Larry Roberts Jr.
Speaker AIs a serial entrepreneur, a 39 year industry veteran.
Speaker AHe is currently the President CEO of Larry's Barber College.
Speaker AHe's also a musician, a trade school owner, a clothing line owner, and he's starting a credit union, among other things, for beauty professionals.
Speaker AToday we're going to learn his story, how he got to where he is and what he's got going on with this credit union, which I'm super excited to learn more about.
Speaker AWelcome back to the Hairdresser Strong Show.
Speaker AMy name is Robert Hughes and I am your host.
Speaker AAnd today I'm with Larry Roberts.
Speaker AHow you doing today, Larry?
Speaker BHey, what's up, Robert?
Speaker BI'm doing great.
Speaker BHow about yourself, man?
Speaker AI'm so good.
Speaker AI'm so good.
Speaker AI'm super excited.
Speaker AEverybody that's listening and watching.
Speaker AI met Larry at, at Beauty Gives Back.
Speaker AHe was one of the people sitting on a panel and he was talking and I got introduced.
Speaker ACorey from Heritage was like, yo, you gotta meet Larry.
Speaker AHe's awesome.
Speaker AYou'll love him because and all these things, the entrepreneurship and he's starting a credit union.
Speaker AAnd everybody who listens to this and watches this show knows I'm really big into the financial world in terms of like impro improving the financial health and the business health of hairdressers, barbers and beauty professionals.
Speaker ASo this, I'm super excited.
Speaker ASo thank you so much for being here.
Speaker BThank you for having me, Robert.
Speaker BI appreciate it.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker ASo let's dive right in.
Speaker ALet's start off with, so like, where.
Speaker AHow'd you get into like what was, how'd you decide to get into the industry?
Speaker AWas it by accident?
Speaker ADid you have a plan?
Speaker AHow old were you?
Speaker BWell, to be honest with you, I started cutting hair when I was 13.
Speaker BBut the rate, the way that I started cutting hair was my parents built a house out in the suburb of Chicago when I was very young.
Speaker BAnd needless to say, there was not nobody that looked like me that could cut my hair.
Speaker BSo I wasn't gonna let anybody else cut my hair.
Speaker BAnd you know, later on down the line, people learned that barbering is an art and it's a science.
Speaker BAnd I have great penmanship and I know how to draw as well.
Speaker BSo for me, it was pretty easy for me to pick up a pair of clippers that I went to Walgreens and bought for $19.99.
Speaker BAnd I bought those one pair of clippers, man, and always tell people the rest is history.
Speaker BSo that's how I got into cutting hair.
Speaker BAnd the way I convinced people into letting me cut their hair is, is that I convinced them that, hey, let me cut your hair.
Speaker BIf I mess up, I'll pay you three bucks, but if I do a good job, you got to pay me three bucks.
Speaker BSo I traveled around with my one pair of clippers, man, and, and you know, I was able to cut people hair and, and thank God I never had to pay anybody for messing up.
Speaker BBut that's a good thing.
Speaker BAnd I tell people often as well.
Speaker BOne of the ways I was able to convince people is the fact that, you know, I think that your, your, your posture and your swag, if for lack of a better word, pretty much makes people know that, you know, if he keep his hair cut, you know, if he dress well, if he smell good, if his hygiene is on point, basically there's a pretty good chance that he may do a good job at giving me a service, man.
Speaker BAnd, and I think that that's very important.
Speaker BIt's very critical and for people to even trust to sit in your chair.
Speaker BSo it goes a long way.
Speaker ATotally.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker ASo, so, like, early on, you're, you're breaking into the industry.
Speaker AAnd so did you go to school or do an apprenticeship program?
Speaker AHow did you go from cutting hair with your, your, your, your clippers to being like a fully licensed barber?
Speaker BOh, that's a great question, man.
Speaker BSo my dad actually owned restaurants back in the day, so I used to work like 40, 50, 60 hours a week.
Speaker BMy dad owned a restaurant called Larry's Ribs.
Speaker BSo I was taught entrepreneurship and sweat equity at a young age, if you will.
Speaker BBut it wasn't until I actually put another chair in my basement, I had another guy from the suburbs where I was literally as a teenager, man, I had two chairs in my basement.
Speaker BWe were cutting.
Speaker BWe had the suburbs sold up.
Speaker BWe was cutting everybody's hair in the suburbs.
Speaker BAnd I told my parents, you know what?
Speaker BThis is what I want to do.
Speaker BAnd it went from the barbershop in the basement to when I was 17 years old, I went to barber school, and I went to barber school when I was a senior in high school because I had all of my credits, if you will, except for the main credits you still need to take as a senior.
Speaker BAnd I got out of school every day at 12 o' clock and I would drive to school, but then also leave straight from school and go to barber school when I was a senior in high school, man.
Speaker BSo I did go to barber school when, when barber school was only 1500 dol.
Speaker AOh my gosh.
Speaker AWhat?
Speaker BBarber school was $1500, man, 100 down, and I had a balance of $1400.
Speaker BAnd oh, barber school is pretty steep right now, especially for those of us who has.
Speaker BHave Title 4 funding.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut yeah, man, I did go to barber school and that's how everything started.
Speaker ANice.
Speaker ASo, so after school, how.
Speaker AHow long until you started breaking.
Speaker AI mean, the entrepreneurship.
Speaker AI could hear you and talking about having multiple chairs in your basement in.
Speaker AYeah, I love that.
Speaker ASo tell us, like, this entrepreneurial journey.
Speaker ALike, did you, did you do a barbershop first?
Speaker ADid you go straight into education?
Speaker ADid you win?
Speaker ALike, what I want to.
Speaker AWhat I want to understand is how you went from getting your license to opening up the school and like, what entrepreneurial endeavors you had along the way.
Speaker BSo, so let me say this, right, and this is just me being candid and very transparent, which is why it led me to wanting.
