Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Hala: Top 3 Secrets to Profiting In Life | E100
Episode Date: February 1, 2021HAPPY 100TH EPISODE! IT'S A SPECIAL ONE! In this episode, Hala goes over her experience in 2020, and how it was both the best and worst year of her life. She is also sharing her top 3 tips for profit...ing in life! Tune in to be inspired, and learn more about Hala, her hardships, and triumphs, as well as YAP.  Hala also has an exciting announcement in this episode!  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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The network you can rely on. Hey, everyone.
This is Hala from Young and
Profiting Podcast.
Today is a very, very special day.
And that's because today is our
hundredth episode at Young and
Profiting Podcast.
I started YAP back in April of 2018
and exactly 1000 days later,
I landed the cover of Podcast Magazine
for their January 2021 issue.
Insane, so serendipitous.
And now it's our 100th episode,
and it also marks my last day at Disney Streaming Services.
I'm going to be a full-time entrepreneur
focusing on Young and Profiting Podcast and YAP media. I bit the bullet. A lot of you guys
who are longtime listeners have heard me talk about this over and
over again. And I finally quit my job. And I am a full time
entrepreneur. And I couldn't be happier. And 2020 was both the
best year and the worst year of my life. I had a lot of setbacks in 2020,
especially the first half.
And so this episode is all about 2020,
my story, what happened, and bringing you on a personal journey
which I don't often do here on the podcast,
but really helping you understand what I went through in 2020
and how it was both the best year
and the worst year of my life.
So we finally made it to 2021.
I'm sure a lot of us are relieved.
So let me start off by sharing with you
that 2020 was both the worst year
and best year of my life.
Let me take you back to January.
So it all started in January.
January is a month where my boyfriend celebrates his birthday and on his birthday, instead
of going out to dinner and doing normal things, he was so paranoid about COVID-19, this is
before the mainstream media was reporting on it, this is before anybody in New York cared
that we spent his birthday hopping from pharmacy to pharmacy looking for masks.
And we went to every single pharmacy in Brooklyn.
In our vicinity, we went to over 10 different pharmacies
and there was no masks.
Everything was sold out.
And then we realized that something much bigger
than we thought was going on.
And that a lot of people knew about something
that we didn't really know much about.
So it was very alarming needless to say. was going on and that a lot of people knew about something that we didn't really know much about.
So it was very alarming needless to say.
So then I remember being one of the only people on the subway wearing a mask.
I was very pro mask.
I didn't want anybody to get COVID.
I was very afraid of COVID.
And I told all my coworkers they should start buying masks and everybody laughed at me
and thought that I was, you know, predicting the end of the world and just being paranoid.
So that was January.
In February, my dad ended up going in and out of the hospital.
He has diabetes and so he was suffering from infections and bad blood circulation.
And so he was in and out of the hospital.
He ended up getting pneumonia in the hospital.
Lots of back and forth. I would take the train into the city and take the bus to visit him in the hospital.
And I would do that two or three times a week. So that was my February. It was going to
work and going to the hospital. And that was basically all I did. And at this point,
I was super adamant about not getting COVID. I would wear a mask on the train. I was
one of the only people who would be wearing a mask
on the subway.
I would tell all my coworkers they should be doing the same.
I was growing a following on LinkedIn.
And so I thought that I needed to be a role model
and use my voice and tell people to wear a mask.
And I would teach people how to properly go grocery shopping
and how to wipe down their stuff
and how to make sure that you could stay safe from COVID-19.
And I was trying to use my platform in a positive way.
By March, people were starting to really catch wind about COVID and realizing that it was a lot more serious than originally thought and people were starting to stay home.
My dad was back home from the hospital and I remember telling my parents, you guys cannot keep going to the doctor.
They used to have to go to these hyperbaric oxygen treatments. And I even bought an at-home
hyperbaric chamber. And I spent a huge chunk of my savings buying this medical machine for my
parents. But it was too late. I got a call from my sister at the end of March and she told me, Hala, I'm going home, your mom, your dad, your brother,
your aunt and uncle all have COVID.
