Look at yourself in the mirror and then look at yourself again the next day. Did you become a better version of that person you saw in the mirror a day before? If your answer is yes, then you have reached one step closer to leveling up. Join your host Ben Baker and his guest, good friend, fellow podcaster, and founder of Time to Shine Today podcast, L. Scott Ferguson. Come and sit back with Scott as he talks about his life from his crazy upbringing, his service with the navy, and his reason as to why you should level up today.Â
—
Listen to the podcast here:
Level Up In The Game Of Life With L. Scott Ferguson
Iâve got Scott Ferguson. I was on his show. We had so much fun and so much to talk about. I had to have him on my show because he is a dynamic individual. Scott, welcome to the show. Letâs Time To Shine Today, thatâs the name of the podcast we are going to talk about it.
Thank you, Ben. Youâve been on the show twice. I remember we did a 2.0. We did you and Ms. Claire Chandler. I loved it so much. I had to bring both of you guys back. It was awesome. You guys level up awesomely.
You were so much fun. You were fun as a host. We had such a great conversation. Claire, me, and you had a great conversation. You and I had a great conversation. I sat there and said, âThis guyâs interesting.â Seriously, I get interviewed all the time. I do about 50 episodes on other peopleâs shows yearly because it allows me to become a better podcaster. Quite honestly, thatâs why I do it. I do it because I become a better podcaster by listening to other podcasters and watching how they do stuff. I enjoyed being on your show so much. Iâm like, âThis guyâs a dynamo. Heâs got so much to say and give. He gives so much to other people.â I had to have you on the show, so welcome to the show.
Do things for the intention, not the attention. Share on XThanks. Itâs seriously a privilege to be here. I have been looking forward to rocking the mic with you for a while now from this side of the microphone.
What is your story? We talked about it a little bit before the show, but I want you to share it with the audience. Give everybody a synopsis about where you came from, where you are, and then weâll talk about where weâre going.
I appreciate you having me on. I was born in 1972, which is the later end of the Vietnam War. I was born in the Philippines. Iâm half-Filipino and they say half-Italian because I donât know who my father was. My father was an American GI and, for lack of a better term, knocked up my mother, who was Filipino. They said that he got killed in Vietnam. At that time, mixed-breed bastard males were very much frowned upon because Iâm 6â1. Iâm 265. Iâm pretty well put together. If you even had 1/2 or 3/4 of that person, you had tens of thousands of those males walking around. They were afraid that physically they could take because Filipinos by stature, the average male is 5â5â, 5â6â, and just a little man. They were afraid of that. Theyâre taking those children and shipping them to Spain because the country of Spain controls the Philippine Islands. No one knows what happens to those male babies. To this day, I did research and no one knows.

My mother gave birth to me, and there was an Air Force couple that was stationed there. They had a couple of children of their own. They were looking to level up their life and bring in an adopted baby. This is in the â70s. Skin color was still a big thing and my skin was darker. They were very white. They started the adoption process. During it, the woman who was going to adopt me, her father, got sick in the United States. They came back. I still have the temporary passport that I had when I was a little guy. They came into the United States. Her father dies. She goes schizophrenic. They canât raise me because Iâm a newborn and then the father is taking care of the two older who would have been my siblings. They put me at an orphanage there in California.
As I grew up a little bit older, I got passed over and passed over again. It was a skin color thing where the white people didnât want to adopt me because I was darker. Finally, my dad, who is my best friend in the world, who I call my dad, who adopted me is as white as you are, Ben. Heâs a white dude and he didnât care. If you met my dad, youâd understand because heâs like 6â6â, a big guy, and no oneâs going to say anything to him. He and my adoptive mother could not have children. They adopted me, but my dad had some problems with Vietnam, had some drinking issues, and ended up passing me off from family member to family member. I was raised by a plethora of people.
I got a little bump on the back of my leg. This is fast forward to around 2001. I reached out to a gentleman that I served within the Navy. Heâs a private investigator. I asked him to find my family because I wanted to see if there are any health issues going on in my family. Heâs like, âAre you sitting down?â Iâm like, âI never sit down.â He said, âWould you sit down because I got something to tell you? I found your family. They all live in New Jersey now.â
This is the original Filipino family?