Speaker BWanting to open up a barber college and educating.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BSo a lot of people don't know when I ask the question, what does the red, white and blue barber poll stand for?
Speaker BYou know, I've heard all kind of answers from, you know, America to the military.
Speaker BI mean, I've heard all kind of answers, right?
Speaker BAnd little do people know the first haircut was done 5000 BC and it wasn't until the late 1800s when they separated the barbers, the doctors, and the dentist.
Speaker BSo the red stand for blood, the blue stand for veins, the white stand for bandages, and a ball on the bottom is called a bassin.
Speaker BPeople don't know that we were doctors and dentists back in the day.
Speaker BWe did minor surgeries, we did bloodletting.
Speaker BSo our professional name is a Tom Sorrow Artist.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo you have the doctor, the dentist, the tonsor artist, and all of our license come from the same place, which here in Illinois is Illinois Department of Professional Regulation.
Speaker BSo what we do is very, very important, man.
Speaker BWe have to learn about, you know, folliculitis.
Speaker BWe have to learn about bacteriology, electricity, light therapy, blood pathogens.
Speaker BI could go on and on about things that could be detrimental to people, that if you don't have the proper license, you know, the health and the welfare of the clients is what the.
Speaker BIs what the state care about.
Speaker BThey can care less about how good you know how to cut hair, how good you know how to do a relaxer.
Speaker BYou know, if you're doing a relaxer and not doing a strand test, and if you're doing a color and not doing a patch test, you know, you.
Speaker BYou can.
Speaker BIt can be Very detrimental to your client.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BBut I went to barber school and got caught up into all of these clients I had.
Speaker BAnd I didn't get my barber's license until 10 years after I graduated from barber school, believe it or not.
Speaker AWhoa.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd I had a barbershop prematurely when I was 19.
Speaker BI had my own barbershop that I used my own money and, you know, thank God I was able to survive it.
Speaker BBut cutting hair or doing hair inside of a shop without a license here in Illinois is considered a misdemeanor.
Speaker BSo I could have possibly went to jail had I.
Speaker BYou know what I'm saying?
Speaker BAnd even though it's a misdemeanor, but you still don't want that on your record, which is why I said I need to go into education because people don't know the importance, which is, this is going to make sense when.
Speaker BWhen we have more conversation down the line about the other things that I'm doing for our industry.
Speaker BBut if you don't have your license, man, you know, which now I have my master instructor license in over 22 states now because I'm preparing for where it is I want to go, man.
Speaker BYou know, like, license is very, very important, and getting the theory is very, very important as well.
Speaker BLike, you know, it's great to be able to say pit arises versus dandruff.
Speaker BYou know, it's great to be able to say your hair is coming out versus alopecia or hereditary alopecia or alopecia areata, or, you know, instead of saying, you got a ringworm.
Speaker BIt's great to be able to say, hey, man, it's tinea, and so on and so forth.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BSo a lot of that comes along with getting theory, having your license, and me feeling like I want to be able to educate people and let them know not to make the mistakes that I made and properly go through the measures.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BBecause I always say you have to go through in order to get to.
Speaker BBut it's how you deal with what you go through that determines how you come out.
Speaker BAnd we also have to be careful.
Speaker BWe don't allow our gift to take us to a place that our character cannot handle.
Speaker BSo a lot of times, if you put the cart before the horse, a lot of times your gift is great, but, you know, your character can't handle being on time, wearing, having uniformity, making sure that the atmosphere is conducive to professionalism, and all of these things.
Speaker BSo that's what led me from wanting to have a barbershop to opening up my own school.
Speaker BAnd, you know, it's.
Speaker BI think that is a very powerful tool.
Speaker ASo nice.
Speaker ADude, this is awesome.
Speaker AAnd like, I totally love that you're separating different stuff that we get through education.
Speaker ALike at the, at the school, you're like, I'm.
Speaker AI don't.
Speaker ADo you find that the students in school, without being like, taught it, come in with.
Speaker ATo school with the impression that they are going to learn everything they need to learn while they're in school and they'll be ready to go when they get out.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI call it YouTube School of.
Speaker BOf barbering and styling.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo believe it or not, I already knew how to cut hair better than subpar when I went to barber school because again, I'm an artist, you know, I know how to draw well and I strive for excellence.
Speaker BI'm not going to say perfectionist, but I strive for excellence.
Speaker BSo one thing that makes me a.
Speaker BA great tonsoro artist is the fact that I pay attention to detail and I don't let anybody get out my chair without.
Speaker BI guess I gotta use perfection without it being to the perfection I feel like it needs to be.
Speaker BWhether it's carving, whether it's the lining, no matter what it is.
Speaker BLike, you don't have to look in the mirror when you get done getting out of my chair, because I'm going to make sure it's everything that you needed it to be.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to put my extra sauce on there to make sure that.
Speaker BThat there's more.
Speaker BBut still, 39 years later, consider myself a student behind a chair.
Speaker BEvery time I stand behind a chair, I want to learn more.
Speaker BI want to be better.
Speaker BYou know, haircuts and things are repeating itself, like the Mohawk, it's not new.
Speaker BLike the south of France.
Speaker BIt's not who new.
Speaker BThe crew cut, it's not new.
Speaker BThey call it the police.
Speaker BYou know what I'm saying?
Speaker BHaircut, so to speak.
Speaker BSo I still remain a student behind the chair, if you will, versus trying to feel like I know it all.
Speaker BWhich is why, you know, when I come across students who come to school think that, oh, I just need to get my license.
Speaker BNo, always keep yourself opening, open to wanting to learn more and more and more, which is what I do.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I would.
Speaker BI would say that, man.
Speaker BSo a lot of people nowadays, especially these new students, they put the cart before the horse and.
Speaker BAnd a lot of them really can't cut hair, to be honest with you.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BI could take one pair of clippers.
Speaker BMatter of fact, I can Take a pair of shears and a razor and cut a whole head, no matter what kind of hairstyle it is.
