The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - #43: Co-Host Interview Part 1: Michael Bosstick

Episode Date: December 27, 2016

The questions are aimed directly at Michael, as Lauryn hits her co-host extraordinaire with some loaded topics. Michael shares his journey, going from working odd-jobs to turning a little side project... called "JetBed," into a flourishing company. Michael also passes on some words of wisdom to young entrepreneurs and shares some tips for couples that work together. To Learn More about JetBed, Inc. click HERE To connect with Lauryn click HERE To connect with Michael click HERE This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential Bombshell Body Guide and Meal plan.  tired of combating inflammation & bloat? Want to feel lighter and sexier? Check out lauryn’s latest 7 day meal plan. In this simple & super effective plan you’ll find: + tsc grocery list with every ingredient you need for the 7 days. + what the f*ck to do when you love carbs guide. + quick and delicious recipes: breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner and dessert. You will also find 28 weeks worth of fat burning, muscle toning, 27 minute long, effective workouts you can do at home with no equipment. USE PROMO CODE: HIMANDHER at Checkout for 20% Off

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This episode is brought to you by Blue Apron. So if you guys read the Skinny Confidential, you know I love, love, love Blue Apron. I just feel like it's quick, it's efficient, the box arrives to your door, it's kind of like a present. You open it up, all the ingredients are measured out for you perfectly, and it's fresh. Also, the beef, the chicken, the pork come from responsibly raised animals. It's just very on brand, you know. What I like is every ingredient is just completely measured out for each recipe. So they're reducing food waste, which is amazing. Plus you don't have to go to like the grocery
Starting point is 00:00:35 store and buy, you know, chili flakes when you can just get them perfectly measured for your recipe. Michael and I love to cook together. It's kind of like an event. He thinks he does everything when I actually do everything, but Blue Apron kind of makes you feel like you're both doing something. So we've been cooking together and I feel like it's building that strong bond. Their upcoming meals are the spicy shrimp and Korean rice cakes with cabbage. They've got pork chops and garlic with scallion rice and spinach. And then my personal favorite, the mushroom and chipotle pepper enchiladas with lime sour cream. Oh, so good. So not all ingredients are created equal. Fresh, high quality ingredients make a real difference.
Starting point is 00:01:19 So it's important to know where your food comes from. It's affordable. It's got a lot of variety, a lot of flexibility. It's easy. I love everything easy. And it's guaranteed. They promise that every ingredient in your delivery arrives ready to cook or they'll make it right. So check out this week's menu and get your first three meals free. Three meals, guys, with free shipping by going to blueapron.com slash him and her. You'll love how good it feels and tastes to create incredible home-cooked meals with Blue Apron, so don't wait. That is blueapron.com slash him and her. Happy cooking.
Starting point is 00:01:57 The following program is a PodcastOne.com presentation. She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire. Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur. A very smart cookie. And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride. Get ready for some major realness. Welcome to the skinny confidential, him and her. You wanted your turkey ham sandwich, didn't you? Hi guys, we're back. The holiday madness is over. We still have New Year's Eve, but we're through the gnarliest part.
Starting point is 00:02:32 We're done. We're finished. Yep. We made it through the holidays. And our wedding. And our wedding party. Nope. Done with the wedding. Not even bringing that up anymore.
Starting point is 00:02:40 Yeah, we're ready to kick it into gear in 2017. Our dogs are over us wouldn't you say yeah we've been running around too much we need to i need to be locked down stay in the house yeah not go anywhere stay in the office in the house i'm not going anywhere yeah so we are ready to kind of just put our heads down and fucking kick ass in 2017. It's time for me to get back on the skinny, confidential, bombshell body meal plan and in the gym. So. I have a big, fat Christmas gut. I know you were pinching it in the cab last night. Well, I was like, what the hell is this?
Starting point is 00:03:15 I've never seen it before. You literally were pinching your gut in the cab last night. Well, I couldn't figure out what the hell it was. I could. I have like a spare tire. Jameson, little little turkey little stuffing little honey ham tequila yeah a little honey ham i'm like a fat baked ham right now all right for those of you who don't know me i'm lauren everett's the creator of the skinny confidential which is the
Starting point is 00:03:36 blog and brand and we have michael bostick my lovely husband. Entrepreneur, investor, internet marketer, husband of the year. What's debatable? Well, so today we're going to do something kind of different. It was my idea. I'm going to take credit for it. I'm going to interview Michael. And then on the next podcast, he's going to interview me. And what we're going to do is we're going to take the questions that you guys have sent us and kind of interview each other so it's not really my questions or his questions it's questions that you guys have sent in via ask what is it podcast at the skinny confidential.com yep or the hashtags yeah so we just we've compiled all these questions and he doesn't know the questions i'm going to ask him i'm not going to get too raunchy today. I'll keep it business-like, but we'll do another one where I get kind of spicy, but this one's more like
Starting point is 00:04:30 business and branding focused. I haven't had any breakfast or coffee, so hopefully I can... Well, you need some cold brew. I have some right here. Hopefully I can knock these out of the park. Yeah. You should have some coffee, honestly. I work well under pressure. Let's go. All right. So we're going to get right into it? We can. Oh, we can also talk a little bit uh last week's episode with taylor got a lot of traction that was kind of probably our wildest episode i mean i loved it a little bit out there i'd like him to come back on and talk about how he was peacocking across the internet he literally made
Starting point is 00:05:02 a graphic off of some app last night and i'm gonna have michael read the graphic out loud i don't know like it's not photoshop i don't know where he like wrote happy holidays from the bare naked cucumber against kermit the frog which just makes no sense whatsoever poor taylor he probably had a couple too many christmas cocktails and was looking for some attention i don't think it's poor Taylor. I think he likes it. And then he posted another picture of a guy in a Star Wars Snuggie and said that that was his holiday. So he's, he's loving the attention. I'm looking at it right now. There's only one comment. It's from you. It says, Hmm, he did change his bio details too. And he doesn't have the four person collage. He actually has a photo booth pick cause he loved himself so much in that photo booth.
