Proven Podcast - Generated $2 Billion Leveraging AI - Susan Sly
Episode Date: July 24, 2025In this powerful episode, Charles sits down with Susan Sly—tech entrepreneur, AI innovator, and health warrior—to unpack how she rebuilt her life from rock bottom to billion-dollar impact. Susan s...hares her gripping story of being diagnosed with progressive multiple sclerosis, losing her marriage, her business, and becoming homeless—all in 16 weeks. But instead of surrendering, she turned to biohacking, belief, and relentless self-reinvention. Together, they explore the healing protocols Susan used to defy her terminal diagnosis, her rise to co-founding an AI company that led the largest deployment of computer vision at scale in U.S. history, and her newest mission: revolutionizing menopause care with AI. The conversation covers everything from stem cell therapy and triathlon training to scaling tech companies and leveraging AI for real-world transformation. It's a masterclass in resilience, reinvention, and using adversity as fuel for impact. Key Takeaways: The exact health protocols Susan used to reverse her MS symptoms and regain peak performance Why Susan avoids support groups—and what she did instead to accelerate healing How she scaled an AI company with 8 patents and became a global authority in computer vision and generative AI The origin and mission behind Pause AI, the world's first menopause-focused AI wellness app Head over to provenpodcast.com to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode. KEY POINTS: 00:57 - The MS diagnosis that changed everything: At the height of her career as a professional athlete and media personality, Susan collapses into chronic fatigue and neurological symptoms—only to be told she has progressive multiple sclerosis and 10 years to live. 06:42 - From rock bottom to reinvention: In just 16 weeks, Susan lost her business, her marriage, and her home—yet made a bold decision to surround herself with millionaires, dive into personal development, and rebuild her identity with intention and belief. 08:22 - The MS recovery protocol revealed: Susan details the exact biohacks and wellness strategies she still follows today—including acupuncture, IV therapy, ozone, fasting retreats, strength training, and ditching artificial sweeteners forever. 14:11 - Scaling AI from nothing to industry dominance: Susan explains how she co-founded a computer vision company that scaled nationally, holds 8 patents, and pioneered the largest deployment of vision-based AI in U.S. history—all without VC funding. 22:39 - AI committees are doing it wrong: Susan breaks down the three fatal mistakes companies make when adopting AI—and why excluding HR and finance from your AI strategy guarantees failure before it starts. 48:46 - The champagne bus moment that sparked Pause AI: At a high-powered women-in-AI event, Susan realized even the most elite women were suffering silently through menopause—and decided to build the first AI-driven solution to support them. 54:39 - What men need to know about menopause (and andropause): Susan offers a candid, science-based breakdown of how menopause affects women—and why male partners need to lean in, get educated, and prepare for the male equivalent: andropause.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Proving Podcast, where it's not about what you think, only what you can prove.
Susan's Live was told she had months to live.
She lost her business and watched her marriage fall apart.
25 years later, she has built a billion-dollar brands, led the largest AI rollout in U.S. history,
and live the life that most of us can only dream of.
Buckle up.
She's here to prove how it's done.
The show starts now.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the show.
Susan, thank you so much for being on.
Charles, I am so excited to be here.
Thank you for having me.
Absolutely.
So for the few people on the planet, which I can't imagine many, don't know who you are.
Can you give me a breakdown of who you are and what you're done?
Oh, so for the 7,9,999, 900.
Yeah.
So for everyone listening, we've all had those moments that either define us or refine us.
And Charles, you and I are cut from the same cloth.
Like, we're never going to be a victim.
So they're always going to be refining moment.
And for me, the big one happened coming out of 1999 into 2000.
So we were all worried about Y2K, you and are both technologists and everyone in the world's
freaking out.
And at that time, I owned a health club.
I had about 52 employees.
I was a professional athlete, Iron Man Distance Triathlon.
I was a media celebrity.
I was on radio, television, doing all this stuff.
But my body started breaking down.
And my first thing I want to say to everyone is don't just put something.
on a post-it note and be like, oh, I need to go get this checked out because I was that person.
I just kept pushing, pushing, pushing. But finally, I was dropping things. I started slurring my
speech. I wasn't drinking. And I went to my doctor. I was like, listen, Ross, I need these tests.
And he's like, Susan, you're just stressed out. I knew I wasn't stressed out. I went on vacation
anyway. I slept the whole time at a five-star all-inclusive resort. I didn't get out of bed for seven days.
I flew back, handed him the post-it note, and I said, Ross, listen, you come to me, you want to know, what to eat, you know, what running shoes.
I want these tests, and I had the test.
January 13, 2000, Charles, he calls me in the office.
We didn't lose the world with Y2K, but my world shifted.
And he showed me a scan, and it was, it looked like a fishbow full of fish.
And he said, this is your brain.
These are lesions.
you have progressive multiple sclerosis. This is the worst kind. You are going to be in a wheelchair
in 10 years and dead in 20. Three days later, my marriage fell apart. 16 weeks later, I walked into my
health club. There was a padlock on the door. We'd been shut down for failure to pay taxes. I had
been burying my head in the sand financially. So in a 16 week period, I end up homeless as a single mom,
completely lost everything and diagnosed with a terminal illness. And that was a referring to
moment for me. And I, you know, as we get into my story, the thing I want to say to anyone
listening, if you're going through something, the biggest thing I'll say is, as Winston Churchill
said, if you're going through hell, just keep on going. And, you know, I'm here today,
25 years later, because I made some very deliberate decisions. And that's what refined my career,
not just in sales and marketing, where I've generated billions of dollars in sales for large
companies or as a technologist doing the largest deployment of computer vision AI at scale that
has been done in U.S. history.
So there's a lot to unpack there. And so MS, for most people, is devastating.
For MS, when you get diagnosed that, it's an autoimmune disorder. It locks the legs out of you.
Now, I know there's become a surprise, but you're not dead.
No.
Out of any wheelchair.
I'm an AI.
No.
You're an AI. You're not real.
This is just agent.
So you got and you went and you got remarried.
and you've done all these things,
and you just were recently
at a wonderful place in Montana,
how it is when you get punched in the face of that hard?
Because most people are like,
hey, how do I pay my bills?
But they're not understanding,
again, I spent eight years in a hospice,
watching people die who didn't, you know,
curve the way you did and have that gift.
How do you withstand that?
When you get that type of a hit,
what are some of the proven strategy that's going to go,
okay, I just found out that I've diagnosed with MS.
What do I do?
