Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - #466: CREATE Your Roadmap to SUCCESS with Jason Tartick 2x Best Selling Author, Host of Top Biz Podcast, Founder of Rewired Talent Management, & Speaker
Episode Date: October 1, 2024In This Episode You Will Learn About: How betting on yourself OPENS doors to BIG opportunities. Why listening to your INTUITION IS the key to life-changing decisions. What choosing SUCCESS over c...oasting REALLY LOOKS LIKE. Why starting tough conversations about MONEY IS a game-changer. What building your roadmap to SUCCESS DOES for your life. Resources: Website: https://www.jasontartick.com/ Listen to Trading Secrets Read The Restart Roadmap LinkedIn: @JasonTartick Instagram, Twitter/X, & YouTube: @Jason_Tartick Facebook: @tradingsecretspodcast Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at shopify.com/monahan Download the CFO’s Guide to AI and Machine Learning at NetSuite.com/MONAHAN. Want to do more and spend less like Uber, 8x8, and Databricks Mosaic? Take a free test drive of OCI at oracle.com/MONAHAN. Get 10% off your first Mitopure order at timeline.com/CONFIDENCE. Call my digital clone at 201-897-2553! Visit heathermonahan.com Reach out to me on Instagram & LinkedIn Sign up for my mailing list: heathermonahan.com/mailing-list/ Overcome Your Villains is Available NOW! Order here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com If you haven't yet, get my first book Confidence Creator Show Notes: What happens when you TRUST your instincts and take risks that align with who you are? Jason Tartick, host of Trading Secrets Podcast and best-selling author of “The Restart Roadmap,” BET on himself, leaving a secure corporate job to follow an uncertain path. And it paid off BIG. Instead of avoiding tough conversations, he dives right in because true success means being REAL with yourself. Jason’s story is a reminder to LISTEN to your gut, take control of your financial future, and create a life that’s both SUCCESSFUL and FULFILLING. Are you ready to do the same? If You Liked This Episode You Might Also Like These Episodes: #421: GO For It: Shattering Limits in Life & Business with Heather! #411: From Setbacks to BREAKTHROUGHS: Create Confidence In Any Situation With Heather! #402: Conflict into Connection: The Art of Effective Communication with Charles Duhigg Pulitzer Prize-winning Reporter & Bestselling Author
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When I started podcasting, an online store was the furthest thing from my mind. Now I'm selling
my group coaching on the regular and it is just so easy. All because I use Shopify.
No one really knows the truth, right? There's three sides to every story, one side, the other side,
and the truth. And you get over explained, and over explain, and over explain, and you still may never get the truth.
And we see this in everything.
We see it in business leaders, we see this in politics,
we see it in everything.
And so all you can do is just carry yourself
with who you are, character and class,
and be able to put your head to bed at night,
and the rest will sort itself out.
That's what I've tried to tell myself.
I'm on this journey with me.
Each week when you join me,
we are going to chase down our goals,
overcome adversity and set you up for a better tomorrow.
I'm in your seat.
I'm ready for my closeup.
Hi and welcome back.
I'm so excited for you to be back with us again this week.
Okay, this week, you guys are going to be hyped.
I'm really excited.
We have an amazing guest, Jason Tardik.
Let me tell you a little bit about him if you haven't heard about him.
And if you haven't heard about him, you need to get on IG and start getting in the mix.
All right.
He's a Wall Street Journal bestselling author, renowned speaker, a finance expert, and you
know I need that in my life, host of the hit podcast, Trading Secrets and Media Powerhouse.
Jason has quickly become the go-to expert on
business and financial affairs for a new generation and for anyone, frankly. This spring, Jason
released his new book, Top Money to Me. Oh my gosh, I can't wait to get into your newest book and also
to get back into your restart roadmap, which I know everybody here is going to appreciate so much.
He was on the bachelorette. Who goes from corporate America having an MBA in accounting and finance and executing over 150 million and lending
transactions to boomerang into The Bachelorette to start his own company and become incredibly
successful as a Wall Street Journal bestselling author. And just like me, he's with Harper Collins
now, that is going to the next level, 15 million downloads and over a hundred episodes reported so far on his podcast.
He's killing it.
One of Jason's biggest passions
is encouraging financial transparency.
That's new to me.
While educating others, his following is huge by the way.
And that's how I found him was on Instagram.
I want you to check him out on Instagram to get his books.
Check out his podcast as he's teaching things
that the world needs to learn about today.
And I can't wait to hear how you started rewired talent management.
Jason, just thank you so much for being here.
We're excited to hear all of your wisdom today.
Let's go, Heather. Thank you so much for that introduction.
I feel fired up after that. And thank you for having me on.
What's so interesting and I want to get into a lot of different things here because you can teach me and selfishly.
That's why I love my podcast is I get to learn things that I need to know from my guests. But one of the things for everybody
listening right now, we all know my story of getting fired from the C-suite and reinvention.
Your story is more on your own volition. However, you made a very, in my outsider opinion, risky
decision to leave a very successful banking corporate America career to take a leap of faith.
Can you talk to us a little bit about what that was like?
Yeah, I mean, one negotiating tactic I've always
learned in my life is you never want
to put someone in a predicament with an ultimatum, right?
