Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Cathy Heller: Do What You Love | E73
Episode Date: July 17, 2020Don't keep your day job! Life is short, and we spend so much of it working. So, it only makes sense to do what you love! Today, Hala chats with Cathy Heller, host of Apple’s #1 podcast, Don't Keep Y...our Day Job, which has over 9 million downloads and features conversations with creative entrepreneurs like actress Jenna Fischer, Seth Godin and more. Cathy is also a business and life coach who helps clients get paid for what they love to do through group programs, courses and retreats. In this episode, we’ll cover why a lack of resources is not an excuse to abandon your dreams, why radical empathy is the core of every business and how Cathy manages to make millions working only 4 hours per day. 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 Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on the show, we're chatting with Kathy Heller, host of Apple's number one podcast,
Don't Keep Your Day Job, which has over 9 million downloads and features conversations
with creative entrepreneurs like actress Jennifer Fisher, Seth Godin, and more.
Kathy is also a business and life coach who helps clients get paid for what they love
to do through group programs, courses, and retreats.
In this episode, we'll cover why a lack of resources is not an excuse to abandon your
dreams.
Why a radical empathy is at the core of every business and how Kathy manages to make millions
working only four hours per day.
Hey Kathy, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
How are you?
I'm good, nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you too.
I'm so excited to kick off this conversation.
I think you have a really cool background
and we're gonna get so much insights from you.
I wanted to start off with your background.
Get some insight into what it was like for you growing up.
You're very up. You're
very successful. You have a top podcast on Apple. You've launched courses and
workshops that generate millions of dollars every time you put one out. You're a
mom of three wonderful daughters. And to the outside eye, it might have seemed
like a really straight shot path to success, but your success actually came a
little bit later. And your past didn't
always shine so bright. Like when you were a teenager, one might not have thought that
you would have achieved so much success later on in life. So help us understand what it
was like for you as a child, as a teenager, and some of the lessons you learned from growing
up.
Yeah, sure. I mean, I think that the truth is that that's how it is for everybody. You know,
I mean, I think we come into this world as a soul
that's gotta learn a lot of lessons
and it must be true because I don't know any person
who has a linear life.
There's actually no straight lines in nature either.
Like everything in nature has like edges and curves
and twists and turns and that's how our lives are.
And I do think that it's like an illusion
because you look at people on social media,
and all you see is like highlight reel,
and you forget like, oh, this person's heart was broken.
Oh, this person got rejected.
Oh, something happened.
I think everyone who's listening by the age of 10
or 11 or 12, you went through something traumatic.
Someone passed away, your parents got divorced.
You had some kind of injury,
like life is intense and complicated.
So of course, it's like that for me.
So I came out to LA 16 years ago
with a dream of being a rock star.
I wanted to get a record deal.
And that was my escape.
Growing up, my parents had a really scary marriage, one of getting divorced.
My mom was suicide almost in my life.
We had very little money, lived in a little apartment.
My dad was sort of off in his own new life,
new marriages, plural.
And it was a very depressing, scary time.
And I wanted so much to be heard and seen,
and I had a voice I could sing.
And I thought, well, then that's it.
And people will see me and people will hear me and without anything.
Just like literally a dream I came out to LA which is like a very romanticized story from
a movie and I wrote mediocre songs and the songs got a little better and a little better
and I was really determined and I sent lots of emails and had lots of meetings and I was really determined. And I sent lots of emails and had lots of meetings and I was very scared and did things anyway
and walked into rooms that I wasn't afraid to be in
until I was offered a record deal
and I was signed to InnerScope
and I was sitting with Lady Gaga.
She was recording paparazzi and I was just signed
and they were asking me what I wanted from Starbucks
and I couldn't believe that soon,
I would have this record out and I couldn't believe that soon I would have
this record out and I would be like Cheryl Crow and it felt so amazing.
That's awesome.
Yeah, as everybody who's listening, they know that I do plenty of research.
So I know about that story and I can't wait to kind of talk about what happened after
you got dropped from the record label on how you felt and how you got out of it.
And we actually have something in common.
So I started off wanting to be a singer.
I recorded a whole album.
My boyfriend is a famous music producer
and he's my longtime boyfriend of 10 years.
His name is Harry Fraud.
And I actually worked at a radio station,
hot 97, and that was my first job in college.
And I actually took that job
so I could pitch my music to the DJs.
And then I fell in love with radio.
And that's why I have a podcast 10 years later.
But you obviously got a lot further.
Wow, I love that story.
I feel like I've lived 10 lives, honestly.
So I feel like we have a lot of income in there
but you got a lot further.
You actually went and got a record deal.
I never had anything like that.
I just was recording and never really put anything out
officially.
So talk to us about when you found out that they were
dropping you from the label. And at that point, from my understanding, you were basically
told from the people who loved you that you needed to get a real job and you needed to
get stable. And how did that feel? And what did you do to sustain yourself after that?
Yeah, I was driving in the car, which is where you spend most of your time in LA. And Ron
Fair was my producer. Ron Fair, most people know him now from producing Christina and
the pussycat dolls and and he called me and he was like, are you driving? I'm like, yeah, he's like,
can you call me when you get home? And I'm like, I'll just pull over. And of course, he told me,
Jimmy Iveen loves you. Everybody loves you, but we're not absolutely certain. We're going to sell
50,000 copies of this record in the first day and we can't take a chance.
And I know you'll be successful.
There's something about you.
And I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's like, no, no, no, no, you're gonna be successful.
But like this might not be like the path for you.
I'm like, great, that's what I wanna hear.
So yeah, everybody said to me, like, grow up.
Like this is reality.
Like nothing's gonna happen for you.
You're gonna be an adult.
And being an adult means being practical
and being miserable.
So get a job, get health insurance,
and like when you're on a Sunday afternoon,
you can do something you like.
When you're retired, you can do something you like,
but not with your life.
And I was like, that's so depressing.
No wonder my mom's depressed.
No wonder my parents were miserable.
This is what being an adult is like.
Everyone just convinces you that you have to be unhappy.
So I was like, great, I'll go get a job job.
So I got a job at a nonprofit.
Because I was like, I'll do something nice for the world.
Well, it was the most dysfunctional place I'd ever worked.
Then I got a job in an interior design firm.
Because I was like, well, I'm really creative.
So like, maybe I want to be around creative things.
No, but you needed to do math.
And like, I didn't like it.
It wasn't really what I'm good at.
Then I got a job in a casting office.
I worked on the Ghost Whisperer pilot
with Jennifer Love Hewitt and I hated it.
I was like everyone is so superficial, not her.
She was really sweet, but like the casting world
was so nitpicky and like even the ways
that the assistants wore their clothes to work,
it was like what are you a fashion designer?
