Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Nick Bare: The Mindset That Built a Multi-Million-Dollar Business | Entrepreneurship | E357
Episode Date: June 30, 2025Starting a business with a $20,000 loan would scare most entrepreneurs, but for Nick Bare, that was all he needed to succeed. He started Bare Performance Nutrition (BPN) in his college apartment as a ...side hustle, scaling it into a $60 million nutrition brand. Along the way, he adopted a mindset that would transform both his startup and personal life: 'Go One More.' In this episode, Nick shares his journey as a creator-entrepreneur in the nutrition industry, offering actionable health and fitness tips. He also explains how the Go One More mindset can help entrepreneurs scale their businesses, build discipline, and achieve work-life balance. In this episode, Hala and Nick will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (02:39) Scaling BPN from Side Hustle to $60M Brand (12:11) How Military Service Shaped His Business Mindset (14:10) The Visionary vs. Integrator Leadership Roles (18:58) Why Brand Awareness Drives Sales and Revenue (32:05) Building a Legacy Brand and Work-Life Balance (38:52) Understanding the ‘Go One More’ Mindset (50:09) The Power of Consistency vs. Occasional Greatness (01:00:54) The Truth About Nutrition and Creatine (01:08:51) Supplement This: Practical Tips for Entrepreneurs Nick Bare is an entrepreneur, hybrid athlete, and US Army Veteran, widely recognized as the founder of Bare Performance Nutrition (BPN), a seven-figure supplement company. He is the author of 25 Hours and the latest, Go One More, and also hosts The Nick Bare Podcast. With over a million YouTube subscribers, Nick is a leading fitness content creator who has helped millions of people achieve their health and wellness goals. 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 Bilt - Start paying rent through Bilt and take advantage of your Neighborhood Benefits by going to joinbilt.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: Nick’s Book, Go One More: bit.ly/GoOneMore Traction by Gino Wickman: bit.ly/_Traction Rocket Fuel by Gino Wickman: bit.ly/_RocketFuel BE 2.0 by Jim Collins: bit.ly/BeyondEntrepreneurship Necessary Endings by Dr. Henry Cloud: bit.ly/_NecessaryEndings 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, Passive Income, Online Business, Solopreneur, Networking.
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We all have these curiosities.
That curiosity will always be a curiosity if you don't have the courage to take action.
You started as a creator entrepreneur,
but then you tried to build a legacy brand and make sure that the brand wasn't really tied to you.
It's very hard to do when the brand starts built off of a person.
It's definitely doable, but it takes years to successfully transition.
One of the approaches we took was,
the biggest issues I made is that I was trying to be something for everyone. doable, but it takes years to successfully transition. One of the approaches we took was,
the biggest issues I made is that I was trying
to be something for everyone.
But we made a shift in 2024 that was a game changer.
How about somebody who's afraid to launch their business?
How would you supplement this?
I believe courage is the answer to many of life's problems.
It's better to be consistently good than occasionally great.
What would you say are typically like
the big mistakes you see in people's nutrition?
Biggest mistakes people make in nutrition.
What's hard right now for so many people is that...
Yeah fam, what if the real key to long-term success is simply showing up day after day and pushing yourself to go one more round?
Today's guests turned that philosophy into a multi-million dollar empire.
Nick Baer started with just $20,000 and an idea in his Army barracks and scaled Bear Performance
Nutrition into a $60 million brand.
But here's what's truly incredible.
He did it all while leading a platoon in the US Army, creating content on YouTube, and
staying true to his Go One More mindset.
In today's episode, Nick shares his journey as a creator entrepreneur in the nutrition
industry, practical insights on health and fitness, and key strategies for embracing the go one more mentality,
centered on living with intention, building discipline,
and developing long-term consistency.
Now I know you guys are gonna absolutely love this episode.
It's jam-packed with advice on health, fitness,
and entrepreneurship.
But if you're new to this channel,
I want you to take a moment to follow and subscribe
to Young and Profiting Podcasts
so you never miss an episode packed with expert insights like this one.
Nick, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thank you for having me on.
I'm really excited for this conversation.
I love that we're in person and that now that I'm in Austin, there's so many more people
that I can interview live.
So thank you for joining me in person.
For sure.
There's a lot going on in Austin right now, especially in the media space, fitness space that I'm in,
podcast space, it's a great place to be located,
to just have in-person connections.
I know, I'm really excited.
We're like building out studios here
and building our home base for YAP Media,
so I'm so excited.
I wanted to know a little bit about your background.
You've never been on the show before.
Hopefully you come back on again and again.
But this is your first time,
so I want to introduce you properly to my listeners.
