
Show Summary
In this engaging conversation, Omni Casey shares his journey in real estate, emphasizing his unique approach to investing and community building. He discusses his focus on long-term multifamily rentals, short-term rentals, and his recent venture into assisted living facilities. Omni highlights the importance of community through his initiative, the Casual Breakfast Club, which aims to connect real estate enthusiasts and provide educational opportunities. He reflects on his evolution from a goal-oriented mindset to one that values the journey and the relationships formed along the way, underscoring the significance of intentionality in both business and personal life.
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Investor Fuel Show Transcript:
Omni Casey (00:00)
before I bought my first property, I share this ⁓ part a lot with people that I help is I made a commitment that changed my life. I encourage everyone to make this commitment. If you’re doing real estate at a level sporadically, or just think about doing real estate, I made the commitment to buy real estate every year of my life. I would never go a year without buying real estate. And at that point, I didn’t own my home. I didn’t own a rental property. I own nothing. I nothing about real estate, but I said,I’m going to make that commitment. So I didn’t need to make, have the money before I made the commitment. I didn’t need to have the knowledge or understanding how I just said, I’m to make the commitment and then figure it out.
Quentin Edmonds (02:07)
Hello everyone. Welcome to the Real Estate Pros podcast. I am your host Q Edmonds. And let me tell you, I’m excited to be here today. I’m actually bursting at the seams. And I think the hardest thing for me to do today is to kind of contain the framework that I normally work in, especially as far as time, because I have someone here, to me, is absolutely incredible. 20 years of experience. I mean, he’s built a community ofOver 10,000 people that show up. He’s you know branded his own breakfast club. mean, he’s done some amazing things, connection with amazing people. And I know today is going to be one of those days where we just get some gems. And so I really want to introduce you all to and happy to introduce you all to Omni Casey. Mr. Omni, how you doing today,
Omni Casey (02:59)
super excited to be here. Thanks for having me.Quentin Edmonds (03:02)
And thank you for being here, man. Listen, I’m not gonna waste time. I want to jump in. So I want you to tell the people what your main focus is these days. If you can give us a little bit of an origin story of kind of how you got started in the real estate. Also tell us what part of the world you’re operating in. And so I’m not sorry, the floor is yours,Omni Casey (03:25)
Yeah, I appreciate it. So I’m originally from Hawaii, born and raised. I grew up in Hawaii. My family’s still out in Hawaii. I’m not there now. I moved away. I’m kind of all over the place now. We’ll get there. But my origin story absolutely starts there. I had a very entrepreneurial family. My dad had multiple construction, roofing, waterproofing businesses as I grew up. And I worked a part of that, just kind of learning work ethic and learning, running the business, right?My mom had some home businesses. I so I watched them as entrepreneurs and I just knew that That’s the path I want to be on I’d really say it wasn’t really in the play for me Didn’t really understand real estate, but it’s no one to be a business owner ⁓ I just felt Like that was my path. And so I multiple businesses as a kid growing up ⁓ and read it read a book that most people probably read by this point rich dad poor dad and that kind of
reaffirmed my mindset when it helped me realize I wasn’t weird or I was weird, but there’s other weird people like me, right? Cause I was thinking differently. kind of thought like, why am I? Can I just think like my cousins, my brothers, everyone else? they’re there. They have this path. They want to go on this path and they’re happy with that path. I wasn’t excited about that path. and so that became my obsession. Business became my obsession. ⁓ and after reading that book, real estate as a business, I understood that that was a business at that.
I didn’t understand that up until that point. No one in my family was a real estate investor. No one was a real estate agent. So I didn’t really understand real estate. I was actually working at a surf shop in Hawaii out on the North shore called Surf and Seat. Soul Surf boards, was top salesman there. I was really good at sales. And I started to kind of pivot and say, how do I find people that are in real estate? And so I just started asking everyone I was selling an expensive board. It was like $2,000 or more.