Like you have to be the cool kids in high school.
Everyone was so insecure.
I was like, what am I doing here?
Then my friend said, no, you're doing it all wrong.
If you're not gonna do what you love, you go make money.
And I'm like, great, how do I make money?
It's like you work in finance or real estate.
I'm like, well, I'm not good at math,
so I'll go work in real estate.
So I get a job in commercial real estate
because they're like, no, you don't sell houses.
You sell multi million dollar shopping centers.
And I'm like, great, because I hate any,
I don't want any of it anyway.
So like, fine, I'll sell a $200 million shopping center.
So I go to work for these guys in Brentwood
who were like total frat guys.
You know, like they drive their Porsche Cayenne,
they wear their press shirts.
And I'm blowing out my hair and I'm wearing high heels and pantsuits, and I'm actually good at it
because I realize in that job what you have to do is just talk to people and have a good
personality, and you're talking to people with lots of money.
These are not people who you have to convince.
Like they're all like, oh, I need a diversify my portfolio, sure, I'll buy that 200, it's
ridiculous. So I was a diversified my portfolio. Sure, I'll buy that 200, it's ridiculous.
So I was actually pretty good at it.
And two years into it, of course, I wasn't making millions,
but I was making a couple hundred grand.
And I was being told by my friends, you are crushing it.
You, I was driving a white two-door Mercedes coupe.
I ate any sushi I wanted. I had the cutest anthropology
couch. Like I was like crushing it. And you're only like 25, 26.
Yeah. And I looked in the mirror one day and I did not recognize myself and I
just started bawling my eyes out. And I said I'm gonna go into work today and
I'm gonna quit. Because I didn't move out to LA for any of that.
And I've come to realize that the greatest regret
of the dying is I didn't live life on my terms.
That is the number one thing that people say
when they're dying.
And I was like, that is not worth it.
No amount of money, no amount of anything.
And for my friend group at the time,
making $198,000 was a lot of
money for 26-year-old. And here I was being super smart. I quit my job.
Yeah. That reminds me of I was listening to you have an interview and you were talking
about how your mom being suicidal was all about her like not being an alignment with herself.
Can you talk to us about like how that you weren't an alignment because you were at that
job and like...
Yeah, I mean, I heard my friend Amber Ray say the same thing that she said like,
people are dying with their gifts inside of them. And I felt like my mom,
that was her deepest pain. She is talented. She is empathetic. She has depth,
and she's sitting on the couch watching the news. Like, she knows there's
something else she's supposed to do
and a rabbi friend of mine said to me,
the opposite of depression is not happiness.
The opposite of depression is a sense of purpose.
And I said, that's so true.
Like, it's not the car and the sushi and the this.
It's the, I wake up every day
and I put my mark in the world
and I feel like I'm
doing something.
And if you don't feel that, it doesn't matter what size your house is, it doesn't matter.
So I quit my job and here was the problem.
I had no path.
And this is what I want your listeners to hear me say.
I believe that we think often it's all or nothing.
It's Beyonce or bust.
There's nothing in between.
I had no clue what else was there.
It was either you get to be Cheryl Crow, Taylor Swift,
or you're not in music.
So I did something really unique.
I did something I've never done before
and I asked a new question.
Is there any other way I can be in music without being a rock star?
And I had never asked that question, so I had never found another answer.
So to me, it was like you get the record dealer not.
So I start researching, and within 10 minutes on Google,
I start to see different ways people are making a living in music,
and one of the biggest things was called licensing your songs to film
in TV. And for those of you who are looking at this on a video screen, which I hope you're
not because I just got out of the shower and I have three kids running around. I didn't do it
Panaykit, but these are articles from Billboard variety, music connection. I was on the cover of the
USA Today Music section. Why? I started licensing my music, but let's go back. I didn't know what
that meant. I read an article about Snow Patrol,
Regina Spector, Ingrid Michelson, Christina Perry,
who had their songs in all these, the Hunger Games,
and Grey's Anatomy, and Dawson's Creek,
and all these shows, and all this stuff.
And I was like, what is this?
These people started out without record deals.
They were just licensing music.
So I was like, okay, I'm gonna put all my energy into that.
And so I started to ask more questions.
What songs do these people need?
Who are these people?
What's their email address?
How do I make a relationship with them?
And I made it my job to focus on that.
And it took 18 months.
And by 18 months, I was out of money.
Because I was living in LA without a job
spending $2,500 on rent, that's what it caught.
I was bleeding money and making music.
I was recording music, so I was spending money
and some of the songs were not exactly what they needed
and a lot of people weren't writing me back
and I was getting phone calls unanswered,
but after 18 months, I got my very first license
and I made $58,000 and they used a song of mine called,
We're Good Together.
We're Good Together.
We're Good Together.
Look at how we shine.
Anyway, they used this song in a Hasbro commercial
and they paid me 58 grand.
Just to use it, not to own it.
Amazing.
Then I licensed it again to something else.
Then I wrote another song.
Then I made another relationship with ABC.
Then I wrote songs for Switch to Birth.
Then it, and then it all just tipping point, like boom.
Then I started writing music constantly.
And when I look back, like even in the heyday
of my music world life, I did that for a decade.
I did that for 10 years.
I did nothing else for 10 years,
other than be a mom and write those songs for film and TV.
And at the top of it, I probably had like 28 buyers, Paramount, Lionsgate, somebody at this ad agency. Like it wasn't like thousands of people. And it's amazing how 28 people in the world,
who you have a relationship with, can turn your dreams into a reality. So here's what happened next,
is I thought I'm going to get a record deal. I was still holding on to that. So here's what happened next is I thought
I'm gonna get a record deal.
I was still holding on to that.
So I was like, look what's happened.
Like my song was in this movie.
It was featured.
Like, you know, people are gonna,
things are gonna start to happen.
It didn't happen.
What happened was something I didn't predict,
which was that other artist did this.
Hey, can you help me?
Hey, can you help me? Like knock, knock, knock. Like emails, phone calls. And I'm like Hey, can you help me? Hey, can you help me knock, knock, knock, like emails, phone calls?
And I'm like, why are you calling me?
I can't help you.
I don't do that.
I don't have a school.
I'm not Berkeley.
I'm not what, why would, and a friend of my husband's was reading the Billboard magazine,
which made me feel cool because he's like, I picked up Billboard at like, you were a full
page.
And he came over and he's like, you're sitting on a gold mine.
And I'm like, what?
He's like, you should teach other artists.
You should be an agent for other artists.
And I felt insulted.
I'm like, I'm an artist.
And I want people to hear this too.
We are very much an or, we forget the yes and.
We are so precious about our identity.
It's like, do no, I'm an artist.
