Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Jenna Kutcher: Turn Your Side Hustle into a 7-Figure Online Business | Entrepreneurship | YAP Live
Episode Date: July 11, 2025Now on Spotify Video! After realizing that climbing the corporate ladder didn’t bring fulfillment, Jenna Kutcher left her stable job to start a photography business. But by the time she scaled it to... six figures, she was burned out. Determined to create a more sustainable lifestyle, she pursued multiple side hustles, worked on her own terms, and built various income streams, ultimately creating a multi-million-dollar online business. In this episode, Jenna shares the strategies that helped her build passive income, scale her business, all while fiercely protecting her work-life balance. In this episode, Hala and Jenna will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (00:53) Quitting Her Corporate Job to Start a Business (05:21) Creating Online Courses as a Side Hustle (09:10) Growing Your Audience on Social Media (14:32) Scaling to 7 Figures Through Affiliate Marketing (18:30) Marketing Tips for Entrepreneurs with a Small Following (22:01) The Journey to Real Estate Investment (30:58) Building a Business with Your Partner (32:58) Prioritizing Family Over Opportunities Jenna Kutcher is an entrepreneur, online marketing expert, author, and the host of the Goal Digger Podcast. She is also a digital educator and has created multi-million-dollar revenue streams through online courses, affiliate marketing, podcasting, and real estate. Jenna has built a massive online following by authentically sharing her journey and empowering women to create businesses they love and lives they enjoy. Sponsored By: Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting. Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/PROFITING OpenPhone - Get 20% off your first 6 months at OpenPhone.com/profiting. Airbnb - Find a co-host at airbnb.com/host Boulevard - Get 10% off your first year at joinblvd.com/profiting when you book a demo Resources Mentioned: Jenna’s Podcast, Goal Digger Podcast: bit.ly/TGDP-apple Jenna’s Instagram: instagram.com/jennakutcher Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap Youtube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting 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, Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business Podcast, Startup, Solopreneur, Founder, Networking
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Today's episode is sponsored in part by Indeed, Shopify, Mercury, OpenPhone, Airbnb, and
Boulevard.
As always, you can find all of our incredible deals linked in the show notes or at youngimprofiting.com
slash deals.
We focus so much on like leaving a legacy, but I think in reality we have to focus on
living a legacy.
Jenna Kutcher.
Jenna Kutcher.
Jenna Kutcher.
She's the host of the Gold Digger podcast.
She's a bestselling author and she's also an entrepreneur of many different businesses.
You've got like a million plus followers on Instagram.
You're huge on Pinterest.
How did that piece come about?
It all grew super organically until it didn't.
Even in the early days, I would just share my life and it really made me realize like
people need to connect with people. I heard this statistic of like the average millionaire has seven revenue streams and
at the time I had a one. And I was like how do we figure this out? Like what could this even look
like? It felt so crazy. I have had to learn how to discern like what are my best yeses and like what
can I say no to without having FOMO, without having guilt?
In the beginning, you have to trade time for money.
That is the hustle that is required.
Boundaries aren't bad.
It's a muscle that you have to learn to flex
and it takes time.
We do seven figures in affiliate marketing each year.
I look at marketing very distilled down.
There are two focuses.
The first primary focus is.
Hey everyone, welcome to the show. We've got an exciting episode in store for you today.
We are live in an Airbnb location, which is coincidental because we actually talked about
Airbnb in this episode. Today I'm interviewing Jenna Kutcher. She's the host of the Golddigger
podcast. She's a bestselling author and she's also an entrepreneur of many different businesses.
So we're gonna talk about all the different ways
she makes money from her courses to affiliate marketing
to podcast sponsorships to hosting a property on Airbnb.
I absolutely love this conversation.
Jenna is one of my close friends and she's so smart.
She's so brilliant.
I can't wait to share it with you all.
So without further ado,
here's my conversation with Jenna Kutcher. Jenna, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thank you. I mean, let's talk about money, but money is such a taboo topic, especially with women.
And so we're going to kind of dive off the deep end together.
Yes.
Let's do it.
So first of all, tell me, what was the first way that you started to make a lot of money like
when did it all start to really come together for you? Okay so when I was 23 I
worked in corporate America and I had a great job but I very quickly realized
that climbing the corporate ladder was just not for me and it is an amazing
option for a lot of people it just didn't resonate with my soul like there
was just this feeling of like,
I've got to figure something else out.
So I started as a wedding photographer.
Most people know my story.
I bought a $300 camera on Craigslist,
ended up starting a wedding photography business,
taught myself everything.
And within three years I was earning six figures,
which at the time was more than I had ever even dreamed of.
In my corporate job I was making $50,000 a year.
I felt so rich.
Making six figures felt like this amount
that was like impossible.
And when I was growing my business,
I was also experiencing burnout
and I had grown so quickly, which was such a blessing,
but I also just hit this place where I was like,
I can't imagine doing this for the next five, 10, 15, 20 years. There's got to be a different way.
