Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Brit Morin: Self-Made Entrepreneurship | E103
Episode Date: February 22, 2021Become a Selfmade Entrepreneur with Brit Morin!  In this episode, we are chatting with Brit Morin, founder and CEO of Brit+CO, a popular lifestyle website. Brit grew up loving arts and crafts, but a...fter she learned how to code in teens, she traded her love of art for a career in technology and marketing -- working with huge names in Silicon Valley like Apple and Google straight after college. At the age of 25, she decided to create her own business, Brit+Co, to center around accessible and helpful DIY how-to’s. In 10 years, she’s secured over $50M in funding and over 1.2 Billion page views! Today, she also hosts her own podcast, Teach Me Something New, is a budding investor (she invested in the booming audio-only social media app, Clubhouse), and recently launched Self-Made, an interactive start-up school to empower female entrepreneurs!  In this week’s episode, we talk about Brit’s passion for creativity growing up as a kid, why we tend to become less creative as we become adults, and why you should try to set aside time for creativity every single day. We’ll also dive deeper into Brit’s beginnings at Apple and Google, why Brit created Brit+Co, how she raised capital, her own investing endeavors, and her new venture to help other women become successful entrepreneurs, Self-Made.  Social Media:  Follow YAP on IG: www.instagram.com/youngandprofiting Reach out to Hala directly at Hala@YoungandProfiting.com Follow Hala on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Follow Hala on Instagram: www.instagram.com/yapwithhala Follow Hala on ClubHouse: @halataha Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com  Timestamps:  00:46 - How Brit’s Creativity Grew Out of Her Childhood 02:09 - Why Creativity Diminishes As You Age 05:22- The Scope of Creativity 08:49 - How Brit’s Childhood Influenced Her Success Today 14:33 - Brit’s Background of Coding 16:42 - Brit’s Start in Silicon Valley 19:21 - Experiencing Steve Jobs’ Leadership 22:25 - What Brit Took From Her Past Experience to Brit+Co 27:10 - Why Marissa Mayer Mentored Brit 30:50 - The Beginnings of Brit+Co 35:34 - When Brit Knew Brit+Co Would be Successful 38:37 - How Brit Raised Money 41:29 - The Ways Brit Decides to Invest in Companies 43:49 - Brit’s Venture, Self-Made 46:37 - Success Stories from Self-Made 50:18 - Brit’s Secret to Profiting in Life  Mentioned In The Episode:  Brit’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/britmorin Brit’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brit/ Brit’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/brit Brit’s Website, Brit+Co: https://www.brit.co/ Self-Made: https://tryselfmade.com/enroll Brit’s Podcast: https://www.brit.co/listen/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode of YAP is sponsored in part by Shopify.
Shopify simplifies selling online and in-person
so you can focus on successfully growing your business.
Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash profiting.
Booba one will save you on all your eats.
Savings can't be beat.
Up to 10 percent of your order.
Join Booba one and save $0.00 delivery fee and percentagecentage Off Discount Subjects to Older Minimums
and Participating Source.
Taxes and other fee still apply.
You're listening to YAP, Young and Profiting Podcast.
A place where you can listen, learn, and profit.
Welcome to the show.
I'm your host, Halla Taha, and on Young and Profiting Podcast, we investigate a new topic
each week and interview some of the brightest minds in the world.
My goal is to turn their wisdom into actionable advice that you can use in your everyday life, no matter your age, profession or industry.
There's no fluff on this podcast, and that's on purpose. I'm here to uncover value from my guests by doing the proper research and asking the right questions.
If you're new to the show, we've chatted with the likes of XFBI agents,
real estate moguls, self-made billionaires, CEOs, and best-selling authors.
Our subject matter ranges from enhanced and productivity,
had to gain influence, the art of entrepreneurship, and more.
If you're smart and like to continually improve yourself,
hit the subscribe button, because you'll love it here
at Young & Profiting Podcast.
This week on YAP, we're chatting with Britt Marin,
a CEO, investor, and the leading female in the world
of do-it-yourself creative content.
Britt grew up loving arts and crafts,
but after she learned how to code in her teens,
she traded her love of art for a career and technology and marketing, working with huge names in Silicon Valley like Apple and Google straight out of college.
In her 20s, she took a risk and leaped into entrepreneurship, launching a progressive lifestyle brand and website by the name of Britain Co, which focuses on accessible, do-it-yourself crafts.
Nearly a decade later, Brit has hustled her way and scaled Britain Co to 75 million in
revenue, nearly 400 million website users, and has released dozens of products in mass
retail stores.
Not to mention, she's put on 15,000 person festivals, host a chart-topping podcast, is
the author of a bestselling book and has even been featured in over 50 national TV
segments.
Britt is absolutely crushing life, and most recently she launched a new, highly interactive
course called Self Made to help women build businesses of their dreams in just 10 weeks.
Some of the teachers in the program
include Britt herself, Gwenith Poucho, and Mariam Nefasi,
the CEO of Minted.
In this episode, we'll talk about why we tend
to become less creative as adults,
and how we can hone creativity later in life.
We'll also dive deep into Britt's beginnings
at Apple and Google, how Britt and Co first came about, and we'll
hear how Brits raised funding as a young entrepreneur and how she makes investment decisions today
as a new venture capitalist.
Hey, Brits, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Hi, thanks for having me.
I'm very excited to talk to you.
I feel like there's so many different things that we can discuss.
You are the founder and CEO of Brinko. You also had a very awesome tech career. You worked at Google and Apple,
so definitely want to dive into that. Something that you're very well known for is do-it-yourself
creativity type of things. And so, from my understanding, you were very creative from a young age,
you know, from finger painting
to drawing, this was something that you always had
inside of you.
So let's start from the beginning.
What were you like as a child?
And how did you kind of hone this creativity
at such a young age?
Oh, like the very beginning, okay.
So for better or for worse, I was a child
of the kind of late 80s and early 90s,
aka the time period in life where there was not the internet, there was not social media,
and I was part of a generation where both the parents worked.
So often I was at home alone, or my mom was working from home,
and I was just left to spend for myself.
And as a creative little girl to your point,
I knew I was going to be an inventor one day.
I had a list of inventions.
I still own that list, by the way.
And I just tinkered around the house finding materials
to try to make them a real thing.
I didn't know what I was doing was actually entrepreneurship.
I called it creativity because I was making stuff.
I was making products.
I was burning things, lighting things on fire on accident,
cutting the wrong things.
And so it was kind of a mess and a disaster,
but that was the only way I could learn, again,
without Google or YouTube or something around me.
