Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Krista Williams & Lindsey Simcik: When Friendship Is a Business Superpower | Entrepreneurship | E353
Episode Date: June 2, 2025Starting a business with your best friend might sound like a recipe for disaster to many entrepreneurs. But for Krista Williams and Lindsey Simcik, that’s exactly how their journey into entrepreneur...ship began. With just a $15 recorder and a tiny closet, they launched Almost 30, a podcast that quickly grew from a side hustle to a thriving business. In this episode, Krista and Lindsey reveal how they navigate their “business marriage,” scale their podcast, and achieve lasting success as both entrepreneurs and friends. In this episode, Hala, Krista, and Lindsey will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:12) The “Business-Marriage” Dynamic in Partnerships (07:12) Building Healthy Communication as Entrepreneurs (13:45) Almost 30: Scaling a Podcast from Scratch (19:39) Balancing a Side Hustle With Full-Time Work (27:13) The Power of Community in Podcast Success (37:47) What Is the Saturn Return? (41:55) Navigating Friendships in Entrepreneurship (45:41) Pivoting Your Career With Purpose and Clarity (56:26) Shifting Your Money Mindset for Financial Freedom Krista Williams and Lindsey Simcik are the co-founders and co-hosts of Almost 30, a top-rated podcast focused on personal development, relationships, wellness, and spirituality. Individually, Krista leads It’s Krista, an online business with coaching services for women, while Lindsey runs Babes Rising, a platform dedicated to conscious motherhood. Their debut book, Almost 30, offers practical tools for navigating change with confidence. Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify OpenPhone: Streamline and scale your customer communications with OpenPhone. Get 20% off your first 6 months at openphone.com/profiting Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit at indeed.com/profiting Rocket Money - Cancel unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster at RocketMoney.com/PROFITING Resources Mentioned: Krista and Lindsey’s Book, Almost 30: bit.ly/Almost30-LK Krista and Lindsey’s Podcast, Almost 30: bit.ly/Almost30-apple A Happy Pocket Full of Money by D.C Gikandi: bit.ly/AHappyPocket 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, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Startup, Passive income, Solopreneur, Founder, Networking.
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How did being an entrepreneur like change you on your journey?
Being an entrepreneur is not easy.
The entrepreneur has a different type of mindset.
The number one thing that you can remember and
accept in life is that your friendships are going to change, and that's okay.
We started recording on our closet floors.
It was not perfect. It was not organized.
It was a mess, but it felt so right.
So if we had waited to start until we got a studio,
had the business all set up and the strategy right, like we would have never started. A lot of people want to be an entrepreneur for the idea
of what being an entrepreneur is. They kind of see what's happening online on social media.
They're like, oh, you work from home or you work on the beach or it's sexy. It's not like that.
Why do you feel like most of these business marriages don't work? If we just love each other,
this will be fine, right?
But then you get into the marriage and you're like,
oh, this is a lot of work.
The most important thing that people need to look for
in relationship for entrepreneurs is,
when we first started, I was so insecure about it.
But I think what I realized was that as an entrepreneur,
you're meant to, I know if I can make this much here,
if you give me 40 hours a week, like watch me,
like there's no limits how much money I can make. If you, if you give me 40 hours a week, like, watch me. Like, there's no limit to how much money I can make.
If you guys go do your own things,
do you get jealous or competitive ever?
It's all gonna come out right now.
Young and Profiters, welcome back to the show. Today we've got an in-person episode with Krista Williams and Lindsay Simcik, who are
the hosts of the Almost 30 podcast.
Now this is a podcast that they started nine years ago on their closet floor.
Now it's one of the top podcasts in the world.
They've got a thriving online community.
They've got so many different revenue streams.
They've built an incredible business around their podcast.
So in this episode, we're going to talk all about that.
We're going to talk about career pivots, the pivotal period of your Saturn return right
before your 30s and how you can navigate that.
We're also going gonna talk about relationships,
work marriages, and so much more.
We get really deep in this conversation.
I think you guys are gonna love it.
Without further delay,
here's my conversation with Krista and Lindsay.
Welcome to Young and Profiting podcast, Krista and Lindsay.
Thank you.
We're so excited to have you guys.
So excited.
So as I was researching for this interview,
I found out that you guys say that you're in a marriage
and you guys recently joined the YAP Media Network.
You know that I also have a business partner, Jason.
I always feel like we're married,
even though we're not romantically married.
But talk to me about why you guys call yourself a marriage
and what does that really entail?
When you're in business with your best friend, especially,
there are so many layers to the dynamic.
And in a marriage, as you know, when you get married,
you share finances, you share just deep growth and learning
in all aspects of your life.
And when you become entrepreneurs as best friends,
you start to share finances first and foremost,
and then you get into the deep work
of becoming confident, successful entrepreneurs,
which requires you to really look at
every aspect of yourself
and every aspect of how you are in relationship.
So Krista and I have been through therapy.
Oh my gosh.
And during coaching, we have had really, really hard conversations about finances,
about our vision for the future, about what's working and what's not working.
Yeah.
And so, there have been many times where, like, the lines are blurred.
I'm like, I kind of want to be more of your friend right now.
Yeah.
But we're in a business conversation.
Yeah. And vice versa.
So it's been something we always have to actively participate in and actively work on.
Yeah.
If you think about our marriage, almost 30 is our baby.
So with parents, sometimes we prioritize almost 30, our baby, over our relationship.
And so we're more in that role of the parents of our baby than we are
as friends. And so it's sometimes felt like we've lost sight of friendship because we're
so focused on the business and the growth of the business. And we also have to focus
on aligning our dreams and visions for the future. In a marriage, you have to continue
to come back to like, where are we going? How are you feeling? Where are we going? And
we have to do that all the time. So whenever people want to start businesses with their
best friends, I'm always hesitant to tell them to do so because most of the time it fails when people do that.
And we've been really lucky. We put in the work during the process and it's been the most beautiful
relationship of my life, but it's not easy. Wow. I love that you guys are sharing this with us
because it's so interesting. Why do you feel like most of these business marriages
with your best friends don't work?
What makes you guys work?
So I think for most of us,
the ideas that we were told about marriage
were from Disney movies, were from media,
were these ideas of marriage and relationships
that are not actually real or supportive
of healthy dynamics and relationships.
You know, we could essentially be in an unhealthy marriage
forever, she and I.
But what we want for our lives is to be happy, to be fulfilled, to do something great.
So now we came into our relationship, our marriage, with the idea of marriage being something where
you sacrifice, you're not in alignment, you don't speak your truth, you don't ask for what you want,
you don't create something amazing. And so a lot of people go in with that thought, like,
this will just work without work.
I went into my previous marriage, I was married,
and I kind of had that idea, if we just love each other,
this will be fine, right?
But then you get into the marriage and you're like,
oh, this is a lot of work, a lot of checking in with myself,
checking in with you, realigning our values.
And so if you go into a business partnership
without checking in on the relationship,
checking in on the values, checking in on the direction of where you're going,
it's not going to work.
Something's going to happen. You're going to build up resentment,
and you're probably going to end up breaking up.
I think the most important thing that people need to look for in relationship
for entrepreneurs is being able to communicate.
Just like a marriage, the number one thing in relationship is communication.
You need to be talking about how you're feeling, what's coming up for you, what
you want, where you want to go, what works for you, what doesn't work for you.
And we've really focused on our communication and communicating respectfully
and with love and with intention.
And that's been the biggest thing that's really kept us together.
That's so interesting.
Talk to me about the communicating with love and respect.
So if you guys are having a disagreement, how do you guys approach it?
Yeah, we coined this phrase called clearing conversation.
So this practice where there's usually
something funky in the air.
We're kind of feeling like something is off.
And we will schedule a walk.
And a walk, because I think sitting down across
from each other, staring into each other's eyes
can be very intense and kind of activate the body in a way that doesn't really support
honesty and flow in a conversation.
So oftentimes we'll go on a walk, we're moving our bodies, we're next to each other and we're
able to look at each other but also like give each other a break.
And our intention in these Clearing Conversations
is to bring truth and respect, to be a great listener
and really have it be an experience of us
against the problem rather than Christa's the issue,
we gotta get to the bottom of it.
And that's really helped us because we all have egos,
it's a thing.
And so when you approach a problem, it's easy to be like,
you know, you did this to me, and you made me feel this way. But in these clearing conversations,
we are very intentional to use I statements. The story I'm telling myself is that you don't care
about this part of the business, and I have to take it all on by myself. And in sharing these
I statements, I'm able to see under the hood of like, what's been turning in Krista's mind.