No, no, no, no, no. It's like, wait, wait. There might be more for you. Maybe there's ways that you're being led to
serve the world and like just trust the process. So finally, I'm like, that kept bouncing
around in my head, what he said to me. And my husband's like, you have nothing to lose. And I said,
well, people are not going to take me seriously as an artist. What was the complete opposite?
I started an agency. I started pitching other seriously as an artist. What was the complete opposite?
I started an agency.
I started pitching other artists along with myself.
That was step one.
And I started making these indie artists money.
And it felt really cool to help them.
And I made a little percentage of it.
Then I realized these artists needed some help.
So I start my first course called Six Figure Songwriting
in my living room, three houses ago.
I start this.
I don't know what I'm doing.
I don't know what I'm charging.
I'm just 10 people come over.
Then I got three of those workshops.
People loved it.
I was like, let me rent a place because I need more chairs.
I rent a theater for $150.
We had 50 seats.
I filled it up.
And then I was like, this is something.
Then I still at that point never, never thought I'd have a podcast,
but other people had music podcasts.
And they were like, can you talk about licensing?
So I go on the CD baby podcast and he says to me,
we've never had an episode that's downloaded as much as this.
People are so, so interested in what you just talked about.
And I get this life changing email from this, people are so, so interested in what you just talked about. And I get this life-changing email
from this girl, Tiana, who I didn't know,
who went to Berkeley undergrad, Berkeley School of Music.
She goes, I just heard that episode.
Please tell me, you will create an online class
because I don't live near you
and I have to learn from you.
And I'm like, online class, is that Japanese?
What are you taught?
I really didn't know that world.
Like I was coming from like,
record deal to like living in LA, writing music
for Disney soundtracks, like, what's an online class?
She says to me, Amy Porterfield, I go, who's that?
She goes, just look her up and take her class
and build a course that I'm like, you're insane.
Goodbye. And then that was jiggling around in my head. And she says to me, and take her class and build a course that I'm like, you're insane, goodbye.
And then that was jiggling around in my head.
And she says to me, do you understand,
you're making a few hundred grand a year,
you could make that in one launch of a class
because she said there will always be a line
of people around the block for everything you do,
for every one customer,
there'll be 50 people who wanna know
how you did what you did.
And I'm like, okay, jiggling around in my head.
So at that point, we lived in a cute little $1 million.
It was literally $1 million 50,000.
That's all we could afford.
But we were doing okay, but like we had our $1 million
of cute Spanish bungalow LA house.
And I was pregnant with our third daughter.
And I was like, wait a minute, I wonder
if this would be a game changer
and then my kids can go to the better school
and we can have a better house in LA
because it's expensive.
I'm pregnant, I've got three months
till the baby's gonna be born,
I'm just gonna frickin' do this thing.
Let's just do it.
Well, I did.
I didn't have an Instagram account,
I didn't have an email list, no joke.
I looked up what you do and I was like, oh God,
it was like exhausting.
Like I would read one thing about what I'm supposed to do,
like creating an opt-in and attaching a lead page
to a thing people download and exchange,
and I was like, my heart would race.
I'm like, this is so not me, but I did it.
I created one frickin' opt-in,
which was like, here are the 10 things
you need to know to license music.
I love it.
And I put it out, and I didn't know what I was doing,
but like I posted it in a Facebook group
and then people shared it, and I thought,
okay, if I get 1,000 people to download this free thing,
I'll do a free webinar.
And I had never done a webinar and I had a big pregnant belly
and I had not one slide.
Cause I didn't know what slides were.
I didn't know how to do that.
I go on, I do this webinar for 1,014 people.
It took six weeks to get that many people
who were like, sure, I'll do this thing for you.
I wanna learn, it's free.
I do a one hour webinar,
straight to camera, pour my guts out.
I'm like, here's what I did,
here's what you can do, write this down,
write this down, write this down.
At the end, I said, I'm gonna do a class,
it's called Six Figure Songwriting, it's a year,
I made it up, now my classes are 12 weeks,
like I never would do a year.
I didn't know what I was doing,
I was like, it's a year, it's 997,
because Amy Porterfield said 997 is a good price,
a thousand dollars, right? 147 is a good price, $1,000, right?
147 people bought it. And that night I looked at my husband and I was like, I just made $147,000 in one day. That's crazy. Then I had the baby. I taught the class. I loved teaching the class.
And then one of my students said,
you need to have a podcast.
And I was like, I don't know what that means.
She goes, I know a woman who sells ads
for billboard, Adam Corolla, and a bunch of comedians
who have podcasts, just have coffee with her.
And I'm like, sure, I'm 10 days postpart,
I'm having a baby, fine.
And this woman says, you need about 10,000 listeners
to make it even worth it.
I'm like, that'll never happen.
But okay, great.
I start a podcast.
And then within two weeks of starting the podcast,
I get a call from three book publishers saying,
this show is phenomenal.
People want to leave their day jobs.
People want to do something creative.
This is amazing.
We want to offer you a book deal.
I'm like, I can't write a book.
I really haven't written anything like that since 10th grade English class. So give me a minute.
Meanwhile, I had just launched the second launch of the music class and it made 441 grand.
Then I launched it again. It made 750,000. Then I figured out something that now I do, which is not a
webinar, but a five-day challenge, and I've perfected it. And now when I launch, we'll
make like a million and a half dollars with very little Facebook ads spend. Maybe we'll
spend $5,000 on Facebook ads, but the challenge, I am like the queen of doing a challenge. Meanwhile,
I start this podcast, and it starts to blow up.
We're three years in, we're at about 15 million downloads now.
It's a dream.
And I start realizing, I don't want to just teach musicians.
I want to be a stand for people who want to do a thing
and need to get resourceful and need to figure out
how to separate a business versus a hobby.
I'm like, I am into this.
So I start a program called Made to Do This. Like, how do you figure out how to separate a business versus a hobby, I'm like, I am into this.
So I start a program called May to Do This.
How do you figure out what your thing is
and how do you actually validate it
and then make your first five grand, 10 grand?
How do you actually do a thing?
That's like a passion project.
It has literally been the funnest ride.
And can you believe my very first anything online,
this first webinar, this is four years ago.
The podcast started three years ago.
And now every quarter we're making, we're making multi-millions.
And this is the best part.
Now I teach other people how to do that.
Yeah.
Isn't that fun?
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And it's working here.
Your students make money.
I know that you have got great testimonials.
I'm so happy that you unpacked your full story. I think that you have a great testimonial. I'm so happy that you unpacked
your full story. I think that your story is amazing. I think there's so many things
that we can dig into. I'm so proud of your journey. And so there's a few things that I want
to point out to my listeners. First of all, you took a break from music. You took a
break and you were successful in real estate, but you took a break from music, but then
you went back to your dreams.