Starting point is 00:05:47 But yeah, so if you guys want to have Taylor back on for like a round two and you guys maybe can call in and ask him questions, I feel like he would love that. Don't you think we should call him? He's on a break. Why? Well, when we go back in the studio, we can do call-ins.
Starting point is 00:06:02 I feel like there was even more to the wedding that we didn't get every nook and cranny. No, I think we got enough. When you're on the strip pole butt naked, I think that's where we toe the line. He was on the strip pole butt naked, spinning around to dry the piss off himself because he pissed himself before going in. And if you guys have not listened to that episode, for sure go back and listen. What episode was it? 42? It's the one right before this, 42.
Starting point is 00:06:24 Okay, definitely listen to that one because it's gnarly. Don't listen with kids in the car and don't listen at work, but other than that, you're good. All right, let's get right into the questions. Are you excited? I'm in the hot seat.
Starting point is 00:06:35 You're in the hot seat. Okay, so these are questions, again, that you guys kind of have asked us and I just put them together. I threw one question in here for good measure that I wrote. Okay. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:06:52 So a lot of people are wondering what you do and I feel like you, you give kind of bits and pieces, but no one really gets the whole thing. So kind of tell your story and tell us exactly what you do on a day-to-day basis. Okay. So my family started in real estate. My dad was a developer for a long time. My uncle is a general contractor. And so I grew up on construction sites, working in and out on residential properties, on commercial properties my whole life. And when I went to school, I studied that. And that's what I thought I was going to be doing. And as you know, when I lived in Tucson, shout out to my Wildcats. You were a Wildcat in Tucson, weren't you?
Starting point is 00:07:25 I sure was. The first project I ever did, I got a loan to do a small remodel on a residential home. And, you know, I had odd jobs before that. In high school, I worked at McDonald's. I worked as a landscaper, car wash. Did all the little, like, odd job things. Lemonade stands. Maybe not lemonade stands in high school, but... I feel like you didn't do a lemonade stand.
Starting point is 00:07:46 All the little, no, I did all the little odd jobs to make whatever money. But then, um, so finally when I got to school almost, I think end of my junior year, beginning of senior year, I did a residential remodel. In college, not high school. In college. Yeah. In Tucson. You, you actually visited that house once.
Starting point is 00:08:03 And I was turned off immediately. I really, you know, got a lot of experience from managing a construction site, learning how to manage people, really learned that doing a real estate project in 2008 was probably not the best idea. Got my ass kicked. So you learned a lot. So I learned a lot. You learn quickly too. One thing about Michael is when he learned something, he learns the lesson quickly and swiftly, which I love because the only lesson you haven't learned though is the toilet seat. We're still working on that. I'm working on it. You got to put it down.
Starting point is 00:08:33 No, so I learned quickly, obviously, as you know, got my ass kicked there, but I still had not gotten the taste of real estate out of my mouth. So I came back to San Diego, a beaten, broken person because I just got my ass kicked. But you had me, this is when we started dating. So you were excited about that. Yeah. But at the time we weren't working together. So I was still, you know, thinking about what, what am I doing? So I came back and I started actually working on a commercial property here in San Diego in Escondido for a medical building that's still there. And it was a 12,000 square foot medical building. We developed that out. The partner was a tenant. And I just really realized during that time with all the regulations here in
Starting point is 00:09:17 California and all the back and forth and the pains of the ass that I really did not like real estate. And at the time, me and my dad had an idea for a side business, which is now one of our main businesses called Jetbed. And we started developing. Okay. What is Jetbed though? Because a lot of people, you say that like everyone knows what that is, but it's such a niche market. Everybody doesn't know what it is. I'm just kidding. Tell us exactly what it is. Okay. so we make beds for corporate and private aircraft. And we've made beds for some of the largest corporations in the world. We have a patent on it. I'm going to brag for a second about you.
Starting point is 00:09:52 He makes jet beds for Oprah. He makes jet beds for Taylor Swift. Who else do you make jet beds for? I don't like to say the clients, but we've done, you know... You're so shy. We've done some of the biggest. We've done Exxon, Coca-Cola, Chevron, but these beds are not beds that you can use in commercial aircraft.
Starting point is 00:10:10 It's just private. It's yeah. I say private and commercial, meaning a lot of these big corporations, they have their own aircraft, right? So a lot of these executives need to be in places, uh, randomly all the time. And sometimes flying private for some of these big companies is much faster so yeah we've done for the US government we've done for big corporations celebrities the company's been around for about 10 years now but the funny thing is we started it as a side project and as you know it was
Starting point is 00:10:38 a niche business you know it's it doesn't serve a lot of people you had me be the model I had Lauren be the model if you actually we need to redo the video no we're not gonna have people go look at that this was like eight years ago when we first started dating and he had me laying on a jet bed with my eyes closed pretending to be asleep yes so we so we developed the product my dad and i we manufacture it in corona california so it's all american made and we still run that business today it's a well oiled machine you've gotten it in systems everywhere i've noticed that yeah it's approaching 10 years so we've learned a lot along the way i mean do you know it's funny though a lot of people and that's why i say patience when we first started
Starting point is 00:11:15 this business if i would have known what it took to get it to where it is now i don't think we would have ever started so i think starting it and just keeping our head down and and kind of grunting through the heart so it took us we did more business the beginning of the first quarter of our fourth year than we did the whole first three years combined so but like explain that in normal terms meaning we made more money in the beginning of our first quarter of the fourth year of the business than we did for the first three years meaning we didn't do shit for the first three years you would call me like when we first started dating and you would be so excited because you sold one jet bed and it was like i think you sold like one in a month i would be like jumping up and down and high-fiving anyone around me if if we did that
Starting point is 00:11:58 we didn't know anything about the market we like i said we went into it as a side project and it's dad your dad flies though my dad flew for a long time you want to get your pilot's license eventually yeah i do i i you know i can i've done a lot of the courses and stuff and i've done a lot of less i can actually take off and land a plane and do all the radio signs and all that stuff but you flew me before yeah did you know that i just i'm not licensed so well let's not tell but if shit hits the fan and we're up in the air i could get us down. Really?
