The Lady Who Makes Millionaires: The PPF Framework That 10x Your Income In 5 Years!
By The Diary Of A CEO
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Prioritize respect over being liked**: To earn respect, you must first decide that you'd rather be respected than liked. This means making the difficult choice to do the right, respectable thing even when it's unlikable, rather than prioritizing what everyone else thinks about you. [35:37], [57:59] - **Don't chase passive income before $1M**: Before you have a million dollars, don't even think about passive income. Instead, focus on using your calendar to represent what you find important and aligning it with your goals. [01:09:10], [01:43:14] - **Master your calendar to control your life**: Your calendar is a representation of what you find important and whether it aligns with your goals. If you don't manage your time, you risk a life dictated by luck, which can lead to self-doubt and uncertainty. [01:12:32], [01:33:33] - **You are not a candle; you cannot burn out**: The concept of burnout is a misconception about hard work. As a human being, you are not a candle and cannot burn out; you can feel moments of pressure and stress, but these are not negative if you recognize them as necessary steps towards your goals. [01:01:03], [01:40:04] - **AI is a tool for learning, not a replacement**: AI is a powerful tool that can help you acquire new skills rapidly, but it's not a replacement for human adaptability. The only skill that truly matters in the age of AI is the ability to learn and adapt. [01:46:49], [01:48:41] - **Focus on skills that generate income**: Money matters, and to increase your income, you must align your time with acquiring skills that generate money. Don't focus on passive income until you have a substantial asset base; instead, invest in skills that solve problems and increase your earning potential. [01:38:35], [01:43:53]
Topics Covered
- Wealth comes from working on the right problems, not just hard work.
- Understanding the 1% strategy for time, investments, skills, and mindset is key to wealth.
- The PPF Framework: Personal, Professional, and Financial goals create clear buckets for success.
- The Financial Crisis: Few Businesses Exceed $1M in Revenue
- Control Your Skills, Not Just Investments: The Path to Income Growth
Full Transcript
In order to be successful, you have to
be able to communicate your ideas, who
you are, and your point of view. And so,
I use three steps in every communication
that can be used for getting a
promotion, laying people off. It could
be used to persuading your significant
other, "Where are you going to go to
dinner that night?" And it allowed me to
go from being in a room where I couldn't
have a conversation with people and
crippled with anxiety and fear to
co-founding two nine-figure businesses,
helping over 15,000 business owners
scale their organizations, as well as
helping people unpack the strategies
that the top 1% of people use to gain
wealth and success that are different
than 99% of people who can't create the
wealth that they've always wanted. Like
they prioritize being respected over
being liked.
>> And where else do people go wrong here?
>> Well, ultimately this comes down to the
character of the person. If the person
isn't somebody who wants to win, who
doesn't sacrifice, you cannot get to
where you want to go. Now, of course,
you could try to hack success, but if
you did it by putting in the effort, you
don't have this anxiety that it's all
going to come crashing down because you
know that you could redo it and it's
never burnoutinducing. That's a
misconception about hard work. You're
not a candle. You can't burn out.
>> What about passive income? Because the
idea that you can make income and do is
unbelievably compelling.
>> Well, before you have a million dollars,
don't even think about passive income.
Instead, use your calendar as a
representation of what you find to be
important with the goals that you have
every single day.
>> But if someone at home isn't quite clear
on their goals, what should they be
doing?
>> I have a three-step methodology for goal
setting that I have rolled out to
thousands of people and it's called PPF
and it's transformed my life. So, the
first is
>> I see messages all the time in the
comment section that some of you didn't
realize you didn't subscribe. So, if you
could do me a favor and double check if
you're a subscriber to this channel,
that would be tremendously appreciated.
It's the simple, it's the free thing
that anybody that watches this show
frequently can do to help us here to
keep everything going in this show in
the trajectory it's on. So, please do
double check if you've subscribed and uh
thank you so much because in a strange
way you are you're part of our history
and you're on this journey with us and I
appreciate you for that. So, yeah, thank
you
Natalie. For my viewers that have just
clicked on this conversation, what is
the reason that you think it's important
for them to stay and listen to what
we're going to talk about today? and all
of the things that you've spent your
career understanding.
>> If you are somebody who has really
struggled with working hard and putting
in the effort and the energy, but you
don't actually have wealth to show for
it. This conversation is important
because wealth should come from hard
work on the right set of problems. And
so you have to ask yourself the
question, what problems do I work on
every single day? And whether you're a
team member in an organization, whether
you're a leader in an organization, a
business owner in an organization, you
should be able to objectively point at
my work here generated this result. And
so if I'm upset with this result,
meaning I haven't made the wealth, I
haven't created the income that I want,
it would make sense that where you're
spending your time and the problems that
you're solving are not tied to your
actual goal of increasing your wealth.
And when it comes to wealth, I do think
that we are in a wealth crisis across
the globe. I think that there is so much
confusion and misunderstanding about
financial literacy and what's actually
happening with who is making money, how
they're making money, what they're
spending their time on. And so this
conversation I'm very much looking
forward to unpacking what are the
strategies that people use the 1% for
their time, for their investments, for
their skills, for their mindset that are
just different than 99% of people who
can't seem to get ahead and create the
wealth that they've always wanted.
>> And so as you sit here now, what is your
business? What's the scale of the
business? And uh what does it do? Yeah,
over the last six years, I co-founded
two businesses that are both nine
figures today. One is a management
consulting investment firm. It's called
Cardone Ventures, and we help small
business owners grow and scale their
organizations. So, I work with business
owners on a daily basis who will be
doing $3 million in annual revenue. They
want to know, how do I become one of the
fewer that is able to have a $5 million
a year business or a $10 million a year
business? because they really realized
that $3 million a year doesn't actually
create financial security. And that
business was started in 2019. And then
our second business, 10X Health, we
purchased a health business back in 2023
and today is helping people all over the
world and it's a nine figure business.
>> So you're on that first business. How
many business owners have you worked
with?
>> Total business owners that have come
through our programs would be over
15,000. what what are the range of
things you're helping them with?
>> Great question. So, there's education.
Yeah. There's consulting, there's
services, and there's investing. So,
think of us like the McKenzie for small
businesses. We reverse engineer their
current market, what they're doing, what
their products, services, offerings are,
and we give back to them either in the
form of actual services where we will do
their marketing for them, we will
recruit people for them, we will do
their bookkeeping for them. But then we
also have a massive events component of
our business where we train business
owners on how to hire, how to recruit
themselves. So they don't need to hire
us to do it. I actually prefer it when
people don't hire us to do this because
I think it's so important for business
owners and the leaders inside those
teams to actually get the competence in
that skill. So if you use Yeah. have
hiring or their books. If if business
owners don't understand how to read a
P&L and the importance of a balance
sheet, they're always going to abdicate
that work to somebody else. And at some
point, that is not going to work for
them any longer because I don't actually
know what that skill is. So, I'm
trusting that Steven can come into my
business. Steven seems great. I know him
from church. I'm just going to let
Stephen do this. But, I don't know that
Steven only knows how to do this to a $3
million business. And I need it to be a
$10 million business. there's no
education system that exists for
business owners to help them identify
that today.
>> So it was a 2019 you started this
business.
>> So if I jumped back to 2019,
what is the difference like fundamental
difference in the principles of how to
be successful in business that you know
now that you wouldn't have known then?
Like what are the glaring principles? I
often think that like the further you go
down any path,
>> it becomes more and more clear what the
like fundamental rules of the game are.
And at the very beginning, those are
just hypotheses. So, what are like the
fundamental things you've learned about
what differentiates those 15,000 people
that you've interfaced with that are
business owners um makes some of them
successful and the others unsuccessful?
>> I ultimately think that this comes down
to the character of the person that is
doing the business. Because if you look
at people that you can partner with in
business, it is incredibly challenging
to make something truly successful. Even
if it's the best business model in the
world, you figured out marketing, you
figured out operations, you can scale
it. If the person is a piece of [ __ ] and
if the person is not somebody who is
ethical and is somebody who's compliant
and isn't somebody who wants to win, to
me those three things go hand in hand
because it to me it doesn't matter what
the business model is. You could give me
a roofing business, you can give me an
HVAC business, you can give me a
wellness company, a marketing agency.
The principles that I thought to be
true, many of them have held true over
the last six years since 2019. Many of
them are still very applicable around
standard practices for accounting and
how you recruit people. Certain tips and
tools help with different platforms that
you can use for these things, but for
the most part, those things actually
haven't changed. But what I've learned
painfully over the last 6 years is
everything is about the people that you
do business with and the partners that
you choose and the people that you allow
in your inner circle. And so that is the
case for your own business, but that's
also the case for the businesses that we
help. And I can watch the most
incredible business owner come into our
organization. She's wanting to win.
She's excited about what the future can
look like. She's going to take all of
the notes and actually go home and
implement those things. But if she has
somebody in her life, say it's a spouse,
say it's a kid, worse yet it's an
employee that she's paying to help her.
Like that's the irony. You pay people to
help you and yet when they're actually
on your team, they do things that
detract from your ability to achieve
your goals and to reach your potential.
That's where I find doesn't matter what
the business model is, doesn't matter.
You can give all of the books, all of
the training, the full playbook to
somebody, they're going to fail because
either they aren't that person or
they've surrounded themselves inside
their business with people who will just
be stops to them and continually stop
their ability to grow and to reach for
more, reducing that person's confidence
in themselves and their business stays
stuck.
>> If people are the most important thing
for long-term success and for business,
what are you looking for in people? What
makes someone an A player in your view?
And how do you how do you filter them
out?
Because a lot of people go off their
vibes and if I've learned anything over
the last 10 years is that we're all
riddled with our own biases and
insecurities. So we end up aiming in a
certain direction whether that's for
better or for worse.
>> So what's your process of finding
exceptional people?
>> I use a three-step interview process. So
the three steps for me is a first a
cultural interview. I want to understand
more so than me trying to get into the
technicalities of can they do the work.
Are they aligned with our organization?
Are they goal oriented? The best
question that you can ask somebody
inside a business before you hire them,
what are their five-year goals and
actually get a real answer. I don't
really care what skills and experiences
you have. If you don't have goals,
you're I'm not hiring you. You're not
allowed to be inside this environment
because it's demoralizing for every
other person who is here to help achieve
their goals. the organization's goals
and hopefully the goals of the end
customer, client, patient for whatever
type of business. So that first
interview really being the cultural
grounding point is of the utmost
importance and then I move straight into
a technical interview where I want to
get the person as close to the work as
possible. So if you're going to be a
salesperson, I want to see you make a a
sales call. I'm going to give you a list
of 50 people to call. I want to listen
to you call those people. If you are a
graphic designer in our organization, we
do not do briefs. We are not the type of
people that are going to say you get all
of this time to be able to think through
this whole process and this whole
journey and we're going to give you two
weeks to do this. For us, we are
turnurning content constantly because
that's the world that we live in for the
amount of ads that need to be created,
presentation decks. It can't take a
bunch of time. And so if the person when
I do a case study interview and I have
them actually make a presentation in
front of me says that they need two days
to think about this and they can't
assemble some form of a presentation or
a graphic for an ad. They don't know how
to use Adobe or Canva or whatever the
platform is, I I can't really hire the
person because I know that they don't
have that skill. And then the final one
is a core values interview. And for me,
our team's ability to demonstrate ahead
of time, ahead of joining the
organization that they actually
understand and are in alignment with our
core values is essential.
>> How do you test someone's core values?
>> Well, I asked them to give me times
where they have exemplified the core
values that we have and they present it
to our leadership team. For the first
100 team members at Cardone Ventures, I
listen to every single core values
presentation. the person can't
demonstrate and actually say, "Oh, I was
able to generate x amount of leads and
convert them at y percentage." They
probably don't know what they're talking
about and they're gonna have a really
hard time in the environment. And I do
believe that this is the business
owner's responsibility. You have to own
your culture and your environment. And
if you don't and just think that anybody
that can come in is going to actually
live by what you want to create, you're
going to be very quickly mistaken
because they're going to create their
own environment inside yours and then
you've lost control. You talked about
goal setting being an imperative when
you're meeting people. What is what is
your framework for goal setting? If
someone at home isn't quite clear on
their goals, what what should they be
doing?
>> I have a three-step methodology for goal
setting that I have rolled out to
thousands of people. And this three-step
framework has really transformed my life
because it allows me to create buckets
for goals. And the process is called
personal goals, professional goals, and
financial goals. And after having over a
thousand of these conversations
personally where I've interviewed team
members and business owners and team
members of business owners about their
goals, what I can say is I've never
found a goal that is outside of those
three buckets. But the challenge many
people run into is on New Year's Eve,
they start to list out all of the lovely
things that they would like to
accomplish and who they want to be. And
it becomes this very esoteric
conversation. Instead of really
prioritizing personally, what does
success look like? Professionally, what
does success look like? Financially,
what does success look like? And what
would those targets be in one year from
now, 3 years from now, and 5 years from
now? Because those three buckets become
easy to think about in the short term.
