Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - YAPClassic: Hala Taha on How I Built a Multimillion-Dollar Business After Countless Rejections | Gathering of Titans Conference
Episode Date: November 17, 2023When the pandemic struck in 2020, Hala Taha’s role model, her father, died a tragic death from COVID-19. He was still a well-respected doctor and was in the middle of writing a book when he died. Hi...s death reminded Hala that life is too short to act small, so she launched YAP Media, a multimillion-dollar media agency that serves some of the biggest names in the business and entrepreneurship space. In this episode of YAPClassic, you’ll hear Hala’s first public speaking engagement at the 2022 MIT Gathering of Titans Conference, where she discusses her come-up story, her struggles with oppression and rejection, and why you should believe that life is limitless. In this episode, Hala will discuss: - How Hala’s father pulled his family out of poverty - When Hala realized she was different - How learning about the Law of Attraction changed Hala’s life - Why Hala was blackballed from the radio industry - When Hala gave up the belief that life is limitless - Becoming an intrapreneur within an organization - How the death of Hala’s father pushed her in a new direction - The right way to deal with gatekeepers - The importance of finding your talent stack - Why you should embrace the idea of death - Will social media fizzle out? - How to help underrepresented and oppressed communities - And other topics… Hala Taha is the founder and CEO of YAP Media, a top-rated media agency serving clients in the business and self-improvement industries. She’s also the host of Young and Profiting Podcast, the number one business and education podcast across all apps. Prior to finding success in the podcast industry, she started the Young Employee Network at Hewlett-Packard and founded the popular entertainment blog, The Sorority of Hip-Hop. LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify MasterClass - Get 15% off right now at youngandprofiting.co/masterclass Relay - Sign up for FREE! Go to relayfi.com/profiting **Relay is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services and FDIC insurance provided through Evolve Bank & Trust and Thread Bank; Members FDIC. The Relay Visa® Debit Card is issued by Thread Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and may be used everywhere Visa® debit cards are accepted. More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com  Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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As always, you can find all of our deals in the show notes. Welcome back, Yap fam.
In this Yap classic, we're replaying an episode that is incredibly close to my heart.
We're dusting off my speech from the MIT Gathering of Titans Conference in 2022, which was my
first real live speaking event, which is crazy to say because since then, I've spoken
on dozens
of stages.
The gathering of Titans is an annual private event that brings together CEOs, change makers
and thought leaders from around the world.
Past speakers at this event include former Yap guests, JT McCormick, who's the CEO of
Scribe Media, and Marshall Goldsmith, the world's number one executive leadership coach, and
also my social media client. And I was so honored to be a guest speaker at this conference
because fun fact, Simon Sinek got his big break on this stage.
This talk is so important to me because,
like I mentioned before, it was my first talk
and it was also about my come-up story
and I shared things that I had never shared before on stage
or publicly, like my experiences going to Palestine as a kid
over the summers and how those experiences shaped to I am today, how my dad inspired me to
follow my dreams and how his death pointed me in a new direction.
And lastly, how I built my own success in the face of rejection and sometimes even oppression.
And to close it all out, I reveal my top three secrets to profiting in life.
I hope you guys really love this episode.
And even though it's mostly about my come-up story,
a lot of people felt inspired from this speech and really enjoyed it.
So I hope by hearing my story,
you're also really inspired to follow your dreams
and build your ideal life as well.
When Darryus first asked me to come speak to you all,
I thought he wanted me to give a LinkedIn training.
And I was like, sure, yeah, I could do a LinkedIn training.
I could teach everybody how to podcast.
And then he was like, no, Hala,
I want you to share your story.
And I have to say some of these things
that I'm about to say in this speech,
I've never said on any other podcast.
I've never said in any other room.
So I'm just telling my authentic story
so that you guys can understand my experience. And I hope that you leave
this conversation having a new perspective, learning something new, and
finding some value in this conversation. So I think my story best starts off
with my dad. So my dad is Palestinian and he was born in 1943. That was five years before the
Nebka. The Nebka is the Arabic word for catastrophe. And that's when 600 villages were burned,
750,000 Palestinians were made refugees, and 15,000 Palestinians died. And I guess you could say
my dad was one of the lucky ones
because he wasn't pushed behind the wall.
He wasn't sent to Gaza to become a refugee
and in the open air prisons, so to speak.
He was in the West Bank.
And so my dad grew up as a poor farmer's son
and he only lived on Figs and Pieda Red, he would tell me.
Two of his youngest siblings died when he was younger.
They were a family of eight that lived in one room,
and he lived in extreme poverty.
And my dad knew that there was only one way out
at the time, and that was to be very educated
and to get a scholarship.
And so he decided he'd be the first person
in his whole village to go to college.
And from when he was a little boy, he decided he'd be the first person in his whole village to go to college. And from when he was a little boy, he decided he'd be the smartest kid in school
and that he'd get perfect marks so that he could achieve that dream
and elevate his whole family out of poverty.
And he did. My dad had extreme grit.
And so he had no light, he had no running water.
And the only light he had was on his walks to school.
And so he would read his books on his long walk to school.
That's how he was able to study
and become the smartest kid in his class,
get perfect marks and eventually get a scholarship
to medical school in Cairo.
