Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Jason Feifer: Stop Resisting Change | E70
Episode Date: June 22, 2020Did you know that people were once afraid of things like bicycles, elevators and teddy bears?  History has proven that when things are new, we tend to be scared of them. Successful entrepreneurs kno...w how to overcome this, and now how to get their customers to come along for the ride.  Today we’re chatting with Jason Feifer, a journalist, author, podcaster, public speaker and the editor in chief of Entrepreneur magazine. Jason hosts not one but three awesome podcasts (Problem Solvers, Pessimists Archive, and Hush Money). Jason has led an amazing career as a journalist and in the past he has held senior editor positions at Fast Company, Men’s Health, and Maxim Magazine among others. Jason is recognized as an authority on change— providing thought leadership on why people resist it, and the importance of embracing it.  Tune into this episode to explore how Jason rose to top of his field as a journalist and developed his personal brand, and we’ll also dive deep into change and how entrepreneurs can both better embrace change and help their customers more easily accept and adapt to new technologies.  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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode of YAP is sponsored in part by Shopify.
Shopify simplifies selling online and in-person
so you can focus on successfully growing your business.
Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com-profiting.
You can crush your fingers and all your toes
during a data center migration.
You can knock on wood, pluck a dozen for leaf clovers
or look to your lucky stars for a successful office expansion.
You could hold your breath, shut your eyes, and say all the well wishes to help avoid cyber
attacks.
But none of that truly helps you.
Because next level moments need the next level network.
With the security, reliability, and expertise to take your business further.
AT&T Business.
The network you can rely on.
Hey everyone, it's your host, Halitaha. Before we kick off with this
week's episode, I want to say thanks to everyone who has left us a
review on Apple podcasts or a comment on your favorite platform.
Reviews are the best way to thank us and they always make my day.
I'd like to share two recent reviews. The first is from Sa Saharan, great content and very informative. I listened to the podcast with Jim
McElvy. It was the first time listening to any podcast and I loved it. I can
see why people speak so highly of your work. I'm hoping that listening to podcasts
becomes a regular habit. And here's another awesome recent review from Abdel
Sayid,
absolutely brilliant podcast. Love the podcast and your style of asking
inquisitive questions. Highly recommend to anyone looking for a good podcast.
I'm a podcast junkie and this was one of the best I've listened to in a while.
Keep up the great work. Thank you so much for both of your reviews, and I hope that if you enjoy listening to YAP,
you'll also take the time to leave us a review
or a comment on your favorite platform.
I'd love to hear what you think about the show.
You're listening to YAP,
Young and Profiting Podcast,
a place where you can listen, learn, and profit.
Welcome to the show.
I'm your host, Halataha, and on Young and Profiting podcast,
we investigate the new topic each week
and interview some of the brightest minds in the world.
My goal is to turn their wisdom into actionable advice
that you can use in your everyday life,
no matter your age, profession, or industry.
There's no fluff on this podcast,
and that's on purpose.
I'm here to uncover value from
my guests by doing the proper research and asking the right questions. If you're new to the show,
we've chatted with the likes of XFBI agents, real estate moguls, self-made billionaires,
CEOs, and bestselling authors. Our subject matter ranges from enhancing productivity,
had to gain influence, the art of entrepreneurship and more.
If you're smart and like to continually improve yourself, hit the subscribe button.
Because you'll love it here at Young & Profiting Podcast.
Today, we're chatting with Jason Bifer, a journalist, author,
podcaster, public speaker, and the editor-in-chief of Entrepreneur magazine.
Jason hosts not one but three awesome podcasts. Problem
solvers, pessimists, archive, and hush money. Jason has led an amazing career as a journalist,
and in the past he's held senior editor positions at Fast Company, Men's Health, and Maxim
Magazine among others. As editor in Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine, and host of the popular
History Podcast Pessimists archive, which studies why new technologies and products like the
bike, the teddy bear and elevators were resisted in the past.
Jason is now recognized as an authority on change, providing thought
leadership on why people resist it, and the importance of embracing it.
Today on the show, we'll explore how Jason rose to the top of his field as a
journalist and developed his personal brand.
We'll also dive deep into change in how entrepreneurs can both better embrace change and help their customers more easily
except and adapt to new technologies.
Hey everyone, it's Hala from Young & Profiting Podcast. I'm here with the editor in chief of Entrepreneur Magazine, Jason Pfeiffer.
Welcome to the show.
Oh, hey, thanks for having me.
I appreciate it.
So I am very excited for this interview.
So Jason, for those who don't know anything about you,
you do a lot of cool things.
Could you let us know who Jason Pfeiffer is
and how do you spend your days?
Yeah, so thanks so much for having me. I am the Editor-in-Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine.
I also host three podcasts. They're called Pessimists Archive,
Problem Solvers, and Hush Money. I do did, I don't know how to say it in a world of,
in which we're all at least still semi-locked down. I did a lot of public speaking and we'll
hopefully continue to do that. I'm a novelist and working on another book now.
And generally, I think of myself as someone who likes to inspire people to feel good about
doing hard things.
The entrepreneurs and people who have adopted that mindset of entrepreneurship are setting
out on a journey that they know is
going to be difficult. And yet, even though they know it's going to be difficult, as you
get down the path, you feel lonely and crazy and you look around and you're like, did I
do the right thing? And I want to be there to say, yes, like not only did you do the right
thing, but the thing that you're feeling is something that everybody else who has taken
this journey is feeling to, like, you may feel alone, but you thing that you're feeling is something that everybody else who has taken this journey is feeling too.
You may feel alone, but you are not.
You are actually having a very shared experience.
So, I see my role as being something of a guide for that and helping people through it
and also helping people to embrace the change that is necessary to get through it.
Cool.
And so, tell us about your profession.
Like, what is your, I know you have a day job and then you have lots of side hustles. Cool. And so tell us about your profession. Like what is your, I know you have a day job and then
you have lots of side hustles. Yeah. Well, I mean, I, my background is in media. So I started as a
community newspaper reporter. That, which means that I was, you know, a reporter for a very small
paper. It was the Gardener news and Gardener Massachusetts circulation the 6,000, like covering nothing, like nothing was
happening in this town. And I quit after a year because I had this realization. And the
realization was that nobody was reading the gardener news at a place that I wanted to
work at. Or like I imagined working at the New York Times with a Washington Post. I wanted
to do big things and like reach big audiences and write about important stuff.