When they feel like they're backed against the corner,
they then will just decide and you never
know if the decision is going to be ultimately the path you
want those people to go.
Now, coincidentally enough, I was putting this ultimatum.
So I'm in corporate banking.
I got my MBA in accounting and finance.
I'm working up the ladder, moving several times.
I get this big offer to move from New York to Seattle.
I'm 29 and I'm killing it.
And then I get offered to go on the Bachelorette, of all things.
And I decide to go.
And my employer was like alright burn through
Your vacation time if there are any issues there could be repercussions
Well, there weren't any issues it went really well as a result of that
I went back to work. I worked my towel off and work also was like hey, wait a second
We got like the little 15 minute buzz here
We're gonna kind of use this guy to go speak over here and do that and I said hey you guys let me go
So I'm gonna do it for you.
A year after I got off the show, working full time,
doing everything, there was a podcast that happened.
There was a story that was told about me.
By the way, that story was just about an ex and I
in a private, like intimate moment, right?
And so the reason I shared that is because
there was nothing wrong with the moment.
It was just that it was shared and my employer and it didn't even come out of my mouth and
my employer was just like, that's it.
You have an option.
You're living this social media life out there where your private world's out there and you're
also in this banking world, make a decision.
No more media, no more marketing, no more podcasts, no more branding, or restart yourself
with this bank and you're done and you're in banking.
Fair.
Well, I was pinned against the wall and I said, I'm going to restart myself outside the bank.
So, ironically enough, one of the companies I started was called Restart Consulting and
my first book was called The Restart Roadmap.
That's a little bit about the predicament I was put in.
That was back in 2019. And here we are in
2024 still moving along strong. Okay, so I'm so curious about this, the idea to make a leap of
faith and go on a reality TV show talk about like, how do you make that decision? And why?
Listen, now that I see the success people have built out of their brands, I'm cursing myself
for not having done that 20 years ago. So I get it now, but when you're actually in the moment,
I mean, don't you have a lot of fears around
what if you look like a jackass on the show?
What if they portray you badly?
Is this stuff even real?
Like, do you even get to choose?
I mean, didn't you have those thoughts?
So a couple of things, like you look at 18, 19, 21,
22, 23, 24, this was seven years ago.
So I also wanna put this out there.
The risk of making a move into social media and all that back seven years ago was a lot
riskier than it is today.
So it even it accentuates your question, like what the hell were you thinking?
Now when I went on the show, the big thing I noticed is, and this gets into like a little
bit of therapy work, but my whole entire life, one of the ways that I, a survival tactic
for me was being a champion for the world around me
and making sure that people I love most felt secure.
People I love the most, mom and dad.
So, you know, I was captain of the sports team.
I always did the right thing.
I never, ever got in trouble, ever, truly.
And I got promoted.
I was a yes guy.
I just did what I did.
And at 29, when I was offered to go on the Bachelorette, you know, everyone in my world, parents and family and mentors and what the fuck are you thinking?
No, what are you talking about? And for me, it was the first time I was like my gut was like I want to go.
I want to do this.
And so it was one of the first times in a very long time that I made a decision for kind of filling my cup as
opposed to everyone else's and ironically enough, it was that small decision, that small crack that led to this little mini empire I have right now.
So it was a high risk. But one thing I did when you talk about finance and just preparing
is after the show, I didn't jump ship right away. I waited. I saw the edit. I saw the way
people were perceiving it. I didn't jump ship. I got put in a predicament. It was about nine
months or so of what I call my double dip earning year where I had a really nice salary coming
in with all these benefits, 401k match, all the stuff while making all this money on social
media.
And so when you get into the business and finance aspect of it, if people are listening
to this and you're trying to make a change in your life, the best way to do it is create
some type of financial freedom where you know what your burn rate
is. And burn rate is how much cash can you go through on a monthly basis until you would
have to go back to what you're doing today. And when I left, when I made that decision,
I knew that I had at minimum, at minimum a year burn rate to do whatever I wanted if
no income came in. And if that didn't work out, I could have always gone back to that
road I was on.
Okay, so for everyone listening, one of the things that was really important that Jason talked about
was listening to his gut and instinct and so often people want to override that and dial it down.
That is not the answer. So I'm thrilled that for a long time you were saying yes to make other
people happy. You decided to listen to yourself and act on it and it completely changed your life
for the better. So for the win, listen to your intuition.
All right, you're talking about burn rate
and I love that the fact that you had the opportunity
to ride the corporate train for a bit longer
while you were kind of testing the waters.
That is without a doubt the best way to do it.
But for a lot of people, like this girl over here,
I was thrust out of it with a non-compete, non-solicit, having to start
over and not having the bachelor behind myself or behind my brand. How does your book, The
Restart Roadmap, walk people through some of the steps that they can take if a situation
like that occurs?
Well, I think now more than ever, if you go back to 2010 to 2020, you almost needed to
be on a show or you had to have something,
just like a little spark of luck to get your platform.
If you look at 2024, anyone, any day, any time
can become viral and their life can change overnight.
If you have something special, if you're electrifying,
if you're educational, if you're engaging,
if you're insightful, anything you do that makes you special
and you put it out there,
it can instantly change your life.