And then I'm able to say, oh, wow, if I believe that I would be feeling that way too.
And it just gives us an opportunity to not only share our experience, but then to listen.
You know, I think both of us are really great listeners and we listen with our heart rather than our minds thinking of what to say next. So the clearing conversation I think is essential for any friendship, any
business partnership, any marriage as a standard in a relationship.
So I got a chance to get to know you guys because we were doing negotiations for YAP
Media. You just joined my network, which is just so exciting.
We're so excited.
We're so excited.
And it seems like you guys wear totally different hats.
I remember at one point, Lindsey was like,
I'm going to handle the contract stuff.
And you have your own stuff that you're handling.
So talk to us about how you divide the labor
and how you think of that with your company.
Yeah, I think getting clarity on that is really important
for any business in general and for really any business
partners especially.
For us, the way that we delegated roles happened naturally,
but happened very early on.
So my experience was in the corporate.
I worked in finance management consulting,
and I actually was doing some brand deals on the side
as a blogger.
And Lindsay was an actress, she worked at SoulCycle,
she was an amazing performer.
She knew a lot about production,
she knew a lot about performance,
she brought a lot to the table from the aspects of the business of creativity that I didn't really
have access to. So early on, I was like, I'm going to take on more of the business strategic
part because that's where I was living. So I actually had it backwards. You're more
of the business. Got it. Okay. And then Lindsay brought more of the creativity. So when we
started building the business, it was like both of us working together and then we saw
where we were fitting naturally and we claimed the domains. And over the years we had to
reclaim domains of where we are and where we work because we were trying to
overlap for quite a bit. And that doesn't really support us. It doesn't really
help for us to both be two cooks in the kitchen. So I'm more strategy, I'm more
of the partnerships, I'm more of the overall ideas that we have that move the
business forward. And Lindsay is so helpful with the creativity.
She's so helpful with the relationship with the team.
She's a great communicator with the team.
So there's just stuff that she's naturally good at
that she brings to the business.
Yeah.
Do you guys, have you ever heard of Mind Pump, the podcast?
Yes, of course.
Okay, so Adam Schaefer came on my show.
Love them.
And it's four guys that talk about fitness, health.
And he was telling me that they're invested
in all of their businesses together
outside of just the podcast.
So they all invest in real estate, stocks.
One of them wrote a book, they all get royalties
even though they did nothing for the book.
And they're just embedded in business together
no matter what the endeavor is.
So how do you guys look at it?
I saw you have like a new YouTube channel.
If you guys go do your own things, how do you guys look at it? I saw you have like a new YouTube channel. If you guys go do your own things,
how do you think about it?
And do you get jealous or competitive ever?
It's all gonna come out right now.
I know, honestly.
You know, I've been thinking about this.
Well, I think what's so interesting,
you know, when we started almost 30,
we were going through a very specific time in our life
and the show has evolved as we have evolved.
And I think with that evolution too,
comes our own very unique gifts
and how they wanna be expressed in the world.
So Krista has an incredibly successful coaching business,
Retreat Business, and so many of her gifts
that could not be truly fully expressed in almost 30
are now being expressed through those businesses.
And I'm exploring this new season of my life of motherhood
and what that might look like in a community
and brand sense.
So thankfully we've always just been very, very supportive
of the other.
I think where the conversation comes in between us is,
okay, we're in a season right now currently in real time
of being very full on with the book and almost 30.
And candidly, I don't have a lot of energy to pour into new mom on the block or anything like that.
And so we've had moments where we're like, okay, we're deciding to be full on, we're going to kind
of pull back on our other things a little bit and just really be focused here. And I think that's
important and important to share what's tough about this and what
you're struggling with in your own lanes of your own business. Because I think we can
create stories in our heads about do they want to like go pursue that fully and like
what's going to happen with almost 30 or you know, there's just a lot of stories we can
create or meaning that we can make out of something that is not really true. So again,
it all comes back to that communication.
Yeah, and I feel like it would only benefit the business.
You know, her succeeding or me succeeding
is only benefits our business that we have together.
But I think what's been really beautiful
about the way that we've evolved
is we've always been like sovereign.
You know, I think early on
we were just doing everything together.
We were so just embedded in one another
and we kind of had moments where we're like,
okay, we are aware that this could be for a season.
This could be for a time period in our life.
We don't wanna be so naive to think
that we're gonna wanna be in business
and financial business together for the rest of our lives.
So investing in each other's businesses in that way,
we have put money into things together.
We have made investments in businesses together
that are longstanding, but it's like,
I don't think for me personally,
it feels truthful for me to be embedded
with one person forever financially or dream wise.
I just like to do a lot of things.
I like to create a lot of different things.
I like to be my own person.
I never wanna be boxed in anywhere.
So that type of business model
wouldn't really feel good for me.
But Almost 30 has helped us as a foundation, show us what we're good at and show us what
our audience wants more of.
For motherhood, obviously they're going to see her.
She's an amazing mother.
She's built an amazing family around that.
So they want more from her in that.
So she's like, okay, cool.
I'm noticing this thing that Almost 30 is providing for me.
What can I do more of in that?
For me, it's the coaching and retreats.
How can I build more of this?
And so it just allows us to be more robust of who we are and evolve in the business and
pour more into the business because we're happier.
Yeah.
You know, if you're kind of just looking to the business to feed and satisfy every one
of your creative needs or pursuits, that doesn't feel true for me. I think having creativity
spark and then going where it needs to go is what I like to do instead.
Yeah. I like that you guys are doing your own things outside of just almost 30,
because you have been doing this for what, nine years now.
Has there ever been a moment where you're like,
I just don't think we can do this anymore? Was there ever like a struggling point?
Because I know in entrepreneurship around the seven-year mark gets really tough.
Did you guys have a tough moment?
You know what's funny is we've been honest with each other
about what life looks like past almost 30,
but we've never had a moment where we fought
or something happened where we wanted to throw in the towel.
Like we've always been very conscious
about where this process is,
and thankfully we have a book coming out.
So like the book feels like such a beautiful rounding
of the 10 years we've been doing this.
It's like all of our life's work. So we've really trusted that. And I think it's normal to feel like quitting,
but it's actually just weird. I think that's what happens for me when I'm expressing myself
creatively in other aspects of my life and I'm not holding this relationship to be the
only thing that sustains me. It's just like romantic relationships. If she's supposed
to be everything to me, if almost 30 is supposed to be everything to me,
I'm not gonna be satisfied.
I need other things, I need other people,
I need other creative outlets.
And because we've both done that, we both feel satisfied
and we come back to the relationship excited to be here.
Yeah.
So let's talk about how Almost 30 started
because I think there's a lot of life lessons
that we can learn in that in itself.
So tell me about how you guys first met
and came up with the idea to start the podcast.
Yeah, so we crossed paths at around 27.
In our late 20s, we were going through it.
The story goes that a mutual friend of ours
introduced Krista and I because Krista wanted to audition for SoulCycle.
SoulCycle was a very popular trendy workout at the time.
I was an instructor and we got connected.
And I remember the day we scheduled a FaceTime,
Krista scheduled a FaceTime and said,
I wanna audition for SoulCycle.
I would love to just pick your brain,
understand the process.
And I was happy to do it.
I was really loving my time at Soul
and just for anyone to want to do it,
I was like, yeah, it's amazing. Let's do this.
So when we had our FaceTime, I was like, she's cool.
Like this felt natural. This felt like flow, you know, and that didn't happen for me.
And so we stayed in touch and through her process of auditioning,
she didn't end up getting it, but it connected us.
And then eventually she moved to LA where we could see more of each other
and really understand on a deeper level
what each other was going through.
And it was a lot.
We were having relationship reckonings,
we were at war with our bodies in different ways,
we were running ourselves into the ground,
we were individuating from our family
and some of our friend groups
that we no longer really felt aligned with.
It was this upheaval that felt like everything was crumbling
to be honest with you.
And a lot of people go through this in their late 20s.
He wrote a book about it.
It's no joke.
And what we found in our friendship was this comfort
and just this healing and being able to talk about it.
And so Christa came to me one day,
we were at Bulletproof Coffee, which is a cafe.
Love Dave, asked for you.
Oh, that was one of my favorite spots, but gosh.
Unfortunately, it does not exist anymore.
I know.
And she was like, you know,
I feel like we could start a podcast
talking about the things that we've been talking about
just on a daily basis.
I was like, yeah, I'm so down.