And I realized not a single person at the New York Times was ever going to read this piece
about like local diners that I wrote in the gardener news.
And so I needed to stop sitting around and thinking that they would come to me and I needed
to go to them.
And so I quit that job and I sat in my bedroom for nine months.
I was living in an apartment next to a graveyard
and hold in Massachusetts.
I would like sit there looking out,
like upon the graveyard, feeling like it was my career.
And then I would just cold pitch.
And I just reached out to editors and I just sat
and came up with the ideas and hustled.
And that's how I got into the Washington Post
and the Boston Globe and Associated Press and New York Times.
That taught me something as I then eventually kind of went back into the normal workforce,
which was I always needed to be going to people.
I always needed to be thinking about what I could do to get in front of people to constantly
build myself because if I just sat around and waited for people to come and like recognize
my genius, it was never going to happen.
So that's how I have continued to build my career.
I mean, that's the reason why I run a national magazine, but I'm doing all these other things
on the side.
The entire point of it is to be aware that no matter how good I am at doing the thing
I'm already doing, the other stuff, the stuff that I'm just digging up, that I'm exploring,
that I'm trying, that I'm
trying, that I'm expanding, that stuff is ultimately more valuable and I always want to be pushing
myself.
That's very cool.
Yeah, I've listened to so many of your interviews and I know it's really important for you
to be in a learning environment.
And I'd like to kind of stick on that point.
So it wasn't your end goal to actually be editor-in-chief of some national magazine.
That wasn't really your goal. Talk to us about how you had the grit and kind of worked your way up to
landing that role and the mentality that you had while you were going on your career journey.
Because everybody always tells us like, you know, have your end goal in mind and then work backwards from that or
look at somebody who has that role that you want
and see what career they had.
What did you do to get to have such a prestigious role?
So I think that that's fine advice to a point
that you should identify your end goal
and then work backwards from that
or find people who are doing the kinds of things.
That's fine, but I would encourage you
to at the same time as you're doing that, be completely okay abandoning that. Just like
straight up abandon it. And the reason for that is because you have no idea what it is that
you will learn along the journey and you will, I guarantee, discover things that are exciting
that might fit you better as you get a better
understanding of what you love to do and what your real skill set is. And also, you
may have an idea of where it is that you want to go, but there's a chance. I
want to prepare you for the real chance that if you got there, it wouldn't be
what you thought it was. It would be terrible.
I'll give you an example, which is a friend of mine, well not named by name, but a friend
of mine, his dream, his entire career was to work at GQ Magazine.
And then he got there.
I mean, he got to GQ Magazine and he was elated.
And then he realized, it is kind of terrible.
Like it was terrible working there.
The working environment was kind of terrible working under the editor in chief
at the time who was a very smart guy, but was very hard to work with.
And there was no joy in it.
And he was stuck there because he had had this one idea of what he was going to be
when he when he achieved
and that was to be an editor at GQ and then he got there and he was stuck. So here's how I've
thought about my path. I always thought, okay, I thought, you know, this is, this is, it kind of builds
off of something that I said a minute ago, but I want to like dive into it because I think it's,
it just sort of gives you a picture of it.
I have this idea that I call work your next job.
And work your next job means this.
In front of you, in front of you, in front of me,
in front of everybody watching this,
everybody listening to this,
there right now there are two sets of opportunities.
Opportunity set A are the opportunities
that are the things that are being asked of you
by your job, by other people, the way that you're being evaluated, what is your KPI, your
key performance indicator, anything that you're being judged on, that's opportunity set A.
Go to work, these are the things that are being asked of you, that's opportunity set A.
Opportunity set B is everything that's available to you that nobody's asking you to do.
And that can be stuff at your work.
And that can be stuff that is not at your work.
That is just, you know, if you freed up some time at home, you could get into it.
You could learn how to podcast.
You could learn anything.
I always think, and I've always felt my entire career that opportunity set B was more important.
That I would go to a job, I would take the job,
and the reason I would take it was because I had a sense
of what I would learn from it.
I worked at Men's Health.
I do not care about fitness tips.
I do not care about weight loss tips.
What I cared about was learning how to do a specific kind
of editing called packaging that Men's Health does really well.
And I wanted to do it at a national level.
That was my first national magazine job.
I knew I would come in, I would learn that skill.
At the same time as I was doing that,
I would find other things that I wasn't hired to do,
that I could learn and grow and build,
and then I would get out of there,
and I would do it all over again.
And the reason that I have been able to build my career
and the way that I have, and end up in this really awesome role
that I could not have possibly anticipated anticipated was because I focused on those skills and just building those
skills, and I focused on working my next job, constantly developing new things that nobody
was asking me to do that would put me in a position to succeed in a way that I couldn't
imagine.
And that path has ping-ponged me around the world of media and has forced me to redefine myself over and over again,
but has been so much more satisfying
than if I tried to follow some straight path.
Yeah, I love that.
I think you just brought out so many great gems.
The thing that resonated with me is that you were more concerned
about the skills you were gonna learn
rather than like the brand name that you were gonna work for.
And I think it's really important.
Sometimes you take a job to learn new skills and you might not really resonate with the
brand's mission, but you actually gain new skills.
Then you can transfer those skills to another job where you might align better with those
missions.
It's something we talk about on the show a lot is skill stacking.
You take one skill from one experience and then you use it in a different way in another
experience and you just keep layering on these skills until you're really desirable in the
marketplace in your field.
So.
That's right.
You know what?
I love the phrase skill stacking.
I'm just going to add another one to it.
I was talking a while ago to a guy named Greg.
He's the C.
Oh, oh, I don't know.
He's one of the co-founders of a company called Foodsters.
They make like baking mixes and stuff and Sarah Michelle Geller, famous as being Buffy,
Buffy the Vampire Sly, she is one of the co-founders.
Anyway, he said this thing to me, which really stuck with me, which is that when he's looking
for co-founders, looking for partners, looking for people to work with to build something
he's been through this many times, he's always looking for what he calls situational awareness,
which is to say he wants people who are aware of what they're good at and aware of what they're not
good at and that they can are able to focus on their strengths and then partner with people who
are really good at the things that they're not. And that's really valuable, it's valuable for you
to always have situational awareness to be very, very open about the things that you need to learn. I mean, that's how I carved my path.
