Generations Of Wealth

Generations Of Wealth | Damion Lupo | Turnkey Solutions

 

Unlocking financial freedom requires more than just knowledge – it demands action. Join serial entrepreneur Damion Lupo and host Derek Dombeck as they explore turnkey solutions for building wealth. Discover the power of the eQRP® (Enhanced Qualified Retirement Plan), innovative strategies like FrameTec, and Damion’s personal journey through the complexities of real estate investing. This episode offers a roadmap to financial security and empowers you to take control of your financial future.

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Turnkey Solutions For Achieving Financial Freedom With Damion Lupo

Welcome To The Generations Of Wealth Podcast

Welcome to the Generations of Wealth. I am your host Derek Dombeck. This is the show where we talk about all the things that help you live your vision and love your life. We are going to have a guest named Damion Lupo. I started seeing Damion at events probably five years ago, got to know them a little bit, and we haven’t crossed paths in person for a while. This man has a ton of experience. He’s been holding back, which is the perfect guest for our show.

Before we bring Damion on though, I love to take a second to give my appreciation to all of you who come back every episode. Anything you can do to help grow The Generations of Wealth family, including jumping on The Generations of Wealth Facebook page and getting interactive with that. If you want to get involved with some of the events we put on, all of that information is at TheGenerationsOfWealth.com. A sincere thank you for being here. With that, let’s bring on Damion Lupo.

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As promised, Mr. Damion Lupo. Thank you so much for coming on the show.

It’s good to see you. It’s been a long time since we crossed paths, but it’s good to be back in the same place.

You’re right. It’s been probably 2 or 3 years. We used to see each other at different events. I still have your book on my bookshelf. Before we started recording, I had to throw it up. We’ll talk about it in a little bit. You have some incredible material that you’ve published over the years. Let’s start at the beginning. Who are you? Tell the audience a little bit about Damion Lupo.

I’m a serial entrepreneur who went out and got thrown out of college. I was starting businesses that put the bookstore out of business in college because I thought they were ripping everybody off. I tried to do better and I did put them out of business, paid for school in a week, and went off. I started doing some real estate instead of getting a 9:00 to 5:00 job because it seemed like a better fit. That’s what I did for 7 to 8 years until my ego got 10 feet tall. I thought I was bulletproof. I lost $25 million in 2008 and went through this whole process of reimagining and reinventing my life.

On the other side of that, I found that the answer wasn’t about more money as I thought it was for the first ten years. It was about more impact and more service to other people. The money was meant to be a side effect instead of the target. It’s an interesting thing to go through that process because I had to lose everything multiple times to understand it. People don’t want to do this. They don’t want to have to go through the process. They want to just get the money anyway.

We say that getting rich isn’t going to solve your problems and they say, ”I’m going to try it anyway,” and so that’s all that people do. I did the same thing even though my mentors told me not to. I laugh at the whole process, but my story is about trying and practicing that idea of money Hedonism and all that stuff, then getting to the other side where it’s more about how many people’s lives can I help by helping them become financially free.

We have a similar path as far as 2008 and I say it publicly all the time. I didn’t lose $25 million. I lost about a $4 million portfolio. I say it all the time. It was the biggest blessing that I’ve ever had after we got through it. That’s what The Generations of Wealth show is all about. It’s not about making all this money. It’s about enjoying your life. Our mantra is to live your vision and love your life. Take us through the timeline a little bit. You lost it. What were your next steps?

The next step was denial, which is a phase of grief where you pretend it didn’t happen. Eventually, there’s a reality check. I’m homeless and I’m on fumes. I have a few bucks that I scrolled away. It wasn’t much, but I was toast. That process took a couple of years until I went to the next step which was saying, “I need to figure out the problem.” The problem was me. A lot of times we point fingers. I was blaming Obama, the Federal Reserve, and everybody. I was able to start shifting when I blamed myself and said, “It is my fault. It is my responsibility. I can learn from it.”

Realizing Life Is About More Than Money

I spent a couple of years digging into that question I asked. What is true? It wasn’t about the money. It was about the money for me, but life is not about money. I meant to teach and support people using my experience. It is not some weekend seminar that I’m regurgitating, but going out there, living in the trenches, and then sharing that with people, and then the money would end up being a side effect. That whole process of getting there took about five years from the time I lost everything in 2008.