In active duty, youâre responsible for the man to your right. Share on XYes. I ended up having a twin sister, Jovi, that nobody told me about. I didnât know anything about it, but my mom had kept her because it wasnât the mixed-breed females. Itâs the mixed breed males. I had had a lot of dark times, being passed around, a lot of abandonment issues that carried me forward. Thatâs the backstory that led into my military career and also the basis of Time To Shine Today, where we donât want to have anyone to feel like they have no one.
Itâs interesting because this is radio, so I canât show anybody. Youâve got the darker skin. Youâre a little bit larger, if anything, I would assume that you were Samoan, but the fact that you have that Filipino background is interesting because thereâs a lot of history, especially in the â70s. Youâre not the only person Iâve ever heard of these types of situations where you end up becoming, I hate to say it, almost like a gypsy, an immigrant to no fault of your own based on that. Itâs, âWhat if we learned from this?â We all have tragedy in our life. Some of us more, some of us less, some of us more traumatic, some of us less traumatic. The question is, âWhat do we do with it?â Weâre going to get into the stage, into leveling up, and to the Time To Shine, but I want to get into what has this enabled you to do? How have you taken these challenges of finding out, âI have a twin sister,â having all the things that went on in your youth, and taking that and channeling that to becoming the amazing person you are?
It was channeled through certain people that I didnât even know were invited into my life. They just showed up. As I look back in retrospect, a lot of it was because I was putting that vibe out there to attract the people. I was like, âThereâs something better.â I always carried a chip on my shoulder. Iâm not going to lie to you. I was always out to prove to myself. Even when I was younger, that led to a lot of arrogance. By wanting to prove stuff, I detracted the people into my life that would help me, as we say at Time To Shine Today, âLevel up at all times.â Whether I was using it for the good of everything or to get over on people, there were two sides of the coin to that. I was doing things to prove to other people instead of doing things in the service of others for a very long time.
Once you realized, âIâve got these people in my life. Theyâre coming into my life and I donât know why.â They keep coming into your life because this has happened to me. People just show up and lessons get learned. Sometimes you pay attention and sometimes you donât. Sometimes itâs five years later that you understand what that person was there to teach you. What can you look back and sit there and say, âAs an amalgamation, as I look back at these 5 or 10 or whatever people that came into my life, they enabled me to do what?â What have they taught you in an amalgamation that has allowed you to move beyond what could be an extremely tragic childhood? Itâs good to be able to move into a place where youâre now living in a life where you help serve others and you help make other peopleâs lives better.
My aunt that helped raise me during that time when my mother and father couldnât raise me showered me a lot of love. Not so much in affirmations but I got a lot of love from her. I excelled at sports. I was a good wrestler, a good baseball player, but I didnât excel in school. The scholarships that people were looking at in schools, theyâre like, âWe donât like the 1.8-grade point average.â My dadâs like, âYouâre not living under my roof.â I was like, âYou didnât even raise me. Youâre not offering me a place to stay.â I was mad at him for a minute but then I just went to the recruiter and was like, âWhere should I go?â He was like, âThe Navyâs the way.â
I went to the Navy. I made a bond of people that I am so close with to this day. Iâm a phone call away. Theyâre a phone call away. As we move through life after we got out of the service, we stuck together and kept enabling each other in great ways to help each other level up. Iâve crossed paths with other people. I used to work as a personal trainer for eight years in a very high affluent area and I would make connections with these people, then they would put me in connections with people. It was always people coming into my life. I was able to use the leverage I got from that to help myself.
It didnât come until about 2010, when my little brother killed himself. I was sitting there, and the real estate market crashed. It was there when I was like, âYou need to start doing things in the service of others and love what you do in the service of people that love that you do it.â Thatâs what it was. It was these certain events in my life from the time I went in the Navy to my brotherâs suicide. From 1990 to 2010, thereâs a lot that happened there and a lot of people came through that door. As I look back now, they helped.

Letâs go back to the eighteen-year-old self. First of all, thank you for your service. What are the big things that you took out of the Navy? What are the things that smacked you and kicked you around a little bit and made you a better person? The military has the ability to do that for a lot of people. It tears you down and then builds you up and enables you to see parts of yourself that youâd never would have seen otherwise. My question to you is, what were the things that you were able to learn through that military service that made you better when you went from military service to civilian life? That in itself is a transition but letâs start at the active military.