They all live in New Jersey next to each other, neighbors.
And so she told me, Hala, you have an hour to figure it out.
I didn't have a car at the time.
And she said, I'm going to pick you up if you want to go home.
If not, you know, it's your choice.
But you have to let me know if you're coming home to help or if you're going to stay in Brooklyn.
And so like any good toddler would, I decided that I needed to go help my parents.
I mean, they gave me life and that's my responsibility.
And so I decided, you know, I packed some stuff up.
Little did I know that I would not be returning back to my apartment for three months.
So when we got home, I mean, imagine this, I'm so scared of COVID, my family is the first family that I ever heard of ever getting COVID
before. It was so scary. I knew nothing about it. I didn't know like if everyone was going to die
or if I was going to die or get very sick and I had no idea what I was getting
into. We'd walk into the house. Of course, we're wearing masks and sunglasses and gloves.
We're in full gear. I walk into the house and even with a mask on, I can just smell the
sickness. Everyone was extremely sick. And I just got started cleaning. I went from being
an executive at Disney and a top podcaster to being a janitor suddenly.
And it was my job to clean.
My sister was a doctor,
so she was gonna do all the medical stuff
and my job was to cook and clean.
And so I was cleaning the floors every chance that I could.
I was spraying the couches with alcohol
and the curtains with alcohol
and I would just spend all day trying to clean
to make sure that nobody would get sicker.
You know, we thought with the virus that if you don't clean and if the virus is lingering,
you can actually get reinfected. And so we were just trying to clean as much as we could.
And me and my sister actually took refuge in the basement. And our basements not like finished
or like anything nice. So it's just two, there was two couches down there. And whatever blanket
we had in the basement. And that's where we slept, that's where we ate.
We didn't end up eating until midnight every night because it was dangerous to eat upstairs.
We were scared to eat upstairs.
We wouldn't even drink water during the day.
We just had our mask and sunglasses all day just kind of working, taking care of the family.
And then we'd come downstairs and we had a toaster and peanut butter and jelly.
And that's what we ate for almost two, three weeks.
By certain in time, we were trying to take care of our family,
but my dad was just deteriorating.
I mean, he was already in really bad health
and COVID just really took it to the next level.
I mean, I can't even go into the level of detail
of how sad and terrible that experience was,
but and the things that I saw that I probably should have never seen.
And it ended up being that my dad's was essentially
dying upstairs.
And me and my sister just realized that,
hey, we've been exposed to COVID for two weeks.
We definitely have COVID.
There's no way we didn't get it.
And so we started just not caring anymore.
And I just spent more time upstairs
and just started just to feed my dad
and just take care of him because it was
who knew when the last, if I would ever seem again,
even if these were his last days.
So we just kind of gave up and decided
that we were going to just take care of him
and just give in to the fact that we were gonna get COVID.
It was just really tough.
And it got to the point where we had to send my dad to the fact that we were gonna get COVID. It was just really tough. And it got to the point where we had to send my dad
to the hospital.
And we called the ambulance and my dad really didn't wanna go.
He told me he thinks that it's gonna be the last time
he sees us if he goes.
But we couldn't take care of him anymore.
He was dying at home and nothing we could do could save him.
And so it was our last resort.
We thought that they could save him.
So we called the ambulance and they took him. And I remember was our last resort. We thought that they could save him. So we called the ambulance
and they took him. And I remember him being wheeled out and me wondering like, is this the last time
I'm going to see my dad. And it was, it was the last time I saw my dad alive.
Because the last time I saw him, we was already dead in the hospital. So he ended up going to
the hospital. And he was there for over a month. He quickly
went on a ventilator. He was pretty much unconscious the whole time. The only way we were
allowed to communicate with him was through Zoom. They wouldn't allow us to actually go
visit him in the hospital. And so that was extremely difficult. I remember working at my day
job and having one screen here and then the other screen was my dad in the hospital on Zoom with oxygen tubes up his nose. Not
really responsive. He also has a very bad eyesight. So he couldn't even see and just the fact
that my dad spent his last days like so alone in the hospital at that point. And I think
even till now like nurses don't really go
often into the rooms because of COVID and different protocols. And so he was very alone and also couldn't
see. And all he had was my voice. And so I would talk to him and sing to him all day as often as I could.