Speaker BI can do the lining and everything with a razor.
Speaker BI can, I can do the fade with, with a razor, some shears, you know, round sale hair over curly hair, no matter what it is.
Speaker BI can also take one pair of clippers without no guards and cut a whole head, right.
Speaker BAnd a comb because I understand hair.
Speaker BSo I use the opportunity in barber school to truly understand hair.
Speaker BSo that way I wouldn't differentiate round sale hair versus over curly hair.
Speaker BAnd for the people who don't understand what that is, it's basically African American hair like mine versus Caucasian hair like, or European hair like yours, if you will, right?
Speaker BSo that's round sale hair versus over curly hair.
Speaker BAnd there's really not hair is hair is what I, you know, is what I mount it to, right?
Speaker BBut for somebody who really don't understand hair like that, you know, it's almost like, oh, I can't cut the straight hair when it's really all the same.
Speaker BYou just have to approach it differently.
Speaker BSo with that being said, man, that's what barber school did for me.
Speaker BSomeone like me who already went in knowing how to cut hair already.
Speaker BSo I needed to get the theory behind it and so I can get my license.
Speaker BBecause when you go and take your barber exam, they don't care how good you can cut hair.
Speaker BThey don't care how good you can do designs, they don't care how good you can use a razor.
Speaker BThey want to know that you're protecting the health and welfare of your clients and so that it won't be, you know, detrimental, so to speak.
Speaker ASo totally.
Speaker ASo just one more question on this because this topic of the working with the students and considering setting them up for success is definitely like, at the core of what we, of most of what we do here at Hairdresser Strong.
Speaker AAnd I think it's really important.
Speaker ASo what fallout have you seen, if any, from this mentality of, I, I'm gonna get everything I need by the time I graduate school and I'll be ready to go full time on my own, do my own thing?
Speaker BThat's, that's a great question.
Speaker BSo, you know, I often use this scenario and I kind of want to put, I want to do it to you.
Speaker BSo if you had pizza from last night, right.
Speaker BAnd you want to eat it this morning, what are you going to do in order to eat that pizza this morning?
Speaker BTell me what you would do, Robert.
Speaker AI would put it on piece of foil and sprinkle a little water.
Speaker AAnd I'd put it in the mic, like the oven and like heat it up.
Speaker BThen you go right there, right.
Speaker BBut this new generation, what are they going to do?
Speaker BMost of them, they're going to pop it in a microwave.
Speaker BMicrowave, right.
Speaker AOr buy a new pizza, a second pizza.
Speaker BOr buy a new pizza.
Speaker BRight, but let's go, let's go microwave.
Speaker BBut when you put it in the microwave, especially if you use the paper plate, you know, what do you have?
Speaker BYou have you know, a paper plate that pretty much, you have a paper plate that pretty much, let's just say, you know, the bread gets soggy, the cheese stick to the paper plate, it don't have the same crunch or the same bite on there, if you will, right?
Speaker BBut when you preheat the oven, put it in the oven, it may take a little longer, but it's going to have the same vibe that it did from the night before, right.
Speaker BSo I often use that because this new generation, unfortunately, even some of the older people, they want it right now.
Speaker BIt's like I'm in a rush to get it.
Speaker BI come from the era, man, where I used to start at 4 in the morning, Robert, cutting hair.
Speaker BSometimes I will cut from four in the morning until one o' clock the next morning without sitting down one time.
Speaker BAnd I would cut between 25 and 38 heads every day.
Speaker BThe most heads I ever cut in one day was 48 heads is what I cut in one day.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd that's when haircuts was 10, 15 and $20.
Speaker BI, at 18 years old, I was making between 1500 and 2000 dollars.
Speaker BWith ten dollar haircuts.
Speaker BThese guys want to charge 50, 60, 70 for a head.
Speaker BThey not on time, they start work late, they're not professional, the atmosphere is horrible.
Speaker BAnd, and, and you know, they want to charge all of this money, man, and I call it, they don't have a pot to piss in and a window to throw it out of when they get done.
Speaker BAnd that's just the reality of it, man.
Speaker BSo you know, it's, it's different now, man.
Speaker BAnd you want this fast, quick money, but you're not willing to do the work in order to get it to, to, to create longevity, to give you that, that, that bite on there and that crunch on there you had from the day before, you know, make it where it lasts versus when you put it in a microwave, man, it's only gonna be warm for a second, for a second.
Speaker BBut when you put it in the oven, the heat is gonna.
Speaker BIs gonna stay on it.
Speaker BIf you walk away from it and come back, the heat is still going to be on there, man, and you're still gonna have the same effect from when it came straight out the pizza oven.
Speaker BSo this, this new generation, man, is different, which is why I'm trying to teach my students when they come in for orientation.
Speaker BI try and do orientation with every student, you know, together at every school.
Speaker BBut it's like, man, I tell them, don't come here trying to be the best barber in one day in.
Speaker BIn 1500 hours in one year, because it's not going to happen.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BFocus on, you know, the, the success of being a barber stylist and not the quick fix, if you will.
Speaker BSo, yo, hopefully that answers your question, man.
Speaker ATotally.
Speaker AYeah, that was good.
Speaker ASo, all right, so we got kind of the vibes on the, on the, like, the teaching and like, your story kind of leading up here.
Speaker AI took us on a little side trip to talk about the.
Speaker AThe students and the state of things in terms of that.
Speaker ASo let's get back on to your.
Speaker AYour story.
Speaker ASo you open up your school, your.
Speaker AAnd we also introduced you here.
Speaker AI got.
Speaker AYou got.
Speaker AHere we go.
Speaker AMusician and a clothing line.
Speaker ATell us about that.
Speaker BOkay, so I play drums and keyboards professionally.
Speaker BTravel the world doing it.
Speaker BI still do it full time.
Speaker BKind of got that.