Starting point is 00:12:26 Yeah, absolutely. That's hot. I'm turned on. Yep. Okay, so go on. Okay, so we did Jetbed and we still do Jetbed and that's one of our businesses. And then from there, while I was doing that, I wanted to go off and do another project. And I started learning how to market on the internet, on Facebook and Google.
Starting point is 00:12:43 Back up. Yep. You need to tell the Morton state and how that started too. That's going to be confidential. Like how this like, it was like intertwined in this. Well, I will, I'll get to that. So I started learning how to market different products and services on the internet for different companies and different brands and different people.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And I still do that today. And I started having a lot of success with that. And I learned a lot about internet traffic and sales and sales funnels and product marketing and branding and just working with other people and other brands. And then obviously working with you. But just so you guys know, when he started getting into the internet and branding and marketing and sales, I started to see you really thrive because I feel like that's really where you belong. You get off on it. Well, I like sales, right? So this is obviously a new thing to me being more in the public eye, thanks to you and calling me Susan and putting me on your Snapchat every second. So I'm more,
Starting point is 00:13:40 surprisingly, surprisingly, I'm more of a behind the scenes guy. No, I feel like you could go either way. Let's be honest. You're like a Gemini, but you're not. I could go either way, but I didn't know that. But typically until maybe this year, I was always a behind the scenes guy helping other people sell their products, helping other people push their brands, you know, marketing behind the scenes. A lot of the stuff that I've done, it doesn't even have my name on it or my stamp on it, which is fine. It was for other businesses that I was paid for. And so, you know, we obviously, we had the conversation at Morton's Steakhouse where you were talking
Starting point is 00:14:09 for the last like six months, about a year, a year for about, yeah, about this blog that you wanted to do. And I didn't want to execute it because we'll get into that, but I just was too much of a perfectionist. Yeah. And so we were going on and on, and I basically told you to... Pull the fucking trigger. Pull the trigger, obviously. So, good thing I did that, because you probably wouldn't have a blog without me. Oh, my God, are you kidding?
Starting point is 00:14:34 Play your violin, please. I'm just kidding. Okay, so, just to let you guys know, Michael was not involved in my blog for, like, two years. Like, you, like, we would talk about it. I was more of an advisor. Yeah, he would, like, but again... Actually, you you know what i don't like to call myself an advisor too because that that sounds weird like i'm like we're we're equal so i would just consult with you and give
Starting point is 00:14:53 you i would talk out ideas yeah but i wasn't what's funny is that i wasn't looking for sales and i'm that's not really my main um focus is sales me. I'm more of a creator and a content creator. So Michael brings a kind of a different perspective to what I do, but go ahead. So my biggest thing is after taking as long as we did with jet bed and seeing how long it took to get the business off the ground and same with marketing and learning all that stuff and figuring out all that. I was completely fine with the approach you took. Not that it was my choice, but I was, I was completely fine with the approach you took, not that it was my choice, but I was, I was fully supportive of the approach you took of,
Starting point is 00:15:29 of just creating great content and not trying to monetize anything, not serving ads, not doing the other side of kind of like what I do, because I believe that if you provide value to people, whether it's a valuable product or valuable service or valuable content, that eventually, in some way, shape, or form, it becomes valuable and it becomes monetizable. And I think that's what's happened. So I don't think I would have – if I hadn't done the JEPIT and I hadn't taken all the time to learn what I did with marketing and everything, I probably would have told you how are you going to make money with this. But since I had that patience at the time, I was completely fine with the approach you took. And I think now it's paying off.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Patience is so underrated. It's so underrated. Patience to me is like, everyone's like, when did you have an epiphany? There's no epiphany. You just work every day and you chip away. And every day I try to lay my head down on the pillow and think, what did I do to build towards my goal today? And I always will think of one thing I did, even if it's the smallest thing ever. Maybe it's a logo design, something so small that I've done
Starting point is 00:16:37 to build towards the bigger goal. And I think that you're a great example of that with Jetbed. Well, yeah, with that, and trust me, it's taken me a long time to... I still think I need to work on it every day. The internet's a very fast-paced place. You see things and you see what other people are doing, and obviously that's very... It entices you to try to do the same thing. But like I say on former podcasts,
Starting point is 00:17:01 I try not to pay attention to what other people are doing and just stay in my own lane and focus on what I'm doing. And patience is definitely a daily practice and it's a mindset that I'm starting to become a lot more comfortable with. What I would say is you don't... Patience is learned too. I feel like I've watched you learn patience. Yeah, patience is learned through getting your ass kicked when you're not patient. And just so everyone out there knows, Michael and I have gotten our ass kicked and we'll do a whole podcast called how we got our ass kicked multiple times, whether it's with family or work, we've both gotten our ass kicked and we're going to continue
Starting point is 00:17:36 to get our ass kicked. That's just the nature of the game. Oh, absolutely. I would say, you know, also moving, segwaying on what I do now is I still, um, obviously run jet bed and I have my media business. You've gotten more involved with the skinny confidential because we're podcasting now. I've gotten involved with the skinny confidential and then I am an investor in probably 10 to 15 different businesses right now. One of them I just launched a kickstarter campaign for it's a boot company called broken home you fucking crushed it michael raised we raised with with the group
Starting point is 00:18:11 you guys raised a hundred grand yeah we raised over a hundred grand for them in 30 days all with organic marketing and a little bit of paid and he really believes in the product he wears the product every day it's called broken home boots And they're the coolest fucking boots I've ever seen. So it was really cool to see you come behind a product that you actually believe in and you actually wear and raise that money. And I think they're going to crush it. Well, as an investor, I've learned, too, over the years, also getting my ass kicked, that you have to invest in products or businesses or services or people that you believe in. And in the past, I haven't, I've, you know, wasn't patient and I invested in things that look good on paper I thought would be great. You've lost money.