But the most painful thing out of this is the fact that my dad was such a good man. He brought
all of my family out of poverty.
He grew up in Palestine and he grew up with no electricity, no water.
He grew up in a room with six people, super poor in war.
And he ended up getting a scholarship to medical school.
Then he went to America.
He became a surgeon.
He opened up a medical center.
He sent all his kids through college.
He sent all my cousins in Palestine through college.
He literally brought my whole family out of poverty.
And to have him such a generous, nice, good guy,
die so alone in the hospital and have such a shitty funeral.
Only six people were allowed to go to his funeral.
He was buried in his hospital clothes.
They buried him with his cell phone and just shoes and
like just gave him the worst funeral ever. And that you think that that would break somebody apart,
like just going through all that watching your father die when he shouldn't have died.
Having to be alone, when you were willing and you already got COVID and you were willing to just
be with him, but they wouldn't let you go. And you would think that that would really ruin anyone's
year and that would set back anyone's year. But I don't mean to share this story as a story of
tragedy. I mean to share this story as a story of triumph because that was just the first half of 2020. And my second half of 2020
went totally different. Again, I said, this is the best and worst year of my life.
When my dad was sick in the hospital, I met Heather Monahan. Heather Monahan became my mentor.
It started off as a really friendly engagement. I was just showing her what I do for my podcast
and what I do for social media. And she told me, Hala, you have the same processes and your stuff is just as impressive as Gary V and Vayner media
You have to start a business. I'm going to be your first client
So Heather gave me the confidence to start a business and so I took her up on it and I started a side hustle
And I all the volunteers used to work for my podcast. I had about 10 volunteers who originally fans.
They started to get paid and had their started to pay me and we started to build this business.
And I landed the next client and the next client.
And by this summer, I was a multi-six figure side hustle.
I work full-time at Disney Streaming Services.
I grew a team of over 30 plus employees.
And today, actually, as
serendipitous as it is, today is actually my last official day at Disney streaming services.
And I'm going to meet full-time entrepreneur. My podcast downloads achieved hockey stick
growth. I went from getting 3,000 downloads over an entire month to getting 10,000 downloads
every single day. I became the number one trending of things done. I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of
things done.
I was able to get a lot of things donebacks do not have to be the end of you.
You can overcome your setbacks.
And like I said, I'm the host of Young and Profiting podcasts.
And the last question I ask all my guests is what is your secret to profiting in life?
And before all this happened, before 2020 happened to me, I never thought that I had any
value to contribute.
But now I feel that I do have something to contribute.
And that's why today I'm going to share my top three secrets of profiting in life.
And so my first secret to everyone here is that when a gatekeeper tells you know, you
have to create your own path.
Think about anytime you've been rejected.
If you are rejected, there is a person
or an entity rejecting you.
That means that there's a gatekeeper involved
and trying to convince that gatekeeper
or another similar gatekeeper to let you in
create your own path.
So I'm gonna give you one example
and I've done this so many times in my life
but I'm gonna give you one example
and that's hot in 97. When I worked at hot in many times in my life, but I'm going to give you one example. And that's hot 97.
When I worked at hot 97, 10 years ago, I interned for free for three years at that station.
It was the number one hip hop and R&B station in the world.
If you haven't heard of hot 97, it's a very popular radio station and back then radio
was huge.
Radio was dying now, but back then it was a big deal to work at that station,
and it was a big deal to be an on-air personality
at that station, and that was my dream.
I wanted to be a radio personality at hot 97.
And so I worked there for free for three years,
and I did everything at that station.
I did the research. I ran the contests.
I got the coffee for the DJs.
I fed their meters.
I did everything, and I gave it contests, I got the coffee for the DJs, I fed their meters,
I did everything and I gave it my all,
it was my identity, I was obsessed with that job.
