Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Elena Cardone: The Mindset Shift That Built a Billion-Dollar Business | Entrepreneurship | YAPClassic
Episode Date: May 8, 2026Elena Cardone grew up believing that wealth and entrepreneurship were only for the privileged. Her fierce independence made her resistant to building with anyone. But when the 2008 recession threatene...d their finances while she was pregnant, she abandoned her lone-wolf mentality, stepped back from acting, and bet everything on a shared vision with her husband, Grant Cardone. That decision laid the foundation for their multi-billion-dollar business empire. In this episode, Elena shares how to break free from limiting beliefs, align with your partner on your goals, and develop the mindset needed to grow a thriving business and family legacy. In this episode, Hala and Elena will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (00:55) Why “Normal” Keeps Entrepreneurs Small (03:43) Breaking Limiting Beliefs About Money (11:18) How Elena Met Grant Cardone (16:06) Choosing the Right Life Partner (27:32) Three Money Rules for Building Wealth (34:15) What It Means to Build an Empire (40:48) Handling Hate While Staying Focused (45:12) Living and Leading From Your Future Self Elena Cardone is a successful entrepreneur, real estate mogul, and visionary co-founder of the Cardone empire, which manages a multi-billion-dollar portfolio. She is the author of the bestselling book Build an Empire, a guide to achieving extraordinary success in both entrepreneurship and marriage. Elena is a renowned speaker and mentor who empowers thousands of individuals to level up their business, mindset, and relationships. Sponsored By: Huel - Get over $50 in savings with the Discovery Bundle from Huel. Use my exclusive code YAP15 for 15% off at huel.com/yap15. Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/profiting Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting. Quo - Run your business communications the smart way. Try Quo for free, plus get 20% off your first 6 months when you go to quo.com/profiting Fabric - Protect your family with term life insurance from Fabric by Gerber Life. Apply today in just minutes at meetfabric.com/profiting ZocDoc - Stop putting off those doctors’ appointments. Find and instantly book a doctor you love today at Zocdoc.com/PROFITING Blinkist - Turn the world’s best nonfiction books into quick 15-minute reads or listens. Grab your free trial plus an exclusive 30% discount at blinkist.com/profiting Remitly - Transfer money internationally with Remitly, with no hidden fees. Use code BUSINESS to get a $100 bonus after you send $300 or more. New customers only. Prolon - Reset and rejuvenate your body with Prolon’s five-day plant-based fasting mimicking program. Go to ProlonLife.com/PROFITING for 15% off sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program. Resources Mentioned: Elena’s Book, Build an Empire: bit.ly/EC-BAE Elena’s Website: elenacardone.com Elena’s Instagram: instagram.com/elenacardone Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Newsletter - youngandprofiting.co/newsletter LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Passive Income, Online Business, Solopreneur, Networking
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Yap gang, most people out here are playing safe, and that's exactly the problem.
When you settle for normal, you're one bad day away from losing everything you thought you had.
Today's guest is Elena Cardone, entrepreneur, author, real estate mogul, and the powerhouse
behind one of the most influential family empires in the world.
Elena built her success along her husband, Grant Cardone, and she's here to share exactly how.
In this Yap classic episode, Elena gets real about overcoming a turbulent past,
breaking through her limiting money beliefs and stepping into her role as the queen of a multi-billion
dollar empire. You'll walk away knowing how to build wealth, protect her most important relationships,
and start thinking bigger than you ever have. And if you're new here, take a moment to hit
that follow button so you never miss a drop of value on Young and Profiting Podcast. Let's get right
into it with Elena Cardone. Elena, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Hello, Hala. How are you? I'm doing great.
I'm super excited for today's episode.
Elena, before we dive into your journey,
I did want to get insight from one of your most famous quotes that I found,
and you say that normal is the most dangerous condition you can be
because it gives you a false sense of security.
So drawing on your own life experiences,
I thought this would be a great way to open up,
how does normalcy generally hold people back?
Well, it holds people back because you don't strive to go further
and to build up in abundance, either in mindset,
that finances, resources, when you think you're okay and you make sense of okay, it's detrimental
because it only takes one incident to come in and wipe it all out, whether that is an economic
collapse or somebody in the family gets sick or dies or becomes incapacitated. The entire system
becomes threatened and can't withstand. So that's why I say normal is so scary because you make sense
of barely getting by, but you convince yourself that you're just fine and you have enough,
you are enough, you've done enough, and then the blanket can get pulled out from under you.
Yeah. So I'd love to learn more about how you grew up.
Well, I grew up in New Orleans, Louisiana. You know, I had a really great childhood.
I was kind of a tomboy. And then one day, my best friend across the street,
She perished in a fire that unfortunately I was there.
I witnessed the whole thing.
It was devastating to me.
And because I was so young and didn't know how to kind of cope with that,
I went down this dark road of self-medicating to try to just numb it and deal with it.
So I feel like I wasted a lot of years trying to rather than confronting.