We've seen it literally time and time again on the dumbest things in the world.
Hawk to a girl being one of them.
I mean, it's literally a Harvard-based business case study how a girl is on a street, she's
drinking, she's drunk, she says something funny, and now she's making millions and millions
of dollars, millions.
And when you do a base case there, I think there's a little bit of a study to say,
people are craving authenticity, but they're also craving just like chill vibes.
Like, we've gotten so serious with everything lately.
I'm a big proponent of therapy and all the work you're doing, Heather,
and your physical work and your mental work and being the best in best,
but we've gotten so serious with everything.
It's like, we've got gotta just chill a little bit.
We gotta just like, everyone's gotta just enjoy life.
I think we're seeing that in all capacities right now.
One thing I think that's really important for people to do
is sit with yourself for a week or two.
And I want you to just write down in your notepad,
your notes on Apple, whatever it is,
just write down the things
you are naturally gravitating towards. Not what mom, dad, boyfriend, girlfriend, whatever it is, just write down the things you are naturally gravitating
towards.
Not what mom, dad, boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, wife, children, anyone would like
put it.
What is your natural gut moving you towards?
I don't care if it's reading a book, it's a TV show you're watching, it's something
you're cooking, it's something you want to eat, a drink you're dying to have, anything
and put it down.
And after about two weeks, you're going to have this long list. And what you're going to notice is that you have natural passions that are gearing
you towards those things. And whatever those things are, those can be a roadmap for you to
start exploring, exploring, creating content with those things, exploring careers with those things.
Because behind a TV show I like, because I really am just interested in it, there's a billion dollar industry right there.
I think so often we're in this world where there's so much noise that we lose focus and
get in touch with ourselves to understand what we want.
If we don't know what we want, how the hell are we going to find the compass for it?
That's where I would start.
Pay attention to what you're naturally doing.
As a result of that, that can be a blueprint for you moving forward.
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I asked you to try to find your passion.
And I like the idea of writing it down.
It's very similar to journaling, right?
It's intentional journaling is basically what that is.
And you can be real.
You don't need to behave in a different way
or make somebody else happy
because it's only you hopefully that's reading this
unless you're my child.
And yes, I have cracked into his journal occasionally.
I feel like that's good parenting.
It was all good, thank goodness.
But the thing is like you get real
when you're alone with yourself.
You don't need to impress anybody.
And to Jason's point, when you're writing down,
this is what I'm enjoying doing,
how can I spend more time doing this?
That's how you're really gonna start figuring out
what your true purpose and calling is.
And when you find that out,
then you're fired up and excited to go to work every day.
And that is a huge seismic difference,
which I know I'm sure you felt this way,
that back when you were in banking and finance, do similar things that you're doing today, but a very different vehicle and platform you're doing
it on. You look super successful. Everyone thinks you're super happy. Everyone thinks you're killing
it. But now looking at your life for the way that you're leading it now, I would imagine you're so
much happier now that you're really following your true calling. Is that the case? Yeah. I mean,
I work my ass off. Like, truly, I work so hard. And part of
my motivation to work so hard is the fact that I never want to go back to that. Like, I remember
what that was like the Sunday night scaries before work. I remember being in meetings miserable. I
remember all the brain power and creativity and all the things that make me me not being deployed,
but me being put in the box to the expectations that I had to provide.
And to me, my skin crawls a little bit thinking about that. And those are the reasons why I bust
my towel the way I do. And so what I would say is, for anyone that's listening to this, that's
thinking about career steps or what they want to do and how they want to do it, when you go through
these experiences and you think about your job, like when I was in finance, write just simple t-chart of like, what is it that you really enjoy? What is it that you don't enjoy?
Interestingly enough, the subject matter I enjoyed, I actually liked meeting with business owners and
learning about their business and providing solutions for them and talking money and
understanding money. What I didn't like was bureaucracy. I didn't like being told I had to
be somewhere in a certain seat for so long. I didn't like subjectivity. I didn't like being told I had to be somewhere in a certain seat for so long. I didn't like subjectivity.
I didn't like someone saying, hey, you did A, B, and C, but we'll decide what your success
is.
And so I think in life, there's only so much we can control and choices are one of them.
But even to our discussion earlier about intuition, I think the biggest thing we all need to do
is everyone needs to go deeper.
Yes, you should follow your intuition.
And I already said it, but you got to go deeper
to understand why is your intuition saying what it's saying?
How are you connecting your head, heart and your gut
and then deciding what the right decision is?
Those are things that I think we truly need to step into,
need to understand.
And so many people in life, like
your average age right now, right? Your average life expectancy is around 78 to 82. That's a good
life. We only have so many ticking moments here and it's gone. And it's like, why are we just
coasting through, checking boxes for everyone else but ourselves. And so that's the biggest piece of
advice I'd give people. Start to work backwards a little bit. Think about top down. What is 78 year
old Jason going to say to myself? I wrote myself a letter when I was going through a tough time
about a year ago. And when I wrote that letter, I wrote it to myself. I wrote it as an 80 year old
to myself today. And I sent it to myself. I put it in an 80-year-old to myself today.
And I sent it to myself.
I put it in the mail.
I don't think I've ever told anyone that.