Life is not about the money. It's about teaching and supporting people by using my experiences. Share on X

It was at that time when I watched my parents retire. My dad ended up dying, broke. It was interesting watching the experience with him because he had played by the rules. He’d done what he was supposed to do. A few weeks before he died, he sat down with me, and we were talking. He said, “There were so many things that I wanted to do,” He realized he had no more time. There was a sense of regret that he hadn’t done life and he was always doing what he was told.

I’m a big fan of going out there and not doing what you’re told, going out there and doing the thing that changes the world. At that point, I said, “I think I need to help people with their retirement money.” The reason was I saw him with his retirement money and it went to zero. People don’t know what their options are. They didn’t know how they could make that abundant.

I'm a big fan of going out there and, instead of doing what you're told, doing the thing that changes the world. Share on X

Most people were trying not to run out of money before they ran out of life. That became the mission to use that tool and that idea. That’s when eQRP was born. The books were written and it was all about that moment in time when I saw him in so much pain. I realized he’s probably not the only one. There are probably millions of people in a very similar space.

We’ve never had this conversation before privately or publicly. We are in very parallel universes because my dad retired and got diagnosed with cancer six months later. We buried him at the age of 64 and never got to enjoy retirement. Regardless if he had money or not, he never got to enjoy it. It was in that same time frame when we were losing everything. It’s crazy how a lot of people have the same path and the same struggles, but we don’t necessarily share that openly. We do on this show, but most people don’t share that openly.

The Importance Of Connection And Shared Experiences

I learned a lot about what you’re talking about. In 2012, I wrote a book with a friend of mine called Reinvented Life. It was my journey in the 2000s building things up, blowing them up, starting over, and then looking at the external and the internal transformation. What was interesting is after I wrote the book, people came to me and said, “I read Reinvented Life. I thought I was the only one who was going through that. My experience was very similar.”

I realized there are a lot of people and it’s one of the sad things about what’s going on in society. You have all this division and it’s pulling us apart. What people need to stop and think about is we have way more in common than we do, whether you have an opinion on one thing or another, some political or social issue, there’s so much more that we have in common.

Instead, we tend to isolate ourselves which is unhealthy. Quite frankly, it’s deadly. We’re meant to be connected and when we’re not connected, people tend to die and they get sick. I think it’s important for us to remember what you and I are talking about and everybody tuning in that you’re not alone. There are people out there who support you and are going along those similar paths. We are not meant to be in a silo.

In the society we’re in today, we could go off on a tangent for hours, but everybody wants to talk about the interesting stuff. The landlords aren’t going to talk about the 95% of their tenants that are awesome. They’re going to talk about the 5% that are shitty and bring up all the drama. It’s the same thing that you mentioned. People always tend to lean towards the negative.

I travel a lot as do you. I live in the Upper Midwest in Wisconsin, where it’s still pretty slow-paced. People are very willing to help their neighbors, then I travel to the big cities and I see how in a lot of cases, people won’t even say hi to you. They won’t even give you a head nod. I don’t understand it. That’s not my background. My background is always to give somebody a helping hand and take somebody at their word. I don’t know how we change that in society. We’re not going to change it on this show, but I sure would like to.

I’ve thought a lot about this and wondering how I can participate. People tend to look at the news. They tend to watch things and get mad about it. They get mad about the Federal Reserve. They get mad about what’s going on politically and who’s running for president. The question I’ve been asking myself and asking people is, ”What can you do about that?” The answer is generally very little or nothing. What can you do about your economy or your world? What can you impact, and how can you help society instead of bitching about it?

This is where instead of trying to figure out how to get money and being mad about somebody raising taxes or doing something to regulations, the question is, how can you serve more people? The money will take care of itself. When you serve more people you inadvertently make society healthier, better, happier, and freer. I think that there is a solution for everybody. Ask the bigger question. We’re here to tap into our potential to serve other people and other people on the planet. There’s a reason we’re here.

When you serve more people, you inadvertently make society healthier, happier, and freer. Share on X

When you get obsessed about that, it does change your energy, your life, and your fulfillment. Instead of chasing this elusive success pile of money, which never makes you happy except for that moment when you get it. You’re like, “Now what? I guess I need a bigger pile.” The other alternative is we start finding deeper meaning. To me, that is the answer. It’s finding that meaning where you’re serving other people. It becomes external versus internal.

I get this question a lot and I’m sure you have over the years too. You buy a house or a piece of real estate, commercial whatever, and you sell it. Now you have to pay taxes. They’re so focused on the negative, “I made $100,000 and I got to pay taxes on it, but I still get to keep the lion’s share versus sitting in the chair watching TV, bitching, and making zero, but at least I didn’t have to pay taxes.” That’s stupid, but that’s the mentality.