Something that I noticed when I talked to a lot of people,
a lot of people like let go over their dreams,
and then they feel like they can never go back to them.
For me, I left the entertainment industry for five years,
and then I went back.
I never thought I would go back,
but everything is just kind of upstream momentum
because I'm following my passion
and your action and plus passion can make anything happen, right?
So that's exactly what happened to you.
It's like you just got interested in things.
You didn't know how to do them.
You didn't know how to start an online course.
You didn't know how to do a podcast,
but you just tried and something else
that you often talk about is that you don't do things
perfect.
You do them messily.
Tell us about that.
Tell us about how you just jump into anything
that you do and just get started because I think people really need to hear that. Well, I agree with you. Three things about that. Tell us about how you just jump into anything that you do and just get started because I think people really need to hear that.
Well, I agree with you. Three things about that. Number one, what you just said is so true.
And I heard Tony Robbins say years ago, our greatest resources are resourcefulness.
And the thing that lights up strongest in the brain, I took a bunch of classes at UCLA.
They have this mindful awareness center. And I took a couple of years of classes there.
And they said, the thing that lights up strongest
in the brain is not love, it's not hate.
It's enthusiasm.
So when you are enthusiastic, other people are magnetized to you.
So when you get resourceful and bold
and you take messy action, there will be momentum.
I said messy because you're right.
I think that the biggest thing I see that stands in people's way
is that they don't want to that stands in people's way is that
they don't want to do anything unless it's perfect. And the people I know who are successful have an action taking bias, meaning they will hit it out of the park, but that's because they
swing for the fences constantly. That's because they get up to bat more often. Like you could say
Michael Jordan, he is the greatest of all time. Meanwhile, for every point he made, how many shots did he miss?
Right? It's the unrelenting.
And that is what creates mastery.
So Serena Williams, you know, she started out behind her sister,
and she was like, oh, no, you don't.
Like, I will crush you.
And she gave herself permission to play until she was like, oh, no, you don't. Like, I will crush you. And she gave herself permission
to play until she was better than her.
But she wasn't Mozart, day one, right?
That doesn't exist.
And so when you look at Justin Timberlake,
when you look at John Williams,
when you look at, I'm thinking of music people right now,
because I'm in that field.
Anybody at the top of their field, right?
Anybody, right?
Like athletics and science, Elon Musk.
Elon Musk was borrowing money for rent 12 years ago.
So what do we know about those people?
It's courage and it's courage to be imperfect
while you're iterating.
Elon Musk said, I'm gonna do this thing called electric cars.
And if somebody beats me to it, that's great,
because I actually just think it's an important thing
the whole world should get on.
I'm probably gonna fail a few times.
You know what I mean?
I don't really know what I'm doing,
but I'm all in to figure it out.
So I think we have to think the way scientists do.
Like right now people are going into work.
Can you imagine being a scientist
is trying to find a cure for cancer?
And you've been working at this for 45 years. And every day it's a no. Every day you have
nothing. Except as a scientist, they feel the reason they stay in it because they're
like, oh my God, here's what we learn that doesn't work. Isn't that amazing? We know so
much more. And we're getting closer. So instead of looking at failure as the end, they see
failure as feedback. And that is so crucial. And I'm one of those people. I think part of having an uncomfortable
childhood was a blessing because there was no illusion that life is just like easy and
smooth. We make it. We make it what it is if we kind of like stay in it. So there's that.
The other thing is, and I don't think everybody hears this, and I think this is really important. There's a lot of conversation about our dreams. Do
what you love. There's a more important piece. The more important piece is radical empathy
for other people. We're not put here because it's about us. We're put here to serve.
So I had to let go of my dream and open the door to,
is there any other way that I'm of use to the world,
that I can be of value to the world and put my ego aside?
And I started to find out in the way that I even
was successful with my music.
This is interesting.
This is important.
I wasn't successful in film and TV because I wrote songs I wanted to write and people bought
them.
No.
It was because I would have these conversations with the head of soundtracks at NBC and say,
what do you need?
What story are you telling?
Oh, you know, Kathy, we have this sister movie Can you write I'll be right back?
So the empathy is
Crucial the thing that people don't realize is there's a difference between a hobby and a business a hobby is
This is about what I love and it doesn't matter what you think
If it's a business by definition definition, someone paid me. If someone paid me, they need this thing or they want this thing, which means it's about them.
People do not want to swallow that.
But I'll tell you what, the people behind Apple products, the people behind Skippy Peanut Butter,
the people behind any business you love, care so much about what you want,
and that's why they're successful.
And a lot of people have a very hard time with that,
and they're missing the boat,
because it's a pleasure when we do something
and somebody is uplifted by it.
So what I did is I just kept looking
for where am I needed.
So then these students were like,
can you teach me?
At first I was like, no,
and then I'm like, let me say yes.
And it worked.
Then somebody else was like, it's inspiring.
Start a podcast.
OK, let me do that.
Then I start seeing that people need this.
I'm like, let me do that.
And it starts being that I'm led, not by what I love,
but by what people are saying as a reflection.
This is what I need from you.
Now, that's different from this is what I need from you. Now, that's different from this is
what I need. It's a problem I can solve. It's them saying to me, like, there's a lot of
people who for years, people have said to them constantly what they love about them, but
they ignore it. Everyone who's listening has gotten feedback at some point in their
life, like, you're such a good listener. You're so good with clothes. You really help give
me good advice. Every time I'm about to build something, you're such a good listener. You're so good with clothes. You really help give me good advice.
Every time I'm about to build something,
you come over, listen to that.
It's a problem you were built to solve.
As opposed to saying, I see a lot of people
who they ignore all of that,
and then they keep pushing this door that's not gonna open,
because it's not about anyone else.
It's like, but I want this and why?
What's the reason for it?
And here's the thing, I think it's because deeply people want to feel seen.
So they have this like, I need to be seen in this way.
It's like, just maybe you'll feel even more seen when you do that thing that the way you do it,
the world is just like flooredored, because you really served.
You know what I mean?
So I've just come to see how empathy plays a big role
in the way that we show up in business.
And then I've also learned a lot about
what actually makes people buy things
and how sales is like,
it's a long runway.
It's not, here's a product, here's a service.
It's like, let's build the intimacy.
Let's really connect.
Let's like make sure that you feel that I get what you need first and you have a full
experience of this thing.
And then I don't even have to sell you on it because like, we're already in a relationship.
So business is relationships, it's not numbers.
And I've learned that.
And when you focus on that and you just make deposits
with people and you think of like,
how can I show up and how can I give?
And I mean in a very tactical way.