I was researching you all day and I found out that you started your career in military.
Yeah.
Talk to us about your military experience and how that
helped shape your approach to entrepreneurship.
So I grew up in Central Pennsylvania and I'll give a little more context that positions
me where I'm at today because there's a few certain decisions I made throughout my life
that I believe have been very pivotal and he was stationed at Fort Campbell, Kentucky
and he was going back and forth on deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan.
It was very kinetic warfare then.
And I watched him transform through these multiple deployments
into this completely different person.
And I saw that and I thought, I want that for my life.
So my plan was to enlist in the Army
after graduating high school, which was 2009.
But my mom said no.
She said, you're gonna go to college.
So I applied for an Army ROTC scholarship,
which now is very competitive, but back then,
no one really knew of it, or at least that I knew.
And it was a great opportunity.
So I got this scholarship, ended up going to Indiana
University of Pennsylvania to study nutrition,
and then on the scholarship, they paid for all of my tuition,
housing, books, I got a monthly stipend
with the military obligation to come after graduating.
And in college, I started in 2009.
I was obsessed then with the bodybuilding, supplement,
sports nutrition space.
And YouTube fitness at the time was brand new.
So I'm watching all these YouTube fitness creators
document their training, their nutrition,
building brands, building businesses.
And it was between my junior and senior year of college
that we were given this opportunity to take out a loan
with a military associated bank, USAA.
It's called a pre-commissioning loan.
And my friends and peers were taking out this loan.
They were going on vacations,
buying engagement rings, getting new vehicles,
because you didn't have to make your first payment
for 18 months after getting this money,
and it was an extremely low interest rate.
USAA knew newly commissioned army lieutenants
were gonna be making steady pay
and no opportunity to spend it
because you're always training.
So I took out this loan, $20,000,
and found a manufacturer,
placed an order, a production order for flight,
which is our pre-workout, still is,
different formula which has evolved over the years.
And it was 500 units.
I spent all my money on that production order.
I had a friend design our website for free.
I had a friend design our labels for free.
I told my dad I was going to make a million dollars that first year.
And he said if it was that easy, everyone would do it.
And in our previous HQ, I had those words plaster on the wall.
It said if it were that easy, everyone would do it.
Because he was right.
That first year did $20,000 in revenue.
That second year did $20,000 in revenue.
That third year we did $20,000 in revenue.
Oh, wow.
And I had this strategy that I was going to send supplements to these fitness YouTubers.
And if a small portion of their audience converted, that was a million dollars, right?
Easier said than done.
So the first year of business was challenging, it was tough.
I was in my apartment at the time,
which was on Philadelphia Street in Indiana, Pennsylvania.
The few orders that would come in,
I'd pack that order in my apartment,
and then I'd drop it off at the post office
on the way to class.
I did that for the first year.
And then a year after starting the business, I graduate college, degree in nutrition and
go right into the army, active in the army.
So I spent the first year in Fort Benning, Georgia.
I was in the infantry officer basic course, ranger school, airborne school, Bradley leader
course in and out of the field
the entire time. So very little time to actually build the business. So I'm in Georgia for
a year. And then after finishing all my schools there, I ended up coming to Fort Hood, Texas,
which is what landed me in Texas. And that was 2014, my first duty assignment. And when I got to Texas, my unit at the time was in Germany for three months.
So I had three months of little work to do with the military.
And I had $500 left to my name.
And I decided that I was going to create a YouTube channel and try to build a business.
So I spent the last $500. I bought a camera.
It was a Canon T3i, I bought a 50 millimeter lens,
I bought a tripod, and I just started documenting everything.
I filmed my training, I filmed my nutrition,
I filmed behind the scenes of building the business,
I filmed my military journey up until that point so far,
and that platform slowly started to grow,
but that decision to start documenting my life changed my life forever.
And that was a catalyst to where I am today.
I love that you gave this backstory because I have so many follow up questions
about all your different experiences and what your approach was to entrepreneurship
throughout this. So first of all, you started this as a side hustle, basically.
So you started Bear Nutrition as a side hustle.
What was the initial spark where you're like,
okay, I want to put out this brand, I want to start this?
I was just obsessed with the supplement space.
I was obsessed with the experience
that was created around using products around training.
I remember using pre-workout for the first time ever
when I was in high school.
And I worked at a gym and I was introduced to pre-workout.
Have you ever taken pre-workout before?
Of course, yeah, I work out a lot.
So I remember taking my first pre-workout ever
and you have this energy, you have this focus,
you get the tingles from the beta-alanine.
It felt like a drug.