I do want to move on because I’ll go on and off on a tangent. My audience knows that about me. Talk a little bit about eQRP. I know you have something else awesome going on called FrameTech. I don’t want to gloss over that.

On the other side of all this mess if you will and this gift of getting squashed by the universe for a moment. Getting squashed, I’ve had that happen multiple times. For example, I went skydiving four times. I had three jumps fail. I had problems three different times. I used to reserve chute and the Space Shuttle exploded over me on my last jump. The universe has given me messages that I sometimes don’t acknowledge. I also don’t recommend going skydiving with me. I won’t do it again. I’m not somebody you should invite.

The interesting thing after that gift of meltdown, homelessness, and everything, when I saw this thing that was happening, the universe gave us these these opportunities. If we’re open and awake, we’ll see them. I said, “There’s an opportunity because the market doesn’t realize. In general, people don’t know that they can take their retirement money, their IRAs and 401(k)s, and do anything other than having them in mutual funds. Maybe they get self-directed so that they can invest in stocks. There are all these cool things out there like real estate Investments, private companies, Bitcoin, gold, and all these cool things that are not Wall Street.

I said, “I think it’s my job to go empower people with the right information, at least the full information.” eQRP became this idea or this mission to free a million people from financial shackles and break those shackles and the bondage that’s with them. It was empowering people to get a hold of their money, their retirement money, and then use it for things outside of the Wall Street stuff. That’s what it has been for the last decade. I’ve been doing this for a decade.

It’s created a community of thousands of people who are now working together inside our community portal. They get to work together, talk about their deals, and learn from each other. They know that they’re around people who are like them. One of the lessons I was thinking when I was alone in 2008 is that I realized a lot of people out there are thinking they’re alone investing and there might be crazy things going on.

This is a cool way for us to build this community where we bring people together. Now they know, “There are a lot of people like me who think like me.” It’s very empowering. eQRP has become a community where people are growing and finding fulfillment, That’s what this turned into you. In the beginning, it was just I had to get people some better information. Now, there are thousands of people in a cool community who are thriving together.

For those that don’t know what eQRP stands for, can you give a short explanation on that?

It’s an Enhanced Qualified Retirement Plan. It’s a type of 401(k) that gives you all this power, control, and protection. It’s different than self-directed IRAs or Solo 401(k)s. It gives you privacy. It gives you power and control. You get to hold assets. One of the things that most people don’t realize is self-directed IRAs do not let you hold assets yourself. You cannot do it. You have to have a custodian. With eQRP, you get to be that person. It’s called a trustee. It’s very cool that you can control it. As long as you’re a good fiduciary, meaning you have to be a good steward of those assets, you get to control them. You don’t have to have mommy or daddy, meaning a custodian, babysitting you. You get to be in charge.

How did you come up with your next idea, which is FrameTech? Give us the background on FrameTech.

FrameTech showed up through some connections, people I’ve known for decades. It was the right thing at the right time. Two and a half years ago, when my partner and I decided that we were going to be a part of it, some guys came to us and said, “We have this great idea but we need about $40 million to do it.” We said, “This idea is pretty cool. It seems crazy, but we like you guys and we think you’re the right, people.” It’s all about the execution of the team. As we said, we’re willing to bet there.

We brought the community together. I said, “We have this incredible idea. We’re all in on it. It went from this idea to disrupt the construction industry and solve the housing crisis, to a manufacturing plant that’s going online in September of 2024, which is the month that we’re recording this. This idea was we have a massive gap in the market where there are millions of missing homes and apartment units. There are not enough people who want to frame them and there’s no innovation with the nail and hammer or the nail gun. From 70 years ago was the last thing.

These guys said, “We have this idea that would make the process four times faster. Instead of framing a house in a couple of months, it takes us two weeks for the entire process. Instead of having dumpsters full of wood and waste, we reduce the waste by 99%, and then we have a quality control building all the floors, the walls, and the trusses inside of a plant, where it’s ten times better quality. We’ve changed the whole system and have not had an incremental change, but an exponential improvement across the board so that we can frame the houses that need to be framed to get people housing units.

Right now, there’s no expansion in this space. It’s very minor. This is an idea that’s scalable and big enough to where it can help to solve this in a significant way. FrameTech is the housing crisis solver that is disrupting the construction industry and has the whole industry paying attention. It’s funny because a couple of years ago, people were looking at us like we were crazy. “There’s no way these guys are going to be able to accomplish what they’re saying they can.”