Starting point is 00:18:56 I've lost a lot of money. Didn't necessarily believe in a lot of this stuff. So, you know, now in 2016, 17, I've really kind of. You're more picky. I'm a lot more picky. I'm a lot more patient with what I choose to invest in. And I, if I find something I really liked and I tried, I tend to, you know, maybe go all in on it. So that's what I do. I'm an investor, marketer, entrepreneur, husband, husband. You're now bringing me coffee in bed with my, what are you getting me? Tell everyone
Starting point is 00:19:21 what you're getting. I got to get you a mug warmer, right? Yeah. Because I get up earlier than you. He does get up earlier than me. I stay up later if we're going to tit for tat on that. But so now I'm excited because I have Bostic Media, which I've kept private for the last three or four years. And I'm getting ready to be more public with it and take on more clients and help other people grow their businesses and their brands. And it's kind of like a consulting marketing PR type firm. But I've seen so many agencies over the past three or four years waste people's time and budgets.
Starting point is 00:19:57 And the approach that I'm going to take is it's going to be a results based approach where I will literally fire my own clients if I don't get them results. You, he also will, both of us, I think now that we're married, we want to really kind of make a foundation and create, I mean, we've always been a team, but when you get married, I mean, I felt a shift. Like you do feel like you're really in this together and you're really a team. So I think with whatever he's doing or whatever I'm doing, like we are taking that very much teammate approach in an equal way. Well, I think you're going to get involved with what I'm doing.
Starting point is 00:20:33 And obviously I'm involved with what you're doing. So we're also working on, we haven't killed each other yet. We haven't almost though. We also should do a podcast called we almost killed each other. We're also working on a product for the Skinny Confidential, and then we have a product that Michael and his best friend Weston are working on. So there's a lot of different things happening, but again, it's all about patience. Okay, let's get the next question. Again, Michael does not know these questions. They're not too
Starting point is 00:21:00 hard, though. I feel like you can answer these easy. What's your best piece of advice to young entrepreneurs who are just starting out? This is a question that we get asked all the time, and I feel like this is a great question for you to answer. Okay. I would not just say this to young entrepreneurs, but I would say to anybody. First, obviously, patience, which I say all the time because everybody wants it right now. And trust me when I say getting something right now is definitely not the answer. A right now generation. Yeah. Anything that I've gotten right now turns out to be shit. I feel like everything that I've waited for. Don't you feel
Starting point is 00:21:34 like that? Yes. And then I would say really find a skill or personality trait and some people aren't going to understand this, but personality trait or skill that differentiates you from somebody else. Examples. Example. I believe that I have a skill, and this may sound, this is going to sound egotistic. I believe that I have a skill to get in front of people and sell them and develop very close relationships with them. It's not in a manipulative or bad way because I only have relationships that I care about and that I put a lot of compassion into. But I believe that I have a skill to get around people and to bring them into my life and to make them a friend. And so
Starting point is 00:22:18 what that's done for me in my life is I've made a lot of really good connections. I have a lot of really good partners. Yeah, you included. But that I would say differentiates me from people that may be smarter than me, may have better technical skills than me. It's important to be well-liked and to want people to be around you. So I think that that's my unique thing. And I say it's a personality trait. And then I say like a unique skill, right? Where I learned how to sell products for other people and help people bring their products to market and help brand them. And so when you can do that and you can help other people, you become valuable to that person. So you're telling, you're telling the audience to find what they're really,
Starting point is 00:23:00 really good at, what their strength is, their niche strength. Find something that can bring value to other people, right? Because when you find something that becomes valuable to other people and you can help other people, then they need you, right? And when someone needs you, you're not replaceable. I don't know if I'm saying you're not, if that's right. But I believe that if you have a unique skillset and you have a unique personality trait that is different and it's not being, you're not mimicking somebody else, but it's unique to
Starting point is 00:23:31 you, then that, that creates a need for you in the market. And be real with yourself just because you want to be a fashion blogger. That might not be your strength. Maybe you're a better cook and maybe, maybe you're better behind the scenes. Like get really real with yourself you know i don't enjoy looking at numbers every single day you i feel like you could go either way but there's things that you don't like to i feel like you are better out in out in the wild well i think you're better in meetings it comes down to it comes down to self-awareness
Starting point is 00:24:02 right like i think this the self-awareness conversation is going to start becoming a very big conversation. People need to start being very, very honest with themselves, being honest with what they want out of life. Be honest with yourself. Tell you what are you not good at. If you're not good at, don't waste your time trying to be good at it. Focus on your strengths and things that drive you and that bring value to other people and really work on those skills and those personality traits and that mindset because you're never going to be good at something you don't like ever and you're never going to improve on stuff that you're not good at as much as you'd improve on stuff that you are good at. That's good advice. So get real with yourself. Look in the mirror and ask yourself what the fuck your strength is and i would say focus on that not your weakness well and here's the thing not everybody needs to be an entrepreneur either or a solopreneur there's nothing wrong with working for somebody
Starting point is 00:24:53 else and and being you know the number two three guys at some of these biggest companies you know the ubers of the world are highly successful you You need a lot of money. Not everybody's cut out to do, to run their own business. I mean, it's not an easy thing. I mean, you have to be willing to get punched in the face every fucking day and smile about it.
