The Jordan Harbinger Show - 236: How to Quit Your Dream Job Gracefully | Feedback Friday
Episode Date: August 9, 2019You and your spouse recently decided to move back to your small hometown after giving the big city a try and deciding it's just not for you. But the problem is: you're going to have to give u...p the job you love, with benefits and more of a salary than you've ever made elsewhere. On top of that, the company is currently paying for you to finish school, so there may be legal consequences if you ditch them on graduation day. So in this Feedback Friday, we'll try to show you how to quit your dream job gracefully. And in case you didn't already know it, Jordan Harbinger (@JordanHarbinger) and Jason DeFillippo (@jpdef) banter and take your comments and questions for Feedback Friday right here every week! If you want us to answer your question, register your feedback, or tell your story on one of our upcoming weekly Feedback Friday episodes, drop us a line at friday@jordanharbinger.com. Now let's dive in! Full show notes and resources can be found here: https://jordanharbinger.com/236. On This Week's Feedback Friday, We Discuss: Is it unreasonable for you to tell friends and family that you don't support MLM companies, won't host their parties, and won't buy their products? Or is there a softer, more effective approach? You recently broke up with your significant other of 15 months, but feel guilty because they gave up their chance to start their MBA in anther city to be with you. Are you a terrible person who made a selfish decision? Your spouse wants to move the family out of the big city and back to your hometown, but it means leaving a job you love that has invested in your education. How do you gracefully part ways while causing the least impact and without burning any bridges? You did a digital detox after listening to our episode with Cal Newport, and want to limit your seven-year-old's exposure to devices after hearing our episode with Jonathan Haidt. How do you ensure you're not just making the wrong thing more appealing? You moved to another country five years ago and have been working menial jobs, learning the language, and taking classes for fun. Now you're ready to take your career seriously, but your resume might be hard to explain. How to proceed? You've lost your motivation, confidence, and self-esteem after quitting a job under a manipulative boss, and your dreams of landing a better job are stalled after submitting hundreds of applications with no calls back. How do you give yourself the kick-in-the-ass, tough self-love pep talk you drastically need? After a few years of accepting sponsored links and posts for your blog, you ended up owning your own link placement agency. This is now what you do full time and you earn more than you ever have before, but you know it's just a matter of time before Google smacks you down. How can you find time to start a more legit business before this happens? You would love to start your own podcast and YouTube channel. You have a great topic, lots of ideas, and contacts for people you could have on the show. Should you work on both the podcast and YouTube or just focus on one? What's the most interesting experience you've ever had? Safari? helicopter tour of a waterfall in venezuela? I'd love to know. Looking at a bucket list. The books on this are all lame because they're trying to fill 200+ pages. Jordan... See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This episode is sponsored in part by Conspiruality Podcast.
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Find Conspirality on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
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Welcome to Feedback Friday.
I'm your host, Jordan Harbinger,
and I'm here with producer Jason DeFilippo.
On the show, we decode the stories,
secrets, and skills of the world's most brilliant
and interesting people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice
that you can use to impact your own life
and those around you.
And this week we had Seth Godin.
He is a master,
what do you even call a guy like Seth Godin?
He's one of the most prolific marketing,
thought leaders, thinkers around.
He's written a bigelial.
best-selling books. Everything he puts out turns into basically canon in the marketing industry.
He's talking about the future of influence with us this week and whether we can make a living
doing what we love. And the answer might actually surprise you because it's kind of yes,
but kind of also not in the way that you think, or at least not in the way that you choose.
We also spoke with my friend David Roski, a guy who, because he's constantly trying to push
the edges, summits mountains like Everest and K2 without oxygen. This guy, this guy, this guy
He climbs, when we go around New York sometimes, he'll climb scaffolding outside of skyscrapers,
not like all the way up to the top, but he'll just horse around and climb up some scaffolding,
which, you know, is dangerous.
So he's a great guy.
Obviously, he's just the right amount of crazy.
And I also write every so often on the blog, the latest post is about how to bring value to a business or personal relationship,
how to make a solid introduction, and how to stop making excuses for not creating and maintaining relationships.
That's at Jordan Harbinger.com slash articles.
So make sure you've had a look and to listen to everything we created for you this week.
Our primary mission on this show is to pass along our guests, insights, and experiences,
and our experiences and insights along to you.
In other words, the real purpose of the show here is to have conversations directly with you
or as direct as possible.
And that's what we're going to do today here on Feedback Friday.
You can reach us Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
And I got to say, baby Jaden.
We won't Jaden.
I don't know if I announced it on the show before.
We had to get a J name.
Those of you on the newsletter helped us choose the name, which is pretty cool.
If you're not on the newsletter, you can get on there by going to Jordan Harbinger.com.
It's right on the homepage.
Or you can sign up for six-minute networking.
And if you don't unsubscribe, you'll get the newsletter.
And it's mostly relevant, you know, not going to make too many promises because I did ask you for baby name in it.
But he looks like an old Chinese man.
Don't all babies look like that, though?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, he is half Asian, so he's Hapa.
That's a word I've recently learned, mixed baby.
He is cute for a newborn, though.
And I know that everyone thinks out about their own newborn,
but I've had a lot of people send me like,
hey, your baby's really cute.
And I'm like, yeah, well, I mean, aren't all newborns cute?
And they're like, no, here's a picture of our kid.
Yeah, it's funny.
People have been sending me pictures of their own kids
and being like, this was our kid.
We thought he was cute at the time.
But after about eight months, we realized he's cute now.
But when he was a newborn, well, here's what he looked like.
And it's like a hairy gremlin.
Yeah.
Or like a shaved, maybe a shaved, some kind of gizmo.
Yeah, a shaved gizmo or a hairy gremlin, sort of in between.
And yeah, I mean, all he does is cry, poop, eat, and sleep.
I love every minute of it, even though I'm constantly in need of a nap.
Jen's a champ.
She already recovered a lot.
She's already more or less back to work.
I mean, we work from home, so she's on email.
I'm not making her set up the video equipment these days.
That's good.
and carry the 50-pound case.
But yeah, she's a natural mom.
I'm pretty fortunate with that.
It's funny, she never held a baby before.
So I had more baby experience than she did at the birth of our child.
That's crazy.
Isn't that crazy?
Never held a baby once?
Wow.
Yeah, like what human hasn't held a baby?
What adults has not held a baby before ever?
Well, Jen, there you go.
We found one.
Yeah.
It's just crazy to me.
I've, I felt like, I don't know, I just assumed everybody's been holding babies since day one.
At least at family functions, you know, you always get passed off the babies as they come around.
You would think, yeah, I don't know, it's funny.
Here, her dad will come over and I'll hand him the baby, and he's like, he holds it like he's holding a Ming vase.
And then he just hands it back to me.
It's like, hey, thanks.
I'm like, okay, it's your grandson, but whatever.
Anyway, we won't bore people too much with this.
A lot of people don't, they don't care.
They be gaff about the baby.
They just want feedback Friday.
So let's give it to them.
What's the first thing we got out on the mailbag?
Hey, Triple J.
I have two family members highly involved in a multi-level marketing or MLM company.
I won't say which one because I feel that it doesn't really matter.
In my opinion, these programs rely on their employees exploiting their relationships with friends and family for profit.
The company's product is always second fiddle to getting people signed up as an associate, sales rep, consultant, or whatever nomenclature they prefer.
I've watched as people actually interested in buying product or asked to instead sign a
up for a wholesale account where they can buy the product at a better price. What real company would do
this? When I'm approached by people about these programs now, I tell them I don't support MLM companies
and I won't host their parties or buy their products. My family members will often state that they
own their own business or work as an entrepreneur, and it really bothers me. I feel as though they
give a bad name to the people who are actually running their own businesses and work hard to create
something of their own. They've even tried to convince my wife to sign up for an account and get on
the sinking ship with them. Are my views too hard on the MLM industry? Is there a more polite way of
telling people that I won't get involved? Are there any good resources or techniques for discouraging
participation in such programs? Keep up the great work. Best regards, party hosting pooper.
Ooh, you've hit one of my triggers big time here. I cannot stand MLM. I really cannot. I know
every time we talk about this, I field emails from what I consider to be irrationally angry people
who don't understand the math of how a business works,
especially a multi-level marketing scheme or a pyramid scheme.