Now that things are online, they’re being tested, and we’re producing, the narrative has shifted. You have to be willing to be a little crazy, and it’s also not something you do in the first round. I’ve had 70-plus businesses that I’ve started. Many of them, more than half, didn’t go anywhere. They were just a great learning opportunity.

That’s one of the things that people have to understand. It doesn’t mean if you have the perfect formula, it’s going to work the first time. You may not be ready and you may need to learn some things. Quite frankly, you have to be willing to say, “I’m going to be obsessed and go all in, and then nothing works.” That’s part of the process of getting to the one thing.

I forget who said it. It may have been Grant Cardone or one of these guys. The thing they said that stuck with me was, “You only have to have one thing work. You don’t need to have 10 out of 10. You get one thing work. It might take you 5, 10, or 20 years, whatever. That doesn’t matter. The important thing is to pick something. It doesn’t matter if it’s even the right thing. Pick something and go for it. Eventually, you’re going to get to that thing. You can’t quit. The only way you lose is if you quit.

That is a quote that I don’t even know who said. I’ve been saying that for years. “The only way you lose is if you quit.” That goes all the way back to 2007, 2008. Ultimately, for people like you and me who are out here telling the world publicly about our failures to educate others. Hopefully, they can avoid some of the mistakes we made. The reality is you’ve written all kinds of books. You’ve been speaking and teaching for many years and yet people don’t always listen.

To a certain degree, they need to make some mistakes. It’s it’s almost like my opinion on on raising kids is like raising entrepreneurs. If you do everything for them and you protect them from every possible thing that can hurt them, they’re not going to appreciate it and they’re not going to learn. They have to get some lumps. They have to take some hits.

I don’t think there’s any way around that. It’s sad. I watched that and I don’t have kids, but It was a kid and I do know that it was very valuable to have my parents tell me now and have me push back and go create. The thing that makes me sad is so many parents think that their job is to protect their kids from pain. It’s not. Their job is to make them independent. Part of that is to have the hardening skills of going through childhood where you don’t die. You do experience pain and you can get through it. I think we have a generation of very soft humans who want to crawl back into the womb in a lot of ways. That’s not going to be good for these people as young adults. Ultimately, they’re going to be very soft.

It’s the same thing with entrepreneurship. You have to understand when you’re going out there that it’s not a straight line and it’s not without you running into walls. You’re going to trip, you’re going to fall, you’re going to stub your toe, and you’re going to bleed. It’s going to be hard and it’s going to be painful and it’s the most fulfilling thing ever. It’s a question of your resiliency and your ability to endure unbelievable amounts of pain.

Learning From Failure And Building Resilience

I’m probably making this sound sexy to become an entrepreneur, but the reality is I’ve done martial arts for two and a half decades. You go in there and you learn. In the beginning, I was like, “If I get hit, I’m going to start crying,” because I don’t like being hit. I hate it, but then you get to a point where it’s part of the process. You learn how to absorb a punch or take a punch. That may seem psycho but when you realize that the world is going to be punching you your entire life, that’s how things work that it’s not some La La Land.

There’s a harsh reality to it. When you learn how to take that without crawling into a corner and sucking your thumb, it is very freeing because you realize, “This isn’t going to kill me. I can go right through this thing and I learn with each of these lumps and bumps. I’m going to get stronger, better, clearer, and more focused.”

You talked about skydiving earlier and other things. My daughter is turning 18 in September. By the time this show comes out, this will already have happened. I’m taking her skydiving for her 18th birthday. I used to skydive when I was younger and I loved it. We talked about the negativity and taking lumps and bumps. I own rodeo bucking bulls. I’ve never been on one.

This year, I had a goal. I’m 48 years old. I’ve dropped a bunch of weight. I got back in decent physical condition. A week from Friday of the week that we’re recording this, I am going to Oklahoma where my bulls live and are trained. I’m getting on a bull. Everybody that I tell about this, the first thing they ask is, “Aren’t you afraid of getting hurt?” That’s the first thing they ask. The second thing they say is, “Make sure you video,” because everybody wants to see me get hurt.

Nobody thinks about the fact that just the fact that I’m getting on is reaching a goal of mine. I don’t care what the outcome is. I have no intentions or no desire to get hurt or die. However, this has been a goal of mine. It’s interesting how the negativity always comes out first, then again, the glory of seeing me get stomped on or take a hooking, I don’t get it. I know this. This is another step in the journey. Regardless of the outcome, I’ll have that memory for life, assuming I’m not in a coma or gone.