But out of that, what got me out of New Orleans was,
an acting career. I saw, okay, I can maybe succeed in an acting and modeling career. So I moved to
Los Angeles at 17 years old. I knew no one. And just started to make it on my own. I thought
anything is better than where I just came from, even though I love my hometown. It was just
more than I could stand having to confront seeing that burned out empty shell of a house every
single time I went in and out of my home. So it just kind of got me to where I am today. I went to
Los Angeles. I was an actress and a model for many years there until I met my husband,
Grant Cardone. And then we moved to Miami in 2012 and we've continued to build our lives from here.
But that's pretty much my childhood in a nutshell. For my understanding, you came from humble
beginnings. How has your mindset changed about money? What are some of the things that you had to
kind of disprove to yourself so that you could become the super successful person that you are today?
Well, I thought that money was only for a select few. Like, I thought you had to be really
intelligent. I thought you had to have a college degree. I thought people like me just couldn't
ever have wealth because that's not what I was born into.
Also, I grew up in my teen years, I joined kind of the punk rock society, you know, and in that mentality, rich people suck. They're greedy. So I had to overcome that, no, you can have wealth and not be greedy. You can have wealth and do great things. You, you know, you're not a bad person if you go out and create wealth. So I had a number of these ideas. I never thought that I could make it this far. I never thought that I could serve.
surpass grant in money. Well, and I haven't to date, let's be fair, but at least now I've opened my
mindset to the possibility that that could occur. Yeah. And what really changed your mind?
Was it when you went to L.A. and you saw how people lived and they had money and that kind of opened
your eyes? Or what really flipped that switch for you? You know, really, yes, when I went there,
it started to open my eyes. I started to kind of grow up a little. I started to really align with,
that's not my beliefs. What are my beliefs? That was the group think back then with that group I was
attached to. What do I really think about money? And then it was when I got with grants who really
started to have me understand the principles of money. And once I really started to understand
money and how to apply it and not violate the policies on money, I started to really be able to have
an abundance of it, you know, when I realized that, you know, money doesn't make you greedy. I realized when I had
been thinking money makes me greedy, no matter how high or how successful I would go, something would
always knock me back down. Because I had been having this mindset, if I got above this, I would somehow
become greedy or an evil person. You know, like money makes you evil. So I would never allow myself to
break up into here, but I didn't do it intentionally. But now looking back, it was because I had already
had this barrier of what I thought was the threshold. And once I crossed it, I would become this
evil, mean person. So in my life, I just always had a situation come and knock it out, whether,
you know, it was an end of a career, an end of a job, an end of, you know, or a car needing repair,
or a house needing repair or a lawsuit or this or that, something would come in and whack,
whack, whack, where it would build down the coffer to build back up. And it wasn't until I realized,
wow, that's a very limiting belief that's actually holding me down. Can I just be open to the
possibility that money could make me more generous? And I just changed that mindset just a little bit.
And then all of the sudden I got to a certain amount where I thought, wow, because I remember the day
when I had the goal of having $60,000 in the bank.
Like I thought I was rich if I had $60,000 in the bank.
And I could never get to that.
Then I opened the viewpoint.
Then I hit the $60,000.
And then I was like, oh, it's $100,000.
That's the real number.
And then I cracked the $100,000.
And then I just opened it up to, I'm just open to the possibility of, you know, money.
And I don't have to make money.
mean all these other things. Money is money. Money is a currency. It's supposed to ebb and flow and
it's an energy and I'm supposed to just use it and how can I grow and multiply it? And that's all it
means. It's just a resource. I started to be able to have a lot of it. And then when I look around
and I saw, wow, there's trillions of dollars. We're printing trillions of dollars. There's no
shortage of money. Why can't I just go as if I had my bucket in an ocean and scoop up some water?
You know, like no one's going to notice if I take a bucket of water from the ocean.
No one's going to notice if I scoop a billion dollars out of the trillions of dollars that are out there.
If I decide to take a billion or a million or 100,000, it's not even going to register.
So why do I have this scarcity mindset and why do I make it any harder than walking down to the beach and scooping up water?
It's only because I'm making it harder.
But once you actually understand the certain philosophies that go around money and how simple it is
and it's not complex, the more that you can be actually of an abundance mindset and start having
and attracting it. I love that. I feel like you gave us so much wisdom in terms of how we can
break out of this limiting mindset when it comes to trying to make more money and not being
afraid of actually achieving the success that we dream of. I think a lot of us are actually afraid
of the outcome and that's why we don't go ahead and do the things that we need to do.
Or you just don't know the right things. You don't have the right information. Knowledge is power.
right? So if you have the wrong information, what do you have? The complete opposite. So get around the right
people, the right mindset, study the right people. It should be easy. It's not difficult.
So you just mentioned knowledge, right? Knowledge is power. From my understanding, you went to California
when you were 17 years old, which I guess means that you didn't go to college, right? So I'd love to
understand your opinion on higher education. Do you think it's necessary?
obviously there's so many entrepreneurs like yourself, you know, Steve jobs that didn't go to college,
that became extremely successful. But for the average person, like what are your thoughts in terms of
higher education? Look, if you want to become a lawyer or a doctor, obviously you need to go to
get a higher education and be very specified with that particular knowledge. But for anybody else,
it's hands-on experience. It's getting in the field. It's doing it. It's action. We don't
ask anybody here what your qualifications are. We're interested in can you produce a result?