And I still keep it today.
When I get lost, I open it up and read, what would 80-year-old Jason want today to think?
And so that's a practice too, I'd give everyone and tell people to think about.
Okay.
So I want to understand this.
So you're going through a tough time in your current moment, I'm sure many people are right and anyone can relate to that
You step into this future version of yourself being 80 years old having that wisdom and you reflect back
You're advising the current you on how you should handle the hard time. Yeah. Well what I'm saying is I'm putting myself
I'm taking my soul and taking it out of my body and I'm putting it into 80 year old Jason and I'm taking my soul and taking it out of my body, and I'm putting it into 80-year-old Jason.
And I'm thinking about 80-year-old Jason.
He's bald and he's wrinkly and he's old
and he's got arthritis.
And I'm writing a letter to what he would say
to 35-year-old Jason.
And it takes a moment to step out, no distractions.
And I think about what would that 80-year-old Jason say to him?
And then I wrote it. And then I shipped it. And I waited for it to come in the mail. And I came
back. And well, I actually had a friend send it to me. And they didn't read it. It was locked.
And then I waited. And I read it. And I still read it when I'm in moments of being disheveled.
And a lot of the things that are in there, some of them are very private, but some of them are like, stop giving a shit what everyone thinks. Stop living
for everyone else. You have such good character. You care with your heart. What people think and
what noise is means shit. Just continue to be the best version of you and leave an imprint on all like the beauty
you believe in yourself.
And those are some of the themes.
I love that.
The other thing that pops into my mind
is the things you're worrying about today
are not going to matter.
They're not even gonna matter.
No!
So now, it's crazy, but you know that
and thank you for giving us this practice
because immediately I thought to myself of eight-year-olds and and they're the best example I can use as a woman, you know,
at my age is that an 80 year old would look at me like stop beating yourself up for how
you look start appreciating it because when they look back at pictures of themselves 30
40 years ago, they're like, I was like, I'm so impressed with myself, but it's smart to
future cast yourself so that you can reflect back to say, I don't need to beat myself up.
I don't need to be so concerned with everybody else's saying.
And to that point, the best weight anyone's ever going to lose is the weight of other
people's opinion of you.
And that is total freedom when you start owning that and rocking it like an 80-year-old.
So thank you for that exercise.
I think that's super powerful.
Yeah.
I think something else too that I just read
lately that connects to this is it's a speech by Jim Carrey and he talks about how you know like
how many thoughts we have in a day, right? We have like millions and millions of thoughts,
just quick little things and these thoughts dictate so many things in our life. They dictate fears
and concern and anxiety. They choose our direction, how we look, how we act, how we feel, how we talk,
how we communicate, how we protect and he's feel, how we talk, how we communicate, how we protect. And he's like, these thoughts though, if you think about it,
it's a little bit of a philosophical deep dive, but what is the thought? What actually is it?
And he took a cup of coffee and he's like, this cup of coffee has more reality than any thought
in my head. It's real, I could touch it, I could taste it. These thoughts aren't real.
They're these fallacies we build.
And the people that I love and the people I think about
and the thoughts I'm having,
they don't know these thoughts.
They're all just these made up things in our head.
And when you take a step outside and just be like,
it doesn't matter, it's not real yet.
Just be you and do you.
It puts in perspective that we can allow thoughts
that have no existence, that a cup of coffee
has more reality than the 999,000 thoughts we have in a day.
But it's those thoughts that are shaping
our decisions and behaviors.
And we need to put that in perspective.
Oh, it's so good.
It's so serendipitous that you're bringing up Jim Carrey.
It's so random. Last week, I was at an event in perspective. Oh, it's so good. It's so serendipitous that you're bringing up Jim Carrey. It's so random.
Last week, I was at an event in LA.
And one of the exercises that they asked everybody to do
was to write themself a check from your future self,
whatever it is.
And immediately, they said, Jim Carrey did this.
He wrote himself a check for $10 million
when he got to LA wanting to be a successful actor.
He was not at the
time. He foresaw this whole vision and future for himself, but to actually make it concrete
and real, he wrote this check out himself. And they were asking us to do that same exercise,
which I thought was completely bizarre, but very interesting because clearly it worked
for him.
I love it. I think he's a genius. Him and Denzel Washington, like I could listen to
him all day, both of them. I'm curious, though, especially my podcast Trading Secrets, all we talk about is financial transparency. How
much did you write your check for?
100 million. And I'll tell you why.
Jesus.
I would not have done that. I want to explain why because and I'm so interested in getting
into the finance, some of the tactics and strategies that you have for this reason.
I grew up very poor. So I came from scarcity mindset and my whole strategy in business and life
was just outwork everybody. And we all know, listen, it works, right? Because the majority
people don't work hard. So you're going to be an all-star and do well in business if you really,
really commit to it. I did, but I gave up so much of my personal life and things I wanted to be
doing as a result of that. However, when I got to this conference, and I've done well for myself
and reinvented myself successfully,
blah, blah, blah, it's great.
Okay, I get to this conference,
I have a new business partner.
She's just sold her last company for 700 million.
I'm in a room.
The next woman walks in,
she just sold her company for 400 million.
Right, so I'm in a room of people
who are light years ahead of me financially
versus where I am.
