Dallin Pili looking fresher than a mint leaf sandwiched between two ice cubes in a mojito.
Dallin is from his dad’s balls, and also, Provo, Utah. Played linebacker for the University of Utah. Did door-to-door sales for Vivint, selling home security systems.
After that, remote closing.
Then ecom, where he launched a clothing brand called The Real Omega Apparel.
Then digital and social marketing.
A little car rental action.
And now he’s got a company called Omega Automations that builds and scales Amazon FBA, Shopify and Facebook stores for clients.
How’s Dallin been so successful in so many different industries, at such a young age?
“I think the key for me,” he says, “is I’m a competitor.”
“All six of my brothers are doing well in what they’re doing,” he explains.
“And for me, being the youngest, I kind of took it like, ‘Okay, if you guys can do well, I can do just as well if not better.’ Right?”
“And then playing football – dude, I lived and breathed football. When I didn’t make it professionally, that dream was cut off.”
“So what’s the next best thing? For me, I’ve always been able to communicate.”
“To persuade people, to close people. So I kinda took that and I ran with it; rather than sit around and cry about my failed football career.”
“I had a huge chip on my shoulder. I had to find something else to where I could make the same money as a professional athlete,” Dallin says.
“And I wanted to help my mom out and provide for my family.”
“But sales just made sense. It was competitive, just like football. I see someone close 12 sales, I wanna close 13.”
“And that’s what made me wake up every morning.”
“The other thing, is times are changing. We have a lot more resources now. I’m doing a bunch of different business ventures.”
“My dad’s got an old school mentality. He sees me doing all these different things, reinvesting into different things, ecom, this, that, and he feels the need to counsel me. ‘Don’t do too much. Hold onto your money.'”
“But he doesn’t understand, times are changing. You either gotta keep up or you get lost.”
“You have to work hard, yes. You have to be organized. But you also have to act fast,” Dallin preaches.
Vision doesn’t hurt, either.
Dallin’s always thinking about what he wants his life to look like 10 years from now. Then he becomes maniacally obsessed with making it a reality.
Working towards that vision, then, gives him a sense of fulfillment, even though he’s not anywhere close to where he wants to be yet.
So there’s a few different ingredients here.
It’s not just about sweat equity. So many people think that’s all it takes.
But if that were true, construction workers, ditch diggers and landscapers would all be rich.
“Another thing is, ya gotta surround yourself with the right people,” Dallin says.
“And I know, everyone says that. ‘Your network is your net worth.’ But it’s so true.”
“Try telling someone who’s not on your wavelength your big goals. They’ll smirk, they’ll laugh at you.”
“Then tell someone who’s already surpassed that goal. They’ll be like, ‘That’s it? You’re setting the bar too low.'”
“But changing your circle’s easier said than done.”
“It’s fun to hang out with fun people, to go out, to engage in pleasure-seeking activities,” D admits.
“But once you break away from that, get around the right people, everything just kinda naturally falls into place.”
“From there, it’s just active ambition.”
“Figure out what you wanna do, break it down into specific goals – tasks you have to complete monthly, weekly, even daily in order to get there,” he finishes with.
My thoughts? Cool dude, charismatic, seems genuine, seems legit.
My only concern would be does he have his hands in too much too soon? Maybe pops knows something.
Like does he have the team and infrastructure to truly deliver on these done for you ecom stores?
You tell me.
Dallin runs with known scammer Jeremiah “The Bull” Evans and his Omega Financial LLC business just got hit with a lawsuit.