Can do you have the resources to self-educate, figure it out? You know, when Grant does a $200 million
deal on an investment property that he's buying, this institutional grade property that Prudential
or J.P. Morgan or Blackstone are also bidding on. They're not asking Grant, what's your college
degree and they're not asking to see his, you know, at what age did you start speaking and, you know,
what degree do you have and from where and who do you know? It's no, show me the numbers in the
account and how can you support this and how are you going to take care of the asset and, you know,
and can you pull this thing off? Yeah. That's it. They're not looking beyond that. So, you know,
I, and Grant has said this. Really, if you're going to go for higher education in a general field,
for one reason and one reason only, meet the people.
You know there and meet the, the Obamas, the Trumps, the world leaders, you know,
go to meet the contacts that can collaborate with you in the future.
Yeah, I think that's great advice.
So let's move on to talking about Grant and your relationship because I think it's really
interesting your dynamic together and how you guys met even is an interesting story.
So why don't we start there?
Can you guys, can you share the story of how you guys met?
Because from my understanding, you weren't actually interested in him at first.
No, I wasn't.
Yeah, we met in Los Angeles.
I was on a commercial.
I was shooting a commercial.
It was in downtown Los Angeles.
Middle of the night, it was a night shoot.
And Grant was friends with the director, so he showed up on the shoot.
I see him in the trailer.
It was like high by.
I never thought anything of him.
You know, not my type.
Short, shorter than me, like just did not register.
I was more into actors, musicians.
at the time. I'm in my 20s. Grant seemed like kind of a businessman, just didn't register.
Anyway, he gets my number from the director. You're not supposed to give somebody's number from
the call sheet out to a random. And the director did. And then Grant calls me. And we have this
disastrous phone call. He's like, oh, it was just horrible. I don't even need to get into it. But it
was horrible. And I decided, okay, this is the last phone call that I'm going to have with this guy. What a
joke. And I hang up the call with him and he proceeds to call me twice a month, every month,
for the next 13 months with no return phone call. He'd leave a message on my answering machine.
But I never thought he was like creepy, scary guy. It was just like a non-event. Just didn't
think anything of it. He wasn't stalking me. It wasn't weird. I wasn't scared. It just wasn't
anything I thought about, you know? And then eventually he became friends with one of my best friends at
time who I was hanging out with so we kind of got in the circle so then he starts showing up at
you know the clubs and the restaurants that I'm at and so I'm like oh well he's not so bad after all
you know but I still wasn't interested um but I liked that he could be around I knew that he liked
me but he wasn't pushing himself on me it was just like cool like I just I just didn't want to be
put in that awkward situation you know and then he finally found out that I like to shoot guns
I was 10th in California for shotguns at the time.
Anyway, he left a message and he was like, hey, I rented the shooting range.
You want to come with me?
And so that was the first call that got me to call him back.
And I was like, okay, I'll go to the shooting range with you.
And then that's how we kind of developed a quote unquote friendship.
And but he didn't push me.
And we hung out like that for a few months.
And then one day I was like, this guy is special.
He's different.
I've never had a guy like this before.
And what is he seeing me?
Like the way I behaved and kind of treated him
would have made any guy like run away
or say, oh, screw it to hell with her.
But he was just patiently cool,
but not in a pathetic way.
Yeah.
One day I just like, my eyes just kind of open
and I was like, oh my God, like something really real
is here in front of me.
Yeah.
And I'm, you know, I was at dinner and I was like, oh my God. And he's like what? And I said,
you're going to make me fall in love with you, aren't you? And he was like, yes, yes, I am.
And we've been together ever since. That's so sweet. So I want to dig into something that you said,
which is basically that Grant was much different than the other guys that you were dating before.
And I'd love to understand what you mean by that. What kind of men were you dating before?
And how did Grant stand out? Oh, gosh. Well, I dated art.
artsy guys. I dated actors, musicians. So tattoo people. One of my, you know, the first big love of my life,
unfortunately, was addicted to crystal meth. It led to some problems after we broke, I mean,
problems while we were together. So much so that I had to break it off with him, not because I wasn't in
love with him, but because there was just so many problems and drama that comes with somebody that's
addicted to crystal meth. Yeah. After I break up with him,
He ends up in jail for three years.
So that's the type of people I was with.
Just drama in that art scene, drugs, alcohol, rock and roll.
And Grant was very different.
He didn't do drugs.
He didn't drink.
He was a businessman.
He had his money together.
He was just stable.
And I just didn't know that world.
I had lived in Los Angeles since I was 17.
By the time I met him, I was in my late 20s.
I never hung out with business people.
It was always producers, actors, directors, musicians.
It was always somebody in the arts.
Yeah.
So the reason why I asked this question is because there's more single women out there than ever right now.
Partially because women are doing better than men right now in general, like more women are starting to graduate college.
I think it's for every one man, it's two women graduate college.
women are starting to make more money.