And you know what's funny about this, Jason,
is I get the angry emails from people that,
and I'm not going to try to insult their intelligence.
I mean, they do that just fine on their own.
A lot of the time, not everyone.
But people will write in and they'll say,
oh, here's why you're wrong.
Or they'll just write in, you know, expletives.
I used to love your show until you said negative things about herbal.
life or whatever. It's like, oh my God, really? That's what pushed you over the edge,
your organized religion of your MLM. But what's funny is I know a couple, just sort of tangentially,
I know a lot of people at the very, very top of a few MLMs. I didn't say we're friends or
close friends. I do know them. Some of them are very nice to me, et cetera, but, you know, I have to,
you, y'all know what I think about this or you will in a second. But they're never mad. And I
think that's interesting because they're rich right they're rich and also they say things like
yeah i mean you know you're not i can't really argue with the things that you say about MLM you know
i mean it's it's not for everyone and i was like well by not for everyone you mean 99 point i don't
know eight percent of people it's not for them and they'll laugh and chuckle and be like
let me get you a drink and i'm just you know because they know this is not something that's
debatable. They won't tell you that if you sign up for their quote-unquote business.
They won't tell you that, but they don't care. They really don't care. I'm going to do a show about
this at some point, but in the meantime, let's not sugarcoat this. Multi-level marketing organizations
are in many ways like cults. Yes, that is not hyperbole. This is actually what I mean, and I will
back it up. In fact, next week, we're going to back it up big time because we're doing a special
on cults. They use tactics to prey on vulnerable populations. That's very culties. So poor,
immigrants, single mothers, retirees, people with chronic illnesses or other health problems,
they promise them the world. Yes, they tell them you're going to have to invest a little
money, but that's normal when you start a business, right? If you work hard, you can live a life
of leisure, you can rake in cash while you stay at home with your kids. You can bequeath it
to your kids, your children, even though it'll be worthless because it's not a real business.
You constantly have to push other people to join the business to get more in your
downline and you have to pay the company usually every single month to buy more quote unquote
product that you then throw away or whatever or try to use but if you want to maintain your
status you've got to pay the company so it's not a business it's usually a money losing venture
no business in the world would saturate one geographic area with as many suppliers as possible
all buying of course at wholesale unless of course the company's primary revenue source were the
wholesalers themselves so i'm going to sort of repeat this
no in and outbrigger, no McDonald's wants to have seven McDonald's on the same block, right, for very obvious reason.
Even things like Starbucks, which you see across the street from one another, you don't see them multiple on the same block most of the time unless there's a massive, massive population density, right?
They've done the math on this.
And often they'll close one after they figure out which side of the street converts better.
And you've seen this.
Now, or they buy another coffee shop, they make it into a Starbucks and then they shut it down.
You've seen that too, right?
But nobody would have 20 wholesalers in the same apartment building.
MLMs don't care because when you join an MLM, you are not a seller.
You are the customer.
You are the product, in fact.
The business would operate the same way if there was no product at all.
Think about this.
You don't even need the product if you're in some sort of MLM most of the time.
You're just funneling money upward to the organization.
It's wholesaler sending money to corporate in exchange for the ability to have money sent to them from below.
If you get rid of your essential oils or your health shakes or whatever it is, the business still operates the exact same way.
You just throw away less stuff.
Your garage has more space in it.
That's really it.
There are tons of reasons.
And MLM is not a real business for the people who are not at the top.
I'll save that for a later show.
So at the end of the day, it's pointless to talk logic or argue with people who are invested in an MLM.
Look, if they're early and they just bought it and they're going, hmm, this is kind of weird.
Sure, you can talk some sense into some of these people.
But for most people, they have drank the Kool-Aid.
They went to the convention.
They flew out there.
They got all their stuff.
They're wearing their t-shirt.
They got their backpack, you know, on.
All we can really do is ask clarifying questions about how profitable the business is for them personally.
Most people will never give you this information because the answer is almost always, statistically always, zero.
Something like 99%, it's actually higher than that, of people involved in an MLM lose money.
Net net lose money.
The MLM shills, the people who are shilling this stuff, they'll tell you it's because, oh, those people didn't work hard enough.
They didn't have the motivation.
They didn't have patience.
They didn't do it right.
Whatever it is.
But it's largely because the math simply does not work.
in fact if you start going we had an expert on the show literally like five plus years ago i got
to have him back on jason but he did the math and it was something like after seven or ten
orders of magnitude down the pyramid you run out of people on earth yep yeah it's crazy
and it happens so fast and that's why people who run one mllm they'll often jump into another
one or they will run multiple.
And that's why you also see people who are high up in MLMs, but not the founder.
They will jump off the MLM that they're in and they'll start another one that's basically
the exact same thing with different branding and different materials because then they're
at the top of the pyramid and they don't have to pay corporate to then get their paycheck.
That's why you see these guys who are like, yeah, I sold my business for $50 million.
You didn't have a business.
You were at an MLM and you sold your downline to corporate.
or you sold your downline to another person who's giving you a buyout. It's total BS.
The math just doesn't work. The best approach when somebody sucked into one of these things is to be
positive, not encouraging, but positive, not negative, I should say. How about neutral, not negative?
Ask questions that will get them thinking. I'm actually going to go into some depth on this
next week during a special two-part series I'm doing on cults with Stephen Hassan. He's great,
super knowledgeable. We're going to be talking about regular cults, business cults being one of them,
an MLM is what he means by that.
If you're skeptical of one of your friends in an MLM,
maybe you can help them keep a spreadsheet of expenses and sales.
See if they'll let you do that.
You'll soon see they have to spend money each month to keep their status,
their status so that they can get paid a certain amount, etc., etc.
They spend that money ostensibly to get product,
but really they're just spending money to keep the status.
They have to keep recruiting other people
to try and recoup the money that they have to spend each month,
and it gets increasingly more and more desperate these people do
to recoup their losses, which then causes them to rely, unfortunately, on their closest
relationships for that money.
See, I wouldn't really care as much if people were just getting ripped off, because eventually
you'd figure it out, right?
And a lot of people do.
But the problem is usually with MLMs, you figure it out after you've really desperately
tried to sell your sister, your brother, your mother, your father, your aunt, your neighbor,
because you're going broke and you need the money and you need to keep your status.
So you see people who are ruining their personal relationships in order to basically dig out of a hole because there's no way that they're going to be profitable.
MLMs are very toxic to the people involved and to everyone around them.
And this is why I think they're a step beyond a scam.
They delve into cult territory.
They use emotional control.
They use manipulation tactics.
Everybody's got a script about why everything that you might say against an MLM.
In fact, I'm going to get this on Twitter.
I'm going to get this in my email.
I'm going to get scripted stuff from people that says, oh, well, it's not their fault that these people don't have the drive and the motivation and da-da-da-da-da.
I'm going to see that come in.
Every time I talk about MLMs, I see a bunch of very, very similar emails come in from people involved in similar groups.
And there was a time a few years ago where, depending on where the email came from, I could actually pinpoint with some accuracy what the group was.
So I'd get something and I'd say, oh, how long you've been doing herbal life?
And they'd be like, huh?
And I'd go, yeah, you don't even notice that you're just a parrot of the crap that you hear at the convention for people who say, hey, this doesn't work.
It's like, oh, you're just repeating this and you don't even see it.
These people also have to put the business before friends and family, and they have to put the business before themselves.
That is unhealthy.
It's all about the company.
It's all about the people at the top.
Now, they won't say it's about the people at the top.
They'll say it's about business and drive, and it's about.
creating a lifestyle that you want that's not what it is at all it's about the people at
the top getting rich and there's so much to this but I will say that we shouldn't
abandon or isolate these people who are sucked into this because what it'll do is it
causes them to go deeper into the MLM network for support oh none of my friends
understand me my friends they ghosted me they won't hang out with me now I'm just
gonna post in a doTERRA Facebook group every five minutes okay this is one
reason one why there are so many conferences there's so many events those are
also, by the way, a great moneymaker for the company itself. Oh, but they do it at cost. No, they don't.