I've always been someone that, if you bring me a creative project, I'm like, let's do it. And I never
really think about if it's going to be a thing. If it lights me up, I'm down. So we started
recording on our closet floors, sometimes in Krista's studio apartment in Venice, next
to like laundry and whatever. And there was no, was there a light in there? There was
no oxygen. I know that.
It wasn't video back then. No. Even when I started in 2018, no video. No video, which was the dream.
Yeah, it was so much better. I missed out so much. Because you just got to focus on the content. Same.
And you just get to rip. Yep. Like I really missed those days. And we were on like a $15 recorder,
just thinking like, okay. Sometimes we would record on the notes app on our phone.
Yeah, just have like four episodes
on the notes app on our phone.
I was listening the other day to Lake One
and then they were just, we'd have friends fake call in
to the podcast and ask for advice.
Like they'd be like someone would be like,
ask about this and they'd be like,
hey, I'm Lauren, I'm a listener.
And they were like, not a listener.
It was like someone that we paid,
like the guest was like my ex and his friends.
And we would just sit in these horribly sounding
conference rooms with the worst sound ever,
just echoing, everyone's all over the place.
And just like talk.
It was not perfect, it was not organized.
It was very just-
Mass.
It was a mess, but it felt so right.
We were just moving.
We were being moved by the experience itself.
So if we had waited, we had waited to start until we got a studio and like, you know,
had the business all set up and the strategy right, we would have never started.
And so as we took action, that moved us. We were like, oh, this feels good. Or oh,
this doesn't feel good. Then we took another step. So it was really imperative that we started before we were ready because we got so much intel. And in 2016, September
2016, we launched the podcast. It is very different than it is today, but that's the
story of things.
Yeah. People don't realize that you can just evolve over time. Like my podcast cover has
changed 10 times.
Oh, I want to see that.
Oh my gosh.
What was the worst?
I used to have like these cartoons of me.
We had two seasons of cartoons.
Yeah.
The one was like creepy.
Yeah, one was like alien.
I don't even know.
Because those were hot back in the day.
Those were real innovative.
Oh my gosh.
Your cartoon was probably so cute.
It was cute.
But like, yeah, I had crazy colors at one point.
Even the topic evolved.
It went from careers to entrepreneurship.
And your story reminds me of Jenna Kutcher, who's also in my network.
She started her podcast in her car because it was the only quiet place because she had
dogs and they would bark in the house.
So she used to record her episodes in her car with her Apple iPods.
Yeah.
Same with you guys. One of the top female podcasters in the world now and you guys started
in your closet. Right? So you can evolve over time. It doesn't have to be perfect. You don't
need perfect equipment or even a perfect idea.
I think that's what when I work with women or any business owners, I'm oftentimes when
they're showing me everything
that they're like, here's my Pinterest board,
I've got the Instagram handle, I've got this,
and they've got all the aesthetic,
and I'm like, I love you girlies,
but oftentimes that's procrastination
for actually doing the thing.
And I'm like, you can have the full package,
the perfect package, but if you don't have the audience,
if you don't have the consumer,
like what are we even doing here?
And I think I'm always someone that's a fan of building,
building it while and getting the reactions from people's because you're like, okay, what do people,
I'm going to build it. What do you guys feel about this? Okay, cool. We're going to go here.
We're going to go here. Like on the beginning of the business, people wanted to be in person.
So we went on tour, we did live in-person events, and then we like evolved from there.
And so rather than just staying in your house and building something, how can you really bring it
out into the world and be with it as it's evolving and be okay with that process?
Get your reps in.
Yes.
So you guys were working full-time jobs when you started the podcast.
How did you balance your time and what advice do you have for other people who want to start a side hustle podcast, whatever it is, while they're working?
I have so much respect and love.
So for anyone, this is me talking to you, I love you so much that's working a full-time job
and wanting to pursue your passion and your business
and that thing that you're doing,
because for me in most of my life in the corporate world,
I had this burning sensation and desire
to do something with my life, to be creative, to create,
to be my own boss, to live a life that felt different,
that felt different than the corporate life was giving me.
And so when I moved to Los Angeles,
I had quit to pursue blogging full-time.
So I was like, I'm gonna be a blogger full-time.
I had no plan, no purpose.
I wasn't making money.
And that obviously you don't start making money
from not making money.
So I had to get a serving job.
I was babysitting, I was nannying,
I was doing odds and ends jobs at like 80 hours a week.
I was like, okay, I can't do 80 hours a week and make so little.
So I was like, I have to go back to the corporate world.
I failed at being a blogger,
I failed at doing entrepreneurship and I was really bummed.
It took me a long time to find another job.
I'd been in debt at that point,
but I was like, okay, let's do this.
So I got back to working in the corporate world.
That's when I met Lindsay at the beginning of that point, but I was like, okay, let's do this. So I got back to working in the corporate world. That's when I met Lindsay at that beginning at that point.
And it was beautiful because that job in the corporate world
that I worked in digital marketing,
not only supported me financially,
but supported me in learning skills
that I could apply to almost 30,
but just really was something that I'm so grateful for.
I don't think I showed up as the best employee.
I wasn't someone that I don't think you'd want to hire.
Because I was so obsessed with Almost 30.
But it was such a beautiful aspect of what we did.
But what we would do is in the morning,
Lindsay and I would talk on my way to work
to Downtown Atlanta traffic.
We'd plan for the day.
We'd talk about things that were going on, social media,
planning for the podcast.
At my lunch break, I would answer Almost 30 emails.
I would do Almost 30 social.
We would figure out what we were doing with guests. At the end of the day, either she and I would answer almost 30 emails, I would do almost 30 social, we would figure out what we
were doing with guests. At the end of the day, either she and I would meet and record, or we would
do something related to the podcast. So it was really something that on the weekends, during the
week, we were just fully immersed and focused in the business. And it was just giving us so much
life. Like it was just feeding us in this way that I had never been fed before. So while I was
definitely burning myself out, and I wasn't very healthy at that point,
it just felt really right and it felt really good.
And it was sustaining me in a way,
in a purpose way that I wanted so badly to be sustained in.
So even though I was just going so hard,
I felt this feeling that I hadn't felt ever.
And I felt this drive to purpose that just felt
and moved me in a way I hadn't been.
Yeah. Sometimes you need to sacrifice and work really hard and it's just for a season.
Yes.
I also started my podcast as a side hustle. So I was working two years in corporate while
starting this podcast. I started my company as a side hustle and I didn't quit my job.
I had 30 employees all around the world and I still didn't quit my job.
Wow.
It was during COVID, so I got away with a lot.
So it was like the summer of COVID, the first summer, and I just built this business.
I was making over six figures a month in my agency, my social agency at first, and I still
was nervous to be an entrepreneur again.
So I didn't quit my job until I was like really knew that I was going to be safe and that
everything would be okay.
When did you guys feel like, oh my gosh,
we don't need to work full-time jobs anymore,
this is really taken off?
When was that moment for you guys?
For two years, we juggled our full-time jobs
with building almost 30.
And in the beginning,
Krista had these existing relationships with brands
because of her blog, which was amazing
and really taught us how to build a working relationship with a brand and really make
it personal.
And I don't think that exists as much in podcasting anymore, but it was a beautiful time where
we could talk to a brand and say, what are your goals?
How can we help you with your goals and really make it collaborative. And so after two years of being in that flow,
we were able to sustain ourselves.
It was scary, definitely, to quit.
I think you quit in June, I quit in December.
So six months later, I quit.
And we had a team to sustain.
These are things that we definitely had to plan for.
And we would tell anyone who's building a business
on the side that not to take the lead,
not to just do it without understanding
the financial consequences or the risk.
Because if you are focused on surviving
and like making money to support your team
or the resources,
then you're probably not going to be creating in a way that feels really in flow or aligned
because you're coming from that place of fear.
Yeah.
So it was important for us.
I think when I first quit my job to pursue blogging full time, I just thought it was like cute.
I was like, oh, I'm just going to see what happens.
I'm going to see where the universe meets me.
And then in the second part, I was like, you know what's cute?
Forecasting.
And seeing how much revenue we have coming in for the next six
months, and seeing how much we're spending,
and seeing how much I need to earn to feel good,
and seeing how much you need to earn, it's like,
I think it really asked and called for me
to step into a new level of truth and a new level of clarity
that I didn't really give myself before.
With money, I was just, I didn't wanna look at it.
And now I was like,
how can I really see clearly what we're doing
and how we wanna do this and how we wanna live?
Because if you wanna plan,
you have to be able to be with money
in a way that's neutral,
be in a money in a way that's loving,
be with money in a way that's supportive of your goals.
And I think my reframe of that of being like,
this money is what's going to sustain my life.