One year for most people, super
straightforward. They're like, "Oh, I'd
like to make an additional $10,000.
Maybe I'd like a promotion here." Three
years starts to get a little bit more
nebulous. And after having over a
thousand of these conversations, 5 years
for most people they have a hard time
thinking with. But the one constant is
in 5 years from now, guess what? We're
going to be 5 years older. I am 32 years
old today. In 5 years from now, for
certain, I will be 37 years old. And so,
who is Natalie at 37?
>> Who is she?
>> She's a [ __ ] badass.
Natalie is in control of her
environment. Natalie is able to
make a lot of financial investments that
I'm not in the position financially to
make today because I want to be able to
write a million dollar check to charity
just because I can. I'd ideally like
that check to be 10 or $50 million. And
when you say PPF, personal,
professional financial
>> is there any specific way that I should
write this down? Is it just do I just
think about in 5 years from now, what
are my personal, professional, and
financial goals? And then I write that
down on a piece of paper, for example.
>> Great question. Ideally, personal is at
the top,
>> okay,
>> with a bucket for one year, three year,
and fiveyear.
>> Then the next is professional, one year,
three year, 5 year. Financial one year,
three year, five year.
>> And you know, you use the word badass.
>> Uhhuh.
What is the mindset of a badass? Like,
have you always been like this?
>> I always wanted this, but today I am
this. At 20 years old, I was crippled
with anxiety and fear about what others
thought of me, about this decision that
I made to be in a relationship with
somebody who was older than me, and
thinking that for the rest of my life,
somebody was going to think that, oh,
she just married her way to the top. She
slept her way to success. She's not
actually very smart. She's just a gold
digger and she took the easy way out.
And so 20-year-old me was actually
terrified of being in front of people,
was terrified of the future judgment
that would come if I was successful.
Because I think there was a part of me
that thought to myself, well, what if I
am only successful because I married
somebody who is successful? and all of
the thought process that goes around,
well, do I not marry this person and be
in this relationship even though I love
them and I think they're the greatest
person on earth because what people are
going to think of me. What if I could
have the greatest relationship because
I'm obsessed with this person. I really
think that this person is my person. I
had that clarity at a very young age
>> and he's 25 years older than you.
>> He is 25 years older than me.
>> So, so you were anxious and more
concerned with other people's opinions?
>> 100%. Did you have the same aura?
>> I don't think so.
>> What changed? What happened? How did you
acquire such an aura?
>> I think the aura came from targeting,
getting stats that I could prove that
let somebody not see me and my life
choices, but actually let them see an
outcome. So that first outcome was being
able to recruit people. I wanted to
actually have a stat that I have
recruited x amount of people. Therefore,
I know how to hire people. I know how to
interview them. I know how to onboard
them. I know how to create a successful
culture because a result shows that. So
whether you like me, don't like me,
think that it was him, you can't take
away the stat. And I became obsessed
with not
getting things or doing things that took
me away from stats.
>> So you needed to acquire first party
evidence for yourself about yourself.
Mhm.
>> So that within yourself, you knew
>> who you were
>> that
>> you had a a self case for who you are.
>> That
>> and even I guess to for people to do
that cuz I'm sure there's so many people
listening that are maybe 20-year-old
Natalie in some way, maybe a bit
shrouded with sort certain insecurities
and maybe aren't the most conf
confident, maybe a bit anxious, scared
about what people might think if they
try. What would you say to those people
from your experience?
>> Go all in on yourself.
go all in on that weird thing that
you're interested in. If it's
scrapbooking, if it's
social media, if it's
recruiting, if you like reading business
books, go allin on that thing. And
social media has never created a better
time for people to actually create
incredible things based off of their own
interests and get those things out to
the world. So 20-year-old anybody
anybody who is 20 years old should say
this is what I'm interested in. It is
one thing. It is not 12 things. And I'm
going to go all in on myself with this
thing and become completely obsessed and
create my environment around becoming
the best at objectively the best at this
thing.
>> Does it matter how you look? I've I've
heard you talk about this in a video you
made in April where you're talking about
seven steps to transforming yourself
>> and you say that you should rebrand your
look.
>> Does it matter how I look?
>> I think it matters a lot to people how
they look. I think people have a lot of
ideas about
levels of acceptance about how they look
and ultimately you have to decide if you
are comfortable with the way that you
look and I do think many people
overemphasize how they look and how they
come across. But if you want to rebrand
yourself and have this new identity,
let's say somebody wants to go from
being a 20-year-old college student that
no one really takes seriously and it's
kind of dumpy and doesn't really like
certain things, but can't really
articulate why, spend too much time on
social media, and let's say that person
wants to become a professional golfer.
Well, all of a sudden, in order for me
to become a professional golfer, the
fastest way for me to be successful at
becoming a professional golfer is to
practice golf every hour of the day and
to assimilate into that environment to
look the part and to act the part. I'm a
huge believer in the process of be, do,
have. It is not have before you actually
be that person and you do the things in
order to have the stuff or have the
identity or have the whatever it is that
you're looking to create the being a
professional golfer, the scrapbooking
business, the $20 million organization.
And so the first step really is becoming
that. And if I really want to change
what my external environment is, I need
to get in those rooms and I need to
start to understand what those rooms
look like. And the fastest way for me to
actually be able to do that, as long as
it doesn't compromise my moral code,
would be to start to look like, dress
like, act like that thing that I want to
become.
>> How important do you think communication
is in terms of like the way that you
show up here and the way that you talk?
Do you think that's important? And if
so, what advice would you give to to my
audience about being an effective
communicator?
>> Of course, communication is the most
important thing. Next to being
successful,
actually, I would say in order to be
successful, you have to be able to
communicate your ideas and your thoughts
and who you are and your point of view.
And if you can't communicate those
things, it will show in your inability
to create the things that you want to
have. So, what do you do when you think
about your own communication style? What
are some of the things that you've
learned over time that are effective to
make people take you seriously to to
hear you and to persuade people?
>> I am incredibly present in any room that
I am in. And that is a missed skill in a
day and age where everyone has a cell
phone where they can contact millions of
people instantly. I find that leaders
who want to get promoted and and be in
the next position, they don't even think
of how unaware they look in every
leadership meeting because they are
simply answering another email or not in
that room. And my philosophy is if
you're in the room and your two feet are
there, that is where you have to be. And
so you are an effective communicator if
you can actually track with what's
happening. If I can track what he's
doing over here and when he comes and
talks to me, I'm able to have a
conversation because he's physically in
my space. That communication matters.
It's not just the most important person
in the room that matters in any room.
It's how you present yourself to every
individual because you are present in
that environment right now. And if you
can teach yourself to not numb yourself
from the environment, if you can teach
yourself to really observe the
environment and talk to whoever it is
that's in front of you, communicate with
them, even if they're not talking to
you. How we became partners with Grant
and Elena Cardone was by sitting at an
event with 35,000 people and instead of
acting like big deals and instead of
acting like we were somebody, we sat
there in their audience and took notes
and were actively interested in what
they were saying. Why? Cuz if somebody's
up on stage and you want that person's
attention, the fastest way to make them
not want to spend time with you is to
slouch in your chair and is to look down
or be distracted the whole time. And
then when they meet you to come maybe
take a picture at the end of the event,
they see you. They are going to know
that you gave them no laughs, you gave
them no verbal cues, you were completely
uninterested, and you actually made
their job harder for them despite the
fact that maybe they are your role model
or idol. I find people are so unaware of
their physical presence in any room, in
a meeting, in a school room, in a
presentation, in a conversation with
their significant other with their kids,
that if they could just own the space
that they are in and be intentional with
the human being that's in front of them
would change everything in their lives.
>> What about how you speak? how the very
the most effective speakers that you've
encountered, what it is they do
tactically to make sure that people hear
what they're saying and are persuaded by
them, you know, and there's a spectrum,
right? There'll be these business owners
that you meet that are like terrible
communicators and speakers. What are
they doing wrong? And then the very best
that you meet, what are they doing
right?
>> The more frameworks somebody has to
frame their communication, I think helps
them land their point. So there's no
shortages of frameworks on the planet.
My framework is vision, commitment,
execution. I use three steps in every
communication that I'm really
intentional about and wanting to land.
And that three-step framework can be
used for getting a promotion. It could
be used for laying people off. It could
be used to figuring out where you're
going to go to dinner that night and
persuading your significant other. So
the first step of the framework under
VCE is vision. And it's important that
vision is first because if you can
articulate to somebody the intention and
the why behind whatever it is you're
communicating, you're going to get much
further than just going into tactics.
And if it's tactics that you go into,
people forget it. People don't remember
tactics. They they like the tips, but do
they actually implement those things?
oftentimes not because it's just
tactics. So why is this thing important
for the individual?
>> So give me an example. I'm on your team
and you're trying to persuade me to
launch a Twitch channel
>> to do live streaming. How how would you
go through this framework to accomplish
that goal?
>> Card Ventures. Our mission is to help
business owners achieve their personal,
professional, and financial goals. And
we're on a path to impact a million
business owners. We've only done
business with a handful of thousands. We
have a long way to go. And one of the
things I was researching is Twitch
because our impact could be greatly
amplified by us having our message be to
this audience to this crowd using Twitch
vision commitment. There's two steps.
First step, what is my commitment? I
will provide you whatever training is
the best training to get you set up with
an account to get you the knowledge and
education of people who are crushing it
in the space. introduce you to those
contacts in order for you to be able to
fully launch this and be responsible for
it. Commitment part two. What I'd ask
for in return is you take that very
seriously and with the contacts that
you're going to be meeting, you follow
up with them. You ensure that they
understand that your intention is to be
the best of the best, to learn from
their mistakes, but to do this in a way
that represents our organization at the
highest level possible.
Execution. So, what I see this looking
like is we're going to get you an
account. I've researched this
platform. I know nothing about Twitch,
but I've researched this platform, and
here are the three people that I'm going
to invest $5,000 for you to go and learn
from, be mentored by, and over the next
8 weeks, the target has to be we're
going to go from zero Twitch subscribers
to
10,000 Twitch subscribers.
and we will check in every single day in
order to remove any roadblocks in order
for this to be a successful initiative.
>> And where do people go wrong here?
>> They start with the execution. They're
like, "Oh, we need to be on Twitch."
This is what business owners do to their
team. They're like, "I came home from
this conference. We need to be on
Twitch. So, figure out what Twitch is
going to look like. Figure out what the
plan is. We'll meet back. Talk about it.
Just like handle this. I'm super busy. I
have to do this thing over here."
instead of really tying whatever the
thing is that you're asking somebody to
why is this important? Oh yeah, it ties
back to this bigger thing. It's not just
because I'm asking you to learn Twitch,
which is likely something that you know
jack [ __ ] about. You know nothing about
Twitch as do I. But that's this
difficulty in businesses and in many
communication outside of business is
you're both trusting that you're going
to do your part in learning about
something that neither of you know
anything about. And so you either again
bottleneck yourself in this
communication because you're struggling
to understand this thing. You're
struggling to understand Twitch and then
you feel like you have to become a
Twitch master. People online are going
to love this. No idea. But you're going
to become like the world's greatest
Twitch person when really what you
should have been doing is these other
things for your business. And this
person you should trust enough but lay
out enough steps for them to say this is
why I'm committed to this. It's
important enough for me to invest
$5,000. That's my commitment. What I'm
asking for in return is your commitment
back to me so that we're aligned. And if
I once I have your commitment, I've
already given you mine. Let's just hop
right into execution. But so often we
drop right into execution without first
getting the commitment from the other
person that they're even interested. And
then we wait 4 weeks or 8 weeks or 12
weeks thinking something is happening
when it is not happening. and we lose
time momentum excitement enthusiasm
about growing and our confidence in
people that we can actually trust them
goes down.
>> I've heard you talk about avoiding
phrases like I think, I feel,
um, and being more high conviction and
certain with the way that you
communicate with people.
>> Mhm.
>> Explain that to me.
>> That honestly might be outdated for me.
>> Yeah. Because in a day and age where
it's important to share your point of
view,
it's not a bad thing to say, I think
this is the right path, especially if
you aren't certain. And it shows
strength and integrity that you are
communicating that you you're thinking
this. You you don't know for sure and
you're relying on other people. Now, if
it is just a filler word, if somebody
says, "I think we should do this and
this is the direction that I think we
should take Cardone Ventures," that
wouldn't be very engaging. So, in that
context, you absolutely should not be
using these filler phrases of I think or
maybe and and adding lack of certainty.