And for you, spending all that time in the hospice,
and you've read, I know,
those studies on death and dying and people's biggest regrets, right? For me, the blessing came
just prior to the breakdown. So there was this guy who was also an athlete and he said,
you know, Susan, you define yourself by the Mercedes you drive and the handbag you have and blah, blah,
the people you know. And he's like, if you lost everything tomorrow, these are his words literally.
You lost everything tomorrow.
You were naked alone.
This is before the show, naked and alone, by the way, but you're naked alone in the woods.
You had nothing.
Your family didn't exist, nothing.
Who would you be?
I was like, that is a question.
And it was a snowy day, but the road was clear.
And I took my bike out.
And I biked for about three hours.
And I kept going, who am I?
And little by little, the small voice was like,
you're a teacher and I went, I'm a teacher. What have I got to teach? And so when the end came,
I literally got down on my knees and I was like, God, you know, if I'm meant to be a teacher,
what am I meant to teach? And I want to spend the rest of my life empowering people. But first,
I have to get out of this situation. Like, to your point, Charles, an impossible situation. And it's,
you and I know a lot of people in common, people who have been on the show, people like Jeremy Delk, right,
John Lee Dumas, people who have been like Jeremy's situation. Oh my gosh, impossible, not just one time, two times, three times, the FDA rating him. Like, you know, all of it that happened. And yet people who are clear on who they are, they're clear on the fact that there is a source, whatever someone wants to call it. I say, God, that ultimately is benevolent, you can get out of it. And that's how I did. And so I began to turn my life. And so I began to turn my life.
life around, I began to, on the health side, biohack my health, on the wealth side, I knew that we are
who we surround ourselves with. And I made a declaration after I lost everything that I would
have memorized the names of seven people who made over a million dollars a year. And so this was before
cell phones are really a thing. And I said, I will have those names memorized. And within two years,
I did. I started listening to Jim Rohn. I started to listen to Tony Robbins. I have shared the
stage with Jim Rohn and Tony Robbins. All of the people from those days that, you know,
you had John Ashroff on the show. I've done multi-speaker events with John. All of those people
that people can name Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hanson is a good friend of mine. That's what I set out to do.
And it was, I knew who I was. I was intentional. I wasn't a victim. And I just every single day was
leaning into that power of belief and source. And that's how I got through it.
it's interesting a lot of what you shared because a lot of people will talk you know
will make things up like oh well i see that way the same way or i felt this or things of that nature
literally wrote a book called who changes everything which is all about identifying who you are
and i think a lot of it came from being around those type of situations i've been very blessed
i haven't had to face that wall and you know some things that jeremy ran through and that you ran
through if you don't understand who you are the what the how and the wire are useless you have to
identify and really dig into who you are. It's just, it's militantly clear. When so selfishly, I have a
dear friend of mine who has just come into the world that there's a strong possibility that he has MS.
So I'm going to selfishly take time on this podcast for him. If there were five or six things that you did,
that you're like, hey, these are the things that changed the ballgame, be it relight therapy or
oxygenating your blood or are different type of things when it comes to MS. So you know,
we're going with this. What are kind of the five things that I can selfishly steal from you and pass
over to him say, hey, this is how you pivot over. And then we'll get into AI and some of the other
stuff you're doing. But if you're running into some MS hurdles, which you're thriving in
your life, what are some of the things that have produced the best results for you?
I love that. And to whoever it is listening, that Charles knows how to contact me. I'm happy to do a
call with you. And we can talk through some of these and do a deeper dive. It doesn't have to be a
terminal life sentence. So the first thing is, I didn't go to any support group. I do not have
have time to sit around with people complaining about problems because then where, where's the solution,
right? So firstly, I never went to a support group. I was like, screw that. I'm not going to do that.
The next thing is I decided to biohack. And the first thing, it's like anything. You do real estate
investing, Charles. So you're not going to pay attention to people who lost millions of dollars in
deals and went bankrupt and never came back. You're going to look at people who crushed it in
real estate and they're not just making money from teaching people about it. They're actually,
they did it and the same thing. So in those days, Montel Williams, he was living exceptionally.
And he was one of the first people to start talking about essential fats for MS and specialized diets.
I'm like, if Montel Williams is doing it, I'm doing it. So I started to first and foremost,
like really clean up my diet. I drank Diet Coke, like crazy part of that. So I haven't had
a Diet Coke in 25 years. So none of, I know aspiratame, gluten, everything, nothing with sucralose
in it, no MSG, nothing, super, super clean. That is one. Number two, I started to also look at
what were the therapies that were effective. And here's the thing. I'm going to disclaim the
statement that everyone needs to speak to their primary health care practitioner.
Go advice.
But I was a certified holistic nutritionist.
And so I decided to go back to school.
I stayed homeopathic medicine.
I stayed traditional Chinese medicine.
I looked at Aerovedic medicine.
And the best progress was actually being made with what I call complementary therapies, acupuncture, all of those things.
So I started to really ensconce myself in that.
So my practice still currently is acupuncture, ozone therapy, IVs.
so infusions. Every Monday, I detox. And even though I'm in my 50s and there's new evidence that's like, oh, women in menopause shouldn't be doing intermittent fasting, that's not why I do it. It's not a weight issue. It's just to recalibrate my body. Once a year, I go to a place called WeCare, and that is in Palm Desert. And I do a whole week long fast. And Matthew McConaughey has gone there to get ready for Dallas Buyers Club.
It is the most healing place on the planet medically, physically.
And there's no medical interventions.
You just, you fast, you meditate, you pray, you know, all sorts of, they wrap your body in castor oil.
It's the best feeling.
So it's very healing.
I also go to, I'm just laying it all out.
So I, you know, again, this is what I do.
It's just like if we were talking about the stock market, you know, you have to get your own advice.
But I also go to a place in Cabo San Lucas.
called stem made. And so they do stem cell therapy. They're doing, they do ebu, so they'll pull your blood out,
they'll ozinate it, they'll clean it, they'll put it back in. They do all kinds of different therapies.
So those are the things I do on a daily basis. Every morning I'm doing 45 minutes of prayer or meditation.
I don't look at my phone in the morning. I get exercise every single day, seven days a week. If I don't move my body,
I feel it. So lots of yoga stretching. I run. I cycle, you know, all of that stuff. I do heavy strength
training. I just did my first CrossFit workout with Marcus Wilson, who founded Noble Shoes. And Marcus and I were at this
summit in upstate New York. And he's like, let's do CrossFit. I'm like, sure. So I just did that. It was a lot of fun.
