From Billy’s Desk · The Origin
From oilfield pipelines to deal pipelines: the 2015 pivot.
Yes, that name. No — not the Goodfellas guy. I’m the living one.
The Short Version
I spent eight years as a pipefitter and welder in Northern Canada’s oilfields, running crews of 100 to 150 men on gas plants and pipelines. When oil crashed in 2015 — with my daughter on the way — I taught myself lead generation, marketing, branding, and web development from books and paid coaches, built an agency for contractors and realtors, and eventually became a digital-M&A operator. The trade never changed: find what’s undervalued, rebuild it right, hand it over stronger.
Run the crews.
Before I ever heard the term “deal flow,” I ran pipe. Eight years in Northern Canada’s oilfields as a pipefitter and welder — gas plants, pipelines, steel that has to hold pressure in weather that wants to kill it.
By the end I was running crews of a hundred to a hundred and fifty men. People think welding was my education. It wasn’t. Logistics was. Materials, schedules, inspections, payroll, and a hundred-plus guys who need to know exactly what they’re building today and why. That’s an operating company. Nobody calls it that on a pipe rack.
Watch it crash.
The oilfield is feast or famine. You’re either eating well or you’re not eating at all — and which one isn’t up to you. It’s up to a commodity chart.
“I worked in the oilfield for eight years, running crews of a hundred, hundred and fifty guys — building gas plants, pipelines… I had a daughter on the way around 2015, and the oilfield crashed. I had to figure out a new way of being more stable and controlling my income.”
— Me, on the I AM CEO Podcast (ep. IAM1103, Aug 2021)That sentence is the hinge of my whole life. 2015: oil collapses, the work disappears, and my daughter is on the way. A man with a torch and a mortgage doesn’t get to wait out a cycle. I needed income that answered to me.
Buy the books before the businesses.
My first acquisition wasn’t a company. It was a library card’s worth of other people’s experience. The 10X Rule came first, then everything else in Grant Cardone’s world. Then I paid for coaches — real money I didn’t really have — because tuition is cheaper than a decade of trial and error.
I taught myself lead generation, marketing, branding, and web development the same way I learned to weld: badly at first, then less badly, then well enough that people paid me. Trade school all over again, except this time I was the apprentice and the foreman.
Build for the people you knew.
I didn’t chase glamorous clients. I built an agency for contractors and real-estate pros — the people I’d worked beside for a decade. I knew what a job site actually runs on, what a slow month feels like, and what they’d pay to never chase another lead. Speaking customer wasn’t a marketing skill I learned; it was a first language.
Trade hours for assets.
The agency worked, but trading hours for invoices is still trading hours. What kept catching my eye was the asset underneath: the websites, the SaaS tools, the e-commerce stores. They could be bought — the way a tired gas plant gets bought, rebuilt, and run profitably.
So that became the business: buy the asset, rebuild the operations, sell the upside. I wrote Unlimited Sellers Guide to document how I find businesses to buy at will, co-created the Buying Beast sourcing method with Andrew Baldwin out of Alberta, and co-founded Prime Acquisitions Group — an AI-and-technology-first M&A team. As of June 2026 the firm reports 16+ closed deals across a $1M–$48M range,* with eleven transactions documented on our public tape.
Roll with the punches.
“Nothing changes — your challenges just change. You’ll still have hard times while you’re doing good… That’s why it’s called being an entrepreneur. You just know how to roll with the punches.”
— Me again, same episodePeople hear “oilfield welder turned dealmaker” and assume the crash was the bad chapter. It wasn’t. It was the forge. The oilfield taught me that nothing stays up forever; 2015 taught me to own the thing that pays you. Everything since — the agency, the book, the firm — is just that lesson, compounding.
The full story, with the timeline and the receipts, lives on my About page. And if you’re holding a digital business and wondering what it’s worth to someone like me — my DMs are open.
* Deal figures self-reported by Prime Acquisitions Group (primeacquisitionsgroup.com), June 2026. Largest documented transaction: $24M; 11 deals on the public transaction tape.