Grazora Life

Grazora

Discover strategies, tools, and inspiration designed for business owners who want to build freedom into their business and life.

  1. 2d ago

    Stop Building. Start Selling.

    Brett just got off a call with an entrepreneur who's been in build mode for two years. Custom CRM. Custom training modules. Products dialed. Margins figured out. Everything a business needs — except revenue. He hasn't taken a dollar from a customer yet. Meanwhile, he has warm leads on the other side of the door, one of them a million-dollar job, waiting for him to be "ready." In this episode of Grazora Life, Jason McKenzie and Brett Adams unpack the perfection paradox that keeps entrepreneurs stuck in build mode forever, why the bigger your opportunity the less perfect you need to be to start, and the specific coaching move that took a stuck operator from paralysis to a clear path to $50 million in six months. You'll learn: → Why entrepreneurs with the biggest opportunities often over-engineer their businesses before earning a single dollar → The counterintuitive truth: the bigger the opportunity, the more mistakes you can afford at the start → The "start from scratch today" question that Jason uses to help operators cut through years of accumulated baggage → Why loss aversion — the fear of missing an opportunity you already have — quietly keeps founders from taking the one right in front of them → Why most small business owners add a second, third, and fourth service instead of fixing the real problem (they don't know how to attract more customers for the one thing they do) → Brett's early-career lesson on which jobs to start saying no to — and why some small jobs cost you money even when they look profitable → The manufacturing "loss leader" trap — when a product line is actually just costing you money → The squirrels that are secretly running your week, and the schedule fix that solves it (two-hour meetings once per week, emails once per day) → The 3-minute AI accountability agent Jason built that pings the operator three times a day to keep him focused Jason shares the moment he watched the weight visibly come off this operator's shoulders — not because they gave him more to do, but because they gave him permission to stop doing almost everything. Brett breaks down the multi-service trap that snags most small business owners and why "running harder" in more directions is usually the opposite of progress. If you've been telling yourself you need to finish building before you can start selling — this is the episode that stops that story. CHAPTERS 00:00 The two-year build with zero revenue 00:31 Custom CRM before a single customer 02:15 The perfection paradox: the bigger the opportunity, the less perfect you need to be 03:35 Two companies, eight owners, two people actually working 05:56 Dealer, franchise, direct sales, wholesale — picking the right model 09:16 The "start from scratch today" question 10:03 The $5M sitting on his doorstep 13:11 Loss aversion and the FOMO trap 14:35 Why adding more services almost never fixes a sales problem 15:12 Brett's lesson on which jobs to say no to 17:34 How real conglomerates handle unrelated businesses (separate divisions, not blended operations) 18:17 The quicksand of expanding too soon 20:49 Which jobs actually make you money — and which ones don't 21:33 The loss leader trap in manufacturing 22:26 The schedule fix: two-hour meetings, emails once a day 23:07 The squirrels that are killing your focus 24:39 The 3-minute AI accountability agent 25:50 The weight coming off his shoulders ABOUT GRAZORA Grazora helps small business owners move from being crushed by their business to having a business that propels them toward their goals. New episodes every week with Jason McKenzie and Brett Adams. 🎯 Subscribe for weekly episodes 💬 What's the one thing you've been "getting ready" to do that you should just start? Drop it in the comments. 🔔 Hit the bell so you don't miss the next one #SmallBusiness #Entrepreneurship #BusinessGrowth #SmallBusinessOwner #StartupAdvice #BusinessCoaching #FounderMindset #SalesStrategy #BusinessSystems #EntrepreneurLife