Starting point is 00:25:15 I think a lot of the conversation where people are saying everyone can do anything they want. That's subscribing to your own delusion. You can do anything you want, but you have to be honest with yourself about what that really is. If you want to play video games all day long, and that's what you want to do, and that's your thing, the internet has made it possible now.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Amazon just bought Twitch. There's kids right now playing video games all day long, making hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Maybe you want to play video games all day. That's fine. But don't play video games all day long and then complain that something's not the way you want it to be. Right. Your actions have to have to map. I love it.
Starting point is 00:25:52 I think you're 100 percent right. I think the self-awareness conversation is going to people are really going to start talking about it. And, you know, you do you. Everyone's different. Hey, everybody. I'm Heather Dubrow. And I'm Dr. Terry Dubrow. Every Friday, check out my podcast, Heather Dub Everyone's different. Hey, everybody. I'm Heather Dubrow. And I'm Dr. Terry Dubrow. Every Friday, check out my podcast, Heather Dubrow's World.
Starting point is 00:26:09 We also have a brand new show, The Dr. and Mrs. Guinea Pig Show, every Tuesday. So don't forget iTunes and Podcast One. Tune in to Dr. and Mrs. Guinea Pig on Tuesdays and Heather Dubrow's World every Friday. This is The Skinny Confidential, him and her. All right, next question. When you were were first starting out what did you do wrong what did i do wrong huh pull out your scroll because i know you have one dust it off okay um and have some coffee well i was maybe a little bit over optimistic i didn't watch the numbers as closely as I should have. You know, let's take that first real estate deal. I was remodeling and I was not pinching pennies as much as I should
Starting point is 00:26:53 have. I was throwing budgets around. I was buying things that were unnecessary. Um, when I first started out and I first started making some good money, I bought a lot of unnecessary materialistic things that I didn't need that I thought would make me happy. Let's, let's dig deep into this, this part before you go to the next. Elaborate. Okay. So as some of you know, I was, uh, I like watches a lot. I bought a lot of watches that you didn't need, that I didn't need. What happens is when you're starting out and you think, you know, status symbols or cars or houses or just clothes or whatever, you think that that's what you do when you become successful. Or at least I did. I didn't really have anyone to tell me different.
Starting point is 00:27:36 What happens is you start to get these things and you realize that it's never good enough, right? Because you're chasing something that's not real. So I started buying things that I didn't need. I've scaled back on that a lot now. You checked yourself. Again, like I said before, you guys, once he learns a lesson, he learns the lesson. And you learned it quickly and swiftly.
Starting point is 00:28:01 I hope that I've brought a little bit of value to you with materialistic things. No. We grew up differently we we grew up differently we grew up differently i could care less now about cars and jewelry and big houses and stuff like that that's not what drives me anymore but there was a point in my life when it did um but i was young you know like when i when i first started working when i first started having some success i was 24 25 years old he was spending a lot of money when when you were 21 i feel like you were spending a lot of money on going out no not 21 i didn't have any money at 21 okay how old i'd say 23 24 25 he was spending money on things that we
Starting point is 00:28:38 just didn't need like we would go and get a bottle of champagne in a club like it was just pointless but you know i don't regret any of this because i made a lot of connections with a lot of people that I'm still partnered with today doing that. So that's actually not, I actually think there's nothing wrong with buying experiences. I would say, I would say it's okay. A lot of people are scared. I spend a lot of money on travel, a lot of money going out with friends. Um, we go out all the time. Like that's a big part of our budget, right? Travel and this, we've talked about it, but I think that's fine because those are experiences and experiences are what help you build bonds with people. They're help.
Starting point is 00:29:09 They help expand your mind, especially when you're traveling. Um, you'll never be happy buying items, but you will always find happiness with experiences. So I think it's okay. So you don't regret buying like 5 million bottles of champagne? No, because it's the experiences and I can laugh about it. No, I don't regret anything in my life. I'm just cautioning people things I would do differently.
Starting point is 00:29:29 And then also patience. I keep saying that over and over, but I got ahead of myself multiple times and made decisions based on needing something now as opposed to waiting to get something later. Tell the story of your dad's friend that would put the facts at the bottom. Oh, well, this is more like with problem solving.
