ask questions be a sponge um even now I mean I'm always on Google YouTube I'm always learning what's going on what's what are the trends what's happening but always surround yourself with people that are more successful than you and also be curious always ask questions and I would say you know take a sales position in anything because when you do sales you're interacting with people you learn a lot you know everything almost in life is sales you know so that would be my advice how do you keep being an immigrant impact your success especially early on well I think the hunger um you know coming from another country you're you feel your you know you're in a new environment and you want to prove yourself you're also learning right because you don't know the environment you don't know how the business works the system works but more than anything I think just that they're Hungary me because I didn't I was Rock Bottom I didn't have any place to go butt up you know and I think that was what um created that driving me you know a lot of people take that freedom resources friends being able to speak English all that for granted because they're here right but if you take all that away from you you get really desperate yeah real quick how do you think others can benefit that that aren't immigrants with that mentality or how can they uh practice that or develop that well challenging themselves for one you could still go you know U.S is over 50 estate so you can go to other states that are you know having a new driver as the economy and open a new business just challenging yourself you know and so setting stagnets on place you know what were what were some of the Discrimination or challenges you faced oh my God I can go on and on on that one yeah Camel Rider standing oh no really oh yeah well back then there were still a lot of discrimination especially towards Middle Easterns so I used to work at Kmart my first show was at Kmart at age 16 I was mopping floors collecting shopping carts and I used to always avoid walking my cafeteria because they I used they used to call me names so I used to go around you know but you know luckily that period's over um us is now primarily a lot of immigrants so you know that it's a lot a lot less now right than uh 40 years ago but it was tough um a lot of name calling especially when I was selling nuts I remember one time I was selling nuts so what I used to do with my nut business used to go to all the auto dealerships because I sell you know cashews trail mix candies to the secretaries and then the sales people love nuts you know you know the the trail mix pistachios and whatever so one time I walked to a Toyota dealership I think it was Toyota anyway um and this GM came at me yelling screaming in front of everybody the entire sales floor how many got that F out blah and it was very humiliating and I'm staying there with my basket of nuts so I remember you know walking out I had tears in my eyes I'm like you know what it's okay suck it up and I went to the next dealership and I sold some nuts so yeah you just got to keep going right yeah do you think you you used that discrimination and name calling and like negativity and funnel that over over the years right because you you were selling to these car dealerships and now you have your own dealership yeah I guess so if you put it that way you know sometimes uh you know life gives you challenges or sometimes people cause challenge for you right um You can either accept it and get defeated or you can prove them wrong you know so I turn my doubters or haters uh now into my followers and I can't imagine also feeling so discriminated and discouraged at these times and then how did you even know what to think of a vision because when I'm noticing of some people is they they don't know how big they can even dream like or how far they can even go so how are you thinking about that and how did you get I just looked at people that were around me that were successful like uh you know when I was at Winston Tire I used to see people coming there with Mercedes convertible few times priority but a lot of Porsches so early on to me success was having a convertible Mercedes you know and that's the first car I bought when I made money but I didn't even know there is a Bugatti in existence I don't know what Bugatti is but then when I got you know uh years later I got involved with higher caliber friends that had Bugattis I'm like wow I learned you know how much technology Legacy is behind the story behind Bugatti etori Bugatti that bill Bugatti then I started building a passion for cars and you know they're like Fine Arts yeah and uh so your dream keeps going with you as long as you have that driving you to grow what's your definition of the American dream definition of American dream is you can just wake up in the morning and decide to take off for two months anywhere you want to go in the world and not have to worry about paying the bells and do you think this still exists of course I mean if you really want it bad enough and you're patient anyone can do it I believe that but you gotta have the drive you gotta have the hunger and you're gonna have to never give a mentality because surely you're gonna get to a point you're gonna have a dead end and you're gonna have to make a U-turn and find a different route well I'm assuming you think you achieved it I think so I don't know you know I still my wife is still tells me that I'm in denial sometimes and um well you know when you're accumulating wealth more cars this that sometimes you don't stop to kind of enjoy it because you're always hustling but yeah I think I have to shoot what is up my friends if you are loving this video you're going to love my free Weekly Newsletter the golden nuggets you can okay dork each and every week to help you succeed on your business Journey a marketing tip a productivity app a YouTube video that impacts me and more make sure you're subscribed if you're not already it's exclusive content just for email subscribers okdork.com nuggets or there'll be a link below in the description how did you make your first million real estate can you tell us more detail about that deal sure so that was a commercial property year 2000 uh because I did own this store I could qualify for SBA loan for a commercial property to build a vacant building in on first history in Santa Ana I bought that with 10 down 67 000 out of pocket I remodeled it and then I sold for 1.6 million in less than a year so that was my first million