At some level, you're playing a
certainty game with everybody around
you, whether they are investors,
clients, patients, team members,
partners, vendors. And so using phrases
that decrease people's certainty in your
direction isn't going to help them help
you. But if you actually are uncertain,
it is okay to be transparent about that.
And it actually builds trust.
>> I I think it's funny I just said I think
I think about this a lot.
>> Um because I I find myself writing out
emails and messages where I've written I
think in them and I I'd say 90% of the
time change it to I believe.
>> And I think there's something
different about that framing. Whenever I
believe, it feels it's still
appreciating that this is a belief that
I have and I don't have certainty on
this hypothesis, but there's something
high conviction about the phrase I
believe we're going to blah blah blah
blah and I believe that will happen blah
blah blah. It feels much better than I
think.
>> I think is a bit flimsy.
>> I'm in agreement with you and
>> a bit plastic banging in the wind. But
when you say it like this, it makes me
connect to you because it actually feels
like it's a stream of consciousness that
you are thinking something
>> instead of in an email.
>> You saying I believe is much more
authoritative. I would
I would caution leaders when it comes to
using words like I believe or being
certain about really ensuring that you
are certain or you really do believe
something, especially as your business
grows. If you're doing a million dollars
and now you have a $10 million business
and all of a sudden you have a a layer
of leaders around you, it can become an
echo chamber. And the more certain you
are, or at least you seem to be, the
less likely people are going to push
back on you when you might actually need
them to collaborate and you weren't so
certain, but you came off with such
certainty. And I find that that's a
balance that leaders have to find as
they become more competent in their zone
of genius and as they get higher up in
organizations or start their own
organization themselves. if they aren't
really communicating what things they
aren't certain of but they're waffling
on um it it can cause unnecessary
duress.
>> You talk about mastering your calendar
as well being central to transformation.
>> Why is why is this so important and what
does that mean?
>> Well, if you want anything in life, you
actually have to spend time to get that
thing. things don't just magically
manifest into people's lives despite
what the internet tells you. So, in
order for me to have the relationship
that I want to have, I actually have to
invest time with my significant other.
It's not just going to magically happen
that I'm going to have an amazing
marriage. If I want to have great
friends, I actually have to spend time
with my friends. And so your calendar is
a reflection and a representation of
what you find to be important and is in
alignment or out of alignment with the
goals that you have every single day. So
if I have zero time being spent on
generating revenue inside my business,
it shouldn't surprise me at the end of
the year that I'm doing the same amount
of revenue that I did last year. Why? I
spent zero time on the one thing aka
revenue generation in order for it to
grow. So for me, my calendar, and I
teach business owners this every single
day, you have to look at it every day.
You you have to start to align your
time, unless you want your life to be
something that just is a story of luck.
I don't know about you, but I'm not
interested in having a life of luck
because I think that actually leads to a
significant amount of self-doubt and
uncertainty. Oh, just because I'm lucky
I'm going to leave something to being
out of my control just because I I
happen to be at the right place the
right time. Of course, there are those
components. I have been at the right
place at the right time throughout my
career. But the way that you control
where you spend your time gives you the
most amount of atbats to the
opportunities that you want if you have
goals and aspirations to have a
different life than you currently have.
And to me, still to this day, I want to
have a different life in the future. And
I imagined a more enriched version of my
life at 40 and at 50 and at 60. And I
think if people were really honest with
themselves, they want a different
version of their lives, too. I don't
think someone listens to this podcast or
watches this show without wanting to be
something different or to have something
different, whether it's relationship or
different health situation or different
income, different friends. I mean, how
many people would want different
friends, like badass friends to do cool
[ __ ] with? Well, how do you get that?
Okay, I would need to actually reverse
engineer using my time and what I do
every single day to get me closer to
people who are doing those similar
things. And so, that might actually take
me making sacrifices for 2 years in
order to be able to be around people to
be able to give value to people who'd be
interested in being my friend. And it
sounds a little
strategic,
but it is. Cuz you don't just get great
people in your life because you happen
to be at the right place at the right
time. You get great people by doing
great things because great people want
to spend time around other people who
are doing great things. And the only way
that you can certainly know that you
were doing great things without getting
lucky or happening to look a certain way
so that you get invited into certain
places is by managing and really
creating your own time.
>> What about hard work in this equation?
You know, people talk a lot about work
life balance and I think a lot of people
want want everything. We want to, you
know, get to 40, have the yacht, have
the great family, have great
relationships, have a great business. I
mean, that's an ideal outcome for all of
us. What would you say to people about
the concept of working hard and how
critical or or unimportant that is?
>> Working hard is the most important
thing. You cannot get to where you want
to go if it's truly something that is
unusual or out of the ordinary without
working hard. And
you could try to hack it. Let's say
somebody happens to be beautiful. I
guess you could get the yacht and a
relationship because you're beautiful
and somebody is willing to be in a
relationship with you because you're a
good person. But I've met those people
and those people have crippling fear and
anxiety because they don't actually know
what their place is and they don't know
they didn't do what was required to have
the thing. So going back to like be do
have people who win the lottery, they
have all the money. People who inherit
wealth, they have all the money. This
was my fear. I was going to have money
because I'm connected to my husband. But
I didn't do the work and become the
person that created the happiness until
I did do the work to become the person
to have the thing. So now that I have
it, I can actually have it. And when you
are able in life to have things that you
want because you did it in the right
order, you don't have this anxiousness,
you don't have this anxiety, you don't
have this worry or fear that someone's
going to take it from you. It's all
going to come crashing down because you
know that you could redo it.
>> If I want to be badass Natalie at 32.
>> Mhm.
>> How hard am I going to have to work in
my 20s? And I want like very specifics
like you cuz people everyone has a
different idea of hard work. I think if
you ask anybody if they work hard, I
think 100% of the population will say,
"Yes, I do." But actually, there's like
levels to this [ __ ] So, how hard do you
work? If we look at an average week,
why are you smiling?
>> I'm never not working. So, however many
hours are in a day, everything in my
life is optimized to the work that I do.
Every single thing. Because the work
that I do is important to me. And I'm in
a phase of my life where I really do
believe that the work that I'm doing can
change my life. It can change others
lives. So, it would be selfish of me to
not spend every minute thinking about
what I can do in order to help move the
work that I do that I'm passionate
about.
>> What about hobbies and stuff? And
>> what what do you have any hobbies?
Anything you do to
>> when you're not working?
>> I love a facial.
Facials are great.
That's the extent of hobbies. I don't
have hobbies. I I' I truly love what I
do every single day. I get to work with
the backbone of America. I get to work
with business owners who need my help,
who are very confused. And so I feel a
huge sense of responsibility every
single day to actually make decisions
that if I had Sarah looking over my
shoulder, listening to how I'm talking
to my husband and Sarah works with her
husband, like would she actually think,
"Oh, she is the person that she says she
is because of the way that Natalie
showed up to this conversation." And if
you have this responsibility and I would
recommend to anybody like manufacture in
every way possible responsibility, put
more responsibility on yourself. Feel
the weight of responsibility because
it's important and there's nothing wrong
with responsibility. We should want
responsibility because people who have
responsibility, what does that mean?
They're able to respond. Well, I don't
want to be unable to respond to
anything. I want to be the first phone
call when somebody is having a crisis. I
want to be the first phone call when
somebody is celebrating something. I
want to be capable and able to respond.
And so, the idea of hard work to me,
it's just a it's a requirement because I
have responsibility. And anybody who is
trying to shortcut the hard work, you
have to figure out almost how to gify it
for yourself and put different ways of I
guess creating pressure and
responsibility to keep yourself going
through it because sometimes it is
frustrating and overwhelming and never
burnoutinducing though and I think that
that's a misconception about hard work.
I don't know successful people who are
still in the game who are burnt out by a
long day. That the response isn't
burnout. Their their response might be I
want to go do something different for a
minute. But my business partner Grant
Cardone who I am obsessed with and that
was one of the greatest partnerships I
could have ever done in my entire life.
He says, "You're not a candle. You can't
burn out. A human being cannot burn out
because you are not a candle. So, can
you feel moments of pressure, stress?
Yes. I don't take any of those moments
as being a bad thing. It's not a
negative to feel overwhelmed because you
have responsibility. People depend on
you. People are relying on you to do
something great.
>> Burnout then in your view, why do people
say, do you know, I was doing this thing
and I got burnt out so I had what is
that? The thing that people do is not
actually leading to where they want to
go.
So if I thought that it was going to
require me to work out two hours a day
in the gym and only eat chicken and rice
and never have any of the things that I
love to never get a six-pack, I'm not
going to do that. But if I think that by
doing this work that's going to be hard
and I'm going to hate and it's going to
suck that I can actually get what I want
and my life would be changed because I'd
actually have a six-pack and I'd feel
confident and I'd be able to buy the
clothes that I'd want and I'd just be
part of the very small percentage of the
population that has one, then the
process of me going to the gym early at
5:00 before my kids get up wouldn't burn
me out. I would recognize that this is a
step that's necessary to get to my goal.
And at which point when the goal is
there, you might change your mind and
you might have a different goal. But
when people win, they are rarely burnt
out at that moment. I've watched
business owners sell their businesses
for hundreds of millions of dollars. Uh
I've watched them get hundreds of
millions of dollars in their bank
account. And that feeling of celebration
and joy happens to stay around for a
little while until that thing kicks in,
which is that individual's potential to
help somebody, to solve more problems,
to be able to make a larger impact. And
so that end goal does end up moving. The
goalpost ends up moving. And there's
actually nothing wrong with that.
Despite the world wanting to tell you
that there is something wrong with the
fact that you're moving the goalpost, I
don't think there's anything wrong with
it. and you only really get burnt out if
you don't see how the sacrifices that
you're making are actually going to lead
you to the six-pack. If you're going to
be overweight forever, then of course
I'm just going to eat candy and chips
and all the things that I love to eat.
But I do think I could get a six-pack.
So, I'm willing to make some of these
sacrifices here and there because the
goal isn't going to allow me to get
burnt out because I'm going to be so
freaking proud of myself by the time I
reach that goal. at which point I'm
going to change it to a different goal
and it's going to be just as interesting
and exciting of a game for me to play at
that point in my life.
>> We talked about responsibility earlier
and you work seven days a week and all
the time but only take time off for
facials.
There's a I know my audience well enough
to know that some of them will be
thinking that's all right for you. You
haven't got kids.
>> Totally.
>> How do you respond to that rebuttal for
people that have, you know, lots of
other responsibilities?
>> They're right. you can have kids and be
a great parent and also work a lot. And
so then your hobby instead of me getting
a facial would be you actually spending
intentional time with your kids. But I
would ask them this question. What is
the appropriate amount of time to spend
with your kids? Like how much is that?
What would make you feel good about how
much time you spent with your kids? Is
it 2 hours a day? Okay, great. 2 hours
focus time, dedicated time, not 4 hours.
half of that on television, on social
media, making calls, making dinner. No,
that that that's not workable. Two hours
makes sense. Or three hours, whatever
that person's goal is with the amount of
time that they want to spend being an
active parent, being somebody actively
involved in that person's life. But we
tend to just use these excuses. Oh, I
have sick parents. Oh, I have kids. Oh,
I have. And I find that very successful
people happen to have all of those. Oh,
I haves. And many of them, not all of
them, but many of them are able to
figure out, okay, I'm going to spend
this 90 minutes at the hospital fully
locked in to my dad right now. My dad
doesn't actually need me for 6 hours. My
dad needs me for 90 minutes. That time
is precious. It's blocked off. I'm
making the time for that. And then
outside of that, it is working in order
to build the life that you want. Because
guess what? Your dad is going to pass
away. If your dad passes away in a year
from now and 6 years from now, the
amount of time that you spent with him
needs to be important enough for you to
make that time. And I would hope that
everybody makes the amount of time that
is necessary for them to feel like they
did their job as the child, did their
job as the caretaker, whatever the role
is. But at what point are you going to
use other people's circumstances to stop
you from doing what you want to do and
creating what you want to have? And for
the parent who is very intentional with
their kids and and doesn't use their
kids as an excuse, I am all for spending
as much time as required for you to be a
good parent. It's that I find that the
other side is far more prevalent, which
is I'm using my kids. I'm using my
family. I'm using my circumstances. I'm
using my education, my lack of
experience as a reason for why I can't
do this thing. And when I find people,
because I work with people all day,
every day, when I find people like that,
the fastest way to handle that is be
like, "Hey, Sarah, let me see your phone
real fast." Sarah will give me your
phone, and I'll open up the screen time
on her phone. And if the screen time on
her phone has 3 hours of Netflix or an
hour and a half of Instagram, like just
reallocate that time to the thing that
you want to go build. Use your calendar,
use your time for building the life that
you actually want to have instead of
saying, "Oh, I have kids." While also
being distracted with your kids and not
being a parent, whatever that definition
for you is, a parent to them. I don't
think that kids are negatively impacted
by watching their parents work their
asses off. I think that that is an
inspiring way to grow up. I had two
parents who worked their tails off. And
I do think that I am part of the way
that I am because I had such incredible
parents who worked hard and who
prioritized their own goals and their
own success as something that was
important. And I would also argue it
should be more important than I am. Just
because you're a parent shouldn't mean
that your kids are the most important
thing in your life and you have to
overindex on spending all of your time
there.
