¶ The Remarkable Journey of Ray Kroc
Welcome to the Profitable Painter Podcast biography edition , where we delve into the lives of some of history's most successful individuals to uncover strategies , tactics , mindsets that propel them to greatness . Today , we delve into the remarkable journey of an individual whose unwavering determination and pursuit of excellence revolutionize the fast food landscape .
Join me as we navigate the journey of this remarkable individual and extract invaluable lessons you can apply to elevate your professional painting business . Get ready to be inspired , to learn and to transform the way you think about success and leadership in your own entrepreneurial journey .
Ray Kroc was an American entrepreneur renowned for transforming McDonald's into the world's leading fast food chain . Initially a salesman , kroc discovered a small but efficient restaurant run by the McDonald Brothers and saw it as a franchise opportunity .
After becoming their franchise agent , he eventually bought the Brothers out and revolutionized the fast food industry with his focus on standardization , franchising and global expansion . Kroc's visionary leadership made McDonald's a symbol of quick service dining worldwide . I recently read the book Grinding it Out , which is an autobiography by Ray Kroc .
Ray Kroc was born in 1902 in Oak Park , illinois . As a kid , he was described as someone who daydreamed a lot , but once he got an idea he acted on it , and he gives an example of when he started his lemonade stand . When he was a kid .
At age 15 , kroc lied about his age to serve as a Red Cross ambulance driver during World War I , and through that war he ended up going overseas , and here's a quote from the book . As school ended that spring , the United States entered World War I . I took a job selling coffee beans and novelties door to door .
I was confident I couldn't make my way in the world and saw no real reason to return to school . Besides , the war effort was more important . My parents objected strenuously , but I finally talked them into letting me join up as a Red Cross ambulance driver .
I had to lie about my age , of course , but even my grandmother could accept that , and my company was another fellow who had lied about his age to get in . He was regarded as a strange duck , because whenever we had time off we went out to the town to chase girls . He stayed in camp drawing pictures . His name was Walt Disney .
So that's kind of cool that he actually met Walt Disney while serving during World War I .
Now , after the war , in the 1920s , kroc held various jobs , including playing piano and bands , selling paper cups and working as a real estate agent and he describes his schedule as , basically , he started working at seven o'clock in the morning and all the way until 2 am , with like a couple hours off in that period to have dinner , and he described it as he
loved to work . It wasn't work to him , it was play . So he loved to work , but he was very . He had a lot going on . He was working several different jobs and and this was during the 20s he ended up he was in Florida .
He was playing at piano at night for basically some gangsters who were this is during prohibition they were Selling alcohol illegally and he was playing piano at like this bar and ended up getting busted .
He went into jail for a short period it was like for a couple days but he ended up getting out and and he Decided to go back to Chicago , which is where he's originally from , and he decided that he was gonna focus on doing one thing . So this is a quote from the book .
When I returned to selling paper cuts , I vowed that this was going to be my only job . I Was going to make my living at it and to hell with moonlighting of any kind . I intended to devote every ounce of my energy to selling and that's exactly what I did .
So I think the lesson he learned here was to focus on one thing , because before he was doing so many things and his energy was being zapped Is pretty exhausting . So that's what he does when he gets back to Chicago .
From the 1930s and the 40s , croc became a successful salesman at Lily tulip cup company and he eventually comes across he , so he's very successful in doing his sales role . He actually becomes a sales manager and he's bringing a lot of business to the Lily tulip cup company .
And this is during the time when a lot of the stores were we're doing fountain drinks and and milkshakes and that sort of thing , and so he'd go around and basically sell paper cups to them and so that was a pretty . He built up a lot of accounts like Walgreens .
He got that account and then eventually he came across Someone who'd invented the multi mixer , which is basically something that mixes milkshakes , and he thinks it's a great idea and he takes that and he wants to quit his job because he was getting kind of annoyed with working at Lily cup .
He felt like he wasn't appreciated and he was really inspired by this idea for the , the milkshake mixing machine . His company actually had the multi mixer contract because when croc initially got the contract , he he brought it to his company . He thought it as an opportunity for them to invest in it and they weren't interested .
And so he's like , okay , if you're not gonna do it , I'm gonna do it . But then the his company wouldn't give the contract back .
They basically ended up being a 60% owner in the business that croc started , which was a pretty bad deal because he was actively running the business and doing everything and his former employer , the lily cup company , owned 60% of that and he ended up telling his wife who .