I’m like, what are you doing? I dug in a little bit deeper. actually found my first mentor there selling them a board. I remember it’s a 10 foot epoxy Takayama and talking about real estate because he’s like, yeah, I do real estate. And he’s the first person that I ever met that did real estate for a living. And it was fascinating. And so I found the way to be in his life, to add value to, I didn’t know I wanted a mentor. I didn’t know what a mentor was, but I knew that I needed someone.
And so I convinced him to be my mentor without those words, which is saying, Hey, how do I add value? Can I show up and, and do something for you and talk real estate? And he was kind enough to do that. And so that put me on that journey, uh, learned from him, you know, a whole ton of lessons and use those lessons as I, um, started my real estate journey. Now starting, you know, I was 21, um, and, and I had no money cause I worked at a surf shop and no knowledge, no experience.
So he kind of said, how do you get into it and how do you get into real estate if you don’t have money, you don’t have experience? He taught me how to go find deals off market. And that was my origin story of finding off market deals in Hawaii, bringing it to him, serving up on a platter and him saying, that’s not a deal, that’s not a deal. And then finally, you know what? There’s something there. There’s meat on the bone, let’s do that. And I was able to earn either a fee.
⁓ Wholesaling wasn’t a thing back then, owner and a fee and I didn’t really want to feel like I want ownership. I want to own this, you know, okay, so I negotiated very small ownership percentage in some deals and got to just watch, take a backseat and watch what was going on. And that was tremendous in my confidence level, ⁓ you know, in terms of I could do this. want to do this. Eventually I realized I wanted cashflow. There’s so many things you can invest for in real estate on cashflow being one of them. Cashflow was what I wanted. ⁓
I didn’t want a job. didn’t want, you know, the shackles of having to work my entire life. The funny thing is now I like working even though I don’t need to work. I love, working. But I didn’t want that. My 21 year old self, I’m like, I want to retire. I want to be on the beach. That’s what I thought. And I need cashflow for that. It’s not about the money in the bank, it’s cashflow. And so it kind of helped me get back to the napkin math, you know, X amount of dollars per rental property you buy. How many rental properties do you need?
and put a rough framework together. ⁓ And
before I bought my first property, I share this ⁓ part a lot with people that I help is I made a commitment that changed my life. I encourage everyone to make this commitment. If you’re doing real estate at a level sporadically, or just think about doing real estate, I made the commitment to buy real estate every year of my life. I would never go a year without buying real estate. And at that point, I didn’t own my home. I didn’t own a rental property. I own nothing. I nothing about real estate, but I said,
I’m going to make that commitment. So I didn’t need to make, have the money before I made the commitment. I didn’t need to have the knowledge or understanding how I just said, I’m to make the commitment and then figure it out.
cause I know I’m really good at figuring it out or finding the people to help me to figure it out. And so I made that commitment and, I’ve bought real estate every year of my life since now that I thought it was going to be one property, one, two, three, 10 years later, I 10 properties. like, I might be set with 10 properties. ⁓ turns out.
You know, you buy one property, then next year you figure out, I’m better. I could buy two or three. Oh man, I some equity. I got some extra cashflow here and you stack it. Like I could buy five or six. And then, you know, it got to a point where a plateau in my business several years down the line where I’m buying, you know, 10, 20 properties a year and getting a little bored. I’m like, all right, this is cool. We hit our number, our financial freedom number. Now what? Am I meant to stop? I tried to actually stop. I tried to retire. Worst year of my life.
⁓ the depression moved away from Hawaii, moved, you know, moved to, ⁓ out near you, near the DMV, Northern Virginia, beautiful, beautiful area. Just. I figure what the heck I’m supposed to do with the rest of my life. and realize I love the business of real estate. So I got into the brokerage side, continued my real estate, ⁓ investing business, revamped it a little bit in terms of how we did it. And I needed that, that big vision, that big goal. So I’m going from 15 to 20 properties per year on average is saying,
How do I do one property every single week? So 52 properties in 52 weeks kind of became my new like crazy goal that I’ve never hit before. And I started telling everyone that’s my goal, that’s my goal. And then people got excited about that. And that first year we never, we didn’t hit 52, but we got, we would have, we had a seller that had five properties that just got delayed to the first week of January. Anyway, technically closed on I think 48 properties that year.