How can I look at it with respect and get really clear about what's going on rather
than just putting it to the wind?
Yeah.
But there was one moment I remember we were in our full-time jobs,
we got asked to speak at this event and we hosted the event the full day.
And I remember the amount that they paid us to speak at one session was the same
as my bi-weekly paycheck.
And I was like, in this one hour, I was myself,
I had so much fun.
I didn't have to put on, I wasn't faking it.
And in the corporate world, I felt like I was faking it.
I felt like I was putting on a mask every day.
I felt like I had to be someone I wasn't.
And I was like, I know if I can make this much here,
if you give me 40 hours a week, watch me.
There's no limits how much money I can make.
And so that moment for me was like the unlock
where I was like, no, it's time.
I love that.
What was your moment?
For me?
Yeah, when you were like, it's time.
I remember that I found out I was gonna be
on the cover of podcast magazine.
It was January, 2021.
And I was like, Oh my God, people
know me so much in my podcast that they want me to be on the
cover of podcast magazine. And I was like, I have all these
employees. The other moment was I hired my first US full time
employee, and she quit her job to work for me. And I was like,
I got to at least put my job now. Yeah. I can't have a full time.
So it was an amazing moment.
Being an entrepreneur is so awesome, but to your point, knowing that you can actually
sustain yourself and not just like jumping out the window and sometimes that takes a
season of sacrifice and a season of just waking up super early and working late nights.
And then you'll be safe and to your point, be able to create without all this stress
because you're living paycheck to paycheck.
Now you guys have done an incredible job growing a loyal audience.
Like it's not normal to achieve the type of success that you guys have achieved in
podcasting.
So how do you think about your audience?
I think we've aligned this community because we were able to be so
open from the get, we were ourselves, probably to a fault if you listen back to old episodes.
But I don't think a lot of people were doing that back then in the podcasting space and
especially speaking to women our age who were just going
through so much and feeling alone.
You know, I think we were speaking to that experience.
We were speaking to the highs and the lows and to give them the resources and the confidence
to take the next step forward, I think was probably more powerful than we could ever
truly comprehend. And what we found was that our ability to be more than a podcast
was very important in our growth.
So what that looked like was hosting events early on and saying,
hey, we're going to be hosting an event at the SoulCycle in Santa Monica.
We want all of our listeners in the local area to come.
We would sell it out, we would hang out afterwards.
And slowly but surely, this in-person effect,
we started to understand the power of it.
We were able to hear their stories,
we were able to hug them,
we were able to really understand the impact of the show
and that would then influence the show.
So they've always been a part of our success,
and not in that literal sense of,
yeah, they're our listeners, they're the numbers,
but it's more so they've influenced
the type of content that we create.
They influence our next decision
and what we wanna provide for them.
So they have been integral, and I think they feel that.
I think they feel that in the way that we talk to them
on the show, in our content.
Do you think the events help spread word of mouth?
Because I feel like there's so much connection,
even with me when I do webinars,
and even though it's virtual, I feel like I get super fans.
So I couldn't even imagine if I had my listeners
in a live event, like what kind of-
It's the best.
So do you feel like that really helped you guys grow?
Oh, so much, yeah, in the beginning. I think, you know, people do you feel like that really helped you guys grow? Oh, so much.
Yeah, in the beginning.
I think, you know, people, it's not like we were the first people to tour, but like it
was just in 2016, 2017, 2018, it was just a different world.
Yeah.
Like podcasting really from 2020 has started to become what it is.
Yeah.
It's more like show-based, it's more touring.
Yeah.
And so we were touring just in this really native way.
Like it was a world tour, but it was just super native.
We'd bring on guests, we'd talk to people in person,
and having that in-person connection was so instrumental,
not only because we could learn from them
and be with them and listen to them,
but it was also like created this social media moment
online that was growing us in a way,
in a marketing way that I don't think
we would have had before.
And it was creating this moment for people
that were almost 30 that were struggling, that we would have had before. It was creating this moment for people that were almost 30, that were struggling,
that were like having their time.
So I think that was instrumental to our growth.
I think what we did there is,
what I would say with audience growth
is you always wanna lead and listen.
So we led by being like, you know what,
we're gonna go on tour and then we listen to them.
Like, what do you guys wanna see from us?
What do you want more of?
You can't be fully listening all the time to your audience
because then you're not who you are.
The reason why your audience is with you
is because you're a leader
and you are someone that is leading in culture,
you are leading in whatever it is that you're an expert in,
but you do have to listen to them
because they're incredibly important.
They are the reason why you exist
and why you are making money in the way that you are.
So it's such a balance of just finding that balance
between leading and listening with your audience so that you can stay in your sovereignty way that you are. So it's such a balance of just finding that balance between leading and listening with your audience
so that you can stay in your sovereignty and who you are,
but also really connect with them in a real and genuine way.
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I got a chance to interview Mel Robbins in person
a few months ago, and she does this incredible job
of making it seem on her podcast
that she's only speaking to one person. And she's always telling her listeners,
I love you, you're my friend.
She really cares about simplicity.
And she says that if you try to act too complex
or intellectual, you come off as elitist and superior.
So she tries to make everything like really simple
with her audience.
Is there anything in terms of the way that you speak to your audience that you guys are
really intentional about?
Yeah, I love that.
I feel like we learn so much.
Yeah.
There's just small indicators that she does that creates that intimacy with people.
And she's amazing, friend of the pod, just an incredible speaker in that way.
She finds her lane and just really knows it.
It's like, how can I make this simple, clear, relatable for people that's also impactful? But for me, that's
not my style. I'm like so out there mentally in the way that I think. I think when people
can find their lane of what's working for them and really lean in on that and really
dial in on that, that's what people should do instead of trying to be other people. But
I think there's such a beauty to the simplicity. But I think what's worked for us is really
staying authentic to who we are.
You know, in the moments where I was going through my divorce
or in the moments where we were really struggling
with various aspects of our lives,
and even in our relationship,
we've been really honest about it.
And there's a magnetism to authenticity,
because you don't know what's going to happen next.
You know it's true.
There's this energy around it of truth,
of happening in the moment, of relatability, of curiosity, of intention. And I think it's true, there's this energy around it of truth, of happening in the moment of relatability,
of curiosity, of intention.
And so I think it's us just staying as authentic as we can
to who we are in the moment,
and hoping that people can really see themselves in us
and our struggle and what we're going through
and find relatability in it
and find inspiration where they can,
but overall feel less alone.
So something that happens to me,
which I think we probably have in common,
is my show name will sometimes cause confusion
with my audience.
So people will be like, I'm too old
to listen to Young and Profiting,
and I'm like, no, we've got listeners of all ages,
it's just Young at Heart, and I have to kind of explain,
or even guests will be like, well, I'm not young,
and I'm like, if you've seen any of my shows,
almost nobody is like 40 years old who I interview,
so it's not really about being young,
but sometimes like, oh man,
I think my name is holding me back or is turning people off
and I often think about rebranding.
Have you guys thought about that at all,
especially as you were getting older
or your audience, do you worry that they're not evolving with you or like talk to thought about that at all, especially as you were getting older or your audience, do you worry
that they're not evolving with you
or like talk to me about that?
Yeah, I mean, it's the most common question that we get.
Yeah, I think it's like, what's your podcast?
I'm like, I'm almost 50, what about me?
I'm almost like every, everyone thinks
they're just as clever each time they say that.
So we have to laugh, we have to laugh
as if it's the first time we're hearing it.
And also I bought every domain that's almost 40.
Every domain almost 40.
You did?
Yeah.
Almost every single one.
Oh, I love that.
I love that.
I'm a domain shark.
It's like my pastime.
I think we obviously did not think about it when we named the show that it would be as
successful as it is and live the life that it's lived.
But like you, we've just thought about it as, this is such a metaphor.
You know, we're all almost something.
And that period of being almost 30 is a foundational time
to just build your relationship with change
in a really healthy way.
So you don't have to be almost 30 to listen to almost 30,
but I think it is such a potent time that I hope that,
especially in talking about the book now,
people will think about that time
even if they've already been through it
and see it as such an impactful reckoning
in the grand scheme of their life.
But yeah, we've had moments where we're like,
should we rename it?
Should we totally rebrand it?
What are you thinking?
I think about it all the time.
Yeah, what's your yes and what's your no?
I think that I will rebrand my podcast
in the next year and a half.
Probably, even though so many know the name,
but now YAP has kind of taken over
and I feel like I could just call it YAP with holla.
Oh my gosh, that's true, YAP.
And then that's it, you know?
That's true.