Yeah, that's really cool.
And I know I've heard you say in the past
that making and the act of actually making something
can help us rediscover our creativity.
Because when we're younger,
we are like kind of fearless when it comes to trying something new
and getting creative.
But then as we get older,
we kind of shy away from being creative.
So can you talk to us about that?
Yeah, it's really interesting because, we did an experiment a few years ago where
we surveyed a bunch of like five to seven year olds and we asked them, do you think you're
creative? And as you can imagine, like almost all of them said, yeah, for sure. Like, of course,
I'm like the most creative person in the world. Super ego about their creativity. Then we interviewed a bunch of 25 to 35
year olds and asked them if they felt they were creative. And as you can imagine, the majority
said, no, I am not creative. Oh, that's not me. I'm not an artist. Like for some reason, everyone
kept referring to it as being an artist instead of just a trait of humanity.
And so we realize that something happens between five and 25 or 35.
And I think it's middle school.
Middle school is to blame for everything in life. But no, I think it's actually like when we start feeling judged about our creative skills. And that can come with grades, you know,
when you get graded in art class, which
is sort of counterintuitive, or when we start to become really
afraid and insecure of what our peers think about us,
when we're showing things to them that feel really vulnerable
as teenagers.
But the fascinating thing is that oftentimes specifically for women, when we studied
creativity as adults, the only time it did come back in a really statistically meaningful way was
around the time of getting married. And we explored this for a little bit and we realized that with the rage of do it yourself weddings
and Pinterest and all of these things, women in particular felt like there was a creative
moment that was happening that they wanted to put their twist on to make it more themselves
and that reinvigorated their little child inside of them. And it, many times, encouraged them to be more creative
as adults on an ongoing basis.
So I thought that was a really fascinating study
that we've done.
And then the other thing to note is that Halloween, of course,
is the one day a year where every single person, well,
not everyone, but like 98% feel creative
and feel like it's OK to break the rules and play and experiment
without the judgment that comes and being silly. So I do think so much of it is just about
adult insecurity at the end of the day. Yeah, well that's so interesting and you know I've always
considered myself to be like a very very creative person. Like I always have like these natural
design abilities.
And even when I was in jobs in corporate,
where I wasn't a designer, I was very strategic
in kind of a higher level role,
I found my creativity to be a huge asset.
Because when I was doing presentations,
I can make them very visual.
And even my spreadsheets were really easy to understand.
And things like that.
So talk to us about the scope of creativity and like your definition of creativity because
I don't think it's just art, right?
And can working on these DIY projects like help you and your corporate career or your professional
job as well.
You know, it's so funny.
That's exactly right.
Everyone thinks that when I say creativity, I mean like glue and ribbon, like crafts.
Even the word craft is so overplayed, it means popsicle sticks and kindergarten.
But when I say the word craftsmanship, that's provoked something more sophisticated or to
your point.
DIY even has a crafty tone,
but when you're doing something yourself,
let's do it yourself.
I can go make dinner for myself.
I can put on makeup by myself.
I think creativity is this horizontal layer
across everything we do in life.
And literally you're making probably 10 to 20 creative choices
every day minimum, just because you're picking
out what you're wearing, you're deciding if it matches, you know, if you're a woman,
maybe you're putting on makeup, you're doing gradients with your eye shadow, you know,
you're blending your contouring, you're literally doing artistic things to your face, in your
hair, you know, you're deciding what to make for dinner, you're maybe decorating or organizing
your home, you're being creative and problem solving
that worked your point.
And so I definitely think creativity is an asset,
no matter what, but the problem is it's like a muscle.
You have to work it out.
You have to explore that side of yourself,
even when you're not working and problem solving.
And to me, even 30 minutes a week, literally like exercising, whatever, pick a creative
thing, cooking, painting, photography, it doesn't matter.
Just do it and understand how it feels to get into that flow state.
Because at the end of the day, there's also been a lot of studies about creativity as
an antidote to anxiety, depression, you depression, all of these mental health issues,
because it does put you into a meditative flow.
And you don't have to Instagram it,
you don't have to show it to anybody,
they can just be for you, it can be messy.
And isn't that such an amazing analogy
for business and for life?
Like, it can be messy, you can try, you can play,
you don't even have to put it out there at first,
but like explore it for yourself and see what comes from that.
Yeah, I love that.
And it doesn't need to like make money or do anything fancy.
It can just speak for you.
And it's for men and women too.
Like men can be creative as well.
And I think even there's a lot of men out there who think that crafts and creativity is
kind of for women.
And I think that there's plenty of things that men can do that are creative, right?
Oh my gosh, I mean, I'm married to a man
who might not call himself a creative actually,
but like, he's an amazing photographer.
He is an incredible architect designer, thinker.
Literally, he studies real estate.
He's on the board of dwell.
He also plays Legos with my boys every day
and they're building from scratch.
They're not following the guidebook.
They're just like making houses, making battleships.
That is creativity, too.
And it's so fun.
It's so fun to let that side of you go and just explore
and see where it takes you.
So yeah, men can totally be creative.
Yeah, I love that. So let's talk about all of your success. You are an extremely successful
young woman. You're only 35 years old. You're the CEO of a company that a lot of people know about.
You're an investor in multiple different companies. You've been on the 30 under 30 list twice.
Like you are very, very successful.
And when I looked at your childhood,
it's not the typical childhood that I've seen
with all the different successful people
that I've been on my show.
Usually I get the underdogs.
They were picked on at school.
They were nerds with no friends.
They never got any opportunities.
But then I look at your profile
and straight A's, captain of the, you know, soccer
team, class president, spelling B champ, you name it, you know, you seem to have been crushing
it your whole life.
So I want to know, are we just seeing the highlight reel of your life?
Did you have any challenges growing up and how do you stay motivated if you had a very
easy childhood?
How does that keep you motivated knowing that you had it so easy
or is there something more missing?
Oh, well, thank you for insinuating that it was easy.
I'm like, I've been in years of therapy.
I can tell you all about my childhood.
No, but for real, my, you know, we were very middle class.
I remember when it was really difficult for my mom to write me a
$20 check for a field trip. Like we didn't have that much money in the bank. My
mom was and is a court reporter. My dad when I was born was a restaurant
manager and then later turned car salesman. Like no one had really gone to
college in my whole family. My dad
put himself through community college later when I was like seven. So I didn't grow up
with like the college educated, super successful working class family. These were people that
were just like trying to make it and get by. And my mom suffered from debilitating depression
when I was in first grade all the way till like sixth or seventh grade
and ever since then she's still had it on and off.