⁓ And I was bummed because I didn’t hit my goal, but I’m realizing I did like more than double than what we normally did. Right. And now, you know, last month alone, we put 84 properties under contract. So we’re scaling up at a pretty fast pace. ⁓ Currently, my bucket of real estate and business, three main buckets to put it in. Boring, safe, residential, long-term rental rentals. 90 plus percent of what I buy are duplex, tripex, quadplexes. I buy in bulk.
So I try to find tired landlords, buy the entire portfolio from them so that they can go off and retire. And I stabilize that portfolio. So that’s vast majority of what I buy. But I like the active business side as well. So that’s, you know, large properties, single family homes in A-class areas, typically Airbnb, co-living I love. And then just recently we purchased an assisted living facility, which is co-living with services, right? Senior care, adult care as well.
Realizing there’s a lot of cool leverage you can pull on those. Definitely take more time, a lot more expense to run those. But if you’re good at operations, if you’re good at business, you can make more than someone that has an identical property right next to you because you’re better at business. so loving that aspect still new in that assisted living, senior living side. And then my third group that I focus on is community. Just trying to build community. We have a community called the Cash for Breakfast Club and it’s education based. It’s free for the public.
close to 10,000 members now nationwide, meeting in person every single month, just, you know, everyone obsessed about real estate. At some point along the line, I realized I was unique or I was weird within my family. Not everyone in my family was obsessed about real estate. My wife, she cared less about real estate. She tolerates me and my obsessions, ⁓ you know? So I just needed more people to just talk about real estate and just just geek out. And so I started this community a while ago and it snowballed and, you know, I think we’ll…
probably be on track to becoming one of the largest, if not the largest real estate investor communities in the United States, within the next year.
Quentin Edmonds (13:37)
So like I told you before we got started, so you just sit around and play Tetris all day. That’s what it sounds like, right? Man, thank you, sir. Thank you for sharing. Thank you for walking us through the journey. I have a saying where I say destiny has no wasted moments. And bro, you sound like the epitome of destiny having no wasted moments from your mom and your dad who was entrepreneurs andMy wife has the same voice caught and taught. So I’m sure you caught stuff from them and they taught you stuff, right? Working in a surf shop, right? Like all these different things. And so, bro, I want to know what has destiny and you even brought up the word destination before we got started, right? What has destiny taught you? Like what has it taught you about yourself? Like if you can put some characteristics in language, what has destiny taught you? Has it taught you discipline? Had you taught you perseverance? Like
What language has destiny taught you that you know you apply to who you are today?
Omni Casey (14:39)
Yeah, there’s probably two sides of that and I wholeheartedly believe in that. So one side is one of my favorite mentors, Tony Robbins. I’ve been obsessed with him. Just in this last year, I think I went to four week long Tony Robbins events in one year alone and just kind of like Tony Robbins overload. Next year, I’m probably gonna do the same thing as well. And so much value that he brings. But one of the things that keeps coming back is life happens for you, not to you. Life happens for you.Not to you. Everything that happens in your life. And like, even if you go back and think about the hardest things in your life, it happened for you, which is hard because, you know, everyone has trauma. Everyone has things that happen. You’re like, why that was painful. But you realize it was happening for you and you’re meant to grow from it. You’re meant to get something from it. And some people take it and run with it. Some people don’t. Right. And then there’s inflection points every day of our lives that we can go one way or the other. And if we think life’s happening to us.
We go one way. think life’s happening for us. We’re like, all right, what do I do from this? This feels painful right now. This sucks right now. All right. Many of those that peppered throughout my life have been those, those inflection points of man, this is painful. Like what do I do from here? ⁓ but with that mindset of life’s happening for you, all right, this is going to make me stronger. And, and that stronger vision of myself, who is that? You know, what, what is that person doing? I, I actually call on my future self quite often.
The other side of this, was talking about this before the event, one of my most favorite things to do, we go on trips, we do masterminds, we go to like Greece and Dominican Republic, places really cool around the world. And we just talked to other entrepreneurs. ⁓ Like we just went to Greece a few months ago, we took 32 people with us and we talked vision, right? Vivid vision is one of the things, there’s a book by Cameron Herold called Vivid Vision. And really it’s just scripting. It’s like, let me author my destiny for the next three years.