By the way, at 50 years old,
there's many things to consider.
Like, I don't just say money is the only thing. Having a good relationship with your kids is like there's
so many other important things. So anyhow, financially, these women were light years ahead of me.
And during one of the breaks, my partner, who I'm close to and I adore and admire, came to me and
said, listen, you need to start thinking bigger with these numbers. I'm noticing your numbers
you're utilizing thus far in conversations was 20 people. You're giving the smallest
numbers out of everybody. I hadn't noticed it. And I said, oh my gosh, that's like an
epiphany moment. She's like, you need to go bigger. I've spent my whole life going bigger
for everything. But once she turned that on inside of me, I started thinking if I'm in
a room with people who sold a company for 700 million, 400 million, why not me? I'm already in the room. I'm in the sphere. I can. So the funny
thing is, Jason, I wrote 100 million. The woman sitting next to me said, can I peek at your check?
I said, yeah. I'm like an open book. Sure. She said, oh my gosh, I did 100 million too. Danielle
Canty, another friend of mine, she co-founded Boss Babe, just sold that company, did very, very well.
She's like, let me see how much you did.
I'm going to give me yours.
Hers was for 300 million.
And she's younger than me.
And so it's like, it's so important to get around people who think bigger, who think
bolder and have done some different things in you.
It opens your mind to what's possible for you.
And so now I think I should have written that check for 500 million, but it's until you start seeing
like what other people are grasping as, yeah, this is real.
This can be real for you too.
It makes a huge difference.
Huge. Yeah.
I mean, that's, it's funny.
Cause like the number in my head, I was thinking
if he said 10 million, my head would be like, okay, yeah,
you're right. I like 10 million.
I'm going to put the 10 million there.
And it's so wild how just the most subtle subconscious thoughts and angles can actually dictate
what level we'll dream at.
That level is then what we do to achieve.
If you think about getting to that goal of mine, financial, I'm very open with financial
discussions.
It's what I do on my podcast.
If anyone hears this and they're like, why is he talking about that stuff?
I think we need to break into that stuff.
I think the world is set up for us
to say that it's unethical or it's against etiquette to talk about these things. But
I think the reason they tell us that is so that we have lack of information. Therefore,
people at the top can actually make more money. The more we actually talk about this shit,
the more comfort we have with money, the better decisions we can make and the less we can
shame people and feel bad about it, which is the current world we live in. So my goal is to get to $10 million in workable assets, so around $10 million of essentially
liquidity because at that rate, I know that given how much I would want to spend in a
year, I can then, quote unquote, retire.
And what does retire mean to me?
It doesn't mean stop working.
Retire means to me I can truly, truly do whatever the hell I want to
dictate for work.
What I want to achieve.
Is it a non-for-profit?
Is it X, Y, and Z?
So that's my goal.
But if you think about 10 million and 300 million, and anyone listening to this that
might have thought instantly 100,000, the behaviors and things that you would have to
do to achieve those are so drastic from the day-to-day work to the technical work to even
the industry that you would pursue.
And it's funny that goes back to our conversation.
It's our thinking that will dictate our actions and our life is just based on actions and
choices.
That's it.
It's so true.
So just go bigger.
Make that number bigger.
Let's get to I read a lot about your background and I thought it was interesting that you had this finance background because your personality, to me, I think your
personality is more like mine, like this is an outgoing extrovert.
So I think similarly people will be in sales or in leadership or whatnot.
But to see that you started in finance, can you talk a little bit about what your father
imparted on you when you were younger that got you on this path to begin with?
Yeah, so I think both of my parents did a really good job
at just explaining to me what the value of money is, right?
Having a healthy relationship with money.
That was first.
But it was actually my grandfather
who broke through for me.
My grandfather was an oral surgeon.
He went to Penn, a very bright guy.
So, you know, you think about someone like that,
he's an outlier with his brain power. And I only say that because that that, he's an outlier with his brain power.
And I only say that because that same man who's an outlier with his brain power who
could do oral surgery work and make a good living, he is the same man that got absolutely
crushed by a financial advisor who was unethical and took him for over half of his wealth.
You can be really good at one thing, you can be really smart with books, but if you don't
have an idea of all the things in life that are just important, enough to know to even hire the right people, it can
be a detriment.
And at 16 years old, I'll never forget it, he walked me up his steps, he had two screens,
he popped open his investment account, and he said, if there's one thing I will make
sure that you learn for the rest of your life is that you understand numbers.
You understand your numbers enough so that if you work with someone, you know how to
hire them. It's kind of like a sommelier. You don't have to be a sommelier
to pick a good bottle of wine. But if you have a sommelier at a restaurant ordering
for you, you got to know enough to make sure that you're not being taken advantage of.
And so he showed me at 16, I saw his whole portfolio, every dollar he had, every dollar
was my step-grandmother at the time that she had. He talked to me about what will happen
when he dies. This will go to your mom, this will go to your aunt,
this will go to your step-grandmother.
And it was that transparency that made me,
it just all clicked.
I was like, I'm not gonna be afraid of numbers,
I'm gonna step into them.
And so from that day on,
I just always had an infatuation with numbers,
the transparency behind them and what we can learn from them.