And so I was Angie Martinez's assistant,
I did everything for that lady, I babysat her kid,
I would drive around and find nail polish colors
for her, her nails chipped and she had a big interview,
I did all the research for her interviews,
I was her slave basically. And so I did everything
for her. And when a paying job opened up as a producer on her show, I was already doing that work
for her as her assistant slash intern. When a paying job opened up after I worked for free for three
years and dropped out of school for this opportunity. She gave that paying job to another man
who was a couple years older than me, another boy.
He worked in the video department.
He had no production experience
and they expected me to train him
and to teach him that job.
I was young and blunt.
And so what I did, that kid was actually my friend.
I text message to him and I said,
you know what, I don't feel good today.
If you wanna learn how to be a producer,
learn it on your own.
He showed that text to Angie Martinez
and Angie Martinez decided to fire me.
She cut me off on the spot.
She cut off my key cards.
I wasn't able to enter the studio anymore.
She told all the DJs they were not allowed
to talk to me anymore.
These were the DJs that I used to go
and host radio shows with them. So I stopped, I was unable to do my radio talk to me anymore. These were the DJs that I used to go and host radio shows with them.
So I stopped, I was unable to do my radio shows
with them anymore.
I was unable to go to parties with them anymore.
They weren't even allowed to take my call.
She basically blackballed me from the hip hop industry.
And she decided, like,
your career is over and I'm ending it.
And that was her attitude towards me.
I'm ending your career.
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So instead of letting somebody close the door on me and tell me no, I decided to create
my own path and that weekend, I decided I was going to learn how to build a blog site.
At the time, blogs were huge and I decided I was going to learn how to build a blog site. At the time, blogs were huge,
and I decided I'm going to learn WordPress. I'm going to learn how to put together a website,
and I'm going to recruit something I called the sorority of hip hop. We're going to be a platform
for women empowerment. We're going to support each other, and I'm not going to be blackballed by
this industry. I'm going to create my own lane. By the end of the week, I had recruited 14 girls.
I sent out Craigless, solicits, Twitter, solicits I had recruited 14 girls. I sent out Craigslist, Celicit, Twitter, Celicit.
I recruited 14 girls.
By month three, we were the 30,000th most popular website
in the world.
We were one of the most popular entertainment hip hop
and news websites.
We started hosting concerts and parties.
MTV scouted us for reality TV shows.
All the DJs who previously I was their intern and fed the meters for and got
them coffee for.
We're now calling me up to promote their parties and putting me side by side on the flyers
as their peer.
So I went from being their intern to being their peer and being on their level and I did
that by creating my own path.
And so I know it's cliche, but rejection is simply redirection. It's the universe
redirecting you to something better. So learn to capitalize on your rejections and use them to
motivate you to succeed in another direction. Let them push you to create your own lane instead
of fitting in someone else's. The greatest accomplishments of my life have always come on the heels
of rejection when I decided to create my own lane and every single example of my success goes back
to this secret. Secret number two, discover your talent stack. This is so important. Towns stacking
is something that Scott Adams first introduced to me. So Scott Adams is a creator of Dilbert.
It's a very successful cartoon, especially in the US.
It's syndicated all over the world.
And so Scott Adams told me that in the past,
specialized experiences and skills were really highly valued.
And still today, if you're a doctor, if you're a lawyer,
if you're an athlete, yes, you have to have a specialized skill to succeed.
But nowadays, you will be more successful if you're a lawyer, if you're an athlete, yes, you have to have a specialized skill to succeed. But nowadays, you will be more successful
if you stack a lot of skills together
that you're pretty good at and come up with unique offering.
So for example, with Scott, he is a pretty good drawer.
He's fairly good at drawing.
He's very funny.
He's a great writer and he has business experience.
So he put all those skills together and he created Dilbert,
and now he was massively successful.
He's definitely one of the most successful and wealthy cartoonists of our generation.
And so he did that through talent stacking.
I can use Young & Profiting Podcast as an example.
Young & Profiting Podcast is not my first show.
It's probably my fifth or sixth show.