And you're like, oh my gosh, this just unlocked this new experience to training
where you now have this pre-training ritual where you have your pre-workout meal,
you had to digest, you take your pre-workout, you get in the zone.
I'd have watched motivational bodybuilding videos back then,
and you go to the gym ready to throw down and train.
I love that whole lifestyle and experience.
So I had this passion around it.
And then when I got to college,
really learning how to use and manipulate diet
and macronutrients to change your body composition
or how it influences training performance
and getting stronger and getting bigger.
And when I was in college, I was making my own supplements.
So I'd buy these ingredients in bulk.
I'd buy creatine in bulk, citrulline malate,
beta-alanine, caffeine.
If I could go back in time right now
and you could look into my college dorm room,
it looked like I was dealing drugs
because I had like this food scale
that I would get at Walmart.
Then I have all these bags of white powder, essentially.
And I'd weigh out grams, like five grams of creatine,
3.2 grams of beta-alanine, 200 milligrams of caffeine.
I'd put all these ingredients in this bag
that I would use for myself,
but then friends would come to my dorm room
and they knock on my door.
They give me a few dollars.
I give them a bag of pre-workout and I just loved everything about the industry, the space,
the product.
So it just felt like this natural fit of, well, I'm just going to create something that
I already love and that I'm already doing.
But there was no true entrepreneurial background in my family.
My dad's side of the family, they were dairy farmers in central Pennsylvania.
My mom's side of the family was mostly military.
So like an e-commerce consumer business, that was brand new.
I went into it so naive.
You probably can understand that based off of me saying I'm going to make a million dollars that first year
and being humbled very quickly
But it was just like this huge passion that I was obsessed with and would you say the military?
impacted the way you thought about business in terms of planning and decision making and execution for sure
Not those first couple years because I was so new to the military
But when I transitioned out of the army in 2017, at that point I did a four-year contract.
I was an infantry platoon leader and we took that platoon to South Korea on a nine-month
rotation.
I was our unit movement officer.
I was the officer in charge of moving all of our company's equipment and vehicles from
Texas to South Korea.
So in terms of forward thinking and backwards planning
and operational planning,
I definitely had some very clear takeaways there.
I would say more so in terms of leadership
and leading people and building teams
and understanding what motivates individuals
and teams to operate at a higher capacity. I took more away from my
military experience that I still use today from that perspective as opposed to
operational planning I'd say.
Okay, so more like leadership skills is what you feel like you gained from it.
So I was actually reading a bit about you, and you had a bit of a weakness, you thought,
during your CEO career at your company,
where you felt like you weren't a good manager,
but you were a good leader.
Can you talk to us about what were some of your strengths
as a leader, and what did you feel like were setbacks
in terms of your managerial experience?
I've learned a lot through this entire experience.
There's probably a lot to unpack there. So in 2023 I stepped down from the CEO role of the
business because I didn't think that I was the person to take the business to
the next level. I was out of the CEO role for a year before returning and I gained
a lot of confidence in my ability to be that person, to take the business to the next level.
Oh wait, so you only were not CEO for a year?
For a year.
Oh, I didn't know that.
Okay, so you stepped down, but then you came back.
Correct.
Okay.
Yeah, I was out of the CEO role for a year.
And one of the systems that we implemented into our business years ago was EOS,
the Entrepreneurial Operating System.
Are you familiar with it?
No, I'd love for you to explain it.
There's this book called Traction by Gina Wickman.
There's a follow-up to that called Rocket Fuel.
And EOS is essentially this system
you can implement into your business.
Typically, you hire a facilitator
that helps you implement the system in your business.
There's a few different parts of EOS, but essentially it helps with meeting structure
and cadence.
It helps with the hiring and firing process to make sure you have the right people in
the right seats.
It helps with setting goals, short-term and long-term, and then assigning ROCs, which are objectives or goals
to each individual that help the business get to
the short term and long term goals.
We still run parts of EOS in our business,
but not the full structure.
So we fully implemented it, and then we realized,
okay, there's certain things we love.
There's certain things we don't necessarily love.
So we kind of run like part of EOS in our business now.
But the reason I recommend everyone who's an entrepreneur to read Traction and then
Rocket Fuel is because it describes in Rocket Fuel the relationship between a visionary
and an integrator in a business.
So I'm the founder of Bayard Performance Centrion.
I'm also the CEO, but I have an integrator in the business.
His name is Josh Holly.
He's CFO, COO, really strong operator.
And there's this relationship between a visionary and an integrator.
The visionary, typically a founder, thinks
very high level, lives in the clouds, the dreams, thinks big picture ideas that can
move the needle in the business, and is always typically optimistic. I'm always thinking
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there's an integrator.