Starting point is 00:29:51 I think that's a great story, though, for patients. My dad had a friend, very successful guy. And back in the day, when they would send correspondences, they would send them via fax. They didn't have email. They didn't have text messages. They had a bank or a lawyer or somebody wanted to send you something important. They sent you a fax. And what this guy would do, and I think this is kind of what I apply to my own life with email a
Starting point is 00:30:19 little bit, which sometimes gets me in trouble with people, is he would take the fax that would come in and he would go to his pile of other faxes and he would take that one fax and he would put it at the very bottom of the pile. And he would just go about his day, you know, kind of going through these faxes and answering these different correspondences and responding to things. And he said,
Starting point is 00:30:38 by the time this fax made it back up to the top of the pile, and that could be days, maybe a week, relate this to email that most of the time. And that could be days, maybe a week, maybe a month. Relate this to email. That most of the time, that problem had worked itself out or gone away. And he says, when people get in a big rush to solve something right away, solve this problem today, do it right now,
Starting point is 00:30:55 a lot of time you make bad judgment calls and you get yourself in trouble. So I took that lesson to heart and I do it with emails. I do it, Lauren gets mad at me because I figure if it's a really important email or really something important that, that I need to know about it, somehow I'll get the message. A lot of the time, a lot of these, you know, whimsical problems or these, or these things that we think we need to solve right away usually don't need to be, and they just cause more chaos in our life. So yeah. All right, next question. So one of the things that attracts me to you as a person is that you're a huge reader. I find it so endearing and so cool, especially in this generation. Who are some of the authors that you love? And what are tips and
Starting point is 00:31:42 tricks that you've picked up from them so give us some books that we all have to read let's not don't go too crazy because i know like if you're gonna say shogun like that's a little too gnarly no no well i will it's i won't say shogun but i'll say the author james claveau who wrote shogun he's been telling me to read this book shogun taipan noble house it's a little intimidating though let's start easy so surprisingly i read a lot more fiction books than non-fiction and many people think that they can't learn things from non-fiction or from fiction books because they're fiction but i actually believe that fiction writers are much better writers than non-fiction writers because they actually have to they they
Starting point is 00:32:25 have to weave a story they have to and i could write a book about my life and it's very easy because it's my life i don't have to have that big of an imagination that is such a good point i've never thought of that in my life you're right you have to i could write a story about my life because it's my life you always say like when i'm nervous to go speak in front of people you say what do you mean you're talking about yourself and you you're right. If I had to go up and talk about something I didn't know, that would be more intimidating. And that's kind of how fiction and nonfiction are. Yes. But also remember that fiction books are always, even, I mean, even science fiction to some degree and fantasy books, they're all based around real events, real life, things that actually
Starting point is 00:33:02 occur or have occurred in history or in current events. And so what these authors do is they're able to weave stories and make you care about characters that are, that don't exist and aren't real. And you can actually picture these characters in your mind. And you, and what I like about it is, you know, if I read a biography about George Washington, we all know what George Washington looked like. So the imagination, you don't need to stretch your imagination that much, but when someone. So the imagination, you don't need to stretch your imagination that much. But when someone creates a fictional character, we all have a different perspective on what that character looks like, what he thinks, what he feels. And so it gets your mind and your creativity flowing.
Starting point is 00:33:44 I like to read fiction, especially historical fiction, because it takes things that have actually happened in real life and facts in life, and they create stories around stories around them okay so if someone isn't a reader how can they start where should they start and what are some tips and tricks that you've picked up from these books that will make people want to read them to learn more so i always recommend james clavelle it's their big intimidating books but they're i promise like lauren's looking at me weird now because they're, they're a little easier. Like that's a very intimidating book. Well, you're asking me what I really recommend. Okay. So, okay. James Clavel, what's the one we should start with? Shogun. Okay. Or Taipan. But it, and you'll see what, I mean, it'll teach you some of those books taught me so
Starting point is 00:34:18 much about business and patience and keeping your mouth shut when you're, when you think you need to speak and what's the tip that they can take away? There's just too many. But I would say there's so much value in those books because, one, it'll take you through history. And two, it'll take you through very smart business minds, very good writing. It'll expand your vocabulary. It talks a lot about patience. Patience, planning.
Starting point is 00:34:44 Waiting. Waiting. I like Larry McMurdy a lot lot he wrote the lonesome dub series but then also you know i've done a lot of book posts on you know on your site on non-fictions arnold schwarzenegger's book is one of the best biographies i've ever read why because he's he's a really interesting guy and i think when you when you tally up his accomplishments, a lot of people don't know that Arnold was a millionaire before he made any money on his movies. Okay, tell us about it. He was really smart in the sense that he saw a lot of actors being put in desperate situations
Starting point is 00:35:18 where they had to say yes to roles, had to say yes to contracts. And so he told himself, he said, I never want to be in that situation. So he started creating his own businesses in real estate. Um, he did one of the first mail subscription services for, um, fitness products. He was a bricklayer at one point and he just, he made it so that he didn't have to negotiate from a point of desperation, which is a lesson that I always try to pass on to you is never negotiate when you're under the gun. Yeah. I've learned that lesson the hard way. That's that's, that'll be in the podcast of how our asses got kicked. Or even if you are under the gun, never negotiate from a,
Starting point is 00:35:54 from a weak point because people can smell weakness. Art of War is a good book. Art of War is a good book by Sun Tzu. What about something that's a little more modern? Like I know that you read this double art of not giving a fuck. by Sun Tzu. What about something that's a little more modern? Like, I know that you read The Stubble Art of Not Giving a Fuck. That was good. Mark Manson's book's good. Mark Manson's coming on our podcast. We're very excited about that, you guys. If you have not read his book, read it before our podcast, because I think you will love him.
Starting point is 00:36:16 You also, right now, are reading Tim Ferriss' Tools of the Titans. And what you like about that, I feel like, is that... I don't want to speak for you, but I think that it breaks down a lot of very successful people's tips and tricks. Yeah, well, he was really smart, and I give him credit also for the marketing of that book, because not only is Tim Ferriss a trusted person where people go to for advice and for an educated perspective, but he took some of the most successful people in the world, whether it's athletes, actors, entrepreneurs, business people, and he put them all in one book and he put all of their advice in one book. So now you're not only going to Tim Ferriss, but he used everyone else. He's genius. It's very smart, but it's also a very good book. I think the Dale Carnegie books on how to win friends and
Starting point is 00:37:05 influence people is important for everybody to read at least once or twice in their life very important especially you said earlier it's important to be you know likable um and warm and what's the book about compelling people i forget the author but the book is called compelling people oh and it talks about how important it is to have strength and warmth not just warmth not just strength, right? Yep. I like Ryan Holiday's books. I've talked about them on your blog before.
Starting point is 00:37:29 Ego is the Enemy? Yeah, but I like The Obstacle is the Way better. I think it's important to read Stoicism and learn, you know, how to view and perceive the hardships of life. What else? I'm waiting for one other book that you read. The Skinny Confidential book is amazing. But yeah, I know. and I read a lot. There's a guy named Connie Golden who does books on the Roman Empire and Genghis Khan and now the Tudors.