Speaker BInherited that from my dad.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BMy dad played the organ for a lot of the gospel greats back in the day.
Speaker BYou know, he was with and around, you know, Thomas Dorsey, you know, it goes back as far as that.
Speaker BJames Cleveland, Albertina Walker, Douglas Miller.
Speaker BI mean, my dad played for a lot of the greats back in the day.
Speaker BMilton Bronson, Levon Whitley Corinthians.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo he traveled a lot as well.
Speaker BSo my musicianship comes from my dad.
Speaker BAnd my nephew is not like one of my nephews.
Speaker BMy oldest nephew, Clemens Poindexter, he played drums for Khalid.
Speaker BMy youngest nephew, Jermaine Poindexter, played drums for LMA.
Speaker BSo Clem been with Khalid for the last 10 years.
Speaker BJermaine been with Ella May for the last eight years.
Speaker BSo you guys just look out for those guys.
Speaker BThose are my nephews who play for them.
Speaker BThey travel the world as well.
Speaker BSo that kind of correlates into when I would go out the country on tour.
Speaker BGuess who was the barber on tour?
Speaker BI was.
Speaker BSo I was making money not only playing my instrument, but I was also making money cutting hair on tour.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo a lot of people come in town, such as the Justin Timberlakes or you know, Bobby Brown and all of them, they come in town, you know, they'll call me in order to come cut hair, you know, wherever they are, whether it's the United center or the Horseshoe, wherever that is.
Speaker BYou know, basically I'm able to service those people.
Speaker BSo there's a correlation in everything that I have going on.
Speaker BSo, you know, a musician and some people may say, man, you got a lot going on but there's a correlation behind it, right?
Speaker BWe, I, I love to dress, you know, I think I dress pretty dope, you know, my shoe gear, my cologne, all of this kind of stuff, man.
Speaker BSo with that it's almost like, why, why shouldn't I have a shoe and clothing line?
Speaker BBecause people are going to look at me, you know, so I can use it for my smocks, my capes, for my shirts, for comfortable shoes because we're standing up all day.
Speaker BSo that's kind of how my shoe and clothing line was, you know, how that came about along with my hair care product.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo who better than to talk about folliculitis, which is, you know, the bumps and ringworms and, and you know, most guys, you know, wash their face with soap, which you shouldn't do.
Speaker BSo you know, opening up the pores, closing the pores when you're shaving, you know, while we get hair bumps, the over curly hair versus the round sale hair.
Speaker BSo you know, with people that has dread.
Speaker BSo I, I talk about and I educate people on products.
Speaker BSo that's why I have the product line.
Speaker BThen you have, you know, I have stores, I have shops inside of Walmart's, right.
Speaker BWhich is the biggest box store in the world.
Speaker BSo you know, Walmart, so when they get done with barber school or if they want to do internship, they can work for me inside of the Walmart, which is not a booth rental situation, it's a commission situation where they become W2 employees for my locations in Walmart.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo why does that make sense?
Speaker BIt goes back to me saying I'm setting them up to succeed.
Speaker BMost people in the industry who pay bluefront, they're never going to be 100 with Uncle Sam about what I made this year in cash.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BNobody's gonna be.
Speaker BWith that being the case, it's almost like I want to get ahead of it because I talked to them about, you know, what are you going to retire to when you can't, when you can't cut hair or when you decide that I want to stop cutting Hair.
Speaker BWhat did you invest in?
Speaker BDid you do a 401k?
Speaker BDid you start your own corporation?
Speaker BDid you.
Speaker BWere you paying taxes?
Speaker BWere you paying into Social Security and Medicare and all of that kind of stuff?
Speaker BSo without using the word force, I want to say, you know, working inside of my Walmart, my Walmart locations, I forced them to become taxpaying citizens.
Speaker BI forced them to be able to have Aflac if they can't work and they still can get paid or, you know, pay into a 401k.
Speaker BSo that way they decide, I can't stand up all day anymore and cut hair, I can't stand behind a chair.
Speaker BYou know, what can I do?
Speaker BThat's why I kind of pay it forward and kind of have them doing that.
Speaker BAnd then I have a trade school, which is automotive, diesel, aviation, H Vac, appliance repair school, where it's a trade where a robot can't cut your hair, a robot can't fix your car, a robot can't, you know, fix your H Vac, and a robot can't fix your appliances.
Speaker BSo I kind of stayed within the realm of, of trade and vocational because a lot of people aren't really trying to go to college, which is not the worst thing in the world.
Speaker BBut somebody like myself who, you know, didn't go to college for business and stuff like that, I just kind of, you know, I always say I'm in 2040, man, because I'm always thinking ahead.
Speaker BSo way back when, you know, I was studying up on business and corporations and how to start my own companies and not for profits and things to that degree, which I also have a non for profit, which that's how I run.
Speaker BMy school is inside of Cook County Jail here, which I've been in for 15 years now.
Speaker BI'm the first person to ever open up a school inside of a county jail.
Speaker BAnd I made history doing that.
Speaker BAnd I do it totally complimentary, which is why, you know, ask people for donations to kind of go toward that.
Speaker BI'm also an adjunct for the city colleges, which is still Barbara, and Cosmetology School, along with I'm in the middle school now and also opening up inside of some high schools, the CPS schools as well, man.
Speaker BSo there's a correlation between everything that I'm doing, which when people say that I'm doing too much or I'm doing a lot, it all works together hand in hand.
Speaker BYou know, if, if they, if they go to jail and they don't finish, if they, if they go to jail they can start my barber school in jail.
Speaker BIf they get out of jail before they finish, they can finish in the world with me.
Speaker BWhen they finish barber school, they can go work for me inside of Walmart.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BIf they need products, they can use my product.
Speaker BIf they decide, hey, I want to go to trade school or do this, they can go to my trade school.
Speaker BSo everything's worked together hand in hand, man, and I'm really excited about it, you know, so thanks, thanks for asking about that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou know, so it's just like you're creating this giant ecosystem and that is brilliant.