Because your destiny is, it’s not gonna happen regardless. Like the reality is you have opportunities and you gotta like, go towards those opportunities, right? So if I’m comfortable and content with an average life, I’m gonna have an average destiny. Like the trajectory of where I am is because of me pushing and pushing and pushing and pushing. And that puts me in a room or in a mindset to do something big maybe.
⁓ if I’ve been content for last 20 years and say, you know what? 10 properties was good. I’m done. I’m retired. I don’t know where I would be. Like I definitely wouldn’t be here. And so the vivid vision forces yourself to like, just script out, walk out of a time machine three years from now and surprise yourself what’s going on. Talk to yourself what’s going right. And, and figure out what’s something that you didn’t even think was achievable three years from now. And you literally just.
write what you see, like a journal entry almost. And I do that, you know, every year, sometimes multiple times a year and I’m due for doing another one because it really is casting out because I believe in vision casting, you can create your destiny and realizing that things are gonna happen to you throughout your life, no matter what. And it’s either gonna be for you or to you, you decide what it’s for. So those two combined is kind of like the mantra of my life trajectory and where I think it could take all of us.
Quentin Edmonds (18:36)
Man, that resonates so powerfully with me. I got the book that you mentioned. I got it written down. I’m about to put that on my list of books to read. So I thank you for that. Thank you for the offering of that, man. And we talking about vision and cast and vision. I got to ask, what’s the next real goal for you, man? What are you looking to solve at scale next?Omni Casey (18:55)
Yeah, I, um, I’m due for a vision mastermind. So I’m, I know that there’s some holes in this. Um, so it’s funny about the vision. You cast out three years and then you go to work and it might take you what you think is three years. You’re like, man, that’s a 10 year goal, but I’m going to put in this crazy three year vision. And a year, a year and a half later you achieve it. And that’s happened to be over and over and over again. It forces to you to shrink this timeline because you’re obsessing over it. You’re focused on it. Right? So if you want to achieve.what you think might happen naturally in 10 years, put it into a three year vision and then try to get to it in a year and a half, right? And so I’m due for my next retreat to do that. However, what I’m really excited about is what we just got into, the assisted living facility, right? That business side of it. We just bought our first one. I’ve been a part of a few passively, but first one that we’re operating and it feels like we’re making an impact on that, right? So when I buy a rental property,
I don’t ever meet my tenants. ⁓ My property managers meet my tenants and I’m not actively involved and I try to be a good property manager. I try to be the best property manager that I’ve ever had, right? We keep our properties nice. We’re fed or our tenants. seeing the difference between that and going to the assisted living facility and say, man, you guys have been living in a, ⁓ this place has been updated for 30 years and you know, you guys don’t have clean, like they’re living in a condition that, ⁓ you know, I didn’t like seeing.
⁓ They’re paying a premium to live there and like, we’re gonna completely renovate all of this. We’re gonna spend hundreds of thousands of dollars. You’re have brand new furniture. You’re gonna have brand new everything. Literally tenants were crying, residents were crying. The staff working there for years, they’re like tearing up. like, I can’t believe you’re doing this. This is amazing. They just kinda felt like that was their life and they’re getting an upgrade and I feel like that’s making an impact. This is not a six month tenant or a one year tenant.
Most of those people have been there for eight years. They probably will be there for the rest of their life and they call that home. That’s their community. And just realizing, man, be good. Don’t get me wrong. We’re going to make a lot of money, right? We made ⁓ a smart investment, got a really good deal. We’re going to make a lot of money, ⁓ but we’re making a meaningful impact. I’m at a point in my life where I like making money. I don’t need more money though. I didn’t want to make an impact. I’m addicted to be good at business. So everything I do will make a profit.
or I’ll have a goal of making a profit, but I really want to figure out how do I take cool people along the way with me? Can I go along that journey with people and can I make as big of an impact as possible to those that are in my world?