There's someone who takes the visionary's vision and then puts it into action and
activates teams and operational planning and logistics and makes that thing
happen.
So I'm a visionary.
I love leading people.
I love inspiring people.
I love thinking big picture.
I don't necessarily love the turning the wrenches and doing all the small things to make it
happen.
I love building teams and leading teams and inspiring teams
to go act on that vision.
But I like thinking big picture and big picture,
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five years, 10 years out.
And I think it's really hard to be a visionary
and an integrator.
I think you're either one or the other. And I believe that naturally the hard to be a visionary and an integrator. I think you're either one or the other.
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Let's walk it back to your first couple of years.
You said you made $20,000
for your first three years in business.
What do you think were some of the big mistakes that you made that didn't enable you to have
more sales?
Well, we didn't have brand awareness.
So we had supply, but we had no awareness.
And the brand has made so many shifts and evolutions over the years.
We started as a bodybuilding company.
It was pre-workout, it was creatine, protein, amino acids.
And if you would have asked me in 2012,
what kind of brand is BPEN gonna be in 2025,
I would have said we are traditional sports nutrition
bodybuilding brand.
And there were a few shifts from then until now. So in 2018, we launched our first health and wellness supplement.
It's called Strong Greens.
And I thought at the time that was going to be an upsell at checkout,
but overnight it became one of our best-selling products.
So we went from being just a bodybuilding brand
to being a bodybuilding brand, but also a health and wellness brand.
So we expanded that line of products within our category. a bodybuilding brand to being a bodybuilding brand, but also a health and wellness brand.
So we expanded that line of products within our category.
And then in 2020, we launched our first endurance supplement,
which was called, and it is called G1M Sport.
It's carbohydrates and electrolytes.
So 2020, 2021, 2022, even 2023,
we saw the brand in three categories, strength and performance, health and wellness,
endurance.
I'd say one of the biggest issues I made from 2012 until 2023 is that I was trying to be
something for everyone.
I was trying to create a brand that spoke to you, whether you were a gym rat bodybuilder
or if you were a six year old woman going to yoga.
But truly we had photography,
I can still go through our Dropbox folder
and find the craziest images
because we were trying to speak to everyone.
In 2024, we made the decision,
and this is obviously only kind of recently,
the brand was still growing,
the brand was still growing strong up until that point, but we made a shift in 2024.
That was a game changer and we hyper focused and we decided that we weren't going to try
to be a brand for everyone anymore.
We're going to go all in on what we call performance endurance.
So at the tip of the spear, we are focused on the endurance consumer.
And the consumer that we speak to, we say they are for the committed, or we are a brand for the committed.
They are someone who takes it serious. They might not be a professional athlete, but they treat their lifestyle like they are.
They eat like they do. They sleep like they do. They train. They supplement. They treat it like it's life or death.
We are a brand for the committed.
So we went all in on performance endurance
for the committed and went very hyper-focused on brand
and it was a game changer for us.
So I'd say one of the mistakes I made early on
was the inability to focus, not knowing exactly who we are.
It was a brand that could be replicated by
just about anyone else early on in those days. You could rip our logo off, put someone else's
logo on, and it would fit pretty well. We didn't have the strongest brand identity.
We didn't have the strongest messaging and communication or tone of voice,
but there was a story behind the brand back then. People bought into the story and our mission
and what we were creating,
but there wasn't something that was
very clear differentiation,
and that's where everything scaled for us.
When I looked online,
it said you made about $50 million in revenue last year.
Is that about accurate?
We did a little over 60 million last year,
and then we'll do north of 80 million this year.
Wow, congratulations.
I'm going to do 10 million this year.
That's awesome. So I'm excited about that.
Your company had this crazy
rocket growth. The first three
years was 20,000, now you're at 60
million. What were the big milestones?
You did one year,
you just started making 10 million, 20 million.
How did it go? Was it overnight? And then also, you know, one year you just started making 10 million, 20 million. Like how did it go?
Is it overnight?
And then also, you know, you have a million plus subscribers on YouTube.
How did your YouTube channel fuel all this?
The YouTube channel was definitely the fuel to the fire early on.
Now, not so much just because we've brought in our reach through athletes and
partnerships and the brand has grown beyond
me, which was my goal.
But early on, I remember sitting in my Bear Extreme in South Korea in 2016.
And when I got to South Korea, we were doing $2,000 a month in revenue.
And this was February of 2016.
And it was a nine in revenue. And this was February of 2016, and it was a nine month rotation.
And my goal was that after that nine month rotation,
we were doing $10,000 a month in revenue.