Speaker AAnd so I, I have a couple of questions.
Speaker ASo can you tell me what this.
Speaker AYou said you're going into middle or high schools.
Speaker AAnd what does that mean is like, can you explain, like, the high level overview of like, how that works and what that means?
Speaker BOkay, so not only do I do career fairs in the high schools, but I have, you know, high schools are understanding now because back in the day.
Speaker BSo I'll be 52 this year.
Speaker BAnd back when I was a teenager, they had barber school and cosmetology school and high schools as a vocational trade.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo they pretty much snatched it and took it away because.
Speaker BBut the enrollment is really, really low and in high schools now.
Speaker BAnd so they're calling me and contacting me because it's like they want to do it again, but they really don't have a funding in order to do it.
Speaker BSo what it's allowing me to do, it's allowing me to put my name on it.
Speaker BLike my name is on Cook County Jail.
Speaker BMy name is on the juvenile.
Speaker BThe Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BWhich means that I then could, you know, ask for donations and ask for, you know, get grants and things to that degree, even though I haven't really gotten any grants like that.
Speaker BBut I believe that it's just a matter of time before I'm able to get grants and stuff like that to help me to fund those programs.
Speaker BSo when I say I'm in the schools, meaning that I literally have my barber school inside of these schools where they can pretty much start.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BBut then the other side of that, if, if they don't finish in high school, then they can finish at my school on outside, basically we're just transferring the transcript.
Speaker BAnd the difference between them, like they can go to my school at 16 years old as a vocational program, but the only problem is, is that they would either have to pay for it out of their pocket or they would have to wait until, you know, they turn 18 to be able to qualify for financial aid, which I have financial aid.
Speaker BLike a regular title for university.
Speaker BTitle 4, like regular 4 university.
Speaker BAlso.
Speaker BI am the only barber school who provide housing.
Speaker BSo I have people that, that comes from out of town that lives in my housing units and also have buses and, and vans where, you know, I have transportation as well for, for financial aid.
Speaker BSo that way, you know, I mean for, for my barber school.
Speaker BSo that way, you know, I can just kind of take care of every aspect of them wanting to come from out of town or even them being here, man.
Speaker BAnd again, that's just me thinking forward.
Speaker BLike, I don't want to give no excuse to anybody who wants to come to barber school, but feel like I can't even get there or I don't have anywhere to live because believe it or not, man, I deal with a lot of people who are homeless and you don't even know it.
Speaker BThey're living out of their cars or they're living from one friend's house or one family member's house to another.
Speaker BSo why not hook them up?
Speaker BBecause their financial aid has a housing allowance.
Speaker BSo why not hook them up to be able to stay on campus and go ahead.
Speaker ASo this is, I'm so curious.
Speaker ASo, so is this.
Speaker AYou said title four university.
Speaker ASo is that different than like your kind of average hair.
Speaker AHair trade?
Speaker AHair school is like they offer the.
Speaker ASo, so when you get financial aid and say like, I'm going to Robert's Beauty School, all right?
Speaker AAnd I, it's.
Speaker AI go in there and they're like, oh, you can get financial aid.
Speaker AWe're accredited.
Speaker AAnd, and there's like, okay, great.
Speaker AAnd they're like, it's $20,000.
Speaker AAnd, and then it's like, are you saying that in that I can also apply to get.
Speaker AOr a person can get.
Speaker AHow is that in addition to the tuition or does it depend on the tuition size?
Speaker BIt's an.
Speaker BSo it's an addition to.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo no matter what you charge in tuition, there's still a housing allowance within your tuition.
Speaker BSo beauty schools and barber schools is a clock hour school, unlike a four year university, where.
Speaker BRight, so it's the same except for a four year university is it's semesters versus clock hours for a beauty or barber school.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BSo with us they just have to meet both Pell award years.
Speaker BAnd when they meet both Pale award years, because we are clocked hour school, you know, there's only so much money that they can exhaust for those two pale award years before a Four year university.
Speaker BOf course, every year entails something different if they're in school for four years, so to speak.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BSo you have a certain amount of money that, that we have for pale.
Speaker BBut then the other money is subsidized, unsubsidized loans and so on and so forth.
Speaker BBut the difference between somebody going to the bank to get a loan versus us being accredited and having title four means that they're guaranteed to get the loans just as long as their EFC is what it needs to be and the income and all of that kind of stuff through the family or themselves individually.
Speaker BSo that's the difference.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo I, I love that.
Speaker BSo that's just me taking advantage of the situation was like, man, look, I don't want nobody not to come to school because, you know, they don't, they don't have anywhere to live or because they can't get back and forth to school.
Speaker BAnd people thought I was crazy 15 years ago when I'm buying buses or I'm telling the banks, hey, I want to buy property so that way I can be able to have housing.
Speaker BAnd boom, what did I do?
Speaker BI did it on my own.
Speaker BAnd making the financial institutions like, oh my God, how did you do that?
Speaker BI'm like, I tried to tell you guys, but y' all wouldn't listen to me, right?
Speaker BSo, you know, I did it anyway, man.
Speaker BAnd, you know, you got so many people who, you know, they get out of barber school or so many people that want to have their own barbershops and their own barber schools and beauty schools and they want to have sweets when, hey, go and serve first, man.
Speaker BGo work up under somebody first.
Speaker BEverybody want to have their own.
Speaker BBut, man, you know, from a spiritual aspect, man, it says in the Bible, man, that many are called, but few are chosen.
Speaker BYou know, everybody is not, it's not in your wheelhouse to own your own barbershop or beauty school or barber school or, you know, have your own suite.
Speaker BIt's not, it's not for everybody, man.
Speaker BAnd I always tell people, if you don't have enough clientele to run your shop on your own, then I feel like you don't need to open up a shop because if you do, you're now depending on other operators to be able to handle your, your day to day, you know, and you don't want to have to depend on anybody else, man.