Women usually marry up, and now women are starting to have to marry down, so to speak,
because they're leveling up.
And a lot of women, being successful, actually emasculate men.
And so it's not working out like it used to be.
Marriage rates are down.
And I guess what I'm trying to say is when you're looking for a partner, obviously nobody's
perfect, right?
I remember hearing you say, like, you thought Grant was short, right?
and that might have, if you were, you know, not open-minded, you may not have embarked on this
amazing journey that you went on because of something as, you know, superficial, right?
Yeah.
So I just want your guidance on that because I think, you know, I have a lot of young listeners,
women in their 30s, I've men that listen to me too.
And I think a lot of people are fixated on this like perfect partner.
And I want to understand from you, given that you guys are sort of like a role model couple,
what do you actually need to look for in a partner?
And how do you understand whether or not, you know,
what you're looking for is either unrealistic
or you're looking at the wrong things, basically?
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think you should compromise. What I would suggest is somebody write down, right, you want to come up
with perfect? You shouldn't deviate from that. Write the perfect person. You know, and you're talking
about trivial. I wrote over 100 characteristics. This is before I got together with Grant. Over
100 characteristics of what I wanted in the perfect man. And it started with 6-2 and Green Eyes.
Every single item on the rest of the list was Grant except for the first two, 6-2 and Green Eyes.
And I only said six two because I had had other guys not want me to wear heels.
It really wasn't because I had a consideration.
And green eyes, I like green eyes.
I should have just said, charming and accept me for my height.
You know what I wouldn't a pigeon hold me into being blind, right?
Because I was looking for six two in green eyes.
So what I would say is write it all down, right?
You want monogamy, you want ethically ambitious, all the traits, trustworthiness, monogamy,
wants a family, write everything that you want, you know, that's,
going to build me up that's going to support me, show active interest in the success of me,
likes women and children, protects women and children, write everything down. I wrote all of that,
has a great relationship, isn't drama, is proud to have me with him, you know, blah, blah, blah,
write every single thing on your list. But here's the catcher. When you write that list,
because after I wrote all the list of what I wanted in a man, because before that I was like,
I'm going to be this dedicated single woman forever. I don't need a man for anything. I don't need a man
for anything. And, you know, I really thought that was going to be my life. I didn't even get married
until I was 30. So, you know, and I wouldn't have until Grant sort of proposed. And then I was like,
oh my God. But anyway, so after you write the list of what you want, turn around. If this actually
became the man of your dreams. I saw, when I wrote that list, I said, if this man actually exists,
I could be with this man for the rest of my life. I wrote on there, like, sexually completely.
compatible, like, you know, adventurous, fun.
We fall in love with each other for, you know, all the stuff that I want to.
If he existed, this man existed, I could be with him.
But now, if this man existed from his point of view, from the perfect man, what are his qualities?
What does he want in a woman?
And I wrote them down.
He would want monogamy.
He would want someone who doesn't excessively drink alcohol, doesn't do drugs, wants to have a family.
You see what I'm saying?
Like is trustworthy, does what they say, isn't a drama queen, takes care of themselves physically.
Trust me, every man wants that.
Don't kid yourself.
Don't be like, oh, he should love me just the way I'm right what he would really want on his ideal scene.
And when I did that, I realized at the time, this is back in time, right, 20 plus years ago?
I saw how off I was. I was, you know, excessively drinking alcohol. I was hanging out in the clubs. I didn't want a family. I didn't want to be married. It wasn't that list that I even considered it. So then I started to go work on myself. How can I improve myself rather than thinking I'm entitled to this perfect person? How can you get yourself in your own, you know, ethical moral code? How can you get yourself to be the woman that would, that man would attract? Do you know what I'm saying?
I did that and that's when we kind of found each other almost immediately because I became comparable magnitude to the thing that I wanted. Now, I could also speak on, you know, the emasculation and the this and the that of the men. And also let's have the woman take responsibility for her role in that only because I've been there and I did that. So I used to have I'm this strong, independent, powerful woman. I never need it and depend on a man for anything. I had all my own experience.
I dated a couple of these guys, right? They lived with me. I don't need you for anything. I made all my
decisions. You don't tell me what to do. I'm doing this with or without you. I made more money than
them. But guess what that did? That attitude of not wanting to be needed or who wants to feel
like that. I don't want to feel not needed. I don't want to feel in a relationship that grant's going to
not include me and go do whatever and whenever. So that made it so they wanted to. I wanted to feel not needed. I don't want to
to go out and like, cheat, because they want to go be with a woman that does need them or care
about them or, you know, is excited by them. I made it seem like I could care less. So I don't think
that it's the fact that you make more money that emasculates the man. I feel like it's your attitude
toward them and not including them in on the cycle, not that you need to ask them how you spend
your money, but it's a way that you treat them that's inclusive. And there's a way that y'all can
come together and work out who you are as a couple, not just I am this with or without you.
Who were we as a couple?
Who do we represent?
Are we the winning couple?
What are our goals?
What are our dreams?
What do we want to accomplish together?