Wow, so now you've dedicated so much of what you do,
especially on the podcast from your newest book, into finances and advising people on financing.
What are you finding as you dig more into this discovery of where people are with finances and
financial conversations? Oh my gosh. Well, I mean, the biggest discovery, especially when you think
about love and money, is that the conversations aren't being had. And when people try to step into the conversations, they are getting terrible responses.
And as a result of that, we inherently, as animals, are saying, we're not going to have conversations,
because when we step into them, it hurts. But the reality is, the proof is always in the numbers.
50% of relationships married or cohabitating don't feel comfortable talking about money.
Of the 50% that do feel comfortable talking about them, 75% of them say it leads to material
tension.
So you have 50% of people that won't talk about it.
You take the group that does, 75% of them saying it's leading to tension.
Now we talk about the love aspect.
That group, that small group that feels like they can talk about money and it leads attention, over half of them when surveyed said that it had led to massively decreased intimacy.
And money reasons are the number two reason behind divorce. So the thing is, is that we
continue to skirt, we continue to avoid the conversation, we continue to step around it,
but at some point you're stepping into it. And if you're cohabitating or you're married,
you've officially stepped into it.
We talk about post-numps and pre-numps a lot.
At the end of the day, everyone out there has a pre-nump.
It's your state laws.
The idea is, do you want to protect yourself by customizing those state laws or do you
want to keep those based on what was established years and years ago?
My biggest takeaway with all of it is that we need to get comfortable with talking about what we
make, what we spend, what our net worth is, where we have credit, where we want to spend,
where we can pull back in our priorities because it's all about compromise.
It's all about compromise.
The things you would like to spend on, Heather, are things I might think are the dumbest thing
in the world.
And the things I might like to spend on you might think are a joke.
But when you have these conversations, you could say in the middle, like, hey, I understand.
As your friend, that makes you happy.
So I'm not going to shame or weaponize it, and vice versa.
And I think that's what we need to do.
Have got conversations.
And then when someone gives you their vulnerability, don't you dare, don't you dare use that vulnerability
as a weapon or a tool to shame them
because it's so hard to open up in the first place.
Okay, I love that you brought up pre-nubs
because it's such an interesting conversation
and to give a little,
actually I haven't talked about this on the show before,
but I'm married and divorced
and I had done very, very well financially
as an equity partner in my 20s.
So I had quite a bit of money when I got married.
Everyone that worked with me came to me and my ex-husband at the time was not successful.
He's very successful now, was not at the time.
And so everyone came to me that I worked with and said, you know, you need to get a prenup
in place.
And of course they were looking out for my best interest.
However, I was 30 years old at the time.
Something interesting happens to 30 year old women. You want to have a baby so bad.
I can't even like put into words for it.
And maybe it doesn't happen to everybody,
but it happens to a lot of women, right?
My brain was so set on, oh my gosh,
I want to fall in love for love.
I want to get married for love.
I'm not a money grubber.
Like this is crazy.
I thought it was very negative.
And I thought you don't want true love.
And like this, I'm looking to be a wife and a mother. And yeah, I'm good in business, but that's just part of who I am. And I can always
make more money and we're not going to get divorced. That's how I went headstrong into
it. I had the conversation with him, which right away he was like, what's interesting
is he was in finance. And he right away was like, I don't know why you would want to get
a prenup, you know, that's kind of crazy. So I backed right off. I did not get a prenup.
We ended up divorced. I ended up losing everything in the divorce. It was my, no, it was my decision.
And anyway, it doesn't matter because I remember saying, I remember having this like inner
conversation. I'd already spent $100,000 on my attorney had already been a year fighting
back and forth. And I remember thinking I've lost a year in my life. Literally, it was
just negativity, negative energy. And, and I don't like negativity.
And I thought, if I can lose this money and be free of this negativity, I can go put that energy
towards making more money, I'll be fine. That's how I move forward. However, if I could look back
and do it all over again, I just would have got the prenup in place. So how do you advise people
who think like this Disney way about life, which is that's how I was
thinking, no it's gonna be a beautiful marriage. How do you get them to think,
yeah it could still be a beautiful marriage and it's not a negative to have
a prenup as well. Prenumps are not at all based on romance. There's no connection
to romance in a prenup. When you get married you're doing a bunch of things
and based on your religion and your beliefs and your character,
you're committing to a lot of things.
But legally, you're committing to a partnership.
And it's also a binding partnership that ties you in as life partners,
but also business partners to a certain extent.
And so the conversation, first of all, needs to start with, think about anything in life we know
that historically has shown us evidence of things we need to be aware of.
A very, very simple example.
I don't like to judge anybody, but let's call vaping.
We know from the biggest and best doctors in the entire planet, one of the few things
in this world we can all agree on vaping is unhealthy for many
reasons. We know it. Are people still going to do it? Yeah, we know that the likelihood of it working
on your favor is not good. Unfortunately, what we've learned with divorces is that they happen
and they happen around 50% of the time. And we also learned that if you've already been married
and you're going into your second marriage, your likeliness of another divorce is about 65 percent. And then if you get
married again, it's around 75 percent. And the likelihood of you remarrying the first person you
get divorced with is six percent. So why ignore studies that we have? And what I'll tell you about
pre-numps is that the biggest thing you want to think about
is if a member has a significant set of, let's say, assets or children from a previous marriage
or large real estate or ownership in a company or you expect to sell a company, you are going
to want to start thinking about pre-numps.