Speaker BThen you set yourself up for people to take advantage of you as well, right?
Speaker BBecause they'll figure that you need us.
Speaker BSo if you need Us, we basically can do whatever we want to do.
Speaker BSo if you want to hold your shop to a certain standard, but you need these people to pay, pay you boof friend.
Speaker BAnd help you to keep this shop open.
Speaker BIt's almost like you kind of let them get away whatever they want to get away with because otherwise you couldn't survive it.
Speaker BYou know, if they make any sense.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AIt's like the roommates that you, you hate but you need to pay, help you pay the rent.
Speaker BI like that.
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker BI love that.
Speaker BYeah, that's good.
Speaker AOkay, so.
Speaker AAll right, this is like so fascinating and I like the whole, the whole situation with the school stuff.
Speaker ASo what about the, so the school, the part where you're in the middle schools and the high schools, is that part of the non profit portion of your organization?
Speaker AThat's like from the same thing as the, as the correctional facilities are, are also.
Speaker AOkay, cool, got it.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BSo it's a subsidiary of.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo I started the non for profit.
Speaker BSo that way, you know, because me like, like I hate the back to school haircut stuff, man.
Speaker BI'm sorry.
Speaker BI do because so many people reach out for this one day out of the year.
Speaker BWhen I do this, I do free, free services every fourth Tuesday of the month.
Speaker BThat's just what I do.
Speaker BYou know, I solicit and allow, allow grammar schools to come in on a regular basis as often as they want to give to let them allow them to get their, their students free services whenever they'd like to.
Speaker BBecause I don't want to just wait until back to school in order to do this.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo the non for profit pretty much serves as that hub also to do the free services inside of the, the correctional facilities and inside of the middle schools and inside of the high schools because there's really no funding for that.
Speaker BBut you have people who, you know.
Speaker BAnd it's also to help cut down on the recidivism as far as jail and juvenile is concerned along with, you know, helping to create alternatives to violence.
Speaker BWhich is why I went in and did that, man.
Speaker BSo I don't get paid to be there.
Speaker BA lot of people think that I do, but I haven't gotten paid a penny to be inside of the, the correctional facility, man.
Speaker BWhich is, you know, is what I use my non for profit for.
Speaker ASo I mean this is, I mean, I mean that's like God's work, dude.
Speaker AIt's like, yeah, you know, you're going in, you're taking, you know, helping people find another way and then also not just let, let and be like, okay, you're, you're out now.
Speaker AGood luck.
Speaker BRight, right, right, right.
Speaker BAnd then I also use my not for profit man for life coach, mentorship, mental health, substance abuse.
Speaker BWe have the GI Bill for the veterans, right?
Speaker BSo all of my schools have the GI Bill where, where they will, you know, pay the veterans tuition, they'll pay for them housing, they'll give them housing allowance, you know, all of that stuff, man, through the GI Bill.
Speaker BAnd we work with the senior citizens as well, so we'll go to the senior homes and stuff like that, man.
Speaker BYou know, homeless people.
Speaker BI just don't want nobody left behind, man.
Speaker BAnd I think that, you know, we have to position ourselves to be able to do that, which is why I established the, the non for profit in order to be able to hopefully get some grants and stuff that will help then facilitate all of these programs that I've done.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AThat's awesome.
Speaker AOkay, so this is an amazing, and we are, I mean, this story is incredible and I, I'm, I, I know that there's so much more conversation I want to have and so many more questions, but I, I would be remiss if I did not ask you about the credit union.
Speaker AAnd you know, so I think as to, you know, to finish up this conversation, I think that's a great place to, to pull, to like kind of end it on.
Speaker ASo tell us about the credit union, your why behind it.
Speaker AI mean, I feel like you've kind of alluded to it a little bit and what we've been talking about already.
Speaker ABut just could you give us, yeah, like, what's your why?
Speaker AWhere are you at in the process?
Speaker AI'm like, you know, I'll have questions along the way, I'm sure.
Speaker BOkay, that's a great question.
Speaker BSo my why behind the credit union?
Speaker BYou know, unfortunately, being a African American, you know, it's more difficult for us to, you know, go to the banks and say, hey, you know, I need to get a loan for $100,000 or $50,000 and so on and so forth.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, there has to be a solution as to why or as to how to, to gain funding in order to be able to facilitate, you know, my objectives or my dreams or my goals and stuff like that.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BBut along with that, I didn't understand back in the day why it was taking me so long to get, you know, where I'm getting and where I'm going now.
Speaker BBut even though, you know, I'VE always been a good steward of finances, and I've always been a, you know, a hard worker.
Speaker BAnd the sweat equity, you know, what I've learned from my dad always say, you know, he's my hero, man, because I watched him.
Speaker BBut there were days where, you know, instead of paying a rent, you know, I bought rims for my truck when I was 19, 20 years old, and, you know, putting sounds in my car, but I wasn't paying the utilities.
Speaker BYou know, I would pay them, but I just knew that I would be able to make the money.
Speaker BBut I kind of, you know, didn't have everything aligned, man.
Speaker BSo where I'm going right now, I just really believe, you know, God wanted to position me better to be able to handle where I'm going, so that way I wouldn't screw it up, which is why it took so long, right?
Speaker BSo the credit union basically is.
Speaker BIs in order to.
Speaker BTo have products for the people not only in the music industry, but for the hair care industry.
Speaker BBecause again, we don't have any exit strategies.
Speaker BWe don't have any end game is what I call it, right?
Speaker BSo me understanding why it was difficult then, not just being African American and it being a little bit more difficult to get the certain loans and stuff I needed, but also, you know, my paperwork wasn't aligned the way the paperwork needed to be aligned.
Speaker BAnd why is that?
Speaker BIt was because of the fact that I made cash money.
Speaker BI might have made a hundred thousand dollars, but I.