And I committed to figuring out a different way through loss. And I shared this story many times,
but when my husband and I finally decided that we wanted to start a family, it didn't happen
as easily for us as it does for other people. And I know a lot
of people experience this, but we went through two miscarriages. And I was planning my pregnancies
around my photography business because I was shooting in the summer and I had to figure out
how was this going to work? And when I had my second loss, I had to show up and shoot a wedding
the next day. And I was like, there has to be a different way. I built this amazing business, but if I don't show up and shoot, I don't get paid. And there there has to be a different way. Like I built this amazing business
but if I don't show up and shoot I don't get paid and there's got to be a different way and so I
committed then and there in this moment of like agony of like I will figure this out and I remember
around that time I heard this statistic of like the average millionaire has seven revenue streams
and at the time I had one and I I was like, how do we figure this
out? Like, what could this even look like? It felt so crazy. And so I started many different
side hustles. Do you want to dive in? Yeah. Okay. So my first side hustle was I became
a watercolor artist. So my mother-in-law is, was an elementary art teacher and in the basement of her house,
she had all of these art supplies.
And in my season of burnout, I was like, I need to do something to connect back to my
creativity.
Like at first, my photography was my creativity and then it became my job.
And so I went home with all these watercolor supplies.
I started painting every day.
I forced myself to sit in a chair and paint for 20 minutes a day.
And I started sharing these paintings on the internet and people were like, can I buy that?
And I ended up figuring out a way to scan these watercolor art prints and sell
them online.
And pretty soon we were paying our mortgage with the print revenue.
Your first sort of passive income revenue.
Totally, because that was what made me realize
I could create something once and sell it a bunch of times.
So it started as like a joke
and it turned into something where I was like,
wait a minute, like we're onto something.
Also around that time was when I had realized
after hitting six figures
that I was happier when I was working less.
And I had hit this point,
and I think a lot of entrepreneurs hit this point
where in the beginning you have to trade time for money.
There's really no other way around it.
That is the hustle that is required.
But at some point when you start to get the money,
you recognize that I will spend money to get back my time.
And I'd hit that point in my photography business
and I was like, you know what?
I will go back to earning $50,000 a year
if I can have a life.
And so I committed to booking half of the weddings that I had been shooting.
And I said, I'm going to figure something else out.
And so that's when I started learning about online courses.
And I had scaled a business from zero to 100K in three years.
I knew something that a lot of people didn't.
And so I started mentoring other local photographers, having them come into this little condo we
lived in,
and I would walk them through pricing, marketing,
social media, like all the business stuff.
Because I'm like, these people are so good at their craft,
they don't know how to like sell it.
And so I started coaching,
and then I started looking into online courses.
And that's kind of where the business
that people see today started to form,
but it was years in the making.
I love that.
It's so inspiring.
So in terms of your courses, how did you first figure out
how to go from one to one to one to many?
Because that's really the secret.
It's like, how do you take what you do to individuals
and then make it possible that many people can take this course?
How did you first start to figure that world out?
Yeah.
It's kind of funny
because I don't know if I've ever drawn the parallel
of like making a watercolor print,
scanning it, figuring out one-to-one or one-to-many.
And that is exactly what online education is.
And it was so funny because I ended up coaching
five local photographers
and they all had the same questions.
And all of a sudden I found myself,
I'm like, I am a broken record. I'm teaching them the same things. I'm showing them the same questions. And all of a sudden I found myself, I'm like, I am a broken record.
I'm teaching them the same things. I'm showing them the same pricing guides. I'm walking
through the same things. And that was when I really started to discern like there are
trends and questions that everybody has. And that is the type of content you want to put
into an online course. And I am so grateful that I took the time to sit down with people
face to face, hear their struggles, understand like, well, what am I actually doing different?
Because I think that so often we are so close to our own genius that we think
everybody knows this.
Yeah.
Surely this is easy for everybody.
And so when I started to identify these trends, I was like, oh my gosh, I can,
I can teach branding and I can teach social media and I can teach pricing and I can
teach email communication and all of these things.
And so I created my first online course
after taking an online course.
So I was like, I'm gonna buy an online course
and figure out, okay, how did they deliver it?
How was it recorded?
How was it spread out over the weeks?
Yes, that is like, my secret sauce is reverse engineering.
I see an end result.
As a wedding photographer, I would see the finished shot and I would think, how did the
photographer pose these people this way?
What were the cues that they gave them?
What was the lighting?
And I reverse engineered course creation because I was like, I can figure this out.
I know I can.
It's like the people that can take apart a car and figure out how to put it back together,
I can't do that.
But when it comes to digital stuff, I'm so good at that.
And so online courses like cracked my life open in such a beautiful way. But it did,
it allowed me to reach people outside of where we lived in this tiny village in Wisconsin.
And it allowed me to connect with other photographers who were struggling with the same thing so
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So I really resonate with this because I started my first course a year ago.
And at the time, I didn't really realize that I had a course under my belt.
I have a social media agency and it's very expensive to work with us.
You're actually one of my social clients.
Yeah.
And so it's like $10,000 a month minimum to work with us.
And I'd have lots of people coming to me being like, I really want your help, but I can't
afford your services.
I really want your help, but I can't afford your services.
And then I realized that this agency that I'm building, in order to get more clients, every time I get three more clients,
I have to hire five more people.
And I don't wanna have like a 3000 person organization.
That's a lot of stress on me.
So I was like, what can I do to sort of lay it all out
and the same trainings that I give my team,
the same checklists I give them,
how can I take what I give my team to service my clients
and then turn it into a class?
And then I did that and I just used everything that we already had.
So the course was like very fast to put together because I think a lot of people don't realize
that if you have an agency, you probably have a course because whatever you're doing, you
can package it up and teach other people how to do what you do to service your clients.
And I feel like a lot of people don't realize that.
