Self-made multimillionaire Marcus Lemonis’ best business advice to start 2019

FAN Editor

As the host of CNBC’s “The Profit,” Marcus Lemonis dispenses business advice to struggling entrepreneurs every Tuesday night.

Lemonis is a self-made multimillionaire and CEO of the billion-dollar company Camping World. On “The Profit,” Lemonis regularly teams up with small business owners who need his help turning around their businesses.

In 2018, Lemonis dispensed plenty of helpful advice for aspiring entrepreneurs, both on TV and in interviews with CNBC Make It. Here’s some of the best advice Lemonis offered up over the past year:

A small business owner’s narcissism was at the heart of an episode of “The Profit” that aired in July 2018. “I hadn’t dealt with a narcissist to this degree,” Lemonis said about Dino Pavoni, the owner of Simply Slices, a family-run drive-through pizza chain in the suburbs of Chicago that appeared on the show.

“If he doesn’t learn to trust other people, particularly his family, his business will be the same forever,” Lemonis told CNBC Make It. In the episode, Pavoni sought out Lemonis’ help with growing his business, but Pavoni’s attitude ended up turning Lemonis off.

Pavoni may be his own worst enemy — he’s controlling and disrespectful — and, that’s a recipe for failure when you’re the boss, according to Lemonis. In the end, the entrepreneur’s controlling attitude and inability to take feedback left Lemonis unconvinced that Simply Slices could grow into a nationwide chain.

“If Dino can’t even take feedback, or have a discussion with his son or an employee, how’s he going to take feedback from a franchisee that’s four states away?” Lemonis asks in the episode.

Growing up in Florida, Lemonis says his family ruled with an “iron fist” in terms of making sure he learned the value of a solid work ethic at a young age.

“I started my business career as a teenager and my family ruled with an iron fist,” Lemonis tells CNBC Make It.

Lemonis’ family put him to work at the family business at a young age, often at the expense of typical teen activities like going to summer camp, playing Little League Baseball or even going on school field trips, he says.

Working hard “was ingrained in the culture of our family,” Lemonis says. But it helped him establish a very strong work ethic.

Lemonis grew up around his own family’s business, a Miami-based automotive dealership owned by his grandfather, Anthony Abraham. Along with working at the family business, where he says he learned “positive and prosperous business values,” Lemonis also became an entrepreneur at an early age. At 12, Lemonis started a lawn-mowing service in order to make enough money to start another business selling candy with his friends.

Of course, Lemonis admits now that spending less time working and more time with kids his own age might have helped him develop better social skills at an early age. But, he still believes that developing his work ethic early on helped him succeed in business.

“It was good because I was able to learn how to adapt in adult environments, learn how to communicate with adults, learn how to integrate in a business environment,” he says.

“I am a big believer that you are who you do business with,” Lemonis says in an episode of “The Profit” that aired in January 2018. In that episode, Lemonis ended up walking away from potentially investing in an athletic apparel company that’s pulling in $1 million in revenue per year.

The reason Lemonis walked away from the investment opportunity is because he learns that the small business owner, Ray Odom, has a side gig as a radio host in which he portrays a character who Odom himself describes as “a sexist, egotistical, racist pig.”

Lemonis admits that Odom’s second job made him feel “uncomfortable really fast,” even though Odom claimed that his on-air personality did not fully represent him. “The fact that you think I would do business with you because you do that, whether it’s your personality or not, I just can’t,” Lemonis tells Odom.

Ultimately, Lemonis did not want someone controversial for a business partner.

“I can get over business problems — fix the process, make it safe, put the air conditioner in, figure out how to pay the taxes, create a better work environment, sell more, diversify the product — I can fix those,” Lemonis told Odom in the episode. “I can’t fix you for being a racist and a sexist, but here’s the good news: I won’t have to fix it because I’m not going to be here.”

CNBC’s “The Profit” airs Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET .

Don’t Miss: This is ‘The Profit’ star Marcus Lemonis’ favorite thing to splurge on 

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