Speaker BI didn't have the paperwork to show that I made a hundred thousand dollars.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo not really understanding that.
Speaker BMore so than, you know, the fact that, man, you know, like for, for instance, you know, I'm great, Bill.
Speaker BI think I believe that on First Barber School, that's ready to build the school from the ground up, right?
Speaker BI've already been approved for it.
Speaker BI'm building it, so.
Speaker BAnd I told the banks, I said, hey, you know, I could do this, but they're looking at me.
Speaker BYou just cut hair, right?
Speaker BI said, no, it's more than just cutting hair.
Speaker BBut they took the time to understand what I did.
Speaker BThey took the time to ask the questions.
Speaker BThey took the time to, you know, make sure that everything was aligned, that needed to be aligned for them to approve a multimillion dollar deal for me to be able to build a school from the ground up, right?
Speaker BAnd it was like, okay, you got your stuff together, right?
Speaker BSo with that being said, a credit union for the music industry and for the hair care industry, which will be a federal credit Union which will encompass the United States.
Speaker BWith that being said, they'll have somebody who understand their industry and will be able to take the time and say, hey, Robert, you know, you want to get a loan, Open up a barber school.
Speaker BBut through my experience, this is what it'll take.
Speaker BSo, you know, get this together and then you can come back or, hey, I want to buy a car, I want to buy a house.
Speaker BOkay, well, you can come to my credit union that you have your money in and let me help you and show you how you need to get prepared versus just saying shunning you off.
Speaker BNo, man, we can't give you no loan and all.
Speaker BYou don't need to open up no barbershop or no, you don't need to open up no barber school.
Speaker BI'm able to help facilitate that because I'm able to educate you on what you need to do.
Speaker BYou know, go to the barbershops and salons, you know, start your own corporation, set yourself up like this, make sure your credit is in order from this aspect.
Speaker BAnd then when you get these things together, then come on back and then we can loan you the money along with, hey, set up a 401k plan, set up some Aflac, set up something that when you can't cut hair and when you can't do hair anymore, then you can go into being an instructor or you can go into, you know, your 401k and all of these investments and things that the products that I'll have available through the credit union, man.
Speaker BSo that's why I wanted to open up a credit union, so that people that deserve yeses cannot.
Speaker BThere won't be so many no's, if you will.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo, and I've been working on it for a while and it's looking like, you know, prayerfully, the beginning of the summer of 2025 is when the credit union to be open.
Speaker BI can take donations for the credit union right now, but I'm not able to open up accounts because I'm not at that phase yet.
Speaker BBut I'm.
Speaker BI'm up on the last phase of opening up the credit union and then we'll be able to take, you know, open up accounts and stuff like that, man.
Speaker BSo I'm really excited about LBC Federal Credit Union.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat this is exciting.
Speaker ASo tell me a little bit, like just, you know, I'm sure there's a lot, but like, what type of stuff that goes into opening a credit union that have been, let's just say your top, your biggest Challenges so far with or, or not challenges.
Speaker ALet's just say the biggest challenges is a good word.
Speaker BChallenges, a great word, right?
Speaker BIt's a great word because in essence, opening up a credit union is not just somebody saying, hey, Larry is opening up a credit union.
Speaker BSo let me open up my own credit union.
Speaker BI've been working on this for some years, man.
Speaker BAnd it was really pretty much, you know, tying up the loose ends and, and, you know, getting surveys done and, and having, you know, different organizations saying, hey, you know, we want to be a part of your credit union.
Speaker BAnd you know, it was a lot of that.
Speaker BThey want to know how much money can you put in, you know, who, who are your partners, all of these things.
Speaker BAnd you.
Speaker BAnd people have to believe in you enough to be willing to give you letters of support.
Speaker BLike big organizations or churches, you know, from the music aspect or, or barbers or barber schools or hair schools, cosmetology schools and barbershops and things to that degree.
Speaker BI had to get support letters.
Speaker BI had to get, you know, just, just financials, like how much money are you putting in and get people to do surveys, right?
Speaker BSo if people don't believe in you and if they don't feel like, hey, you know, this is worth doing, you're not going to get these support letters to even get from phase one to phase two and so on and so forth.
Speaker BSo there was a lot of challenges, man, you know, just really getting people to follow through with the support letters and organizations and they have to give their bylaws and all of this kind of stuff.
Speaker BSo you're asking, you know, major corporations to give you their bylaws or to give you support letters, right, for something that could come back and bite them in a butt, if you will, you know, so there definitely were some challenges, but I believe that the challenges only came to make me stronger and to make sure that I can withstand, you know, the things that will be coming, you know, later on in the future, man.
Speaker BAnd basically, you know, I like to often tell people that, you know, people think that we're only so good, you know, we're just as only so good as working with our hands, man, when at the end of the day, you know, I have a lot of education behind, you know, it might not have been me going to a four year university in college, but, you know, I'm very knowledgeable, I'm very intelligent.
Speaker BNot only in the hair care industry, but I'm very intelligent and knowledgeable in business.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BI understand the, you know, the LLCs the different LLCs and the C Corps and the S Corps and the 501C3s and things to that degree which I educated myself on.
Speaker BAnd I know how to talk around any type of round table.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo it can be a professional round table, it can be a roundtable in the hood.
Speaker BYou know, I have a balance.
Speaker BYou know, I've cut the NBA ball players, football players from the NFL, major league baseball players, people in Hollywood, people in the music industry.
Speaker BSo I've had opportunity to be on many platforms, I've had the opportunity to service very high end clients, if you will.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BSo I feel like I, I've encompassed or I've, I've landed on, you know, in many circles that, that people who, you know, they're the new, they're the new generation where they want it right now.
Speaker BBut man, I put some work in.
Speaker BI put some work in.
Speaker BSo people see me now, but they don't know out of 33 years of being in business, you know, I just now start seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
Speaker BThe last 10 years, right.