He married his wife back when he was like 18 years old and he's pretty much a workaholic and he's so he this is a quote from the book Ethel was incredulous at the idea that I would give up my position and go off on a flyer like this . We had just moved into a fine home . We were extremely comfortable there .
Ethel loved it and she felt threatened by this proposal . You are risking your whole future if you do this . Ray , she said you are 35 years old and you're going to start all over again as as if you're 20 . This multi makes her seems good now . But what if it turns out that it was just a fad and it fails ? You just have to trust my instincts .
I said I am positive , this is going to be a winner . So he basically quits his stable job at the paper cup company to sell this multi-mixer . And here's another quote from the book For me , this was the first phase of grinding it out , building my personal monument to capitalism .
I paid tribute in the feudal sense for many years before I was able to rise with McDonald's on the foundation that I lay . Perhaps without that adversity I might not have been able to persevere . Later on , when my financial burdens were redoubled , I learned then how to keep problems from crushing me .
I refused to worry about more than one thing at a time and I would not let useless fretting about a problem , no matter how important , keep me from sleeping . And so basically he has to take out a mortgage on his house to fund his multi-mixer business he's running .
The multi-mixer business is very difficult because his former employer has 60% , so he's basically not making much money at all . And around 1954 , he hears about this restaurant in San Bernardino , california , that uses eight multi-mixers , which was a lot of multi-mixers and one restaurant .
So he's really intrigued and so he goes out to visit the McDonald Brothers who had this original restaurant in San Bernardino , and he saw a lot of potential for a nationwide chain when he visited it . The operation was very efficient .
There's loads of people waiting in line to get hamburgers and fries at this McDonald's restaurant , and he was super impressed and he thought it would be an amazing thing to have these McDonald's all across the United States . And so here's a quote from the book .
It was a restaurant stripped down to the minimum in service and menu , the prototype for legions of fast food units that later would spread across the land . Hamburgers , fries and beverages were prepared on an assembly line basis . The simplicity of the procedure allowed the McDonald's to concentrate on quality in every step , and that was the trick .
Basically , they simplified this process of making hamburgers , fries and drinks . They provided just those three things . It's very simple , but then that allowed them to perfect that process , and so I think this is a good lesson for us .
If you can dial in your process for cabinet refinishing or exterior painting or interior painting , whatever it is , really focus on that one service line and and just perfect that process Instead of trying to go after many different service lines , like you do everything , like I'll paint anything into your exterior cabinet , or refinishing , staining , all these different
things . Instead , maybe it might be an approach to just really simplify your offer and then go in and perfect it to make customers super impressed and delighted with the service that you're offering .
So he ends up talking to the McDonald's brother seeing how he could franchise this business with them , and so here's a quote from the book I would have rights to franchise copies of their operation everywhere else in the United States . The buildings would have to be exactly like the new one their architect had drawn up , with the golden arches .
The name McDonald's would be on all of them , of course , and I was 100% in favor of that . I had a feeling that it would be one of those promotable names that would catch the public fancy . I was for the contractual clauses that obligated me to follow their plans down to last detail too , even to signs and menus , but I should have been cautious there .
The agreement was that I could not deviate from their plans in my units unless the changes were spelled out in writing , signed by both brothers and sent to me by registered mail . This seemingly innocuous requirement created massive problems for me .
There's an old saying that a man who represents himself has a fool for a lawyer , and it certainly applied in this instance . I was just carried away by the thought of McDonald's drive-ins proliferating like rabbits with eight multi-mixers in each one .
So at this point , when he does this initial agreement with the McDonald's brothers , he's still kind of thinking about the multi-mixer business that he has and the fact that it's gonna have a lot of multi-mixers . So he doesn't quite have the vision that his money's gonna be made just with McDonald's . So the terms of the contract aren't super favorable to him .
He just described there that they would have any changes in the units that he does everywhere else in the United States . He had to get written permission from the McDonald's brothers and they signed it and sent it via registered mail , which obviously is an issue .
But he's also only getting 1.4% of revenue from the franchises that he's opening up across the United States , which is not that much . So it's not a very good deal . So here's another quote "'Ethel was incensed by the whole thing . We had no obligations that would be jeopardized by it . Our daughter Marilyn was married and no longer depended on this .