The other thing with courses is that it just gives you so much content to then create an
audience and attract an audience.
So for example, I have like a two-day master class on LinkedIn and my team literally just
goes to the slides that I created and then creates posts.
You know what I mean?
Because they have all the content, I've written it all down.
So I'd love to understand,
how did you end up becoming an influencer?
Because you've got like a million plus followers
on Instagram, you're huge on Pinterest too.
And so just curious, how did that piece come about?
Was the podcast the first thing that kicked that all off?
No, I mean, it all grew super organically until it didn't. So when I was a wedding photographer I realized really quickly
that there were a million wedding photographers in my area that were
really talented and the only thing that made me different was me because we were
all delivering a very similar finished product and so even in the early days
and I mean this is like oh gee oh gee, Instagram, we're talking
here.
Like when we used to use those weird Valencia filters, I would just share my life.
And I would just share who I was and what I was struggling with.
I would share working from home with no makeup on.
This is the reality of it.
And it was so interesting because when I first became a wedding photographer, I just hid
behind my work.
It was like this safe spot. I figured surely everyone only wants to see my work.
And I remember years and years and years ago, polling my audience of like, what are your favorite posts?
And it was all personal. And I was like, what is this?
And so fast forward a few years, we went to Hawaii and I wanted to do an experiment.
And I love experimenting.
I am like a huge experimenter.
And so I said, for 30 days, I'm going to only post me.
And this is at a time when I've been hiding behind my work for years.
And my engagement skyrocketed.
My confidence in myself grew.
My connection to my audience grew.
And I was like so fascinated by it
because I was like this seems like the least interesting thing of like what I'm
doing. I was just sharing my life and it really made me realize like people need
to connect with people and I never set out to be an influencer. I really wanted
to just like continue to grow and share and I really have realized over the last
few years of like my dream is to like help women build businesses
they don't hate and build lives that they love.
And I have been taking people on this journey,
not as like I have figured this all out,
but like I am still learning, I am still growing,
I'm still figuring this out.
And so when I started doing like social media collaborations
and social media promotions and different things like that,
it just felt so natural because I am the kind of person
where I'm like, oh my God, have you tried this new lip gloss
or like this skin like cleanser is life changing.
Like I am naturally like when I go on a girls date
with my girlfriends, by the end of the day,
I've dropped like 10 links of things
that I'm just telling them about
because I'm like, if this works for me,
this could work for you.
Like I just love not gatekeeping,
whether it's business or like beauty products
or whatever that is.
And so that was just such an interesting like facet
for me to realize like people care about the business, yes,
but they also care about like what's happening
behind the business and like what's fueling it.
And so that was interesting.
We did have a viral moment.
So I grew very organically.
I felt like I knew every single follower. Like I just, it felt that way. And we had
a moment go viral and it was a photo of me and my husband on the beach in Hawaii. And
I was talking about body image and it was the funniest post because I just, I never
expected it to go viral. I think that's what happens with viral posts. And I was clapping
back at someone who had said,
how can a woman like you get a man like him?
And my husband is very fit.
He's very in shape.
At the time I was curvier.
I had been going through miscarriages and loss.
My body had been through so much and I was just angry.
And I was like, who are you to say this?
Like we have been together for a decade.
He has loved me through every pound, every pimple,
like everything.
And that post like blew up and overnight we got hundreds of thousands of followers and
blessing and a curse, right? Double-edged sword because wow, this is amazing. But also
like who are these people and why are they here? And what are they watching?
That's when I first found out about you because I was starting to podcast and I was growing
popularity in podcasts and then I
remember hearing about Jenna Kutcher and your likeliness was so tied up with like body image.
And so like you were the body image girl that was like spreading body positivity and that's
what you were known for.
Was that hard to sort of like get out of that box?
Because now you're out of that box. It was, well, it was so confusing
because I had talked about body image for years.
I think it's a lifelong journey
to learn how to love yourself
and I don't think it ever ends.
And so the fact that like one random post goes off
and then here I am running a business,
teaching entrepreneurs
and now all these people are following,
commenting about my body, wanting more of that content I am running a business, teaching entrepreneurs, and now all these people are following,
commenting about my body, wanting more of that content
that I'm not monetizing because I didn't want to monetize it.
It was very confusing.
And again, it was such a blessing and a curse
because so many people resonated with the message
and it connected with them and they felt seen
and they felt understood.
And at the same point too, as a creator,
it's like, what do I do with this?
And as a business owner, where do we go from here?
Like, I'm not gonna sell a course about body image.
And so it was a really interesting time.
And I think that I just did my best
to like stay very true to myself,
stay very grounded in the message,
to be clear of like, here's what you can expect
if you stick around here,
because this isn't gonna become this type of account.
And so yeah, it was very interesting.
I wanna dig into the course thing
and how it lended itself so nicely to you doing affiliates.
Because something that a lot of entrepreneurs don't realize
is that once you figure out how to promote something well,
you can then just take that
and replicate it in a million different ways.
And I was even talking about this yesterday.
Me and Jenna were at the IAB upfronts.
We were both like very integrated into this big podcasting event for advertisers.
And I was telling the advertisers, YAP Media, my network, we're all business owners.
And so we understand how to promote our own products and services.
And then we turn that into podcast sponsorships.
So that's what I've been doing.
You've been doing that with affiliate marketing.