So my dad went off to Cairo, he got a scholarship there
and he ended up going to America
and becoming a doctor finishing his residence here,
becoming a surgeon, becoming chief of surgery
in multiple hospitals in New Jersey, and ended up owning a
medical center. And he literally brought his whole family out
of poverty. My dad was so generous, he was so humble, and his
favorite store to shop out was Sears. And he would give all
his money away, he put all his kids to college.
He put all his nieces and nephews in Palestine
through college and through grad school.
And essentially lifted my whole family out of poverty.
And made sure everybody would be OK.
So in terms of my experience, the first time that I realized
I was different was my summers going to Palestine.
We had a house in Palestine.
And actually, my whole family lived on one street.
A bunch of people had moved to America.
And so it was this town they called it
the American Village in Palestine.
Because it was a street half the people were actually
Americans and had summer homes there.
And we're not there most of the year.
And so I remember when I finally realized what was going on,
that was the first time I realized I was different.
Because when I was in America, we were kind of treated
like an Italian family.
I really knew we were ethnic, knew we would go back home
over the summer, but we were just treated like a normal family,
maybe like an Italian family in my white affluent town
that I grew up in and watching New Jersey.
But when I went to Palestine, at a certain age,
I realized how different I was.
I remember my dad being this amazing respected doctor
in America.
We'd go to the Israeli airport, and he'd get interrogated
for hours.
We'd be sitting on the airport floor,
like waiting for dad to get done with his interrogation
every time we went.
I remember having to drive on separate roads,
even though I was a US citizen, not allowed to drive
on the same roads in Palestine.
I remember having to take super quick showers because we weren't rationed water like everybody
else because we were a Palestinian family.
I remember almost dying at a checkpoint one day when we landed and we had all our luggage
in a van and these checkpoints are super crowded and it's super chaotic and everybody was saying,
go, go, go, like all the soldiers.
And there was nowhere to go.
We almost fell off a cliff and we almost died
because our van almost fell off a cliff.
And it was my sister saying, push the luggage to one side.
And we did.
Everybody pushed the luggage to one side on the van
and we ended up making it and we didn't fall off the cliff.
And I literally almost died when I was like 12 years old
at a checkpoint.
That was Palestine because in America, I was totally normal and old at a checkpoint. That was Palestine, because in America,
I was totally normal, and we were a respected family.
And in terms of my experience growing up in America,
I was always wanted to be a star.
All my siblings wanted to be doctors.
And so I have three siblings.
They all ended up being doctors.
I have three cousins who lived down the street.
They all ended up being doctors. And so there were seven lived down the street. They all ended up being doctors.
And so there were seven kids in the family.
And I was the only one who never wanted to be a doctor,
not one day in my life.
I always wanted to be a star.
I loved to sing.
Actually, it's a big joke in my family
that I sang before I spoke.
And my first words were singing a song back to my mom.
And I was always super outgoing.
I was a kid that was dancing and singing
at all the family parties and always like the star of the show.
And I had a great childhood.
You know, I was lived a decently privileged life
in terms of like we always had money.
I had a good family.
And I did great in school.
I was popular.
I used to be the lead in all the talent shows
that get on every sports team.
And everything was great. And that to be the lead in all the talent shows that get on every sports team and everything was great.
And that was until 9-11 hit.
So 9-11, I was a freshman in high school.
And I remember, at that time,
there was some buildup happening in terms of air of paint.
And I was starting to get a taste of the oppression
that I was feeling in Palestine
suddenly was happening at home.
And I remember learning about the planes hitting and feeling this pain in my stomach like,
oh my God, everyone's gonna hate us and this is gonna be so bad.
And I remember being so devastated when I found out because my family was so proud to be American.
And my dad loved America. And I was like, this sucks because everyone's gonna hate us
and we actually love being American.
I remember actually crying on the floor,
hysterically crying, calling up Z100.
It was a very popular radio station at the time,
trying to get through because they were having this whole thing
where people were calling in,
telling their experiences,
everybody was sharing their thoughts.
And I so desperately trying to get through
to let everybody know that we didn't feel this way,
that none of the Arabic people knew about it
and that we're just as shocked and as sad as everybody.
But at that point, my life was changed.
And for the first time ever, I learned that gatekeepers
don't only exist at checkpoints.
So my life was turned upside down.
I was just starting my high school career.
And from then on, I went from the American Girl Next Door
to never getting any opportunities.
I tried out for the plays, I never got a part.
I tried out for the cheerleading team, I didn't make it.
I tried out for the volleyball team, I didn't make it.
They didn't even let me in the talent show every year
when I hands down had the best voice in school.
And so, that ended up really impacting me that me in the talent show every year when I hands down had the best voice in school.
And so that ended up really impacting me
because I didn't get into a great college.
I had great grades, but I got into a meteorical school
because it looked like I had no ambition,
but I had lots of ambition.
I wasn't given any opportunities.
And so I went to New Jersey Institute of Technology.
It was in New York, New Jersey, a super diverse school. And from the moment I
stepped foot on that campus, my life changed. First of all, it was four years after 9-11.
And so four years after 9-11, things kind of cooled down. You know, people were starting to be more
accepting. And the other thing is that it was a super diverse school. Previously, I went to a very
white Christian Jewish school, and I was like the only brown kid in school. And so I started getting opportunity left and right.
And I had so little fear of rejection because I had been rejected so much.
I just thought it was a part of life that I tried out for everything and I'd make it.