The active duty, youâre responsible for the man to your right. If you look at any Special Forces movies or whatever you see, you always see the guys are looking after the person on your right. The strongest person of the pack, the alpha, is always on the left because heâs got his own flank or if you have overhead protection, cyber, whatever aircraft. Thatâs another thing, but it taught that you become selfless. Itâs not about your life. Itâs putting your life in someone elseâs hands and protecting the other personâs life. Thatâs one big thing. You became selfless. Secondly, I believe that it instilled so much responsibility in me that it was my fault for everything that happened in my life and even it went back to a kid, I still took responsibility for that.
As years went by, I always took responsibility, but I would always still use it as a crutch. A good friend of mine, Rod Hairston, who has a company, Envision-U. Heâs a Navy Seal and heâs a good friend. Heâs was like, âFergie, responsibility is rooted in the word. Responsibility is the ability to respond.â What I was doing is I was responding to things differently. Itâs more reacting but the military makes you take responsibility and makes you build trust and camaraderie that your freaking life is on the line. Itâs not just like, âI had nothing against people that do spreadsheets but the spreadsheet is like your life and youâre counting on them and theyâre counting on you. I wouldnât say youâre fearless, but you can face anything going forward in life after the military. If you use the principles that they helped instill you there,â and I did but I didnât always do it for the good of others. It was about the good of Scott. Iâm the first to admit that now. It was a lot of arrogance and stuff that I had to push through.
Letâs talk about the person to your left. The person to your right, you know youâre responsible for. You know that youâre responsible for protecting your flank, getting their back, make sure youâre taken care of. Itâs the person to your left that you are fundamentally trusting with your life. The person that youâre not looking at, not paying attention to, but you know they are behind you, making sure that you are safe. How do you get to a point where you donât have to look, you know that person is over your left shoulder, is taking care of you, and is willing to die to protect you? In turn, youâre willing to die to protect the person to your right.
Responsibility is rooted in the word. Responsibility is the ability to respond. Share on XIf youâre in the military, you know the game, Spades. Itâs a card game and even civilians play it. In the military, you have so much time in your hands. You play cards with these guys and you read reactions, you read tells, you read stuff, and thatâs how I got to know everybody. When you go in the military, usually people are not like, âIâm just going to go in the military,â unless itâs ingrained in their family. âMy great-grandpaâs a general. Iâm going to go in because they are.â In the military, you go in one because you donât want to go to jail. The judge is like, âDo 2 to 4 years,â and youâre going in, or youâre like me who didnât care about grades. I had no real place to live and when youâre offered three hot meals and a place to sleep for free. Thatâs it. When you can take 88 people or more and put them into a boot camp and then make them marching cadence from all of these different backgrounds, itâs incredible.
To answer your question is you read mannerisms, even though if you donât know that youâre reading them. Youâre like, âIâm going into pretty crazy chaotic situations.â Even as a young man, your brain is not fully formed yet, but you still instinctively, from back in caveman days, recognize your surroundings. A lot of it comes with the training, too. Thatâs how I built trust is through lots of card games. Itâs weird. Itâs the craziest thing because youâre spending so much time together that thereâs no place to go drink a beer. Weâre stuck on a ship ready for our next operation. You do a lot of cards. Itâs crazy to say it, but I look back and I dreamt about it then. I found that thatâs what it is. It was lots of card games and hanging out.
Itâs what the card game enables you to do. Itâs being able to read other people. Itâs those conversations. Itâs how do people interact and engage. I think thatâs important. Letâs get into the arrogance factor because we all have it when weâre all young men and even young women. Some of us outgrow it, some of us donât. What did you realize, and when did you realize that the arrogance was getting in the way of allowing you to succeed? When you finally came to that realization, how did you help yourself move beyond it?
I was a personal trainer. I had a lot of people that were in real estate saying that, âYouâd be perfect. Youâre born to the real estate game,â so I did. In 2003, I had a seven-figure year. I made so much money. I didnât know what to do. My dad, I love him, best friend in the world, heâs a line worker at General Motors. He didnât have that identity so much to make money. When I had the money, it was the theory of relativity that happened. You make money, and everyoneâs your relative. People would come to you and youâd be lending it out or basically giving it away. I was arrogant about it, I was like the awesome baseball, football or basketball player just shooting money out and saying, âThe real estate marketâs always going to go up. Itâs fine.â I didnât listen to my mentors. I had some awesome Jewish mentors out of Detroit, Michigan. They were trying to tell me that like, âYou need to settle down, slow your roll, maintain your lane.â Whatever they were saying, I was like, âNo. The market is going to go up.â
It was 2009, and Bear Stearns went down. I was at the gym. I was watching them. I called my underwriter. Iâm like, âRachel, how many deals we have under underwritten by Bear Stearns?â âWe have like nineteen and theyâre all going to die.â There was a tipping point there with, âI didnât listen to my mentors.â I was keeping people around me with arrogance and money but when I ran out, those people disappeared, including family. There was that tipping point where I knew that I was arrogant, but I can take care of it because of everything Iâve been through in my life with the abandonment stuff. Iâll fix it, but it crushed me. Not just with money but with confidence and with everything that I had built up through that arrogance. Thatâs how it built up in 2009. It came crashing down.