And largely my childhood memories were of my dad at work
and my mom sleeping in her bedroom.
And I think that I became so fascinated with creativity
and invention and DIY, do it myself,
because that was my only option.
I had to figure things out for myself to survive literally.
I had to learn to cook for myself.
I did my laundry when I was eight.
I had to go seek other people's approval, like teachers and coaches, because I didn't
feel like I was getting that at home.
And I've talked to my mom about this at this point.
But it also encouraged me to never want to be like that.
My mom was a very negative person during those times.
She definitely didn't
think she was smart enough, pretty enough good enough at anything in life. She was not
ambitious at all. She did not want to change her life to do anything different or new.
And I think I pushed against that so hard, like so hard, that not only did I throw myself
into being the most ambitious go getter person in the world. But I truly believe every woman can be that as well.
And it's become my mission in life to pull women along with me and push them off the edge
when they're scared and push them to do things that are really, really uncomfortable for
them because I know they can.
And that has been what's created Britain Co and self-made the new brand we've made.
And everything else, I mean, my podcast is called Teach Me Something New because I just
believe that life is a journey that you should be learning and evolving every single day.
And I'm insatiably curious.
And so I wouldn't say that it was easy, quote unquote.
In fact, this trauma I had is what pushed me to do those things.
But it's the truth of anybody that's had success.
It doesn't necessarily mean you feel like you've actually
made it to yourself and what is making it even mean.
In general, you could be Joe Biden or the president.
You could be Oprah and you might still be unsatisfied
at the end of the day.
So yeah, I would encourage everyone out there listening
to judge wisely and cautiously when you see people
with a bunch of accolades because there've probably
been things that have pushed them that hard to do those things
and achieve those things.
And I do feel like, right now in my life,
I feel like the most whole authentic version of myself
that I can talk so openly about this.
And I can be a resource for other men and women going through similar things, whether it's
with mental health or the achievement push that, you know, anyogram three over here can't
ever, like, say shit, my need to achieve.
So speaking of learning something new,
you learned how to code at a young age,
and you're really not that much older than me,
and I know when we were growing up,
it was very unusual for girls to be coding and things like that.
So when did you start learning how to code,
and what gave you the desire to go out to Silicon Valley
at such a young age?
Yeah, well, I remember being in like eighth grade
and playing around with like geocities
and all of these sort of like build your own website tools
that had just come out on the internet,
which if anyone's listening, that's like sub 25, I'm sorry.
Like, but like these were things that existed
where you could like, you can even code your own
my space background with some CSS. And so I just became fascinated with it. But these were things that existed where you could even code your own Myspace background
with some CSS.
And so I just became fascinated with it.
Even your aim profile, your AOL and semester profile.
So I was learning these little tips and tricks with CSS and HTML.
And then I remember seeing that there was an AP computer science class being offered at
my high school.
And we were going gonna learn JavaScript,
which was this fancy new coding language at the time
because prior to that I was C++.
And so, A, I wanted AP credits because I knew
I had to pay my way through college,
and I desperately wanted to test out of as much college
as I could to save myself money.
But B, I was seeing what was happening with the internet. It was exploding.
I mean, this is around the time of like 2000, like literally the dot com boom. Like, I was like,
what is this magical thing called the internet? How do I get to Silicon Valley as soon as possible?
Oh, I should learn to code. And so I did. And I think that I was one of three girls in the class
of like 25 or 30 people.
And I just learned how to create little programs
and learned about the basis of computing.
And that became the beginning of a journey for me
that really changed my life.
Very cool.
So you ended up going to the University of Texas, right?
And you wanted to go there because you knew you would graduate early and then head out
to Silicon Valley when you were, I think, 20 years old, right?
So talk to us about that.
Talk to us about that move to Silicon Valley.
I think your first job was Apple.
Tell us about that story.
Yeah, you know, it's really funny because along the same time I was fascinated with computers
in Silicon Valley. I was equally fascinated by media and entertainment. I was binge watching
television all the time, like most teenagers do. And LA felt so glamorous to me, a girl from Texas.
And I remember when I was graduating, I was graduating early, I had two opportunities.
One was to move to LA and work on the Jimmy Kimmel show, which had just launched.
No one knew who this guy was.
Or to move to San Francisco and work for Apple.
And I was very conflicted.
I remember being like, ooh, this is really tough.
And my brother talked some sense into me
and was like, are you crazy?
Like, you have to go to Apple.
But Apple wasn't sexy at the time.
This is like, Dell was still number one in PCs.
It was what everyone had.
iPods were still hard to sell to people.
It's like early 2000s.
So I was like, okay, I guess I'll go to Apple.
And I'm so glad I did,
because not only did I get to work in iTunes,
which is the coolest group at Apple,
and we have like John Mayer stop by for fun.
But I met my husband there,
which was an awesome bonus.
And of course got getting to work and meet Steve Jobs,
even though I was so low on the Totem pole, was really, really cool.
I remember I had to, at one point, one of my jobs was to send out the chunk of press that
had happened the day before. I had to deliver it, hand deliver it to each one of the executives
in the morning and go by their offices. And I had heard horror stories about Steve Jobs firing you on the spot.
Like if you said something wrong, and so I remember I would always tiptoe to his office
and hand him the stack of press from the day before.
Like so afraid it was a bad press day.
I would be fired or something?
I don't know.
But it was just like little stories like that.
And I got to ask him questions at Tawan Halls, and it was a really, really cool time to be there.
And I'm so glad I got to work at Apple briefly during the Steve Jobs era.
Yeah, and I heard that he actually lied to you about releasing the iPhone. You had asked about
a phone, and he was like, oh, we would never, you know never put a camera and an iPod and one device.
We would never do that. And then six months later it came out. Tell us about that story. And tell us
about like, just, it's crazy that you had like, you actually met Steve Jobs. Not many people can
say that. So tell us about how he was as a leader as well. Yeah, like I said, I was so scared of him because we all passed around these horror stories.
But, you know, I was also the like go getter, maybe naive, early 20-something year old,
that like, if there was an opportunity at a town hall to ask a question, I wasn't going to like
let that chance slip. And so I raised my hand, there had been all these rumors about an iPhone, and I said,
hey, like there's rumors we're making a phone. Is this true? And he said, yeah, exactly what he said,
he was like, well, let me tell you something. When you put a camera, an iPod, and a telephone
into one device, no way can you keep the quality as high as possible in each
one of those three things, like something has to give.