And then figure out who does what in the relationships based on your strengths and weakness is
not male-female on how you're going to get there.
Because if I'm the big breadwinner in the family and I'm the female, but I have this guy
who's supporting me and setting up and getting me everything that I need to run all the behind-the-scenes
operations so that we, me can get there. He's equally as valuable, you understand. So it's about
figuring out and not caring about what the outside world is, but how you each contribute to the
win and to the success of both of y'all as a couple. I've actually talked to couples where the woman is
the big breadwinner and the guy is running the whole organization and her follow-up
administration where she gets to go out and be the artist and, you know, she's a sculpture,
she's a famous person, whatever, blah, blah, blah.
But you know what I'm saying?
They don't have inner conflict because they have their thing worked out and so grooved in.
They're intertwined with each other going for goals together.
Yeah.
I feel like this is such a great segue to talk about your own experience with Grant.
I learned that you guys had a different dynamic before the 2008 recession and after.
and I think this illustrates exactly what you're saying so perfectly.
Yeah, well, we married in 2004.
Again, I had it just ingrained in me.
I wasn't trying to prove a point.
It was just ingrained to me to be the strong, powerful, independent woman,
never depend on a man for anything.
That was just what was always sitting there.
It wasn't spoken.
It just lived in me.
So for the first four years, I mean, Grant and I had my goals.
He had his goals.
We had never come together and said, who are we as a couple?
what do we represent and where do we want to go together?
It was always me, him.
So I would go out and produce and he would go out and produce,
and we'd come home and fight and battle because I was like,
you're not going to tell me what to do.
And I've lived on my own this whole time.
And you don't own me just because you have more money than me.
And I'm not going to make you a meal because you want a meal.
I'm going to make you a meal.
You know, just weird psycho stuff.
I mean, this is the man I'm married to and I am having issues
with like making the man a meal.
like that's that's messed up like how about support like just feed somebody who's hungry you know what i'm
saying without making it mean this so we fought each other so we build build build and kind of tear it
apart at night because we were playing small bickering small i was fighting he was fighting tit for tat
who's going to get to be the boss who's this who's that after 2008 different story i'm pregnant
with our first child we're under a lawsuit economic collapse occurs we're on the verge of losing
everything financially. Now what are you going to do? Now I had to take on the big gulp and say,
wow, you know what? Why can't I depend on the man that I trusted and loved enough to marry?
Why can't I depend on him? Why does society want to say, oh, you're co-dependent? Well, I am married.
I am co-dependent on him. He is codependent on me. I show up for him. He shows up for me.
I like that. I don't want to do this game alone. I want to build a lot. I want to build a
with somebody. I want to be able to depend on somebody who's got my back and vice versa. I had to go through
all of this in my head. I believe there's strengths and numbers. I believe in the power of two,
in the power of more. So that's after 2008, I was like, okay, this is when I had the idea,
who were we, where are we going, what do we want to build? What does our empire look like in the future?
It was very, this was the vision, but it did not look like that back then.
And I took a big risk and I said, I'm betting on you, Grant, I'm trading in the acting
career.
I'm going to come in and run background support.
I'm going to have your back.
I'm going to make you a meal.
I'm going to do whatever it takes for us to get ourselves out of this.
You know, you need me to this, that, boom, boom, boom, I got you.
Make connections.
Have a vision.
Hammer you to get going.
Not complain when you're out, working too hard.
Never staying when's enough enough.
Just keep pushing.
go, let's go, let's go. Win, celebrate the wins. Like, I'm going to be your cheerleader. And that's what
I did. And that's when everything started to just go, zoom, zoom. We started to make major strides.
We were no longer fighting. I had a role and he had a role. And he doesn't show up 50 and I show up 50.
I show up 100 and he shows up 100. That's how we do our relationship. Whether we're fighting,
we're arguing, we're mad, we hate each other that day. It doesn't matter. I'm showing up in the
relationship 100%. And so is he. And that's the way we've been able to be so successful.
Yeah. And I definitely want to get into, you know, what it means to build an empire and all that.
But before we get into that, there's a recession that everybody says is coming up. And so I'd love to
hear your advice in terms of how couples and like should deal with that. What should they talk about
and get aligned with? Because a lot of people break apart when the going gets tough. Right.
You know, they should just become very aware. We're in a recession. It's happening even if it doesn't just be
there, go there. Okay, what do we need to do? Economize, okay? Let's shut out all the excess spending,
which you should anyway. You're violating one of the principles that we know about money.
You know, get on the same page on money. Where are we going to go? It's who's got my money.
It's always a who. Who's got your money? Who's going to, who can you exchange products and services
with? It's a who. It's people. How do you network? How do you get on the communication lines of the
world. What can y'all do to meet? How can you do 10x the amount of work? You know, now's the time to pour
it on, not retreat. Now's the time to be around a 10x mindset. Now's the time to stay away from toxic
people and small-minded people. Now's the time to step away from the news and stop hearing the news.
Accept it. Make your battle plan. Grant and I have three rules to money. One, you know how to earn it,
right? Number two, you know how to store. It doesn't mean save. You save it in a bank. The money's
into zero. It's depreciating in value. Store it. And then number three, you store it so that you can
invest it into a passive income asset. That's what Grant and I have done. We earn income.