And we can talk about it more.
It just happens.
The momentum just shows up.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh, you just gave so much good advice.
And there's so many things that I want to talk to you about in terms of
The lessons that you brought out the first one is the fact that you're not scared to kind of like go up to your potential clients and ask them
What they want so instead of trying to guess what they want you actually ask them
What do you want and from when I was doing your research?
I know you and you just mentioned it like you would call up random people that you didn't even know
and like introduce yourself, ask them what they want. And then you'd make a good impression
because it'd be like nobody has ever done this before. So you like you would immediately stand
out as somebody who has courage like you mentioned and who is smart enough to know that you're
not going to work on something before you know there's actually a demand for it, right?
And then also what you said about thinking about what people praise you for.
That's a clue into what you're special at, what you're extremely talented at, and what
you could possibly sell that people will actually want.
So I think those are all key things that everybody listening should think about.
One thing that I want to go back to is your resourcefulness.
So can you tell us an example of when you were relentlessly resourceful, you did something
that most people wouldn't have done to get that job
to get to that next step?
I mean constantly, every single day is the answer.
I'm doing it constantly.
I can give you so many examples,
but one of them that's fun is that when I was starting out
in this music thing of trying to license my music,
I kept feeling like I would send emails
or I would make phone calls and nine times out of 10,
people wouldn't answer their phone
or they wouldn't call me back
or they wouldn't respond to an email.
One single while they would, which was also fine,
but I wanted more.
And I thought, you know what,
it's nobody's job to help me.
And I think that people get really cynical.
They're like, it's such a mean business.
It's like, look, this person is sitting at a desk. They have a job. Then after work, they have to
take their dog to the vet. They also have their own issues. They have a boss. Like, they're not just
waiting for a stranger to call them and go, oh, how can I just give you a lecture on what you need to
do for your career? Like, that's not there. That's not, do you do that every day? Like, no. So I realize I have to make deposits.
I have to make a relationship before I can ask them
to even tell me what they need.
And trust me, who am I?
They're just gonna tell me, oh yeah, we're working on,
so I needed to kind of connect on a human level.
So one day, I'm sitting at my computer,
and I'm like, I gotta do something out of the box.
And I'm just like, I gotta do something out of the box.
And I'm just like, I don't overthink things.
That's one of my strengths.
I'm like, everybody likes coffee.
So I just opened up my computer.
I'd never at that point made anything.
So I'm not good at graphic design.
I pull a picture of a Starbucks,
Frappuccino off the internet.
I pull a picture of a little girl with a guitar off the internet.
She was like a cartoon girl with a guitar.
And I put a plus sign between them. So like this little girl with a guitar, the internet. She was like a cartoon girl with a guitar. And I put a plus sign between them.
So like this little girl with a guitar,
a plus sign and a Starbucks.
And I wrote on top of it, mocha's in music.
And then I wrote, step one, tell me your favorite Starbucks drink.
Step two, tell me what day and time to drop it off.
And step three, I'll leave you with some music
and some coffee and that's it.
I took this little PDF image and I put it inside of an email and I sent it
to about 80 people and a bunch of people said nothing and some people said no thank you
and 26 people said sure and I'm like oh my god I'm gonna start delivering coffee
someone's what do you want and then I went and like I actually added to it I was like does your
assistant want something because I figure
Okay, so it's gonna cost me 15 bucks, but it'll be so awesome. I
walked in the 26 offices of
different people who chose music for TV shows and ads and would you believe a
year later there was a billboard article and the
Editor billboards said how many licenses did you have this year? And I said 26.
Every one of them worked with me.
And that was the breakthrough.
It's like, and I didn't have the music already that every one of them needed.
But I walked in that office and I did not take the bait.
I didn't say, let me tell you about myself.
Nope.
I really held on to what
up my mission was, which is this is not about me. I said, here's the coffee. I was ready
to walk right back out the door, and they each said, sit down. In some offices, I stayed
for eight minutes, in some offices, I stayed for an hour. We didn't talk about music. I asked
them about them. Why do you like your job? What got you into it? What's your story? Do
you have kids? Do you like living in LA? in LA, we just went into a conversation. I was really, truly interested because I
really admire these people. I was actually so impressed at how many of these people
helped all these indie artists. They're not record label executives making this big money.
They're just music fans who find these artists and then these artists blow up. So I had a lot of respect for them.
It wasn't fake.
Well, it led to a relationship where then they were like, you know what, I will listen to
this music you brought and let me follow up with you.
And so then they would give me a shot.
You know, Kathy, we're working on something we need a song about home.
Let us know if you have something and I'm like, I'll go write something and then sure enough, I did. And they liked it. And then it led to the next thing and the next thing.
So I think that that was pretty resourceful. And I do stuff like that constantly, non-stop.
So I love that you were just so creative. You just did something that was totally at the box.
You didn't know if it would work or not, but it didn't take much of your time to just put a
PDF together and send out an email blast and
and then the long-term effects of it were amazing. You got 26 people the following year who worked with you.
So I think that's so cool, so innovative and just shows like how much you think outside the box.
Something else I want to talk about is your concept of deep engagement.
So I learned that you like to have 10 Instagram conversations a day with your audience.
So what makes it so important to you to connect deeply with your listeners or clients?
Well, I think that people in general really look at numbers.
So we're like, oh, wouldn't it be so cool if I had 100,000 followers, 200,000 followers, and I don't think people really understand
what matters more is the depth of the relationship.
So if you have 100,000 followers,
but you get like 24 comments on a post,
it's not a connected, deep, intimate relationship
you have with your audience.
But if you have 4,800 followers,
and you get 58 comments on a post and 1,200 likes,
it's amazing what you've built.
Like that's incredible, that's so, so special.
I think that what I've seen in my life is,
you don't need millions of people to buy from you.
You also underestimate how, if you do have a course,
that's $9.97 and 100 people take it,
100 people in the world, that's 100 grand.
If you have a program that's $3,000 and 100 people take it,
that's 300 grand, right?
Every single person on average has about 400 friends online.
So everything is word of mouth. And if you have a really strong relationship
with 10 people, and then they share about how much they loved working with you, you'll
probably soon have 20 people. And then they'll share. And it's more important to have that
intimacy than it is to have a bigger number with much less connection
involved.
What would you say to somebody?
This is a random question that wasn't planned, but I'll just ask it.
There's a lot of skepticism about people who launch courses.
There's a lot of feelings that people who launch courses are scammy, and I think that
it's starting to go away because the new way that people want to
educate themselves is through courses. So like what would you say to that in terms of like people who
think that courses or like selling a course is like being a sellout or yeah I think you get my
just. Yeah I do. I mean I think I felt that way too when I started and I was like I don't really
want to be a part of something online,
something about it did feel maybe because we do see ads popping up a lot
and there's something that feels disingenuous about a lot of people.