I mean, I went from Boston Magazine to Men's Health to Fast Company to Maxim to Entrepreneur,
like that doesn't make any sense unless you know that I was constantly aware of what I
didn't know.
So I, you know, why did I go from Men's Health to Fast Company?
Because I knew that I had no real idea how to write and edit like long, 3000 word stories.
And I needed to know how to do that.
And so I didn't care what magazine would let me do it.
I wanted that.
Well, why did I go to Maxim?
Maxim's a disgusting magazine.
I have no interest in working at Maxim.
But the reason I did it was because there was an opening for a deputy editor job, which
would have put me into a management role.
And I knew that I really didn't know how to manage people
and I needed an opportunity to do that.
So I would walk into this disgusting magazine
and I would learn how to manage
and then I would get out of there.
And that's fine, that's great
because what matters most is skills
because those are transferable.
The rest of your career far more than like whatever
random thing you happen to be doing at the job that day.
Yeah, totally, I totally agree.
And I can definitely really, I used to work at Hewlett Packard
and I was in marketing.
And I kept getting promoted.
I got promoted five times and I was really rising up the ranks.
But Hewlett Packard is kind of an old fashioned company
and I knew that if I stayed there,
I wouldn't have advanced my skills.
Now I work at Disney Streaming and I'm at like the cutting
edge of marketing and technology where previously it was kind of old school. And it turns out when I'm at like the cutting edge of marketing and technology, where previously,
it was kind of old school.
And it turns out when I started at Disney,
I was so overwhelmed because I was like,
oh my God, I was the most technical person at HP.
And now I'm just like everyone else,
if not a little bit behind the curve.
And I've got to learn all these things,
but now I've learned so much and it's been totally worth it.
And pain is gross, so it was challenging,
it was hard, but it worked out. So. That's awesome. And I love, so it's so interesting that you said,
you know, you were, you were like the most technical person in your department at HP,
because had you stayed there, you would have never been challenged to be more tech, to be smarter,
to be better, right? And the, the people who I've worked with throughout my career, who I would
say were the worst, or like, like, like, when or like when I think back to a previous magazine I worked at, and I, you know,
what are the very senior people who I worked with? I considered to be the single worst person
I ever worked with, just unbelievably rude, no opening in this guy's head for how to think
differently or how you could reimagine what you do in this.
He was so stuck in his ways and he was so mean about it.
And it should not surprise you at all that that guy had spent his entire career at that magazine.
He started as an intern and he worked his way up and he'd been there for like 15 years.
Nobody ever challenged him.
He never had to go into new environments and learn new things and discover that, oh, maybe I was pretty good at that over there, but I actually socketed it over here and I need to
rethink what I do. He never had to do that, and that's why he was so terrible.
Young and profitors, do you have a brilliant business idea, but you don't know how to move
forward with it? Going into debt for a four-year degree isn't the only path to success. Instead,
learn everything you need to know about running a business for free
by listening to the Millionaire University podcast.
The Millionaire University podcast is a show that's changing the game for aspiring entrepreneurs.
Hosted by Justin and Tara Williams, it's the ultimate resource for those who want to run a successful business and graduate rich, not broke.
Justin and Tara started from Square One, just like you and me.
They faced lows and dug themselves out of huge debt.
Now they're financially free and they're sharing their hard-earned lessons with all
of us.
That's right, millionaire university will teach you everything you need to know about starting
and growing a successful business.
No degrees required.
In each episode, you'll gain invaluable insights from seasoned entrepreneurs and mentors who truly understand what it takes to succeed. From topics like how to start a software business
without creating your own software, to more broad discussions such as eight businesses you can start
tomorrow to make 10K plus a month, this podcast has it all. So don't wait, now is a time to turn
your business idea into a reality by listening to the millionaire university podcast. New episodes drop Mondays and Thursdays. Find the millionaire university podcast on Apple
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Yeah, it definitely could stunt your growth if you don't
go out there and get more opportunities. And you can be like a big fish in a small pond very easily
and not be able to expand your skills. So totally every there. So Jason, I wanted to understand if your personal brand
happened first or if your job at Entrepreneur Magazine
actually happened first because I have a full time job
like I just mentioned and I have this podcast on the side.
And sometimes it's difficult to navigate
having a personal brand while representing a corporation.
And I want to understand your perspective on that, how you balance that, and what came
first, did being the editor in chief of entrepreneur magazine kind of pushed you to the limelight,
or were you doing that already?
I think a lot, a lot about my relationship, like as a personal brand, with my relationship
with my employer.
So this is a great subject.
I mean, the very quick answer, and then I'll give you the long answer.
The very quick answer is that for this version of my personal brand, entrepreneur came,
the job came first.
So here's what happened.
I had, throughout my career, been very interested in stepping out and being more forward-facing as a person and speaking in
my own voice.
And I have to be honest, for most of my career, I had no idea what my voice was.
I was developing a writer's voice, but I didn't know what like I meant to people.
I hadn't thought through that.
And I had really been given no opportunity to do it.
I mean, you know, occasionally I'd be on TV for this or that interview or whatever, but I just, you know, and I'd created a couple
like random viral things that got me some attention, but I didn't know what it was. And then
I got this job as Editor-in-Chief of Entrepreneur Magazine. I was originally executive editor,
which is the number two at a magazine, and then the editor- editor in chief left and I made a play for the top spot.
And I got it. And at first, honestly, I thought of it as a magazine job, right? I thought of it as
a media job, the way that every other job of mine was, I was like, I'm going to scrap this magazine,
white sheet the whole thing. We're going to rethink what this is. We're going to rethink how we
communicate as a brand, you know, the editor inief of the magazine is basically the face of a brand,
and also the person who is in control of all the editorial,
everything that we put out.
So I wanted to think about what entrepreneur could be now
in this new world in which the word entrepreneur is not obscure.
It's now a mindset and identity.
So I spent about a year doing that.
And then, after I felt like I got it into a good place,
I started accepting interview requests.
And I would go on these shows or in these podcasts
and people would introduce me as a thought leader in entrepreneurship.
Jason Fiverr, we got Jason Fiverr here as a thought leader in entrepreneurship.
And my instinct was to say, no, so I'm not a thought leader.
I'm actually a journalist because if you're a journalist, you're trained, you're not
the story, you're just supporting the story.