Quentin Edmonds (21:34)
Yeah, man. Again, man, so much that you say really, really impacts me and really hit at the core of my beliefs and even things that I say. so around this portion, I normally find myself saying this.relationships, community. And I’d say healing happens in community. when you get around, community is common unity, people in common unity, people of the same mindset moving ecosystems together. So healing happens in community. And when you’re around the right community, financial healing happens. ⁓
Physical healing can happen happen mental healing can happen Psychological healing can happen because you are around an ecosystem that incubates you and causes you to heal it can cause you to rest It can cause you to speed up it can cause you clarity like this is why I healings happen in community So when I’m to somebody that puts a premium on community building I have to pick their brain about relationships. So when it comes to relationship building, what is your strategy?
Is relationship important to you? believe it is the way you talk. Is it a, you put a premium on it. I believe you do because of what you’re building. So please man, talk to me about relationship.
Omni Casey (22:59)
Yeah, it’s the most important thing to me at the moment. I’ll say it wasn’t what was important to me when I was hustling and grinding my 20s. Relationship wasn’t a focus. It was like financial freedom, you know, and then then I had kids have three beautiful kids now my 30s. I was like, alright, thinking about that generational wealth. And now my 40s is like, alright, making that impact and community is really resonating to me now. IfI having a conversation with my 20 year old self could be laughing at me like, why would you care about that? That makes no sense, right? So just understand we’re going to evolve, right? There’s the Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. I’ve studied it more and more realize we are like we’re meant to care about different things. I believe it’s God. He’s putting something in my heart at certain points in time that ⁓ I’m ready to care about that. Right? So if you go back to the Maslow’s hierarchy of leads, that the very bottom row is like air, like you need air.
If you don’t have air, then it’s hard for you to even care about food. Okay, once you have air, now food and water, let’s care about that. But if I don’t have food and water, it’s hard for me to care about shelter, community, making a difference. All right, I got food and water, that’s there. Now I get to care about something else. Now I get to care about relationships. All right, let me fix those relationships, get it to a level. And eventually the top is self-actualization, making a difference, making an impact. So…
No one starts out of the womb and says, hey, let me go make an impact. Like, no, I got to figure out how to walk and figure out how eat. And I think we’re all just naturally going up this hierarchy of needs. ⁓ And I used to feel guilty for not wanting to make an impact earlier until I really dug into it, realized I just wasn’t ready for that. I couldn’t have made the impact that I can today 20 years ago. So it was my journey to like grind and get that freedom, freedom of time, freedom of choice, freedom of money.
so that now I’m in a position to make that impact. And so I really just encourage people to figure out where they are in that hierarchy of needs and just like lean in and just peek up, just know that at some point I’m gonna start caring about this. Don’t force yourself to care about this. At some point I’m gonna evolve to care about this and whether it’s God, whether it’s the universe, I believe it comes into our soul, to our heart ⁓ to care about that. So we’re being used in a good way.
Um, for the betterment of society, betterment of, of man there. But yeah, so that’s, that’s my, my, my idea of who I am right now and community realized for me to have the relationships that I want or community I want, I needed to be intentional. Um, I think I’ve always been a good dad. I wasn’t an intentional father. Right. And so, like, all right, let me do some study. Let me be intentional. How do I be intentional on that? Like, how do I specifically make sure each kid?
have different personalities, they have different needs. How do I have an individual relationship with each child and be intentional? And I’m not saying I’m perfect, by no means am I, but I think I’m way better now than I was before I had that mindset of intentional. learn, right? Go to these, hire the coach, hire the mentor, go to masterminds, right? So so many things. Once again, even just in this last year alone, Tony Robbins, like, man, there’s…
something for relationship in there, this completely changed my life, right? So it’s all about intentionality. If I wasn’t trying to be intentional, I would not be trying to improve a deficit in my life, right? And relationships have always been, I’ve been good at business, people’s difficult for me. And so understanding, you know, relating to, and so like just putting in the work to me being better, to manage those relationships. So all of my relationships are very intentional at the moment.