So I mix it up. And then I always do gratitude every day. I write 10 times gratitude. And before I start my
day. I leave three gratitude voice text for people. And that's, you know, 23 years of practice now. So I am not,
full disclaimer, I do not take the medication for it. I do have my days. Some days I do feel like,
oh, it's a little bit more challenging. But, you know, that's how I roll. I love that. It's interesting
because I've done triathlons as well. And a lot of it, because for those of you don't know triathlons,
or I've never done it.
It's for crazy people.
But you go swim,
bike run.
And I'm a swimmer.
By default, I'm a swimmer.
I'm exceptionally fast on the water.
The bike is what it is,
but I have 17-inch calves.
So the run is like running as a,
it's brutal.
All of everyone who's ever done this,
and you could probably speak to this,
the mind game that you get to play.
And finding out who you are in the run
is the whole reason I do the tries.
And when you were talking about some of the stuff
with stem cells and ozone and doing the infusions,
um,
He's doing some of that, but I will, if I will 100% take you up on, again, the two of you guys
connected because he, um, giving him the idea that the light of the end of the tunnel is not a
train, uh, would be, would be a gift because he's just, he's a great human being.
So, but back to the stuff we're talking about here. So you get diagnosed. You find the stuff and
you find your way out through everything that you shared, which was beautiful. You didn't just find your
way out. You've knocked down and done some really impressive things. Uh, you know, you talked about
your father a little bit and some of the things that he was doing. I'd love to you. You just
share that just to give him some tribute as well. What were some of the things you've done
professionally now as well? Yeah, I was raised and to all the men out there, you know,
even though I'm such an advocate for women, and we know that women-led startups receive less
than 1% of all VC funding. It's actually gone down, Charles, from 2.5% to 24 to under 2 to last
year. In 2024, it was less than 1%. And yet women-led startups are,
60% more profitable. It's crazy. And so my, you know, I was raised by a single dad who taught me that
he had five sisters, no brothers, poor guy, that I could literally be due and have anything I wanted.
When I was 10 years old, he handed me the book Sun Sue, the Art of War. And one of the biggest
lessons from Master's son was for me, adapt to your train. So one thing's I've always been
adaptable. So we, you know, turn on the news. There's tariffs adapt. So we turn on the news.
There's, you know, there's suddenly no grant funding adapt.
Just I have to be scrappy and adaptable.
And as a triathlet, you don't know.
You could show up for that race and it's raining, it's sleet.
It could be, you know, I did Iron Man Malaysia.
I kept flatting up my tires.
I did the last 10K of the bike on flats.
I ran out of tubes.
Like, just the stuff, right?
So for me professionally, in my book of work, if there were headlines, yes,
largest deployment of computer vision AI at scale in the United States. That company I co-founded,
we now have eight patents in CalNA. We're just crushing it there. Doing a new company being the first
company to really dive into the perimenopause and menopause space using AI. And we could talk about
that. Building sales teams, as I mentioned, that generate over $2 billion of sales for domestic
companies in the U.S. in both CPG, consumer package goods.
and also in technology. And so, yeah, I've done a lot. I think the biggest thing for me when I got
the diagnosis, so Elizabeth Cooleur Ross, the stages of death and dying, Charles, you know all
about those. I wasn't angry. I wasn't shocked. The first thought in my head was,
crap, I haven't done the Boston Marathon yet. And I think of all the professional things in my body of work,
my big thing was doing six Boston marathons after getting diagnosed. I want to do four more to make it 10. And for people who don't know, you have to qualify for Boston. You don't just get to do boss. You don't show up and do 26.2 miles. So that's one of my big achievement, of course, having my kids and everything else. Even being with my husband Chris for 25 years, that's in dog, you know, like a marriage these days, it's like dog years. It's like, you know, 200.
years.
You've done a lot of things that other people haven't.
And, you know, we both share a tech background.
Normally in tech, when there's something going on, normally you just pull up,
you read the white paper, which I've written way too many of those.
There's going to be instructions.
A lot of things you've done that didn't come with instructions.
There's a lot of people right now who are finding, they're adapting to a new world,
and it's ever changing, especially with AI.
And we're going to jump into a lot of the AI stuff you've done.
But when you're sitting there and there isn't that plan, what is the first kind of
things you go into, so, okay, I've got to build these sales team to do this, or I've got to
penetrate this market differently, or as an angel investor, how do I look at things differently?
Because we're pitched all the time. How do we go into the hits really? Please stop bitching me.
For any of you guys who are listening out there, please stop pitching me. Me too. Me too.
Me too. Please. No more. Please. No, I love that you find what a Sequoia deck is. I love you for that.
Please stop pitching me. Thank you. So as you're going through and you're trying to break in those,
there's those steps, those proven paths of like, okay,
new problem, no matter what it is, this is what I walk through.
What are some of the things that you do?
Because you've overcome and done some amazing things.
What are the things you're like, okay, these are my tangible first three or four steps?
You know, it's so interesting is that there are different schools of thoughts.
So I'm going to reference Mark Zuckerberg because this is how I build software.
So one of the things people might not know about Mark Zuckerberg, other than he gives his wife
interesting statues or he has his uniform or, you know,
with the Harvard story and, you know, we all saw that movie. So the way Zuckerberg's built software,
and this is directly from him, is that he will say, okay, we're going to, you know, kind of survey
people or get a vibe for what people want, and then we're going to push out a feature. We know it's
going to be really ugly. We're going to get user feedback, and we're going to be totally fine,
knowing that some of the feedback is going to be really horrible. We're going to refine the feature,
push it out, refine it, push it out until people love it.
And then we're going to wash, rinse, repeat, and do the same thing. So the question about, how do we
solve for problems? So what are the problems people want to solve? I went to MIT Sloan and then I graduated
from MIT exec ed in the engineering school. And my one wish from my dad was I'd go to MIT, but I failed
calculus first year university in my undergrad. So I thought MIT was not in the cards, but it became my
COVID project. You know, some people got chickens. I went to school. So anyway, but the
The big piece around that problem we want to solve is at MIT, the way we look at solving problems
is how can we do it cheaply, get our proof of concept, but get something called a MMP,
not an MVP, so a minimum marketable product. So how do we take some off-the-shelf tools,
put together a tech stack, put it out there in the world, and then see if people will pay for it.