    27 min
  2. Jul 3

    Comfort Is the Crisis: Why Successful Businesses Become Cages

    At a recent event, Jason wore a shirt covered in bananas. Person after person told him how bold it was — then went back to their dark, conservative shirts. One guy in the corner said it out loud: "I would never wear that shirt."That moment is exactly why most small business owners stay stuck.In this episode of Grazora Life, Jason McKenzie and Brett Adams unpack why we all want the results of doing the bold thing without actually doing it — and why most of the "successful" businesses you admire are cages the owner can't figure out how to escape.You'll learn:→ Why people compliment the banana shirt but won't wear one themselves — and what that reveals about how business owners approach growth→ How to spot the difference between a business that looks successful from the outside and a dumpster fire on the inside (hint: freedom, not revenue)→ The Bob Proctor story that shows why "I want a Lincoln" isn't a goal if you already drive one — the difference between incremental and transformative vision→ Why one entrepreneur kept switching industries to escape feeling trapped, and what he was actually running from→ Brett's line that stops the room: "Comfort is the crisis" — and what it means for anyone building a business→ The Rich Dad Poor Dad bucket-vs-pipeline story that explains why running harder won't get you out→ Why money lets you go faster but never lets you skip stepsJason shares the moment he caught himself playing too small and realized that incremental improvements were just making the bars of his cage thicker. Brett breaks down why comfort is the enemy of every entrepreneur who actually wants freedom — and why the discomfort you're avoiding is often the exact door you need to walk through.If you've quietly wondered whether the business you've built is actually serving the life you want — this is the episode for you.CHAPTERS[Timestamps to be verified from SRT — pull actual timecodes before publishing]ABOUT GRAZORAGrazora helps small business owners move from being crushed by their business to having a business that propels them toward their goals. New episodes every week with Jason McKenzie and Brett Adams.🎯 Subscribe for weekly episodes💬 What's one "comfortable" thing in your business you've been avoiding changing? Drop it in the comments.🔔 Hit the bell so you don't miss the next one#SmallBusiness #Entrepreneurship #BusinessGrowth #SmallBusinessOwner #BusinessMindset #EntrepreneurMindset #BusinessCoaching #SmallBusinessTips #Leadership #ComfortZone

    28 min
  3. Jun 26

    Your Business Moat Is Already Crumbling. You Just Haven't Noticed

    In the Middle Ages, a moat was the most expensive piece of fortification a castle could have. Most castles didn't have one because they were too hard to build and maintain. The ones that did get built often weren't even filled with water. They were just a deep ditch to make the walls feel taller and stop ladders.Then the cannon showed up. Then the crossbow. Then siege equipment got better, and a lot of those moats stopped mattering.Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie use that history as the spine of a conversation about the business "moat," the thing that's supposed to keep your competitors out, and why most small business owners either don't have one, don't realize theirs is crumbling, or are about to watch one fall the way Google's search dominance has fallen to AI in the last two years.Things they get into:What a real business moat looks like, and why almost nobody has just one. Google didn't either. They layered network effects, default placements, their own operating system, brand recognition, and AdWords revenue, and AI still managed to slice off chunks of their search market in under three yearsWhy search before Google felt like Ask Jeeves vs Dogpile vs flashing banner ads, and why AI now feels the same way next to GoogleThe drone problem in modern warfare, and what it has to do with the crossbow getting banned in the Middle Ages because it was too goodThe pest control entrepreneur who moved from California to Idaho and was upset that there wasn't enough red tape protecting incumbents from competitionThe Vegas restaurant supplier who got a phone call from "people with power" and quietly removed his innovation from the marketWhy innovation always costs us something we used to value, and why that's the actual point of innovationThe entrepreneur hat that business owners hang on a hook the day they start running operations, and forget to put back onBrett's own confession: he built a tool two years ago that saved hours of work, then spent eighteen months patting himself on the back for it while the rest of the world moved onWhy being in a group can sharpen your innovation, but only the right group. The wrong group will reprimand you for being too innovative.The "tradition and innovation" oxymoron, why traditions only count when you've actually chosen them, and the roast that got the ends cut off because grandma's pan was too smallWhy reading things you disagree with is one of the few reliable ways to sharpen what you actually believeThe bottom line: necessity will force you to innovate eventually. Far better to go looking for the problem yourself.Chapters:00:00 What does "moat" actually mean?01:09 Most castles didn't have one02:35 Translating moats into business04:48 What Google did right09:18 AI is slicing chunks off Google in real time11:13 Drones, crossbows, and asymmetric warfare12:13 The pest control guy who wanted more red tape14:33 The Vegas restaurateur who got "a phone call"17:25 Every innovation costs us something we used to value19:39 The entrepreneur hat on the hook21:30 Brett's own confession: I patted myself on the back for two years22:48 The right group sharpens you. The wrong group reprimands you.23:52 The "tradition and innovation" oxymoron26:13 Why reading what you disagree with makes you sharper27:43 How to actually keep that innovative mindsetGrazora Life, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly. #smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #innovation #moats #grazora