You pay fees to go. Of course, you pay for your own hotel. You pay for your own travel, but you always pay
a conference fee. And people won't tell you that. They'll say, oh, I got VIP status. Cool. How much
did you pay to keep that status all year? Oh, $10,000? Okay, so the fees built in. And they keep the
emotions at these things. They keep your emotions in buying temperature really high, all the attendees,
especially as those people become more and more isolated.
This is all they have after a while.
So don't isolate them, but also do not enable them.
Don't loan them money.
Don't let them use your house for recruiting and have their little parties there.
Don't let them recruit at your parties or your gatherings.
Do not join their fake business.
Do not go to those meetings.
You'll just resent them for it.
And these people, they need real friends desperately because after a few years,
the strain on their personal and financial lives can really be staggering.
It's really, really sad and shameful, especially because they do target vulnerable people in the first place.
I could go on forever with this.
I really recommend watching betting on zero.
I think it's still on Netflix.
It's a documentary about a hedge fund that shorted herbal life and tried to expose that company.
And you can really see it's an ego battle between these two hedge fund guys.
These companies are very powerful.
They're very insidious.
They lobby.
And in fact, there's one in the government right now.
who made a bunch of, Jason, what does Betsy DeVos make her money do?
Is Amway?
Was that what she made her money doing?
I think that was hers, yeah.
Yeah.
And people, sometimes they don't even know that what their friends and family are doing
or even some of the products that they see are an MLM.
In fact, there's a Reddit group that I'm in, and people will go, I'm at CVS right now
and look what's on the shelf.
And there's all this Amway stuff.
And it's like, wait, you can't sell that at CVS.
So what they're thinking is like maybe the manager or somebody at a mom and pop sometimes drugstore will be in this and they'll go, how do I get rid of all this shampoo?
And they'll sell it to the drugstore for like 10 cents a bottle.
And the drugstore sells it as quote unquote store brand or cheapo for two bucks because they're just giving it away.
It's crazy.
There's so much wrong with this, man.
It's so toxic.
I really do feel for you and I feel for your friend.
I feel for everybody involved in these sorts of things because they go after people.
that need the money.
I don't know anybody who's like upper middle class, successful,
has a regular good job and is involved in this for a long time.
I know people that dabble and then they go, oh, wait a minute,
and then they're out.
The people that I know that are neck deep in this,
I hear about it because they're my Uber driver.
I hear about it because they're talking about it in Spanish at the hair salon
while they're sweeping the floor.
I mean, these are people that can't afford to lose $1,000 a month or whatever it is.
It's just a shame.
Shame on these companies and shame on anybody who's encouraging people to do this.
Yeah, I had a friend of mine who got sucked into it.
And she posted on her Instagram one day all of her herbal life stuff.
And I'm like, who sold that to you?
Because whoever that is is not your friend.
You know?
And of course, that's not how you do it.
That's not the proper way to do it.
And so then she called me an asshole and never spoke to me again because I was just trying to tell her.
I laid it out in a long paragraph.
And I'm like, look, this is not good for you.
You're on a budget.
You cannot be, you cannot afford to be diving into this because it's just going to make you even poorer.
And she'd already drunk the Kool-Aid.
And it was, you know, then she ended up losing, you know, probably $10,000 on it.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
It sucks.
It really sucks.
And it's, again, these people that are doing this, they're sold.
Hey, this is the secret way out of the day to day.
Look, man, you can make money after work doing this and stuff.
The reality of MLM, oh my gosh, going on Reddit has just been so educational.
when it comes to the MLM, you see people's real stories.
And if you look on the right forum online,
you find MLM dissenters,
and they'll be like, yeah, when I worked for such and such,
whatever, MLM, I was working like 16 hours a day,
sending text messages, Facebook messages, Instagram.
It was tedious.
Every lunch, meal, breakfast, everything,
every friend I had was me pitching.
Everybody that I sold, I felt guilty.
And everybody that I, you know, I didn't sell,
didn't really want to hang out with me ever again
because everything was always under false pretenses
or if it wasn't under false pretenses
and it was a sales meeting,
I mean, how many people want to take sales meetings
with their friends over and over?
You know, not many.
And it's just absolutely crazy to me.
And even when people say, look, the products are kind of good,
it's like, well, when you look at lab tests
and stuff like that, or when you look at the price
of that product compared to something
that's actually market price,
it's never even close.
you get something that is 300% as expensive from the MLM
and then the store has it for a dollar,
it's $3 from the MLM or more.
And when you kind of say what's going on with that,
why would anybody buy that?
I want the cheap toilet paper that's more affordable at Costco.
Why would I pay you $3 a roll?
They say, well, loyalty because people below you are gonna do it.
And I'm like, so I have to trust that they're gonna do it
and then I have to do it so that the people above me,
they do it, it just doesn't make any sense.
It's a lot like communism.
Oh, well, you got to do it this way because that's what's good for society.
And as long as nobody cheats, it works.
Except for even an MLM, it doesn't.
Communism would if nobody ever cheated.
In MLM, it doesn't because there's still people at the bottom.
And then you run out of people.
You run out of humans.
So, whatever.
I don't want to bore everybody with this.
I get worked.
I get triggered with this.
I can tell.
I can tell.
Yeah.
Next up.
Dear Triple J, I recently broke up with my girlfriend of 15 months because the relationship wasn't
satisfactory to my standards. However, when we met, she was about to start an MBA in Rotterdam
and gave that up to be with me. I was really clear that I didn't want a long-distance relationship
as we live in Asia. I didn't manipulate her into staying, however, and insisted that she make
her own choice knowing the risk that relationships are always a gamble. Now that we're separating,
I have guilt that I can't shake, that I ruined her life. Now she's on her way to 35, and it's
increasingly harder to find MBA positions the older you get. I know I couldn't have known at the
beginning that it wouldn't work out, but I still feel I should have stopped the relationship then,
and I think I'll do that in any future relationship that will come along. Do you think it's a wise
decision? P.S. Your six-minute networking is great, too. Best regards, guilty about the gal.
I feel for you, man. We all make decisions that we regret, and this wasn't really your decision to make.
You didn't make it. She made it, or you made it together. I understand.
that and she can still get an MBA yeah she's probably a few years behind it's not
like she didn't grow as a person in your relationship it's not like you wasted her
time I know that she might feel that way she might even be telling you that you
don't owe people your happiness or owe them a relationship just because they
committed to you or because you committed to them in the past you just don't
owe them your happiness and you don't owe them a relationship who's putting the
guilt on you this is what I wonder is it her putting the guilt on you or is it
you putting the guilt on yourself.
It's always ourselves in some way, right?
Because sometimes we just feel really bad.
We feel really guilty.
We're good people.
But sometimes we're encouraged by the other person.
And I wonder how much of that might be happening here, right?
She's saying, you ruined my life, you wasted my time.
I can't get my MBA now.
I counted on you.
When people make us feel guilt and they won't let it go,
you got to remember this is about control.
If somebody is trying to make you feel guilty
and they won't let it go,
it's not just about them.
It is about controlling you
and an attempt to control your behavior.
You need to move on with your life.
You need to forgive yourself.
She needs to move on as well.
But if you're feeling guilty
and you're entertaining all of her kind of conversations
with you about how you ruined her life,
it's prohibiting you from moving on,
but also it's prohibiting her from moving on.
So if you're going back and forth on this,
you need to stop
so that both of you can get on with your lives.
the fact that you're feeling bad right now,
it shows me that you're a caring person.
I understand that, but you can't keep beating yourself up
because of this,
or you will never be able to settle in with someone else again
because you'll be afraid that you're going to hurt them.
And that's going to take a heavy toll on you emotionally.
Breakups are not easy for anyone.
There's a lot of baggage in both directions.
But I would say you should be getting therapy.
Definitely betterhelp.com slash Jordan,
this is a really good, convenient place to get therapy.
get therapy, breakups are always, always hard.
This is part of the game.
A good therapist can help you with that
because once we clearly articulate our feelings,
we can clearly articulate our thoughts,
usually in conjunction with a good therapist
that's helping us do this,
we can understand and process those thoughts
and those feelings much better.