All earned income either goes to self-enhancement, back into myself and my business, not back into
Chanel, not back into Gucci, not back into a nice car. It's sacrifice. Pay the price today so you can
pay any price in the future. That's it. Be strict. Be disciplined. This is what Grant and I did
for a decade before social media and you couldn't see us paying the price. We paid the price.
What are you willing to give up in order to get where you wanted to go? We weren't doing fancy
parties, dinners, no loaf time. We were working, hustling, right? Earned income either goes back
into self, self-enhancement business. The rest gets stored. Okay, and that's it. Boom, boom, boom,
stored. Then you get enough income producing asset. We created a fund, card-owned capital. Anyone can invest.
accredited, non-accredited. You can invest with us and have a piece of this from day one,
income-producing asset that either delivers a dividend monthly or quarterly, depending on how you came in as an investor.
And that money, okay, and that money, number three, the passive income is what you spend on your Gucci,
in our case, planes, because we've amassed such a mass fortune of it, or an extra home or a this or that.
But until then, we're in sacrifice space.
So if you can get into alignment on those three things and know how to do your finances
and make agreements on, you know what, now's the time we're going to dig in.
And even if we don't financially grow in the next year, but we grow spiritually.
We grow in awareness.
We grow with investing in whatever it is that you do in your business.
You invest in your network that when the floodgates open, you're starting.
so far ahead of everybody else because you've had your discipline in for the last year.
You know, people always ask me, what would you do if you lost all your money? I'm like,
yeah, so? It wouldn't take me nearly as long to get it the second time. The first time. Why?
Because you can't take away what I know. You can't take away my connections. You can't take away
my intelligence, my grit, my confidence, my discipline. You know, that's been earned. So now is the time
to get together and say, you know what, now is the time where we can get stronger, where we can fortify.
Others are going to fail. Let's make a commitment to be the winning couple. Let's make a commitment
to get on the other side of this so that we can help other people who are just like us.
Start with a commitment, reaffirm it. Every week, have your meetings to powwow to keep each other
energized, set small goals along the way, small little targets that you can hit along the way to feel good.
Yeah. So your story is so fascinating because a lot of people would think that you might be upset that you're leaving behind such a great modeling and acting career. But actually, you ended up still being in the spotlight, being very famous. And almost it's like you took a different path to get to the same place that you wanted to be. And to me, that's such a powerful lesson because a lot of people are so fixated on this one outcome of this is what I need to pursue my.
dream. This is the one outcome. But really, there's so many ways you can get to what you really want,
which I think for you is like making an impact, you know, being known. And so I'd love to hear
thoughts on that. Creativity follows commitment, you know, and once you make a commitment and you're
open to the possibility, and once you know what you want, you know your purpose, you, all of a sudden
you can start to see opportunities everywhere. And when you get out of the little tunnel vision,
And in my case, for me, I thought the only thing I knew how to do was an acting career.
What else can I do?
I never went to college.
Never thought I was one of those smart chicks, you know?
I thought that was the only thing.
I had my whole identity wrapped up into it.
It was very hard to make the move.
And exactly what you said.
Now, as I just made this commitment, I've used everything along the way.
I've just used it all.
But if I had that closed mindset, I wouldn't even be able to see.
You know, I use now that I was.
was able to support grant and to turn that into my superhero.
That is my power.
I'm not ashamed by that.
Other women have in my case, I'm only speaking about my case,
so I'm assuming that because I feel it,
there have to be other women out there that feel the same way.
But in the beginning, you know, I was this power woman.
I moved to Los Angeles.
I was the actress.
I was this.
I was not to come and then take a support role
and figure out what all of that means.
Like, you can kind of want to shrink and shrivel.
I was like, no, I've got to own this.
I am the support.
I did do this.
Own it.
And now I'm on the forefront, empowering other women owning and, you know, I'm building a real estate
group with EXP where I have over 730 agents in my organization.
I'm helping other powerful people build their empires.
How?
By doing the same thing that I did for grant, offering infrastructure, mindset, and support.
Stop trying to fight it.
These are your assets.
Just embrace them.
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first of all, what is your definition of an empire? And then I want to understand what your role is
and grants role in this empire. So an empire is really a mindset. It's about thinking big enough,
abundantly enough, big enough expansion. Empires require people.
No one can build an empire alone.
So it's a metaphor for your life, right?
This isn't the solopreneur.
This is the empire.
And my role, of course, in every empire that you have, you should be the king and the queen of your empire.
And there's empires within the empires, you know?
My executive assistant, she gets to be the queen of her empire.
And as the king and the queen, like that means our relationship is the most sacred of the entire empire.
meaning I don't go to my friends, and I metaphorically call the chambermaids in this book as an example to say,
if you're with the queen and you're with a king, and that's the top, how could you go to anyone below you and ask advice about being with the king when they've never been with the king?
They can't give you the advice.
And why are you nattering and criticizing and complaining the king?
and why would the king do that for the queen?