But that didn't matter to Ethel . She just didn't want to hear about the McDonald's or my plans . I had done it again , and once too often . As far as she was concerned , the quarrels we'd had when I took over Prince Castle and then when I extended the mortgage on our house to buy out John Clark were mere preludes to this one .
This was a veritable Wagnerian opera strife , the opera of strife . It closed the door between us . She dutifully attended McDonald's gatherings in later years and was well liked by operators' wives and by women on the staff , but there was nothing more between us . Our 35 years of holy matrimony endured another five in unholy acrimony" .
So , basically , mcdonald's kills his marriage and by the next year Ray Kroc opens up his first McDonald's franchise under his management in Illinois . And so this is marks the beginning of the McDonald's corporation . Here's a quote from the book "'It was a messy way to start being in default on the first unit , but there was no choice .
I went ahead with the building , telling myself that when I got breathing space I would fly out to see the McDonald's and get all the contractual wrinkles ironed out at once . That would have worked had the McDonald's been reasonable men . Instead they were obtuse .
They were utterly indifferent to the fact that I was putting every cent that I had and all that I could borrow into this project . When we sat down with our lawyers in attendance , the brothers acknowledged the problems but refused to write a single letter that would permit me to make changes" .
So he needed to control to make these changes in the different franchises he was building , because there's just slight differences . But he wasn't getting the written permission that he required by contract . So this was definitely an issue and the McDonald's brothers weren't really working with him on that .
Here's another quote from the book it would drive down to the planes Each morning and , in health the place get ready to open . The janitor would arrive at the same time I did and if there was nothing else to be done I'd help them .
I've never been too proud to grab a mop and clean up the restrooms , even if I happened to be wearing a good suit , but usually there were a lot of details to be taken care of in terms of ordering supplies and keeping the food operation going . So I'd write out the detailed instructions for Ed Mac Lucky Concerning them .
Ed came in about 10 o'clock in the morning to open the store at 11 . I would leave my car at the store and walk three or four blocks to the Northwestern station where I'd catch the 757 Express to Chicago and be in my Prince Castle office Before 9 o'clock and the evenings I would commute back to Displanes and walk over to the store .
I was always Eager to see it come into view , my McDonald's , but sometimes the site pleased me a lot less than other times . Sometimes Ed would have forgotten to turn off the sign when Dust became to fall and that made me furious , or maybe the lot would have some littering on it .
That Ed said that he had forgotten to pick up those little things didn't seem to bother some people , but they were gross affronts to me . I'd get screaming mad and really let Ed have it . He took . He took it in good part . I Know he was as concerned about the details as I was Because he proved it in his own store , stores in later years .
But perfection is very difficult to achieve and perfection was what I wanted in McDonald's .
¶ Ray Kroc's McDonald's Founder Story
Everything else was secondary for me . So I think a couple lessons here , so and in themes that I've seen in and other founders and and leaders . So first of all is he Leads from the front . You know he's not afraid to get his hands dirty , get in . You know he was doing the janitor's work At certain points , so he's not afraid to to get his hands dirty .
And you know , if your employees , your workers , see that you're , you're striving for perfection , they're gonna model their behavior after you . And this is something that Jeff basis did .
Alexander the great even , he led his troops from the front , which , which , which was not necessarily common he wouldn't be in the back just doing the strategy who would be actually leading , you know , a contingent of his force . And then at this point he's actually still has a multi-mixer business that he's he's doing and he has that one McDonald's store .
So that's why he's traveling back and forth . But eventually he's gonna figure out a way to make some real money with the McDonald's franchises and he ends up hiring someone the Scott and Perry and and here's a quote from the book , this is the real , this was the beginning of real income for McDonald's .
Harry devised the formula for the monthly payments being made by our operators that paid our own mortgage and other Expenses plus a profit . We received this set monthly minimum minimum or percentage of the volume the operator did , which , whichever was greater .
After time we began realizing substantial revenues from the formula and we could see that we're Mear , merely nibbling around the edges of this huge hamburger frontier we were exploring .
So , basically , once they start getting more , once Ray starts getting more franchisees opened , more McDonald's stores open , he realized working with Harry , that owning the real estate and Getting the payments from the franchisee was a lot more profitable than just relying on the royalties because , like I said before , he Only was getting like 1.4% , and so it's kind of
demonstrates just one little tweak and the way you're doing things can really have outsized results , and I kind of think of this .