So over in Korea, the time difference is significant.
So I was waking up extra early to have conversations
back in the States with manufacturers.
And then after work was over in the evening,
going back to work in the business,
I mean, I just worked that entire nine months.
Within the first 90 days of being there,
we went from $2,000 a month to $10,000 a month in revenue.
I launched new products while I was in South Korea,
rebuilt our website, so transitioned from
what was built on a friend's website hosting platform to Shopify.
Love Shopify.
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I learned how to vlog and do storytelling through watching and studying Casey Neistat's YouTube videos.
And when I was in Korea, I mean, it was very slow gradual growth from 2014 to 2016.
When I was in Korea, I was filming videos all the time.
I filmed this one video one day, just like I always was.
Came back to my barracks room, didn't think much of it.
And I'm thinking like, what do I title this video?
And I just titled it, A Day in the Life of an Infantry Paternary Leader.
Didn't think much of it. It was just, that's what it was.
of an infantry platoon leader. Didn't think much of it, it was just, that's what it was.
And that video within the first couple weeks
went over a million views,
which for me back then was next level.
But the subscriber growth in comparison to those metrics
was remarkable.
So it went from 30,000 subscribers on YouTube
to 80,000 subscribers from that one video.
Wow.
And BPN sales didn't grow in correspondence with that, but there was more brand awareness
and there was slowly this uptick in sales and revenue.
So that back then, that video was a spark.
And I think there's an opportunity when you go viral, and that was viral for me back then.
Yeah, I mean, it's viral now.
Yeah, I mean, a million views.
But it was a video that was very authentic to me.
It was me sharing my life in South Korea,
doing the work that I was doing back then,
showing the business.
So a video that went viral and popped off
was one that was so insightful into who I am and what I
was doing.
It wasn't this random trend video that I created that has no relationship to what I'm actually
doing and building and living.
It gave people insight into, here's this guy building this business in South Korea while
stationed in the army.
And then it grabbed the interest of the right people
who wanted to learn more about BPN.
So that was definitely a significant step for me.
And then after that nine month of rotation in Korea,
came back to the States, my military contract was up,
I started transitioning out.
And in 2017, we crossed the seven figure revenue mark
for the first time, 1.7 million in revenue.
And it was me, it was my brother Preston, and it was our friend Joe, who still works in
the business.
We signed a lease for a 6,000 square foot warehouse.
We could barely afford rent for it.
Cash flow was an absolute nightmare.
I didn't know about financing inventory.
I didn't know about financing inventory. I didn't know about lines of credit.
I just thought that the money you have to spend
is the money you have in the business bank account.
And at the time we had 12 week lead times
with manufacturers, no terms.
So I would place a production order for inventory.
I put 50% of that money down.
When it was completed 12 weeks later,
I'd pay off the remaining 50%.
So I'd pay all of it off before getting it.
But the issue was that we were growing very fast then, and we were running on the inventory.
So I was having to stack production orders, like 12 weeks out, eight weeks out, four weeks
out.
So all of our money was tied up in inventory that we didn't have yet with manufacturers. And there would be weeks where rent was due the next month or the next week for our warehouse.
We didn't have enough money in the bank account.
We'd run a flash sale online.
We get just enough money to get by.
I mean, 2017 was the hardest year of my life in terms of building the business, but I would
go back tomorrow and live it all over again.
Why?
It was like waking up on Christmas morning, every morning.
Three young guys who felt like we had nothing to lose,
all to gain, living the dream.
We had a 6,000 square foot warehouse.
We were documenting our life.
We were waking up every morning, ready to just build and go to work.
I'm doing it with my brother, doing it with a friend,
and I've documented all this.
I go back and watch those YouTube videos all the time,
just like relive it.
And as little money as we had,
and as hard as those days were in that year was,
it was a blast.
But that year taught us how to be lean and resourceful
and get really creative with how we grow.
Like how do you grow when you don't have money?
Yeah, talk to us about that. How did you fix the cash flow problem?
And we just like slowly dug out of it, but that's why I've always leaned into content
and using organic content and storytelling to connect with a consumer.
And I love long form content.
I love long form podcasts, long form YouTube,
never really gotten to short form stuff
because I believe you can use social media platforms
to bring a consumer in.
And if a consumer resonates with what you put out there,
your core values, your purpose,
your mission, your goals, they'll come alongside and they'll support and they'll fight alongside
you.
And when money was even tighter, we just leaned in harder to organic content.
We had the laptop to edit, I had the camera to film.