I tried out for the play.
I was a lead.
I tried out for tuning.
I was the captain.
I was in my sorority.
And I was obsessed with all these extracurricular activities because I got no opportunities in high school
that I was doing very poorly in school. I didn't care about class because I was
like, oh, I'm finally able to do the things I was never able to do and I was just
really embracing that experience. At the same time, I found out about something called the law
of attraction. So the law Attraction almost became my religion.
I was never religious.
My family wasn't very religious.
I grew up Muslim.
I never related to that.
And nobody ever forced me to relate to that.
So I found the Law of Attraction.
And it literally was like my new religion.
I almost got into like a cult.
I was obsessed with Abraham and Esther Hicks.
And they were these big love attraction people.
I'd listen to their CDs all day,
I'd read all of their books,
it was like a new religion for me
and I got super into it
and I did affirmations every day
and visualizations every day
and I literally believed that life was limitless.
I thought I could create my own dream life.
And I was so naive, I really believe this
and honestly, my life just skyrocketed from there.
So I was 19 years old, I found the law of attraction.
I really was super confident at this point.
I was crushing it in college other than school.
But the extra curricular part, I was crushing it.
And so I ended up, I always knew that I wanted to use my voice
to impact the world and make a positive difference.
That's my purpose in life to impact the world with my voice.
And you know, you often don't know exactly how that's going to be.
And at the time, I thought I was supposed to be a famous singer because that was always
my natural talent since I was a kid.
And so I set out to songwriting and I worked with all these different producers and I
started writing music.
And I had this bright idea.
I was in the radio club.
I did like every activity in college. And I was this bright idea. I was in the radio club. I did like every activity in college.
And I was like, well, I'm in the radio club.
I could probably get an internship at a radio station
and push my music to the DJs and break that way.
And so I did.
I applied to all these radio stations
and I ended up getting a job at Hot 97.
Hot 97 is the world's number one hip hop and R&B station.
This is about 10 years ago.
It was a huge deal to work at that station.
All the people, all the DJs were like celebrities
in the local region.
And I ended up getting this internship.
I did a great job.
They ended up promoting me to be like the sacred intern
in the studio area.
And I was Angie Martinez's assistant.
She's a voice of New York, one of the most famous personalities
in the world.
And I was essentially the assistant producer on the Angie Martinez show, the biggest show
in America.
So this was supposed to be a normal college internship, but then they started to say,
holla, like, can you come every day?
You know, can you start working on the weekend?
Can you come at night?
And you're doing such a great job, and they wanted me to be there more often.
So I ended up dropping out of school.
And I thought I had this great opportunity.
I was failing out of school anyway. And, you know, I was just so enamored by this life because I met
every celebrity you can think of. J.Lo, Kim Kardashian, Chris Brown, Kanye. I was hanging out with
these celebrities at night. I was 19 years old. And so it was just a big opportunity for me. So I did
it. I quit my job and I started this apprenticeship at Haunt 97.
And I worked for free there for three years.
Never paid a dollar.
I would make my money at night hosting parties and selling showcase tickets with the DJs.
And I did everything for that station.
I was the show runner.
I would enter the phones.
I would run the commercials.
I would go in at 2 a.m. in the morning
and run the delet boards when I had to
and make sure that music went on for the world all night.
That was really scary if I had to go to the bathroom
or something that there'd be like dead air.
But I love that job, it became my identity.
So all my friends knew me as Hala from Hot 97.
Everybody would be like, oh my gosh, how'd you get that job?
Like you have the coolest job in the world.
And I was being primed to be the next Angie Martinez.
The way that it works in radio is that you work for free for many years.
And then finally you end up getting a show.
And that's how it works.
You got to work for all the DJs for free for many years.
So at the same time, I was feeling a lot of pressure
because all of my siblings and cousins were on the medical track.
And to all the outside world, even though I was learning so many new skills,
and even though I was doing so many cool things, I was like a party girl to everybody else.
And they thought I was throwing my life away, you know, dropped out of college.
And I'd go to Thanksgiving, and I was like the black sheep, the embarrassment of the family.
My dad always believed in me, but everybody else really looked down on me
at this point in my life.
And I was starting to feel a lot of pressure
because I was like, man, like,
I've been working here for three years.
They haven't given me a job yet,
like in my ever gonna even get paid minimum wage,
like I feel like an embarrassment.
And so finally, a position opened up at Haunt 97.
The producer of the show,
and I was doing his job for about a year,
and they ended up firing him,
because he was like a deadbeat,
and I was already doing his job for over a year.
And so I was like, okay, finally,
I'm gonna get the producer role
and everything's gonna be okay.
And then I come to find out that they gave the job
to somebody who worked in the video department
who never spent a day on the show,
and the worst part about it
is that they expected me to train him.
day on the show, and the worst part about it is that they expected me to train him.
And so, yeah, I was not young and profiting at this point.
I was young and pissed.
So, on the first day of his work, his name was Drew Ski,
and we were actually really good friends.
While I was working at Hot 97,
I also had online radio shows on the side
with all the up-and-coming DJs.
Many of these DJs are super famous on the radio now.
And I still host little radio shows with them
pretending to be Angie Martinez.
And so we were actually good friends.
And I was young, stupid, whatever you want to say, upset.
And I texted him and I said, I don't feel good today.