So I'd love for you to walk through
how do you actually promote your courses,
and then how is that very,
what is the relationship to that,
and then how you started affiliate marketing.
Yeah, oh my gosh, I love affiliate marketing.
I know, I don't do any of that.
Oh my gosh, people.
Okay, so we do seven figures in affiliate marketing. I know, I don't do any of that. Oh my gosh, people. Okay, so we do seven figures in affiliate marketing each year, over seven figures.
So like if people are wondering like, are you getting pennies to the dollar?
Like this can be a very lucrative thing, especially if you don't have a ton of offers that you
are selling on your own.
Affiliate marketing is literally just recommending someone else's product and getting a commission
when people buy it.
And so if you have gotten people's trust in what you are recommending with anything and
they do trust you, they will follow you wherever you lead them to in a beautiful way, right?
And so I love affiliate marketing, whether it is skincare, whether it is jeans, whether
it is another online course, like I just think it's so powerful.
And the reason why I love it is because I am not an expert in everything.
Very clearly, I'm not an expert in all the things.
And I want to recommend things and people that I love to the people that I love.
Yeah.
And so it is like I am a natural connector.
My greatest joy in life is like connecting people that I love to each other,
connecting people to products that they love.
So one of the things that I've realized is like I can sell my own stuff.
That's wonderful.
But what does it look like when I partner up with brands that I love and with
people that I love and help promote their business?
We recently partnered with one of my dear friends who I've literally known for
almost a decade and she's my copywriter and she has an amazing course.
And I was like, Ashlyn, let me talk about your course.
Like your work has changed my life and so many people could benefit from this.
And I am not a pro copywriter.
And it transformed her business.
It changed her launch.
It made her show up differently.
My audience was like there.
We had thousands of people sign up for her master class.
And so it's like so fun for me because I'm like, I get to support the people and brands
that I love.
I get a commission from what I'm selling and I get to kind of experiment with different
marketing strategies because there's less skin in the game and I get to be more creative
of like, what does this look like?
But go into the nitty gritty.
Like, what are you doing?
I know you're using many chat automations. Like are you leveraging an email list? Just tell me, like what are you doing?
Okay, you want me to give you the lathe length. Okay, so if somebody's listening to this and you
have a podcast, a very natural way to do this is to have a podcast interview and to be able to tie
it to something. That's what we did when we did my LinkedIn course. Yes, and so just naturally
integrating what that person is an expert in and inviting people with a call to action at the end to tie it to something else. That's what we did when we did my LinkedIn course. Yes, and so just naturally integrating
what that person is an expert in
and inviting people with a call to action
at the end of the podcast.
If you have an email list,
sending out emails about,
hey, this person that I trust,
this is my experience with them,
this is how they've transformed things for me,
this is why you should trust them
or join their free masterclass.
If you have Instagram, sharing about it on Instagram.
So we've basically built this almost like flywheel
where we could have a guest on our podcast,
we could send out a couple emails,
I could do an Instagram live with them
and a few Instagram posts, and that's honestly it.
And they take care of the rest.
And it's people that I trust that are going to serve
my audience well at the highest level.
And then if it's the right offer for them, they'll take it.
So now you've got like millions of followers.
Take us back to when you didn't have millions of followers.
It wasn't that long ago.
How would you promote something then?
Maybe you've got a couple thousand followers,
but you're really smart.
You already make money doing something really well.
Maybe you have a job and you do something really well. Maybe you have a job and you do something really well.
Maybe you have a company, you do something well, but you just don't have a lot of
followers.
How would you then either sell courses or affiliate marketing?
Yeah.
So I would say two channels.
So Pinterest is huge and I love Pinterest.
That's a juicy one.
No one talks about this.
Y'all Pinterest is a search engine.
It's not social media and it's so crazy to me that people think
that it is just like a place to like plan your dream life,
but not do anything about it.
When people go onto Pinterest,
they are typing in recipes with sausage,
or makeup looks for work,
or capsule wardrobes for vacation.
People are typing in key words,
and they're typing in
stuff that you have created or work that you could create and so we get millions
of views on Pinterest a month just using like the same strategies you would use
for search engine optimization, just using keywords. That's so smart because nobody's
doing that. Nobody's doing it. Especially for targeting women. Yes and the cool thing about that is like with Pinterest being a search engine, it's
not a popularity contest. So unlike other social platforms, in order to get your work
seen, you have to have a massive following because it is a search engine. If you are
search engine oriented, you will be found. And so if you are someone listening to this
and you're like, great for you, I don't have a million followers or I don't have this.
Pinterest is an amazing place.
So like we use Pinterest to grow our email list.
I look at marketing very distilled down.
There are two focuses.
The first primary focus is growing your email list.
Why?
It is an asset that you own.
It is something you can control.
Social media is amazing.
It is rented space.
You do not own it.
You can't control it.
You are battling multiple algorithms. Your email list is a true asset.
If you are somebody listening and you want to be in business three years from now,
five years from now, 10 years from now, you have to have an email list.
That is the only way. So priority number one in marketing is an email list.
Priority number two is any other platform that you are using,
whether it is LinkedIn, YouTube, a podcast, Instagram, all of those efforts
need to be getting people off of those platforms
and onto your email list.
That is it.
And it's so funny because we over complicate marketing
and we're like, you know, Instagram doesn't work.
How are you using Instagram?
Are you serving or are you selling?
If you are selling, no wonder it doesn't work.
