181. Best of Season 4: Q2
The Game Changing Attorney Podcast with Michael Mogill
Michael Mogill
5.0 • 539 Ratings
🗓️ 18 July 2023
⏱️ 54 minutes
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Summary
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| 0:00.0 | You can make a few million dollars, $10 million being really good at marketing in sales. |
| 0:06.5 | You could become a multimillioner doing that. |
| 0:08.2 | It's just you're not going to build a massive, massive fortune unless the thing you sell is good. |
| 0:14.0 | Welcome to a special edition episode of the Game Changey Attorney podcast where we're looking back |
| 0:18.2 | at some of our most impactful conversations over the past few months. |
| 0:21.6 | The real big, obvious answer of why people don't make more money is they're just not that good. |
| 0:33.3 | I'm Michael Logel, founder and CEO of Crisp, the nation's number one law firm growth company. |
| 0:37.8 | I've built my business through practice, not theory. |
| 0:40.8 | Crisp started with just $500 to my name and has grown to over eight figures in revenue over the last few years, |
| 0:46.3 | earning a spot on the Inc 500 list of the fastest growing private companies in America. |
| 0:50.3 | Our approach has been to take everything we've learned about generating massive growth within our own organization and help the country's most ambitious and committed law firm owners do the same for theirs. |
| 0:59.0 | In each episode of this podcast, I sit down with innovative market leaders from the legal industry and beyond to learn from those who thrive in the face of adversity, challenge the status quo, and define what it means to be a true game changer. |
| 1:12.0 | Today, we're looking back at our conversations with the best-selling author and founder of |
| 1:15.7 | Acquisition.com, Alex Hormosey, accomplished endurance athlete and the founder and CEO of Spartan, |
| 1:20.7 | Joe DeSenna, renowned trial attorney and partner at Wright Gray, Darrell Gray, and the New York |
| 1:25.2 | Times bestselling author and professor at NYU Stern School |
| 1:28.4 | of Business, Adam Alter. If you're moving, if you're making progress, you demonstrate to |
| 1:33.6 | yourself that you're not stuck, and that's very important because the emotional consequences |
| 1:37.1 | of being stuck are quite damaging. And the sense of progress, that sense of velocity that comes |
| 1:41.8 | from progress is very important for making further progress. |
| 1:44.8 | So stuckness compounds gets worse over time, but so does unsticking compound and get better over |
| 1:50.1 | time. |
... |
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