So do you think we would really do that?
And I was like, oh, you're so, okay, you're so right, you're so right.
Apple's like high quality, we don't want ever sacrifice quality.
And then six months later, it's like literally meet the iPhone.
It's like the keynote presentation that changed the world.
And so there was also another time I asked him about social media, which was interesting
because this is like 2006, like Facebook had just launched.
It was picking up some steam, but it was still in colleges.
And I said, what do you think about social media, Steve?
And I remember at the time,
my space was the biggest social network.
And he said, because I had asked him,
do you think Apple might ever launch a social network?
And he said, let me tell you something.
If my space is like over here on this end of the spectrum,
and Disney is on the whole other end of the spectrum,
AKA insinuating that my space was like first sex
and craziness and like massage,
I don't know, like terrible things in Disney.
It was like family friendly.
He's like, I think we would be more aligned with Disney.
Like he would always answer things and around about way
where he wasn't saying yes or no,
but he was like painting a picture of like like why or why not we would do things.
And it's interesting because at the time I don't think that Apple and Pixar had
formalized a relationship yet, but that must have been like on his mind or something because that was all happening in that same era.
And it's just also funny that like my space was the draw thing.
I know exactly.
So anyways, it was a really fun time and I learned a lot.
And now actually my partner in the venture firm, I'm working on literally reported to
Steve Jobs for 28 years.
So I'm getting way more intel on Steve in his life and what he was like as a boss through my my new partner James
Really cool and so you also worked at Google so you worked at two massive tech giants now you have your own company
What are some things that you kind of took from each company because now I'm a new entrepreneur
I worked at you at Packard
I worked at Disney streaming and other places and I find myself like taking values and kind of culture bits from each company.
What have you brought to Britain Co from these two companies?
Yeah, they both are so different, but I'm so glad I got to see both of them.
So at Apple, you know, designers are the gods.
Everything hinges on quality and design, right?
And it's also a super secretive culture.
And marketing is everything.
Like if you are an epic marketer,
you know how to write copy, you know, tell a story,
you know, the iPod ads that are so infamous,
that is everything.
At Google, that stuff is the bottom of the pack.
Like engineering is everything at Google.
Data driven decisions are the way to go.
Design and marketing are fluffy.
They won't actually change the user's perception,
and of course, I'm overstating some of this,
but like, totally different cultures.
And also at Google, we literally had an internal wiki
where you could search what any project is,
who's working on it, when it's going to be launched,
like see all the mocks, the screenshots.
Like, and no one really leaked it.
It was actually like pretty secure.
We didn't really have leaks that much.
So I think it's interesting how you can build
totally different types of cultures,
but still create incredible brands that could change
the world. The thing about Google that I loved, though, was like really the data-driven
decision-making. You know, Marissa Meyer was one of my bosses there. She went on to be an
investor in my company, as you said. And I remember we would be in user design reviews and she would make us test like 100 colors
of the shade of blue and a button to see which one converted better.
Like we had like maybe 10 and she was like we need more like pick every shade of blue
in this and this part of the spectrum and let's see if there's a difference like 0.01
percent difference and click through rate Because when you're literally dealing with a billion people, a change of 0.01% is really
meaningful.
And so she really invested in teaching me how to think about numbers, how to think about
data, how to pair data and design together because art and science can live congruently and harmoniously together.
And at the end of the day, Britonco has really been driven by data as much as possible.
It's one of those things from Google.
For instance, when we launched Britonco back in the day, 2011, I remember Pinterest was
a new social network.
They had just released the Pnit button that you can embed
on your website to save images. We tested 20 or 30 versions of the P, or the save, the pinnit,
the P, all the variations of the pinnit button. We found one that blew the rust away. And to this day,
the rest away. And to this day, Britain Co, specifically like my account, Brit, is one of the top
Pinterest accounts in the whole world. We, I think most recently reached 91 million uniques on Pinterest. And I totally credit that to the testing of this PINIT button,
which became really, really effective for us,
because so many of our users would say things,
and that really blew up our account there.
So, if anyone is out there thinking about data,
like getting the Google Master's degree
and how to make data-driven decisions
can totally help you out.
Yeah, and I would definitely echo that,
because I find that that's a skill
that not many people have.
Like people don't understand UX,
people haven't had experience with A.B. testing
and things like that.
Unless you've been in product marketing
or in a marketing department that does that kind of stuff,
there's a lot of people who don't have experience there.
And then they start businesses on their own,
they run ad campaigns, they don't know why it's not working and they don't understand that you need to continually iterate and
iterate and iterate until you get something that's really good. And you got to keep spending
time to make it better and better. So I would definitely recommend, you know, increasing
that skill, your product design skills and things like that. Young and profitors, do you
have a brilliant business idea, but you don't know how to move
forward with it? Going into debt for a four-year degree isn't the only path to success. Instead,
learn everything you need to know about running a business for free by listening to the Millionaire
University podcast. The Millionaire University podcast is a show that's changing the game for
aspiring entrepreneurs. Hosted by Justin and Tara Williams, it's the ultimate resource for those who want to run
a successful business and graduate rich, not broke.
Justin and Tara started from Square One,
just like you and me.
They faced lows and dug themselves out of huge debt.
Now they're financially free
and they're sharing their hard earned lessons with all of us.
That's right, millionaire university will teach you
everything you need to know about starting
and growing a successful business.
No degrees required.
In each episode you'll gain invaluable insights from seasoned entrepreneurs and mentors who truly
understand what it takes to succeed.
From topics like how to start a software business without creating your own software, to more
broad discussions such as eight businesses you can start tomorrow to make 10K plus month,
this podcast has it all.
So don't wait, now is the time to turn your business idea
into a reality by listening to the Millionaire
University podcast.
New episodes drop Mondays and Thursdays.
Find the Millionaire University podcast
on Apple Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Love that.
So you mentioned Mercea Mayor,
and she was an investor in your company
and sounds like she was also one of your boss mentors.
And I want to understand if you could look back at your time at Google and making your
impression with Marissa, what do you think it was in terms of your qualities for her to
kind of take you on under her wings, for her to have liked you so much to invest in your
company, how did you get in her wings for her to have liked you so much to invest in your company.
How did you get in her good graces?
I think that's a fascinating question because I'm actually still not totally sure.
What I do know is she didn't like me at first. So there was a cross-every-point. No, I had this
manager when I was first at Google. And again, I'm like 23 at this point, right? Like, I'm really young.
This manager was a gay Spanish man.