And so your primary focus as a creator
is to start your email list
and then any efforts that you have,
the goal should be to get people off
of whatever platform they're on
and onto your list because again, you own that.
And you get them off of the platform by serving them
and then retargeting them in the DMs
to get them in your email list.
One of the biggest regrets I have
is not starting my email list until like just a couple years ago
I started it.
And my favorite way, I don't know if you do this,
to get emails is to do webinars.
So I do these private Zoom webinars where I'll do
like LinkedIn training, sales trainings,
I'm doing like a mental health one for entrepreneurs
later this summer.
And then I'll get like a thousand, two thousand people registering.
Boom, I got two thousand emails now
and they opted in so I can communicate with them now.
And there's so much clicks and conversions
that happen in email.
It's a lot of sales are happening on email.
So I love that.
When I first started Young and Profiting Podcast
back in 2018, it was just a hobby.
And for two good years, I poured more time and money than I got back.
At times I kept asking myself, is this worth it?
What if it never works?
What if I don't have the tools, the time, or the team?
But I just pushed through and I was consistent and now it's one of the top entrepreneurship
podcasts in the world.
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Okay, so we talked about a number
of your revenue streams already.
We talked about your water coloring business
when you first started out. We talked about courses. We talked about your water coloring business when you first started out.
We talked about courses. We talked a little bit about podcasts and your different sponsorships
and affiliate marketing. What other revenue streams do you have?
So one thing that we are super passionate about is real estate. And I love real estate.
I love property. I love looking at houses online. Like I just, there's something about making a space a home
and sharing it even that just feels so powerful to me.
And years and years ago,
Drew and I used to spend multiple months of the year in Maui.
And it was after I had had this revelation of like,
I can build a business that can run while I rest.
Like, what would it look like if we spent a month on Maui?
And then it turned into two and three
and we started to fall in love.
But we were also spending a lot of money staying there.
And we would stay in Airbnbs each time.
And we started to like ask ourselves questions like,
okay, we're spending a lot of money here.
Like, what would this look like?
Like, could there be a possibility
that like we could do this ourselves?
And I'll never forget a trip. My parents came to visit us and there was an open house.
We were walking down the beach and we're like, I don't know, let's just pop in and look.
And I started to really dream bigger.
And at the time, my business was not at all the size that it is today.
And I remember we went through this open house.
I took the little flyer and I went and sat in a coffee shop and I started doing math.
And I started thinking about okay
How much are we spending a month when we're here? How much rent could we potentially earn? What would the expenses be?
What are the HOAs? What does this look like and
One thing that's super interesting about Hawaii is there's a lot of different zoning
So there's apartment zone and there's hotel zone and the place that we were looking at used to be a hotel
It literally is zoned as a hotel.
And I remember just thinking, this is so peculiar
that this was an operating hotel
and they have now created it into spaces
that people could own.
And I sat down in this coffee shop
and started running the numbers and I'm like,
I think we could make this work.
And I remember telling Drew,
I am committed to eating ramen noodles for a year
if we do this this because we just loved
being on the island and we loved having this space and the thought of doing it was just
so exciting.
And so we ended up putting in an offer.
I will never forget, we flew back to the island, so we got this place.
It had been owned by this sweet, sweet old couple for years.
And we had one week to flip the unit and get it ready for Airbnb. And I literally thought we were going to get divorced that week because we were like painting
and getting the couch in and the couch was too big. It couldn't fit through the door and all
these like silly things that we were like, what did we get ourselves into?
And it's ended up being one of like the biggest blessings.
We have hosted hundreds of couples over the years. We have
had so many repeat guests come back to our space. And we have been able to kind of just
create a community with our guests, with the team that helps us take care of our property.
It's been so beautiful. We've also been able to give back so much to the community. We
bought a place on the island because we care about the island.
And so last year alone, we donated over 30% of our profits
to locals and to support them.
We were able to help people in need
when the devastating fire went through Lahaina.
We opened up our doors, we housed locals
for over two months in our unit,
and we just took care of people.
Like we used our network of other Airbnb hosts
and we said like, open your doors,
we will pay all of your expenses, just get people in.
And so it was amazing to see like, yes, it is a property
and yes, it is this place where people can rent and stay,
but we're also doing something a lot bigger with it.
And that matters to me.
Like anything that I do has to have meaning
and I care so deeply about like the why
behind our work that like I want to make sure that there is always facets of like respect and
community built into everything that we do. And so it's been beautiful. My parents were just down
there and stayed and to be able to like see our space be shared and loved by people we love,
but also taken care of by people we shared and loved by people we love, but
also taken care of by people we love and enjoyed by people we love. Like it just feels like
this trifecta of like blessings upon blessings. And I just, I love property and I love the
idea of like putting together a space where people are making lifelong memories. Because
when we went to Hawaii, it was like a bucket list trip. It was like, someday in our lifetime,
I wanna go to Hawaii.
And the fact that like now we get to host people
on their bucket list trips, like how cool is that?
I love that.
I could see like the joy exuding from you.
Like it makes you so happy to host these people
in your home and make your home beautiful.
So like, how does it work?
Cause you're not physically in Hawaii.
Do you have somebody managing the
property? You obviously need to get it cleaned. And if somebody
needs something like how does that all work?
Yeah, so we've had the same team of people since we first started.
And we met them at church in Hawaii. And we have a property
manager and we have a cleaner. And they are like dear friends
to us. And our cleaner is a single mom of three boys
and like we work with her.