If they're just sort of nebulously floating around
in the back of your brain,
you got a problem because that will never quite get clear enough
for you to let it go.
you won't be able to refute it logically.
You'll just be sort of feeling bad.
That's not good.
You need to articulate it, get really clear on it, process it logically so that your emotional
brain stops nagging you about this stuff.
And this is what therapy, in part, what therapy does for us.
So I highly encourage it.
Again, better help, one of our sponsors, BetterHelp.com slash Jordan.
BetterHelp, again, one of our sponsors, really big fan of them.
Just go get some therapy.
And remember, this is not necessarily all about you.
And it's certainly not all about her.
She sounds like she's trying to make you feel bad in order to control you.
She's maybe not doing that on purpose.
She's not thinking I'm going to control him by making him feel bad.
But what's the effect it's having on you?
That's what you got to examine.
And it doesn't sound like you're able to move on or be happy.
And that is destructive for both of you.
This is Feedback Friday.
We'll be right back after this.
Thanks for listening and supporting the show.
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And now let's hear some more of your questions on Feedback Friday.
Okay, what's next?
Hello, sirs. I've recently been given an ultimatum by my wife. I definitely agree with her
perspective, but now I'm struggling to decide the best route in career decisions moving forward.
We moved to the Washington, D.C. area, almost three and a half years ago after I finished my bachelor's degree.
We chose this area because I work in technology and I landed a great job with even better benefits right out of school.
It was her first time moving away from home, and it's been a struggle for her this entire time.
She really doesn't like the area, and to be honest, I'm not a huge fan of the area myself, but I really do like my job.
She wants us to move back home to rural Pennsylvania.
She has a handful of reasons, but I've already decided that I think they're compelling enough to agree.
Now that I've agreed to move back, I have to decide the best route to take with this unplanned
redirement of my career. My biggest concern is that I've never had to quit a job before, let alone
leave a job I love with a great company. How do I go about gracefully separating while causing the
least impact and most importantly without burning any bridges? Another major concern is that I'm
currently going to school for my master's degree in work as reimbursing me as it's relevant to my job,
one of the great benefits I'll likely be losing. I have at least a new,
another year to go, and I've gotten my wife to agree that we won't move back until I finished.
I really feel like I'm taking advantage of my employer's investment in me, since I know that I'm not
going to be staying once I've finished school. Should I feel that way? Are there any legal concerns
with leaving? Is there any way to go about this without any bad blood from my employer when I decide
to leave right after finishing school? Lastly, there's very little hope that I'll find a job back home
with benefits that match what I'm currently getting,
and I'll likely have to take a significant pay cut,
even though that is expected,
as the cost of living is significantly lower than it is here.
I'm still expecting a pretty big cut compared to my current income,
so I just can't help but feel that I'm taking a step backwards in my career
since there are significantly less options in this field back home.
I never planned on staying forever at my first job out of school,
but definitely wasn't seeing any reasons to leave so soon.
Is there anything I can do to mitigate this feeling
or any perspective I can gain here?
How do I even figure out how much I should ask for
and how much are my skills worth back home?
Again, any feedback would be greatly appreciated
since my head is spinning just thinking about all of this.
Thank you guys.
Signed, love my job, but love my wife more.
Oh, man, I do feel for you here.
This is a tough situation.
You're really caring, obviously, for your wife
making this huge shift, a downshift,
some might say,
in order to help her sanity and her mental
mental health. I really get it. I feel like you're between a rock and a hard place.
But you're going to make the most of it and I think it's going to be good for you in the end because
what do they say, happy wife, happy life. I like that. I sort of like that. It depends. It depends on
the context. But before leaving any job, make sure you have something else lined up back home.
You do not know if they're going to want you to leave in two months when a project is over or if they're going to
want you to want you to leave immediately in two weeks. So you're going to want to try to line up a job
and they're going to say, when can you start?
And you'll say, I'll have to let you know when I resign from my previous position.
Is that okay?
And they might say, sure, because you need to sort of negotiate this.
What you don't want is, oh, well, I'm going to put in my two weeks.
And, you know, they're probably going to want me to finish this project.
And then I'll go home.
And they might just be like, oh, you're going to leave in two weeks.
Well, we have all these projects.
And I know you think you're going to finish them.
But actually, why don't you just pack your stuff right now?
You just don't know how they're going to handle this.
So once you've secured another offer in writing, by the way,
back home where you're going to move, then talk to your supervisor and let them know why you're
leaving and that it's because of your wife's health. Make sure you're really clear on that
because you don't want them to think like, we just gave this guy a promotion, a bunch of projects
that he asked for and now he's still not happy. You know, tell them exactly what's going on.
I know it's private, but they'll understand much better if you're very, very candid with them.
Otherwise, they might even try to retain you with incentives and all that stuff. That's a waste
of everyone's time. It's going to confuse the situation. And you don't want them to go,
All right, three more weeks of paid vacation and $10,000 raise because we really need your help.
That's problematic because then you're tempted, and then you've got to redo that calculation of,
well, how long can my wife really deal with this?
And is she going to be happy or is she going to be sad?
I mean, you just don't want to have to keep doing the math on this.
You've already made your decision, so you've got to pull the trigger.
Tell them your timeline.
And if you're flexible and you should be, offer them the option of keeping you on for the next several months or weeks, whatever, to finish the projects, do the transition,
train the new guy, whatever it is.
Minimize the impact to the company.
If you're worried about the impact to the company, like you say,
you've got to make sure that you just are ready to,
your head is on a swivel,
you're there every morning with bells on to make this transition for them
because you need a positive referral from them.
You should get one anyway,
and you should make sure you don't burn those bridges.
The fact that you're going to school and that they're paying for it,
ooh, that is a huge wrench in this one.
because not only are they going to be angry,
not only are they going to be disappointed.
There's almost surely some fine print in your agreement or your contract
that says you have to stay with the company for X number of years,
years after you get your degree.
And if you leave before that, expect to have to reimburse your company for the tuition
at the very least.
There might even be some sort of penalty.
I don't know if that's legal or if that's in there or what.
The very least you're going to have to pay the company for tuition,
if not lost time because maybe you left early to go to school.
I don't know how they handle that.
I do not see a way around that.
Definitely have an employment attorney look at any and all agreements you have with your company
about your school, your employment, everything.
Go see a lawyer immediately because you're going to want to be prepared.
There might even be a clause in there that you can only pay that back in a lump
or that you have to pay it back within a year.
And then you've got to do some serious math with your new job to see if you can survive.
while you're paying 10 grand a month in tuition or whatever at five grand a month in tuition.
As for taking a pay cut, this is exacerbated now, of course, by the fact that you're surely going to owe that tuition money back to your employer.
And at the end of the day, the amount of money you make, of course, it's always relative to where you live and your standard of living.
So if you feel like your standard of living will stay the same, I would say worry a lot less about this.
But if your standard of living is going to take a nose dive, you're going to have to come to terms with that.
otherwise it's going to cause strain on your relationship.
You know, you're going to be at home and eating beans out of a can for a while or living
with your parents because you can't afford a place yet.
And that's going to put some strain on your relationship.
You and your wife need to be on the same page.
You can't have somebody be like, oh, I picked out the house we're going to buy and you're going,
what are you talking about?
We're going to be living in my dad's basement for at least three years because I've got
to pay this tuition back.
Make sure everybody knows what they're getting out of this one.
I know this is hard.
And our ego, especially as men, I think, our ego, our sense of self-worth,
is tied into our income.
It may be the same for women.
I just know my own experience is or was,
especially when I worked on Wall Street,
I was like, all right, I'm important now.
Look at the money I make.
I mean, it's just ridiculous.
But you got to let that go.
The burden of paying tuition, the student loans,
that's always going to be there.
And you got to let the income thing go
if your wife and you are going to be happy
living in another area.
It's just there's no way to sort of say,
I want the D.C. experience in rural Pennsylvania.
Not going to happen.
Sounds like you're happy.
happy to leave the city, but you're also taking a kick from the lifestyle perspective. This is the
unfortunate price we put on our mental health and our relationships. But I would say, again,
you're probably making the right choice. If your wife is really sad and you know somehow that
she's going to be better back home or she's going to at least have a better chance at getting
better and you think you're going to have a more sane and productive family life, well, then yeah,
you're doing the right thing, man. I can't really say for most people,
that they should live somewhere that they don't want it,
their spouse doesn't want to live for the money.