So that's what I'm doing with my current company. With my past company, we were at the bleeding
edge of AI before there was off-the-shelf tools. So we had to build all of our own tools. That's why we
have so many patents in that company. And we were, you know, we were looking at problems we could
solve. And then suddenly the way that company was really bootstrapped was because we went into
computer vision because no one else was there. And the whole thing with computer vision,
and we can dive into that. And I know you know all about it is that essentially for listeners you
don't know, there are different forms of AI. Computer vision is when you're taking artificial
intelligence models, looking at cameras, security cameras, ideally, existing cameras,
and then doing motion interpretation of what humans and vehicles are doing or weather or
whatever it is through those cameras. And so we decided to go into the gas station convenience
store industry because there were already existing security cameras, but no one was solving
for customer analytics using vision. And that's where we're.
we decided to play and to dive right in. So the way I look at it is the way Zuckerberg does,
we're going to solve a problem, we're going to get feedback, it's going to be ugly,
and we're going to start with a solution that we know people are going to pay for,
and we're not going to have cycles of spending tens of millions of dollars building stuff
that no one pays for. Like, that's get it out the door, get some early revenue,
and just keep charging that mountain. And listen to the feedback that comes in because it will change it.
Now, one of the things that have changed, and I love that you jumped into AI,
AI is changing the world.
We were talking about this before.
You were in tech when it was Y2K, and we were installing cards that did nothing.
They're like, oh, this will protect you from white.
I mean, we installed tons of those things.
And I remember during that environment, I had multiple networks running,
none of them even skipped a beat.
Nothing happened.
So we're like, what the heck?
We thought the whole world was going to die.
Dang it.
Lots of extra overtime.
It was wonderful.
We're now into a world of AI.
And where there's a lot of people like, oh, well, this is a fab.
Like the internet was a fad.
Now we're into world of AI where this is, this is the new world.
I was on stage.
I was talking to John about this.
John said there are going to be two type of companies in the next six months.
The ones who use AI and the ones who are calling towards bankruptcy.
He goes, and that's just how it is.
John Astral's hit it really well.
I was like, okay, that makes sense.
For those of us who are walking into it,
and you're kind of tip of the spear when it comes to this.
You've already done this and you've created some amazing things.
For those of us who are not tip of the spear and are trying to catch up,
what are some of the things when it comes to AI,
when you're starting to use it, where some of the mistakes people are using,
be it based off fear or just implementation or being tactical with it.
What are some of the problems that they're running into?
Oh, that's a great question.
And as aside, I do, if people listening want me to,
I do do AI innovation workshops and consulting with companies because what we,
here's a big mistake.
You've got someone who's like, oh, we have to do AI and they don't know what they're talking about.
The first thing is, the question I have is who is on your board? Does anyone on your board have experience scaling AI? And I'm not talking about they read some freaking McKinsey report or like they have a gardener consultant. Like I mean, does anyone actually have experience doing an AI implementation that's scaled? And by scaling, Charles and I, what we're talking about is a piece of technology that can go to multiple users, multiple divisions, in multiple.
geographical locations. That's what scaling is. Not all technology is scalable. There are a lot of ideas
that are cooked up in a lab that will not actually scale. So who on your board has experienced
scaling AI? Number two, I always ask in my workshops, do you have an AI committee? If so, who is on
the committee? Do you have multiple stakeholders? Because you know what people always do on their AI
committee? You and I know this trial's big. Number one mistake. We're just going to put all the tech
people on the AI committee. Wrong. No, you're not.
You need people from HR, from legal.
I even love people from finance on there.
You have to get the buy-in from the multiple stakeholders.
And in my past company, we worked with large hospital ecosystems,
some of the, you know, one of the biggest retailers in the United States.
And so the multiple stakeholders, that's the next thing.
The third biggest mistake is you don't know why you're using AI.
To John Astros' point, yes, companies that aren't AI forward,
they're not going to exist.
And the other thing in startups, if anyone's doing a tech startup, is that with AI forward,
what the VCs are looking for is lean teams.
We saw that, you know, in one of the most recent news cycles, Intel is laying off hundreds
and hundreds of employees just in their Silicon Valley location.
That's not globally.
We've seen big layoffs from all the major hyperscalers.
And the reason is, is because even we,
use no code tools too, that with these tools, one person can now do the work of three or four
people. And so you have to know why you want to use AI. What is your problem you're trying to
solve? And those are the big things I always say before any company starts to think about AI.
And it's like it's like the doctor who isn't prescribing certain medication. Then the pharma
rep comes in is like, hey, you need to use this. And by the way, if you prescribe a lot, you get to go on a
cruise and suddenly they're just giving this out to every patient. That's what we're seeing with
AI. It's like, oh, I saw this AI tool and now we're just going to use it for everything.
You're not thinking about all of the different levels of complexity that you should be going through
in your organization in order to scale it and use it effectively. What have you found as far as
tools or methodologies with AI have been the most effective? You know, we were talking about how
corporations are changing and, you know, Microsoft just announced that they saved, like, $50 or $500 million,
And they're like, hey, we just changed the ballgame.
This is only going to continue.
So what are some of the tools and the methodologies that you have found?
They're like, hey, this is really proven to me the best thing when it comes to using AI and implementing it.
Where have you seen it's shining stars?
So it's so interesting because this year I was speaking at CES on agentic AI.
And I also hosted a panel on BCI, which is brain computer interface.
We don't have to get that nerdy because some of your listeners are like, what the heck?
I just keep talking about.
But two years ago at CES, everyone was talking about Gen.
And just going back a little bit in recent time, generative AI and what OpenAI did was the democratization of AI.
Prior to this, AI was reserved for enterprise because it was very expensive.
And my background is edge AI.
So there's a server component.
There's a cloud component.
you know, it can be pricey to do those deployments.
But everyone's talking about Gen AI.
Gen AI now is several iterations old, which means that some of the things like the hallucinations
and the things that were happening early on, those things have been ameliorated.
And where I see companies getting a great return on investment are using Gen AI tools.
And I use Gen AI tools myself all.
the time. Our team uses them. But I'm like, do not show me something that you ran through
GPT that wasn't like a, you know, that that particular GPT wasn't given a proper instruction
set. Don't just spit something out. I don't want to see the word thrive. I don't want to see
delved. I don't want to see the frigging dashes. I don't want to see the stupid emojis. I,
you know, I can do that myself. Thank you all very much, right? So, but generative AI tools can be used,
I think for the following three things.
So when we all get decision fatigue,
especially in the C-suite founders, middle managers,
that's a great time to go to your Gen.
AI model and say, hey, help me come up with 10 ideas
that we can use to lift sales 5%.
And you don't even have to put in proprietary data.
You could, I'll give a real world example.
So I trade my own stock portfolio.
So one of the things I'm using my GPT,
model, one of my custom GPTs, is saying, okay, let's take a look at the news cycle for
Nvidia. I want you to read the charts for Nvidia. I want you to take a look at the global
landscape for semiconductors and build a predictive model of this target of the estimated share
price for the next 18 months, right? So that's something I'm doing in my personal life.
for my portfolio.