So you can imagine, like, it's just very outgoing, loud.
And I remember, you know, we would do our peer assessments
and we would get sort of our quarterly performance reviews back.
And all the managers would have to go to Marissa
to sort of validate each person on their team
and what their review score was, blah, blah.
And Marissa kept knocking me down.
Like he would be like, I think Britt,
like was an overachiever this quarter,
she should get a 4.0 and Marissa was like,
mm, I don't know, I think she's probably more like a 3.5.
And I remember my manager being like,
I don't know, Britt, like maybe she feels like you're competitive.
Like, I don't know why she's, she thinks you're like a diva.
I don't know, like what's happening.
And I was so sad because I was working my ass off.
And I was like, always trying to be so kind.
And like, I just like do my work.
And, but then I remember being asked to join a new team
by Marissa, which was called Google TV.
We were creating the first operating system for television
that ever existed.
It was part of the YouTube organization.
It's now gone on to be Chromecast.
But Marissa like was called me to her office and was like, I think you need
to go to this team. And I was like, really? Why? And she was like, because this is going
to be like a startup within Google. And I just really believe that it's going to be exciting
for you. You're going to learn a lot. You're going to get a bunch of responsibility. And
I was like, technically, like, I'm not actually like experienced enough to be on that team for the role that's open there. And she's like, I'll make it happen for you. And I was like, technically, like, I'm not actually like experienced enough
to be on that team for the role that's open there. And she's like, I'll make it happen
for you. And I was just like, what when in this like life cycle of knowing Marissa, did
she suddenly decide she liked me? Because whatever. But I'll take it. And so I just, I went
to the team. I like launched Google TV. It was awesome. I managed a $50 million budget when I was 25, which is totally insane.
And ever since then, she's been really supportive of me and everything I've tried to do. And
so I don't know. But something, that's a good mystery to figure out.
Well, you know, if I could from an outside perspective, it sounded like you're always willing
to raise your hand, whether you are at the town hall, willing to raise your hand and ask a question,
because a lot of people are shy to do that,
and that's really how you get in tension of the CEO
and people you don't have access to, right?
You probably started to recognize you
as the girl who always asked a question.
And then with Marisa,
you weren't afraid to say yes
when she gave you that opportunity
that you weren't quite ready for.
So these are all definitely qualities
of young employees that I think really stand out in my opinion.
Yeah, for sure. And I think just like being willing to roll up your sleeves, do the work,
say yes to your point, really puts your boss's mind at ease when they need that whole
field right now. So you're right, that's a really great tip for anyone out there.
Yeah. So let's talk about Britain Co.
At what point did you want, like, decide you were going to go off as an entrepreneur?
You started really young.
How did you get, like, the motivation to do that, the courage, the confidence to just go out on your own?
How did that come about?
Yeah, so, you know, here I was, 25.
I just launched Google TV.
I'd also worked on many other things
that Google had been there for four years.
And I felt like I was repeating patterns.
I was literally nothing felt that challenging anymore.
I mean, it's challenging, but I was doing the same thing.
I was launching a new thing, I knew how to launch something.
And at Google also, if you put a link on the Google homepage,
you're going to work to get a successful lunch.
So I was like, how does this work for when
you don't have a billion people following you?
And I noticed at Google and YouTube how
to search queries, how to blink.
We're always the most popular every year.
They actually tend to disqueue female more than male. And as
a 20-something year old female, I was like not very impressed by the search results behind
them. They were like pretty boring, you know, not exciting, not informative. So I was like,
oh, I love creative stuff. I really want to learn how to do things too. But I wouldn't turn
to any of these search results to teach me. And I was like, oh my God, should I be the teacher?
And I remember, you know, I was getting ready to get married.
I was in the same state.
I told you about earlier, which was like I was thinking of all these creative ideas for
my wedding.
And I wanted to make them all to add a personal twist.
And I really wanted other women to learn how to do this too.
Pentress Touches launched.
I was putting everything on my blog.
And on Pinterest,
I was developing a little following
for my little creative side projects.
And I was just like, oh, I feel like this is what I'm supposed to do.
But I didn't feel like it was a real business.
I was like, this is just a blog.
It's not like, you know, this isn't a business.
And so instead, I was like, well, I actually really care
about health and fitness.
There's like a body analytics company I really want to start to
and I got a co-founder, it was a female engineer.
We were building an alpha, I had left Google, I decided,
you know, I had six months of savings in my bank account.
And if I couldn't get something working in six months,
I would just go back to Google
or get a new job somewhere else.
Like I felt confident enough in myself
that I could get another nine to five
if things fell apart.
But I had six months to go prove myself to the world.
And I did have this crazy impasse
where I was working on this health company.
We were about to go raise money,
we were building a pitch check, but I was obsessed on this health company. We were about to go raise money, we were building a pitch check,
but I was obsessed with this creative part of my life
in like teaching women how to do things.
And my husband and one of my best friends
sat me down one day and we're like,
Britt, you are destined to do this.
Like you champion women.
This has always been part of you.
You've literally been creative since you were a little girl. You light up when you talk about this.
The health and fitness, like analytic stuff.
Cool.
Maybe that's a billion dollar company.
Maybe you can have a really great outcome.
But are you really gonna love doing that every day
when you wake up for the next 10 years?
And I was like, what?
And so much of the decision was actually like me believing
enough in myself to do something
without a co-founder at first.
It's really scary to start alone.
I had the co-founder at this health startup I was working on.
But I was like, they're right.
And I broke up with my co-founder.
I was literally like, it's not you, it's me.
The same excuse you would use in dating.
And off I went to start Britain Co.
And I put my name in it because at the time,
social media was just blowing up.
And everyone that was a brand was a human.
And it felt way more authentic and personable
to be a real person behind the brand
kind of like back in the day.
It's your point, Disney, Hershey's,
Porsche, Rockefeller, Walmart.
They were all real people.
And that gave you an element of trust
in the brand that they built.
So you launched Brighton Co.
I can't believe you didn't start it really
as a side hustle that you just went cold turkey
because we have opposite stories.
I did, yeah, media as a side hustle,
did it completely while working full time.
And then once it was like totally risk-free,
I left the mothership.
So we did that totally, absolutely.
It could also be, there's such different markets now.
I did it during COVID, you did it a long time ago,
maybe it wasn't that crazy, even market at the time.
So different scenarios, you're very successful.
So it worked out for you.