bucks on a single flip and then I turned that and use the cash to my advantage and I started writing a lot of offers on apartment buildings in Long Beach you know six unit and up and I was able to buy some you know with short closing so use that to my advantage of getting a price reduction in return close it quick with no contingency and uh so again I took risk but it was calculate risk because I knew hey if they're asking 900 Grand and I offer them 650 Grand they settle for 700 I just made 200 000 right let's tell what they're asking because I was able to perform quick and buy the Aziz and then I did that so I flipped probably to 300 units and then I started doing Office Buildings the similar concept and as a matter of fact the building I recently bought for 22 million I ordered a million and a half dollar non-refiable deposit day one and there was an offer 26 million four million more but the seller gave it 24.22. so how did he why did they do that because they want a certainty so seller was very wealthy individual and just wanted certainty that the person is going to close the other offers had 90-day due diligence they wanted to develop it go to the city see what they could be built on it he just wanted certainty so in real estate you want to see what the seller's objective is and if you can fill that void and you make you can make extra money out front so a full-time I I do like that because it's like if you can deal with more uncertainty you can get bigger upside yeah what was it like to make the first million and how oh he was great so uh I think it was 2000 or 2001 so I'm born in 71 so I was 30. 29 or 30. it was great because back then a million dollars was a lot of money right now a million dollars is not a lot of money right or maybe it is I don't know you lose uh concept of money when you know you buy five million dollar cars um but no it was Army well obviously I did 1031 exchange but when I had my statement that shows a million dollars in 1031 exchange cash that was uh it was a good feeling I felt like I made it like Borat says great success is that the moment you felt like you made the American dream or when was yeah well that was definitely a a milestone that I never forget because I was writing offers you know buying the sex Unit Nine unit apartment complex all cash 10 day close and I was 30 years old it was like you know that's a pretty good feeling you're setting a powerful scene when you can tell somebody here I'll close in one week uh but I want 200 000 off you know and uh and that worked out really well for me too because that was your 2001 2002 and then this real estate I had a good run-up till 2007. so I was able to you know Ms of portfolio from that one million dollars started to over 100 million dollars in real estate by 2007. if someone is just starting out and they want to make a million dollars in real estate yeah they're gold liquid uh and they have they don't have much money like what would be the steps they follow so you said you're saying residential like how would you think about that yeah residential well nowadays with technology back when I started 30 years ago there was no internet so I had to actually fly out to Houston meet with the listing broker walk the properties and then I would pick which one I want to buy now you get on call start Loop net there's so many multiple listed Services you can kind of do your research online and to that point you can also network with other people that have money and if you do your research and you find a nice value at real estate that's distress and you do your research say okay this mess managed if we do this to this out parcel this tenant sell it separately or lease this subdivided lease it to multiple a smaller antennas that pay higher rent per foot the comps are there to support double the price and you go to investor network with other investors that have Equity bring them as an equity partner and make a million bucks you can do a split there is so many ways so many options you have now that you don't have 30 years ago so whoever says they can make a million bucks that's just an excuse they haven't tried hard enough so does that mean it's going to happen overnight it may take them a year to two years to absorb and study that market to be able to sell that to an equity investor this is a business that takes time to get educated and power up so the thing that's I've always kind of avoided about real estate is anyone can do it like I do Tech because that's much harder or making videos like this it's like everyone can go and do these things but I I'm missing like everyone's doing real estate how are you able to be in the that sounds like the top Echelon performance like what were you doing I would say my timing was I was very lucky because that you know five six years of Runner run we had in real estate it was unprecedented similar to what happened you know in the past five years right but I use the same concept of you know just flipping out of each value add into the bigger deal so basically I scaled my portfolio and I at some point I had over 2 million square feet um in real estate mostly in Houston and then in 2007 I realized just like 1999 when I sold my stocks I realized okay this is a little too good to be true people were bidding on my high-rise buildings from Florida New York without seeing it on a 18 million dollar high-rise and had multiple offers I'm like this is not normal it's just too good to be true so I sold my portfolio in 2007 made a lot of money at 1031 exchange and bought bunch of shopping centers that are anchored by grocery stores and a bunch of about a million square feet of industrial Haliburton FedEx Continental line these were all I'm in Houston because I knew those tenants have a strong balance student they can weather the storm if you have a recession we will surely what happened we had a recession most of my high rises went back to the bank I ended up buying five of them from the banking three years later and sold them again that's another story but so what I'm saying is if you if you take out the risk and you don't have to underrate the property and you know you're on the right cycle your timing's right uh real estate is pretty predictable how many places have you bought and I think it's on and how much have you spent in real estate over the years oh over a billion maybe 2 billion I don't know and then yeah I think what's also interesting in that you know how many properties is that Eric like hundreds uh I don't know 70 80 