The same thing is true using it, Charles, for saying, hey, I want you to take a look at the
news cycle.
This is a great freebie that anyone can do.
Look at the news cycle.
Look at put your competitors' websites in.
Put your website in.
Give me 10 ways we could drive profits by 5%.
So that's what.
Love Gen.
AI for that.
Number two, I caution against putting your
proprietary data into a GPT, but that being said, you could put dummy data that's look-like data
into the GPT and say, where can we cost-optimized? That is phenomenal. The third way, if you have
your own generative AI models and you are putting your own data in, it's the questions you ask.
And things we previously, and sorry, I have friends who work for these companies, but I have said consultants
Two years ago, I said there will be no consultants.
There will be no influencers.
These are the top things that AI is going to replace.
And even Gary V is like there will be AI influencers.
Last year, Mango, the Spanish clothing company, did their whole spring campaign with AI, looks like humans.
So we won't be needing consultants because of general of AI, sorry, friends in that world.
You don't need them.
So that's the biggest low lift playing with content creation.
We all know, like, white papers, blog posts, all of those things.
Just make sure you go sanity check them.
Another way I just save money, we have a patent.
We're applying for.
I love patents.
Most female founders, to the female founders listening, you don't do enough patents.
You don't do enough trademarks, girls.
You need to get off your ass and do those things.
So I had my GPT do the preliminary search on the USPTO, so I wasn't paying an attorney $5,000 just to search.
And then I went in and verified.
the links myself. So all sorts of ways, but Gen. AI is the bright shining spot, but we're moving into
a Gentic AI, then robotics. I know many investors. I was just at an event with Jack Selby.
They're like doubling, tripling down on robotics. We can talk about that. But all of this has been
leading to this inflection point technology where we're headed within the next, I would say,
18 months. Sure. Yeah, closer. It's going to go a lot faster. It is what it's. So we're a lot of people who are
listening to this, especially the, you know, the SMBs out there, the people are like, hey, I just made my first,
you know, I've made my first 10 million. This is what it is. A lot of them are terrified because they,
they contact me and they reach out and like, hey, where is AI going to go? What, what jobs are
going to be left? And, you know, I've got people who are friends in LA and they're like, I'm going to be
an actor or an actor. So I'm like, no, that's cute. No, where, not anymore. So where do you see?
Because everyone talks about the doom and gloom. Like, you know, these are going to get wiped out. These
billions of jobs you're going to get like that. And when that comes across my desk, I'm like,
yes, absolutely. Just like when we went from industrial and went from agricultural to industrial,
and technology boom happened, these things are changing. Where do you see the opportunities that are
coming in? Because you're an individual who has not found the opportunities, but capitalize
them on a high level. Where should people be saying, okay, I own this type of business. Maybe it's
time to systematize scale and sell that and enter into a new industry that has a better path ahead of
So I love that question, Charles. So I'm going to answer it first through the investment lens. So in order for us, so I was having this discussion about Tesla as an example and with a fellow founder who's also in AI because we were talking about our investments. And I said, I want to use Tesla as an example. So we know that, you know, Elon's just launched the Robotoxy and my home base is Phoenix.
So Phoenix is the only location right now, currently where Waymo can pick you up and drop you off at the airport.
My kids use Waymo all the time. It's cheaper than Uber. But in order for us to get to where we are in artificial intelligence and robotics, it's been the years culminating, culminating.
Where I came out of IoT and computer vision, it's for the average layperson. You have data inputs coming in from computers, from audio, from, from,
cameras from all sorts of different kinds of sensors and then to be able to combine them and to
have a car that can make decisions, right? And that's where Elon starting with Tesla and then
going to the robot taxi and then to Optimus, we're having these personalized robots. Those personalized
robots are built on the technology from the autonomous vehicles, which came from the EV vehicles that
we're computerized. So I just wanted to give a brief history of this. So where we're going.
Robotics, robotics, robotics, robotics. And that is what the vision is, is that, you know,
for Elon's vision, everyone will have their own personalized robot. And it will fall in the
price point of somewhere, anywhere from 35,000 to 55,000. So just like we all, you and I are of the
age where we remember life without cell phones. And when the,
The first cell phone came out. It looked like a huge box of tissue. I had one of those. And then
everyone's was like, not everyone's going to have cell phones. Now everyone has cell phones.
Like, you know, everyone has cell phones. So the vision is everyone will have robots.
Where the opportunity is and invest as you see fit, I'll share where I'm personally investing.
I'm investing in Nvidia. I have friends that work in Nvidia. I did business with
Nvidia when we were in vision. And invidia is the premium chip maker. And Jensen is, in my opinion,
one of the top CEOs in the entire world. And one of the things Jensen does is his,
VPs, when they have their monthly one-on-ones, do you know what he asked them, Charles?
I don't. Bring me an idea that is going to make us an extra billion a month.
Now, I have heard that from friends, but that's how he operate.
And so he's, when people say Jensen, you know, they just became a $4 trillion company.
When people say Jensen is at the bleeding edge, it's because he knows how to ask the right
question.
So the question shouldn't be anyone listening if you're an SMB.
Should we incorporate AI?
Like, please don't call me because that's the wrong question.
The right question is, how do we use AI or how do we use robotics to generate an extra $10 million
a month or billion dollars a year or whatever your side?
of your company is, that's the right question. That's the interesting question. And so where we're
going is robotics, where we're going is aging in place. We have a massive shortage in the United States
of hospital beds. You came out of hospice. You and I have seen many, many people die. So aging in place,
we don't have the hospital beds. Most people are retiring out to poverty. So using robotics for
home monitoring, home assistant, that kind of thing, we're going to see that very widely adopted within,
I would say the next 15 years. And that's what I want. I want to age in place in home. I don't want to be living in a home. Forget that nonsense. So that's where we're going. So I'm an optimist because, and I want everyone listening to hear this, the moment you flick your switch and start to think of yourself as an investor, so, you know, Charles doesn't drink. So, you know, instead of getting the $45 martini, you don't have a second. You don't have a second. You know,
of Martini, you put it in an investment account. And, you know, the other thing I'm looking at
is cryptocurrency. I've had crypto for a while, not smart enough to get Bitcoin when it was $50,
but I have friends who did, and they're doing okay. They're doing great. Yeah, I turned,
that is, I turned that down. One of my guys, and he knows who he is, came to me, he's like,
hey, there's this thing, it's this virtual currency. It's like a hundred bucks. We should buy some.