And so I was like, you know, what I do, and I'm not even, I don't even have a business
background.
I really, I was like a generalist and I tell me, it was like falling down the stairs,
don't, don't, don't, right a business background. I really, I was like a generalist and I tell me, it was like falling down the stairs. Tum, tum, tum, right?
Like it was terrible.
And you could hear the hosts would then try to like
reel it back in because I was ruining the reason
that I was on their show.
Or they were like, well, what do you think of you
as a thought leader?
And so I was telling my wife about this.
And she said she gave me the greatest advice
that I've gotten for this phase of my career.
And that was, if they want you to be a thought leader,
then be a thought leader.
And I realized that the only difference
between someone who's a thought leader
and someone who's not a thought leader
is that the thought leader is willing to say
they're a thought leader.
Like, that's literally it.
It's the only difference.
And so I spent a long time thinking about what I am,
how can I be relevant to this audience that I'm,
like what overlap is there between
my passions and my personal experiences and the things that people are looking for? And
I came up with this philosophy for personal brands. In case anyone's interested in
being in sort of personal branding, which is that you are not, you know, I think people think,
well, personal brand is like, oh, you just put yourself out there and people, no, be a character.
You are a character.
You are a very simple version of yourself,
a version of yourself that is constantly delivering
at the same time, predictability and surprise,
because that's what people want from a brand.
That's what they want from media, right?
I mean, if you turn on a TV show, there's a predictability to it.
The predictability is, you know what the show is, you know you like the show, you like
the characters, you like where it's going, the surprise is that you don't know what's
happening next, right?
But you, but it's all in part of the same thing.
So, you know, but if you, if you picked up entrepreneur magazine and it was 17 magazine,
bad surprise, rather you need the predictability.
A personal brand is the same thing. People have
to know why they're tuning into you. What do you offer to them? What kind of, what is, what is the
way that you fit into their lives? And the way that you do that is that you simplify yourself down
into this predictable surprise package that people know what they're getting. And so I started to
realize that the thing that I, you know, I said it in the very beginning when you asked me to define myself,
I realized that the thing that I was doing,
the thing that I was able to offer
was this kind of combination of like motivation
and perspective all around change,
all around how you have to change in your journey,
you have to change the things that you work on,
you have to change inside of yourself.
I had gone through that personally
and so I could speak to it even though, let's be honest, and I'll be totally transparent. I haven't
built a company. I'm running Entrepreneur Magazine. The only company that I've built is like
my own personal brand and my podcasts. It's not the same, but the journey, the emotional
experience of it is very similar. And so I've been able to speak to that. I flattened myself
out. I came up with the voice that I speak in.
I came up with the attitude.
I came up with some ethos, like some, so like I thought,
okay, one of the things that I always am is accessible.
That's a word in my personal brand accessible.
What does that mean?
It means that I will respond to everybody.
If you DM me, you will get a response.
It means that I do things in a kind of raw way so that it feels a little imperfect and
it feels like more real.
You're just there with me, right?
I mean, I don't have a background here.
I'm just like in a living room.
So that's all intentional.
That's all thinking about the personal brand.
And now I'm always constantly evolving it.
I'm putting things out.
I'm experimenting.
I'm seeing how people respond to it.
But I'm always thinking of myself as a character.
You right now are not talking to Jason Fyfer.
You're not.
Because if you were talking to Jason Fyfer, I got all other things.
I got to bore you with talks about my kids and boring things.
You're talking to me because of a very small slice of my experience, which is the slice
that's relevant to your audience.
I'm aware of that and I'm constantly, constantly drilling into it. That's what I mean. You are a character. You're a personal brand.
So, they're related. I think that my personal brand helps entrepreneur and I think that
entrepreneur helps my personal brand, but I do see them as distinct entities because, of course,
you have to remember, unless you work at a company that you own, that relationship is not forever.
That relationship is also uncontrollable.
I don't own entrepreneur.
I do own my personal brand.
And so I want to be a building both,
but aware of how they're distinct.
Yeah, I love that.
I think you talked about so many great things.
It reminds me of something I had Eric Admitis on the show.
He's like a popular public speaker.
He worked with like Mind valley. And he talked
about something called a story journal. And he inspired me to create a story journal. And basically,
what I did is that there's like basically chapters of your story journal. So for me, like overcoming
rejection is a big topic that I like to talk about. Skills backing is another big topic that I like
to talk about. And just like so on different categories. And then you start to like fill in like,
what are the different stories that I have in these categories?
And you start to have like a journal of all your stories.
So before you go onto a podcast,
you can think about what is relevant to this audience.
And you can basically like pick the stories
that you're gonna keep in mind for that episode.
And then you end up being a lot more,
it's like a lot easier.
It's not reading the story word for word.
It's just like trying to remember your experiences
and memories. So I think it's great advice.
I have the same thing I had just used a different term for it. I call it interlocking parts.
There are there are a menu of interlocking parts that I have in my head that I'm every time
some new thing happens. So I talked to somebody interesting. I'll test it out on a podcast. I'll
test it out on stage. I'll test it out in conversation.
If people like it, it feels like it works,
I can add some value, then I'll refine it.
And I have it in my head.
You're like you said, it's not a scripted thing,
it's never been written down,
but there are little bitty interlocking parts,
things that I can just, as you're asking me a question right now,
I'm rifling, any time you're doing that,
I'm rifling through my head to the interlocking part
that I know is going to fit, because I know it works, and I've done it a bunch of times, and any time you're doing that, I'm rifling through my head to the interlocking part that I know is going to fit,
because I know it works, and I've done it a bunch of times,
and I know how to say it, and I know what the point is,
and I know what the beats are,
and I think that you nailed it.
I mean, anybody who wants to do this,
you need to be constantly, every second of your day,
alert to what can be your interlocking part,
or part of your story journal, or whatever you wanna call it.
Yeah, so we do a lot of research here
on Young and Profiting Podcast as I mentioned to you.
And so I was looking through all your YouTube videos
and doing my typical research.
And I saw your speaking reel.
And it turns out you call yourself
and you mentioned it before, a champion of change.