So I think I'm slowly rebranding YAP.
So like our logo used to say Young and Profiting,
now it just says YAP Media.
Totally.
So kind of rebranding to that.
I could see you guys rebranding.
You're allowed to evolve.
Yeah, totally.
For 10 years.
It's like the two things, it's like,
and this is what's hard as an entrepreneur,
you're like, okay, we have almost 30,
there's a whole audience of people to serve.
Do we wanna serve the almost 30 audience forever
with the tools, research, insights, support
for this pivotal time period,
that we talk about in our book
and that we experienced ourselves,
or is it something that we do kind of try
to reach a new audience with a different name change?
And it's tough.
I don't know if it's reaching a new audience.
I think it's allowing your audience
maybe to grow with you guys.
Cause do you feel like you're getting new audience people
like in and out,
or do you feel like they're just growing with you?
I don't know.
I think it's know. Both.
I think it's both.
Yeah.
You know, I think, I think especially with the book, we're going to get that influx of
like definitely kind of new, actual almost thirties, people going through that time.
But people have grown with us.
I mean, we hear all the time, I've been with you since the beginning and they've been through
so much with us.
So it's both.
Well, I feel like with podcasting, you can definitely speak to a range of people.
So I feel like it's safe to say that you guys
would be able to cater to people who are in their mid-20s
till their early 60s and still be relevant, right?
The broader, the better, in my opinion.
When I have a man DM me that listens to the pod,
like I'll have a lot of 50 that are like,
what's your outfit or what are you wearing for,
and I'm like, ignore.
And then a man I'm like,
I really love that relationship episode. I'm like, ignore. And then a man I'm like, I really loved that relationship episode.
I'm like, I will spend my whole day.
Like just like when the unexpected people listen,
it's just my dream.
I'm like, oh, this is my like.
And like you, we have an age range.
Totally.
You definitely have an age range, I'm sure.
Well, you guys have done such a great job.
So speaking of almost 30,
you've got this new book coming out, which I loved.
Thank you for giving me a copy of it. So what was the idea behind this book? So speaking of almost 30, you've got this new book coming out, which I loved.
Thank you for giving me a copy of it.
So what was the idea behind this book?
What did you want to share with the world?
I think we wanted to first culminate and put together everything that we've learned in
the process of the rock bottom that we started at, where we met, and to building two sovereign,
amazing lives that we love.
In your late 20s, it's such a pivotal portal in time,
and we realize that you're not lost, you're just becoming.
And that in the process of this growth
and transformation period,
how can we approach it with excitement
and with looking forward to the change and transformation?
And I think if I would have had everything in this book
when I was struggling so much with my mental health
in my late 20s, I would have been so much happier, I'd be so much further in life. And I would have felt so much
more at peace. That age in your 20s is unhappier and more anxious and depressed than ever.
People are struggling more with their mental health than ever before. People are feeling more
lonely. And our goal is to help people feel less alone in their process of awakening. And so,
in the book, we talk about how to support yourself
through times of change and transformation.
And we have research from studies, we have guests that we had on the show,
sharing insights and inspiration.
And it's just the guidebook for anyone going through their process.
Yeah, you guys talk about this concept called Saturn Return.
Now, this is a very nerdy entrepreneurship show.
We usually don't get too spiritual or into astrology, but I was telling you guys, I want
my listeners to learn something new.
I never knew about this.
So talk to us about Saturn Return.
Yeah.
So when we learned about this, I mean, it unlocked everything.
We were like, wait, actually, what?
We were going through that and everyone does.
So the Saturn Return is an astrological transit that happens for everyone,
where Saturn comes back to the place in your chart
it was when you were born.
And Saturn is the planet, think of it as like the dad,
comes in and is like, yo, this is not working,
this is not aligned, we gotta look at this,
we have to be truthful and honest about this
and make changes.
And it can feel like your life is falling apart. It can feel like
everything you've known to be true is actually coming up for questioning in a really big way.
So whether it's your career, your relationships, your relationship with yourself, or you want to
live, what you want to do, what your purpose is, it's a very existential crisis type season.
essential crisis type season. But it is also probably your greatest opportunity yet in your life to get to know yourself in a way that will be a foundation for the rest of
your life. So for Chris and I, we had themes of relationships come up where I was going
through a really intense breakup and I thought I was
going to marry this person. I thought I would be married by the time I was 27, have kids
by the time I was 29, and then we'd walk off into the sunset, whatever. And that didn't happen.
And I was like, wait, so now what? You know, who am I then? Who am I without him? Who am I?
If this isn't the plan. But I think what Saturn has the opportunity to show you is that, yeah, we can have a plan based
on how we grew up and all the things, but there is a much more expansive plan and life for you
if you lean into the unknown. So, you know, it's a practice. It's a practice to be able to have faith
No, it's a practice. It's a practice to be able to have faith
in something that you don't know what the next step is.
But I think Saturn will really teach you
that that is the way, you know?
That is truly the way.
And that's something that just happens every 28, 29 years.
So it's like just a few pivotal points in your life.
Yes, it goes to like two or three.
Hopefully three, yeah.
Hopefully three times if you live along enough.
Brian Johnson, you're four probably.
I'm kind of sad that I missed mine
and I didn't know about it.
I wonder what was happening when you were 27 to 30.
I shut down my blog and got my MBA and went into corporate.
There you go.
Because I felt like I needed to grow up.
I felt like, oh, I needed to grow up.
I need to like take care of myself.
Yep.
Your prefrontal cortex is also coming online
during that time.
So your prefrontal cortex is actually responsible
for you making decisions like that,
where you're like, I'm gonna be more thoughtful.
I'm gonna be more strategic.
I'm gonna be more diplomatic about how I'm spending my time.
So it's not only like the Saturn return period,
but there's a lot of brain development that's happening
that changes how you operate with life in the world,
where you're like, okay, now with my prefrontal cortex online
and becoming conscious,
how am I gonna approach relationships?
How am I going to approach my career?
How am I gonna approach my friendships?
And there's just so much change happening
that it's just can feel like a washing machine
if you're not really being mindful of it.
And if you don't have the permission
to see it as an opportunity to lead you to a better life. Yeah, you
were just talking about friendships and I know in your books you talk a lot
about making sure you've got the right people around you. Talk to us about your
advice related to that. Yeah, I think especially for entrepreneurs, I mean the
entrepreneur journey, you in my perspective, and this could be wrong, so I
was in corporate and being an entrepreneur, the entrepreneur has a different type of mindset. You have a different type
of set of values and priorities. And so it can be hard actually as an entrepreneur to
relate to people in the corporate world, I think. So just thinking about that for your
entrepreneur audience, just really understanding that your friendships are going to change.
I think the number one thing that you can remember and accept in life is that your friendships
are going to change, and that's okay. I think for me for thing that you can remember and accept in life is that your friendships are gonna change.
And that's okay.
I think for me, for so long, I felt so much shame
that I didn't have the same four girlfriends
that I grew up with.
And it wasn't Sex and the City, and it wasn't girls,
and it wasn't like every movie that I saw
where everyone was best friends with the same people
for their entire lives.
I had friends come in and out, I had changes,
I had transitions, and that actually was I had changes. I had transitions.
And that actually was a good thing.
That was showing how I was changing, how I was evolving,
how I was prioritizing different things,
like not drinking or partying
or my business or spirituality.
And so accepting that friendships will change is number one.
I think number two,
seeing friendships as a vehicle for your growth
just as deep as your romantic relationships is huge.
My romantic relationships have been so powerful for me,
but my friendships have been such a place for growth
and support and love.
And now I see my friendships as equal
to my romantic relationships.
They really see me, they hear me, they've been with me
and women especially in women relationships.
The way that we can see and support one another is just next level
Yeah, I love that you're saying that because I know that in my 20s when I was in relationships
I'd be the type of girl that would be not prioritizing my friendships. I would just get sucked into my relationship
I'm sorry. I'm with him. We all have to do that
You know and then you lose your friendships then you break up and then you realize like, oh crap.
I did not do a good job being a good friend.
And now I don't have any friends because I was prioritizing my boyfriend and all this kind of stuff.
And now I look at my girlfriend relationships as actually sometimes more important than my romantic relationships
because they'll be with me no matter what.
They're not going to go fall in love with somebody else.
You know?
So, they can't cheat though.
They'll hang out with the other girlfriend.
You're like, what are you guys doing?
I'll never forget that my mom, after getting divorced,
she was like, you know, never lose your girlfriends.
She's like, your girlfriends are just so important.
And you know, I love men so much,
but the texture and richness of my life
has been so benefited by deep female friendships and relationships.