Itâs amazing when weâre flying high and everythingâs good, everybodyâs our friend. Everybodyâs willing to come to the table, wants to be around you, takes your phone calls. As soon as things start going south and start going wrong, itâs amazing how quickly you find out who your real friends are and who you can trust.
It was a great learning experience. The best thing that ever happened to me but the hardest thing I ever went through.
Letâs get into leveling up in the Time To Shine Today Show. First of all, I want to find out what came first and why. Was leveling up the underwriting thought process that came to you and youâve had forever, and itâs just been a mantra, or was there a tipping point where you just say, âI get it now?â
The leveling up was a joke at first because a lot of the guys that I was in the Navy with were gamers. This is back in Nintendo and Sega. Iâd leave and theyâre like, âCome on, Ferg. Letâs play.â I was an outdoorsy. I was in San Diego. I wanted to go bodyboard. I was never a surfer but bodyboard, hiking, lift weights, get out of the house, go. I was on a ship for 6 or 7 months out of the year. Iâm like, âYou guys sit here and level up. Iâm going to go.â I would joke about it. At the gym, Iâd be like, âGet a lift in,â or in Jujitsu, rolling with a guy. Iâm like, âItâs time to level up. Time to level up.â I always say that. It was a joke that parlayed off of working my guys and friends of mine, even to this day, that were gamers.
They say that in gaming. I didnât make-up level. Theyâre all, âLevel up. Great job.â It was a joke. âYou guys see our level up?â I then took it into my life and said, âIâve got to level up this client, a personal training client. Iâve got to level up this.â Then it just rolled forward. Time To Shine Today was born in 2010 as an affiliate marketing platform. Leveling up came way before Time To Shine Today but I was like, âLetâs level up,â is perfect for interviewing people like you and other people that help others level up. To answer your question in my long way, level up came way before Time To Shine Today.
With that in mind, forget about the gaming, forget about everything. What does leveling up mean to you now? When youâre asking people to level up, what are you truly wanting them to do, and how are you helping them do it?

What I want them to do is look at themselves in the mirror the next day and say, âWere you a better version of that person than what you looked in the mirror the day before?â I always ask my clients, whether theyâre Fortune 100 or the professional baseball player that I coach, âDid you sin today?â The first time I always say it to them, theyâre like, âWhat do you mean sin?â Iâm like, âDid you sin today?â Theyâre like, âIâm not even religious.â Iâm like, âLetâs go back to the Greek origin of the word sin. It just means missing the mark.â I always joke with them, âTell me about your sins,â whoever Iâm coaching. âLetâs write down our sins. Where did you miss the mark?â Thatâs where I start my day and end every day with my sins. Thereâs no religious connotation to it. Iâm sorry if I offend anybody out there, but everything to me revolves around sinning. Sinning just means missing the mark.
Thatâs where Time To Shine Today we put people, whether you are somebody thatâs looking to level up your business or a phone call that I got. It was like âScott, I listened to your show. Iâve commented on your posts. Iâve even emailed you but I called you this time because I want to kill myself. I heard you interview a suicide counselor. Iâd like a warm introduction to him. I need to talk to him.â Jared talked to him and heâs still breathing to this day. Thatâs the kind of stuff that fires me up. What levels me up is to help other people know that our tagline or our credo, whatever your mission statement, we donât want to have anyone to feel like they have no one.
If youâre making $300,000 a year and you want to make it to a millionaire, I got 6 or 7 people I can introduce you from who Iâve interviewed. Being able to take that and build it on a platform for affiliate marketing, weâre all getting. Weâre open to that reciprocation like my good friend, Bob Burg, the author of The Go-Giver. He says, âYou have to be open to reciprocation,â and thatâs what we did. We set ourselves up on a platform where we get compensated for the introductions that we make to the people we interview. Itâs a cool thing that weâve set up.