It's a really tough argument to make.
If you were looking at poverty wages where you live,
if you were from South Sudan and you said,
well, my wife really misses back home,
but when I'm in America, I'm an engineer, I would say you've got to adjust.
But if you're talking about another place in the United States,
you're probably fine moving back to where you grew up.
But I don't envy the fact that you have to make this choice.
All right, what's next?
Hi, Jen, Jordan, and Jason.
Congrats on being new parents.
I love your discussions on how many scams exist in the self-help industry
and some of your personal tales of classes you attended.
You're so passionate about it.
Have you considered doing a documentary on this?
It would be amazing and such a useful resource to help people
that are considering jumping into one of these.
Anyways, my question is about social media.
I did a digital detox after listening to Cal Newport and many others you've had on
about the manipulation by the companies in associated mental health.
health issues. Wow, did I find out I was wasting my life with that crap. As any parent, I always
want to do what's best for my daughter. I've always said that I would never get my daughter a phone
until she was paying for it herself, but I'm starting to realize this might not be realistic.
My first thought was to get one of those phones that parents can limit to make sure my daughter
stays off social media, but I'm wondering if this is the right call. I know Jonathan Haidt and others
talk about limiting kids' contact with screens and particularly social media. However, I know this is
something you can't keep away from kids forever. I'm worried it'll be like the kid in high school
who had strict parents and went absolutely crazy partying in college. I'm almost thinking it would
be better to introduce my daughter to social media earlier and talk about it rather than trying
to keep it away. At least that way, she might come off with a better understanding of what she's
seeing. My daughter's only seven, in a long way off from a phone, but already she's familiar with
social media from seeing others use it. Sadly, myself and her mom included. I know you spent a fair
amount of time talking with experts in these areas and any insights you can provide would be much
appreciated. Cheers. Trying to do right by my daughter. For those of you wondering, Cal Newport was
episode 159 and Jonathan Haidt was episode 90. We'll link to those in the show notes for this so you can go
have a listen if you want. But look, I think this is a great idea. Wow, I'd love to do a documentary
about self-help scams. This would be epic. I'm reaching out to some friends now who do documentaries.
Has anyone seen a good self-help scam documentary?
I'd love to see what else is out there.
Jason, you might have seen some.
What do you think?
Well, there's always Penn and Teller's Bullshit, which was a classic, and they covered
a lot of self-help in there.
So I highly recommend going back through the archives and checking those out, but, man,
it would be good to resurrect that show.
Oh, yeah.
And just do it all fresh and new.
Oh, my gosh.
That's right.
I remember that's actually where I saw Tony Robbins do the firewall.
And they were like, cool.
Are there any measurable results?
from this and these scientists and social scientists are like, this is not, this raises endorphins
and it's really interesting.
You get these experts that are like, here's what this is doing to your brain and here
are the long-term results, nothing.
Nothing.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So interesting.
Yeah, I would love to do this.
When I went to some of these self-help scammy seminar things, I would love to sort of secretly
record or secretly film or whatever and then have like Robert Chaldini or Stephen Hassan
break down the things that they're saying and say, oh, this is this kind of.
of manipulation. This is this kind of double bind. This is this kind of hypnosis trap or whatever.
This kind of, that would be so interesting because there's tons of it out there and it's really
apparent when you're there if you know what you're looking for. Most people, of course, who go
there have no idea what they're getting into, which is the whole point. Anyway, yes, I hear you on
social media. Instagram. I started that in late 2017. I was just never interested in it. I'm still
not interested in Instagram. I'm on it to interact with you guys. And I post the occasional photo.
but I can actually feel myself getting more and more down,
comparing myself more, getting more irritated whenever I use it.
It's a real drag.
I do love interacting with you guys on social media.
It's fun to share.
The feed itself, though, so toxic.
So toxic.
And I know influencers, they're on there six hours a day.
Most of them are not happy.
They're on there all the time.
The rest of their time is spent figuring out how to curate some photo of,
I'm on vacation and somewhere, look at me.
It's, oh, I got to use this filter.
Here's my girlfriend.
It's ridiculous.
These people are just trapped.
Anyway, as for the phone, I think you're on the right track.
It's hard to say you won't get a phone until she pays for her because you're going to want to reach your daughter in middle school and high school.
But you can likely restrict screen time and other things.
And you're right, though.
It's going to be the kid who goes nuts in college.
And then you go, wow, James is a party machine.
How did he grew up?
Oh, he's a Jehovah's Witness.
Oh, okay.
That explains it.
or whatever, right?
No offense,
Jehovah's Witnesses, of course.
I just mean, like,
the more structured your life is when you're younger,
those were always the guys in college
that just were bonkers.
Yeah.
They were just crazy.
And you're like, wow.
You don't want her to get a flip phone
for her daughter,
and then she turns into a stripper
because she didn't have, you know, a touchscreen.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, that's a jump, right?
But it's not, it's not ridiculous.
I remember, I remember, this is so funny, dude.
When I was dating,
I was dating a really conservative girl in college.
and she would invite me to these church things.
I never wanted to go,
but some of them you kind of have to
because it's like the Christmas party
and everyone's going
and I'm the only one who's boyfriend's not going,
so I would go.
And I remember one time
we ran into a couple there
and I was like, oh hey,
and this girl, she looks super familiar,
you know where this is going,
she looks super familiar.
And then my girlfriend was like,
oh, we've hung out with her before
and I was like, oh, okay, that must be why.
And then like two or three months later,
My buddy was turning 18.
And so we took him to deja vu and Ipsilani, which was like this trashy, you know, strip club that college kids like me at the time could afford.
And there she was on the pole on amateur night doing her worst.
And I was like, oh my gosh, this is like a Lutheran campus crusade for Christ member who is on the pole.
It's really funny because these were the people that couldn't wear two-piece bathing suits on their beach outings.
Like, this is what I'm talking.
It was just nuts.
So, anyway, I don't know why we got off in that tangent.
You don't want your kid to go nuts in college.
Your best bet, in my very non-professional opinion, is to routinely meet with your kids.
Find out what's going on with her social media, what she sees on there, what she's posting on there.
And more importantly, what she feels when she's on there, right?
How do people react to her there?
When she posed something and it doesn't get a lot of likes, how does she feel?
When she post something and people say mean stuff, how does she feel?
This is important because often I think kids and adults for that matter we don't even realize when we're getting depressed, right?
We don't even notice it happening.
The process is slow.
It's the boiling frog that overused in false metaphor.
We don't see it coming.
We wake up one day.
We feel a little more down than usual.
It spirals from there.
That's how it sometimes goes with me anyway, right?
Like, I don't know about you, Jason.
You don't need any help.
Yeah, but Instagram is really easy to, you know, you.
you go on there, oh, this happened, this other person's so much further ahead of me.
You know, that happens all the time.
And this is really bad for kids.
She might not even know why she's feeling down.
She's not going to connect it to the fact that she was on Instagram yesterday and a hundred
other kids are posting super fun vacation photos, their new toys, their new clothes,
and that she's at home raking leaves, right?
Or she's not going to connect it that she got mean comments on her photos and that's why she
suddenly wants to lose weight.
Unfortunately, I think this is something.
you have to monitor by having very open dialogue about social media, how she's reacting to it.
In fact, I think you can open this dialogue, and this is, again, I am not a counselor,
but I think you can tell her how you use social media, why you like it, and why you do not
like it. Explain what you feel when you use it. Like, I was using Instagram today, and it
made me sad, and it made me feel, I got some FOMO, if you were missing out, I didn't like
this, this made me feel like I don't have enough things. Or when it made you happy to
give a fair and balanced view of this.
This way, when she has those feelings herself,
she might be able to say,
oh, well, I was on Instagram,
and I did start feeling bad when I saw all my friends
on vacation together,
and I'm not there because I couldn't afford to go,
so I feel left out, right?
That type of trigger, that awareness of that,
that is very powerful.
And kids are smart.
They're going to get the message.