So we share our calendar with her.
She knows when people are checking in, checking out.
She lets us know like,
hey guys, can you order a new rug for this?
Or can you get some new sheets?
Or we need, you know, a new laundry basket.
And she kind of keeps the eyes on our property.
And then on Island, we have a representative
so that let's say somebody
got locked out or they needed help immediately. Obviously, we're in Minnesota, we can't do
that. And so it's actually not that complicated. And what's beautiful is it provides for the
local economy. Like we're creating jobs for the local economy. We have a handyman that
we've employed for years. So like, it's this beautiful web of how you can create opportunities for other people if you personally
or physically cannot manage it yourself. And a lot of companies
excel at helping manage it. So like while we still do all of the
touch points with whoever is staying with us, then we have
this like second line of defense to help make sure that like
everything is safe. Everything is protected. Everything is
clean.
And it's, you know,
honestly, it's not as stressful as it sounds.
Yeah.
I love the fact that as you're talking about this,
and I didn't expect to get this out of you,
is that it's about like building community.
It's like you're building a community
with the people that are coming in,
staying at your Airbnb,
the people that are working for you,
and even the relationship and the bond
that you're deepening with your husband.
And something that people don't realize
is that you don't necessarily need
an investment property to do this.
You could do this in your own home now.
You can host a room in your house.
Yeah, that is something that is coming up a lot lately.
And it's an amazing way for people
to supplement their mortgages or to like
help pay their rent. And we and Drew and I experienced this years ago, and I feel like
these people were ahead of the curve on this, but we went on an anniversary trip and we were driving
along the coast of California and we rented a room in this like bed and breakfast type house,
but they owned a farm and I was like, I want to see the alpaca. I want to check out the goats. I
want to collect the eggs from the chickens. And it was a whole different life than what we were
living. And I remember we like showed up and they greeted us at the door and they had a bottle of
wine chilled and they had like charcuterie boards out. And like we sat and talked to them. We got
to know about like their life of living on this farm and why they were doing it. And it was such
a cool experience where it opened my eyes up of like, yeah, it
doesn't have to be a whole house, you don't have to buy a
condo, like, you can literally do this wherever you are and
start to share your space in such a meaningful way.
Love that. So something else that's really popular now is
working remotely. So many people can work from anywhere now. And
so I imagine that if you explore it and it's possible,
you can just put your apartment or house on Airbnb
and then go work remotely to someplace
that you've never been.
It's such like a win-win solution
because it would offset any costs of you going
and working from somewhere else.
Yeah, when I did the movie, The Holiday,
did you ever see that movie?
No. Oh my gosh.
They like house swap so like
one person goes to la and one person i did have seen this and they like trade houses and i'm like
that is so genius because it is true like a lot of people these days have a lot more freedom and
flexibility to work wherever i know um during the pandemic we moved up to our lake house in minnesota
and our neighbors there have spaces that they rent on Airbnb.
And during the pandemic,
we would go on walks with them every day
and they had this huge dream of like living in Hawaii.
That's where they had met initially.
They wanted to live in Hawaii.
They were able to rent out their spaces in Minnesota
and now they live in Hawaii.
Amazing.
And it's like crazy because I'm like,
you just see that there's so much possibility there and a little bit of creativity, which I think entrepreneurs naturally have.
And so it's like, maybe this is something that you haven't even considered, but like,
what would it look like if you explored it?
So I am curious about starting an Airbnb.
And one of my fantasies is I'm not married yet.
I was in a long term relationship and I was like begging him to
do Airbnb with me, to host an Airbnb because to me I feel like it's such a fun project
to do with a partner. Like it just seems like the perfect business project to work on with
somebody that you love because it's relatively easy, it's an investment that both of you
guys will like be a part of, there There's enough things for both people to do.
And to me, it just seems like such an awesome thing
to do with your partner.
So can you talk to us about doing this with your husband
and what that is like?
Yeah, so I gotta shout out my husband, Drew,
because he does most of our work with the Airbnbs
and he loves it.
He is our real estate professional in our family.
He really enjoys it.
And so he does the majority
of it. And it is so fun because I love the decor. I love the messages. I love making
sure our guests feel cared for. I love the recommendations, all things we've talked about
in this episode. And he is very good at the financial side and the organization and managing
our cleaner and just like different things
like that where he has more of like the boots
on the ground mentality and I'm more of like,
here's the experience, I'm gonna paint this picture.
And so it is so fun and we always wanna pick places
that we love and enjoy ourselves.
And so it's like, we love this and you will love this too,
which is a theme, have you noticed?
I love telling people about business,
I love telling people about the products I love.
I love just sharing experiences with people.
And so it was such a natural progression
and for us to do it together,
it was our first big investment as a couple.
Like we really had to have conversations of like,
can we do this?
Will we do this?
What does this look like?
And it felt like a huge leap of faith.
And it's just been one that has been this like beautiful
journey for the both of us. And I feel like it connects you guys closer and it felt like a huge leap of faith and it's just been one that has been this beautiful journey
for the both of us.
And I feel like it connects you guys closer
because you guys are in business together.
You're making money together.
I just feel like that's such an awesome thing
to do with your partner, so I love that you do that.
So something else to know about Jenna
is that she only does stuff that brings her joy.
You only do things that you wanna do.
I bring Jenna opportunities all the time.