What was the tipping point with Britain Co? Like at what point did you feel like, wow, like this is really gonna be a thing, this is gonna be really successful. So it worked out for you. What was the tipping point with Britain Co? Like at what
point did you feel like, wow, like this is really going to be a thing. This is going to be really
successful. At what point did you start realizing that you had created a movement and that you were
going to get a lot of notoriety from this? At what point did you realize that?
I think there were a lot of micro moments along the way, you know, even just raising our first
round of funding, which was a million dollars,
felt like a huge achievement. Like, oh my god, we had enough traffic and enough revenue for
huge venture capitalists to invest in us. Like, that was scary, but awesome. And then we did it again
with the series A, and we did it again with the series B. And between the series B and series C, which was probably like 2015 to 2017, was like
those years, I just remember, we're like so wild and amazing that those years were probably
the time period to that answer your question. Like we were launching products and target
stores nationwide. We have 15,000 people coming out to our events.
We had we've peaked at 15 million uniques a month
on our website.
There's press all the time.
I was on TV all the time and it was just like
so much was going on and it was awesome.
But in many ways, we were scaling so quickly
at the time that I do feel like it was equally hard
because I was losing touch with so many of the employees, you know, to over 100 employees.
And it was just like a lot that happened at once. And Disney became an investor, Verizon became
an investor. It took me away from my team way more than I imagined.
And after the election in 2016
and Facebook started changing all their algorithms
and the media world of digital media started getting crazy
if you look at Buzzfeed and Vox
and everybody has had an enormous amount of struggle
over the last past few years
because all these changing algorithms
just changed traffic so wildly. And so the last few years have been super difficult
just because we live in a social media world now, whereas those years building up from 2011 to 2017,
yes, like Facebook was a thing, but like it wasn't so fragmented. It was like Google, Facebook, Pinterest, you know, our three social media resources of traffic.
And so it's been more challenging,
but also more rewarding because so many publishers
have started moving into direct-to-consumer revenue
rather than relying on advertising
as our main revenue source.
And that's been so liberating for me
because at the end of the day, like,
I get to spend more of my time with our for me because at the end of the day, like,
I get to spend more of my time with our users instead of like flying all over the country
talking to CMOs. And you know, that stuff's fun. But like, I want to know what's next
for, you know, on the cusp of the edge for women. And that's what I care about.
Yeah. And so when you were raising money for your business, like when did you decide I'm not gonna bootstrap this,
I'm gonna raise money.
What were you gonna use that money for?
And how did you know that you were in fact ready
to take on an investor rather than going for a loan
or something like that?
Yes, so it was 2012 and I remember thinking,
wow, our traffic is really picking up.
I mean, we went from like zero to half a million
uniques really quickly and then a million.
And at the time, that was like a really big deal.
And I remember thinking about how this was just
the brink of what couldn't be be because if we can continue to grow traffic
like this, we can monetize it through advertising.
We could also create a commerce business, which at the time really hadn't been done before.
Content and commerce businesses were very new.
And ultimately, we could build this multifaceted brand.
But in order to do that, I needed like significant capital because I needed engineers,
I needed, you know, people who knew manufacturing, I needed a bunch of people and a loan was
not going to get me there.
And so I think it's also a fact of like I've been born and bred in Silicon Valley and venture
capital is just like right outside my door and I know the people who are venture capitalists,
I literally did my seed deal in the back of a taxi
in New York City because I was like pitching
to a VC who I know.
And so I was fortunate to have a network
that was literally right outside my door.
And I know not everyone has that.
But I do think it's part of the halo effect
of having got to Silicon Valley at such a young age
and starting to get to know people,
even at Apple and Google,
and like, your network is your network,
as my friend Porter Gale says,
so it really helped me in that way.
I will say I don't think venture capital
is the right approach for most businesses.
I, you know, in many ways have thought back like, could I have done this without all the
VC money? And I, I think it's totally possible. You might not grow as quickly, but you will
grow organically. You can probably grow a solid 20 to 30% year every year instead of 100%
year every year. Like we like we've done so many years
but it's totally possible and probably less stressful if you want to do it that way.
Yeah and I know that now you're an investor yourself. You actually mentioned to me on an
offline conversation that you invested in Clubhouse which I think was a really great one to choose.
I agree. Thank you. So how do you decide which companies you're going to invest in?
What's that process like?
What do you look for?
Yeah, so I'm a seed stage investor, which
is sometimes investing in companies
before they've even launched.
Other times investing in them right after they've launched.
It's really hard to paint a picture of success
when you barely have metrics to work off of.
So what me and my partners tend to do is, A, look at the team.
And when I say team, I really mean the founder or co-founders.
Like, have they done this before?
What's their track record?
Have they worked together before?
We reference them with a lot of background diligence on who they are.
If they're second time founders or third time founders
as is Paul Davidson, the founder of Clubhouse,
you know, I've known Paul since like 2009,
you know, we hung out at South by Southwest back in the day
when he was like launching highlight his second company.
And I know that he has an itch in him to scratch
when it comes to building a social network.
He's tried to do it and failed and he's learned a lot and he just won't give up.
And I think in many ways, we look for people that will just bulldo through walls no matter
what.
They will figure it out.
So, that's number one.
And number two is truly the idea.
Is this an idea that could become a multi-billion dollar business?
Is this something that could defend themselves with if competition came out from nowhere?
You know, is this something that can scale quickly rather than taking like 10 or 20 years?
You know, and so we look at those things, we look at models, and ultimately, you know,
we place our butts on companies where still 90% plus won't work out.
The beauty of venture capital is that hopefully a small percentage of them do,
and when they do work out, it's not just a 2x return,
it's a 1,000x return, which I'm hopeful
that Clubhouse will be one of for us.
Sure, well, Clubhouse is blowing up, and we actually have a Clubhouse event later today,
which is very exciting. So can't wait for that. Let's talk about your new venture self-made.
Tell us about what this is, how people can benefit from it, where they can find out more about it.
Yeah, so during the peak of the early pandemic in 2020,
kind of roughly in the May, June timeframe,
I was noticing how women were disproportionately
getting furloughed, let go,
or forced out of their jobs to care for their kids.
And the New York Times had coined at a she session,
like women were getting far more displaced for men than men.
And also the Black Lives Matter movement was happening, talking about how disproportionately
people of color have been treated during the pandemic.
And I just became angry because frankly, I have learned how to make money through starting
a business.
I've watched thousands of people do the same.
I have seen all the patterns.
I know all the people in the same. I have seen all the patterns. I know all the people in the game.
So could I help? Could I do something to enable these women to go off and start their own businesses
and live on their own financial terms rather than applying to 100 jobs and crossing their fingers.