>> What matters more being in your view
being happy and content with your life
or being successful even if it comes at
the cost of contentment?
>> They are the same thing. They're not
different. I do not find success and
happiness uh on two polar opposites. I
am happy when I create things and when I
can see in the physical universe that
I've done something that I wanted to do
whether that's
driving revenue, hiring people, helping
a business owner, that is when I I am
the happiest when I am doing the things
that are part of becoming successful.
>> So if Sarah who's scrolling on Netflix
is is content and happy,
>> she's not content or happy though.
>> How do you know?
>> Because what is she watching? Is she
watching Selling Sunset and watching
other people live their lives and
touring these gorgeous homes and having
these fancy things that Sarah would
would love to have? If she really
thought she could have those things,
if she really actually believed that for
a second and these are the steps that
are part of getting there, I do believe
that she would choose actually having it
versus watching it. I guess it depends
what it comes at the expense of because
I know a bunch of billionaires and
they're not amongst the happiest people
I know sometimes. I mean there's the odd
one or two that I think are really, you
know, really happy and content. But then
I've got friends that, you know, live in
my hometown who I think are probably
happier and that never, you know, have a
9 toive job, etc. And I would say
they're probably happier.
So, so that the house in my mind doesn't
strike me as being the source of
everyone's happiness. Even though for
for you and maybe even for me,
>> Mhm.
>> maybe that is the pursuit of those
things gives us some kind of stability.
>> Mhm.
>> Because of our own trauma and our own
wiring and our own insecurities, etc.
But for Sarah, maybe she had such a
cushy, lovely upbringing and she felt so
safe and secure and that she didn't she
wasn't without
>> that maybe she's like perfectly happy
just vicariously watching Netflix and
walking her dog.
>> I refuse to believe that that's
possible.
>> Really?
>> Yeah. Sarah is slapped in the face as
soon as she leaves that nice little
escape that she's created for herself of
Netflix of all of the things that she
can't have and that she can't do and the
experiences she can't create for herself
that she could never give to people
around her because she was distracted
and not actually building what she
wanted to build.
>> Maybe that's what she wanted to build
though,
>> a life of watching other people's lives
on social media, Netflix. People like
watching movies and stuff and they like
scrolling and you know they they like
cooking and then do a bit of crochet
then walk the dog and spend time with
the kids. People like that. I when I was
younger you know when I was like 18 19
20 25 whatever I didn't think it was
possible. I thought that everyone was
pretending
>> that they you know that they were happy.
But as I got older and as I started to
realize that I'm a bit [ __ ] up. It
became more and more clear to me that
actually had the circumstances of my
earlier life been slightly different, I
wouldn't be the way that I am and I
wouldn't want the things that I think I
want and I wouldn't get the contentment
and stability from the pursuit of
things. And so it's plausible if you
even look at your siblings, you go,
well, how are we all so different? Like,
you know, why why are why am I working
seven days a week every single day and
some of my siblings choose not to? It's
because we have we have different wiring
and we get happiness from different
things. And some of the things they do I
go I'd hate them. I'd hate that. My
brain would be going crazy thinking
about email.
You don't think Sarah can be happy?
>> I don't think Sarah's happy watching
Netflix and on social media. I think
that there is a deep sense of insecurity
and lack of contentment that's guised as
I'm happy and that's guised as or
covered of it's almost like a a facade.
I'm going to say that I'm happy.
But the realities of our economy and the
realities of her financial situation
create dependencies for Sarah. It
creates dependencies and with those
dependencies what I found is that the
things that you are dependent upon at
some level you will end up resenting.
If I'm dependent upon my one customer in
my business and they make up 80% of my
revenue, sure it's great when I sign
that deal. It's really sucky when that
customer ends up being a jerk because
now I'm dependent upon them 80% of my
revenue until I'm not dependent upon
them because I've diversified my revenue
and I've been able to bring on other
customers because I was able to market
my business and acquire an audience. And
so with Sarah,
I would ask if the median household
income is around $60,000
shy of $70,000 a year, what is Sarah
dependent upon to be able to afford the
Netflix subscription? And when she
scrolls on Tik Tok shop and wants to be
able to be like everybody else who's
living these cool lives doing these
glamorous influencer events or whatever
she's into, whatever is so captivating
to her that's making her watch this
instead of go out and do those things,
apply the makeup. How many makeup
tutorials do women watch without ever
even applying the makeup or using the
tools and the products? It's just
because they're distracted. I'm
wondering if this is a consequence of
the internet this this perspective like
because I I was in my head I was
skipping back through the through 50
years and then 100 years and I was going
back further I was like you know what's
human what what's the human sort of
wiring a thousand years ago when wealth
didn't exist like wealth was what you
could carry there was no such thing as
bank accounts or money so I was as
wealthy as what I could carry and
actually maybe as I think Nal said this
before that the only currency back then
which still persists and actually wealth
is just a proxy of is status status has
always meant survival It means that I
get the resources, I get the mates. But
wealth is isn't this construct that
actually the mind understands. But in
the last 20, 30 years because of social
media, we've all been sort of, I guess,
wired in a way to believe that
material possessions like the yacht or
the follow account is of utmost
importance.
>> Maybe it's just a proxy of like I belong
to I belong and I'm I'm not at risk.
Maybe it's a proxy of status.
>> I think it's a proxy of survival. Yeah.
Yeah. Exactly. So, I'm I'm wondering if
like if we've just been wired for the
last 20 years to believe that we need
these things because of the environment
that we're in, but actually like
prehistorically it doesn't make sense
that we would we would care about
we so pursuit I think is like really
hardwired into us. So, it's like we
wouldn't have these cameras and all in
this house and stuff. So, clearly my
ancestors were like wired to pursue
things and to build, but they were also
most certainly wired to depend
Like I think this is might be be one of
the real problems with society at the
moment is that we're all pursuing
independence,
>> you know, like I I think this is a bit
of a problem. I think about this quite a
lot actually like the decline in faith
and the decline in community
institutions and the decline in people
having kids and family. I'm like we're
really becoming really individualistic
and I'm not sure that's within our
nature.
>> See, I think survival has to depend upon
other people. It's not just my survival.
Once I've handled my survival,
the amount of money that I make, it
instantly goes to the problems that come
with other people's survival, whether
that's a family member, a group of
friends, and how far out that expands. I
don't think that changed 200 years ago
or 2,000 years ago. the ability to
accumulate things to better prepare
yourself in a harvest, better prepare
yourself in a in a time of a drought to
actually sustain and and make it through
to really survive. And the more contacts
that you have, the more you are setting
yourself up to survive. The more people
who know you, even though it's a little
bit of a status symbol, it's actually a
survival mechanism for you because
millions of people across the globe at
any point in time that you have a
problem, you've built enough trust and
credibility with them for them to be
interested in helping you. So, it's
actually a survival point. Now, of
course, you can run the spectrum of the
survival and say, well, is the
additional millionth follower or the
additional 2 million followers actually
leading to more survival? I would argue
that potentially, but what else could
you be able to impact if you were
thinking about the survival of you, of
your family, of the people that depend
on you, your team that's here? Like you
are creating abundance so that other
people can survive through what you have
created and you pursuing your own
survival and then having the second
order be the group around you, family,
the employees, the other groups that
you're a part of that you contribute to
in whatever ways you do and then those
concepts go further out to what can you
actually be responsible for for its
survival. What's interesting is this
this approach to sort of one's survival
and one's prosperity is resulting in us
having going through a genetic
extinction because people are not having
kids anymore. So Sarah scrolling on
Netflix with her four kids is actually
genetically surviving and all these
people that are focused on independence
and how much money I can make, they're
genetically becoming extinct. It's
>> fascinating. I'm basically playing
devil's advocate with myself because if
you observe my life clearly this is a
massive contradiction but um but it's
something that's been front of mind for
me at the moment is is this idea of like
dependence and independence and
obviously I'm approaching this season of
life where I'm going to have kids and
there's going to be trade-offs that I
have to make uh that I do make but I
guess we shall see what happens.
>> Do you think people respect you a lot
more now at 33 than they did when you
were
in 2019?
>> Of course they do. And what should
someone do that is looking to earn the
respect? Some someone that feels like
they're continually disrespected.
There's something about them. There's
something in the way they carry
themselves that what they continually
feel like people are disrespecting them.
They might work in a business or, you
know, they might be low down in a
company or maybe they're not. Maybe
they're just someone who's gone through
the corporate world and they're
continually disrespected. What would you
say they should do to to earn people's
respect? The first thing somebody has to
do in order to earn respect is to decide
that they would rather be respected than
liked. That trade-off is made too often.
We're in a situation when the right
respectful thing to do is unlikable. We
don't choose the right respectable thing
to do. We prioritize being liked. And so
when you make that decision to be
respected and to not prioritize what
everybody thinks about you, you can then
transition into the second step which is
you have to get stats in the area that
you want respect in. If you're low in an
organization or you have different
people around you who don't respect you
for a variety of different reasons. What
is the area of your expertise that is
undeniable?
It's proof. It exists in the physical
universe. It's not just because you had
an idea or you think you can be an
entrepreneur or you'd like to be someone
who gives people relationship advice.
I'm sorry, but if you're not in a
relationship and you don't have a stat
of being able to have a good
relationship and you can't have a spouse
that's like, "Wow, this person's great.
I love being around this person." You
probably shouldn't be giving that
advice. And that's why you don't have
respect in that area. So, I don't think
respect is a overall life respect. You
need to have respect in the different
compartments. It's not just Steven is a
respectable person altogether. That's
that's a facade to me. You might not be
respectable in certain areas. I maybe
shouldn't respect you in certain areas
of your life, but other areas, I would
think, areas that you've prioritized,
you're incredibly respectable in and
you've prioritized getting stats and
proof in those areas to earn people's
respect whether they like you or not
because you have something to prove for
it. Has that been a journey for you?
This idea of caring less about being
liked because you talked about that
earlier as being really central to your
sort of early 20s, etc.
>> It was so hard for me to not want to be
liked. I had a mom growing up who was a
medical doctor and just was the world's
most sweet, kind, thoughtful person. She
would sit down at a party and every
single person in that room loved her
immediately. That she just had this aura
about her. And so I watched my mom
growing up as a role model and somebody
who still to me today is a role model.
And she really emphasized how important
it is to ask great questions and to be
engaged with other people. And what I
lost in that process is well, if I'm
always asking other people and and
trying to get other people to like me
and it's always that flow, like what do
I actually think about myself because
I'm so focused on over accommodating
others? And so if you're trying to flip
this for yourself, you're trying to go
from I overindex on being liked and not
so overindexed on being respectable and
liking what I think about myself. You
really have to go out to your three-year
version of yourself and your 5-year
version of yourself because no one is
going to get clear on that for you
besides you. And once you put that stake
in the ground saying, "This is what I
want to be known for. this is who I want
to become. This is who I imagine myself
being. This isn't a manifestation
practice. It's a I'm going to decide who
that person is. And then I'm going to
like myself at 20, at 30, at 70 because
I'm acting in accordance with the way
that I view myself in the future. And
I'm going to become the person that I
want to be.
>> Have you found that you've had to
reinforce and protect your boundaries in
order to earn that respect? Do you find
that people try and test you? Of course
they do. I work with hundreds of team
members every single day who have their
own points of view and their own
perspectives on what they want the work
to look like, what they want our culture
to look like. And I think I've had to
wrestle with this so much because I want
to create an environment where people
can be successful. My definition of
leadership is making other people's
success easy. So, if I'm going to be a
leader, I'm going to make other people's
success easy. How would I go about doing
that? What type of environment would
they need to be in in order to actually
make their success easy compared to
their alternative, which is going down
the street and trusting that some other
leader is going to make them more
successful. And so, I really wrestle
with who I need to be and what the
boundaries are that I set for myself.