What you want to do is make sure
that she understands that feeling sad
or feeling FOMO about someone else,
that's normal.
It's not about her.
It's not about them.
then you can explain that taking a break from these things helps and can prevent us from comparing
our blooper reel to someone else's highlight reel as it were you've heard me say that on the show
before that's what we end up doing when we look at somebody's perfectly cropped photo color
filtered with a professional photographer while they're on vacation and their brand new clothes
and we're at home having just gotten back from yeah raking leaves picking up the grass trimmings
right i'm curious how this has worked for other parents because if anyone has
any really good ideas, shoot me a message about this.
I know you can't just say kids can't use social media.
That's kind of like saying you're not allowed to have a bicycle.
It just doesn't work, right?
I also recommend checking out Google's be Internet awesome.
It's like a school that they've set up for kids to learn the ins and outs of kind of how
the Internet works and like how to stay alert for sharing and how fake news works and how to be
secure and like who to talk to and talk to your parents, that kind of thing.
I highly recommend checking it out.
They've done a pretty good job with this,
and it's just for kids to learn how the internet works.
That's a good idea.
I had no idea that existed.
I think a lot of people don't get,
they don't really understand that the internet's not just the apps they use online.
And we'll link to that in the show notes as well.
We'll be back with more feedback Friday right after this.
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Now back to the show for the conclusion of Feedback Friday.
All right, next up.
Hi, all.
I have an education and work experience,
but a couple years ago I moved to another country just for fun.
Here I had to start everything from zero.
All this time, I've worked rather low-qualified jobs,
but at the same time, I've learned the local language fluently
and picked up some university courses to complement my existing education.
I'm ready to go back to better jobs, but how should I address my last five years with those simple jobs?
Should I pretend that they didn't exist and just traveled all this time?
It bothers me that someone can judge me of that, although I feel stronger and more confident than ever before.
With regards, stuck in the middle.
Wow, this is a little tricky.
I would say, don't focus on the jobs you had, but focus on the fact that you were studying another language to fluency and trying to assimilate to a culture.
You can say you were looking to challenge yourself, use another skill, learn another skill to fluency.
Obviously, of course, you've got to mention the jobs you had, but explain that you were focused on learning the language to a professional fluency, which is why you made those sacrifices.
So bear in mind, you're still going to have to start at entry level in a career, but you can likely move up quickly if you work your butt off and make sure you leverage your skills.
you're going to have to drop any ego or sense of entitlement that comes with age and experience
because it's a little humbling to have five years or whatever of experience and then have to
start over.
I know that.
I get it.
Bear in mind, that's not the end of the world.
You're going to have to work your butt off at that entry level.
You're going to have to make sure you leverage your skills.
I think this type of thing would look great to any employer, especially an employer who needs
to leverage your language skills because that's going to be the big.
skill stack that you've got oh i speak fluent check well okay or i speak fluent whatever it is hopefully you
didn't just learn something where there's a bigillion bilingual people that have the same language
if you did not the end of the world but yeah hopefully it wasn't like spanish or something
hopefully you learn something niche enough that's going to be really useful and if it were you know
what that's fine try to get a job maybe in that the united states with a company that does a lot of
business with them and then maybe they'll send you back there
Again, don't focus on what you lack.
Focus on what you've gained from that experience.
It's a lot more forgivable to say,
oh, you were just doing bookkeeping,
even though you want to do full-blown accounting for our company?
Why are you doing bookkeeping?
Well, I was working in Mandarin, Chinese.
Oh, well, all right, that makes sense.
And now I speak fluent Chinese,
and I'm fluent in the business environment of southeastern China,
and now I want to work in an American company
that does a lot of business with that region.
That's much more compelling than, yeah, I just wanted to travel and work, and now I'm ready to face reality.
That's not a good sales pitch.
Let me know how this goes.
I know this is a tricky situation, but I think knowing that you'd spent your time doing something very productive that whole time is going to aid you in this process.
All right, what's next?
Hey, Jordan.
I'm 24 years old, and up until last year, I'd always been an enthusiastic, motivated, hardworking overachiever who enjoyed going above and beyond in school.
at work, and in my relationships. I worked hard in school to get good grades, graduated as the
salutatorian of my high school class, went to college on a full ride, landed my dream internship,
which eventually segued into my dream job. Over a year ago, things in the company turned south,
and I was placed on a team with poor culture in a manager who manipulated and micromanaged us.
Eventually, I lost my motivation and noticed myself backing off and falling into the trap of just doing good
enough. I turned bitter and became someone who lacked motivation and enthusiasm and started receiving
feedback about having a poor attitude. It finally became too much and two weeks ago I put in my notice.
I don't have another job lined up. I'm living in my parents' basement, literally, and my depression
that I was diagnosed with six years ago has gotten much worse. I've lost my motivation, confidence,
and self-esteem. All my dreams of landing my next job in my dream city have died after being rejected
from hundreds of job applications.
I don't know what I want anymore with my career and life in general.
My question for you is,
how do I give myself the huge kick in the ass, tough love,
stop feeling sorry for yourself,
hardcore talk that I need?
All my friends and family are congratulating me
on getting out of that bad environment,
but no one seems to be questioning my obvious self-destructive behavior.
I'm worried that I'm just feeling sorry for myself
and am too weak-willed to pull myself out of this.
How do I get the wake-up call I know I need
when being motivated has never been an issue until now.
Sincerely, needs her ass kicked.
P.S., I have been working with a therapist
to address the obvious mental health issues.
So sorry to hear about this.
For what it's worth, you did the right thing
leaving a bad situation,
even if you didn't have another job lined up.
Of course, ideally, you have a job
before you leave the previous one,
but if you're dealing with mental health issues,
you have to change your environment no matter what,
and you did that, which was brave of you.
Your friends are right to commend you for leaving a bad environment.
You're asking for a tough love kick in the butt.
I don't think you need that.
I think a lot of people who are depressed, they feel like, oh, all I need is some motivation
or some tough love or a kick in the butt.
That's not it.
You're not a lazy teenager who's not driven because you're having fun sitting at home playing
Xbox.
You've got an actual mental illness in depression that needs to get handled.
Now, I know it's tough, but what you don't want to do is put yourself in a situation
where you beat yourself up about your depression because you think it can be fixed with a kick in the pants or some get up and go.
That's not fair to you to do that.
And it's going to result in a loop of disappointment as those things fail you and you wake up every morning with the same malaise that was there before.
It almost sounds like you want your friends and me for that matter to punish you or get on your case.
And that's not going to help you.
I'm really glad to hear that you're in therapy as well.
That's crucial, of course.
always have a professional on your side.
Now, get back into exercise.
I think that's going to be hugely helpful.
This is going to help with endorphins.
It's going to help you get some wins under your belt if you haven't gotten in shape already.
There's nothing that gets momentum going like starting the day off with a good workout, right?
If you feel kind of crummy, you're going to go, yeah, but I already hit the gym, I had a protein shake.
I weighed myself.
I'm feeling good, looking good.
Small winds build momentum.
It'll let you feel your oats a little, right?
get that swag back. Also, I would volunteer somewhere. It's a lot easier to get a gig volunteering
that it is to get a job. And it gives you a reason to get out of bed. It adds purpose to your life.
And it helps you put your own situation into context. It's kind of, it's a little harder to feel bad.
Look, depression's depression, but it's harder to feel bad about yourself if you're routinely
tutoring homeless children who have left their house because their dad or mom is abusive or their
grandpa, whatever, is abusive and now they don't have a place to live. Right? It's a
lot harder to feel sorry for yourself in those situations. Again, depression is depression. It's not
going to necessarily cure the underlying thing, but it's going to give you a lot of perspective.