    31 min
  4. Jun 19

    AI Has Read the Whole Internet. It's Still Never Felt Gravity

    Episode 32AI has digested the entire Internet. Every research paper, every novel, every forum post, every Wikipedia article. And yet, as Jason points out in the opening of this episode, AI has never once experienced gravity. Never picked up a hammer. Never stood awkwardly next to another person trying to film a podcast.That gap between what AI knows and what humans have actually lived through is the thread Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie pull on for the whole conversation. And it leads somewhere unexpected: AI is not the threat most small business owners think it is, but the people who refuse to use it are about to look like the $50 million company that, well into the 2010s, still had one employee whose entire job was printing out incoming emails and putting them on everyone's desks.That company existed. It is a true story. And the modern equivalent is happening in small businesses right now.Things they get into:Why Toyota makes new executives stand in a taped-off box on the production floor for hours just to watch what's happening, and why "going to see for yourself" still beats every dashboard ever builtThe bodybuilder couple at the campsite eating lollipops and drinking Dr Pepper for breakfast, and what it took Brett a while to figure out about post-competition cyclesThe leadership team drowning in interruptions while their owner refused to consider AI, and the moment they realized AI could handle the very things stealing their dayThe big company in 2012 with the AOL email account and one employee whose job was to print emails and hand them out, and why most small businesses today are doing the same thing in their own wayThe employee who burned through 20,000 AI tokens in a few hours by accidentally pointing the model at the entire internet, and the guardrails every company needs before turning anyone loose with AIWhy 70 percent of AI implementations fail, and the underlying truth: you cannot automate chaos, you have to fix the system firstThe high school teacher who lets her students use AI but grades them on the research process, the rough draft, and how they actually worked with the toolThe neighbor who tested six different AI detection programs and found they did not work at all, including labeling decade-old human writing as AIThe man with a PhD in dance, and why a society that can afford that kind of specialization is a society where AI lifts the playing field for everyoneThe closer: the homeless person walking around with a smartphone has access to technology the wealthiest person on earth could not have imagined 200 years ago, and that is the direction AI is going to push humanity if we let itChapters:00:00 The awkward setup that made them go remote01:17 Toyota's "go and see" principle01:54 When was the last time AI experienced gravity?03:11 The robot dog from China and what AI still cannot do04:18 The bodybuilders eating lollipops for breakfast06:54 Why walking the floor matters in your business09:35 The $50 million company that still printed every email12:13 The leadership team drowning in interruptions14:08 Email is to fax machine as AI is to email16:11 The employee who burned through 20,000 AI tokens in hours17:48 Why 70 percent of AI implementations fail20:18 The teacher who grades the process, not just the output22:59 The AI detection programs that do not work25:25 The PhD in dance and what prosperity actually buys us27:57 The homeless person with a smartphone vs the wealthiest person 200 years ago30:00 The best time to be alive is nowGrazora Life, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly.#smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #ai #grazora

    31 min
  5. Jun 12

    I Found the Secret to Boosting Your IQ. It's Really Expensive.

    Episode 31 Brett says he's found the secret to boosting your intelligence and creativity. It's not a supplement, not a microdose, not a mushroom. It's incredibly expensive, in the sense that almost nobody is willing to pay the price. Spoiler: it's sleep, exercise, and nutrition. Done consistently. Every day. The reveal lands as a joke, but the rest of the conversation is what makes it worth thirty minutes of your time. Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie get into why these three "free" things are some of the hardest things small business owners refuse to commit to, why the cost of not doing them is usually invisible until it's too late, and how the entire conversation eventually has to come back to one question: what are you actually trying to be successful at? Things they get into: The medieval alchemists who drank mercury looking for cognitive boosts, and the modern entrepreneurs who think nootropics are going to do what good sleep won't George Visger, the former NFL player who survived nine brain surgeries and 22 simultaneous medications, and what Jason learned from him about cryo chambers, fish oil, and creatine Why the cost of doing these three things feels high, but the cost of not doing them is the one actually bleeding you dry The entrepreneur who said $10 million would make him successful, then said $20 million would make him successful, and how all he was really doing was building a bigger cage Why measuring success only by gross or net revenue is the trap that keeps the cage growing Brett's frisbee test: three minutes winded six years ago, an hour of play with his kids yesterday, and what that actually tells him about success Bob Proctor's quoted definition that reframes the whole thing: success is the progressive realization of a worthy ideal The kicker at the end: that quote is also the definition of joy, and the movement toward a worthy ideal is what we usually just call work Why work feels like drudgery when you don't know what you're moving toward, and how to tell whether your current work fits your real vision or whether you need to change one of them Chapters: 00:00 Brett's "expensive cognitive enhancement" discovery 00:32 Medieval alchemy and people who drank mercury 01:34 LSD, mushrooms, and the song about the magic weed 02:50 The big reveal: sleep, exercise, and nutrition 06:11 What about the couple with newborn twins? 09:09 Why the world is wired against good nutrition 10:51 Surrounding yourself with people who push the same direction 12:35 George Visger, 22 medications, and the NFL cryo chamber 15:01 Why the cost of not doing these things is invisible 17:39 Consistency matters more than waking up early 19:39 Can you succeed without these three things? 21:50 The entrepreneur building a bigger cage at $20 million 26:00 The frisbee test: three minutes winded vs an hour of play 27:50 Success is the progressive realization of a worthy ideal 28:50 Why that quote is also the definition of joy 29:30 If work feels like drudgery, rethink your vision Grazora Life, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly. #smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #productivity #success #grazora