And I was like, why am I buying this? I thought it was like World of Warcraft stuff.
I mean, I've missed that boat multiple times.
It's okay.
There will be more boats.
I'm okay with that.
But yeah, crypto is good.
Yeah.
If you think of yourself as an investor, then the big thing is I would, you know, this is
common sense, right?
And we hear this a lot on your show.
Like, you know, there's no one on the show that I've seen as a guest, it was like,
oh, I just woke up and got lucky would the lottery.
Like the great entrepreneurs are the ones that are able to see.
the opportunity that's even just a little bit further ahead, right? So when I'm looking at in order
to have the technology that we're all using, you look at the Microsoft's the world. You look at
what Zuckerberger's doing with his AI. You know, it's been, you know, he's, he's trying to
get the top talent from other companies. He's offering them huge salaries and packages. He, I said years ago,
he was never a social media company. I had a financial advisor and I got rid of him because when
Facebook IPOed, I wanted to buy it. He said that company's never going to go anywhere, Susan,
because it's a free platform. And I'm like, you don't see it. And he is the largest facial recognition
database in the world. And we all annotated his data. So we're if you're afraid, number one,
it's inevitable. I did a talk for MIT. I'm like, why would you be a
of something that's inevitable. You have to figure out how to adapt to the train. Number two,
everyone is an investor. There's, you know, regardless of your financial position right now,
you need to get out of debt, you need to save money, you need to live on less than you, you know,
you need to. And then take every extra bit of resource and invest and find a mentor. So Charles does
real estate investing. Find a mentor who can mentor you. Get a good investment advisor.
And if your investment advisor doesn't know anything about AI,
know anything about cryptocurrency, doesn't know anything about robotics, they're not the right
person for you. That person who, you know, hasn't looked at anything since they did manual
calculations in 1985 is not your investment advisor. You need to find someone who's on top of it.
And then I would say the last thing about being optimistic is good people create good technology,
bad people create bad technology. And the cautionary thing, just knowing some of your guests
who I know as well, I'll be very blunt.
Our enemies are not going to use technology for good.
Correct.
So it's very polyanish of us to think that there are people out there that don't want to use drones, robots for war, and America also will too.
And so that is also, you know, nothing that, you know, you can really change.
It's just human nature. So you can either invest or you can write your congressperson or you can.
can protest or you can do whatever you want. The way I look at it is through the investment
lens. Because at the end of the day, my goal is to become wealthy enough that I can invest in
the next generation of startups that can really change the world. One of my first mentors said it,
he goes, accept the world how it is, not how you want it to be. Yes. Are the way what they are,
period. So part of that of accepting the world and doing better, and you brought it up before,
is asking better questions. And everything starts with better questions. And you're talking
about NVIDIA CEO. What are some of the better questions that you asked not only of you're in the
finance world, but in your health world and then also with your kids, because we'll find out
that we perform at different levels. And if you're coming in, you're like, hey, I just found out
that I was diagnosed with that mass and then I got a divorce and that I lost all the money.
You're asking different questions. There are questions you asked that led you to a 25-year marriage
and to have the relationship you have and the health you have. Those are different questions.
What are some of those questions that you ask?
The first question I always ask when confronted with any challenge, because, like, believe me and everyone listening, like, I have them all the time.
Real.
That who has been in the same situation and gotten through it and prospered?
So they didn't just come through it.
It's like they came through it and they, like, went on to sort.
And that's why I love what you get to do.
What I get to do is, like, interviewing people and, and, and, for me.
finding out, you know, how did they get through it? How did Jeremy get through what he got through,
right? And everyone listening, go back and listen to Jeremy's episode and read his book. It's awesome.
So how did they get through it? And so that when we think about that, it shifts our mind.
Many years ago, I did my NLP master training certification. And I did, you know, to do those big
multi-speaker events with like Tony Robbins and Pitbull and Mel Robbins and all the folks, right?
So I used to do these transformational leadership training events.
I learned how to ask better questions from who I surrounded myself with, right?
And you don't last very long on a stage if you're full of nonsense.
And you didn't really transcend because you get busted pretty quickly.
Absolutely.
So that's the first question I always ask.
The second question I ask is who do I know who knows that person?
If I don't know anyone that knows that person is how do I learn about that person? So thank God we have
podcasts, we have books, we have, you know, multi-speaker events, we have all sorts of things.
And I always want to get access and find it out. And I'll give a real world example. So I have
an amazing friend. I won't name who she is. She's a huge influencer with a very specific area of
specialty. And she and her husband were on the verge of divorce and she's like,
I'm done. Then suddenly they're happy, Charles, and they're like renewing their wedding vows. I'm like,
what the heck? And I called her up and she's like, Susan, I went to this transformational training in L.A.
She's like, Lewis House went through it, Beyonce went through it, all these people went through it.
I was thinking it was going to be like $60,000. It was $600. So the first thing I did is I signed up for it.
I didn't need to know anything else.
That my husband and I were going through a really rough patch of our marriage.
And it was like, he was like, and I don't mind saying this because if it helps you.
And he was like, Susan, you know, I think we just want different things.
And, you know, I was spending, he was spending more time in Montana.
I was spending more time in Scottsdale and we were not really seeing each other.
But I said, you know, what if we could fix this?
Would you be all in if we could?
He's like, yeah.
He goes, I don't know how. We've tried therapy. We've tried this. I said, okay, here's the deal. I'll go to this. Then you go to the next one. That's what we'll do. And that's what we did. So I went to the first one. He went to the second one. And then we did the advanced course together. And then it was like suddenly we let go of all this trauma, stuff we were carrying. And it was like two weekends. And we were like a newlywed couple. It was crazy. So that's how I look at solving problems. When I see someone who is transcended a similar.
health condition, how'd they do it, where'd they go. One of the best things I heard recently,
and it was a guest on Lewis's show, he said, wealthy-minded people. I want everyone to make
sure they hear what I just said, minded, not wealthy. Wealthy-minded people figure out how to get
money and use that money to save time. Poverty-minded people trade their time for money,
and often those people will become exhausted, broke, or more sick in that.
And it comes down to that mindset.
So that's how I look at things, whether it's technology, whether it's, you know, no matter what it is.
When I'm looking at stock splits, Charles, so I'm like, okay, what stocks are likely to split, right?
And then I start to like go deep in the rabbit hole in that research.