So I will say two things.
One, I don't sell courses and I'll tell you what I mean.
I don't think people buy courses.
I don't think that that's what people buy, and I'll explain.
When I go ahead and invite people to work with me,
I make sure that they understand,
and this is really the truth.
I don't think people are buying the course
that's gonna sit on their desktop, those videos.
It's not gonna work.
What we find in the data is most of those people don't complete
those courses. So it's kind of a waste of money. What I sell is I'm actually going to keep you accountable
and I'm going to show up live and I'm going to help you implement all this information.
So it's like coaching. Well, it's just the implementation of whatever it is.
You don't have to be a coach.
You could be a person who teaches people how to be vegan.
You could be a person who teaches people how to play piano.
You might not necessarily consider yourself a coach,
but it's the, I'm going to help you.
Well, look at the difference of this.
Let's say you watch videos on YouTube with a yoga teacher.
They're all free.
Or you hire a yoga teacher and you're in a class and that person can come over and
like give you an adjustment or give you some information that helps your ankle. That's
very different than watching it for free, right? And I think a lot of people have all these
to-do lists, right? I'm going to start a podcast. I'm going to be more successful. I'm going
to be healthier. But there's not a lot on the to-done list. Nothing's done.
So what I think I do is I say
if you actually want to start a business, if you actually want to start a podcast, if you actually do want this year to
license your music and you want to be doing it, not thinking about it, but doing it,
then this program is an insurance policy because you will get
it done.
The way I set up my programs are like these full, interactive, immersive things where there's
a tremendous amount of built-in accountability and there's a lot of live engagement, Zoom
calls, where it's like it's constant. For me, that's worth everything.
And if you look at a school, right, like a college,
and people are paying, depending where you go,
could be 20 grand a year, 70 grand a year,
and it is theoretical.
It is theory.
It is not actual.
Versus spending three grand, five grand, on a 12 week program, immersed with the person
who's doing it and has done it and is going to add that they're showing up and making sure you do it.
That is a tremendous gift, right? Like the fastest way to get from point A to point B is to find
the person who's at point B who's going to take you there and save you the 10 years, right, and save you the time.
So that's why it depends on what you're buying.
I personally don't like these programs that are like, it's an amazing webinar and you can
spend this money and go watch these videos.
That to me, I wouldn't do because it's all for me about
the accountability and it's all to me about I need the feedback loop from the person who
looks at it, puts their eyes on it and says, no, it's this, it's not this, those little
tweaks and the coaching, because I also don't think we buy the thing just for the information.
I think the transaction is the energetic exchange of being around the person who holds that frequency of I actually live this life.
And the more you're around that person, you're like, I'm starting to absorb this.
And it's not just the information, it's this person's energy and confidence, and it's pushing me to actually do these things. And it's lighting in a bottle. I've literally had, it's insane.
The ways that people feel after taking my programs,
they're like, I would pay 20 times what I paid for it,
and I feel like it's the greatest impact I've made.
I will also say one other thing,
which is what will help people be less skeptical.
I teach the entire class in the free challenge.
I teach the entire class in the five day free challenge.
If I do a webinar, which I don't,
because I can't get it all in in one hour,
I still would teach as much as I can.
I don't do this thing where I'm like,
here's what's possible,
and if you want to know how to do it, join the class.
I know that's really, really hip to do, but I just don't do that.
I don't like doing that.
I also have a lot of reasons to believe that it's really good for my business to give
a lot of stuff away for free.
It's really good for my business.
So when I do a five day free challenge, people are taking pages of notes, and I 100% believe
that they will be better off after the five days that are free,
and some of them will be totally good to go.
They will not need the class, and that's awesome.
It really helps my brand.
It really builds my platform.
It brings so many more people to my podcast.
It's so fun.
The people who decide to join my program,
that's also awesome.
They just need, they're like, people who decide to join my program, that's also awesome.
And they just need, they're like, I got a lot out of it and I cannot not have you around
for three months.
So that's all it costs, 3500 bucks, and I get to be around you for three months, like
where you're really showing up.
That's a no brainer for me.
And for everybody else, we're good. Because I love giving that away,
and I love how it builds my audience,
like in the deepest way.
And they're fans forever.
So it's the way that people should live their life,
I think, is just give as much away as possible.
Totally. And honestly, you've inspired me
because I feel like people are always asking me
to teach them, I'm like really good at graphic design,
and video editing, and marketing, and obviously podcasting. And people are always asking me, teach them, I'm like really good at graphic design and video editing and marketing and obviously podcasting.
And people are always asking me and I was like,
I don't know if I want to do it,
but I think I definitely will.
I think honestly, you sound so fulfilled from having.
I am so fulfilled from it, honestly.
And I think it's a future, honestly,
because I think people are going to move more away
from traditional education.
It's not really working.
I think more of like internships, apprenticeships, mentorships.
I think that's the future and I think that's where you play.
100%. I have three little kids.
I mean, they're little, three, six, and eight.
But I think about them going to college and I'm like,
I didn't learn one thing.
No.
Not one thing that I liked it though.
I had fun.
I liked being on campus.
I had a cool boyfriend.
I worked for the college paper, but that's a different thing than my career.
It's so funny how that was not career-related at all.
It was like a life experience, but my career has been learning on the job.
And the conversations I've had with guests on my podcast,
and starting a podcast is the most spectacular thing you can do.
Talk about getting a masterclass.
On my show, I've interviewed Malcolm Gladwell, Barbara Corcoran.
Every person I admire, Howard Schultz, started Starbucks.
Those are masterclasses for me.
So that's another best thing are master classes for me.
That's another best thing you can do for yourself,
is start your own show where you just get to be
a fly on the wall and absorb.
You get an hour alone with Malcolm Gladwell.
It's like, start a show.
No, did that happen on the first month of my show?
No, but it happened pretty quickly.
It's amazing what's possible,
and there's no cost to entry for podcasts.
I mean, there used to be, if you wanted to write a book,
it's like you've got a bag Harper Collins
to think that you're cool.
Right now, you can go to Amazon
and buy a $65 microphone.
And you have an authority all of a sudden.
You have something to say.
Why not?
I would do it.
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I know, I always encourage my listeners that a lot of people are scared that there's too
many podcasts out there, but like you said, it's not about how wide you're going.
It's about how deep you're going.
So if you can find people that care about what you're saying, if you have a specific niche, and like you said,
it's a great way to learn from mentors.
Okay, I'm learning from you.
I had Robert Green on my show, Mark Manson on my show,
like huge names that would have never talked to me
if I didn't have any sort of platform.