It was just man hours now of filming, editing,
creating, uploading. I filmed and edited and published all my own content from 2014 till
2019 while building the business. And it was two to three vlogs a week back then. And I
think that's the power in building true, authentic, organic content platforms.
Yeah, it's so true.
Building an audience-based business,
or having that audience that you can sell to
de-risks a lot of things.
I think about it with my own business.
Let's say, for some reason, the social agency is slow.
I can just be like, all right, I'll launch a course.
I'll launch a mastermind and promote it
and make a couple hundred thousand dollars, and we're good.
So having that audience do you risks if one
party of your business is slow or something, you
can just tap into your audience and sell what
they want.
So sticking on this creator entrepreneurship
piece, you were really a creator entrepreneur
before that term even existed.
You were an influencer before that term existed.
I feel like your approach was really awesome
because you said you started as a creator entrepreneur,
but then you tried to build a legacy brand
and make sure that the brand wasn't really tied to you.
And I feel like that's just a really good model
for everybody to replicate.
If you're starting a business, start a personal brand,
get some brand awareness through your personal brand.
And then you've got to figure out
how is the business not just revolving around you because that's not sustainable, right? If
you want a long-term business that survives without you. So how have you
thought about that and made sure that BPN was a legacy brand? It's very hard to
do when the brand starts built off of a person and individual. It's definitely
doable, but it takes years
to successfully transition.
One of the approaches we took was building out
an athlete and partnerships program.
And we keep our athlete partnerships program
smaller and leaner.
We aren't in the business of adding hundreds or thousands of ambassadors and athletes and
partners just for reach and exposure, but the athletes and partners that we do sign
have to be very directly aligned with our core values, our purpose, and our goals.
So we have 25, roughly, athletes and partners that we work with who are extremely aligned with
our core values, our purpose, our goals, our vision, who can help us scale and
grow the business, going to the future. And that's been efforts of successes and
failures and wins and losses along the way. Another piece of that strategy has
just been building out a really strong team.
I sat down with Ben Francis a few years ago.
He came to visit our HQ.
Ben Francis being the CEO and founder of Gymshark.
One of the pieces of advice he gave me was
that there's three components
that make a business successful.
It is brand, it is product, and it is people.
And you have to be great at all three of those things.
You need a great brand that is sustainable, different and strong.
You need great products.
You can't build a strong business without great products and the people
matter almost more than anything else.
If you have the wrong people on the team, it's going to be
really hard to scale and succeed.
If you have the right people on the team, but in the wrong seats, in the wrong people on the team, it's going to be really hard to scale and succeed. If you have the right people on the team, but in the wrong seats, in the wrong
rules, that's also going to make it very hard to scale and grow.
I believe so much in building a very strong culture that is both a family and a team.
I take the hiring process very serious, but I also take the firing process very serious.
And just having one wrong person on the team
can erode and destruct an entire business.
So we have a very, very strong team.
Our HQ is here in Round Rock, Texas.
Everyone is in house who don't have any remote roles.
Oh really?
Yep, everything's in house from media, brand,
all of our videographers, photographers, editors, marketing.
We use some agencies for certain parts of the business.
All fulfillment is in-house.
Everything's in-house.
Why?
These days, people at least flex hybrid work.
Why in person?
We've tried it, and for the culture we've created, it just doesn't work.
Our team is so dedicated and committed.
It's more than just a job.
This past weekend's a great example. We had a race this past weekend and it started Saturday at 12 p.m. And it went until
Monday at 9 p.m. And
We didn't have to ask people to come work. We said here's a list of times that we need to fill
We're not saying you have to come work this weekend,
but it'd be nice if you would.
People signed up for multiple shifts.
There were people who stayed there from Saturday at 12 p.m.
until Monday at 9 p.m.
No complaints, no negativity, all positivity, all optimism.
I mean, it's like the power
in building a really strong culture.
And for my business at least, remote does not work.
We've tried it.
It does more harm to the culture than good.
I'd love to understand what makes your team so dedicated.
What do you think it is that you guys do?
I think there's real purpose and impact behind the brand.
These events we go to, the message of go on more,
it truly does change people's lives. Our purpose is to show people that they have the ability to do
whatever they want to do and helping them realize that and then providing them the tools,
resources, the knowledge, the education, the community to go do it. People towed the line
the knowledge, the education, the community to go do it. People towed the line at this weekend's race,
never running 10 miles before,
and some of them ran 20, 30, 40 miles.
So we're actually changing lives and creating impact.
And when you're in person and you go to these events
and you hear the stories from people, it's real.
I mean, there are thousands of people
with Go One More tattoo tattoo on their body because those
three words, as simple as they are, they are so powerful when actually applied to your
life.