Bob has been on this show and heâs an amazing guy. His partner, John David Mann is going to be on the show. If anybody hasnât read the book, The Go-Giver or the series of books with The Go-Giver, go get the books. Read the books. I want to get into the sin and we can talk about this quickly because itâs important. Theyâve got to be your sins. There are many people out there that say, âYouâll look at what Bill Gates is doing. Look at what Zuckerberg is doing. I didnât level up to their level.â Who cares? There are many of us that are fixated on what other people are doing and what other peopleâs vision of success is that they forget about their own accomplishments and they step on their own successes because theyâre trying to achieve somebody elseâs.
Theyâre sinning because theyâre missing the mark of their potential, trying to reach somebody elseâs. Some people will say, âThat makes me happy to strive for that.â Thatâs fine. As long as theyâre doing it in incremental steps, knowing that they might not ever reach that, but itâs great to shoot for it. Youâre sitting against yourself like you had said, âTheyâre your sins and youâre missing the mark.â Daily, try to crack down the amount of sins you make.
I have these visions of these kids that I mentor. They all want to become the next unicorn. Theyâre all these 23 or 25-year-old young startups that all want to be the next unicorn, but they havenât sold their first whatever yet. They havenât sold anything. They havenât made a dime, but theyâre all going to be the next unicorn. I go, âSell your first product. Get your first three incredible clients. Work it out. Figure it out, then get your next 10, then get your next 50, then get your next 100. You can then sit there and say, âNow, weâre a million-dollar business, what is it going to take me to be a $2.5 million business, a $5 million business, a $10 million business, a $40 million business?ââ You get there over time. Youâre going to get to that billion dollars. Never think youâre going to go from zero to a billion overnight.
We break it down on my clients or when I talk to them. I say, âInch by inch, itâs a cinch. By the yard, itâs hard.â You either can break it down and inch by inch your way. Other people use, âHow do you know if I went by that time?â I learned this from Rod Hairston too. A Navy SEAL guy I was talking about, a great speaker, great man, and good friend. Itâs how I take everything. People try to be the next unicorn, but theyâve got to be their own horse for a little bit.
Go out there and sell something. Go talk to a customer. Go figure it out and then build the company. There are still many people who are fixated with stars in their eyes and dollar signs that they forget that they have to go out there and do the hard work. Letâs talk about Time To Shine Today. Letâs talk about the whole program because, as you said, it started with an affiliate marketing program. You have consulting that goes with it. Thereâs the podcast and a whole different thing. Talk to me about the philosophy behind that, where that started, and where is it now?
You can face anything going forward in life after joining the military. Share on XIt started with writing articles in 2007, but it wasnât called Time To Shine then. I would write articles and put them on eZine and all these other publication formats, and I would sell something within the article. The one article that I wrote that made the most money for me was Ovarian Cyst and Remove Them Naturally. I would write ten different articles around that and sell a $45 book. They were paying $30 on it. I sold a thousand of them. I then worked into the ClickBank and the JVZoo. Iâd take digital products. Iâd buy them for the $8 and see what their funnels look like, and I would sell them to my list. I started concentrating on going out to people with newer products, whether theyâre digital or physical and building my list up. I got over 90,000 subscribers to Time To Shine Today. Back then, I didnât have near that. I would do a product review and send it to them, to the list, and then they buy it. Iâd get paid an affiliate commission, which Iâm sure youâve explained on your show.
Affiliate commission is no different than McDonaldâs. The owner of McDonaldâs does not own the restaurant and doesnât own the rights to the burgers. It owns the rights to sell them. McDonaldâs will pay you an affiliate commission for selling their burgers. Thatâs all affiliate marketing is. I built a platform with affiliate marketing. Iâm looking at the Atlantic Ocean and to my left is a room full of swag. I got $50,000-$60,000 worth of merchandise sitting to the left of me. I take stuff and I will do a review. If I like it, I send it out to my list. Iâm very segmented with my list. I have people that are into mountain biking. Iâve got people that are in real estate investing. If it helps level up your health, wealth, or mindset, thatâs what I want to see. I wouldnât take a Fitbit or something like that to sell something thatâs already out there. Itâs all brand new. Some of it is revolutionary stuff.
Whatâs awesome about it is because I built a platform to where itâs at, I get stuff for free. Iâm able to do the reviews and itâs awesome. What turned Time To Shine Today over from the affiliate marketing to the podcast is that I interview people now. I like to give until it hurts so good. I interview Ben. Ben gets exposure to my list in whatever social networks. I get a free Masterclass with Ben.