So definitely encourage everyone to go out
and start a podcast if you want to.
I want to talk about your work day
because I learned that you only work four hours a day.
Sometimes less.
That's crazy to me.
I'm here working literally.
I have a full-time job.
I have my podcast.
I have a freelance project.
I have a client.
Like I work 80 hours a week, 90 hours a week.
So I want to know how you are able to manage all,
because you have multiple projects to you. How are you able to do everything in four hours a day?
Well, I started out working like that non-stop. And then I realized the more successful you
are, you work smarter, not harder. That's it. So I actually think it's less work to make
multi-million dollars than it is to make $40,000. If you're making $40,000, you are
working standing on your feet all day long. It,000. If you're making $40,000, you are working standing on your feet all day long.
It's hard.
If you're making millions, what you've figured out is you've stepped back and instead of working
in your business, you've worked on your business and you've looked at things and you've been
able to build something which you can now launch every so often.
I mean, there's a lot to that, but there are days where I don't work at all.
I don't only work four hours a day,
sometimes I work nothing at all.
It depends on the day.
It's how I intentionally built my life, though.
Like when I was doing music,
I had to build it every time again, right?
In order for me to make 50 grand from Coca-Cola for a song,
I had to sit down, write a hit, right?
And they have their pick of the litter.
So I had to write a great song,
which means in order to get that one choice
that they would pick,
I had to show up for them probably 12 times
where there were other things they didn't choose
just to keep the relationship alive.
So it was a lot of labor intensive,
constant making the relationships, getting in the room.
So I could even have something to pitch to. Then I had to go do the work, oh, making the relationships, getting in the room so I could even have something
to pitch to, then I had to go do the work.
Oh, can you make this edit?
Actually, we're not going to use it the client pass, but we have this thing for Walmart.
Can you work on that?
It was constant.
And it took me all my time to make that money, $300,000, $400,000 a year, right, from like
a bunch of placements on TV.
When I started teaching classes, it was like,
oh, let me start getting better and better at this, right?
Because then I can do the music stuff
just in between when I want to.
I'll take a project when I want to.
I'll write a theme song for Netflix when I want to,
but I don't have to.
And everything comes down to building a deep relationship
with an audience, because a portion of that audience will convert
to buy something.
And like I said, I'm making multi-millions.
I know it sounds like, oh, so weird that she says it.
But I say it because I want people to hear it.
It's not a big deal.
You know what I'm saying?
It really, we put it on such a pedestal.
This is the problem.
And we think there's only one little tiny bridge
that gets you there,
and who knows where to find that? It's like, no, it's available. I have tons of friends who do this.
And no one knows them. Seth Godin is my personal mentor. He's like, Kathy, if you go into Google
and you just type the word Seth, I'm the first thing that shows up. That's how many people
read his blog, and he goes, and if you round up to the nearest million,
most people don't even know who I am.
Even though I have a decent following,
I'm still not even a, I'm not even a thing,
and I'm making so much money
because a small piece of my audience
will buy these programs, whatever.
So, like, say to people with their show, with their platform,
if you had 62 people come to your house every Tuesday,
your neighbors would be like,
why are there 62 cars in front of your house?
It's a lot of people.
So when people are like,
I can't start a podcast,
I won't have 15 million downloads.
I'm like, how about 62?
How about 62 people?
And you then have a thing where you do this program
or this retreat or you're having an online summit or you're offering the candles you made and
24 of those people buy that from you every month. My friend Jenny was just on Shark Tank. I want to tell you this really quickly.
She's my best friend from high school. I've known her like forever. And you know, we kind of riff on this stuff all the time
And she became vegan and she wanted to do something and she was a stay at home mom and she wanted to work
and she wasn't sure what to do.
So she starts making vegan recipes
and she comes across this vegan corn beef recipe
and her husband liked it and he eats meat.
So she's like, oh, let me go try.
Let me let's see if other people like it.
Other people liked it.
Now here's the thing.
We talked about working hard versus working smart.
If she would have said, I'll sell a sandwich to each person, one at a time that's like 15 bucks
a sandwich at best, right?
No, you know what's smarter?
Zoom out.
And instead of having to sell hundreds of sandwiches to hundreds of humans, how about you
get one client?
And you zoom out and say, who's my one client?
Oh, I'm going to call this really popular deli in LA
and see if they wanna buy a hundred pounds of corn beef.
Let me call another place.
How about Dodger Stadium?
Do they want one kiosk with vegan food?
So she did that.
And three weeks in to her business,
she's on the phone making the calls,
no one that wants to make. She's on the phone making the calls, no one wants to make.
She's calling the managers of the delis.
She was calling Quiznos corporate.
She was calling Whole Foods and scared out of her mind.
This is how you work four hours a day.
Cause that's smart.
That's the smart way.
Not getting a food truck and selling it one at a time
and trying to make $800.
No.
She wound up
getting meetings, bringing a corner of a sandwich for someone to taste. She wound up getting
into 10 delis in LA. She wound up getting into Quiz Nose. They tried her in one local store.
People liked it. They went into the whole region. Within 10 months of making that corn
beef in her kitchen, she was making multimillions.
That's working smart, not working hard.
And that's what I'm saying.
When I had to build the widget, every conversation, call this place, fly out to Madison Avenue,
meet with this ad agency, fly out to Minnesota.
I was in Minnesota, walking into Target and best by talking to them about their campaign.
Yeah, it felt like awesome at the time,
but you look back, how can you be even smarter?
How can you affect more people?
And so when you comes back to online,
like with Jenny, she found buyers
that already had those customers, right?
So one person led to thousands at one time.
She knew if she got subway
She's done right she's done and that's what happened
So now she's in every menacing of farms quiz nose whole foot like everything It's just ridiculous. It's so done beyond done beyond done and with me
I knew like wait a minute like it's even smarter for me to keep thinking about like, where is a bigger
pool? And how can I, if, if, this is what I want to say, in the, in the three-dimensional
world, in, not online, right? But like in your neighborhood, how many people can you really
talk to in a day? How many people will you meet and have real conversations with?
Well, in COVID-19, but in COVID-19, 29?
I mean, online in one hour,
you can talk to 5,000 people, 20,000 people,
like it's just more effective,
and then a small group of those people
are gonna show up and be interested in what this thing is.
But what does it take?
You have to have an offer,
and a lot of people are so ashamed
of like who am I to have an offer,
who am I to charge for something,
and that's where it all falls apart.
You have to have the, my friend Suzy said to me,
Suzy Moore, she goes,
you either have the courage to sell
or you will work for someone who does.
Isn't that good?
Like, I love that.