And being an entrepreneur is not easy.
You meet up against limiting beliefs
and mindset like setbacks all of the time.
You have fear, you have overwhelm, you have stress,
you're putting yourselves out there,
you're doing cringe things.
And so to have cheerleaders in your corner
or have people that really see you and support you
has kept me going 100% of the way.
And I think in the Saturn return period,
for those friendships that are for that lifetime vibe,
they require that update, you know,
because you're kind of working on like old patterns,
you're working on old everything.
And so if you feel like you're changing,
most likely your friend is changing
too. We both are holding on to how the friendship has always been. So I think with the select
few in my life, I've had to just have like a come to Jesus moment of like, Hey, this
is actually what's important to me right now. Or this is what I have capacity for. Because
sometimes, for example, in friendships, you don't see each other as much, maybe because
you've gotten married, or maybe you've moved, maybe you don't see each other as much, maybe because you've gotten married or maybe you've moved,
maybe you don't touch base as often.
And we can make so much meaning out of that.
And so if you have a conversation where it's like,
listen, I would love for when we connect,
it's just really quality
and we're able to be really present.
I think that is super, super important
because I don't know about you,
but anytime I would change within a romantic relationship,
my then boyfriend would be like, man, you've changed.
You know, would have such a problem with change.
Yeah.
That's correct.
Yeah.
And then with friendships, I always felt like,
oh gosh, I can't change because then they're gonna feel
a type of way.
So I just giving people permission to change
within their relationships and have actual conversations about it.
I think it's really important.
For everybody tuning in, whether they're a man, I actually have a lot of male listeners.
So whether they're men, women, if they're thinking about a career change, a career pivot,
how should they think about it?
I think that rumbling happens for a lot of people where like you are at a job that you've been up for a while,
maybe most likely you're really good at what you do,
you get rewarded for that,
you are maybe on a path where you have an upward trajectory,
but there's something within you that just says,
I think there's something more
and I think I wanna pursue something else
or something else does light me up
and I would love to see what would happen. And so I think first of all you have to get really clear about that. Is there an
opportunity to pivot within the actual company that you're in because it's maybe just a feeling
of what you're doing. Is it no longer aligned? Is there another position at the company?
If it's a bit more than that and you actually want to pursue something else, which we both have done many times over, I think it's getting
clear about how do I want to feel on a day to day basis? What really lights me up? Asking
those questions about the feeling part of it, logistics will come in, but I had to get
clear that what was moving me in that direction came from
like this place rather than the over analyzing of everything, if that makes sense.
So when I pivoted, for example, from pursuing my acting career to the podcast, I had to
make a conscious pivot.
I could no longer do both.
And I think for me, the question was, how do you want to feel on a day-to-day basis?
And I wanted to feel like I was creating.
I was creating literally something, but also my future.
And with acting, I was waiting to be chosen.
So it made it so clear that that pivot was right for me
to completely let go of the acting
and pursue the podcast full-time and let that go.
Something that you just said really spoke to me, the fact that you were basically saying, completely let go of the acting and pursue the podcast full time and let that go.
Something that you just said like really spoke to me,
the fact that you were basically saying,
I'm in control now.
I'm not gonna wait to get chosen.
And I feel like with entrepreneurship,
that is such an amazing part of entrepreneurship
that you get to control your life.
I dealt with like a lot of rejection.
I was rejected by radio and TV and satellite radio.
And then I started my podcast and did great.
And so I'd love to hear from you of how did being an entrepreneur change you mentally,
spiritually, how did it change you on your journey?
It helped me become more of who I came here to be, to be honest.
It gave me the tools, it gave me the friction, it gave me the feedback to allow
me to be who I came here to be.
And that was someone that's using her voice, someone that's standing in her power, someone
that knows what she wants, someone that's clear on where she's going, and someone that
has to meet every growth edge.
I feel like in the corporate world, I was just spending a lot of my time and my energy
towards someone else's vision that I didn't really even align with in the first place.
And I was there for money,
probably out of fear of not having money
or not having purpose.
And when you're an entrepreneur,
you're putting all your eggs in your own basket, I guess.
And I feel like it's really just helped develop me
as a better person,
because the more clear I am with my relationships
within business, within my personal life,
the more business I'll get,
the more business will grow.
And it's been so powerful.
I couldn't see my life being any other way
but self-led and self-made through entrepreneurship.
I'm so glad for it.
What about you, Lindsay?
To be honest, when we first started,
I was so insecure about it
because I didn't have a corporate background.
I came from being my own, I suppose, insecure about it because I didn't have a corporate background. I came from
being my own, I suppose, entrepreneur in my acting life where even though I was waiting to be chosen, I was having to self-motivate every day to go on auditions, to meet agents, meet casting directors.
So I had that experience within me as far as entrepreneurship goes, but when it came to the business side, I just felt so insecure.
But I think what I realized was that as an entrepreneur, you're meant to really double
down on your gifts, you know?
And you will learn everything else along the way.
I've learned so much about business and just doing it and making mistakes and learning
from Krista. So it's been really important for me to acknowledge the insecurities around what I don't know.
But actually that's not where my focus is meant to go.
My focus is meant to double down on what I'm really good at and really step in there because
especially in a partnership, we've come together so well like a puzzle where my strengths are something
that fit perfectly in the puzzle
and then Krista fills in her strengths
where I'm kind of lacking.
So it's been really, really beautiful,
but entrepreneurship has given me just a lot of confidence
in every aspect of my life.
I think when I think about starting over in any way,
I think about almost 30.
I just always reference that experience of just building something from nothing, building
it from an idea.
And I'm like, oh yeah, I can do this.
It really adds to that well of confidence that you have for the rest of your life.
I love that. So one of my last questions for you guys,
if somebody is almost an entrepreneur,
they have the idea of becoming an entrepreneur,
they're in this transition period,
they might be working a corporate job.
What is your advice to how they should treat this period
and their next steps?
This is my personal belief,
but I feel like a lot of people
want to be an entrepreneur for the idea of what
being an entrepreneur is.
They kind of see what's happening online on social media.
They're like, oh, you work from home, or you work on the beach,
or it's sexy.
There's a lot of entrepreneurship,
I think especially too, earlier in the previous times that
was girl bossy and made everything really, really
sexy and fun and really Instagram-y and marketing.
And it's not like that.
It's the most challenging thing that you'll do.
And it has made me so insecure at times and so low at times
and so unsure of myself at times,
but it's also been so powerful.
So I would check first, what is the actual desire?
Cause I think entrepreneurship doesn't happen.
I think your creativity and your idea happens.
I think you build what you want to do.
You become who you want to be.
You create what you're here to do.
And then you become an entrepreneur.
So I think it should be led by something that comes internally,
like something that you feel like has to exist in the world.
So I think waiting until you have that calling, that desire, that thing.
Like you feel it in your gut.
Yes, you're like, this needs to exist.
I need to create this thing because it doesn't exist.
And I feel like my life sucks without it.
My life isn't as good without it.
So I think waiting until you're so cold
that the things that come up
and the how of it all just goes away.
So when your why is so strong, your how just,
it doesn't even matter how it happens.
Like our passion and obsession with our connection
and really finding this reason
to help people feel less alone drove us to like,
stay up late at night, invest money and take the risk.
And so what I would say is find that thing
or wait for that thing, or look intently at the world
a little differently with a different lens
to see what is needed and then create that.
Any thoughts Lindsay?
Yeah, I think, I mean, your business that you start will be your mirror.
And so it's, I think, imperative from the get to understand that this will bring up
a lot about you and what you are bringing to the table.
And so for me, it's about having a therapist, you know, having like resources and tools
so that I can come to each moment as aware and as conscious as possible.
It's not always going to be perfect, but how you do one thing is how you do everything.
And I think with a business, for me, it was showing me where I could really step into my worth.
It was showing me how I could become a better communicator in all aspects of my life.
So I think to be prepared for that and maybe even set yourself up
by having a coach or a therapist from the get.
I know it's an investment,
but it's the most worthwhile investment I've ever made
and helps me both in business and personal.
Yeah.
It's a good one.
Such good advice.
So somebody's about to become an entrepreneur.
I really liked your advice of why are you doing this?
Is it because you just wanna make money?
Is it because you feel like being an entrepreneur
has some clout with it?
I feel like you need to really understand
if you have a good business idea.
So for me, the big thing is can you make money?
Can you get customers?
Will people pay for this thing?
Because a lot of people have these ideas that nobody wants.
And I see that time and time again.