And when you realize you're working on something, in something, towards something that's much
greater than yourself, which I believe is the greatest reward in life is you're building
something that is much larger than yourself. It's selfless.
That's what the power of being the military is. There's a lot of
appreciation and fulfillment and satisfaction in that and it's hard to find that in many places.
So I know you have a new book. By the time this interview comes out, it will be out and available.
It's called Go One More.
So talk to us about that because you actually created this concept years ago.
Why are you putting out a book now about it and how has that term evolved?
What does it mean to you today?
What did it mean to you back then?
Go One More for me has evolved over the years.
And the reason I wrote the book is because it's evolved from just being an action to actually an outcome. So I'll explain all of that. I
Founded going more
2018
2019 before it really came to life. I was training for a marathon the Austin, Texas marathon and
It was before I really started running marathons and building endurance.
So running for me was very challenging.
It was a year after I got out of the military
and me and my fiance then, wife now,
were living downtown Austin,
right off Zilker Park in Barton Springs.
That's where I live, Zilker.
We loved living there.
We're north now.
I miss living by the trail,
because I would run the Lady Bird Lake Trail every morning.
And that's where I was doing my marathon training.
And this one day, I had an 18-mile run scheduled.
I got 10 miles into this run,
and my legs got heavy, I was tired, I decided to quit.
So I stopped running,
I started walking back to the house that we were running.
And as I'm walking back to the house, I'm thinking, if I quit on this run, even though
no one will know, what will this say about me as an individual and a leader in the business
and my character?
What else will I quit on?
Will I quit on my business?
Will I quit on my family?
Will I quit on my wife?
Can I take myself seriously, honestly serious, if I quit on my wife? Can I like take myself serious, honestly serious, if I quit on this run?
So I turn around as I'm walking back.
I go back to the trail.
I finished the run.
I run 18 miles and then I run one more mile just to prove to myself I could.
I ran 19 miles and I came back to the house we were renting.
I took my hat off because I'm always wearing a hat, and
I wrote one more under the bill, took a photo of it, posted it on social media, and that
was it. There was not much other intention behind it. And it struck a chord amongst a
lot of people, and all these other people started writing one more on the bill under
their hat, taking a photo of it and sending it to me.
So I'm realizing, okay, there's like, there's something here.
It's like the power of doing the action of go one more or one more evolved into go one
more.
We trademarked that I became part of our business and my mission.
And back then for the first couple of years, it was just the action of doing more.
They just go do more of anything and everything.
Work one more hour, do one more rep, run one more mile.
And I just realized that people didn't have the ability to truly understand when, why,
how, and what was appropriate of doing more of anything.
And that I did it myself thinking that just by doing more of anything or everything
was going to result in success regardless of what you were doing more of.
I think sometimes we make the mistakes of putting a lot of effort into one part of our
life, say our fitness.
Sometimes I made this mistake myself.
You're doing all this training, you're running, you're working out, you're lifting, you're eating healthy, and you're spending all this time. And you think that
that success in that department of your life carries over to other parts and it doesn't always.
I've had employees before who spend all this time on their nutrition and their body and they want that work and that action to be rewarded saying,
well, look how hard I work. Well, you're not working hard in your job. You're working hard
in something that you're not being paid for. I respect and appreciate that. But for what you
need to do, let's apply that same amount of effort elsewhere. So I've realized over time that going
more is not actually just an action that is part of it, but it's this outcome that we can achieve and experience when
we are very intentional with the decisions we're making.
And there have been multiple times in my life where I've had to make a decision
that has shifted the trajectory of my life, starting my business in college.
That decision changed my life.
Picking up a camera and that decision changed my life. Picking up a camera and documenting everything
changed my life.
Turning around on that training run
and running one more and taking a photo of my hat
and posting it online, that changed my life.
Stepping down from the CEO role in my business
and coming back, that changed my life.
All these things that I've done along the way
have shifted the trajectory of where I am right now
and we all have the power and ability along the way have shifted the trajectory of where I am right now.
And we all have the power and ability to make these decisions.
But if we go through life that lacks intentionality and focus and clarity around these decisions,
we're going to end up somewhere we don't want to be.
And that's not the success or outcome of go one more, it's being lost and unsatisfied and unfulfilled
because we weren't intentional with
where we were spending our time, how, with who, on what.
Something that just made me think is
you step down from your CEO role.
So you could have just been like,
you know what, I'm just gonna keep going.
I'm just gonna go one more.
I'm just gonna keep being the CEO. Sometimes you do keep going. I'm just going to go one more. I'm just going to keep being the CEO.