Cause like, you know, either you marry Rich
or you won't have the courage to sell what you do,
your service, your product, your whatever,
but you'll let somebody else have the courage
and you'll work for that insurance company.
You'll work for that person's graphic design company.
Cause like, cause they're entitled to sell
and I'll let them be courageous,
and then they can pay me,
but I don't believe in what I'm doing.
So I'll work for the person
who has courage to sell their thing.
Like when you really think about it,
that's what it is.
Yeah.
I think this was such an amazing conversation.
I think you brought at so many points about being courageous,
taking risks, being creative,
right, being resourceful.
So many different tips that we can use no matter what industry we're in and no matter
what career goals that we have.
So thank you so much.
Can you tell I love talking about this stuff?
I love it.
I mean, it's inspiring me.
I feel so motive.
Even when I, before I met you, I was like, this lady is inspiring me to be like an entrepreneur
faster than I would be.
The last question that I ask all my guests
is what is your secret to profiting in life?
I think the answer that comes to me is,
there's a line in the Talmud.
Okay, the Talmud is like this 3,000 year old Jewish text.
And it's one of the most beautiful things I've ever heard.
It says that the first question
God asks you when you get to heaven is to answer for every pleasure and every beautiful thing in the world
that you did not taste. And the way I interpret that is it's all here here. The sun sets, the sushi, the really good friends,
the beautiful apartment, the really good towels.
And we don't believe we deserve it,
and we put a ceiling on what's possible,
and we don't reach for it, and we settle,
and we tolerate less.
I don't just mean quality of like the physical stuff.
I mean, we settle for less in our relationships. We allow ourselves to be around people who
are negative, who don't really see us. We allow ourselves to say, like, it's okay, I'll
just have this little tiny place. I'll just have this job that doesn't fulfill me. I'll just sit over here. That is not our job.
And we stay now at like we stay at the peninsula, we stay at the Ritz, we stay at the four seasons.
You know what a big difference it is between that and a holiday in or a Hilton?
Not even in the same universe. Do you know what a difference it is? The quality of women, friends in my life right now,
we are all courageous, hardworking,
vulnerable people who make seven figures
because we show up and we show up for each other, right?
And there's no snickering going on.
Everyone is like integrity.
That is the cost of admission to the cool club
is you're gonna be vulnerable,
you're gonna have empathy,
you're gonna show up for yourself,
you're gonna do that hard healing work
on your inner child, all that stuff.
I'm saying the path to profit is,
don't settle for less than you know you deserve. I think successful
people see raindrops everywhere and bring out a bucket. They see opportunity, they see
possibility and they just go allow it in. Non-successful people are like, it's not possible. There's
no reason I would even. So then we just, we put the ceiling on ourselves in every regard, and we know deep down that it's garbage.
And we just don't believe we're worthy of more.
And then of course, you see most people
then fighting about politics on Facebook all day
because they're miserable.
If they just allowed themselves to get busy
being resourceful, sending that scary email,
posting their own podcast, even though it's messy and mediocre, which mine were two when
I said, it's like, do you know the momentum?
Do you know the doors will open to gifts in your life?
And then you won't be busy worried about all that other stuff because you'll be busy having
fun.
And I want to say one last thing, which is the biggest payoff to doing all of this.
It's not even about, oh, my podcast has these downloads.
Oh, we got married, check.
We have this house, check.
It's who you become in pushing through your resistance
and doing these things.
You push through your resistance,
you're scared as hell
because your parents had the worst divorce
and you got married anyway.
And you went to therapy with your husband
and you cried it out and you don't run.
Who do you become from that?
That's the win.
You pushed through, you published that podcast,
you felt like an idiot, that's your win.
We're not responsible for like what idiot, that's your win. We're not
responsible for like what God does with what we do, we're responsible for the doing of
it. Our job is do the darn thing. Let him take care of what comes of it. And that's the
magic. So everyone that I see that's unhappy is waiting and deciding that nothing's gonna happen. So don't wait, be messy and decide that it is possible
and just watch what that does.
And keep listening to podcasts like this
because what you're doing is helping a lot of people.
Thank you.
Kathy, this was so inspirational.
I am pumped, I feel more motivated than ever.
I'm very motivated naturally, but now I feel like I could just run a marathon.
Oh, like yeah.
Let's go.
So I'm very excited.
You definitely inspired me.
I'm sure you inspired all of our listeners who are two years.
Well, you're adorable.
You look like Jasmine from Aladdin.
Oh, thank you.
You're a Disney princess.
Thank you.
And I just had just two of the hardest weeks of my life.
And you can see work is such a gift.
I just had like, we went through a scary health thing.
And it was really scary.
It was really hard.
It really, really was.
And two, you know, a week and a half ago,
I was in surgery and all of this yucky stuff.
And it's amazing how my work lifts me.
Like, look at this conversation.
Like, what a great distraction.
Like, you and I weren't just talking about celebrity gossip.
I wasn't shopping, right?
And look how yummy, right?
Like, look what that does for me.
So that's the beauty of like doing your stuff in the world.
It really does.
You said it before, you're like, you're fulfilled.
I'm like, it is.
It is fulfilling. Cause it's, it's not just a like, oh, I bought a thing. You know, you buy
a blouse, you're happy for your friends.
Yeah. You're impacting that. So thank you for giving that to me because I had two really
hard weeks and then I get to do stuff like this and it makes me happy. Yes. And you'll
be happier when it comes out too. So where can our listeners go to find more about you
and everything that you do?
Well, you can come to Instagram
because I'm very active there.
And I'm at Kathy.heller, C-A-T-H-Y.H-E-L-L-E-R.
And then the podcast is really, really awesome.
Those interviews with Malcolm Gladwell and Rob Lowe
are coming out soon.
I just interviewed Jason Moraz and Allie Webb
who created the dry bar.
And Mark Manson, like you said, was on our show
and Bobby Brown and Bobby Brown,
who's a makeup artist and Mandy Moore.
It's been this the funnest ride.
You can find that everywhere on Apple Podcasts,
on wherever you listen to podcasts.
And then I have a website, CathyHeller.com,
and there's a free quiz there, actually,
which if you're trying to figure out
like what would my career dream be,
we worked pretty hard on making something really fun
and that's free and you can take it there.
That's it.
Cool.
So her podcast is called Don't Keep Your Day Job.
It's a number one Apple podcast.
It's huge.
So definitely go check that out and check out all her courses.
I'll stick links in my show notes.
So you guys have easy access.
Thank you so much, Kathy.
It was a pleasure.
You're a pleasure.
Thank you. Thanks for listening it was a pleasure. You're a pleasure. Thank you.
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting Podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review on Apple podcasts or comments on YouTube, SoundCloud,
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Until next time, this is Hala, signing off.
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