If you want to learn how to be producer, learn it on your own.
And he showed that text to Angie because he had to explain why he wasn't getting training
today.
And she fired me on the spot.
And she cut my key cards.
And not only that, she didn't let me say goodbye to anybody, all my friends and mentors
for three years.
I dropped out of college for this lady.
She didn't let me pack up my stuff.
And worst of all, she told everyone, you'll be fired if you talk to Holly.
And she blackballed me from the industry.
And she thought that I would trivel and die probably.
So, yeah, oops.
And so, at the time, I felt like I had died.
My identity was taken away from me.
I, everybody knew me Hala from Hot 97.
It was extremely embarrassing.
Like all my social media saying Hala Hot 97.
Everything was Hot 97.
My whole life was wrapped in this brand.
And so I was so embarrassed and I literally felt like somebody died.
It was one of the worst moments in my life.
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Pfft!
It's kind of funny.
I was fired on a Thursday.
By Sunday, I had a new idea.
I decided I was going to create something called
the sorority of hip hop.
And I was going to recoup all the girls
in the hip hop entertainment industry
who worked for IHurt Radio, VH1, you name it.
And we'd all band together and I'd create a blog site.
Blogs were super hot at the time.
And we would band together and become more powerful
and have a platform.
And so I started working on this idea. I was fired on Thursday.
I started working on my website and learning how to code websites on Sunday.
By the end of two weeks, I recruited 14 girls off of Twitter and Craigslist, and we formed
with the sorority of hip hop, and I was the president, and we started a blog site.
I went back to school to finish my undergrad and make my parents proud.
And at the same time, I was building this website.
Within three months, we were one of the most popular
hip-hop and R&B stations, block sites in the world.
I also had about 50 girls at that time.
I had 150 girls outside of the organization
over about three years.
So we got all this notoriety because I figured out
how to hack Twitter.
I got all these celebrities to retweet us
and we blew up that way.
So three months into it, MTV scouts us.
We did a little pilot, nothing really came out of it,
but we didn't care.
We were like, this is three months in,
what's going to happen six months from now?
Who cares, right?
So we keep building and building where we have online radio shows,
interviewing celebrities,
we're hosting concerts and events,
we have this blog site that's going viral all the time.
Everything's good.
We're not really monetizing that much
because I didn't really figure out the business aspect of it,
but we are making a little bit of money.
And finally, MTV reaches back out.
And at the time, I was getting scouted
for multiple reality TV shows.
Love and hip-hop wanted me to be on their show.
Oxygen wanted me to have a show.
And MTV was like, listen, holla.
We just had Jersey Shore.
We're gonna make you a star.
Choose us.
And so I did.
I chose them. And I was gonna be the lead. I was getting paid three times as much as everybody else.
And so they filmed us all summer. We were broke girls, caddy girls. It was fun time and they got us
a studio on Broadway. And it was had neon signs. It was hooked up with all this furniture. We got
our hair and makeup done every day. We were miked up and filmed on the street.
They filmed us in restaurants at my parents' house.
They filmed us all summer.
We had a concert.
It was absolutely amazing.
Unfortunately, when it was about to air two weeks before,
my producer gives me a call.
And she's like, ho, I'm sorry,
but we decided to move in another direction.
And again, it was one of those moments
where I was like, oh my God, like again, I did
all the work, I did everything right, I made the right choices, I worked my butt off, how is this
happening again? And they didn't give me a reason why they didn't choose the show, but they decided
not to air it. And that was a moment in my life where I feel like my thought that life was limitless,
really fizzled out.
And I thought, you know what, Hala, you're really unrealistic.
Life is not this easy.
Your parents are right, your family is right.
You should just be normal and get a real job.
And it's time to just be normal.
So I thought I'd never get back on a mic.
I shut down the group.
I had 50 girls that were extremely mad at me.
But I shut down the group.
I shut down the blog. And I decided that I was going to go get my MBA, and that I was going to
be a normal person and get a normal job in corporate, and that was that, I was time to be
a normal person.
So I ended up wanting to get my MBA.
Unfortunately, I had a 2.3 undergrad GPA.
So it was really difficult to get to school. So I decided that I was going to
use my networking skills. It's one of my strongest skills. And I decided I was going to target my
alma mater, the director of Alumni Association at NJIT, and I would beg her to get into the MBA program.
And so I emailed her every other day for like a month and I just wouldn't leave her alone.
And I was like, can I get you a coffee?
Can I buy you lunch?
Can I come there?
And finally she agreed to take a meeting with me.
And I explained to her my whole story,
how I had the story of hip-hop, how I worked out on I7
and how even though on paper, I looked like a schlub,
I really was a hard worker.
And she believed in me and I told her,
if you let me in this program, I promised I'll get a 4.0
and I'll get straight A's.
And she said, Holly, if you keep that promise,
I'll let you in the program.
And she let me in the program.
I ended up getting a 4.0, graduating with straight A's
number one in my class.
And it really set off my corporate career.
At the same time, I got my MBA.
I leveraged that to get an internship at ULIC Packard.
And I was making 70 grand a year.
To me, that was a lot of money,
and I was finally making it.
I did that, and at the same time at HP,
I started something called the Young Employee Network.
The Young Employee Network is
an employee resource group at HULIP Packard.
HULIP Packard actually has an amazing company culture.