So tell us why you feel that you are a champion of change and what credibility do
you have behind that? So funny, you know, speaking of personal branding, I've been experimenting with
language to describe myself and champion of change is something I honestly, I mean, you know,
like I said, a totally open book on these things, I came up with that two, three months ago and just
kind of started throwing it out there to see what would happen. You're the second person to have asked me about it. So it's like, not, I don't
know. I don't know how well it's working. You tell me if you think it's any good. Here's
the reason that I put that out there. So I came to this realization, which is that, well,
okay, a couple of things. Number one, I was trying to understand at the very beginning of my personal brand journey how I am most useful
to people and I realized something and that was that if you listen to the questions that
people ask you, that you will get a sense of what they think that your value is because
right, they're coming with some assumption about how you can be useful.
So, the question that I got a lot was, what are the qualities that I am seeing in successful
entrepreneurs?
Because I am constantly talking to entrepreneurs.
Like the greatest thing that I have, the greatest asset that I have right now at my job,
is that I have access. I asset that I have right now at my job is that I have access.
I have access to everybody, right? Big and small entrepreneurs you've never heard of. And
just before lockdown, I was sitting down and talking to Dwayne the Rock Johnson and his
business partner, Danny Garcia, like, I get the full range. And so I'm able to see these patterns of how people are succeeding and the things that
they're doing that are allowing them to thrive.
And so I started looking for the patterns because that's what people were asking me for.
And the thing that I realized was that the people who succeed are the ones that embrace change,
that are able to not just understand that they themselves need
to change, that their businesses need to change, that their industries are going to change,
and that they have to be proactive about it. They can't be reactive to it. They can't
be changing when they're forced to, when it's too late. They have to do it first. They
have to do it. Sometimes when it's very painful. And so that was a really useful piece of information.
They said, okay, people think that my value to them is that I'm seeing the patterns.
So let me identify the patterns and the big pattern is change.
At the same time, I was also working on an ongoing, I think of it as a research project,
which is this podcast that I do, which is called pessimists archive.
So pessimists archive is a show about why people resist new things and then how they come
to embrace them.
Because the crazy thing is that everything in your life right now, everything in our
world, things that you do not even think about that you totally take for granted, those
things were once scary and new.
And what does that mean?
I'm talking literally everything.
I'm talking teddy bears, I'm talking novels,
I'm talking chess, I'm talking bicycles,
and it's really fascinating when you look back
and you see how people were afraid of these things.
One of my favorite ones, the bicycle,
when the bicycle came out, late 1800s,
the bicycle is a brand
new thing, and merchants were totally freaked out about it because it was changing people's
behaviors. So bar owners were very upset about the bicycle because people weren't coming
in and drinking in the middle of the day anymore, drinking beer because they were now drinking
water, they were riding the bicycle. Cobblers were very upset. There was a, there was a great
1898 newspaper article that I found in which a guy who sells fancy felt hats
said that he wanted Congress to pass a law
mandating that every
Cyclist by too fancy felt hats a year to compensate him for the loss of sales because cyclists weren't buying these hats anymore
They were biting cycling caps and as I look back on this
I realized that I am able to see the patterns and the same way that I was able to see the patterns in how entrepreneurs
are embracing change. I was able to see the patterns historically in why people are afraid
of change and then how great were change makers, people who invented the elevator, people
who invented the car, how they're able to get people to come along for the ride, so to speak. And so I put those two things
together and I realized that what I have is actually a really fantastic window into the history of
and the the embracing of change. I have come to understand change in a way that I don't know that
anybody else is doing. And so that's why I came up with that phrase,
champion of change, because I feel like
that's where my role can be.
I'm just gonna tell you a quick story,
a wanted story that I love of an entrepreneur
who really embraced change and embodies
not just that you need to change,
but that you need to be ahead of it,
that you need to proactively change.
And here's what it is.
Okay, so maybe some of you are familiar with beer called dogfish.
Dogfish head is a brewery in Delaware, a very popular, and many years ago,
this is a guy named Sam. Sam is the founder of dogfish. Many years ago, Sam had created this beer
called 90-minute IPA. It's a 9% alcohol by volume beer,
which is very strong. I'm not going on the floor. And so he was being told by people who liked
the beer. Listen, this is great. But can you create a version of this that I can drink
standing up? So he created a 60-minute IPA, 6% alcohol by volume, easier beer to drink.
You can have a few of them. you won't go on the floor.
And this thing takes off just absolutely crazy takes off.
And it takes off so much.
People love this beer.
They want this beer.
They need this beer, restaurants, bars, Amtrak is calling.
Everybody wants this beer.
And this beer very quickly starts rising in sales.
Such that it could become.
It was on track to becoming 80% of all sales of dogfish,
which is to say that this company,
which makes a lot of beers, 80% of what they were selling
was gonna be this one beer, this one beer, 60 minute IPA.
Now, you might think amazing, love this. Such a great like, wow, I'm an
entrepreneur. I got a hit product. I'm going to sell this beer. I got to sell this beer
and I got to make as much money as I can on this moment. This is my moment. But that is
not what Sam thought. Sam thoughts on the else. Sam thought change is coming. He realized
that he was right now going to be selling one style of beer, which meant
that everybody was going to know him for one style of beer. Every time you went into a bar,
60-minute IPA, every time you went into a restaurant, 60-minute IPA, every time that you went into,
you know, I was talking to Amtrak, 60-minute IPA. So he says, if everybody's experience
is dogfish, through this one beer, if everybody just knows
me as the IPA brand, well, one day people are not going to like IPAs the way that they do
now.
One day the market is going to change.
And when that happens, when people are no longer interested in IPAs the way they are now,
then I am not a hit brand anymore.
I'm an old brand.
And so Sam decided to do something that sounds crazy.
Now remember, I said, this beer was on track to become 80% of everything that he sold.
He decided to cap sales of his best selling product at 50%.
Which meant that a lot of restaurants were calling him and saying they won 60 minute IPA
and he had to say no.
And bars were calling him and he said no.
People were furious.
They were screaming at him on the street.
I have walked around Delaware with Sam.
He has liked a celebrity there.
They were screaming at him.
And yet, Sam understood that this short term pain was necessary for long term stability.
He understood that when people called and yelled at him that he had an opportunity not to
cower, not to apologize, but to say, I understand, I'm really sorry we make this beer very fresh,
and that's the reason why I can't give it to you.
In the meantime, we would love you to try one of our other beers.
And eventually, the anger disappeared.
Eventually, people discovered that they liked the other beers that he made.