maybe 100 like one deal right now I bought for 22 million and I'm opening a score for 72 million yeah yeah hold on so the person that was selling it what did they not see that you were able to do oh I can disclose that too you know I was like not that confidentiality with it it's a huge company buying it from me but this property was basically I'm repurposing it so it's basically a land play so I bought it because the the substantial land uh you know high density area and this developer is going to come and put you know four to six hundred apartments on it so to them they're repurposing the dirt so it's good money down what's the value of your current portfolio today I don't even know and I'm just kidding no couple hundred million um I've been waiting for a recession to buy because I made all my money in recessions and that's why I have you know probably 30 million dollars in cars um last recession I only have one bug ID because I was buying a lot of properties so now I'm getting ready gearing up to load up because next two years I think it's going to present the mother of all buying opportunities when it comes to commercial not so much residential maybe but commercial real estate a lot of defaults so my you know I'm looking to double triple that portfolio value the two two comments on that one when you have you've bought 70 or 80 and you have a portfolio hundreds of millions now and you've spent billions I also think it's like how many places you put offers in on that you didn't get because that's like kind of a thing that people don't realize like how many of you swung that didn't didn't work out a lot well on a on a good day I look at probably 20 properties not physically but you know on my lead flow and I probably write an offer every three four months on one so if you look at that's 150 deals a month I look at yeah and in six months that's 900 properties I look at but I I right and then I make one offer and I haven't been able to get anything in escrow for the past 18 months that tells you so a lot of swinging and I'm not hitting the ball yet yeah but I think that's the part I really wanted to highlight yeah because your strategy now it's like you're looking for opportunities and recessions and but it's not it's not here yeah and you just go buy one and it magically works it's like I think people don't realize that yeah they're not saying that yeah yeah you have to swing a lot of bats to hit in real estate and you got to be patient because there's a game of patience and you gotta just wait for those cycles and right now that you know we are in a down cycle so it already started um and with the feds increasing the rates 10 times um that's going to accelerate it it already has um and I think in the next 18 months if people are you know geared up financially and mentally and powered up knowing what they're going to be doing in which sub-market they can make a amazing amazing return what are the contrarian opportunities or contrarian things that people should be prepared for thinking about well you know when uh contrary mentality works with anything like cars you know in um when we had the lockdowns some cars were selling for 50 cents on a dollar because people panic um you know they have the fear of oh it's end of the world uh right now it's a banking industry you're seeing all the banks you know Regional banks are collapsing they're underwater uh so a lot of people taking their money out and putting you at bigger Banks because they're scared they're going to lose their money so fear um and panic always creates opportunity and you know whether it's real estate cars or stocks in March 2020 as stocks went down 30 percent uh people that bought they were contrarian they made a killing right so you can use that of course it's not it's easier than said than done but um as you take risk uh and and be a contrarian and you you know make money and you have success with it you you're on your balls get bigger in in the real estate portfolio what's been like the biggest win you've had and the biggest loss my biggest loss was a sex story building I bought for 17 million and it was a single tenant it was a subsidiary of Boeing uh USA United space Alliance they used to have all the communication with a space shuttle and they didn't get the contract from NASA so they gave me a I got a FedEx envelope with one page in there telling me they're going to vacate and my heart dropped so 5 million cash down gone that was my biggest loss on an in a real estate single deal and my biggest win 50 million if I close this deal on one on one on one property you got how many companies do you have by the way how many how many companies do you have like I went in the building there's like 18 different stickers of all these businesses yeah I have a lot of different companies do you have an idea how many something uh six of them I can count right away on my fingers but there's a lot others I invest on my Silent Partner like maybe you know I own a small personal job a bank I have several other companies that I'm a just a LP limited partner but uh the ones I'm actively managing uh there's six okay and then for like owning a house like this or do you have a lot do you have passive income do you have like income from your real estate and that's what covers the lifestyle yeah of course yeah well my businesses make money plus a real estate cash flow yeah they're not empty buildings I mean I have shopping centers this building like I have a mortgage company upstairs you know pay me a lot of money I got yeah I mean I have two or three buildings that I buy for flip that are vacant these are like reposition play so by when you have a big portfolio obviously you have cash flow that and some are value add that you're flipping so it's a function of it's a lot of fluid you know a lot of things happening and um I also make money with cars how do we manage all these businesses and how do you and what is your your team I don't sleep much I drink a lot of coffee I get a four four between four and five in the morning so I re respond to all the emails because I got properties in four different states you know and sometimes those are two hours ahead and I start getting emails early and then I uh kind of go through my to-do list for the day and and prioritize my day by seven of working out uh sauna cold shower get my a third cup of coffee by eight in the morning from a Starbucks and I'm over here at the office um take lunch about 11 30. and then afternoon I have a couple of meetings usually