In my office, though, there was no culture. Nobody talked to each other outside of
departments. Like it was super boring and bland. And I being like the little entrepreneur
inside the organization was like, oh no, like we've got to change this. So I got everybody
to sign a petition. And we started a young employee network at the office and I ended
up launching their first holiday party, their first company picnic, all of their charity events,
and I infused the whole office with culture. And so at the same time, I was doing amazing in my
career. I thought I was going to be so behind everybody else because I started my corporate
career so late, but that wasn't true at all. I had learned outside of an organization, and so I was so tech savvy,
and I was like the digital whiz kid.
I got promoted from role to role.
I had every single job on the marketing team,
and I was like the C-suite pet,
especially because I was doing all this cultural stuff,
and I was interviewing the CEO and the CMO all the time,
and I was really the face of the young employees
at HULIP Packard.
So I did this presidency of the young employee network for two years at Hulett Packard.
And then I finally thought, you know what, let me step my sights even higher.
I want to be the president of the Global Young Employee Network.
And so I was on the recruitment chair of that organization and I paid my dues.
I created something called HPE Spirit Week.
At the time, there was 300,000 employees
across the organization.
And I launched a week-long event with daily themes
around the world where I was emailing
the entire organization every day as if I was the CEO.
And they still do this event to this day.
And I created it.
It was like a week-long event called HPE Spirit Week.
So I thought I for sure was a shoe-in
to be the president of the Global Young Employee Network.
But of course, I was wrong.
The HR director for some reason didn't like me, she didn't give me the position, she gave it to a guy who never was even involved in the organization.
And they didn't even keep me on the board, they kicked me out.
And I was again, like, what did I do? I just worked for free. I basically had a side hustle inside of this organization and they just stopped me out.
And by the way, that HR director left one month later.
I left too.
I went to Disney streaming services.
And at the same time, I started Young and Profiting podcast.
And I decided that if I couldn't lead the 7,000 young employees
all over the world at Hula Packard, that I would lead
7 million young professionals across the world instead. And I'd start my own thing, young and profiting. So I started a young and profiting podcast in April of 2018.
I'm going to fast forward to 2020 now.
2020 was both the best year and the worst year of my life.
2020 was the year that my life changed forever.
And I feel like that's the most pivotal year of my whole life.
So I'll start off with January. So I'm going to start off with January. first year of my life. 2020 was the year that my life changed forever, and I feel like that's the most pivotal year
of my whole life.
So I'll start off with January.
So at the time, I was with my ex boyfriend,
and we were living in Brooklyn,
and he was super paranoid about COVID.
We had some friends overseas who were telling us
it was pretty bad.
And in America and New York, nobody cared, right?
It was just business as usual.
But it was his birthday and that morning,
we decided we were gonna go to the pharmacy
and we were gonna try to get some masks
and alcohol on gloves and just play it safe.
And so we go to one pharmacy, we go to the aisle,
nothing's there.
Okay, this is weird.
We go to the next one, nothing's there.
We go to 10 different pharmacies,
we cannot find any alcohol, any masks, any gloves.
At this time, nobody knew about COVID
and we're like, everybody, like a lot of people
know something that we don't know.
And things are about to get real.
I remember wearing a mask on the train,
and I was the only one on the train
where you mask everybody looking at me like I was crazy.
But I was trying to be ultra protective of my father
because at the time, my father was had diabetes.
And he had to get his toe amputated.
And in January and February, he was in and out of the hospital.
And so I remember working at Disney Streaming Services
at the time I had my podcast.
And so my days were like this.
I'd wake up at 6 a.m. work on my podcast.
On the train, I'd do my LinkedIn post.
I was growing my LinkedIn following.
I'd go to work.
During lunchtime, I'd be interviewing people
like Brian Scudamore in the phone booth.
And then I'd finish work, go home.
My boyfriend at the time was a music producer.
He worked nights, and so I was able to work
on my podcast that night.
And I do my engagement on social media.
And I literally just worked all day all night.
And all weekend, too.
And I did that for many years.
Around February, March, lockdown happens.
So this was actually in March.
Lockdown happens.
Disney tells everybody to start working from home.
We're in lockdown.
Nobody knows anything about COVID.
I don't know anybody who had COVID, all we hear about
is just the crazy stories.
I'm definitely afraid of getting COVID.
I am the most protective person and I was for months
about not getting COVID.
I remember being on LinkedIn and telling everybody
how to wash their hands properly and how to go grocery,
shopping in the right way, and trying to be like a role model about how to not get COVID.
And so, March hits, a week into lockdown, my sister gives me a call, a little bit of a
backstory here.
My dad was getting hyperbaric oxygen treatments for his toe because he got his toe amputated.
And me and my sister and my brothers were begging them, like, mom and dad stopped going and getting the treatments,
but it was the only way that my dad was going to get better
and they really wanted the treatments.
I actually spent $20,000 to buy my dad,
a hyperbaric oxygen machine at home, but it was too late.
And so my sister gives me a call and she says,
Hala, mom and dad have COVID.
Your brother's home, he has COVID and
your aunt and uncle down the street have COVID too. I didn't have a car at the time I was living
the city. I'm going to pick you up and like, if you want to come, I'm going to pick you up
in like an hour. You have an hour to decide if you want to come home.