And one of the things I've gotten so
much criticism of uh online was when I
publicly shared a Tik Tok about firing
somebody because I found out that she
was cheating on her significant other
and the other person also had a
significant other. And as soon as I
found out about it, I terminated both of
them immediately. And it's so shocking
to people that
>> Wait, someone was cheating with someone
in the company?
>> Yeah.
>> Oh, and they both had partners outside
of the company.
>> Both had partners outside of the
company. As soon as I caught wind of it,
it wasn't even like a a split-second
decision. Well, I guess it technically
was a split-second decision. Was like, I
can't have this in my environment,
especially somebody close around me.
People trust me and should trust any
leader to help them make their success
easy. Am I making people's success easy
by putting inside that environment
people who are going to erode the values
of the group? No. Success for most
people isn't getting a divorce from
their significant other. Success for
most people looks like figuring out how
to have the success in their
professional lives and in their
financial lives while also being able to
have a spouse. I wouldn't want my
husband going out to work and being in
an environment where the company was
just fine with people cheating on each
other, lying to each other, and not
having a code of ethics, doing drugs.
Like none of that is something that I
want inside my environment cuz it's my
job to make people's success easy.
>> One would say that's none of your
business what they're doing when they go
home.
>> It is my business first of all because
it was with each other.
>> Yeah. But they're not doing it at work.
>> Well, there was a not to get into
specifics of the particular event, but
it happened to be around work related.
>> But if it wasn't at work, you still
>> even if it was, I would fire the person
immediately.
>> So you'd fire someone for cheating.
Absolutely. On their partner.
>> Absolutely.
>> I can't have cheaters. If they're going
to cheat on the person that they're
supposed to spend the rest of their life
with, do you think that they're cheating
on their work?
>> Do you think that they're going to cheat
on our clients? Do you think that
they're going to have the ethics and
morals and judgment to not be so
distracted with their own personal
ethics situation that they can actually
focus and do a good job? That person in
any environment is a liability to the
environment. It's a complete liability.
Some people have, you know, things in
their personal life which are very
different to the way that they show up
professionally. Though people people do
all kinds of things in their personal
life.
>> It's terrifying
>> cuz listen, the way that I see it is if
I expand the scope of my uh
concerns,
>> I'm going to get [ __ ] nothing done.
>> Mhm. So if I start, you know, going into
who they who they at home with and in
bed with and what's going on in their
personal life, unless they bring it to
me, obviously when you're the founder or
the CEO, people bring you stuff and they
say, "Look, this is going to impact my
work."
>> But um I, you know, bound I don't want
to be I don't want to be the government
of your [ __ ] personal situations as
well, as long as it doesn't show up in
the office.
>> Mhm.
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If I'm thinking of starting a business
in 2025,
you know, you've spoken to thousands and
thousands and thousands of business
owners online, probably many millions of
business owners.
When we think about that initial period
of like coming up with the idea and
picking what to work on. Is there any
advice you would give people based on
the success and failure you've seen
about what they should aim at, what they
should work on, especially in the
context of like 2025 when so much in the
world is changing so quickly?
>> If they could use the frame, if any
business owner or potential business
owner could think about starting a
business from the standpoint of where is
there the greatest chance for me to be
successful, that is the best frame to
use. Unfortunately, most do not use that
frame and they base it off of their
existing experience and the skills that
they have. If it was not based off of
existing experience or skills that
somebody has, I think great AI is going
to be the great leveler because nobody
has a lot of experience in AI. Nobody
knows in small businesses across America
how to hook up automations and start
working with assistants to be able to
put small businesses onto a CRM system
or an operating system that connects to
their financial software that allows the
business owner to make great decisions.
No one has done this at scale because it
didn't exist. And so if I was starting a
business in 2025, I would absolutely
look at how do I help business owners
who have an infinite budget for things
that actually work to make them more
money solve problems that are real to
them. And the problems that are real to
the 35 million business owners in the
United States of America is that they
don't know how to use AI. they are
terrified of AI and they're going to
either put their head in the sand or
assume that somebody who is young is
going to create the solution for them
when somebody instead who is experienced
could have a eight maybe even a nine
figure business over the course of the
next 18 to 24 months really figuring out
how to help solve these problems because
it makes the business owner to that
business incredibly sticky. the customer
is always going to be there and they
would be on the front end of something
that nobody has experience in.
>> So do you think a lot about this the
speed in which that market is growing
when you think about where to set up
shop and start a business?
>> Of course the market growth is
everything because if you want to start
a paper business in 2025, you would have
to be the best paper business and really
have a unique positioning to make that
successful. when you could do something
less well and be much more successful
because there's just more opportunity in
the growth and there's less players in
markets. So the growth allows for
innovation, the growth allows for new
entrance and as I mentioned with AI, uh
there's just an unprecedented
opportunity in front of people right
now. But I'm also very excited about
service-based businesses, roofers,
plumbers electricians
HVAC, all of those businesses.
The core of the business doesn't get
disrupted by AI until robots. But those
business operations are ripe for
somebody to come in, I don't care if
you're 15 years old or if you're 50
years old, and get paid tens of
thousands of dollars per client to
implement very simple solutions that
really do solve problems for those
businesses
>> using AI.
>> Using AI.
>> Yeah. I've heard you talk about when you
described the six most profitable
businesses that you think will be around
in 2026. We've talked about AI
businesses, talked about home services.
The other one was hybrid wellness clubs.
>> Mhm.
>> Why is why is health such a a big
predict prediction for you in terms of
profitability and a good place to set up
shop?
>> There's growth in the health space after
co the whole world changed and their
priorities changed as it relates to
health. the statistics I read recently
about alcohol sales connected to like
nightclubs, it's just it's not what it
used to be because instead of wanting to
go out late and party and do all sorts
of things, people are actually
prioritizing their health and providing
them with solutions for optimizing their
health is just it's continued to grow
for ever since co and it's going to
continue to grow with different types of
amenities at gyms with different types
of technology that people are inserting
into what a traditional I one time I
recently went to a a facial, my favorite
thing, my hobby. I went to get a
60-minute facial and they integrated IV
services into that facial experience.
Well, what else could you do that allows
somebody who is sitting in a chair for
60 minutes to add revenue to that
business that's connected to their
health and well-being? Those types of
innovations are happening in small
markets all across the world.
>> And why did you say in that video pet
care?
>> People love their pets and people will
spend money on their pets. People will
spend more money on their pets than
they'll spend on their kids and then
they'll spend on themselves. I mean, if
somebody has a dog, I recently talked to
somebody who told me that she was doing
Reiki with her 12 dogs. I mean, it's
just the the level of interest that
people have in taking care of their
pets. I think what's happened in that
market place specifically is as business
owners and high-income earners make more
money and they do have these pets, these
things that are dependent upon them that
aren't yet children. They want to spend
their discretionary income on making
that pooch that is their new best friend
phto comfortable
making him be well through all sorts of
offerings because I feel bad and it can
actually pay off my guilt by providing
phto with a caretaker and nail polish
and
EMF, you know, therapy.
And the other the other thing that I I
think is particularly pertinent to the
experience you've had is um so many
small business owners will come up to me
and say that they are
they won't say it like this but what
they're describing is that they're a
bottleneck in their own business.
>> They're at maybe I don't know a million
in revenue. I mean most people that come
up to me say this exact same thing.
They've reached about a million in
revenue in total and they don't know how
to scale beyond their typically like
service based businesses where someone's
doing a service for a client and uh what
would you what do you say to those
people when you've encountered them in
your your company?
>> Welcome to being an entrepreneur. This
is not a unique set of challenges. This
is an expected set of challenges. The
statistics show that the challenges that
business owners face at that break point
of taking what they are doing that is
working and transitioning that to having
other people help them is part of the
process. And so there is nothing wrong
with this business owner. It's just that
they don't technically know how to train
somebody to do what they do well that
then allows the business owner to focus
on the business owner's primary role.
And that primary role should be to
generate revenue. It shouldn't be the
dentist being in the person's mouth. You
cannot have 12 dental clinics and still
be the person that is helping the person
floss and making sure that they are
flossing. Right? Mostly hygienists help
dentists with that. But you have to get
out of the doing of your business and
you have to get into the scaling of the
operations of your business. And those
are just skills that you don't currently
have.
>> And what is that skill? What is the core
skill there? It's a tactical skill. And
the skill is opening up their calendar,
looking at what they do every single
day, duplicating through process
creation what it is that they do that
makes them a special snowflake in their
mind. Because every business owner
thinks that they are the only person
that can talk to their customer. They're
the only person that their clients will
listen to. Nobody is ever going to be
able to service their patient like them.
That's what they think. And so they
create those conditions instead of
saying, "No, I'm going to objectively
look at where I spend my time, and out
of all of the things that I do across a
50-hour work week, there are specific
things that are not the highest value
for me to continue to do, but I would
have to train somebody how to do that
thing flawlessly." It is not about
hiring somebody who's going to know how
to do that thing. That's where they fail
and then they lose confidence because
they think some magical unicorn employee
is just going to come into their lives
and take this thing that only know they
know how to do and actually be able to
do it. Of course, they can't. So, it's
this reinforcing thought that they have
instead of structuring it to say out of
these things, these are the specific
parts of the business that I want to
remove off of my plate so that in 3
months from now, I do not touch these
processes. In order to do that, I'm
going to document what I do. Ideally
using a framework like vision,
commitment, execution so that it doesn't
just get reduced down to steps, but so
that team members can understand the why
behind it, what the organization is
committed to, what the team member needs
to commit back to, and then actually
execute on whatever that process is. And
instead of just handing that person
those items in an onboarding and maybe
never checking it again, you're going to
go through a four-step process. First,
you're going to tell the person what
they're supposed to do, aka the process.
Ideally, then you show them what they're
supposed to do so that they can see how
this applies in real life. It's not just
something on a document. Then you're
going to let them do that thing. And you
are going to coach them and provide them
feedback on doing that thing. So when
you can see that you've properly trained
somebody and you've switched your
mindset from just assuming that adults
learn the same way that we used to learn
when we were children, which is just by
picking it up and figuring it out.
You're going to give them a full
structure, tell me, show me, let me
coach me on the most important things
that they need to be onboarded with. And
then you are going to actually measure
that they're able to do those things in
the way that you were able to do that so
that that role inside your business is
handled. And then you just do that over
and over and over again.
>> So often when people are having this
conversation with me about this, they
say, "Oh, I tried that and I brought
someone in and they [ __ ] up and and so
yeah, I'm not I'm just going to do it
myself." That's like the rebuttal that I
always get. It's always people saying,
"Well, I tried that. I trusted someone.
They [ __ ] me over. So that doesn't
work."
>> What responsibility can they take in the
interview process? What responsibility
can they take in the onboarding process?
Did they actually show that person what
they were supposed to do? Did they
ensure that the person knew what to do?
>> Do you think most people are bad at
hiring?
>> Of course they are. People are terrible
at hiring.
>> Where do they go wrong? Like what are
the biases that they that end up
consuming that process that make them
make a bad decision?
>> I don't think they really understand
what the work is that they're trying to
get that person to do. So they Google a
job description or they chat GPT or use
Grock to put a job description that
isn't actually connected to the real
outcomes in the role. I can imagine if
you posted for a marketing position
inside your business. For you, marketing
looks like lots of different things.
Yeah. For the average business owner,
I'm just going to I need somebody to
help me with marketing.
>> They don't even know what they're hiring
for. Yeah.
>> No. So then the person comes in with a
certain set of experiences and they are
going to drive based off of their
experiences whatever they think the
outcomes are for their role inside that
business because the owner never took
the responsibility to say this is how
I'm going to objectively measure. Was
this person successful based off of the
fact that the marketing that we do for
our plumbing business that's doing
$800,000 of revenue is actually email
marketing?
>> So, what if I don't know the right type
of marketing? Cuz I'm a plumber. I don't
know about [ __ ] marketing. So, I'm
going to be very easily duped by someone
that tells me that they know marketing.
What do I do to
minimize the probability of me being
duped?
Well, the good news is if you are a
plumber currently and you're doing,
let's say, $800,000 of revenue, you
figured out marketing for $800,000 of
revenue. So, the first thing in order to
not be duped would be ensuring that the
person that you're bringing on can at
least do what you are doing and they can
duplicate what you are doing. Now, once
they've demonstrated to you that they
can take on those tasks for that
800,000, they are competent. They
understand the business. They understand
who your customer is because you forced
them to. because you documented what you
did did to get the first 800 and maybe
that's even referrals. Great. What is
your referral process? And how then once
they've been able to master what you
created a model for, I like to call this
the four M. Model, mimic, master,
multiply. The business owner can first
create the model of what they are doing
today that's generating the $800,000 of
revenue in their plumbing business. I
take a model. I have the model. This is
what we are doing for email marketing
inside our business. Then I move into
seeing if they can mimic what is the
behavior to then move into mastering it.