They might get hired or hoping the pandemic ends so they don't have to homeschool their kids anymore.
And so self-made was born. It was totally on a whim. I built a square space site in two
weeks. It's sort of like my favorite example of just like putting something messy and sloppy
out there to see if it sticks. And like 170 women signed up. And I didn't know what I was
doing, but I was like within 10 weeks,
I'm gonna teach these women everything they need to know
about how to start a business.
And I did that, and it went really well.
And then I did it again in the fall,
and it went even better.
And now I'm doing it again for the third time.
And the key of this whole thing is,
not only is it live interaction with me,
but it's also live interaction with
like 25 other people I'm bringing in that are experts in all kinds of topics from like
pitch checks to PNLs, to social media, to sales, there's also women who have just like
done it. There's, you know, women like the CEO and founder of ClassPass, Pyle Kadakia,
Rebecca Minkoff, the fashion designer,
Gwyneth Paltrow, the CEO of Goop,
Bozema St. John, the CMO of Netflix.
You know, there's women that have taken companies public,
there's women that have bootstrapped
and like everyone is here to tell their story
and accelerate the path that these new entrepreneurs have
in front of them so that they can just start
making money sooner.
And so it's been really, really, really rewarding for me
and I'm really excited that we're about to start
the next one on March 1st.
And I'm hopeful that at the end of the day,
we can create over 10,000 new female founded companies
through self-made.
Your dog is an important part of your family.
Don't settle when it comes to their health.
Make the switch to fresh food
made with real ingredients
that are backed by science with nom nom.
Nom nom delivers fresh dog food
that is personalized to your dog's individual needs.
Each portion is tailored to ensure your dog
gets the nutrition they need
so you can watch them thrive.
Nom nom's ingredients are cooked individually
and then mixed together
because science tells
us that every protein, carb, and veggie has different cooking times and methods. This
packs in all the vitamins and minerals your dog needs, so they truly get the most out
of every single bite. And NOM NOM is completely free of additives, fillers, and mystery ingredients
that contribute to bloating and low energy. Your dog deserves only the best, and Nom Nom delivers just that.
Their nutrient-packed recipes are crafted
by board-certified veterinary nutritionists,
made fresh and shipped to your door, absolutely free.
Nom Nom meals started just $2.40,
and every meal is cooked in company-owned kitchens
right here in the US,
and they've already delivered over 40 million
meals, inspiring clean bowls and wagging tails everywhere.
Ever since I started feeding my dog Nom Nom, he's been so much more energetic, and he's
getting older, he's a senior dog, but now we've been going on longer walks, and he's
much more playful.
He used to be pretty sluggish and sleeping all the time, but I've definitely noticed
a major improvement since I started feeding him nom nom.
And the best part, they offer a money back guarantee.
If your dog's tail isn't wagging within 30 days, they'll refund your first order.
No fillers, no nonsense, just nom nom.
Go right now for 50% off your no risk 2 week trial at trinom.com slash app. That's trinom.nom.com slash app for 50% off trinom.com slash
app. That's amazing. So have any success stories come about since you launched? I know it's so new.
So, but anything come to mind? Oh, yeah. I mean, most women are launching their businesses during the class. And so they're literally starting to create real revenue.
I mean, one woman freaked out because she launched
her company one day.
The next day, she had like $4,000 in sales overnight.
Like, she just like put up a couple Facebook posts,
sent it to some friends, went to bed, woke up,
and was like, holy shit.
I get like $4,000 of orders.
Like, I've never made that much money in a week in my life.
Like, and that's the feeling,
like that feeling that I had when I saw that happen.
And that's not as singular incident.
Like, this has happened many different times
to so many of the women in the course.
Like, how cool, how cool that they took a chance on themselves,
put something out there, didn't really know what they're doing,
and saw massive success.
And so the next step is how do we sustain that success?
And so we have an alumni program and coaching
and all kinds of things that go into it,
but it's been incredible.
It's been amazing.
Like, we've had women invent new products,
medical devices,
all kinds of really crazy B2B services,
and then we've had people create jewelry and face masks.
So it really runs the gamut.
That's really cool.
And so it's a 10 week program, and it
takes you from zero to launching a business.
If you already have a business or a new business,
is it still relevant for you,
or is it really for someone who just has an idea?
No, it's definitely relevant for both.
We have some separate tracks and breakout sessions
for those who already have a business.
We also have dedicated coaching
where you can go one-on-one with coaches
to get really specific personal advice on your business.
I am there 24-7 to message with and talk to as well.
Again, super custom and personalized to you.
So it really can be for anyone.
And the best part is at the end of it,
we have like a pitch day where everyone, not everyone,
but like a selection of the students get to pitch.
And we are literally giving out grants.
My dream is also to have a venture track
for like a venture style company
where we can literally invest on the spot, Shark Tank style.
And I can rope in all my favorite female VCs to join.
And so ultimately we want to be in the business
of helping women create businesses.
And that's what self-made is all about.
It's also the irony of the name, because even though we want
you to take full credit for what you're doing,
there's like a total girl gang here
to help push you forward.
And so, yeah, now we're live for a few more days for signups.
If anyone listening wants to enroll,
please check it out on the website.
It's triselfmade.comcom and you can learn more there.
Yeah, I love the mission.
I see beaming when you're talking about it.
Like you seem so passionate about it.
And honestly, for everybody out there listening, I think going through a reputable
coaching program like this can replace the need to like go get an MBA.
Like literally, I really do feel like this is a future of that type of education. For sure. It's also like a quarter million dollars to get an MBA, like literally, I really do feel like this is a future of that type of education.
For sure. It's also like a quarter million dollars to get an MBA.
I left my mat to go through self-made. Yeah, exactly. It's a great other option. Okay, so
you're very, very accomplished, as we said. You're just 35 years old. You have an incredible company,
now you're launching a new venture called Self Made.
The last question I ask all my guests on the show
is what is your secret to profiting in life?
My secret to profiting in life is to become incredibly aware
of what fills me with energy rather than takes it from me. And I think this is a
pattern that a lot of people get into where they're habitually doing the same thing every day, and that
could be in work or in your home life. And if you critical all of the things that you're doing, I
bet you more than 50% of them are energy draining, not energy giving.
And so the question becomes how do you either delegate the energy draining stuff or make
that sub 10% and fill your days and fill your life with the things that are energy giving
to you because life is short and we don't have time to spend wasting our energy.
We should be filling our energy and therefore it becomes contagious to others.
And if we're all doing that, how much better of a world could we create?