Being like, considering my parents gave me everything in life, I was like, of course, I have
to go home. I don't, if I'm going to get COVID, I'm going to get COVID, but of course I have to go home.
So my sister picks me up and we go home and she's a doctor.
So we have like full hazmat suits on.
We have an N95 mask, we have sunglasses, gloves, and you know, I remember walking to
the house and my house usually smells lovely, food or flowers.
It smelled so bad of sickness,
and I was like, oh boy, like this is crazy.
And me and my sister were so paranoid,
we thought we were gonna die,
because at the time nobody, it was so scary,
we didn't know anybody who had COVID.
We were the first family impacted out of everybody.
And so we were like, are we gonna die?
Is everybody gonna, like, is everybody gonna die?
Like, what is happening?
And my sister played the role of doctor.
And I went from like top-podcaster
and, you know, business executive at Disney to janitor.
That was my job.
And so I was just focusing on cleaning the house,
cooking, making sure everybody was okay.
And for two weeks, we would be in full gear, and the only time we would eat would be at
like 10 or 11 p.m. once we were done taking care of everybody.
All we had was like peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
We were living on the couch.
We had like old blankets from when we were kids because we didn't know anything about the
disease.
So we assumed everything upstairs, which was like contaminated and had COVID all over it.
So everybody started to get better except for my dad. My dad started to deteriorate even worse.
And so at a certain point me and my sister were like, you know what?
Effort. We're gonna get COVID. It's obvious. Like who are we kidding? And I stopped wearing even a mask
and I just concentrated on being with my dad. And so we were feeding him, he was like coughing in our faces,
we didn't care.
And so we just were trying to take care of our dad.
And then a point came where we felt like we had
to send him to the hospital.
And we didn't want to send him to the hospital.
Because at that time, the hospitals were totally packed.
And we knew that he had really bad eyesight
and that it would be really difficult for him
to be alone in that hospital setting. And we knew we wouldn't really bad eyesight and that it would be really difficult for him to be alone in that hospital setting.
And we knew we wouldn't be allowed to visit him.
But it came to a point where we had to make
that difficult decision.
And I remember when we had to take him,
that was the last time I spoke to my dad when he was alert.
And he said, if you guys send me to the hospital,
you're never gonna see me again.
But we had to make that decision
because we were trying to save his life.
And he was right, that was the last time
I ever saw him alert.
And so I remember that time being so difficult,
we were, I was working from home.
I remember working at HP, I'd be working at HP and have my dad on Zoom next to me
with, he was traked, he had tubes in his nose.
He always looked super uncomfortable, like he didn't look peaceful,
he looked very suffering, you know?
And so that was super hard,
and I still had to go to work and figure that all out.
And the biggest regret is that we weren't able
to actually visit him in the hospital.
We weren't allowed to go visit him.
And actually, I didn't see him until he died.
And so that was super difficult,
but they allowed me to be on Zoom. And my dad couldn't see him until he died. And so that was super difficult, but they allowed me to be on Zoom.
And my dad couldn't see well,
but I thought that he could hear my voice.
And so I spent most of my time during the month
that he was in that hospital.
I didn't do anything really other than work
and then sing to my father on Zoom
and try to make it as peaceful as possible for him.
And so he passed away May 15th.
That's actually the same day as the Nupke day that is commemorated.
And he passed away on May 15th, and he had like the shittiest funeral ever.
They buried him with his shoes, with his cell phone.
Only six people were allowed at the funeral. And it was
really hard for me. And you would think that that would break anyone. You would think that that
would just, I would just sign off for the year. And that, okay, this year is over, worst year of my
life. But it wasn't. It was actually the best year of my life, because I was the first half of 2020.
And the second half of 2020 ended up being the best year of my life because that was the first half of 2020 and the second half of 2020 ended up being
the best year of my life. We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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These side marios all you can eat is all you can munch a soup, sell it, and gollic
home.
Oh my, come on, me!
I gotta move out of bed!
So at the time, when my dad was in the mom, I'm leaving! I gotta move out of here!
So at the time, when my dad was in the hospital, I met this lady named Heather Monahan.
Heather Monahan is a huge influencer on LinkedIn.
And I interviewed her for my show,
and she kind of wouldn't leave me alone after.
I had a team of volunteers
since I started Young & Profiting Podcast.
By episode two, I had my first volunteer, he's now my business partner.
By episode eight, I had 10 volunteers in a Slack channel helping me work on my show.
And so I knew everything about podcasting.
So I teach one guy in Estonia, I had to build websites and run that for me.
I teach one guy in Atlanta how to do my videos.
I taught one person how to do my social and I would just teach all these interns and volunteers how to work on my show
and we created a Slack channel
and that was basically our office.
And Heather was like, your videos are so good
in different hollow.
Like, can you do this for me on LinkedIn?
And I was like, no, I'm really busy.
Like my dad's in the hospital.
Like, it's not the right time.
I just have a volunteer group.
Like, I can't do this for you.
We can only do it for me.
I was interested in her being my mentor.
So she asked me for a call so that I could teach her
how to make those videos.
And I was like, sure, I'll teach you how to make these videos.
So I take a call with Heather,
and I show her my Slack channel.
I'm showing her all our processes and our templates.
And she's like, Hala, I just had a call with VaynerMedia.
Your stuff is better than theirs.
I have to be your first client.
You have to start a business.