And eventually, Sam became known not as a brand
that made one kind of beer, but as an innovative brand.
And last year, Sam sold that company for $300 million.
And that would not have happened.
If he had been afraid to say, you know what,
this needs to change. If he had been afraid to say, you know what, this needs to change. If he had
just seen this hit product and decided to run with it and just become the moment, just
sink in to the thing that was presented to him instead of taking action and saying, change
is going to come. So I have to change first. If he hadn't done that, he would not have
a longstanding business, but he did,
and he sold it for $300 million.
And that's why I believe that change is important.
Your dog is an important part of your family.
Don't settle when it comes to their health.
Make the switch to fresh food made with real ingredients that are backed by science with
nom nom nom.
Nom nom delivers fresh dog food that is personalized to your dog's individual needs.
Each portion is tailored to ensure your dog gets the nutrition they need so you can watch
them thrive.
Nominom's ingredients are cooked individually and then mixed together, because science tells
us that every protein, carb, and veggie has different cooking times and methods.
This packs in all the vitamins and minerals your dog needs, so they truly get the most out
of every single bite.
And Nom Nom is completely free of additives, fillers, and mystery ingredients that contribute
to bloating and low energy.
Your dog deserves only the best, and Nom Nom delivers just that.
Their nutrient packed recipes are crafted by board certified veterinary nutritionists,
made fresh and shipped to your door.
Absolutely free.
Nom-nom meals started just $2.40 and every meal is cooked in company owned
kitchens right here in the US and they've already delivered over 40 million
meals, inspiring clean bowls and wagging tails everywhere. Ever since I started
feeding my dog Nom-nom he's been so much more energetic and he's getting older.
He's a senior dog but now we've been going on longer walks, and he's much more playful.
He used to be pretty sluggish and sleeping all the time, but I've definitely noticed
a major improvement since I started feeding him Nom Nom.
And the best part, they offer a money back guarantee.
If your dog's tail isn't wagging within 30 days, they'll refund your first order.
No fillers, no nonsense, just nom nom.
Go right now for 50% off your no risk two week trial at trinom.com.shap.
That's trinom.nom.com.shap for 50% off trinom.com.shap.
I think that's a great point. It's so important.
You say that entrepreneurs play the long game even when it hurts. That's right. I love that's a great point. It's so important. You say that entrepreneurs play the long game
even when it hurts.
That's right.
I love that phrase.
Do you really turn it?
I do.
So you already gave a real life example,
so I don't need to ask you that question anymore.
Let's talk about your podcast, The Pessimist Archive.
Yeah, sure.
Such a cool concept for a show, honestly.
It's something that I would definitely listen to.
It reminds me of Freakonomics a little bit, which was one of my favorite podcasts before I even started
one. So tell us about that show, how you got the idea for it, and maybe give us a few examples
of how historically people have been resistant to new technology.
Yeah, sure. So thanks. So pessimist's archive is it's a show, like I said, it's about why
people resist new things.
The reason that I started it honestly goes right back to what I said earlier about work
your next job.
I had a fascination with this, with the history of people saying that things that today we
know of as commonplace and not scary were scary, right?
You go back in time and you find that teddy bears were accused
of harming young girls. The argument was that girls will stop playing with dolls and start
playing with bears and therefore they will not learn how to be mothers. That was the
argument. Novels, people worried that novels were going to become too engrossing, too
distracting. Basically, everything that people say about screens right now, about, you know, like get
that kid off a TikTok or whatever, right now, it's not like an old person, but you know,
like everything that people say, they were saying about the novel, coffee, throughout history,
throughout the hundreds of years, governments have banned coffee, the governor of Mecca banned
coffee in the 1600s, the king of England banned coffee
because they thought the coffee made people revolutionary. And you know, I could go on for kind of ever,
but the point of it is that it was so interesting to see how when things are new,
we treat them as if they are scary and damaging. We identify the loss without being able to see the game. We see, oh, this thing
is coming in, it's going to replace something that I already know, and therefore I'm going
to lose something. And they never think through what the possible game could be. How we could
build a new culture, a new society, the elevator is a fascinating one. So let me give you a walkthrough,
a good example with the elevator.
So the elevator is a long and fascinating history of it.
Basically, if you live in a city,
you can thank the elevator for that.
Because prior to the elevator,
they didn't build buildings more than like six, eight stories tall
because it was just too much of a schlep.
And also the way that people thought about height
was totally different.
So before the elevator, poor people lived at the top of buildings and rich people lived at the bottom.
Because of course it was easier to get into your home if you were in the bottom. And then
of course when the elevator came along, people were able to build tall buildings that totally
shifted. Now the rich people wanted to be on top and they shoved all the poor people down
to the bottom. But the thing, the moment that I find most fascinating about the elevator was the moment
that the elevator became automatic.
And just think about it.
Before that, we all just walk into an elevator right now, it just takes us where we want
to go, maybe we press a button, maybe we don't even, because it just knows.
Before that, there was a human being in there.
Not the very beginning, that human being literally physically moved the elevator up and down.
Like by a rope, they would rather pull a rope and it would move it up and down.
And then eventually that wasn't necessary anymore. And then the elevator operator was in there
to press the button and make sure nothing went wrong. And then technology improved enough.
And now we're talking about like the 1950s, technology improved enough that the elevator could go
up and down by itself. And people were terrified by this. Absolutely
terrified by this. They were terrified for a lot of reasons. They were thinking about how
the elevator must have a mind of its own now. There are newspaper stories about how, what
does the elevator think? There are also concerns about how, you know, if there's an automatic
elevator, well, then there's nobody in the elevator, which means that the elevator could
be very dangerous,
rather dangerous people could come onto the elevator.
And the elevator industry had a problem,
which is that nobody was getting into this elevator,
even though automatic elevator could be very good,
could in fact be considerably better,
because here's another fun thing about elevators
when they had operators, operators don't work 24 hours a day,
which means much like the train,
you had to catch the last elevator. So if you were on the high part much like the train, you had to catch the last elevator.
So if you were on the high part of the building and you didn't catch the last elevator, you
had to take the stairs.
It was crazy, right?
It was a different world.
And so here's what they did.
They realized, and this is so important for anybody who wants to create change, anybody
who's inventing, anybody who's innovating, they realized that just creating something and
just knowing that
it's good is not enough.