And it's very different than my past shows. It's a solo show. It's on business. I interview authors
and CEOs. Previous to that, I used to have online radio shows. And I used to interview celebrities
and music artists. And I used to have co-hosts. it used to be fun in games and it was totally different
but I still learned valuable experiences even though all of those shows were failure. Every failure
is an experience you only get experience if you're willing to try something new and when you fail
you don't start from scratch you start from experience and that puts you at a significant advantage.
So again I started a younger profiting podcast and I put together all these
different skills that I learned.
I'm a great writer.
I used to have that blog.
I wrote over 2000 blogs.
I know how to write.
I know how to script, right?
I know how to audio edit because I had all those different radio experiences.
I worked at a freaking radio station.
I'm a great marketer.
That's what I did for my corporate career. That's what I went to school for. I know how to market. I know how a freaking radio station. I'm a great marketer. That's what I did for my corporate career.
That's what I went to school for.
I know how to market.
I know how to graphic design.
I know how to video edit it.
And I'm a decent podcaster.
I'm not even the best podcaster in the world.
But you put all those skills together
and I greatly stand out as a podcaster
because I put all those different skills together
and that's my unique package
and that's why Younger Profiting Podcast was a success.
And if it was not for my failures,
I would have never stacked all those skills
over those different experiences.
And so I challenge everyone here
to think about what your talent stack is,
what your unique skills are that you can put together,
and what service offerings can you create
with your unique set of talents.
And secret number three, my last secret to profiting in life
is that you must believe that life is limitless.
It took the death of my father
for me to realize that life is limitless.
It took my dad getting COVID.
One of my favorite authors in his name is Robert Green.
He wrote the human
laws of nature. He taught me about the law of death and that law says that most people
spend their lives avoiding the thought of death. And Robert believes that it's better to
accept and understand the shortness of life to fill us with a sense of purpose and to
realize urgency in our goals. Ever since my dad passed away and when my dad was sick
in the hospital and so close to death, I just felt like I wanted to take over the world. I just started working
harder and harder. I started to really believe that I could achieve anything that I wanted
to achieve. I remembered how my dad took my family out of poverty and came from nothing
and became something and helped all of my family get out of poverty. And I realized that I have absolutely no excuse to achieve my goals.
And that I can be a successful as Gary Vee.
I can be the female Tim Ferriss.
I can be the next Oprah.
And I truly believe that inside.
And once I truly believe that and anytime I truly believe in my goals
is when I end up succeeding in my life.
And so in terms of manifesting your future,
the secret is writing things down,
knowing exactly what you want,
and then truly believing that it's possible
and only then can you manifest your goals.
And so, seek it number three,
is that you must believe life is limitless.
And it's never too late to start over.
You're never too old to learn something new,
and you're never too old to set new goals.
And that's really magical stuff.
So remember, you must believe that life is limitless,
and it's not too late to start over.
Thank you so much for tuning in to this 100th episode
of Young and Profiting Podcast.
Like I mentioned earlier in the episode before 2020, I really
thought that I never had any value to share when it came to my secrets to profiting in life.
I never thought that I was really profiting. I mean, I had a great corporate career,
but I wasn't really following my true passions. And so I didn't really feel like I reached my full potential or was even close to my
full potential.
And for the first time ever, after 2020 and all the crazy, great things that happened
the second half of this year and the fact that, you know, I built my team.
I have over 45 people on my team now.
And our business is doing so well.
We're a multi-six figure business.
I feel like we're going gonna be a million dollar business
before we're even a year old as a company.
And it's just crazy, like how everything changed
and I finally feel like for the first time,
like I really am young and profiting.
I'm not just interviewing people who are really successful,
like I'm successful too, and not just at a corporate job.
Like I have my own company,
and my own team, and I'm a leader, and I went through a lot to get here. A lot of you guys probably
don't know my backstory. And, you know, there's plenty of episodes that cover that, and I'll be sure
that I share more of my story, especially now that I have more time to work on younger profiting since I am a full-time entrepreneur now.
And I finally feel like I actually am young and profiting.
Like I'm fully aligned with the message of my show,
my purpose, my passion,
and that I have a lot of value to contribute to.
And I hope this inspires you to realize
that you probably have a lot of value to share in your life.