What is the outcome of that?
do I know anyone who was invested when that split before? Can I call them up? Are they still in that
position? Same thing. So it's the idea if you want to go fast, go alone. We want to go far,
go together. Yes. One of the things that we don't talk about enough is something you're really
passionate about. And I know this is a hard gear shift, but I want to talk about it. So I was raised
by single parent as well. And the entire world I spent at hospice was all female.
And you're doing something with Paul's AI that was probably the main reason I wanted to bring you on the show.
I was like, I want to talk about that because not only are you doing something where, you know, you've got internal plumbing and the entire society doesn't give you a big enough ability to speak to that.
We talked about this before.
Less than 2% are getting funny, but 60% have a better rate.
So it just, it's wild that your side of the species isn't celebrated more.
But you guys also, if you're blessed enough to live long enough, are going to run into.
something. And we jokingly call it men on pause, because it's not menopause, it's men on pause, it's
go away. You have something with pause AI. Can you tell everybody a little bit about that and then
some of the infrastructure behind that? Yeah, sure. So as we go into this part of the conversation,
I don't think it's a hard pivot because we've been talking a lot about like change in the world.
And I want everyone to think about, especially for the guys, is, you know, a woman in your life you love.
It could be your sister. It could be a partner. It could be a coworker, a colleague, whoever it is, best friend. And menopause is the only inevitable health condition every woman will face. Not every woman will have a baby, menstruate, all sorts of things. By 2030, from a TAM perspective, a total addressable market, there will be over a billion women in menopause globally.
And every woman navigates menopause differently.
Some women have hot flashes.
Some women don't.
Some women gain weight.
Some don't.
Some brain fog.
Some don't.
And then we go into Charles, which I knew as an area you're passionate about too, is cultural
differences.
So like women from India have different size blood vessels than white women.
And so none of this has been studied.
Up until just over 20 years ago, women weren't allowed in clinical trials.
So there isn't the data.
And so how the story begins for me is when I, after I had my last baby, I was 38, I started getting my period for two weeks a month, every year for 13 years.
I was misdiagnosed.
I was told it was PMS.
I was, you know, like every single wrong thing.
And I just suffered in silence because I'm an athlete.
I push through.
It was debilitating.
And, you know,
In 2023, I was invited to speak in New York at the women in AI event.
And what this event is, it's put on by Nvidia, HP, and 32 women.
And it's very, very prestigious to get an invitation.
And then what happens is you do this AI collab with these top women from all these companies.
Then you go to a fashion show.
And there's champagne involved.
So I'm there.
I've been suffering.
And we're now on the party bus to go to the Badgeley-Mish.
fashion show in my girlfriends who are VPs, C-level, at these huge hyperskillers, we're not talking
about AI. And we are the leading women in AI. Like last year, I was voted as one of the top women
in the entire world in real-time AI alongside Mira Murty, who is then the CTO of Open AI. We're not,
Mira wasn't there, but we're not talking about AI. We are talking about how much sleep did you get,
and do you have hot flashes? And one of my girlfriends, Charles, goes,
can you solve this with AI? And I was like, I want to solve this with AI, but you can't build AI
models without the right data. And the data doesn't exist. There are electronic medical records,
but there isn't real data. So how I went about solving the problem was to say,
we're going to start with a consumer-facing application. So the pause AI app is available in the
app store and the Play Store. And I'm building like Zuckerberg. We're pushing features out. They're
ugly. We're getting the refinement. We only launched it like six months ago. And we have a, like,
we're spending the next, whenever someone's listening to this, they'll look different by the time you see it.
But we're spending the next seven weeks where like my, my developer team, like all of our engineers,
we're just heads down with all these features because we have some big, big announcements that are
coming out and big collaborations. And, but in order for us to build the three P's, which are the
trifecta of any healthcare app, which are predictive, prescriptive, preventative,
we have to create data that doesn't exist anywhere on the planet.
And so that's what we're doing and solving it in a different way.
So already our subscribers almost 90% improved better well-being, the first 90 days using
the platform, which is amazing.
We have gamification.
We have integration wearables.
So women, like, get their biofeedback.
and it's like, oh, my resilience score is whatever it is. This is what you need to do. And then we have an AI
agent that named herself Harmony with an I. We have the trademark for that. And she'll have the
conversation with you and help you feel better if it's two in the morning and you want to like punch
someone or you're having a hot flash. You can talk to Harmony. And Charles Loss say from the personal
side, women in this cohort is one of the fastest growing suicide rates in the United States. It is one of
the biggest divorce rates. And men are suffering. I get men messaging me on LinkedIn all the time.
Please solve for this. And it breaks apart families. I had one woman tell me that her mother,
when she was in her 50s, committed suicide. And so this is a big problem to solve. It keeps me up
at night. Like, I try not to work seven days a week, but I just, I've got to solve it, got to solve it,
got to solve it. So that's what we're building. This is a sign of any entrepreneur. We just,
we're like rabid dogs. We'll just bite them.
won't let go of that bone.
This side of this species, since I have external plumbing, what can we do?
What can my side of the species do to help out with this?
For the listeners out there, because a lot of the people who listen to the show, they are married
and mazel tough, but they're also running into that because it is a good.
It is you've got your spouse who you adore who is going through this.
And for us who have external plumbing, it's hard for us to understand.
We don't understand.
Tony talks about this all the time.
I am not a hairy woman.
You are not a hairless man.
We are not the same creatures.
We are very different creatures.
So from our side, what can we do to help out and to help Paul's AI or just even our spouses?
Like you talked about wearables.
What is the number one wearable that works you up for this?
So question.
It's one thing to know your data.
It's another thing to know what to do with it.
And I grew up in a Buddhist, Jewish Christian household.
I just want to say there are a lot of people listening who, you know, maybe culturally,
you came from a country where women are a little bit more cloistered. And I will tell you,
in a lot of cultural backgrounds, talking about painful intercourse, talking about vaginal
dryness, women just don't feel comfortable. And so one of the big pieces around what we've
created with the AI agent is you can have those conversations with her and she can give you
the right guidance. And that's the thing I want to say, because there are a lot of
of men who don't know how much their partners are suffering, Charles, because it's, you know,
women will tough it out. And I say the number one thing is having a conversation and being
okay with the conversation. Number two is especially as her body is changing, your body is changing
to endropause is real. Mark my words, I will solve the endro pause next. Because once I solve
this, I am going to solve for men. Men, when testosterone starts going down,
on other hormones. There are so many things, and I'm going to solve this for MET. Guys, I am coming.
I am going to do this. It's really important to me as a mother of a son and a daughter of a single
father and watching my husband go through it, coming out the other side, like, you know, thank God.
Have the conversation and know that things are going to change, but that's not the time to check out.