Starting point is 00:37:56 Okay, so one book. One book for entrepreneurs out there that are young entrepreneurs. There's two. What is the one book? There's two that i recommend to everybody okay and tell us why okay first managing oneself by peter drucker you could read it in 30 minutes maybe an hour if you're a slower reader he gave this to all his friends you guys and it's a small 50 page manifesto on really learning yourself and managing yourself and understanding really what you're about.
Starting point is 00:38:25 And then, uh, the one thing by Gary Keller. And I think that's a really important book for focus and, and starting out. And, and, and I recommend those two to everyone. Perfect. I have one more question for you and then we are off to go get chips and salsa at Fidel's. Okay. So last question. This one's for me selfishly. Well, I hope it provides value to everyone, but what are some tips for couples that work together? This is a question we've gotten asked a lot and I feel like I want to constantly be checking myself because we work together so much. How do you think we're doing? What would you rate us? How can we give value to people that are working together? What are some tips? I think this year, 2016 was the biggest year
Starting point is 00:39:23 of growing pains. Hopefully that we will go through with working together. And that's really, let's talk about that because if people just watched our Snapchat or saw our Instagram or saw my blog, I feel like they would say, wow, you guys work together perfectly. First of all, nothing's perfect. Elaborate on that. Okay. I came from my businesses and doing my thing and being the boss in my respective situations. And you came from your blog and you being the boss on with your day to day. And when I say the boss, I don't mean the boss of other people necessarily. I mean the boss of how, how the day was going to go, right? You, you, you set the tone of this is what we're
Starting point is 00:40:03 doing today for the skinny confidential. And I set the tone with what I was going to do for what I was doing. And when you come together and you take two type A personalities, which I believe we both are. Extremely. That can get chaotic, especially when, in this case, we use your platform. And the reason that I think we're going to be okay now is that we navigated a lot of the issues and the problems along the way. But what I would say, the reason we were able to do that, and this would be
Starting point is 00:40:32 the advice for people wanting to work together as a couple is first, I believe that you and I are both 100% committed to the same common goal. Okay. I don't, I'm not doing this for me and you're not doing this for you we're doing this for some for a goal together and i think that there needs to be an honest conversation between couples of what that goal is and and what people are both committed to doing and our friend steve who we had on the show a couple weeks back helped us do that we actually did a 14 hour session that we never showed anybody about a strategic future for the for for this brand and it's called a charter we wrote a charter out and we we both got committed to it and we're gonna do one also for our relationship you do them
Starting point is 00:41:14 separately yeah um you you figure out your fixed way of being meaning like what is michael's fixed way of being and what is mine and how those fixed way of beings can work together and how you can overcome them. So a fixed way of being could be, you always have to be in control or, and that turned out to be my fixed way of being. That was Michael's fixed way of being. And you can't find your fixed way of being by just like thinking about it. You have to talk it out. Anyways, go on. Um, two, after deciding what that common goal is and both being committed to it, and this is something that you either have and you really believe or you don't,
Starting point is 00:41:50 is respect for one another. I respect Lauren more than anyone on this earth, obviously. That's why I married her. And I consider her an equal, if not above me. Aww, points for you. Do you want to get laid tonight or something? I think a lot of time in a relationship, there's one or the other is taking a stance of they're better or their opinion weighs more or they're the boss. They're smarter.
Starting point is 00:42:15 They have more experience. There's plenty of things that I have experience in that Lauren doesn't and plenty of things that she has experience in that I don't. And I think that complements each other. Lauren's taught me many, many lessons in life, which we could do a whole podcast on that. But so I think respect and really being honest and asking yourself, do you actually really respect your partner? Does that, does your partner really respect you?
Starting point is 00:42:37 And then I think the final thing is defining the goals. I mean, not the goals, the roles of each person and understanding. You know, I never, ever get into the Skinny Confidential and do any of the creative content unless it's a piece of content that I'm writing. I don't ever step in her way of the vision she has with that. You did one time try to direct a photo shoot. And I told you to bow down i was out um so and you know with the way i run the back end of the site lauren lauren gives me control you know it was interesting this year because we had taylor who's and some of my uh employees that
Starting point is 00:43:19 have worked for me for a long time kind of step into the skinny confidential and help and then lauren had my sister and some of her employees kind of stepping into my stuff. And it was interesting to blend those two teams together because a lot of the time the teams didn't really know who was in charge and whose voice to listen to. And Lauren and I have different management styles. Mine's a little bit more blunt, a little bit more to the point. You know, I always tell the guys that work for me, don't ever get offended by anything I say when we're working because my whole goal is just to help all of us
Starting point is 00:43:49 and complete the mission that we're trying to complete. Michael's more of a dick. Yeah. So, well, I say things quickly and I'm blunt about it. And so a lot of people, you know, when you step in and you're managing some people, they don't get that style. My team has learned to deal with that management style for a long time.
Starting point is 00:44:07 Lauren's didn't. So blending those two different management styles was interesting. It's working now. Yeah. Once again, when we're on the same page, we have the same goal. Also, the final thing is I would say you need to be a united front. There can't... Team player.