started a community called the Cash for Breakfast Club to attract, intentionally attract like-minded people. People that are obsessed about real estate, all different backgrounds, all different beliefs, all different, doesn’t matter. We care about one thing. We have one thing in common. And so we can disagree on a lot of things. That’s cool. But here’s the one thing that, man, we’re obsessed on. We believe if we get good at this, it can change our life. One of the things I ask within our community, every time someone comes in, we kind of do real estate education and we do some gamified network.
right? Give them questions to pre think through that they’re going to go talk to other people in the room. Let’s say you got a hundred people in the room. You’re to go talk to 10, 20, 30 people before the day’s over in this kind of speed networking session. One of the questions, there’s simple questions. What did you buy in real estate? What do you want to buy this year? What’s your goal? But one of the questions is so big, it’s so audacious. It’s something along the lines like once you’re financially free, how are you going to change the world? Is it what the heck? That’s a crazy, like who, who comes to meet up thinking that right?
And it’s just like, I just want to plant the seed. want to plant the seed like everyone’s meant to change the world in some way. Every single person. I truly believe that you’re meant to change the world, maybe in your family, maybe in your community, maybe the entire world. We don’t know, but here’s what I do know. Most people will never make a dent in their purpose. Never make a dent in what they’re actually meant to do to change the world unless they figure out their finances and the time obligation, right? We have the shackles of finances, we have the shackles of time and
that drains our energy and although we want to figure out our purpose or we want to achieve that goal, most of us don’t even have the energy to dream about what the heck would I do? How am I gonna make that impact? And so we talk about that every single month and it’s really cool. First time someone comes through, they’re like, don’t know, struggling through that question, write something. Then after five or six, you get inspired by other people saying, man, I want to do some really cool things as well. And if you have that dream, something bigger than yourself,
Right? Because we’re all very self-focused to start as we should be for survival. But once if you’re forced to think about things more than yourself, your family, your community, your neighborhood, your world, then man, I need to be bigger. I need to be better. I need to do better for them. Right? I’m doing enough right now to achieve my goals. But that’s not good enough. I need to do way more to achieve what I think I’m meant to do. And so inspiring people to really put the belief that they’re meant to change the world has been
impactful. And so that’s, we’re curating that room. And then from that room, we actually take it down to like a smaller group. We do these travel masterminds, ⁓ go to Greece at least once a year, we go to Dominican Republic, go to some cool places for, you know, five days, six days, seven days. We have a really fun time. We rent yachts, we have private chefs all day, really VIP experience that we just kind of share the cost on. And then two hours a day, three hours a day, we’re masterminding. We’re talking through the hard questions like life, relationships, business.
going right, what’s going wrong, vision, all those things. And by the end of the day, at the end of the week, every single time I do this, sometimes people know each other ahead of time. A lot of times they’re strangers. I’m connected through this group. I’m connected to this person through this group. They get an invite. And by the end, they’re lifelong friends. Like they’re going on vacation together because you spend that much time intentionally having conversations with anyone. You build a bond and a relationship. So I’m at a point where I don’t have time to mess around for
10, 15 years to figure out if we really like each other, if we’re a good fit, we’re gonna make this work, we’re gonna figure out, or clearly you’re gonna opt out because, man, that guy’s weird. I don’t wanna be a part of that world, that’s completely fine. I’m all about pushing people away as I am attracting because what’s good for you might not be good for me. So I’m very clear on my intentions, on what I expect within my world and my community. And I used to sit around and say, let me go to do other things, what other people are doing.
⁓ And they weren’t quite aligned. They’re great. They weren’t quite aligned with what I wanted, right? So I just started to say, let me just curate exactly what I want out of life. Who are my best friends that I want? Who are my business partners? As an example, a friend that were part of another community went to ⁓ went to Greece with us, right? And we got really, really close there. And ⁓ this actually assisted living facility. I was buying it.
I don’t like commercial debt, we’re actually, I usually use mortgages, but on this one we’re buying cash. It’s roughly $1.5 million. It’s a big purchase for me, cash. And I had a partner on that. And the partner got sick, her father got sick or something. And last minute, literally, you know, two days before closing, called up and said, hey, I can’t be a part of this deal. I got too much going on. My father’s sick, complete. And I said, hey, completely okay. I get it, right? And I let my partner out of the deal.