And once somebody is at mastering
something inside a plumbing business for
$800,000 a year that it's generating,
they can then start to tweak and add
things and and maybe we're going to also
try one other thing. We're going to try
Instagram marketing because we know that
our plumbing clients are on Instagram
and we're going to have this strategy
here. So now I'm going to be able to add
to that. At which point when a team
member can go through those first three
M's, model, mimic, master, then they're
in a position to multiply their role.
Because if they really did master
something, the results would show that
to indicate that the business is ready
for them to add potentially a marketing
coordinator underneath the marketing
manager that can then go through those
first three steps of the process. while
the team member who was once responsible
for those things is no longer doing
those things but is being additive to
additional types of marketing inside
that business. The the other thing that
I often wonder is if people aim too low
with talent, especially like earlier
stage founders, they tend they tend
there tends to be a bit of insecurity
there and they don't want
someone to come in and tell them what to
do in a particular domain
>> because I think the further I've got in
my career, the more I've sought out
people that are like significantly
smarter than me and I see that as the
game. But in the early innings of my
career, I think I was
hiring people I could manage.
Do you think you weren't as successful
when you were hiring people you could
manage
>> 100%?
>> Because now you're able to bring on
talent to help you bring on whole new
lines of revenue, whole new
partnerships, business opportunities,
manage those things.
>> Yeah. In the early innings of my career,
I was particularly aiming at young
people that were like my age or younger
cuz I was what I was what 20. So, I'm
like, how how the hell am I going to
bring in a 45-year-old that's been doing
this for 25 years and get and and be
able to tell them anything, which is
what which was the fault in my thinking
cuz I thought my job was to tell them
what to do and to give them the vision
and but actually as I I think got more
secure in myself, I realized that the
game is the inverse, which is try and
find truly exceptional people that know
things I don't know and create the
conditions where their knowledge is adds
to the hive mind of the decisions of
this organization.
And actually that's what we need. We
need new thinking, new experiences.
>> I think that's important once you reach
$30 million of revenue. But until you as
the founder
can generate something that you can
prove works and you can replicate what
works, you open yourself up to
significant risk. And the stats show it.
the the majority of businesses, 97% of
businesses fail within 10 years. So by
trusting or thinking that you're going
to bring on somebody who's smarter than
you, you're not actually taking on your
role to say this is what I want to
build. This is what I've built so far.
before you will be additive to this
environment, I need to make sure that
what we have built so far, the $800,000
of revenue, the $2 million of revenue,
the $10 million of revenue, I need to
first make sure that you can do that.
>> Because if you can't do that and we
can't duplicate what we're already doing
that works well, we don't know what is
the right idea to bring in because there
isn't a a core understanding of what
makes this business run today. And the
last thing that you want to do is bring
on a leader. Let's say your business is
doing $10 million of revenue and you
think that there's somebody out there
that is smarter than you who's going to
entirely change your sales process.
Maybe you weren't the best salesperson.
You hired a salesperson on very early.
They've tapped out in their ability to
add additional salespeople and really
properly run a sales team. Well, as soon
as that's happened and you're going to
bring on this external person, it would
be great if they could add $20 million
of revenue. But if it's through some
different product and different service
and different way that disrupts what got
you to 10 million, you're not at 10
million any longer. You're at 8 million
or 7 million. And there's real slipbacks
that happen. And to me, that's more of
the reality that I see, which is the
slipback because the business owner
doesn't know enough about the core parts
of the business to decide how the
business is run, what the core offer is
to have the confidence to then bring on
people who are additive that can't break
the business.
So you think we you should approach with
caution because there's risk associated
with on boarding people that might be
expensive and um
know too much about I guess be I guess
it goes back to being duped be able to
dup you by you not fully understanding
what they're saying and what they know
>> and they can't dup you if you know what
you are already doing. If you're really
willing to model what is currently being
done and they are willing to be humble
enough to come into your environment and
learn the reasons why. This doesn't have
to take years. This can take a handful
of months. I'm not talking about like
stifling innovation for quarters and
quarters or years and years to make sure
that they like really are indoctrinated
with the way that the organization
works. Absolutely not. That wouldn't
work. The way you have to do it is
quickly assessing that they understand
the way the things work inside your
current business. We just recently
brought on a new seauite um within the
first handful of weeks. I can tell that
he's picking up on what our core
business has does. And if I didn't think
that, it would be hard for me to trust
some of his recommendations because I
brought on a seuite team member earlier
this year who had all these fanciful
ideas and this, you know, the the big
names and you think that they're going
to bring on all these things, but they
can't actually contextualize what their
experience is to the core business
because they don't understand the core
business. And then it ends up
disenfranchising the team members that
they're responsible for working with.
And I have seen more often than not that
trusting too early on without that
founder getting the necessary skills
ends up in the luck scenario instead of
this was a strategy because I knew and
had certainty about what was going on
and I'm good with what my four walls
are. This is what you are going to
bring. That is incredibly additive to
that core business. But that rigor and
that discipline has to be there from the
founder first.
>> It's interesting. Yeah, it's really
interesting. And I think part of my bias
is because I've been there before. I
would never start a new business now
without aiming extremely high with the
talent. But that's actually because I'm
harder to dup now. So if you have to pay
someone a huge salary for example and
give them a huge package whatever
>> I'm better able to assess whether they
are worth it and what their ROI is going
to be versus the start of my career
where hiring someone on and taking such
a big risk on someone I didn't have
enough data to understand if I was being
duped or not. So it was a lot of faith
and trust and well they worked at this
incredible company so they must be good
and I've also seen that completely
backfire as well. Um, you talk about
these 10 steps to becoming a millionaire
in a video that you made uh in December
in 24 and there are a couple of things
that I wanted to to pull out here. So,
you out outline this 10-step process to
becoming a millionaire within a year and
one of them is researching what jobs
millionaires have.
Then rate your interest and skills in
each and pick one to master.
The other one is cut out friends who
drain energy or don't stop your goals.
Study the 10 most successful people in
your field through podcast, videos, and
books.
Use every moment to build skills. Follow
only millionaires on social media and
eliminate all distractions such as
Netflix and doom scrolling.
Be willing to invest and go into debt.
As without investment knowledge, you
will stay broke.
Attend events with successful people.
Research you'll be attending. Master
selling yourself, your customers, and
your team members daily.
On this point of selling, is there
anything on this subject of how to be a
great salesperson that we haven't talked
about that you think is important?
Whether it's selling yourself or selling
your ideas or selling your business or
>> one of my favorite quotes from Grant
Cardone, to the extent you are sold, you
will sell.
>> Oh, okay. So to the extent in which you
believe something is the extent you'll
be able to make others believe in the
thing.
>> Mhm. So if you're not sold on yourself,
on your business idea, on the product
that you're selling for the company that
you work for, on getting another
department to work crossunctionally with
you, if you aren't really sold on that,
you will not sell. But I think it goes a
layer deeper than that often times
because
it's easy to look at I'm not selling the
product inside my business. Maybe I'm a
team member. I'm in sales and I'm not
hitting my quota this month of cars that
I'm supposed to sell. And I'm like,
well, like I don't really feel good
about the fact that I sell cars. Like I
this car is a piece of crap. Of course,
I'm not selling the car. And you can get
very critical of the thing and
rationalize why you are not good at
sales. But if you really do take a step
back, why did you choose to sell cars in
the first place? Why is that the thing
that you said, I'm going to spend my
time and energy being sold on? You could
have chosen lots of other opportunities.
and you actually being sold on the PR
firm that you wanted to work at instead
of taking the sales job that you got and
not confronting the PR rejection that
you got landed you in this place where
you're unsold and then you're critical
of your environment and you're critical
of the product and then you think you're
not good at sales when really you just
needed to go back to that thing that you
were actually sold on because you sold
yourself on why you thought for you that
was your opportunity. then you just
missed the target and instead of being
unreasonable about the target, you
became reasonable and started selling
something you didn't believe in and then
you think that you're not good at sales.
And so the reasonleness
in yourself in what you want to be doing
is actually why I find that salespeople
can't sell. It's not about their
inherent skills. If I can get them sold
on the product, of course I'm going to
get them sold on the product. I help
business owners across the country get
sold on getting their team members to
sell roofs. I believe that somebody
knocking on the door and selling roofs
is the most important thing for that
team member. I am sold on the fact that
they're working for a roofer who cares
about them. So, I'm like, "Hell yeah,
let's get on the roof." I've was on a
roof about a month ago and then was on
another roof two months ago cuz I
literally helped these business owners
train their sales team members to sell
roofs. And these sales team members
aren't naturally interested in roofs.
They didn't wake up one day and thinking
like, "My life's dream is to sell a
roof." But what are they sold on?
They're sold on the opportunity to
potentially join this roofing company to
go from one location to two locations,
three locations, five locations because
the business owner has created that
vision for them and the salesperson can
sell themselves on the skills that they
have to understand how to sell a roof.
Maybe not the sexiest thing, but that's
a stepping stone in order to be a future
expansion partner with this business
owner because this opportunity exists.
So, how do I sell a roof? If I'm on that
roof with you and you're trying to train
me to sell the roof better,
>> how what are you saying to me is
>> Well, ideally, you're knocking on the
door of the homeowner.
>> Okay. I knock on the door.
>> You knock on the door.
>> Yeah.
>> And you go through if there was a storm.
There's all sorts of ways that you can
sell roofs, but let's say that there was
a storm nearby or recently that hit that
area and you could go the easier route,
which is going through insurance because
that roof is completely then paid for.
But then you'd need to go up on the roof
and or use a drone to look at the real
damage because that in and of itself is
a sales skill. Somebody going up and
pointing out the problem that that
person has that they do not know in that
moment that they have helps the person
feel confident in selling that roof. So,
it's just as much a part of a process to
go walk the roof or to fly a drone over
that roof to see the damage as it is a
selling mechanism for the salesperson
because you're not just selling somebody
a roof that doesn't need a roof. They
actually have a problem. And then you
would educate that sales individual on
the damage that that can do long term,
the value loss of that property. And if
you can sell the salesperson on why that
homeowner deserves to know that their
roof has something that insurance could
pay for that could get fixed for them
within a handful of weeks that doesn't
erode the biggest investment that that
person has likely made in their life,
their home. All of a sudden, I have an
army of salespeople who are interested
in selling roofs because they're sold
not just on the fact that it's a roof,
but the impact that that work makes on
the person that they're selling and
ideally the opportunity that they have
inside that company to be freaking great
at selling roofs.
>> So, you you pointed out the problem that
they have. You've then assigned a cost
to that problem, how much it's going to
cost them over the long term or short
term, and then you posed the solution,
which is to get the roof repaired. And I
guess you're trying to frame the
solution relative to the cost so that
the solution is not bigger or more
costly than the the cost of having a bad
roof.
Earlier on, you mentioned um this this
phrase which I've not heard before and
it was just before we started recording
you talked about a woman's wealth
transfer.
>> And when I asked you what was front of
mind for you at the moment, you
referenced that you were thinking a lot
about the women's wealth transfer. What
is this?
>> The women's wealth transfer. between
2025 and 2030 looks like just these are
US stats 10 trillion dollars are in the
hands of women right now and between now
and 2030 that number is going to go up
to $30 trillion.
So this wealth is going to balloon. And
when you think about the implications of
how this wealth transfer happens, it's
not just cash that is given to women all
of the sudden because they're making
more money. There's a transition because
of differences in life expectancy in
partners. A man and a woman, there's
about a on average
>> men are going to die first.
>> Yep. And it's about five and a half, six
years. So women are left with assets,
not cash, like homes, businesses,
portfolios, investments, bank accounts
that often times they were left out of
the conversation with the financial
adviser. And they don't actually know
how to operationalize, how to manage
because up until as recent as 50 years
ago, women weren't even allowed to open
bank accounts without their husband or
their father until that passed in the
80s. And so the wealth is actually
moving towards women. But women today
feel less financially able due to
content creation. There was recent study
done by a company called Elvest where
they analyze the amount of manifestation
content on the internet created by women
creators. There's 12 times as much
manifestation content from women
creators as there is investing and
equity content. Or 70% of women feel
more overwhelmed with financial
information after consuming the content
because it's a tip or trick or hack that
is being shared instead of a real system
and process for how do they take
something and systematize or
operationalize this business that has
equity. But then there's trucks maybe
that they're inheriting. Then there's
debt on this business. And it's just a
brand new conversation. And as women get
more financially literate, as they get
more financial opportunities, there have
to be more ways for them to be in these
conversations. They have there have to
be more ways for them to understand how
to navigate what opportunities didn't
exist structurally even up until as
recent as 20, 30 years ago. And so I'm
passionate about this because I see this
incredible time where
I help people every day understand how
to grow businesses and be competent in
businesses. So as the total wealth
transfer takes place over the next 20
years from baby boomers to the next
generation, that total wealth transfer
is about $124 trillion.