Starting point is 00:44:22 Team player. There can't ever be divergence. Lauren and I try not to contradict ourselves in front of people outside of our team and definitely in front of our team and so yeah that's and we're working on it you guys this is such a work in progress i mean we're learning it's like i always say it's like a dance like you like you have to learn how to dance it's practice it's working every day it's it's committed to to the same goal so i feel like people are hard on themselves when they compare themselves to a sod on social media and it's this practice it's working every day it's it's committed to to the same goal so i feel like people are hard on themselves when they compare themselves to a sod on social media and it's really important to remember that everyone is navigating stuff like this every single day i
Starting point is 00:44:54 mean there's by no means any like anything perfect no i would say at the end of the day it comes down to love and respect and and you it's important to never lose sight of the reason why you're working together in the first place and why you're doing something. In our case, it's to make a better life for ourselves and our family and... Our community. And our community and the people that we speak to. And if at any point working together detracts from that or takes away from that, then you have to really analyze, like, why are we even doing this? So don't forget the reason that you decide to start working together in the first place. Great advice. I'm having this huge obsession right now with John F. Kennedy and Carolyn Bissett because I read the book, What Remains. You guys know that if you read my post
Starting point is 00:45:38 on death on the Skinny Confidential. And after reading that, I wanted to know more about this couple that was such a power couple. So I just, I'm reading right now a book by John F. Kennedy's assistant, Rosie. I don't know the name of it. But anyways, I'll put it on the Skinny Confidential. She talks about what made Carolyn Bessette and John F. Kennedy so powerful. And she said, at the end of the day, they were equals. So I think that if you're in a relationship or a business partnership where you're not feeling like you're equals, you should sit down and evaluate that because I think that's really important. And I think this whole year has been for us navigating that. And at the end of the day we are about being equal so listen if we can get through what we went
Starting point is 00:46:25 through this year there's been you know starting businesses together there's been marriages there's been deaths unfortunately there's been a million wedding parties there's been family dynamic there's been christmases and holidays just another's just another year. It's called life. There's been, you know, people pissing themselves and getting naked. There's been crazy Thanksgiving stalkers. It's been a year. If we can get through all that, then I think, I think we're set up in a good place for 2017. It's been a ride. Thank you guys so much for your support.
Starting point is 00:47:04 Next week, Michael will be interviewing me. Get some good questions. You've got to collect. If you guys want to send them in, you can send them to podcast at theskinnyconfidential.com. Make sure you're subscribed to our podcast. I'm constantly doing giveaways on Snapchat, and it's a big plus extra credit if you're subscribed. We appreciate your support. You guys have been fucking amazing in
Starting point is 00:47:25 2016 we're so excited for 2017 because we are going to have some badass guests on that we are very excited about we're fired up i think we've gotten to the point i think what i would say about this podcast and this and you know what's funny is we've probably worked out a lot of our issues through this podcast which is interesting both lauren and I never thought we would be doing this. We started this on a whim. We were literally in a cab in New York, and I said, why don't we just do a podcast? Wrong. Wrong again. We were in Cabo drinking ginger margaritas at the bar with Joel, blacked out, and you said, let's do a podcast. You know what? Now that I think back, that's true. But I remember I was listening to a podcast in a cab in New York, and I thought of the idea of why don't we just do a podcast so that's why i thought that but 43 episodes in i think we've
Starting point is 00:48:10 finally started to get a rhythm we started to learn how to do this a little bit we're listening to you guys we're taking all your feedback all your criticism and we are trying to get better with each one yeah i i think think we held off on guests. We've had some guests, but we've held off on guests outside of podcasters for a long time because we wanted to get a little better at this style. Have our foundation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:36 We've never, you know, definitely both of us never trained for this. We're training now. We're training in front of you guys. And here's the thing. This podcast is such a representation of this whole entire interview we just did with michael because if the first podcast was horrendous the second podcast was horrific the third podcast was kind of horrific and so all we've done here is we've practiced patience we've got a long way to go and we're growing
Starting point is 00:49:02 slowly and at the end of the day if you you're an entrepreneur, you're growing your company. That's all you can do. Start out horrific, grow each day, chip away before you know it. You'll realize, whoa, shit, I've come a fucking long way. I mean, 43 episodes. So let's call that roughly 43 hours, a little less because the shows sometimes are there. That's, you know, I will be happy when we get to 52 episodes, which will be one year. I think one year of putting in work on a weekly basis is a good step in the right direction.
Starting point is 00:49:35 I'll be happy when we get to 500 just because I love that number. And then I'll feel like we've been together for a long time. How many weeks is that? Do the math. That's 10 years. Okay. Well, that's when I'll be happy. Okay. Everyone knows that the world shops online now. And if you don't, you're weird.
Starting point is 00:49:50 People only go to malls to drop the kids off or buy a super pretzel, maybe see a movie. And of course, as you know, Amazon is the biggest online mall in the universe. But did you know that every time you use Amazon, you can be helping us keep this podcast going? That's right. If you use our Amazon banner, when you shop, a small amount of the purchase goes directly to help support this podcast at no extra cost to you. Okay, so here's how you do it. Go to podcastone.com and click on the killer deals link. Click on our show logo and you'll see Amazon and all of our sponsors. Then when you click the link, bookmark it so it's super easy to use the next time. It's a cool way you can help us keep doing this show every week.
Starting point is 00:50:26 All right, you guys. Have a great new year. We will see you next week. Before we go, we want to take a minute to thank all the great sponsors and all the listeners and readers for supporting the Skinny Confidential, him and her podcast. You guys are what keeps the show growing. We will continue to bring you guys entertainment and value on a weekly basis for free. Thank you guys for downloading, subscribing, and supporting. And remember to send your questions to Twitter or
Starting point is 00:50:50 Instagram using the hashtag AskKimAndHer. Send us questions to our snaps, Lauren Eberts and Michael Bostic, or email us at podcast at theskinnyconfidential.com. Yeah, send us some questions for Michael to ask me. Get weird. Get really weird. Alright, you guys. We will Michael to ask me. Get weird. Get really weird. All right, you guys.
Starting point is 00:51:05 We will see you next week. Happy holidays. Thanks for listening to The Skinny Confidential, Him and Her, with Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic. Download new episodes every Tuesday at PodcastOne.com or subscribe now on the Podcast One app.

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