Speaker BBecause of where I'm going, because of where I want to go and what I want to do.
Speaker BYou know, it's not just as easy as, okay, I went to barber school for a year, so now I deserve to open up my own barbershop or I went to barber school, I've had a barber shop for one year, so now I deserve to be able to open up a barber school.
Speaker BAnd I'm only 22 years old.
Speaker BLike, come on, man, you got to put some skin in the game in order to be able to get to your next.
Speaker BThat's why I always talk about we have to be careful.
Speaker BWe don't allow our gift to take us a place that our character can't handle.
Speaker BMan, you know, you got to go through it, but it's how you deal with what you go through it that determines how you come out on the other side.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that's just so good.
Speaker AThis, this has been a pleasure hearing about everything you're, you're doing.
Speaker AI'm excited.
Speaker AThe credit union, is there anything else that's coming up that we should be watching, looking out for or maybe like some like last words to wrap it up as we kind of come up on our time here.
Speaker ABut it's just in general, I would say that this has been a real pleasure and so insightful and I'm sure there are so many people that are going to get value out of this because the show is really like, for People who have that entrepreneurial spirit.
Speaker AAnd so this has been so good.
Speaker ABut yeah, like I want to give you like, you know, you have.
Speaker BSo I've written a couple books, man.
Speaker BYou can find me on Amazon.
Speaker BFirst book was Suicide is Not the Answer.
Speaker BThe second book was out of the Ashes I Rise.
Speaker BSo I did write a couple books.
Speaker BI've been on like, man, probably most TV, you know, most mainstream TV channels.
Speaker BI just did something for ABC 7.
Speaker BSo that documentary slash, whatever else they're talking about they're going to do will be out for Black History Month which will be in February where, you know, I'm talking about, you know, black hair, so to speak.
Speaker BSo that was pretty good.
Speaker BI'm working on reality shows as well.
Speaker BI want to do that eventually.
Speaker BSomething I've been working on for some years, man.
Speaker BSo I would say stay tuned for, you know, I'm going to open up inside of another Walmart and I'm, I'm just non stop, man.
Speaker BYou know, I'm non stop.
Speaker BI'm trying to do things but this is not for myself gratitude more so for to make sure the people, you know, I believe in help the people who help you.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker BAnd this is more so for the people who, who are wanting to go to the next level.
Speaker BAnd you know, some people are like rocket boosters.
Speaker BI often talk about, I talked about in my meeting today.
Speaker BA rocket booster is designed so that way it can take you up so far but then it drop off so the rocket could keep going to the higher height.
Speaker BAs long as the rocket booster is still on, it can't really, you know, get up because that rocket, rocket booster, so to speak, hanging, it's kind of low fruit hanging them down.
Speaker BAnd you're gonna have that, you know, the rocket boosters are going to fall off, man.
Speaker BBut I believe in, you know, higher and slow and firing fast unfortunately man.
Speaker BAnd I believe and you know, I'm not just your typical average barber school or you know, the company, so to speak, man.
Speaker BWe have regular weekly meetings.
Speaker BI call them power that be meetings.
Speaker BI have a creative ops team, you know, somebody to govern and run my emails and my social media and you know, my instructors have weekly meetings.
Speaker BWe have stand down.
Speaker BSo I just do things, man, so people can know we are high echelon, that we are corporate America, man.
Speaker BWe not just ah, they just cut hair.
Speaker BYou're going to stop looking at me as ah, he just cut hair.
Speaker BMore so than I'm a professional.
Speaker BI'm a Tom Sorrel artist, man.
Speaker BBut our Postures need to look the part and they need to be, you know, we need to look like who we say we are, man.
Speaker BAnd that's what I try and do, you know, unfortunately, you know, in our demographic and when our ethnicity, you know, a lot of us, man, are, are looked down upon or deemed as.
Speaker BThat's where they're kicking in that, you know.
Speaker BAnd Robert, honestly, and this is not to pass judgment on anybody else, man, but, you know, I don't have the stories of, you know, drinking and smoking and using drugs, you know, you know, I've never done none of that stuff, man.
Speaker BYou know, that's my choice, right?
Speaker BYou know, I'm, I'm, I'm that athlete, man.
Speaker BI still play basketball and baseball and football and softball and squash and racquetball and, you know, I can, at 52 years old, I can give you 50 push ups, man.
Speaker BSo I talk about health, you know, I, I'm example for health.
Speaker BI'm, I'm, I'm example for, you know, hey, this is the way I choose to live my life, man, because I want to live long, I want to live healthy, and I want to be an example for the people who sit in my chair, man.
Speaker BSo if nothing else, people can gravitate from, you know, me not doing those things.
Speaker BIt's more so than, man, you know, I just don't want to be a statistic out there where, you know, this took me down, man, or I can't come in and service you today because I'm sick off this, that and the other man.
Speaker BSo I just try and be an example, man, the best positive example that I can be.
Speaker BYou know, I love God, you know, I don't care, man, what faith you are, what religion, you know you want to be, man.
Speaker BI just feel like as a people, I want to love everybody, you know, race, color, creed, whatever the case may be, man.
Speaker BI think that we're all brothers and sisters, man, and we should be able to get along and, and walk this race, man, and run this race together, man.
Speaker BSo, you know, man, it's not about the battle, man, but it's about, it's about winning a war, you know, And I think together, you know, we can win a war, man.
Speaker ASo, man, I love this.
Speaker AThis has been so good.
Speaker AI want to thank you so much for your time, and I really hope to have you on again in the future.
Speaker AAnd I'm really going to keep an eye out and watch and anytime that you're doing anything and you want to get the word out, please we will definitely share it with our folks as well.
Speaker BThank you, Robert.
Speaker BI appreciate you having me on, man.
Speaker BIt was a pleasure.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AAll right, Will.
Speaker AUntil next time.
Speaker ATake care.
Speaker BYou too, man.
Speaker BLater.