How do I equip women to feel confident
with the decisions that they're making,
to not just fire their financial
advisor, which 70% of them do after
their spouse dies within the first year,
and actually know before this
catastrophic event takes place, how they
control the money, how they feel
confident with the money. So that once
they have it, it is not in moments of
panic and stress and frustration that
they are having to figure these things
out. They already feel like they are
equipped with conversations about what
is a P&L and how do I understand what's
happening with my 401k and still some of
these concepts are just out of sight,
out of mind and traditionally held by
male roles in a household. So what would
you recommend people do who find
themselves in that situation where
they're they are financially illiterate?
You used the word earlier on financial
crisis.
>> Is that dovetailing into the same thing?
Is that because people is that the
financial illiteracy point?
>> You say financial crisis
>> for me the financial crisis is how few
people are actually making enough money
to make ends meet. The financial crisis
is that there are so many businesses, 35
million in the US alone, and yet less
than 200,000 make more than a million
dollars. And if less than 200,000 make a
million over a million dollars and the
average margin of a business is 8.5%,
you just you you're circling the drain
as to how much money people are actually
making. It seems like there's so much
money because of social media. And there
are team members who work in
organizations that make more than
$60,000 a year, but people are actually
making less money than I think society
believes because of the proliferation of
content creation. And so this crisis to
me is has much more to do with how do we
get people skills that they need with
our life expectancy in total looking
like it's going to be longer based off
of the different treatments that are
coming out due to AI in healthcare in
genomics.
>> What do you think is the most important
financial information the average person
needs in this regard?
>> I think the most important financial
information is actually that money
matters. And if money matters, how are
you spending your time today, tomorrow,
the next day to get skills and to do
things that generate money? And if you
can align your time with making more
money instead of thinking that it's some
fixed resource or there is some scarcity
around it, you could actually increase
the the top line because you can save
your way to the bottom, but you get to
the bottom. There's no abundance in the
in the bottom. So what are the skills?
Like if I was somebody that was trying
to earn more money today, I would go on
to one of the AI platforms and say this
is the set of skills that I have. These
are the set of interests that I have.
This is the current job that I hold,
what I do for work, and my goal is to
increase my income between now and 12
months from now by $100,000. what are
the specific skills and the associated
syllabus for each week if I carved out
two hours a day for me to learn that you
could put together for me so that I can
actually get skills that would
demonstrate that I'm able to make more
money. And I think that message is
missed when people talk about investing
and 401ks.
Sure, you can make your 6%, your 8%,
your 10%. But what can you actually
control? And what does every individual
have the ability to control? their
skills and how they exchange those
skills for problems that they are
solving in exchange earning more income
and then they're able to invest in and
do all of those other things. But those
things are ancilliary. They are not the
main thing. The main thing is you need
to get skills. You are going to live
longer. Wake up, smell the roses. The
world is going to be a very long place
that you are going to inhabit for the
next potentially hundred years on
average. So let's get comfortable with
learning more, understanding what our
stops are to learning so that we aren't
scared as the world changes of having to
acquire new skills. Before the diary of
a co was what it is today, it was just
an idea. And it started with me, a cheap
plug-in microphone, and my Mac right
here. And I have to say when I first had
the idea for the diary of a CEO, my
thinking was that the world might want
to see into the diaries of some of the
most interesting, successful people
really in high places that were doing
interesting things. So after recording
that first episode under my duvet, I sat
on my Mac, which is from our sponsor
Apple, and spent hours editing and
eventually uploaded it. And honestly, I
thought that would probably be it. But a
couple of my friends said they enjoyed
it, so I kept on recording. And over
time, the microphone has changed and we
now have this incredible setup here. The
thing that has stayed the same is I'm
still using the Mac. Even today, my
entire team across our studio still uses
the Mac. Our first few episodes maybe
had tens of people listening, but now
tens of millions of people tune in all
over the world, which is still
absolutely crazy to me. So, if there is
an idea that keeps tapping you on the
shoulder, this is your sign to start.
Your great ideas start on Mac. And you
can find out more at apple.com/mac.
I did something at 24 years old that has
had a profound impact on my life. I set
myself the challenge of posting every
single day on my social media channels.
And at the time, I was doing it to grow
my following. But it had this profound
impact on my life. And two remarkable
things happened when I did that. I
managed to learn faster because every
single day, I'm capturing what is
happening to me and trying to distill it
down into something that I can share
with the world. But more remarkably, it
led me to building a following of many
millions of people. And that's the basis
that I used to launch the diary of a co.
And that's why I want to tell you about
our sponsor today, Adobe Express. They
are the platform that I use to make all
the posts across my LinkedIn and across
my Instagram. It's a couple of clicks
and you don't need to be an expert. And
that is why I love using it because I'm
not an expert in graphic design. It's
accessible to use for all of us, even if
we don't have the technical prowess to
design great things. So, if you want to
start compounding both your reach and
your knowledge like I did at 24 years
old, then head to adobe./stephven.
y/stephven
and get started with Adobe Express.
That's adobe.
Stephven.
People love talking about passive
income,
>> especially on YouTube and the internet.
They everyone wants passive income. The
idea that you can make income and do
[ __ ] all is unbelievably compelling.
>> Sign me up.
>> I would like some passive income.
>> What is the reality of this? Because
there's a real obsession with figuring
out ways to make passive income. I want
to earn money when I sleep.
>> Um, what is the reality of that? Is that
is that a thing? Is that possible? Is
that something I should be aiming at?
>> You should aim at that. Once you have a
million dollars in your bank account
before you have a million dollars, don't
even think about passive income. You
have you have no asset to actually earn
passive income off of. And your time is
much better spent learning how do you
get your first million dollars than it
is through passive income and thinking
how you're going to earn a percentage on
the principle that you've invested. If
you make $60,000 a year, medium wage,
United States of America, if you make
$60,000 a year, 8% on that isn't gonna
get you to financial freedom. So, don't
figure out how to crack 8% to maybe I'm
going to get 15% returns because the
principle is still so small. The 60,000
is so small. What do you have to do?
Actually learn how do I make my income
160,000. But what's wild once people
learn how to do this and the skill of
learning is like it's the greatest drug
on planet earth because you learn how to
do something and you become competent in
it and as soon as you get there you're
like oh my gosh if that's all it took
for these people that I used to think
were special to earn an additional
100,000 and now all I have to do is do
that same process again to go from where
I'm at to be able to earn 1.6 6 million,
do a 10x, sign me up. Because you get
this confidence from learning how to do
things. And so passive income is great
at a certain stage of life and at a
certain stage of financial protection,
but it is not. It is financial
protection. It is not for the people who
are saying I want to go build something.
I want to grow something. I want to
create something. It is a it is to me
almost the opposite of survival
actually. It's your backup plan. It's
your rainy day fund in case [ __ ] hits
the fan. And I'm not opposed to having a
backup plan. It's good to have a backup
plan, but 99% of your time should be
focused on how do I make the first plan
go freaking right and do everything I
can today to control plan A.
>> You talked about acquiring skills being
the key thing there. Um obviously the
world is changing quickly because of AI
and all the skills that a lot of people
once acquired in university you know
accountants, lawyers, um podcasters I
guess
>> um our skills are quickly being replaced
by intelligence machines and systems
that can now do what we do. And when you
look around the corner at what's going
on in robotics, I think Neo, the
robotics company this week put on sale
their first humanoid robot which can
move through the physical environment
and do things. And when I combine these
two things, I can combine intelligence
with the ability to manipulate the
physical environment, I go, where are
where are humans going to going to be in
all this? Cuz it is conceivable. It's
perfectly conceivable to me that
much of what
we employ people to do these days will
be redundant in the in the near future.
>> Mhm. And that's not to say that there
won't be new jobs, but it's a difficult
time to be um investing heavily in any
particular skill set. Well, some to some
skill sets because they're they're
becoming invalid in no time at all. Like
even as a writer, so like I've written
two books and I enjoy the process of
writing. I considered it to be one of my
edges. I was like, I'm quite good at
writing. So that's useful. You can build
a personal brand. You can send good
emails. You can convince people,
investors, whatever it might be. But
even now like [ __ ] everyone's got like
AI now chatb2. they can just produce AI
slop and they can literally just say
write it like Steven or write it like
Natalie. So the edges are are going What
is the edge of the future in your view?
What is the edge? What is the skill I
should double down on that the robots
and AI aren't going to steal from me?
>> I think the only skill that we can
actually double down on in a world of AI
is the skill of learning and adapting
because we cannot predict what the world
is going to look like in 2040. We do not
know what robots are or aren't going to
be capable of. I'm not as bullish on
this. I watched Elon have a interview
over the weekend about his take on AI
and he said that it's a supersonic
tsunami in which he proceeded to explain
that supersonic is traveling at the
speed of sound and a tsunami is a wall
of water. And so if you think about that
being AI, it's coming, it's here, it's
fast. And of course, he benefits from
everybody believing all of those things
with all of the companies. And I am a
pro Elon person. I I love what he has
built. I love his mind. But I think that
we're further away than people think,
but it is still coming. And so the only
hedge that somebody can have is the
ability to adapt and learn. And what AI
should be used for with every individual
is the ability to learn. Acknowledge
what you don't know. That is the
greatest strength somebody has. Really
be comfortable saying, "I do not know
how to read a P&L. I don't know how to
read this legal contract. I don't know
anything about AI and what I've heard
LLM. Uh I don't really know what it is
or agentic. What's the difference?" And
be able to convince yourself why that is
the most important skill for you to push
past that barrier of learning something
new. That is so uncomfortable because
the the names are new and you feel like
a freaking idiot and then you think
everybody is smarter than you and that
you're just some fraud. To push back on
that and to have some resilience through
it to say, I'm going to adapt through
this. I'm going to get to the other side
and learn so that I concretely can have
confidence that I can change in any
environment based off of what's needed
of me in that environment and I will add
value to that environment regardless of
whatever the external circumstances are.
That is the only choice. There is no
alternative choice.
>> Are you scared about AI?
>> I'm not scared at all. I'm pumped. As
you can tell, I'm really excited because
I used to feel dumb. I used to feel like
there were things that these smart
people knew that I didn't know. And my
entire
outlook on life changed a handful of
years ago when this got launched because
AI has taught me in two years what I
would have had to go to school for and
would have had to get a degree in still
to just find out that most people who
went to school for those things and had
degrees in them missed something
critical and important. And so for me,
and I think people like me, and I don't
think there's anything particularly
special about who I categorize as people
like me, it is a unprecedented time to
lean into this reference of information
that can specifically tutor you on what
you don't know, to actually equip you.
you've never had this opportunity before
and it's not specific to you with your
gender or your race or your age. It's
accessible.
And so I'm beyond excited because
anything that comes up that's like, oh,
this just changed the whole dynamic of
the business. Guess what? I have AI to
help me understand that and to help me
get whatever skill I need in this new
world. Same thing that people 100 years
ago had to do. Same thing that 2,000
years ago people had to do. They just
didn't actually have a tool to help them
understand what was happening to then
learn what needed to happen from them
whatever they had misunderstood Zar in
in order to actually get to the other
side with real skills.
>> Natalie, what do you think is the most
important thing we haven't talked about
that we should have talked about as it
relates to what you know about who my
audience are and what they're interested
in?
I think this is a connected subject but
I would want anybody in the audience
whether you make 60,000 a year a million
a year a 100red million a year to
actually have the belief in themselves
that they can learn anything that they
want to know and that there isn't
actually a barrier there that exists
because if I could get people to really
believe that their entire life would
change due to the access that they have
today due to the tools that they have
today. And so taking that confidence
that I can walk into any room with any
big shot with anybody who knows
something about a particular subject
matter that I know nothing about and
feel totally comfortable being in that
environment because you can prep
yourself. You can learn about it and
life is so beautiful because you get
those experiences and you don't have to
be scared of them. you can learn and you
can understand and there's nothing
that's wrong with you to where you can't
and there's no special privilege or
special characteristics that somebody
has that you don't have in that you can
learn anything.