There’s that. I love the idea here. It makes me think about going to the gym or a lot of things where the wind is saying yes and taking action of some sort, and then you trust the process. In my experience, the process ends up being a lot of great stories and then it’s very fulfilling to be in it, but it’s not about the outcome. This is the same in sales or investing or anything. If you own the drivers or you own the actions like showing up and doing that ride or whatever it is that matters.

When I hear people saying, “I can’t wait for this when this happens for me, like when I make the money.” I look at him and I shake my head. I’m like, “You’re missing the entire point of this life. Anybody that’s 70 to 89 years old is going to tell you the opposite. Don’t wait for that thing until you’re happy.” There was a singer named Nightbird who passed away and she was amazing. She was on America’s Got Talent or one of those shows with Simon. She made a comment that was incredibly beautiful about you don’t want to wait until things aren’t hard to be happy.

Finding Happiness In The Process

I hear people saying that and it was a great reminder that your job is to be happy in the process of taking that step and then letting go. It’s beautiful when we can do that because then we experience life and the presence of it versus forward projecting and having anxiety about what the future might hold, or whether it may or may not be exactly the way we see it.

The other lesson that I heard you say earlier is you talked about your mentor’s advice to do certain things and you chose to do others. That’s no different than me going and jumping on a bucking bull. I’m not going to some backyard farmer who has a bull in his pasture. I’m going to a place where the man who takes care of our animals and trains our animals is a former professional bull rider who has won the National Finals Rodeo. He’s won the PBR finals. He’s qualified. He’s one of the best of the best.

The lesson is you’ve done this for your entire career. I’ve done it for my career. We fall and we get thrown off, but we go and seek out the best of the best people we can to learn from, and to hitch our wagon so to speak. Not if, but when you get your ass kicked, that makes it easier to get up, dust yourself off, and get back into business. I didn’t have that in 2007. I didn’t have a network. For the first five years of my career, I dropped the ball. I didn’t know anything about this stuff. Now, I preach it all the time. You don’t have to have the answers. You just have to have people in your network that do.

I think that’s it because all the answers are out there, whether it’s people or the resources we can find. The only question is, are you willing to take the step and keep taking a step, stay focused, and have something bigger than yourself? If you have that and you’re willing to hold that vision, there’s nothing that can stop you. The worst-case scenario for some people is, “What if it kills me?” I’m like, “You’re going to be fine because you’ll be dead.” It isn’t going to matter, but you are worrying about you dying. We’re all going to die. The exact moment in time is not up to you.

I think that it’s an irrational waste of time for us to be thinking about that potential outcome. If it’s not going to kill you, you’re going to learn or you’re going to win. The reality is this idea of losing is a silly thing. Every time, I’ve learned something because something fails, if you will, it was this incredible gift. Quite frankly, those are the best lessons. It’s not when you win. That’s not when you learn something.

You truly learn from the pain. That’s what burns into you. The first time you get rejected, when you’re trying to do a deal, you’re trying to get that rejection like, ”I’m going to get better. I’m going to get sexier. I’m going to make better off. I’m going to have more capital,” whatever it is. There’s an emotional charge that helps you. Whereas if you win, it’s very fleeting and it’s very shallow.

It’s not sustainable. You and I both know people who got into the real estate industry or any business in the last five years as the markets kept going up and up. You and I and many people tuning in to this. If you’re one of the people who are this way tuning to this, shame on you. Ultimately, they think their shit doesn’t stink because everything they touch made money. Let’s see what happens as the markets turn in a shift.

That’s where the cream rises to the top. That is capitalism. That is supply and demand. We need that. I crave it. I have been looking forward to interest rates going up for so long. Everybody says, “You’re crazy.” No, because for my business model, I’m not reliant on what the banks are charging for interest. I have opportunities that I learned over the years of making mistakes that my “competition” doesn’t understand. They’ve never been through it.

You’re spot on. Everyone should listen to that last minute or two over and over again.

It is fun when you’re in the right position and you’ve taken the lumps. You have some books and videos accessible to the audience. Can you talk about that?

TurnKey Retirement is this idea of finding a way for people to take the whole idea of financial freedom, boil it down, and start understanding what you need to do. People get overwhelmed. It’s easy to get over because it’s like, “What do I start with? Where do I go? What do I need to know?” TurnKey retirement is this umbrella for the community, with all the people who are involved in the eQRP community. What I’ve done is I’ve taken stuff that I’ve learned through experience.