And I hope that my story of 2020 and all the struggles that I went through and how I overcame them and ended up having the best year of my life,
I hope that inspires you.
And I hope that some of my secrets on my journey inspire you and you'll remember them the next time that you've got rejected and you'll remember them the next time that you want to get an opportunity and you don't know if you
have the right experiences and you'll remember the next time that you're not believing in
yourself and hopefully you'll remember Hala telling you that you need to believe that
life is limitless.
You need to believe you can achieve your goals if you actually want to achieve them.
And rejection is okay.
Rejection just means you got to create your own lane.
That's the sign from the universe.
When you get rejected, it doesn't mean go find another gatekeeper.
It doesn't mean go try to convince the same gatekeeper over and over again.
It means you need to do your own thing and create your own lane.
That's what it means. And then every failure that you get,
every experience that you take will give you skills
that you can then use later on to follow your true passions.
And if you do it right and you aren't afraid to do new things,
aren't afraid to take on risks and to possibly fail, you will learn so much so
fast. And you will be at an advantage when you're finally ready to do what you were truly
meant to do. And I think a lot of successful people, if you kind of dissect how they did
it, they had certain experiences that gave them skills, that then gave them the foundation
to be very successful.
And that's where I feel like I'm at now.
I talked about talent stacking when it came to the podcast.
But even with YAP Media, I feel like all my experiences as a leader, my different jobs,
my different projects, everything that I've done, I feel like has molded me into the perfect
CEO of this podcast and social media marketing agency that's doing so well now.
But this is my second business, my first business failed,
and I had so many other failures, and it's okay to fail,
because eventually all those failures
are going to help you become successful.
And that's what I hope you learned from this episode.
Before I go, I did want to thank my team.
We're celebrating 100 episodes.
And without you guys, this podcast would not be possible.
I have the best team.
Our values are happy, hands-on, hungry, and hardworking.
And everybody at YAP exemplifies those values.
And I just love my team so much.
We're so happy.
We're so motivated.
Everyone's so hardworking. We're all just love my team so much. We're so happy. We're so motivated. Everyone's
so hardworking. We're all just one amazing team. And I love my team. So shout out to you guys.
You guys are absolutely amazing. And shout out to my listeners because you guys listen
day in and day out, weekend and week out. I love the feedback that you guys give me all
the amazing reviews that we get. The comments and feedback on LinkedIn and Clubhouse now and Instagram.
Everybody is just so supportive and I just feel so thankful to have a community and an audience that loves to tune into the show.
And I hope that you get value out of this show. And my promise to you going forward as a full-time entrepreneur focused on
young and profiting podcast and yet media is that the podcast is going to be better than ever.
I'm going to make sure that the podcast is going to be higher quality than ever. There's going to
be a lot more solo episodes. There's going to be a lot more studying on my part or interview episodes
are going to be amazing. You have to understand that I did this podcast as a side hustle while I was a Disney executive.
And so I would be at work in the office and then running and having five minutes to set
up all my equipment in the phone booths, or sometimes I would even have to hang out
in the phone booth from the morning just to like hold my spot.
So I would have a quiet spot for the podcast and I'd be super uncomfortable all day working in the phone booth just to make
sure that I had a quiet space because we didn't really have office space or conference space at Disney.
And I just remember like all the struggles that I went through to like put on this podcast over
the years like it's insane. I would lug 20 pounds of equipment on the drain. I would be running in and out.
I would be getting no sleep, trying to study
because I had so much work the night before
and like, it was just really hard.
And so I think I did a good job in terms of
putting out quality content,
considering that I was working full time.
But now that I have complete focus
and it's just very streamlined in terms of like
everything that I do is just aligned, I think the show is going to be a lot better and I
think I want to have a lot more clarity and a lot more time to do what I need to do and
I just hope that the show is going to be even more valuable and more successful than ever
with my full focus.
So you have that promise from me and again shout out to my team, shout out. And again, shout out to my team, shout
out to my listener, shout out to my mom, my dad in heaven. I love everyone so much. Thank
you so much for supporting me. This is Hala signing off for the hundredth time.
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