And further, then you'll be able to say you took time off to work with a nonprofit, which
certainly sounds better than I live in my parents' basement because I hated my job and I had to
quit. So there's not an overnight fix to this. There's no motivational speech. There's no
Instagram or YouTube video that you can watch to transform your mindset. I know that that's
blasphemy right now influencers everywhere are gasping and clutching their pearls on instagram tv
oh a two million instagram images just uh wept over and cried that's right that's right i know
instagram story is the world over just made sad emoji faces spontaneously explode the magic pill
to pull ourselves out of a funk doesn't exist it's all step by step it's all brick by brick and
you can do it you've got your family you got your friends you've got to get your endorphins and
your body on your side now by getting in shape or at least starting that process. And once you do
that and you're getting out of the house every day to help others and get to the gym, you're going to be
more than ready and able to help yourself get back on your feet and get your groove back. And you're
going to have a little bit of an excuse as to why you took a break because you were working with
that nonprofit and getting things back in order. And you didn't, you know, and you had that problem
with your old job and you had to quit, but you quit to go work at the nonprofit, not you watched a lot of
reruns of sex in the city. Keep in touch and let me know how this goes. All right, Jason, what else we
got? Hello to the three Js. Listening from the UK and Love the Show. I started blogging back in
2006 and built up a relatively successful blog. I've always hated my previous office-based jobs
and knew that I wanted to have my own business eventually. After a few years of accepting sponsored
links and posts, I ended up stumbling into owning my own link placement agency. This is now what I do
full-time and I earn more than I've ever done previously in the jobs I hated. I know I'm very much
in a gray area here as Google more than frown upon this practice. I'm enjoying the freedom of choosing
my own hours, working from home, and having time to spend with my family, but I'm worried
about the rug being pulled out from under my feet. Ideally, I'd like this to be a stepping
stone towards another online business, but running an agency demands my attention and time, so
starting a new business hasn't been as easy as I would have hoped. If you guys have any advice for me, I
would very much appreciate it.
Regards, stuck, enjoying objectionable practices.
Oof, yeah.
All businesses have this sort of expiration date on them.
The problem is, when your business relies 100% exclusively on a loophole in someone else's
business, that is a problem, especially if that business strives to close those loopholes
by hiring some of the most brilliant people they can find everywhere in the world, you know, Google.
So, yeah, your days are numbered in this space.
I'm surprised this even still exists.
I know that back in our old company,
we had all this black hat link placement crap,
and then a few years later,
what was it like the Pandora update or something, Jason?
Oh, the Panda, Panda Update.
We had to go and disavow all like 50,000 links.
And you know what's funny?
The old business, I looked at this,
the old business still does that,
because I get reports for their links,
and they have, like, my SEO team's,
like yeah they got a thousand new links this month 900 of them were from like mail order bride
and adult websites and i'm just thinking like who is doing this who is who did you hire you knuckleheads
so yeah your days are numbered in this space this is an important realization you've got to take
some action and get another revenue stream going here you either you can either motivate yourself
by fear or by the upside of doing something that you really enjoy i suggest doing both of these
types of motivation, right? The carrot and the stick. Literally visualize. Sit down, set some time
aside, whatever. How are you going to feel if you wake up one day and Google has another algorithm
change and your business is completely torpedoed? This is going to wipe out your business. Now you're
starting from zero with no warning. Trust me, you don't want that. Been there, done that. No thanks.
Alternatively, if you even spend one day a week, half a day a week working on a new business or a new venture,
Then by the time the algorithm change happens, if you've got, let's say, a couple months or a couple years, you might actually be relieved that you're free from the other business entirely.
That's kind of how this worked out, right?
When I got canned from the last company, I was like panic, well, my gosh.
And then everyone was like, this is going to be the best thing that ever happened to you because you already have all these other resources.
You have all this brand equity, all this stuff.
You've got to build that.
You got to dig that well, man.
You got to build that.
When I left the old company, I was terrified.
What I realized, though, was I'd been building relationships, I'd been building a personal brand,
I'd been building trust with a huge audience over a period of over a decade.
This is why the Jordan Harbinger Show and the team here, this is why we were able to start over again and rebuild so quickly.
We had a great team.
We had all these relationships.
We had all this brand equity.
That momentum was what carried everyone through.
If we didn't have any momentum and we ran into the same issues, we would all have been in serious, serious trouble.
Even right now with a new baby, ugh, not a good.
place to be what a nightmare and i know that you're busy but i think allocating time to work on something
new before you need to jump into a new industry is the corporate version the career version of digging
the well before you're thirsty you need to do this before you wake up one day having buried your
head in the sand on this you already know this is going to happen so instead of being surprised you
should be ready and so you want to you don't want to wake up one day and instead of being relieved you
end up taking a shovel to the face.
And if that's not motivation of whichever kind you choose, I don't know what is.
And that said, look at this like an opportunity to do something you've always wanted to do business-wise
while you're in the safe embrace and income stream of your current business.
This time right now, this is priceless.
It's like this is, when I worked on Wall Street and I started the last business, I was getting
that lawyer money, but I was also running a startup.
So I was making tons of money, never going to be hungry, able to bank.
a ton of cash, able to live the way I wanted to in Manhattan, and then I would come back and
work on the business from like 7 p.m. to 11 or 2 a.m. or whatever it was. And those are glorious
times. By the time I left Wall Street because of impending layoffs at downmarket, we had a ton of
momentum on the other business. And it wasn't like, oh my God, what are we going to do? It was like,
great. I'm all in, baby. That was a great place to be. You've got this. You've got to do it,
though. You've got to take action now and not wait. Last but not least.
Dear Triple J, I've been listening to your show for several months now.
During this time, I've been battling depression after a tragic event,
but I'm doing so much better through the help of counseling
and going to my doctors for antidepressants,
something that you guys gave me the bravery to do.
I also pursued a career in real estate,
only to realize that although I achieved what I set out to do,
it didn't bring me satisfaction when I got there.
Something that you also helped me with,
coming to terms with the fact that I didn't fail.
I also still use my entrepreneurial skills in other areas,
which helped me to finally find a new career that I really feel blessed to be in
and that challenges me to better myself in a healthy way.
All this time, your show has inspired me, encouraged me, educated me, and entertained me,
so thank you.
I would really love to start my own podcast and YouTube channel.
I have a great topic, lots of ideas, and contacts for people I could have on the show.
Should I focus on both a podcast and YouTube, or should I just focus on one?
I don't have any experience in either medium, however.
I'm feeling fairly knowledgeable based on the great example your show brings to your audience.
I really want to get off to a strong start.
I've already got a pile of books that I've acquired over the past few months to help with topics for the show, et cetera.
And I have a possible co-host in mind to help me get this launched if I needed it.
Any suggestions would be most appreciated.
Best wishes, pursuing victory through love.
There are a lot of things to consider with this.
What's the point of the channel?
What's the point of the content?
If you're trying to have conversations with somebody, like an interview form,
type deal or an individual conversation, let's say,
with the consumer of the content, I would say podcast.
Is it a long format?
Podcast.
Are you trying to be instructional on a very specific topic?
YouTube.
Is it going to be a highly searchable instructional topic?
YouTube.
Right?
If you're teaching people plumbing stuff, how to install a shower head,
YouTube, is there a video element that's absolutely required,
like gardening or something?
YouTube, right?
Or at least, you know, installing a shower head is very
installing a shower head is pretty clear because I had to look at that myself. That's YouTube.
But if you're just trying to have good conversations with people, start with a podcast,
there's another consideration here, another set of considerations.
Video is not twice as hard to produce. It's 10 times as hard to produce, and it's 10 times as
expensive. Maybe 8. What do you think, Jason?
8.67. 8.67. It's an order of magnitude, more expensive and difficult.
You can and you probably should start with a podcast.
You can film yourself recording the podcast with guests.
You can get some GoPro cameras, see if you enjoy it, get the hang of the tech.
You can always use squadcast.fm.
Full disclosure, I advise this company.
They got the best gear in the biz.
Squadcast.com to record with guests remotely, but you can't do YouTube remotely
because the other person at best is going to have a crappy webcam, which is not going to be lit well.
Podcasting is a great dry run for YouTube.
You're able to edit it so much more easily.
You can record anywhere.
You can get equipment at a steal from a podcaster that's already quit, right?
There's a lot of those.
I got half a studio full of that.
eBay has to have so many Zoom recorders.
It's got to just be absolutely bananas.
Oh, it's ridiculous.
Yeah, you can get stuff for so cheap.
If you search for podcasting kit on any used gear thing, oh my gosh, it's probably like, yeah,
made it to episode nine.
We're out.
So you can get the equipment at a steel.