Youâre like me. I do this because I learn way more than I teach on my everyday podcast.
With that, I turned around. We ran a beta test with six different people that I interviewed and started running marketing out to the masses. Iâll tell you how I do it. I go to Tony Robbinsâ and Jim Rohnâs Facebook page. I go to all those Facebook pages. I run ads that are only seen by people that are members of those pages, that are looking to level up their life, looking for coaching and consulting. They answer a questionnaire from me that takes about fifteen minutes. They fill out the questionnaire. My intern, who now is on my staff, wrote an algorithm to match the answers with the answers from the coaches, and then we put them together. We make the introduction. I built an affiliate platform within Time To Shine Today by giving. The affiliate commission on the back end with the coaches, they sell a package, and Time To Shine get some.
To break it down in 2020, we started that in July. We did $112,000 in coaching commissions. Weâre already double that in 2021. Iâm able to give so much content, which brought on sponsorships to Time To Shine Today. Iâm sponsored by some companies. Iâm able to get the word out there. Iâm going on XM Radio in May 2020. Itâs grown. Iâm so blessed, but I couldnât have done it without people like yourself and other people that are just giving until it hurts so good to them. Thatâs how it comes back.
Bob Burg will tell you, âYou have to be open to that reciprocation.â Itâs no different than a plant thatâs sitting in your room. You breathe in oxygen. Breathe that carbon dioxide. The plant does the exact opposite. Thatâs how I look at it. Iâm going to get mine. I donât care how it comes. My god-daughter who never calls me unless she needs something. I love you Kelsey if youâre reading. She called me out of the blue. That is a reciprocation to me, just to shoot the crap. Iâm open to anything. Blessings like this, being on here.
Itâs symbiotic relationships. The reason youâre on my show is because you were such a giving host. We had such a good time. We had such a great conversation, both on-air and off-air. I love you as a human being. It wasnât just the fact that. âHeâs going to be a good interviewee. Heâs going to level up the community,â which is great. Itâs the fact that youâre a great human being. We all need to surround ourselves with people that make us better to level us up. I want to thank you for being one of those people.
I appreciate you. You and I have not even reached the tip of the iceberg of stuff weâre going to do. We got some good fun stuff coming up.
Hereâs the question I ask everybody as they walk out the door. When you leave a meeting or you sign off the air or whatever you do, you get in your car and drive away, whatâs the one thing youâd want people to know about Scott when youâre not in the room?
That he does everything for the intention and not the attention, itâs all I care about. As long as my intentions are true and Iâm helping you level up, I donât care about attention. I do it for the intention, not the attention. Thatâs what I want people to remember.
If thatâs not quotable, I donât know what is.
That comes from a good buddy of mine, Julian Harrison. He told me thatâs how he felt. He was like, âFerg, you do stuff for this and not for that.â Thatâs what I live by now. Iâm a real estate agent by trade. Iâm looking at it going, âWe get paid a lot of money as realtors,â especially here in South Florida. âAm I doing it to make sure that they get the right thing? Am I doing it to make my name bigger?â Thatâs how I check everything. Youâre doing it for the intention or the attention, and just leave it be from there. Thatâs what I want to happen.
Scott, thank you for being such an intentional person. Thank you for your energy, for your passion and for being an amazing guest.
Thanks. I appreciate you. I love your guts.
Important Links:
- Time To Shine Today
- Time To Shine Interview with Ben Baker and Claire Chandler
- The Go-Giver
- Twitter – Scott Ferguson
- LinkedIn – Scott Ferguson
- Instagram – Scott Ferguson
- Facebook – Scott Ferguson
- YouTube – Scott Ferguson
- Envision-U
- Bob Burg â Past Episode
About Scott Ferguson
L. Scott Ferguson is the host of the Time To Shine Today Podcast. His mission is to NOT have ANYONE feel like they have NO-ONE. Scottâs story was highly sought after by people in the entertainment business, which he was not ready to share until now. At Time To Shine Today Scott shares Knowledge Nuggets to help individuals and teams to Level UP both in business and personal. Scott is a Veteran of the United States Navy with multiple deployments to Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia etc in the early to mid 1990âs. An active podcaster and real estate junky/investor â Scott loves to give, live intentional, loves the beach, Jiu Jitsu, fitness, yoga and volunteering.
Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!