But also if you're married to someone like that, you too want to think about pre-numps
because you want to make sure that you have an understanding going into marriage that the life you currently
live will still be somewhat similar even if it doesn't work out.
It's not a one-way street with pre-nubs.
It's for both people to be in a better position so there's not gray area entering your relationship,
wondering what if, and then terrible toxicity, keeping you in that relationship
because you don't have answers.
So step into it.
History tells us we need to step into it.
Also, let's quickly just talk about the idea
that there is something called a post-nup, right?
So I don't know if you've addressed that on the show,
but a post-nup is something that,
maybe you ran out of time to sign a pre-nup,
maybe you're listening to this and you don't have one.
There's all this craziness about planning a wedding
and doing all these things.
Like it's a tough thing to even think about.
But we know that divorce happens.
So if something has happened in your life
where more money is coming in,
or let's say your parents are well off
and you're gonna get some of their inheritance,
or you just wanna get on top of it today,
you can create a postnup after you're married.
And that's another way to protect both parties,
especially the person that's at home taking care of the family
that is sacrificing their earnings in their job
so that if the relationship doesn't work out,
they're not starting at entry level 101
like they graduated college.
They have some type of value for what
they brought to the relationship.
And staying at home and taking care of the family
is a massive value.
Oh, I love that. And I know somebody might listeners are going to love that you said
that. So thank you, Jason. All right. So let's talk a little bit about relationships. One
of the things that's interesting, I'm currently single. And I'll tell you one of the things
that I find challenging is because I have a decent social media following, it intimidates
a lot of people. You, on the other hand, have had two
and are currently in a very high profile relationship
and your last relationship was very high profile.
How has that affected your ability and or do you now think
like these are bad ideas that you get involved
with people that are in high profile?
Like, how does that affect you?
At the end of the day,
the reason I even have any form platform
is because I went on
a dating show.
I opened my life about dating.
I introduced my family through ABC, and I talked about like, it's crazy with that show.
Good job.
Good idea.
I mean, I talked about my grandmother's Alzheimer's and how I'll just never forget the moment
that I was with my dad and she couldn't remember my dad's name and the pain in his eyes, but the fact that he could still sit there with a smile knowing her best
interest was at stake if he held strong.
These are deep moments that have impacted everything about me.
It's those moments that have led to this platform, which I've been able to pivot in a lot of
ways.
I think there's a couple takeaways from that.
One, vulnerability is the root of all connection, right?
Like the deeper you can go, the more you can connect with people.
I've also learned through, you know, that was of course on the Bachelorette, obviously
that relationship didn't work out.
I had another relationship that didn't work out and now I'm in a new relationship, right?
So since bringing that part of my life to the public eye, I've also learned a lot about
this space of where things can be really good about doing that, where things can
be really bad, some of the negativity, some of the positivity, and it's a
learning process. And like everything, it's a continued learning process. And
so what I have learned in, let's just call it the last year, is that the importance
of boundaries in privacy to a certain extent is so much greater than your ego or trying
to get a point across.
And I think that goes for people in a public spotlight, private satellite.
I think that goes for people in business.
I think that goes for people in relationships at any level is that
Sometimes we let our ego lead and our ego wants to do a lot of things and there are other times that it's like
Not everything has to be explained right children explain adults in form
And so I think with maturity with time with learning comes growing and with all this public stuff
I'm gonna make mistakes.
I'm never gonna be perfect.
My goal is though to be better today than I was yesterday.
And I think that's all you can do.
Meet a different guest each week.
What is the hardest to change?
Confidence created.
Confidence created.
I ask you to try to find your passion.
I love that.
All right.
Tell me about how you handle haters because I am sure through these high profile breakups,
especially with the TV show associate, people have their fan favorite.
I guarantee you're getting hatred because I get hatred and I've never been on a show
like that from people.
How do you respond or do you choose not to?
You know, I asked this question and I'll never forget.
I asked Nick Vial.
He's one of the most successful people
that have come from the Bachelor franchise.
And he, ironically enough, has had so much success,
one of the best podcasts truly in the country right now,
performance wise.
And I asked him, he gets a lot of hate.
He gets a lot of hate, but he's very successful.
And he said it really well to me,
it was something I'll never forget. And after that, I always ask people in their industry, and there's
more lessons I've learned. But what he said was he's a big Green Bay Packers fan. And
every day there's a commentator on Monday that will come in after the Packers game and
he will rip them apart. He hates the Packers. He cannot stand them. And Nick said, I'm a
fan of the Packers and I hate this guy. But every Monday, I'm a fan of the Packers, and I hate this guy, but every Monday,
I'm the first person that listens to his show.
And he said, it doesn't matter
if people like you or love you,
it matters that they want to hear from you.
And I started to explore this,
and I learned a little bit at Barstool.
Barstool has a rule,
we don't care what people say in the comments,
they better be just commenting.
And then I looked even further into a business that's been around a lot longer than both
of those.