YouTube requires cameras, lighting.
and by the way, you can't just buy the cameras in the lighting.
You've got to know how to use that stuff, and it's pretty complex.
I mean, it's not complex.
It's just there's a stronger learning curve there.
With microphones, there's a learning curve, but I'm telling you, you'll get the hang of it.
I'll hell of a lot quicker than you will with lighting different scenarios
and setting up cameras and angles and cuts and everything.
If you're going to compete with pros on YouTube, you're going to have to get good at it.
Competing with a podcast is a lot easier.
Some of the biggest podcasts, they're a dude with a cheap mic and a Zoom recorder.
It's embarrassed, right?
But it still sounds good enough.
People listen to it all the time.
To be honest, it's because Tim has a fine team behind him with thousands of dollars of software.
But you can still start with a cheap microphone and a Zoom recorder.
Right.
He does have a production team behind him.
But look at, I mean, Sam Harris also has a production team, but he's just doing Skype and phoneers a lot of the time.
So you will still need somebody who knows what they're doing at some point in the workflow,
but you don't need to get a $4,000 microphone and a professional studio and all that stuff.
Right.
So the key is to get started creating and see if this is even for you.
And then you can take it up a notch and film it.
Once you get creating, you get the hang of it, then add in more technically challenging elements.
A lot of people go, I'm going to start a YouTube thing.
I remember some old buddies of mine and Jason, you'll know who I'm talking about.
They were like, we're going to get famous on YouTube.
They made like 10 videos that sucked.
They got like 87 views and they gave up.
They spent so much money producing those videos.
Oh, I know exactly who you're talking about.
Yeah, of course you do.
They spend thousands, if not tens of thousands of dollars producing these videos.
If they knew that they were going to be too lazy to create that, they could have started
with a podcast.
They already had the gear for that, and they could have just kept going on that.
The last thing you want to do is have the challenge of hosting and creating content while
you're also dealing with lots of new tech hurdles.
Recording voices is just, again, an order of magnitude more simple than figuring out the cameras,
the angle, the setup, the lighting, the...
editing, the cutting, even transferring the data files is faster.
You're going to end up with like a 40 megabyte MP3 file you can upload to somebody on Fiverr,
or you're going to end up with five gigs of freaking video that's going to take you three
days to upload to an editor who then screws it up, right?
So take it one step at a time.
Take it one step at a time.
I suggest starting with audio before you add in any more tech.
Well, that's it for this week.
By the way, I want to know what the most interesting experience is that you ever had.
Is it a safari?
Did you do a helicopter tour of a waterfall in Venezuela?
I'd love to know I'm making, I know this sounds so cliche, but I'm looking at bucket list
type stuff.
I'm not making one for myself, but I love some of these experiences.
People have been sending me spontaneously, and they're just so interesting.
And I go, oh, wow, helping a village in the middle of the jungle, dig a well, actually
looks much more interesting than a week at the beach.
And the books on this, they're all lame.
Oh, 100 things to do before you croak or whatever it is.
And I'm not taking a shot at that particular book.
I don't even think I've looked at it.
But a lot of these books, they're just trying to fill 200 pages.
So they put in like, you got to stay at this snorkeling resort.
It's like, that's not what I'm talking about.
All right, I want to hear what you think is amazing and why you think it's amazing.
Jordan at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Life pro tip of the week, by the way.
If you have to cancel plans with somebody, immediately on that same text or call,
ask them when they're free again in the future and make replacement plans.
I notice that when people cancel and they don't make replacement plans, I feel blown off.
But when people make replacement plans, then it makes me to go like, oh, this is a legit cancellation.
Right?
You appear, by the way, and you appear less flaky.
If you cancel and it's, I don't know, some other time, I just go, ah, you're a flake, you're
disorganized.
If you reschedule, you look like you at least are a functioning human being that I should
stay friends with. So make sure you create those replacement plans right away. Recommendation of the
week, we mentioned it earlier, betting on zero, dives into the complex world of herbal life,
which is an international nutritional products company accused of being a pyramid scheme,
and it's definitely multi-level marketing. I mean, I think even they admit that. That's on Netflix,
and we'll link to it in the show notes. It is so good. My roommate and I were watching it this weekend.
Love it. Oh, really? You just coincidentally, we're watching it this weekend. That's pretty funny.
Well, no, I saw that you had it in the show notes, and I wanted to check it out. And as soon as I saw it was about herbal life, I'm like, I'm in.
Trust me, I hate these guys as much as you do. So anything I can do to just make me happy that people are going after, I'm all in.
Yeah, I would love to see all of these get outlawed, but the lobby is way too strong.
And, you know, it's a bummer, but I also get that the government can't protect stupid people from everything.
But here's the problem.
It's not just stupid people that get roped into this.
It sounds very convincing unless you sit down and you do the – you won't find legit business people doing it because they just run the numbers and they go, no.
Yeah.
Right?
You just won't.
What you do is you find people who want to start a business.
And they're like, I'm going to be an entrepreneur, hashtag boss babe.
And then they go, wait a minute, this math isn't working.
And then they find out their friend who roped them in.
They're kind of exaggerating a little bit on how much money they made.
A little bit.
And where the money came from.
Yeah.
Anyway, I don't go down that road again.
Hope you all enjoyed this week's episode.
I want to thank everyone that wrote in this week.
A link to the show notes for the episode can be found at Jordan Harbinger.com.
And a quick shout out to Fabio, who spotted me parking my car before a show in San Francisco the other day.
And I got out and I went, hey, can I park here?
And he said, I don't know, I'm waiting for a job interview.
And by the way, are you Jordan Harbinger?
So I hope you got that job, man.
And I got to say, again, nothing makes me feel more cool than being spotted in the wild.
So a couple of people send me messages like, oh, were you at this restaurant?
I didn't want to bother you.
No, please bother me.
Please bother me.
I will go to bed with a smile on my face if someone goes, hey, are you that guy from that thing?
Yes, that is me, maybe, hopefully, hopefully.
And you're not just confusing me with somebody else who's actually a well-known person or some Instagram.
Don't do that.
I will go to bed crying myself to sleep.
If you're like, aren't you that guy that does those videos online about motivation?
No.
And if you want to have some fun with Jordan, make sure when you see him and you go up to him, it's like, hey, aren't you producer Jason?
Yeah, yes, exactly.
Works every time.
Go back and check out the guest this week, Seth Godin and David Roski.
if you haven't yet.
And if you want to know how we manage to book all these great folks, manage our relationships,
manage that network.
I've got systems.
I've got tiny habits.
I'm teaching you to them for free.
In our course, six-minute networking, Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
That course replaces any other course you have seen from us.
And the problem with people doing it later, you've got to dig that well before you're thirsty.
You can't leverage relationships when you need them.
And I see people making this mistake all the time.
I'll do it later.
I'll do it later.
And then, whoops, you need them, and it's too late.
These drills take a few minutes per day.
You can ignore this at your own peril.
I wish I knew this stuff 20 years ago.
This has just been crucial in my life.
Jordan Harbinger.com slash course.
I'm on Instagram and Twitter at Jordan Harbinger.
It's a great way to engage with the show.
And videos of our interviews are at Jordan Harbinger.com slash YouTube.
Jason?
I'm on Instagram at JPD.
I'm on Twitter at J.P. DeF.
And you can also check out my other podcast,
which is a tech-related show called Grumpy Old Geeks.
This show is produced in association with podcast.
This episode was co-produced by Jen Harbinger.
Show notes for the episode are by Robert Fogarty, and music is by Evan Viola.
Keep sending in those questions to Friday at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Oh, and our advice and opinions, and those of our guests, those are their own opinions, and our
own opinions.
And yes, I'm a lawyer, but I'm not your lawyer.
So do your own research before you implement anything that you hear on the show.
And remember, we rise by lifting others.
So share the show with those you love, and especially, probably also with those you don't.
We've got a lot more in the pipeline.
I'm very excited for some of these upcoming shows.
Special on Cults next week.
Tune in for that.
In the meantime, do your best to apply what you hear on the show so you can live what you listen.
And we'll see you next time.
This episode is sponsored in part by Something You Should Know podcast.
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Recently, they've covered things like why we care so much what other people think,
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