I remember one time somebody was on a webinar with me
and she was talking about how she's building an app,
something about naming your star sign
or something like this.
And it was such a far out there idea.
Maybe it's because I'm not into astrology
or whatever it is.
But to me I was like,
okay, is that something that you want or that other people want? And so for me it's about
channeling demand, not trying to create demand. So find something that people already have a
problem with, like in a lot of people, and a problem where you know how to find these people,
like they label themselves something.
They're all hanging out in the same places.
They have the same titles.
They've gone to the same schools
or they work at the same places.
Because then your job is easy.
You just find those people that have that problem
and you sell to them.
But I find time and time again,
people have solutions to problems that don't exist
or you can't find any customers.
So I just feel like you have to know
that your customers exist and that they actually
have a problem that they're willing to spend their money on.
And this solution also has to somehow increase their status
in some way, you know?
Because people just buy based on increasing their status,
whatever it is.
They make every decision based on if it's gonna increase my status or not.
So is it gonna improve my wealth?
Are people gonna think more highly of me if I have this thing or if I fix this problem, right?
So it's all based on status.
So how does it impact their status?
Wow.
Interesting.
People are great.
Sometimes they're like, wow, we're doing that?
You know, I do that, of course.
Sometimes it's stuff like that, but it's like-
Beauty, it's the health thing.
Exactly.
Yeah, wow.
Yes.
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Okay, so my last question that I ask all of my guests,
you can just answer from your heart.
You both can answer each one.
So what is one actionable thing
our young and profitors can do today
to become more profitable?
Let's go with the business mind first.
I think to become more profitable,
a book that I love, that I recommend
is called A Happy Pocketful of Money.
Have you read that? It's really, really good about the relationship you can have to money
and the energetics of money. And it's been incredibly profound and transformative for me.
I think when you think about becoming more profitable, there's so many different aspects
of it related to your business. But if the foundational relationship you have to the
energetics of money isn't there, You're never going to become more profitable.
So getting your relationship right, the energetic frequency and the connection you have with
money is going to be incredibly helpful.
When I could finally meet money and respect and love money in the way that I do, I'm so
grateful for the way money moves in my life.
I'm so grateful for the way money gives me freedom, for the way money supports my health,
for the way money gives me freedom, for the way money supports my health, for the way money supports my family.
I have so much respect and love for money,
so money loves to work with me.
Money loves to be around me.
Money loves to hang out with me.
Money loves to move through me.
And once you can have that,
you can really see how money can move more in your business.
Can we actually stick on this for a little bit?
I feel like I have an incredible relationship with money. Sometimes I wonder,
I'm like, how do people not make money? Like, I feel like I just attract money left and right,
right? Like, that's one thing. Where do you think that comes from?
My dad was a surgeon, but he grew up super poor. So my dad grew up in Palestine. I'm Palestinian.
So he grew up with no running water. He was dirt poor. He became a surgeon.
And then when I was growing up,
he never wanted me to feel like money was an obstacle
because it was for him.
So like, if I wanted to buy anything,
I remember one time he bought me like a thousand dollar Furby,
you know, like QVC when it was really popular.
You know, and he spent a thousand dollars
to get me this Furby.
His phrase was, if someone was $100,
he'd be like, oh, that's free.
I'm obsessed.
And he would always just tell me, that's free, that's free.
Oh, can dad, can I have this money?
Oh, sure, no problem.
So he made me feel like money was just so easy.
Wow.
And so my whole life, I just thought money is easy.
Wow.
And now I just make a lot of money all the time, you know?
Like we just like have these huge deals.
And then sometimes I think when people like make
such little money, I'm like, how?
How are they making such little money?
You know?
Wow.
So I have a really good, but I have bad relationships
with other things.
You know what I'm saying?
So like money is just happens to be good for me.
But talk to me about your relationship with money. And I think a lot of people have things with money in terms of their beliefs.
Oh, yeah. I mean, it's so much as the hierarchy of money. Money means worth, money means safety,
money means security, money means you're bad. Like if we look at the media programming,
a lot of the media programming, the villains are rich. So we have this idea that having money is
bad. Jesus had no money.
You know, like the gurus and the saints and the cultural leaders from a religious perspective
were usually poor.
So we have this embedded idea around money and the relationship to money in our lives.
And I think so many of us have grown up with money is shameful.
You don't talk about it.
You don't talk about money.
You don't talk about sex.
You don't talk about religion.
So not only are we not talking about it, but we're living in a society that's telling us
that money is bad, but yet all the people at the top
are figuring out ways to get money.
So I think when we can really take our power back
and have a beautiful relationship with money,
money actually isn't anything, it's like paper.
Yeah, so we're actually placing all this energy
and value and thought and meaning to paper.
So like, how are we, can we take the power back
and be like, this is a tool for me
to live my life in the way that I want.
This is something I deserve.
This is something that I can move through me energetically
and become something that can be supportive
of the life that I want.
And I think so many people take what they learned
or did not learn when they were younger from their parents
and use it as like an excuse
not to rewrite their relationship with money.
So it's like, my parents never taught me,
this is something I've done.
My parents, I'm like, my parents, this girl.
My parents never taught me about balancing my checkbook
or like how to manage money or how to invest
or how to work with a credit card, like never, none of that.
And there was always stress around money.
There was always fights were started over money, always.
So I really had this stiff arm approach to money where I'm like, money's over here.
I don't really want to look at it.
I don't really want to talk about it.
I've had very, very abundant times in my life.
And usually that's because I am not connecting money
to my worth and I am just living in a way
that's like incredibly aligned.
I'm using my gifts and that's usually
when I have a lot of money coming in.
But any period of time where I've literally held money
as I'm going to feel okay today,
if I have this amount in my bank account,
it's evaded me at all costs. So it's just really interesting. Like Krista said,
the relationship with money on an energetic level, I think is important, but also looking at where
did your money story come from? You know, just being really honest about it and knowing that you
can rewrite it right now. In this moment, you can start rewriting it. You don't have the like scarlet
letter on you for the rest of your life, you can absolutely rewrite this.
And I think for me, it helped to understand why my parents had the beliefs that they did.
I just had more compassion.
I didn't have as much resentment towards them.
So yeah, I just think it's so important that we kind of detangle that before we rewrite
them.
We talked about that in the book because I mean, especially in your late 20s, like 60%
of people have student debt. You start to make more money in your late 20s, like 60% of people have student debt.
You start to make more money in your late 20s.
You're changing jobs.
Like a lot of people are getting married for the first time.
They're having children.
So there's so many different financial things
that are happening to people during that time.
So I think for me, the rebel part of me is always like,
I just want to somehow take the power back from the system
and like figure out how to live my life outside of it,
live my life freely.
And it doesn't mean I'm buying a yacht or a private jet. It means I'm living in a way
that feels luxurious and free to me, that feels expansive to me. And I want that for
everyone. We all humans deserve that. And the more we can break outside of the systems
that we're in and really see, first of all, our inherent worth for money, then money comes
to us, like what you have already.
I love that.
I love your dad.
Yeah, my dad was awesome.
He was also really generous.
So taught me that too.
Like he would spend all his money
just sending kids to college.
Like you know what I mean?
So I got both being super generous
and then getting the money, right?
That is so beautiful.
How about you?
What is one actionable thing our young and profitors can do
to become more profitable tomorrow?
Oh boy.
I think it's about relationships.
So in terms of your audience, your customer,
like how can you become even more human with them,
even more connected to them?
And oftentimes that means vulnerability from you
as the founder or more vulnerability in the intention
or the process in creating the product.
It could come in different forms,
but I think that vulnerable storytelling
and that honesty is something that differentiates you.
And I think really makes people buy in.
They wanna support a brand or a product that has a story.
I do.
I just think in this day and age, there's so many things that we can buy. There's so many things we can invest in. They want to support a brand or a product that has a story. I do. I just think in this
day and age, there's so many things that we can buy. There's so many things we can invest
in. And it's like, at a point, it just kind of hurts. You're just like, okay, there's
just so much stuff. But when I find a brand where the story is just so impactful and so
moving, I'm like, I want to support that. Let me put my dollars there. So I think bringing in more storytelling about your story
or just the path of creating this product,
I think could be really profound.
Something that you said really spoke to me
and that was caring about your customers.
I don't remember who told me this,
but they were saying, you've gotta love your customers.
Because if you love them, they'll feel that love.
And people refer something based on
what it's gonna make them look like.
They'll refer you and put their own brand reputation
on the line and they'll only do that
if they feel like they love you so much
that they're willing to put their reputation on the line.
And they'll only feel that way if you actually love
and really care about your clients.