And when you are allowed to seek your own counsel with each other and you protect each other,
you're able to, the rest of the empire filters down and follows suits.
So now I can work out my disagreements with my husband in private,
and I don't have to have dumped onto my friends that now have a negative outlook with him.
I make up with him.
They still have the negative outlook.
Then I get with them.
They have the negative outlook.
I have to defend them.
or they bring up something that I've already hashed out and then I go home and refight all over again.
Why? I don't do that. So an empire is about abundance. It's abundance in confidence. It's abundance in
resources, finances, people. It's abundance on the mission. It's about wearing the crown,
something that's greater than yourself. It's about something in your purpose being so important
that you can be willing to feel scared or sad or lazy, but you'll still do it anywhere because
you have to do it for the crown, for the people, for the purpose, for the cause. It gets you
going. It's being willing to think bigger than just yourself. Yeah. So one of the things that
I'm curious about is how you get your children involved in this empire. It's very interesting that
you guys bring them up on stage. You don't.
see many successful couples even putting their kids on camera, but you guys have decided that your
entire family is going to be this role model family in the limelight. I want to understand how
you get buy-in from your kids to come along this journey. Well, I've just indoctrinated them from
when they're very early, very young. I've always tried to respect them as spiritual beings that
are in little bodies, not that they're adults, not that they've earned adult rights, but
that their spiritual beings are not children, they can understand, not like dumb, you know,
but like that they can actually understand. So I've communicated, look, Grant and I are
superheroes and we want to make a difference for the better and we want to impact lives.
And Grant wants to, you know, help financial literacy and help people take care of their finances
and it helps their families. And, you know, me, I want to restore the family dynamic to society.
and I want to empower women because I believe we're powerful and we can make a difference and make
change on the planet. And so do you want to be a part of that? We asked them. We don't make them.
We didn't decide. We invited them to participate. Do you want to be a part of this team that makes a
difference for the better? Yes, yes, I want to be a superhero. You know, they're a little, right?
Great. This is how you can do this. You can show up with us at events. You can dance on the stage.
You can pass out the flyers. You can, you know, sometimes when we have to leave you behind, because we
have to go do an event when you're okay, when the nanny is watching you, and I don't have to worry
about you, and I can give to that audience, and then they can take it home, and then they can go
make their lives better for their kids. You're contributing. Do you realize you're not there,
but you're contributing because you let us go distraction-free? That is a way you are exchanging
with us. So I let them see that they can exchange from a very young age. And now, as you can see,
You know, they're 13.
Sabrina's on a trip with Grant today about meeting with a very big group for apartments and whatnot.
And she does the real estate king with them.
And they do 10x kids.
And they're putting together a show mini moguls together.
And, you know, they speak at Grant Cardone Foundation to other children.
Like, you know, they're, they've taken an active role because they've been allowed to contribute and exchange with as much as they're willing to do.
I feel like that's so beautiful.
You want to help.
Your kids want to help, you know?
Like it's just understanding that, you know, it might not look like in the form that you're used to.
So, you know, from a very young age, if the kid sees you on the computer all day long and they come over and they start pounding on your computer, as difficult as it may be to not be like, stop it.
What are you doing?
You're just ruined my document.
But being and having the intellect enough to realize the kid is coming over.
who loves you so much and is trying to contribute.
They're trying to help you by pounding on your computer.
They want to contribute.
So, you know, from a young age, it was, oh, wow, thank you so much.
Wow, that was amazing.
They're like, yay, you know, they feel all great.
And you take your computer and undo all the little marks that they made and, you know, continue.
But it's allowing, it's about parents recognizing, like, even a,
even a smile or a performance or a dinner they want to make you.
I remember they made us dinners and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches or whatever.
It's allowing them to discharge that debt that they feel.
Can you imagine a kid has been given everything?
They can't do anything.
They want to feel, even from young ages, that they are self-determined,
that they can do things, that they can give back and they can contribute.
And it's important for parents to recognize and allow their children to control.
tribute. I love that. So my last question before we start to close this out is really about you being a
role model. You know, people think it's easy to just get on camera every day to always sort of make the
right decisions, to always, you know, hold yourself with a certain amount of honor and grace. But it's
not easy to be a role model. I know that I've got a lot of fans on LinkedIn, for example, and sometimes I want to
respond to a mean comment, but then I remember I'm a role model to so many people. And so many people,
that are looking up to me, and you have it, you know, a hundred times as most people. So I'd love to
understand how you deal with that. Oh, so that's very easy. Like, you know, you mentioned wanting to
respond to somebody. I have all those impulses, too. What helps me in those situations, it isn't really
necessarily that, and I should maybe look and say, wait, I'm a role model here, but I don't. What I do is
I go, look, my purpose is so big. I'm trying to restore the value of,
family dynamic to the world. I'm trying to empower women to empower themselves, to empower their
families, their communities. And I feel like I'm so far from having that goal achieved on this
planet that I can't waste a second if that's the goal. And then every time somebody says something
negative about me, I go chase it down. What am I doing right now? I'm going down this rabbit hole.
that enemy, that hater, has now successfully distracted me from achieving my target because I'm off my
target and I'm on to them. And now I'm flowing power. Somebody like me, somebody like you who has power,
who has influence. Now I've put my attention, your attention, your power onto them and I'm flowing
them power, even if it's a negative comment or whatever. Like, can you imagine the flow of power you just gave them
and how much they receive by pulling you off of your agenda.