It's a multi, multi, multi, multi-billion dollar business, wrestling, WWF, WCW, WWE,
Hulk Hogan to wherever we are today.
And in that sport, what determines your success is how loud the crowd can be.
So they have the fan favorites and they have what's called the heels.
And there could be a show in which the heel goes out there and he's getting beer thrown
at them, everyone's flicking them off and they're screaming at them.
And when they sit at their production table, if he got the loudest noise that night, he
won the night.
And so sometimes it's interesting, it doesn't matter if you're the fan favorite or if you're
loved or hated or whatever season you're in, sometimes it just in this crazy space and
you hear about these businesses, it's that people are tuning in.
And I know that's like blunt and that's harsh and it is what it is, but it's also just the
reality of this. So what I've told myself when I deal with haters is one, noise is okay. It's not
necessarily a bad thing. And two, the other big thing I've told myself, and this came from my
therapist, no one really knows the truth, right? There's three sides to every story, one side,
the other side, and the truth. And you can over explain, over explain, over explain, and you still may never get the truth.
And we see this in everything. We see it in business leaders. We see this in politics.
We see it in everything. And so all you can do is just carry yourself with who you are,
character, and class, and be able to put your head to bed at night,
and the rest will sort itself out.
That's what I've tried to tell myself.
I love that.
That's a lot of wisdom, my friend.
I absolutely love that.
I couldn't agree with you more.
Talk to us a little bit about the eight essential
financial questions to discuss with your partner.
Your new book.
New book.
So it's called Talk Money to Me.
The idea behind Talk Money to Me
was I used to be an underwriter.
So I would be the one at the bank that would say, you get the loan or you don't get the
loan.
And I said to myself, why don't we take these things that we look at at the bank to decide
if people get money and have them start talking about it?
So basic things to think about.
What do you earn?
Understanding your cash inflow after taxes.
What do you spend monthly and annually?
What is your current debt status? That's a big
one. What is your credit score? What is your net worth? A big thing with mortgage lending,
they want to know your debt to income ratio. So understanding that. When do you want to retire?
What's your risk appetite is? And so some of these numbers, I show you exactly how to find them,
exactly what they mean, how to find them, exactly what they mean,
how to track them, how to have conversations about them, and the biggest thing is compromise.
Because none of us have the same financial situation, none of us have the same appetite,
none of us have the same income, and at the end of the day, we have to find resolve with
the people that we love to come up with solutions as opposed to running from them.
But literally, some of these exercises will take five minutes and it'll change your entire life on the way
you think about money. And I would say if any of those is the most important, I think
net worth is your most important. Because net worth, we all have one. We always think
net worth LeBron James, you know, a billion dollars, Taylor Swift, billion dollars. We
all have a net worth. And net worth changes every second. If I go buy a cup of coffee,
my net worth changes. It's your inflows, my share outflows, and your assets and the value of
those. And so it's the one number that gives you a true indication of what your current
value is today.
And who did you write that book for?
I wrote that book for Grandpa Lenny. He's the one that taught me everything. That's
who I made it to. But I wrote the book in general for what I'm seeing in a lot of relationships,
what I've experienced and what we're just seeing in what I'm seeing in a lot of relationships, what I've experienced
and what we're just seeing in our society, which is a lack of financial transparency
that is ultimately leading to a lot of sadness and loneliness because we're not having the
conversations.
I love how you are bringing this unique discussion forward, all about finances, being transparent
and doing it with class and grace.
Thank you so much for the work that you're doin
What's the name of the po
they get the books and ho
more about you? Yeah, so
trading secrets will have
but we're talking all thi
reality stars to comedia
industry experts, you nam
all the secrets behind th
it cost to be in the ind, how much they're getting paid for that billboard, how much money they
lost on that big investment.
That's what we talk about.
So I always joked around, I say, sex stories to call her daddy back in the day is transparency
of what actually money is and the numbers on trading secrets.
The first book I wrote is The Restart Roadmap, Rewire and Reset Your Career, you can get
it on Amazon. And then the second one was called Restart Roadmap, Rewire and Reset Your Career. You can get it on Amazon.
And then the second one was called Talk Money to Me, which is all about that intersection
of love and money.
I also have a talent agency.
It's fun to not only be a creator, but manage creators.
I've had that since 2020.
It's called Rewired Talent Management.
And on social media, it's just Jason underscore Tartic, T-A-R-T-I-C-K, or on YouTube, TikTok,
Twitter, threads, Instagram, all of this stuff.
Oh my gosh, you're everywhere.
Thank you so much for opening this conversation for all of our listeners today and for the
work you keep doing.
Keep doing you and drop the weight of everybody else's opinion.
We're all for you, Jason.
Thanks for the work that you're doing.
Thank you so much for having me, Heather.
All right, guys, until next week, keep creating your confidence. You know I will be.
I'm gonna make it all over again.
I decided to change that dynamic.
And I might fail now.
I couldn't be more excited for what you're gonna hear.
Start learning and growing.
Inevitably something will happen.
No one succeeds alone.
You don't stop and look around once in a while.
You could miss it. I'm on this journey with me. Hey team, if you're enjoying this podcast where we delve into high achieving people
with transformative lives, then I have an exciting recommendation just for you.
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