It's a time to dig in more. Sex is going to change. Intimacy is going to change. But the good news is
we have a lot of resources that those things don't have to change, but not all women can go on hormone
replacement therapy. There was bad data, bad study, and over 2 million women have died so far
because they were given bad information, and that number is growing. So less than 4% of women
in the United States are on hormone replacement therapy. Some women can't, if they've gone through
cancer, but it doesn't mean they can't do other things. And so we
have the conversation, go out for dinner, go for a walk and say, you know, are you having symptoms?
What can I do? And my, you know, my ask is, of course, I want every woman, the 50 million women in
menopause to be using our app. We want the feedback where women found a company. The leading
period tracking app was founded by two guys. So definitely women, you know, kudos to them. We are
female founded company. That's one. Number two, you know, we are, we are going into benefits. We
already have customers lined up. So if you are an SMB and you want to have an accessible,
like, plug and play benefit that women can just get and you can just give them, this is a gift.
Reach out to us through the pause.a.a. website. I'm just say, if you love the women in your life,
please go to this website. We need to solve this, please. And yes, for on the guy side, it's amazing
because I know menopause as a word.
Like, that's a word that's very, I know that word.
Then you said the male version of that word.
And I was like, I've never heard that word.
What?
I was like, you haven't heard of andropause?
Nope.
So that explains the ignorance in my side of the species.
Like, we just don't even talk about men, especially, I mean, some of us change our EQ.
We have evolved, some of us have been blessed to have your side of the species in our lives.
And it changes our trajectory of our lives.
but as a whole, you know, we, at least for me and my generation, you didn't cry.
It was always, you know, if you get up, you will, I'll give you a reason to cry.
Remember when the Lion King came out and I just bawled.
I was like, what?
No, shut up.
Dude, it's taken a while.
Luckily, I've been blessed by yours and other species to open that side of me up.
And I had a dear friend of mine, he was like, he was men don't cry.
I was like, cool, give me a second.
I called up a buddy of mine who's an operator.
I was like, former Navy SEAL.
Tell him he's not a man when he starts crying.
I dare you.
I wish you the best of luck.
So it's just this idea that you can't.
be in touch with it, but also being comfortable that there is a side of us that we need to let out
and have that testosterone let go. We need to be able to find that balance in a healthy way. So there is
that finding that balance on both sides, but the ignorance that exists on what happens for men on our
side, I don't even know word for. If I could do a quick PSA for men, and I'm not talking about
prostate, so the symptoms of antipause are very similar to PMS for women. So moodiness,
crying when it's like, I've never been a
crier. And yes, it's great you're emotionally in touch,
but it's like suddenly you're crying and there's kittens in the,
you know, or the Budriser horses or something that's not normal.
Of course, the...
Watching the news. Sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
Aractile dysfunction is another symptom of andropause,
brain fog, low libido, low drive.
And the, you know, we, I am going to solve this.
This is my life's work.
It is, I am going to solve it.
It is, and I'm going to solve it fast.
The big thing for the guys listening is there are things you can do naturally to raise your testosterone, not just injecting the tea.
The interval training, even things like, I know this sounds crazy, but watching movies that are like, you know, have fighting and Game of Thrones and all that stuff, watching sporting events, doing that kind of stuff we would truly.
called guy stuff. And the problem is there's been this movement where men are being told that
that stuff's not good, but it actually is, that's how the species was designed. And so my message to guys,
if you're feeling all this stuff, it doesn't mean you just go buy a Harley and mortgage your
house. It's more than likely go get your blood tested. And that's why we're seeing like going back to
the investment conversation. One of the things I'm researching with my GPT are what's
stocks are going to benefit the most of both menopause and andropause and men having those,
you know, actually waking up and going, hey, wait a minute, I'm not supposed to feel like this.
So I think this is such an exciting time in technology, in investments, an exciting time to be
solving problems. And of course, like anyone listening, if you want to connect, reach out,
you know, I'd love to. We would love the support.
That was literally my next question. If someone wants to track down, because there's so much more.
You and I could probably talk about this for days and days.
I have so many other ways I want to go, but I want to be respectful of your time.
Yeah.
If someone wants to track you down.
If someone's like, oh, my God, I want to do this.
I want to help out.
I want to learn more about AI.
I want to learn how to help out the women in my life.
I am a woman.
I want to be helped out there.
If someone wants to track you down, what's the best way to get a hold of you?
Yeah, absolutely.
If you're interested in having a menopause benefit that's accessible, then just go to
the pause.
I do the contact forum.
That is going to come to me.
I'll see it through the marketing team.
If you're interested in having me come in and as someone who scaled AI and do a workshop with your company, just go to susansly.com.
And then I'm on all the socials. I'm on Instagram. I haven't done anything on X in a while. I had one TikTok video go viral. It was one of my AI robotics videos. And I haven't done much with TikTok because I've just been heads down building product. I'm on LinkedIn almost every day. But follow me on Insta. And that's a great way to reach out.
At Susan Sly.
That's what I was looking for.
So it's at Susan Sly.
Susan, this has been a wonderful conversation.
I'm really glad there's so much more I want to ask you about your respect your time.
Thank you so much for coming on the show.
I really appreciate it.
Well, thank you, Charles.
And I love everything you're doing in the world.
And I would just encourage everyone to go back and listen to some of the other episodes
because everything builds on each other.
When you see someone who's created a $30 million, you know, like revenue stream
or when you see someone who's overcome the odds.
Like, you know, every day we want to be learning and growing.
And, you know, Charles' podcast is amazing.
My podcast is slightly different raw and real entrepreneurship.
We've had some of the similar guests.
So if you love Jeremy's episode, I did an episode with Jeremy where he doesn't swear.
So you could check that out.
But, yeah, that's my show.
I have no idea you got Jeremy not to swear.
I still have that problem with him every day.
Yeah, I said, listen, do you.
We're both parents, and I have kids listen to the show, and I get messages from parents that play my show in the car with their kids.
And I said, so that's why.
And yeah, Steve Sims didn't swear.
Brendan Steiner.
Nope.
Impressive that you got through these guys not to swear.
Almost all the way through mine.
I haven't sworn yet.
So we're doing one.
Thank you, Susan.
I really appreciate you.
Thanks so much.
Thanks, Charles.
That concludes this episode of the proving podcast.
Remember, it's not what you think.
It's only what you could prove.
We've proved a ton of things on this episode.
Go prove it yourself.
Don't trust us.
Don't trust our guests.
Go out there, implement.
You want more, go to the provenpodcast.com,
and there's more examples just like this.
Thank you for joining us.