I love that.
That's beautiful.
And where can our listeners go to learn more about you and everything that you do?
Oh my gosh.
Well, I'm at Brit on basically every social network at Brit and Co is the company
and the podcast is called Teach Me Something New
and my new venture is selfmade, tryselfmade.com.
Awesome and I'll definitely put the links
for all of that in my show notes.
Brit, it was so lovely to talk to you.
It was a wonderful conversation.
Thank you so much.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks everyone.
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to subscribe to Yapp and drop
us a five star review on your favorite platform.
Brit Marin is such a girl boss.
I think the most memorable part of this episode for me
was hearing her stories and interactions
that she had with Steve Jobs at Apple.
She is so lucky she got to meet him in person.
I can't even believe that.
And I truly admire how she uses creativity
and to do it yourself attitude in all aspects of her life.
I hope you gained some actionable insight
and inspiration to stay creative no matter how
old you are and what stage you are in life by listening to this episode.
And if you want more information about honing your creativity, why don't you check out
my recent episode with Seth Godin?
Number 87, the Practice of Creativity.
In it we discuss his approach to creativity as a professional, the importance of generosity
with ideas,
and why people may be holding themselves back from success without even knowing it. Here's a clip
from that episode. How about art? What is your definition of art? So I wish I had a better word,
and if you could help me with this highlight, appreciate it. I think we can all agree that Jackson
Pollock was an artist. We can all agree that Frida Kahlo was an artist.
We can all agree that Marcel Duchamp was an artist.
But wait a minute, what about William Shakespeare?
He was definitely an artist.
And so was Neil Gaiman, right?
So it might be art painting, it might be writing,
but you can also be an artist as an architect.
And I think you can be an artist as a child's therapist,
showing up with a kid who hasn't been able to engage with someone and you got them to engage.
So I need to say art is what happens when a human being does something generous that might not work designed to change somebody else.
That's my definition of art.
Yeah, I thought it was really interesting that you kept talking about generosity in your book
in relation to being a creative, being an artist, being a leader.
Tell us about how generosity interplays with all of this.
Okay, so there are two ways to get at this.
The first way is this, if I have $6 and I give you $3 generously, I don't have it anymore.
You have it.
So if I give it out to
everybody, I'm broke. But if I have an idea and I give it to you, I still have it.
In fact, the more people have my idea, the more it's worth. And so the world has
changed from the scarcity mindset of, I don't have it anymore, to the abundant
mindset of connection, connection
creates value.
So, that's one reason to be generous.
We live in that world now.
And the second reason to be generous is because a lot of people are trained correctly to
not want to take or steal or hustle or just put stuff out there that they're not proud of.
And so, we hold back.
We hold back our good idea.
But imagine that you're standing on the boardwalk
and invent a speech or something,
and someone is drowning a couple feet away from you.
Will you jump in and save them?
Or will you say, well, I can't be sure I can save them?
Will you say someone else here
it might be more qualified than me?
Will you say, I'll just hide? Well, I'm guessing you would jump in and save them. Will you say someone else here it might be more qualified than me? Will you say, I'll just hide?
Well, I'm guessing you would jump in and save them. I try. Because you're generous and
That makes it way easier to do our art. If we realize we're not doing our art for links or clicks or money
We're doing our art because the other person will benefit
Suddenly, it's selfish to hold it back.
It's generous to say, here, I made this.
And that's an extraordinary opportunity
and a great way to hack your brain
and get out of your own way to trust yourself.
Again, go check out number 87 with Seth Godin
if you want further information
on how to hone your creativity
and get some excellent marketing advice while you're at it.
We're so grateful for our avid listeners, and that's why each week I shout out our recent Apple Podcast review at the end of my episode.
Apple Podcast reviews are the most coveted kind of reviews for podcasters because they act as social proof and they largely impact podcast rankings. If you haven't written us an Apple Podcast review,
what are you waiting for?
Show us some love and appreciation this week
by taking the time to write us an Apple Podcast review.
This week's shoutout goes to Clayton Lawrence from the US.
One of my favorite podcasts.
Everything about this show is amazing.
Every time I listen to a new episode,
I've learned something new,
and I feel inspired and motivated to incorporate that learning in my life. Yapp is both informative and entertaining
and holidays a great job of pulling out value from each guest. On top of that, the production
quality is top notch. I highly recommend this show. Thank you so much for the review, Clayin,
and for all the support you show us on LinkedIn too. And by the way, shout out to Matt on my team.
He's our lead audio engineer,
and the production quality is all kudos to him.
Matt, you're amazing.
Thank you so much.
And to everyone listening out there,
don't forget to share a young and profiting podcast
with your friends and family,
and remember to follow us on social media.
You can find me on Instagram at Yapathala or LinkedIn.
Just search for my name, it's Halataha. follow us on social media. You can find me on Instagram at Yapathala or LinkedIn, just
search for my name, it's Halataha. And now I'm on Clubhouse, follow me at Halataha and
tap the bell for always so you always know when I open up a room. I host podcast office
hours each and every week, and I'll also be hosting a lot of Gap live events. Big thanks
to the Gap family, we're now over 40 people strong. It's literally insane how fast
we've grown, but I'm so proud of everyone and everything that we're doing, much love to the team.
This is Hala, signing off.
Are you looking for ways to be happier, healthier, more productive, and more creative?
I'm Gretchen Rubin, the number one best-selling author of the Happiness Project, and every week we share ideas and practical solutions on the happier with
Gretchen Ruben podcast. My co-host and happiness guinea pig is my sister Elizabeth Kraft.
That's me Elizabeth Kraft, a TV writer and producer in Hollywood. Join us as we explore
fresh insights from cutting-edge science, ancient wisdom, pop culture, and our own experiences
about cultivating happiness and good habits.
Every week we offer a try this at home tip
you can use to boost your happiness
without spending a lot of time, energy, or money.
Suggestions such as follow the one-minute rule.
Choose a one-word theme for the year,
or design your summer.
We also feature segments like know yourself better
where we discuss questions like, are you an over buyer or an under buyer? Morning person or night person, abundance
lever or simplicity lever? And every episode includes a happiness hack, a quick, easy shortcut
to more happy. Listen and follow the podcast, Happier with Gretchen Rubin.
Get on up with Dark and Bold from Community Coffee. Hello! Get, get, get, get, get, get, get on up!
Get, get, get, get, get, get on up!
First and loose when you're born to say,
I'm bustin' loose!
Look for it at your local grocery or communitycoffee.com.