Just trust me.
And I was like, all right, I'll do your videos.
And so she paid us like 600 bucks a month
to do her videos.
I was like, it was nothing.
But then it ended up being, I took over her whole LinkedIn.
Then I took over her whole podcast.
Our second client was like a $30,000 retainer.
And it was a very powerful billionaire client
that we got, and then everything changed.
I was able to hire all my volunteer team.
I was able to expand my team, and continue to grow this side hustle.
So one thing leads to another, and I end up where I am today.
I am full-time entrepreneur. I quit my job at Disney.
I ended up being able to reinvest in my podcast and grow it very large to be the
number one education show across all podcasts.
I got the cover of Podcast Magazine January of 2021.
I learned that I was going to be interviewing Matthew McConaughey at the end of 2020.
And so my whole year turned around.
In my podcast, I always ask one question at the end of the show.
I always say, what is your secret to profiting in life?
And so I always interview all these people who are mega successful.
And I never, ever thought that I had value to actually contribute to that question.
What is your secret to profiting in life?
And then after 2020 was the first time that I actually felt like I could help answer that question
with my secrets to profiting in life.
And so I'd love to go over that with you guys next.
And I hope you're enjoying this conversation.
Secret number one, create your own lane. When a gatekeeper is telling you no,
instead of going and trying to beg that gatekeeper,
instead of looking for other similar gatekeepers,
create your own path,
because I found that creating my own path
was always a fast-tracked success.
When I was fired from hot 97,
I started strawberrybunt.com and the story of hip- hip hop and it was one of the best experiences of my life.
It didn't end the way I quite imagined, but I learned a lot of skills
and it was still one of the best experiences of my life.
When I didn't get MTV, I ended up owning my own life going back to school.
When I didn't get the young employee network, I started a young and profiting podcast
and thank God for those notes.
Because if it wasn't for those knows,
I wouldn't be where I am today.
And then in terms of creating your own path,
there's some ways to turbocharge that,
having a team, which I always had,
and having a team believe in you,
and then also having somebody other
than yourself believe in you.
So I felt like my father also turbocharged my destiny
because he always believed in me
whether anybody else did or not.
And then the second secret to profiting in life
is finding your talent stack.
So I actually learned this from Scott Adams.
He's the creator of Dilbert.
So that's a very famous cartoon.
It's syndicated in all the newspapers.
And it's basically like a funny cartoon
about this guy who's in business.
And so Scott Adams really taught me
about this idea of talent stacking.
So for him, he was a decent writer.
He was a decent drawer, and he was funny.
And he knew a bit about business and computer
and the IT world.
So he put that all together and he created Dilbert
and it was a massive success.
Now he wasn't the best in all of these things.
He wasn't the best drawer, the funniest guy in the world.
He was just decently good at all of it.
He put it all together and he had a unique offering
that he could share to the world.
I think that my story is very similar.
I was a great podcaster and my show took off right away
because I had the experiences to build my talent stack to make me the best podcaster and
Eventually the best CEO of Yat Media. I had radio experience. I had blogging experience. I had ran multiple social media channels for Fortune 500 companies
and I put all these things together and knew how to build teams and recruit teams. I put all those skills together and created the podcast
and then eventually, yeah, media.
So find your talent stack.
And the next one is that life is limitless.
When my father was dying,
I never felt so much fire in my belly.
I wanted to take over the world.
Heather Monahan gave me a kick in the butt.
And after that, I was ready to take over the world
because I realized that life was limitless.
Like, my father loved to live.
He still was writing a book.
He wasn't finished with life.
And I felt like, man, like, life can just end at any moment.
You never know.
And not only that, I felt like I was playing small.
To the outside world, it probably seemed like I had made it.
I had a great executive career at Disney.
I was running all their email and mobile marketing.
I had a top podcast.
You would think, oh, this girl's got it all.
But to me, I was actually playing small.
My whole life, I wanted to be a star.
I wanted to be famous and to make a huge impact on the world.
And so I realized I was playing too, too small.
And so I finally got back to that 19 year old Hala
who is obsessed with the law of attraction
and who really believed that you could create your dream life.
And I got that fire back in my belly.
And Robert Green, who I also interviewed on my show,
he's the author of the laws of human nature
and the 50th laws of power, huge author.
And he taught me about the law of death denial.
So in the law of death denial, it says that most people
are actually scared to confront the idea of death.
They don't even think about it.
They avoid the thought of death.
Now, Robert suggests that instead of doing that,
you should embrace the idea of death, think about your death
so that it actually motivates you to a life of purpose and fulfillment.
And so my ask to everybody here today is not to wait until you're on your deathbed, not
to wait until somebody you love is on their deathbed to feel that fire in your belly and realize
that life is limitless.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Guys, we have time for questions. So let's go to Brighton. Yeah, thanks, Hala.
Good to get to know your personal story rather than just,
you know, you and I have interacted on Zoom
and a few side conversations,
but it's great to hear the personal side.
So thanks for sharing.
Are you on a quest or a path?
A quest or a path.
You know, right now I feel like I don't know what my ultimate vision is, but I know that
I'm focused on making a huge positive impact with the world.
And one of the things that I recently did was launch my podcast network, which I'm
super excited about.
But I feel like there's another element to my life's purpose that I haven't discovered
yet.