One of the things that I put on there that you can download is all the things you need to look at in a deal. I build this framework. It was like the top 19 land mines that are out there. It’s the things that you should make sure you know and should avoid, and things like understanding the people you’re investing with. How much money do they have in the deal? Whose in the deal? Who’s got experience?

There are all these 19 different things. What I’ve noticed is that many people invest in deals and they haven’t even looked at 19, let alone 9 of these things. They just go, “That’s cute. I’m going to go invest in cute.” That’s a great way to lose all your money. The idea here is that you’re getting to leverage 25 years of my experience losing tens of millions of dollars and making hundreds of millions of dollars. In terms of the financial model, it’s also understanding what the process is. All that stuff is available. You go there and it’s my gift to you guys to go and download it.

That’s awesome. We appreciate it. Everybody can go to TheGenerationsOfWealth.com/turnkey and you’ll get linked over to Damion’s information. I asked this question of a lot of my guests. What is something I should have asked you that I did not? It does not have to be related to anything that we’ve been talking about.

What Damion Wishes He Knew 25 Years Ago

I always loved the question if you were going to go back 25 years, what do you wish somebody had told you? The funny part is I think about that and I’m like, “If they tell me X,” I probably would have ignored it. I laugh because sometimes, you’re not ready to hear it. I think one of the things that I wish somebody would have told me is one, always have somebody that’s balder, wiser, grayer hair, with at least 10 to 20 years beyond your experience, ideally more, because they have cycles and they can calm you down, and fail faster.

It’s interesting how people try to avoid it. They want everything perfect. They want all the lights to be green before they leave the garage, and then they’re still in the garage twenty years later. They go, “What happened?” Life just went by. Those two things are things that I realized that twenty years ago, the things I failed, I was concerned about how people would judge me. Those people don’t even know who I am. There’s such a funny disconnect or they don’t remember those things.

I think that’s part of our training as kids where we’re taught, “Don’t fail.” If you get 60%, you’re almost an F student. If you get less than 50, you’re a total flunky. The reality in life is if you can get half right or if you can get 1 out of 10 right, you’re a billionaire. We have to get clear on those things. We’re taught the opposite.

The mentors again, not only do they help keep things calm, they give you perspective. When you think the world is falling apart, and things aren’t going as fast as you want, it’s a useful lesson to have somebody to say, “You’ve been doing this for five days. This took me seventeen years so maybe give it another week or two or a month.” That perspective and trusting somebody is one of the most valuable things that everybody should do. I say should very specifically. I don’t like should-ing on people very much, but everybody should have somebody wiser that they are paying attention to and that they trust will tell them the truth.

Final Thoughts And Closing Remarks

Honestly, not that this is anything that led up to pitching this, but the REI Circle Trust, which is the mastermind that I run, that’s exactly what it is. It is a peer-to-peer mastermind of people telling the blunt truth as we see it. If you take the advice, that’s up to you. When you sit in a house of your peers for several days, immersed 24/7, there’s shit that’s going to come out. It changed my life. That’s why I’m so passionate about it now. Damion, I appreciate your time. I look forward to crossing paths with you in person again hopefully soon. It’s like it has been a minute but thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and your experience with The Generations of Wealth.

I’m happy to be here. It’s good to see you again. Thanks so much.

For everybody else, that wraps up another episode. Check us out everywhere you find your local podcast and please like, share, give us all the love, and spread The Generations of Wealth Show to all of your friends and family. Until the next one, go out, live your vision, and love your life. See you.

 

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About Damion Lupo

Generations Of Wealth | Damion Lupo | Turnkey SolutionsDamion Lupo is a seasoned entrepreneur who has launched and grown over 70 companies from $0 to $100 million throughout a remarkable 25-year journey.

In addition to being a prolific author with 12 published books, Damion is celebrated for his extraordinary achievements in building multiple companies from the ground up, many of which have reached seven, eight, and even nine-figure valuations.

Despite a significant setback that saw him lose a $20 million portfolio at the age of 30, Damion’s resilience and determination led him to not only overcome homelessness but also rebuild his wealth beyond 9-figures.

Today, he is a driving force in transforming the retirement landscape with his groundbreaking retirement plan system and revolutionizing the home and apartment construction industry through his pioneering work with Frametec.

 

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