People don't know the thing the way that you know it.
People don't see the value the way that you see it.
You have to build a bridge of familiarity.
You have to bring them along with you.
And that often means giving them something that is already familiar so that this new thing doesn't feel like a radical new thing.
It just feels like a new version of the old thing. And this is why when you walk into elevators.
I mean, they don't do really that much anymore because we don't need it so much anymore.
But decades ago, you can still see it. If you walked into an elevator, you would hear a soothing female voice that would say, going up, going down,
floor one, floor two. That's the reason for that because that was what gave people the
comfort that when they walked into this thing, there was a human presence. They were used
to a human presence. And we need those things. If you're an innovator, if you are going
to go out there and create change, you have to remember that you have to bring people along with you.
It is your job not just to create something great, but to also show people the way, show
people how it fits into their lives, show people that this is something that is additive
to the world and not scary and subtractive or replacing something in their world.
And if you do that, then you can bring people.
So that's why I do the show because I'm totally fascinated
by that and the world is full of it.
It's such a fascinating topic.
I would definitely recommend you guys to go listen
to pessimist archive.
I'll link to it in my show notes.
So is there a modern example of people resisting technology
and maybe how an entrepreneur bridged that gap
in terms of the old and the new so people weren't so scared about it anymore.
Yeah, it's a great question.
I mean, we are going through quite a lot of it right now and the pandemic I think has
shifted quite a lot of our pre-pandemic technophier thinking.
So for example, remember how everybody was scared about screen time?
Kids are getting too much screen time, so much screen time.
Nobody's worried about that anymore, right?
Nobody's worried about that.
Also, social media, there used to be so much talk about how social media is going to
is making kids depressed and social media makes us anti social.
That was all based on completely faulty research.
It's really interesting.
So, you know, like let's just take you. You may have seen it.
There's tons of headlines.
Go to Google and type in like Facebook Depression,
and you'll find.
So, the thinking was, when they did surveys,
they would find that there was a high percentage
of teenagers with depression who used Facebook.
And so, the original research hypothesized
that Facebook was creating the depression.
But that's not true.
As it turns out now that we have a few more years
of research to look at,
and some of those old studies have been reviewed,
what we're seeing now is that it's actually,
it wasn't a causation,
it wasn't that Facebook was causing the depression.
It was a correlation.
It was that there was a higher likelihood
that if somebody was suffering from depression,
that they would use Facebook.
Now, that's a different thing.
And it's really important to know that
because the solution then is different.
Because if it was true that Facebook causes depression,
well, then one of the things that you might wanna do to help people is get them off of Facebook.
But if it turns out that in fact they have the depression and that's why they're using Facebook because they're finding a community and it's some kind of help for them.
Well then if you took them off of Facebook, you're making the problem worse.
And this is what we do when we jump to conclusions, when we see something that's changing, and we say, ah, that's scary, we have to stop it.
You create the wrong solutions.
And that is so dangerous.
So yeah, there are really interesting shifts happening
right now in which things that people were afraid of,
things that people resisted, they were forced into using,
and they're discovering that the sky didn't fall.
Another is remote work right now, right?
Of course, there were studies.
Before the pandemic, there were plenty of studies
showing that remote work actually improved employee happiness,
improved employee retention, and also improved productivity.
Great things.
Why didn't companies do it?
Because they were so stuck in their old ways.
And the managers, managers only understood how to manage people who were in an office.
And the managers didn't want to feel outmoded.
So we kept everybody in the office, even though it was totally against the purpose of the company,
which is to create great things and to do it efficiently and to make people happy.
And now here we are, we're all distributed.
It turns out, it's fine.
And that's going to change the way that we now think.
So those were exceptional examples. One thing that I want you to drive home is that you say that
technologies don't replace everything all the time. They integrate. Could you explain that point
a little bit? Yeah, yeah. No, thanks. Thanks for picking up on that. I love the research that you've
done for this episode. So, right, this is a really key thing to remember, which is that we often fear new technologies
and new things because we think that they are total replacements to old things.
And so, I mean, I think that drives a lot of the concerns that you may have seen about social
media because people saw the way that young people were interacting on social media and they said, oh no, this is going to replace every other way that young people used to communicate.
Right? If young people only communicate online, well, then they'll never have any idea how to talk
to each other in person. There's a woman named Sherry Terkel who writes books about this, whole books
about this, about how we've lost the art of conversation and nobody knows how to talk to each other.
This is all based on this faulty understanding
of how new things enter into our worlds.
New things do not wholesale replace old things.
They integrate.
So here's another great example.
Both of us are wearing headphones of some sort
or another, your earbuds right now. So if you go back to the 1980s, what you'll see is
you'll see all of these fascinating and really funny news stories about how awful
the Walkman was because the Walkman was the first real portable music device. It was the
first time in which you could create your own environment. And so people were saying
this thing is anti-social. This is the digital snubbery was a line that was used on CBS news. And the
fear was that people are going to be always walking around constantly without any desire or need to interact with other people. Now, what has
actually happened, now that we've had a couple decades on it. Well, what actually
happened is that people interact with each other just fine, but they also take
time for themselves. What the Walkman did is it gave us another option. It gave
us a way to give ourselves some privacy when we wanted it.
And then take it off when we didn't.
And we can share things.
I've seen people on the subway sharing headphones.
It's an opportunity.
Everything that we're given is just an opportunity.
And you know what?
We also, this is an important thing to remember what we're talking about replacing, is
that we often will romanticize, falsely romanticize the past.
So when people were talking about,
oh, well, people are walking around with their headphones
and that means that they're not talking,
that imagines a world that didn't exist
in which everybody was having deep, meaningful conversations
with everybody that they came across.
Could you imagine that world,
that world sounds tedious
and it also sounds imaginary.
I mean, I ride, during normal times,
I'm on the subway multiple times a day in New York City.
And people are largely quiet,
although some people are talking.
And if you rewound 50 years
and you walk onto that same subway,
you didn't see a bunch of philosophers
like having pow-outs.
What you saw was people quietly reading the newspaper,
reading magazines.
So it's not like we were exiting some world
in which we were all communicating
and we were entering some world
in which we're all isolated forever.
No, all we were doing was giving ourselves one more option.
And if you believe, if you believe that people
are fundamentally to their core social creatures who are also
interested in learning and growing, which we are, well then you know some piece of technology
that we created is not going to alter the fundamentals of who we are.