Yeah, that's so true.
You know what I mean?
So you really need to care about your clients,
love your clients, think about them.
How can you do the best job possible,
no matter what you sell or what you do, right?
Yeah.
Okay, last question.
Okay.
This is really fun.
Thank you guys for joining us.
We have a little portal.
I know.
I know.
Okay.
What is your secret to profiting in life?
And this can go beyond business.
Prayer in God.
That's just my vibe.
I feel like having a spiritual foundation
or having a foundation of like an anchor point
for my life has just been exponentially beneficial
to all my relationships, to the way that I move, to what I prioritize, to what I want
to create. And I feel like, you know, it might not be for everyone, but for me, it's been
what's really given me abundance in ways that are not just financial, but spiritual and
meaningful in my life.
Yeah. Were you always religious?
So I grew up Catholic.
I grew up in a small town in Ohio.
And so it was very religious.
It was very conservative.
And I kind of lost my way, you know?
I was like nihilistic for a while.
I was like just figuring things out.
And I kind of refound my faith in the past couple years,
probably five, six, seven years.
And it doesn't mean that it's religiously attached
or connotated.
I wouldn't say that I'm attached to any religion,
but it's something that feels like really perfect
from my algorithm,
perfect from my type of spirituality and the way that I move.
But yeah, I grew up religious and had to refine it.
I'm asking personally.
Yeah, I got you.
Because I'm not connected
to any religion personally, but I always think,
oh my gosh, I really wanna have religion.
So what did you do to get connected
to your spirituality?
So I think I had a rock bottom humbling event.
I think Lindsay and I both had this moment of humbling.
And then we also had an amazing coach that we worked with
that brought God back into our
life in a way that was very offering and helped us metabolize an idea of just sort of naming the
Creator, naming this infinite source of love and support and helping me re-approach God in a way
where it wasn't a man in the sky that was punishing me or had this idea of how I should live or hated
me if I did this and didn't like me if I did this,
it was like, what if there was this benevolent co-creator of life that you had that loved you
endlessly and that was there for you endlessly and that was just a guiding partner for everything
that you do? And so there was a lot of my spiritual practice and process that kind of led to this. I
had been done so much energy work. I had done so much study of different religions and spirituality
through the podcast. But it was really that coach in a rock bottom moment
that was like, you know what, I give up all of this to like one creator.
And that's sort of how I'm going to build my foundation.
I still do a lot of different spiritual tools and practices. I'm very open.
But having the anchor is the most supportive for me.
I find that almost every successful person that I meet
is grounded in that way.
Uh-huh.
Actually, that's crazy because I've noticed that too.
Yes.
The people that I see at the level that I want to be,
they're anchored.
Because you could get blown in the wind.
You could go, fall for this, fall for that, fall for...
Like, there's a lot of things here
that could pull you off of your path and your truth
and having just something
where I'm like, okay, what am I working towards?
Who am I working with?
What are my guiding principles for how I wanna live?
And it just helped so much.
Yeah, I have to second it.
I'll be boring inside me too.
I had obviously a similar experience with Krista
with our coach, but my now husband also came into my life
around that same time, little bit after.
And he's also brought that aspect of faith into my life.
And to be able to connect so intimately on faith
with someone that you love in that way
was something I've never experienced.
And just opens up this whole realm of possibility
when it comes to, yeah, just being a human on earth. You know, it's like we don't have
to shoulder everything. You know, I think that's what I saw growing up. I saw my parents
shouldering everything, even though my mom was spiritual, they just shouldered so much. And now it's just my greatest joy
to be able to just give things up to God
and just be like, I trust you.
I don't know what's next, but I trust you and thank you.
And yeah, there's just this experience of gratitude
in my life now that I feel so much more
than I ever have before.
And I think that's been the fuel.
Cause even when things are hard and I'm like, man,
this is like a really hard season.
I'm always just like, but I'm so grateful.
I'm so grateful for this pruning season.
I know you're working on me and I trust it.
And so, yeah, I think for me,
someone who does take on a lot and can overanalyze things,
it's been the greatest gift to just be like,
God, I totally trust you.
Like this is-
That's so beautiful.
You guys are inspiring me.
Yeah, and it can look like the way you want it to look.
I think we think of, and honestly, let's just say,
we name God in the book.
We say God.
And we say like,
you call it whatever you wanna call it,
but it was actually a choice.
I know there's a lot of names people have for God,
and it could be really triggering.
I think people have a lot of religious deep programming
that I think we kinda have to do as a culture and society,
but I reclaimed God in a way that feels a little rebellious
to the way that I was taken away from God through religion.
Yes.
Do you mean like when people say like source energy
and stuff like that?
Sure.
Yeah, I mean, source energy works.
Whatever works for people,
that gets them anchored in there.
For me, I just felt like God was presented as something
that was not loving and was not the way that I wanted.
And for me to be like, actually it's not,
that's the church, that's man.
Got it. What you're talking about is man,
what my God is all loving, my God is all knowing,
my God is with me.
So it's like, oh, actually I just,
I was kind of looking at it through this religious lens
that like I don't.
Yes.
And you had to unlearn that.
Yes.
Yeah.
How do you see it?
That's how I feel.
I feel like God is really loving.
I feel like there is something out there.
I grew up Muslim.
But I don't feel like aligned to that religion.
But I think it's primarily because I just
don't really understand Arabic.
I didn't understand anything.
Yeah, totally.
Right?
And so I always connected with Christianity more
because all my boyfriends were Christian
and I'd go to church and understand what was going on. So I think it's just more of like, because it's all the same stories, it's really, really
similar.
So I think it's just a matter of feeling connected just because I can actually understand
it, if that makes sense.
And I know there's translations and stuff, but still like, you pray in Arabic and I don't
understand what I'm saying.
So it's just, it's hard to feel connected if you don't understand what you're saying.
For sure, 100%. So that's something I'm saying. So it's just, it's hard to feel connected if you don't understand what you're saying. For sure, 100%.
So that's something I'm looking forward to exploring.
There's a book called Secrets of Divine Love.
I'm almost Christian.
I know, literally.
Literally.
Sorry mom.
Sorry mom, don't be mad at me.
Yeah.
This is so fun guys.
Thank you guys so much for joining us.
You did such a great job.
Thank you. Thank you. Bye guys. Thank you guys so much for joining us. You did such a great job. Thank you.
Thank you. Bye guys.
Bye.
Well, Yap Gang, we're closing out today's episode with so much to reflect on thanks to Krista and Lindsay.
We talked a lot about that special kind of transformation that happens when you stop waiting to be chosen
and start building a future on purpose.
For many of us, that pivot happens
when we're in our late 20s or early 30s.
That's when, for example, I decided to shut down my blog,
get an MBA, enter the corporate world,
and get more serious about achieving the future
that I really wanted.
As Krista pointed out, it's not just an emotional shift
that happens during those years.
It's actually biological. It's our fully an emotional shift that happens during those years. It's actually biological.
It's our fully developed prefrontal cortex,
making us more strategic, intentional, and future-focused.
But it still takes a lot of courage to pivot,
to stop waiting to be chosen, and instead choose yourself.
Lindsay's story about leaving acting
to pursue podcasting full-time reminded us
that the most important question isn't what you do,
but how you want to feel doing it.
For her, the answer was simple.
I wanted to create.
Striking out on your own takes time, though, and it can be a rough ride.
Like Krista said, being an entrepreneur or running a business can look sexy from the
outside, but getting started will probably be the hardest thing you ever do in your life.
Entrepreneurship isn't glamorous.
It's hard, humbling, and deeply personal.
But when your idea is rooted in purpose and your why,
when you feel that something is missing from the world
and you just have to create it, that's when you're ready to get started.
So whatever age you are right now, if you're in that in-between space
between identities and careers, let this episode be a reminder.
You don't have to have it all figured out,
but you do have to listen for that internal pull.
And when it comes, be ready to follow it.
Thanks for listening to this episode of Young and Profiting.
If you learned something today,
and if you felt seen or inspired,
share this episode with somebody who needs to hear it.
And don't forget to leave us a five-star review
on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you listen to the show. Your reviews help us reach more listeners who are ready to
profit from powerful conversations like this one. If you want to check us out on YouTube and watch
our episodes on video, all of our episodes are on YouTube, just search Young and Profiting.
You can also connect with me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or LinkedIn, just search for my name.
It's Halataha.
And my Yap team is absolutely amazing. I cannot go an episode without thanking them. So thank you guys for all your hard work and dedication. It really shows. This is your host, Hala Taha,
aka the Podcast Princess, signing off. you