So I don't engage because I can't afford to engage.
I am so busy trying to get my mission accomplished.
That saves me now.
If somebody tries to, and it's a rare circumstance,
the real enemy who tries to threaten my family,
our staff, our investors,
somebody who's really evil intention,
not somebody that's just going to say I look like,
Oh, God, what do they call me?
A drag queen.
They say I was like a drag queen.
Whatever.
The people they want to or say that I'm a gold digger or a trophy wife,
they try to say these, which all of which I use to my benefit in the end.
But, you know, I'm not talking about comments like that.
I'm talking about real threats or those people.
I am not afraid to come off of my post, you know, my job.
I'm not afraid to make an example out of them.
and for all to see
because I want people to know
I do fight for my friends
I do fight for my group
you're not allowed to harm me
my family, my people
it won't happen on my watch
and it only happens about
maybe once every five years
but I'm not afraid to stab those people
in a public arena because I don't
want I want people to know
what the threat is for coming after
me and my group but that's rare
the haters
they're like barking dogs on a on a on on the wheel of a fire truck like is the fire truck who's
trying to put out of fire going to stop to kick the dog away from biting the tire no you're
going to keep going and the dog's going to tire out and all the haters do because they can't even
match your energy they all the energy that they have is to try to bring you down yeah you know
and when that fails they peter out yeah i love what you're saying you're basically saying
Save your energy for when it really matters and all that little stuff, just let it slide off your back because you don't want to feed your energy, give them your good energy.
Right.
Because that's what they want.
They want to bring you down.
That's right.
And the best revenge is to flourish and prosper.
It's the best revenge.
It's the best for all involved.
The more you succeed, the less hate you have for those people, you know.
And it actually heals you from actually wanting revenge, you know.
and you're doing good for the world. So the solution to everything is to flourish and prosper.
So Elena, I want to be respectful of your time. I know we have just a couple minutes left. So I end
my interviews with the same couple of questions. The first one is what is one actionable thing
that our young improfitors can do today to become more profitable tomorrow?
Profitable. You know, stop studying the self-proclaimed experts and really start getting mentors
study the big guys, the big guys, study, what is Elon Musk doing? How do they take on debt? How do they use
debt? How do they, what are they doing? Like, model them. What are the greats doing? So find the people
and study what they're doing. Study the people that have the statistic in the area of which you want to
succeed in and go deep on everything that they do, learn everything that they do, and stop trying to get
pieces here and there and just study it deep until you master that one thing.
I love that advice. And what is your secret to profiting in life? And this doesn't have to be
related to financially. Profiting can be profiting in relationships, for example, anything.
The secrets of profiting for me is I'm huge on this. I don't live from the past into the
present. That's normal. I don't like normal. I live from the future to the present.
So I look at where I want to go, who I want to be, who I want to be around, what do I want in my life.
And I reverse engineer and take the actions necessary in order to become that person that I want to be in the future.
And so that's where I'm always looking from.
I'm living from now from my future self, not my past.
When I disconnected from that, I really started to profit and have gains.
Otherwise, you know, I was looking at the past.
I don't want to buy this program because the last program didn't.
work and I failed. Well, I'm not the same person. Maybe I do the new program in a new unit of time,
and this time it works. Every time I compared myself to the pastor, this relationship's not going to work
because the last relationship didn't work. Everything from the past, the past I could never get ahead.
Once I finally said, this is who I am. I want to know about finances. I want to be a good speaker.
I want to be confident. I want to be competent. Every single course I've done since then has worked because
I go, I need to have X, Y, and Z. Once I get through check, check, check, then I get to be that.
girl, that girl that I want. So every single thing that I do has impact meeting. I know it's going to
work because I see who I'm supposed to be. I just have to get through the checklist of all my
action items and then I get to have. It is a complete game changer. I love that you're bringing
this up. I just had a conversation with Ben Hardy and our whole conversation was about future self.
And he told me something that I want to just share with my listeners really quick because it's related
with what you just said. Basically, it's like you're not your future self yet. You're not your past self.
We're only are who we are in this moment. Your past self is dead. People who hurt you in the past,
they're not the same people anymore. They've had new experiences. They think differently. They're
doing different things. They have different jobs. It's literally the person who broke your heart,
the person who fired you. You can't stay mad at them because they're not the same person. That person
doesn't exist anymore. So the past doesn't even matter anymore. And if you spend your
time there, you're never going to get to where you want to go. So all you can do is be in your
present self and work on your future self. So true. It's been a game changer for me. I like that advice.
Thank you so much, Elena. I really appreciate having you on the show. And thanks for coming on.
Oh, it's been an honor. Thank you so much for having me and introducing me to all your amazing audience.
Thank you.