As for painting businesses for gross profit , gross profit is like the number one profitability measure you should be looking at , and If you can just get your gross profit up by a few percentage points , it's really gonna have an outsize impact on your bottom line profit . So that is something that you could really hone in on .
Take a look at changing your process for how you produce the work to get a Little bit bigger of a gross profit margin or change your pricing structure or both To get a higher gross profit , and that's gonna greatly change how much profit you're getting , because gross profit is just a huge lever for profit , overall profitability .
So a few years ago , go past , he's opening up multiple locations throughout the United States and eventually the he's trying to figure out Okay , I need to get out of this contract With the McDonald's brothers because it's just not working .
So he ends up basically calling the McDonald's brothers and saying what price do you want , how much do you want for your share of the business ? And they basically they give him a number of $2.7 million , which is a lot of money . Especially is a lot of money now , but it's especially a lot of money back in 1961 .
So they asked for $2.7 million and he's basically he doesn't have that money at all . So he's his jaw drops to the floor when he hears how much money they want . But he wants to figure out a way to get out of this , this deal with them , and he wants to own , you know , mcdonald's completely . So he figures out a way to finance it .
So here's a quote from the book . I was an extremely it was an extremely successful deal . All concerned were happy . The 12 apostles , which is the 12 apostles , is the , the group that helps them finance this .
The 12 apostles wound up making $12 million on it and while that seemed like a terrific price to pay , remember , remember that we had been forking over 0.5% to the McDonald's brothers all along .
Anyhow , the total cost of the transaction to us , about 14 million , was peanuts compared to what the corporation earned in the years that followed by retaining that 0.5% instead of paying it to Mack and Dick McDonald . On today's system-wide sales of more than 3 billion , that 0.5% would be up there over 15 million
¶ Success and Determination in Business
a year . And so this this was written back in 1977 and they were doing 3 billion then . Mcdonald's now is doing , you know , 10 X . That at least . So it's . You know they asked for 2.7 .
He does some financing with 12 apostles , and 12 apostles basically got a percentage of the revenue which was 0.5% , which was what the McDonald's brothers were getting anyway , and so they pay off 12 apostles over the course of a few years . It ends up costing Ray 14 million to buy out the McDonald's brothers .
But as he says , you know , getting them out saved him a whole bunch of money because otherwise he would have had to have paid the McDonald's brothers like 15 million a year by 1977 . So from the 1960s , 1970s , mcdonald's expanded rapidly across the United States and then internationally . And here's a quote from the book .
I maintain that authority should go with a job . Some wrong decisions may be made as a result , but that's the only way you can encourage strong people to grow in an organization . Sit on them and they will be stifled . The best ones go elsewhere . I knew that very well from my past experience with John Clark at the Lily Cup company at the Lily Tulip Cup .
I believe that less is more in the case of corporate management . For its size , mcdonald's today is the most unstructured corporation I know and I don't think you could find a happier , more secure , hardworking group of executives anywhere . So basically , he has a structure where he has a team that has a lot of authority the franchisees .
They have to run their own stores and he tries to incentivize them and give them guidelines in a system , but he lets them kind of take the reins and go with it . He doesn't have a lot of rules . He has a more decentralized structure .
Here's another quote that stuck out to me is he says I believe that if you think small , you stay small , and that's just a common thing that we keep seeing over and over again from Alexander the Great , jeff Bezos , napoleon . You have to have a big vision . If you put limits on your thinking you're going to , you're not going to do big things .
Here's another quote from the book . The key element in these individual success stories , and of McDonald's itself , is not NAC or education , is determination . This is expressed very well in my favorite homily Press on Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence . Talent will not . Nothing is more common than the unsuccessful men with talent .
Genius will not . Unrewarded genius is almost a proverb . Education will not . The world is full of educated derelicts , and determination alone are omnipotent . Coming from Ray Kroc himself , determination is the key and he definitely had determination throughout his life , as we just went through .
So I definitely recommend you you pick up the book grinding it out by Ray Kroc . It was definitely a good read .
I think some of the lessons that we can take from him is determination , not giving up creative thinking , trying getting you know , setting up these systems and figuring out the best way to to win in situations where you know it did not look good for him .
Plus , he , he saw the the value in stripping down processes and and perfecting them , and then that that allowed him to really scale his business and repeat it over and over again , and with that I'll see you next week .