She's in my podcast network where I'll be giving her like, I booked sponsorships for
her and she'll be like, I don't want to do that. I'm burnt out. I'm burnt out on IG
reels. And I'm like, but it's thousands of dollars. Are you sure? And she's like, yeah,
I don't care. I'm burnt out. I'm not doing that. You can do it. You can book it in two
months or whatever. So talk to me about that. How are you able to just put your foot down?
A lot of people couldn't just turn down money like that.
Yeah.
I mean, first off, it is such a privilege to be in a position like this.
Yeah, it wasn't always like that.
No.
It's always, you've got to sacrifice.
But I've realized, and here's what I've really realized, is if you have listened to this
whole episode, you recognize the power of trust.
And I want my community to trust me.
And if something isn't in alignment, not only do I feel it, but they feel it.
And so I have had to get so good at discerning what are the right partners?
What are the right opportunities?
What are the right like sponsorships to take on?
Like, is this in alignment?
And I feel that way with every opportunity, whether it is getting asked to speak on stages
that I would have once dreamt of being on,
but now I'm saying no to,
or whether it is hosting a mastermind or all these things.
I could do a million things.
I don't want to.
And I think that I'm just at this place in my life
where I just recognize that peace needs to be protected.
And right now in this stage of my life,
my priority is my family.
And anything that I'm saying yes to is a no to them.
And what is the most important thing to me?
And so, turning down things like recording
another social media reel, to me it's like,
but this is more time with my kids.
Or this is protecting and preserving
the integrity of my followers.
She'll even turn down things that are a good fit. Totally,
totally. I'll turn down things that are a great fit for her
because she's like, No, my time with my family is more important.
Yeah. And I think that like boundaries protect what's sacred
to you. And I've just had to relearn this lesson over and over
and over again of like, boundaries aren't bad and boundaries like keep what I say most important to me
and they, they exemplify that.
Like what I am saying is most important to me is reflected in my calendar.
It is reflected in my bank account is reflected in the way I show up every
single day. And so it's,
it's a muscle that you have to learn to flex and it takes time because I think
that, you know, there was a time in my life where I got paid $ learn to flex and it takes time because I think that, you
know, there was a time in my life where I got paid $50 to take pictures of a cat and
I couldn't believe it.
Like somebody is paying me to do something.
I love this is amazing.
And what a blessing that is.
And the better that you get out listening to your gut and discerning like, well, this
is a great opportunity, but is it the right opportunity for me?
It keeps you in alignment so that you are not passing up
things that you should be saying yes to
and that you are not saying yes to things
that you should be saying no to.
And so I feel like I just have a really strong intuition
and a gut game and I don't apologize
for saying no any longer because my no is literally
just a reflection of what is mattering
the most to me right now.
Yeah, but let's stick on this mindset
because yesterday I was talking to Jenna,
I had been working on this crazy presentation
for like three months and I was like,
guys, I killed myself on this.
I worked so hard.
And we were with our other friend, Amy Porterfield,
and she was saying, you know, I'm the same way.
I work really hard sometimes and burn myself out.
And Jenna was like, I don't know how you guys do that. Like I
would never do that. I would never choose to kill myself on
anything. And I always a lot of the times take the hard route. I
don't know why it's my personality. Why are you like
this? Like how did this come about? Were you always like
this? Where you're just like, No, I'd rather just have my joy
than the money.
I feel like I've realized that like our peace is so expensive and life is so short.
And I definitely am not anti hustle culture because I do believe hustle is required to
get the dream off the ground, no matter what the dream is.
There have been so many points in my career where I get an idea or I have a project or
something like, yeah, I can hustle.
But if hustle is the only way that you can operate and sustain what you're building,
that is not a business.
Like you are building a prison for yourself.
And I've watched so many people who have really successful businesses and really lousy lives.
Like they are rich in their bank accounts and empty in relationships.
And like to me, that's just not worth it.
That is such a high cost.
And I feel like I have had to learn how to discern
what are my best yeses and what can I say no to
without having FOMO, without having guilt.
And it's interesting because I think becoming a mom
really shifted that for me of like,
anytime I'm away from my kids, I want it to be worth it.
And the only way for me to alleviate mom guilt
was to know that like I was doing work that I love,
work that I enjoy, work that gives me peace,
that excites me, so that whenever I'm working,
I'm not there thinking I should be with my kids.
And whenever I'm with my kids,
I'm thinking I should be working.
It's like the only way to get past that
was to just be in total alignment of like,
what do I want for my life?
And I think we focus so much on like leaving a legacy,
but I think in reality,
we have to focus on living a legacy.
And I'm like, I want my kids to see the joy.
I want them to see the peace.
And you know, I've had so many turning
points in my business where like I've just realized that like money isn't the answer.
Like at times in my business where I've earned the most money, I've been the most miserable.
And I just feel like there's this threshold of like, where do I get more joy? How do I
derive joy? Like what does peace look like? Like when I go to bed at the end of the night, how do I truly rest?
And it's just been a huge shift and it's not easy.
And it doesn't come naturally because I am an achiever
and I am a hard worker and I am driven,
but I'm just at a place in my life where I'm like,
I just want to enjoy it.
Yeah.
I love the way that you and your team handle it.
You guys take Fridays off.