>> Did you used to think there were special
characteristics or some kind of genetic
genius gene that these people at the
very top had and and how how did that
change once you were in rooms with those
people? Of course, I thought that there
was some genius button that somebody
clicked at birth before coming out of
the womb where they just got to be
special and they got to understand
things. I really struggled growing up
with remembering numbers. Numbers were
so challenging. I would just reverse the
numbers and then they wouldn't stick in
my brain and I thought I was stupid for
so much of my life. And for anybody who
also struggles with that, what you would
come to find out being around lots of
people, successful or unsuccessful
people, is everybody has that thing. So
the faster that you can attack it and
get yourself comfortable with numbers,
what I realized is like that was just a
story I told myself because had I ever
spent an afternoon on a Sunday with my
extra time actually trying to get better
at remembering numbers. No, I hadn't. I
just used it as an excuse. And
successful people just limit the amount
of excuses that they allow themselves to
believe for why they aren't successful.
They take the limitation that they have
and either they so overindex in the
strength and they ignore that or they
realize that that limitation is actually
at a point where it is limiting them. So
they have to attack it and take the time
to get better and shore up that area to
then be able to springboard from there.
>> There's also I guess another layer to
this which is men tend to rate their own
performance higher than women do even
when their actual performance is equal.
And there's a bunch of different studies
that site this. There's one famous study
that people always talk about which
might not be I think might be refuted
now but it said that men apply for a job
when they meet 60% of the listed
qualifications while women only apply
when they meet 100% of the listed
qualifications which in part as it
relates to top jobs um in in Europe
people think that this is part of the
reason why men are more likely to be in
full-time top jobs um because they that
overconfidence
means they're more likely to apply and
therefore more likely to um I convince
pe other people and more likely to get
the job. So there is something there
seems to be a difference in genders in
terms of
the need to feel ready and the need to
feel qualified.
>> That's so real to me.
>> Yeah,
>> that is so real to me. I get to work
with people every day and I will have a
personal, professional, and financial
goal conversation with team members who
are in the exact same role. Let's say
they're an account manager. One will be
a female, one will be a male. The woman
is like a rock star. She like the
clients love her and she's so good and
she just has like this little like
magical spark. So, I'll be sitting with
them with their personal, professional,
and financial goal conversation, and the
woman will say, "Oh, I'd like to go from
making $80,000 a year to maybe in a year
from now making 90,000." And the next
hour I will have a conversation with a
guy, who is not as performant as she is,
and he will say, "Yeah, I'm making
80,000 a year. Think in the next three
years I should be up to 200, 250." I've
had this happen over and over and over.
So, I watch this in real time. And my
go-to in that is
to sit down with a girl and to say, "I
want you to imagine what your life is
going to look like in 3 years from now.
So, if you're 35 years old, you're going
to be 38 years old. What does life look
like? Who are you spending time with?
How much money are you making? Have you
traveled? Do you have a spouse? Do you
have kids? Like what what does life look
like? And what I want you to do if you
don't have an account already is I want
you to get hooked up with Pinterest and
you are going to create a board and you
just going to go through all of these
incredible things that you could have in
your life that you actually want. Not
the stupid things like the things that
you're like, if my life could include
that, it would change my life. I would
love to have that life. For me, that
would have been full sequin suit.
Because if you can't do that, you're of
course going to be stunted in what
you're going to do in order to get
there. If it was a man who was
struggling with that, though, I'd do the
exact same thing. That to me is the real
job of a leader is to inspire people
enough not about who you are and all of
your accomplishments, but to actually
have them see that they could have the
life that they want through the work
that they do every single day. and tying
those two things together and being
ruthlessly honest with them when they do
things that hold them back and remove
things that are in their way.
>> Natalie, we have a closing tradition
where the last guest leaves a question
for the next not knowing who they're
leaving it for. And the question left
for you is um a fairly well-known
question actually. It is, what would you
do if you knew you would not fail? If I
knew that I wasn't going to fail, I
would just like I'd fix world hunger and
I'd fix all of these things. But like
short of thinking that I could solve
those particular problems, it's it's
selfish to not have those goals and
dreams, I just think for my actual life
today, I really believe and preach and
to my core I feel act out that
I take massive action towards goals that
do seem unbelievable or unreal to me.
And right now the the set of goals that
I have are the things that I'm very
confident that I'm not going to fail at.
And I'm spending time doing those things
in order to get myself as close as
possible to the woman that I want to
become. And I could change my mind in a
handful of months or a handful of years
once I've achieved those things. But I
guess I already actually do think that
I'm living my life short of solving
world hunger and like world peace. that
I'm doing everything that I know how to
do to make an impact on the world.
>> I noticed that um you know I've had a
bunch of conversations on this show with
people like Evie Porus who is the uh the
the Secret Service agent and you have a
lot of similarities to her. M
>> I think because of the directness in
which you speak and I think part of the
resonance is people want to know how to
be taken seriously in this world
>> and I think they they they look at you
and see someone who is like them in many
ways or at least how they aspire to be
but is taken seriously in a world that
is often hard to be taken seriously in
especially as a woman in male-dominated
environments especially things like the
finance industry and investment industry
it's hard to be taken seriously it's
hard to be respected ffected.
>> And so people I think people have a deep
sense that they are being being
diminished. They are like misunderstood.
They're not being heard. And so they
when they hear someone that speaks so
clearly and with such conviction as you,
>> um they they want to learn how to do it.
>> Is there anything in that regard that
we've we've left off? because I was I
was I was on your YouTube channel and I
was looking at some of your recent
videos and one of the recent videos that
has been incredibly resonant to people
is this exact point which is the 1%
secrets to make anyone respect you
instantly.
>> Is there anything within the subject of
that video? And I was looking at the
comment section. It was a lot of people
talking about how they feel
someone has disrespected them or that
they feel they've been ignored or not
heard. Is there anything you'd say to
those people?
>> Being looked down upon, being not taken
seriously is actually your superpower.
And you have to convert the energy of
that frustration into what are you going
to do in that environment next time to
be taken seriously. I went to a charity
event was about a decade ago now and I
remember being mortified because I was
in this career pivot where I was making
the decision to work with Brandon and
the
>> your husband
>> my husband yeah and the proverbial
question of like what do you do came
around to me and I fumbled the question
and for the rest of that night and it
was actually a charity trip the person
just didn't take me seriously and they
were somebody that I wanted to respect
me and I was so pissed off at myself
that I messed it up that I hadn't
created something at 22 or years old
that was more impressive that they would
take me seriously and so I made it my
mission between that point and the next
year when we would go on that trip for
them to take me seriously and I had to
look at what do I have to do what do I
have to create in order for somebody to
take a 24 year old seriously
>> what did you have to do and create
>> well I launched a podcast and I had to
work on this communication skill cuz I
was terrified to communicate. I used to
not be able to communicate like this. I
had a horrifying experience when I was
in my early 20s where I was supposed to
present this new leadership program that
was being rolled out at this
organization. And I was nervous ahead of
time but was fairly confident in the
material that I was presenting. And I
walked up to the front of the room and I
was the first person to speak. It was
8:00 in the morning and I got through
five minutes of my hourlong
presentation. I turned around to the
presentation screen to point out
something and turned back to the
audience. And in that moment, I was
instantly petrified. The nerves took
over every fiber of my body. I could not
control what I was saying. My thoughts
and my words did not connect. And I
proceeded to give the rest of my
presentation that was supposed to take
an additional 55 minutes in seven. And
then I sat at the front of the room
while everyone around me was talking
about all the different components of
the things I was supposed to be
highlighting because I just couldn't
articulate them. And from that point for
about four years, I was unable to have a
conversation with people that had a
larger group than four or five because
this disconnect for me happened and this
anxiousness took place and I had to work
on this skill to learn how to
communicate. And so I launched a podcast
and the only topic that I felt
comfortable talking about at that point
I didn't have some business expertise. I
wasn't naive enough to think that
somebody was going to listen to me at
the wise age of 23 or 24, my early 20s,
and how to run a business. So, what did
I know at that point? And what was a
problem that I was seeing? Well, I was
actually around a group of people who
were in age gap relationships and having
all these conversations in secret, but
wouldn't publicly talk about it. And so
I started a podcast where I was talking
about what it's like being a third
marriage and being a stepmom and how did
we tell our parents and what are tools
to navigate something that feels really
crippling and almost embarrassing to
somebody who is a high performer. And I
proceeded to have that podcast every
single week. And I made it my mission
that year to make a toast at every
single meal that made sense for me to
make a toast at. So that I worked out
this skill of communicating. And working
out the skill of communicating is what
allowed me to go from being in a room
where I couldn't trust myself to even
introduce what I do to showing up the
next year and having made progress on my
communication and saying, "Hey, I I know
that you didn't take me very seriously
last year, but this year, I would never
say it like this, but this year I've
built this cool thing, and I actually
have this blog that has thousands of
readers every single month that is
generating this revenue. And you, Mr.
old man might not have taken me
seriously, but I could probably help you
in your business do the same thing
because I know that you don't know
anything about this. So, I gained a
skill in that process and was able to
talk about the skill that I knew was my
angle.
>> The top comment on that video is being
nice destroyed my life.
>> I can understand. Of course, it did.
>> The second comment is, "A friend to all
is a friend to none." People really
resonate with the topic of being liked
versus being respected. And people give
up their goals in order to be liked. And
they give up what they believe that they
can actually accomplish. And thinking
that it's okay to go all in on
themselves in order to be liked. And so
that message I know really resonated
with people because I start out the
video by talking about the difference
between respect and being liked and
really making that a choice and it's an
active choice, not a passive thing that
just happens.
>> I wonder why that is. I wonder why so
many people are really focused on the
the idea of being liked. They don't want
to be disliked and they want to be
liked, but in their pursuit of being
liked, they feel like they're
self-sabotaging in some way. like
they're disrespecting themselves. So
then they end up wanting to be okay with
not being liked.
>> What is the the answer there in that
vicious loop?
>> You have to choose who you want to be
liked by. And if you choose that you
want to be liked by people who are
respectable, you're not going to lose.
If you choose that you want to be liked
by your co-workers because they think
it's cool to [ __ ] on the company culture
or to
pretend like they're working but not
really care, then of course you're going
to get stuck in this vicious cycle
because you actually want to be
respected, but you're choosing to be
liked by somebody that is not
respectable. And
I think when you find yourself in a
position where people who are
respectable do actually like you, you
start to like yourself a little bit more
because you've made sacrifices. You have
to have made sacrifices in order to drop
the person that you were to become this
different version of yourself. And that
process is so painful because you shed
your identities and you shed people that
you thought you needed to be dependent
upon. But as soon as you shed that and
you,
it's almost like a butterfly. You
metamorphosize into this new person, you
will repeat that process over and over
again because of the confidence that it
brings you. And you like yourself. And
when you like yourself,
there's nothing better on this planet. I
love my husband. I love my team members.
I love my parents, my brother. There's
there's no amount of there's no greater
joy that I have than actually being my
own best friend. And I don't say that
from like a I'm just going to hold your
hand and we're just I'm just going to be
best friends with myself. I am brutally
honest with myself about what I am bad
at, what I am good at. And I don't
overindex either way. I'm just honest
with myself because I want to like me.
And when you like you because you've put
in work that you have to do to not lie
to yourself about what you want, then
the world is opened for you to pursue
whatever opportunities because you like
yourself and you're good with yourself
and that actually attracts more people
who want to do cool [ __ ] with you
because most people don't like
themselves and they're not their own
best friend and they think that that's
silly. But they are so mean to
themselves. And I get that cuz I used to
be so mean to myself and so critical.
Nobody would ever say to me what I would
say to myself. I would never say to a
friend of mine or even my worst enemy
what I used to say to myself. And I I
had to work on rewiring myself to
understand why I was so critical and why
I was so mean to myself to stop doing
that and to stop acting in that way that
then allowed me to work on the things
and fix the things that I didn't like
about myself. For instance, used to
watch way too much reality television. I
hated that I watched as much reality
television as I watched, but I loved all
of the Real Housewives, everything on
Bravo, but it made me feel crappy
because I liked their lives instead of
liking my own lives, my own life. And
when you like somebody else's life and
you're living into something that you
don't feel good about,
you end up being really rude to yourself
for obvious reasons. You're not creating
the thing that you want. You're just
circumventing. You're like shortcutting
it. And that stuff to me is is just as
powerful and maybe even just as harmful
of a drug as hard drugs and alcohol
because it's escapism.
>> Natalie, thank you and I'm very excited
to sit again with you in uh some point
in the future and get an update on your
PPS.
>> I appreciate
>> see how you're getting on.
>> Thank you.
>> Please keep doing what you're doing.
>> Appreciate you.
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