    30 min
  6. Jun 5

    You're Negotiating From a Position of Weakness and You Don't Know It

    Episode 30Most small business owners are negotiating from a position of weakness and they don't even know it. They think they have one client. One key employee they can't afford to lose. One offer that has to work. And the people on the other side of those relationships can feel that desperation, even when nobody says it out loud.Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie unpack what Donald Trump's longtime real estate attorney George H. Ross wrote about why "you cannot let the deal be your only ticket," and why that principle applies to a young couple stuck in what amounts to a slave contract with their main client, a business owner being held hostage by one disrespectful employee, and the small business owners they keep meeting who think they have no other options when AI can generate fifty in five minutes.They also wander into the weirder territory: what if you could just talk to your body and ask it to optimize for strength instead of survival, instead of forcing it into compliance through stress? And what if that same principle applies to how you communicate with employees, vendors, and customers?Things they get into:What Trump's "I have a great relationship with everyone I negotiate with" really is, according to the guy who wrote his real estate contractsThe young couple running their business on verbal agreements for three years while their main client slowly bled them dryWhy one bad employee being kept around to avoid losing a good one is usually costing the owner more than they realizeHow AI just generated a list of 50 alternative clients for a couple who thought they had only oneThe guy whose mental faculties shut down completely the moment any conflict appears, and what to do about itWhy marketing, sales, and promotion are useful distinctions, but emotion and intellect might be a false oneChris Voss's "Never Split the Difference" insight that you cannot reach the rational brain until you've moved through the emotional brainWhy we make every decision emotionally first and then rationalize it, even when we hate hearing thatThe "fog burning off the mountain" moment when a business owner finally sees the path forward they've been ignoringChapters:00:00 Welcome to Grazora Live (and who's actually the host)01:21 What if you could just talk to your body instead of stressing it?03:11 The same question applied to employees, vendors, and customers03:55 The owner held hostage by one disrespectful employee05:53 The young couple in a verbal-agreement "slave contract"07:54 George H. Ross, Trump's negotiator, and never letting the deal be your only ticket10:01 AI generated 50 alternative clients in minutes11:24 The young entrepreneur whose mental faculties shut down in conflict13:23 Strengthen your weaknesses, or leverage someone else's strength15:03 The event and the fog burning off the mountain18:11 Mental stats and the false distinction between IQ and EQ21:34 Pushback: the cold and calculating person vs the basket case22:53 Training falls in when emotion takes over25:18 Chris Voss and getting through the emotional brain first26:13 NLP, Tony Robbins, and reprogramming the loops that hold you hostage28:01 The hardest truth: every decision is emotional first29:13 Why finding new truth matters more than being consistentGrazora Live, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly.#smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #negotiation #leadership #grazora