And I think it probably has to do with Palestine, but I feel like to be honest,
I'm not ready yet to do that.
So, because I know you'd always think big and execute big,
if you could think five years into the future, what would you manifest?
You want me to answer that question?
Well, I think, yeah, media is going to be a 1,000 person company, 100%.
I think I'm going to have the biggest podcast network in the world,
and we're probably going to be bought by Spotify or something like that.
And I think that at that point, I'll be so secure in my career
that I can start really giving back and help educating people
about some of the oppression and occupation and issues that are going
on in Palestine that in this very juncture today, I can't do yet because I'm not successful
enough to do that.
From your perspective as the youngest person in the room, what is the future of marketing?
The future of marketing.
So I don't think obviously social media is going away.
I do think that
platforms like Instagram and Twitter are definitely going to fizzle out. They're already losing their
organic growth. In terms of podcasting, I think it's going to turn into like VR and more of like a
VR experience. And that's definitely the future of podcasting. And in general, I just think like
the metaverse is going to be the future of marketing and social media,
making sure that you're relevant in the metaverse.
And companies will have real estate
in the real world and the metaverse.
The foundation that your dad was,
and what he did for everyone.
How's the family now?
And how's your mom?
How's everybody doing?
How's everybody come together?
Wait, now that your dad's passed.
Our family is doing amazing
because I feel like my dad left
with such a strong foundation.
So my mom's doing great.
My brothers and sisters,
our old doctors, super successful.
We're super blessed.
So everybody's doing great.
Thanks for asking.
I'm a little nervous to ask this question.
So let me see if I can get it out.
Okay. Your 12 year old little girl I'm a little nervous to ask this question, so let me see if I can get it out.
Okay.
Your 12-year-old little girl was being attacked by a country for being who you were.
And there are children in states right now that are trans children that are being attacked for being who they are.
What do you wish rooms like this would have done for you when you were a little
girl when you were under attack? That's a good question. Wow, that's a good question.
So like let's just face it, I'm just going to call it how it is. Most of the people in
this room are white, right? White men. So I remember being a little Palestinian girl thinking I was just a regular American girl
and I remember having parents, parents, friends.
They'd ask me, what's your heritage, Hala, where you guys from?
And I'd say, I'm from Palestine.
And literally, multiple times, I've had parents say, Palestine doesn't exist.
Imagine being a little girl and being told that like your whole life is a lie and you don't
even exist, right?
So one of the things that I would say is educate yourself. Have some compassion, you know?
Educate yourself about what's really going on and the other thing that I would say is for me
I'm in a really tricky place because I've seen things with my own eyes. I feel a very certain way about it
But I've been canceled. I didn't tell you guys every story of my life.
I've been canceled multiple times for talking about Palestine.
And so I'm like, you could ask Deris, I wasn't even going to mention it today.
And he was like, he was like, you better mention it.
I took it out of my speech because I was like, I don't want to get canceled.
My career's taken off.
I don't want anybody to hate me.
I love people, like, and I try to stay
out of it because I understand that I'm not powerful enough to talk about it yet, but
maybe some of you guys in this room are.
And so I want to wait until I've got so much foundation that nobody can tear me down
because I've been torn down before before I've been shadow banned on Instagram
like I literally
One of the reasons why I blew up on LinkedIn is because Instagram shadow banned me for so many years and nobody saw my stuff
And so I know what it's like to be canceled and so what I'd ask is that
Open your mind. Don't just look at the media. Don't listen to the same stories that everybody told you like
There's stuff going on in the world that you need to learn about and do research about and listen to the same stories that everybody told you. Like there's stuff going on in the world
that you need to learn about and do research about
and listen to the people who are going through it
and then be an advocate and stand up for them
if you have the power and if you have the foundation
where no one's gonna tear you down,
there are people like me and people who are transgender
or Palestinian or whatever it is, whatever the minority group is,
who don't have the power to stand up for themselves
and who will be canceled,
and their life will be way more impacted
than if used it up for them.
And I know it's a hard thing to ask
because people are scared to speak out
because everybody's trying to protect their livelihood.
But at some point,
people need to stand up for what's right
and equal human rights across the board for everyone. trying to protect their livelihood, but at some point, people need to stand up for what's right
and equal human rights across the board for everyone.
Okay.
All right. Is there any other questions for Halla?
Oh, sure.
You know, being counsels and all over and over again,
you were quits. People quit on you and fired you.
What was that thing that kept you going
and believing in yourself?
Honestly, it was my dad.
It was knowing that my dad got out of poverty
when all the odds were stacked against him.
Like he was literally,
like his dad didn't even have a first grade education
and he went off to become like chief of surgery
of multiple hospitals.
Like, and so for me, I always felt like I had zero excuse
to not be even 10 times more successful than he was.
And so really it was always my dad thinking about like
everything that he sacrificed because all he did was study
his whole life and all he did was give back his whole life.
His whole life was like for his family and dedicated
for his family.
So for me, that was always a driving factor
to make sure that nothing he did was in vain
and that I would help build my family's generational wealth
and 10X it, hopefully.
Any other questions?
Bill?
I just want to say, yeah, yeah,
like you said,
that's the perfect thing.
Congratulations, Ben, you did that one.
Oh, I'm a good team. I have a good team.
She G Offends the whole room, and you all have invites too.
That's so funny.
Thank you guys.
you