Yeah. So they don't work on Fridays, but you're still crushing you and your team handle it. You guys take Fridays off. Yeah, so they don't work on Fridays
But you're still crushing it and getting so much done
Like you don't have to overwork yourself to be successful and you are such a great example of that
Yeah, there's this quote that I heard that totally changed my my mentality and it was instead of asking yourself
If you've worked hard enough to earn your rest, ask yourself if you've rested well enough
to do your best work.
It was by a girl, Nikola Hobbs, I think is her name,
or Nikola Dobbs.
And I heard that and I was like, whoa,
I have been wired of like, I just need to get this done
and then I can rest.
And I was like, what if we flip this on its head?
And it's just been so transformative for me
because I'm like, no, I need to like come into this
feeling rested and well to do my best work.
And that is like totally shifted things.
I love that.
So this has been such an awesome conversation
about all the different ways that you generate revenue.
We talked about courses, affiliate marketing.
We talked about you hosting a property on Airbnb
and also about your mindset.
I love learning about that
because I need to have some more boundaries.
So thank you for sharing that and thank you for joining us on Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, Pam, I absolutely loved having Jenna on the show.
And honestly, this conversation holds a special place in my heart because this was one of
the first times that I met Jenna in person.
And I swear, even though it was one of the first times I met her in person, I feel like
I've known her forever.
Jenna is somebody that I've known her forever.
Jen is somebody that I've looked up to for years.
I've listened to her podcasts for years and she's just so genuinely bubbly,
so warm, so real.
And what you see with her is exactly what you get.
And it's so obvious why she's become such a powerhouse.
She is literally the OG female podcaster.
I've been admiring her work since I first started this crazy podcasting journey.
And when I first started my podcast seven years ago, I wanted to be just like Jenna.
What blows my mind is that now Jenna is in my podcast network, the YAP Media Podcast
Network.
I am exclusively responsible to get all of her sponsorships.
So we're essentially business partners, and I get to call her my friend and mentor.
So what a full circle moment. Now this Yap Life episode was recorded in person in an Airbnb and the vibes of being in person is
just so much different and so it's really relaxed and authentic and I'm just so excited to do more
in-person interviews like this. And Jenna absolutely delivered in this conversation. She
didn't hold back anything when it comes to breaking down her multiple revenue streams. We dove deep
into affiliate marketing, podcast sponsorships, course
creation, and something I cannot stress enough, building your
email list. If you haven't started with your email list yet,
please, please make it a business priority. I'm literally
kicking myself for not starting a year sooner. We've had our
email list for three years now. And it's been amazing for
driving our why for driving subscribers and listens and webinar attendees.
We use it for all of our initiatives.
And it's like having a security blanket for your business because here's the harsh truth.
You can spend all this time creating content on Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, but you don't own that audience.
You've got to pull those people into your email list where you have control.
And by the way, email is like a social media algorithm that you have control over.
You have a number of subscribers and you get to hit them directly in the inbox.
If you guys have been listening to the show, you know all about interest-based algorithms
and on social media, it's really about your topic and the algorithm controls who gets
to see your content.
With email, you control who gets to see your content.
And that is so important moving forward
in this creator entrepreneurship space.
Another hidden gem from our conversation was Pinterest.
We do not talk about Pinterest enough.
It is still absolutely a massive platform,
especially amongst women.
And here's the kicker, it functions like a search engine.
If you're serious about SEO
and wanna be discovered organically,
Pinterest should definitely be a part of your strategy.
But honestly, the part that got me the most excited was when we were talking about real
estate and Airbnb investing. You can literally see Jenna's entire face light up when she starts
sharing about her hosting experiences. The pure joy she gets from creating these amazing spaces
for people and getting the feedback from guests. It was so infectious, so much so that she inspired
me to start my own Airbnb
journey and I've started to host out my apartment in Jersey City. And who knows, maybe I'll be
starting my own Airbnb empire like Jenna. I've been thinking about investing in some more real
estate and of course you guys will hear all about it since Airbnb is one of my long-term sponsors.
Thank you so much from the bottom of my heart for tuning into this Yap Live episode. It means absolutely everything that you chose to
spend your time with me and Jenna. If you watched us on video, Spotify video, or
YouTube, I hope you sincerely enjoyed it and drop us some comments and leave
some engagement so we can get more people checking out this awesome video.
Nothing means more than growing this community by word of mouth. And if this
conversation sparked something in you,
I would love a five star review on Apple, Spotify, Castbox,
wherever you listen to the show.
I love reading your reviews that keep us going here at Yap.
And I'm so excited to tell you that now all of our live and in-person videos
will be on Spotify video. We're going to release one a week.
I've been doing so much in-person content.
We've got enough for one a week for the next six months or more and I'll be doing more and more. You can of course always watch our videos on demand
on YouTube. We've got close to 60,000 followers on there and if you guys want to connect with me
on Instagram, Hala at me there at yapwithhala. You can also follow me on LinkedIn, just search
for my name, it's Hala Taha. And before we go, I want to shout out my Yap Bookings team,
Hisham for Khan and Joshua.
You guys do such an incredible job.
You are the secret sauce behind the show,
helping me secure guests like Gary Vee, Jenna Kutcher,
Damon Chon, Matthew McConaughey.
We are incredible at booking guests.
And now we actually offer this as a service
for other people, so if you're interested in that,
go to yapmededia.com to learn
more. Well, that's all the time we have for today. Thank you so much for tuning into this
Yap Live episode. I hope you guys are enjoying this Yap Live series. This is your host,
Hala Taha, aka The Podcast Princess, signing off.