    30 min
  7. May 30

    Stop Playing Business on Hard Mode

    Episode 29 Most business owners are playing their business on hard mode without realizing it. They take on every offer they can possibly deliver, they refuse to copy proven models, they cram everything into kitchen sink SOPs nobody can actually use, and they quietly believe that if something feels easy, they didn't actually earn it. Then they wonder why they're stuck. Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie unpack all of it, with stories ranging from a six foot eight basketball professor who refused to apologize for walking with a cane, to Dan Kennedy's client who turned a 60 Minutes hit piece into four years of "As Seen on 60 Minutes" marketing, to a real company that plowed snow and answered IT tickets at the same time and called itself something that might as well have been John Smith Enterprises. Things they get into: Why writing your goal down once a year and never again means you probably will not hit it (and what Brett's mob-breaking story has to do with it) Jason's own coined line: "every undocumented process is a future hostage situation, and you are the hostage" Why a process for everything is its own form of self sabotage, and how to tell the difference between a real process and a kitchen sink mess What the fast food industry got dead right about process design, and why most small business "SOPs" violate every rule of it The customer who called Jason demanding he do work he did not offer, because "you can do it so you have to do it for me" Why your scattered side offers are usually a scarcity reflex, not a strategy The identities you have to let go of to grow, and why the mindset that got you started is also what is keeping you stuck Brett's sons' battlebot competition, the one who used AI to do most of the work, and the other son who tried to argue that it did not count Why "destructive innovation" is almost always just perspective, and the candlemakers who got obsoleted by the lightbulb The big idea: stop offering everything you possibly can, stop reinventing wheels somebody else already turned, and stop assuming easy means wrong. Chapters: 00:00 The professor with the cane who refused to apologize 01:21 The two roommates wearing the exact same clothes 02:18 The Dan Kennedy 60 Minutes story 04:16 Lean into the mess (the cake at the dinner) 05:09 Why writing your goals down once a year does not work 06:21 The uncle who broke up mobs because he never wrote anything down 07:56 "Every undocumented process is a future hostage situation" 09:30 Why you don't actually need a process for everything 11:00 The kitchen sink SOP problem 13:08 What the fast food industry got right about process 15:17 Welcome to John Smith Enterprises 17:21 "Just because I can doesn't mean I will" 18:35 You can fire your customers 20:35 The scarcity mindset behind every scattered offer 22:13 The identities you have to let go of to grow 23:35 Stop reinventing wheels somebody else already turned 24:12 "If it's too easy, we didn't earn it" 25:18 The battlebot competition and the brother who said AI didn't count 27:33 Destructive innovation is just a perspective 29:42 Candlemakers, lightbulbs, and the rising tide Grazora Live, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly. #smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #focus #grazora

    30 min
  8. May 22

    Emperor's New Groove Was Secretly About Your Business

    Episode 28 The emperor in Emperor's New Groove was blaming others else for throwing him off his groove. Most business owners are doing the same thing, except no one is actually throwing them off. They are doing it to themselves. Brett Adams and Jason McKenzie unpack every form of self sabotage they keep running into with the entrepreneurs they talk to. The owner whose month got "chopped up" by his own calendar. The one who is terrified to grow because he keeps chasing shiny objects instead of doing the basics. The body that manufactures stress chemicals and then drives a person to drink to escape the feelings the body created in the first place. Along the way: Why a 20 minute conversation with a lawyer can wreck half your day, and the phrase Jason uses to short circuit the panic before it starts ("it is not a threat") Bart Miller's trick for thanking your body for trying to protect you so the stress actually melts away Why A students become professors, B students get jobs, and C and D students end up hiring everyone else Jason's sword fighting analogy for business: most owners are just blocking the attack, which is exactly why they keep getting stabbed. You have to block AND threaten at the same time The entrepreneur who built wild success because nobody had told him yet that what he was doing was impossible The billionaire who drove a $200,000 car, and the religious friend who called that the only thing he did wrong (spoiler: it was not) The Catholic priest and the pie: a tiny parable about whether you are doing good for its own sake or for the reward Why family is the reason you can grow a business, not the obstacle The closing invitation: cut out the people who want to keep you small, and surround yourself with the ones who push you to be bigger than you think you can be. Chapters: 00:00 The Emperor's New Groove lesson 01:18 "My month got chopped up" by who, exactly? 02:37 Why a 20 minute lawyer call wrecks half a day 04:07 Your body manufactures feelings it then tries to escape 05:13 "It's not a threat" reframe 05:59 Thank your body for trying to protect you 07:06 Why school doesn't teach any of this 07:30 A students teach, B students get jobs, C and D students hire everyone 09:25 The U.S. military's cowboy advantage 11:35 Sword fighting and what most entrepreneurs get wrong 13:55 Why a four pound sword raises your heart rate 15:31 What most business owners get wrong when they're getting attacked 18:30 "I tried everything" usually means "I didn't know what to do" 19:05 Business as a vehicle for personal growth 19:28 Marriage, kids, and business push you into new territory 21:30 The man who succeeded because nobody told him he couldn't 23:50 The billionaire's $200,000 car 27:15 The Catholic priest and the pie 29:31 Cut out the people who want to keep you small Grazora Life, helping small business owners build businesses that propel them, not crush them. New episodes weekly. #smallbusiness #entrepreneurship #mindset #selfsabotage #grazora

    31 min

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Discover strategies, tools, and inspiration designed for business owners who want to build freedom into their business and life.