It's absolutely nuts to think that we are so fragile that somebody could invent the
Walkman and it would literally destroy the entire
way that we evolved to be social people.
It's not how it works.
So I get worked up as you can see about this whole thing.
But the point is, and I'm glad that you asked it, the point is that when you see something
new, you shouldn't say, oh no, this is going to completely replace everything that I love
and know and I'm comfortable with.
And instead you should say, this is a great new or possible great, not everything is great,
but this is a possible great new addition to my world.
And let's see if it fits in.
I love that.
You have so much energy.
You're so wonderful.
I think you brought up some great points both about how we can kind of bridge the gap in
terms of if we're an entrepreneur, we're coming out with a new product, what's the best way to put it in the market?
And then you also gave us some great advice in terms of how we can accept change by knowing
that it's just getting integrated into our lives and it's not going to necessarily
replace anything.
So that's amazing.
So today is June 19th.
It's a holiday called June 10th.
It's over 150 years old.
It marks the day when slaves were truly released in Texas.
The last slaves were freed two years after the man's patient proclamation.
So I thought a great way to end the show would be to ask you if you have any inspiring stories
from black entrepreneurs that you've interviewed in the past.
Yeah, thank you so much.
I love that question.
A great way to end on this important day.
So, you know, I mean, I've talked to so many people. I'll tell you one who I just very recently talked to. His name is Mustafa Nure. He's actually a Somali refugee who came over here after his
father was killed by terrorists in Somalia. And he started a company called Bridge in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
And the idea of it is to create cross-cultural events.
So for example, a local Syrian refugee family will host locals,
just locals from Pennsylvania, in their home for dinner.
And they'll also, they do lots of other events.
And the idea is to get immigrants, refugees,
locals together talking because once you see
how similar somebody is to you,
it's a lot harder to be afraid of them.
It's really valuable work.
And the reason I was talking to him was because
I wondered what had happened to his business
once you weren't allowed to have people in your homes anymore.
I mean, his whole idea was get people together and suddenly you couldn't get people together anymore.
And he at first, when lockdowns began, he was really scared because he wasn't sure how to continue his work.
And then he realized that he actually had an opportunity here, which is that young, healthy,
immigrants and refugees could become lifelines for local elderly people or people with
compromised immune systems who weren't able to go out.
And so now you've got, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, you've got Syrian refugees who are delivering
groceries to an elderly woman who just before the
lockdown was having dinner in their home.
And I should just note, like an elderly white woman who has very little otherwise experience
with Syrian refugees.
And they're calling these people.
So the Syrian refugees are calling this woman every day at 6 p.m. just to check in because
she lives alone and you need somebody's got to make sure that she's okay every day.
And they've built these new ways in which these different groups of people can interact
and can be valuable to each other.
And I asked him what this has made him think about as he's looked at how the connections
that he's built and the way that he originally thought he was going to build connections
has evolved.
And he said, and I really loved the way that he, you know, he put, he said, he said,
he looks at it and he says, this is how life should always be, right?
Like what he's built is something that should just always be there.
That that communities, no matter how different they are from each other, should be connecting,
should not just be connecting, but should be useful to each other, should be understanding
how they are additive to each other.
And so the thing that he, I think, is going to do, which so many other entrepreneurs are
going to do in their own lines of business, which is that they're going to take this thing,
this new way that they found to be valuable to people and to interact in this time in
which the way that they could do something before is just not available to them anymore.
And they're going to continue to do it.
All right, they're going to use it.
It's going to become a new way that they can connect.
There will be a time in the future where Mustafa Nour's bridge will go back to hosting
dinners and people's homes, but maybe also will go, will continue to deliver groceries
and do errand runs and do check-in calls.
These are all new things that we can do.
And I think that just the power of him being very conscious about bringing people together
is something that we should all be thinking about today.
Yeah, what an inspiring story.
Thanks for sharing.
And where can our listeners go to learn more about you and everything that you do?
Yeah, thanks.
So a couple of ways you can check me out.
One, you know, we talked about pessimists archive as a podcast. You know, I'd love for you can check me out. One, we talked about pessimists archive. As a podcast, I'd love for you to check that out.
If you want to reach out to me on Instagram,
I'm very active on at hayfifer.edu.
Fei.f-e-r.
And like I said earlier in the episode,
I'm super accessible.
I respond to every DM.
Test me, I will respond.
So you can check that out.
And then also, if you want to go to jsonfifer.com,
you'll get prompted to sign up for my newsletter.
It's once a month, and it's five inspirational insights
that I had in entrepreneurship that month that I hope
will help push people forward.
Thank you so much for coming on the show, Jason.
You were so energetic, you provided so much value
around how you developed your personal brand
and how we can all better embrace change.
It was such a pleasure to have you on.
Bye, thank you so much.
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review on Apple Podcasts
or comments on YouTube, SoundCloud, or your favorite platform.
Reviews make all the hard work worth it.
They're the ultimate thank you to me and the Yap team.
The other way
to support us is by word of mouth. Share this podcast with a friend or family member who
may find it valuable. Follow YAP on Instagram at Young & Profiting and check us out at Young
& Profiting.com. You can find me on Instagram at YAP with Hala or LinkedIn just search for
my name, Hala Ta Ha. Until next time, this is Hala, signing off.
Are you looking for ways to be happier, healthier,
more productive and more creative?
I'm Gretchen Ruben, the number one best-selling author
of the Happiness Project.
And every week, we share ideas and practical solutions
on the Happier with Gretchen Ruben Podcast. My co-host and Happiness Guinea Pig is my sister Elizabeth Kraft.
That's me, Elizabeth Kraft, a TV writer and producer in Hollywood. Join us as we explore
fresh insights from cutting-edge science, ancient wisdom, pop culture, and our own experiences
about cultivating happiness and good habits. Every week we offer a try this at home tip
you can use to boost your happiness
without spending a lot of time energy or money.
Suggestions such as follow the one minute rule.
Choose a one word theme for the year or design your summer.
We also feature segments like know yourself better
where we discuss questions like are you an over buyer
or an under buyer, morning person or night person,
abundance lever or simplicity lover?
And every episode includes a happiness hack, a quick, easy shortcut to more happiness.
Listen and follow the podcast, Happier with Gretchen Rubin.