and then I have to have a cigar by myself and regroup what happened all day yeah that day and then get ready for the next day what what things are you cheap on cheap on yeah what things not spend a lot of money on that's a good question I'm trying to say well you should ask my wife well I don't like to spend you know like I don't know ten thousand dollars a bottle of wine because I honestly don't appreciate it to me I can have a 30 bottle of wine I does the same thing I get you know I enjoy it just as much um uh I don't know maybe I guess maybe watches I mean I don't is a hundred thousand dollar watch but I mean I could buy a million dollar watch but I don't I think it's waste of money you know um Maybe High fashion you know this is not something that that matters as much to you or no I don't appreciate it as much maybe I don't know I don't know but I'm typically not cheap come on it's like for me I'm going to say it too I would say I would spend less money on it would be like expensive wines champagne or any anything else I mean I do drink cognac four five thousand dollar bottle cognac because I smoke cigars but why not not so much take it I charge their Jets all the time um obviously you know jewelry handbags you know on a special occasion I like to treat my wife and uh just vacationing I would say probably is my biggest Splurge I love vacationing event to Lake Como and I'm actually getting a villa for a couple of weeks taking my entire family to Lake Como how much does the private jet to Charter cost yeah it's about 12 000 an hour an hour so if you're good but so if you're going across America a few hours yeah like when we go to Cowboys like between 40 to 50 000 bucks just for the three days we go and then how much is like the hotels and like this experience oh I don't know I mean probably another 15 20. vacationing is the best money is spent because you know you can get time back right this one hour we spent it's not gonna come back it's gone so you know and you as you get older you appreciate time and you when you vacation you're really spending your time with yourself and your loved one so it's the best money you spend what's it like to drive around in a Rolls Royce like you know as an immigrant you come here didn't speak English didn't have money lived in it you lived in a Datsun and now you're driving like this hundreds of thousands of other car yeah well I have four Roy's raises I got two drop heads at dawn at a brand new ghost I bought for my wife um you know I hate to say it but I to me is normal because I've been driving rosaries since 2004 when Phantom came out I better brand new Phantom back then the lease payment on that quote was more than my mortgage payment but everybody say you're crazy I said no no you got to get used to having a bigger overhead and I went to the royce royce in Newport Beach and I told him give me the highest payment you can give doesn't you mean lowest I said no no highest so reducing residual whatever they do in Lisa's you know is it just I want to pay down the basically the lease I want to have less payment in the year five when I want to buy it then you know normally you guys do do you have any regrets like working too hard was the money worth it or what regions you have and you know working so hard and what's the money regrets young dumb you know I stopped making money uh and I was partying single and drinking driving that's my biggest regret because my friend that was in my car you know that my correspondent lost control he wasn't wearing seat belt so he got ejected and you know unfortunately he passed away that was a very dark moment in my life but I would say that's my biggest rig ready in life being irresponsible you know young doing stupid things which I know a lot of young kids do but you know sometimes you can't bring on new things like that right and uh yeah you pay for that for the rest of your life so that's like probably my biggest regret damn yeah I'm glad to share that message because I do think like myself in the past have done it I think a lot of people do it so it's good to remember like it's not they're not guaranteed to be safe there yeah it was a very on unfortunate accident but it's uh I take the blame because I was the one driving and you know I was on there to even fly so it's yeah definitely um something that you know most people will not really get it until it happens to them you know because you think everyone's you know back then everybody all my friends used to go to clubs bars you have a few drinks and you get behind the wheel yeah like it was like except that you know but that's one thing I regret the most do you feel like we work too much I don't work too much now I used to work too much you know before but now I have my kids like right now weekends even if somebody pays me a million bucks I wouldn't show up to do a seminar work somewhere now I do seminars for my students but that's because it's part of program but I'm saying as a speaker or a job or a gig you know I wouldn't work on weekends because I'd rather spend that with my kids how do you define success for yourself because I think when a lot of people see you they say success but I've always thought success is actually an internal measurement so I'm curious how you think about it or how you would decide it well to me sucks says he's having the freedom to choose what you want to do when you wake up and being able to give back um which I think I've achieved so you know it's not how much money you have in the bank or how much is your net worth is being able to have the freedom if you loved this video you are going to love this video right up here with John Paul De jorya the billionaire founder of Patron tequila and Paul Mitchell care Hair Systems make sure to subscribe to the channel if you're not already Uncle Noah loves you and I'll see you out there
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Channel: Noah Kagan
Views: 705,350
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Keywords: #multimillionaire, #millionaire, #millionaireadvice, #americandream, #startingfromnothing, #startedfromthebottom, #howtogetrich, #homeless, #mannykhoshbin, #realestate, #realestateempire, #businessempire, #carcollection, #workhard, #carinvesting, #exoticcarcollection, #millionairemindset, immigrant story, #immigrantstory, #ragstoriches
Id: 0HHiZgPabgo
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 37min 11sec (2231 seconds)
Published: Tue Aug 01 2023
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