I’m sitting there, I’m like, man, I got to buy this by myself cash. I did, luckily I had some reserves and, and, it got tight, right? And I’m stretching out a little bit. I’m like, man, we’re, pouring a lot into this. I’ve got 80 other properties outside of this. I still need to fund. Um, and then literally like maybe the next day, um, my friend that went to us with, uh, in Greece called me up and said, Hey, what deals do you got? want to partner on the deal. One of my deals just fell through. I want to get something for cost segregation before the end of the year.
Tell me about your deals.” I’m like, are you kidding me? And he’s like, here’s ideally what I’m looking for. And he did not have the conversation with him about assisted living or anything along those lines, but we had that relationship and they just say, well, I got this deal, this deal, this deal, and I have this one. I actually already closed on it, but oddly enough, my partner just had to back out so I could give you my partner’s spot if you wanted to. And he’s like, I’m in. Like literally, like three minutes, three minutes.
multi hundred thousand dollar decision for him and we had that relationship, right? ⁓ And so those are the type of things that I believe and looking back, like, man, I believe I was meant to partner with this guy than my previous friend. Like just such an asset, just notice his face already. So if you’re intentional about what you’re trying to build in life and business and around your relationships, I think it all connects. I believe it all connects. And I’ve seen that over and over and over again.
Quentin Edmonds (32:51)
Man, Mr. Omni, listen, sir, I can talk to you for easily another 30 minutes, easily, But listen, if someone wanted to reach out to you, connect with you, collaborate with you, learn more about what you’re doing, the books, all the different things, how can people get in contact with you,Omni Casey (33:08)
Yeah, you get the book on Amazon, called The Casual Breakfast Club. My contact information is all over the internet. ⁓ Omni, the investor guy, you can find me there. And then we have a website called thecashflowbreakfastclub.com. You can go there, reach out. ⁓ You text me, I’ll text back. I love talking real estate, I love talking business, I love talking relationships, partnerships. We collaborate with investors all over the US, that’s what we do. So I’m not teaching Casual Breakfast Club in all these communities.I find like inspirational people that like, I wanna build my community. I’ve tried, I don’t have the framework. We give them the framework. So we partner with investors all over the community, actually the world. We’re going international now. And we give you the framework to go be impactful in your community. And then if you make a big enough impact, guess what? It’s gonna come back. You’re gonna benefit from it as well. So I’m super excited about that. Reach out, cashforbreakfastclub.com or directly on social media.
Quentin Edmonds (34:05)
Absolutely.So y’all heard it. Yeah, you heard him. Yeah, I know y’all agree with me This guy sits around please touch her touch her as he has nothing going on. I know y’all agree with me now, right? No, man Of course, you know, I’m joking. Let me just stamp that I know, know, I’m joking man. Thank you so much man for One just your time. I think you absolutely know you can put a premium on your time. So your time is very valuable So sir, thank you for your time. Definitely. Thank you for your stories
Kobe Bryant Lee Kobe Bryant before he passed away He was on an interview with Lewis house on the school greatness podcast and Kobe said nothing in this world moves without story There is nothing in this world and moves about story So thank you for just your dynamic story talking about your mom and your dad talking about this surfboard shop everything man. Thank you for your story and I want to say more importantly, but I really appreciate this your perspective Thank you for your mindset the way you think
Thank you for bringing that mindset to this podcast. greatly appreciate you sir. Thank you for coming through. Absolutely. So listen, y’all can’t tell me y’all didn’t get value from this. I told you from jump, this guy was gonna give you value. Give you value after value. So definitely check out Omni, Omni. ⁓ How I do that at the end? Omni, check out Omni Casey for sure. But definitely make sure you are subscribed here because I promise you we’re gonna continue to bring up amazing people just like Omni.
Omni Casey (35:08)
It’s been an honor. Thank you.Quentin Edmonds (35:31)
So sir, thank you again and everyone else. We’ll see you on the next time.