Sometimes you do need to actually quit pause and not go one more.
So is there some sort of framework that we should go through to decide whether or
not we're going to go one more?
Yeah.
I mean, I think it's really easy to just keep pushing.
One of my favorite books is called Necessary Endings by Dr.
Henry Cloud.
There have also been many books in my life that have come to me at the right time in the right place.
And in Necessary Endings by Dr. Henry Cloud, he talks about pruning and the analogies around a rose bush.
So if you look at a rose bush and if you don't tend to it, it's a mess.
There's thorns, there's stems, there's dead petals.
And in order to help this plant and bush flourish, you have to prune it.
You have to cut away the dead leaves and the stems and the thorns.
And for a moment in time, it's going to look bare
and empty and dead, but you're actually helping it grow
and become stronger and larger and more durable.
I think that's applicable in our same life,
where there's going to be moments where we have to create
unnecessary endings and we have to prune parts of our life.
And for a period of time, it's going to feel empty,
it's going to feel bare, it's gonna feel bare, it's gonna feel like we took a step back.
But in that moment, we're allowing ourselves to grow and flourish.
Another one of my favorite authors, he's a pastor, Erwin McManus.
He talks about these moments of quietness or these lulls in life.
It's an opportunity to sharpen your ax.
And he uses this story, which I absolutely love.
And when he was younger, he was a lumberjack.
And he showed up to be this lumberjack
among all these old men.
And you got paid based off of how many trees
you chopped down for the day.
So he's looking around, all these older men look weak
and tired and he's like, I'm gonna crush them.
I'm gonna make so much more money
and cut down so many more trees than them.
And the end of every day, he would come up short.
All these older, weaker, fatigued men
were cutting down more trees
and they were making more money.
So he said, why is this happening?
What was happening was he kept just swinging a dull ax at trees all day, all night, every
day.
And in order to chop down each additional tree, he had to put forth more effort, more
strength because his ax was dull.
What the old wise gentlemen were doing was
they would take breaks on the day,
they would drop off their ax to get sharpened,
and then they would rest and nap.
So when the ax was sharpened, they'd come back,
and with every swing, it was sharp,
and they were more effective, more efficient.
So he quotes the Bible, and I believe it is, when the axe is dull and unsharpened, more
strength and effort is required.
So sometimes you'll look at someone's life and you're thinking, oh, they're not doing
anything.
They're in this lull.
Or maybe you're in a lull right now.
I'm in between jobs.
I'm in between careers.
I'm not sure what the next path is for me.
And it's really hard to sit in that lull of time where you're not actually making progress
and pushing forward. Maybe you had to take a step back, but that is the opportunity to sharpen your
axe. So when you come back and swing it again, it is sharp, refined, it requires less effort,
Sharp, refined, it requires less effort because you have a strong blade. So that framework has really shifted the way that I think about life in terms of it's okay to slow down.
For me, I never want to lose momentum.
Slowing down is not losing momentum. You're still moving forward.
But sometimes we have to slow down or maybe even stop and recognize, okay, I'm at a point
where I have to make a decision.
Do I go left?
Do I go right?
Do I go forward?
Do I go backward?
Make very clear decisions that are guided through intentionality and then swing again
with a sharp axe.
But if you keep just pushing forward, the axe becomes duller and duller and duller.
More strength is required.
And you're not actually making effective or efficient progress.
I feel like I'll never forget that story.
Now, I love that story so much.
So one of the things that you talk about a lot is consistency.
And you talk about the need to be intentional and not mechanical.
So walk us through some examples of somebody
being mechanical with their consistency and what that would result in versus if you're
intentional.
I think consistency and being consistent, it's such a strong ability to harness, but
everyone's preaching it. Just be consistent. Just be consistent. Like, what does that mean?
What does it mean to just be consistent? And my running coach, Jeff Cunningham, who's based down at Austin, Texas here, he said this on
my podcast years ago and it clicked so well. And he said, it's better to be consistently good
than occasionally great. And sometimes being consistently good isn't sexy and you're
not throwing the Hail Mary pass and you're not hitting the home run and
you're not coming out in first every time. Sometimes the most consistent
person is middle of the pack and they're not falling behind but they're doing all
the things right and they're moving forward and they're very unassuming,
but they're consistently making progress.
And then, I mean, I can think back to high school
where you had like the occasionally great athlete
who nine times out of 10 would show up
looking like a soup sandwich,
missed the passes, struck out, wasn't focused,
didn't care, but occasionally they would hit the home run and
they would catch the game winning pass and they became the hero.
But you couldn't count on them nine times out of 10.
It is better to be consistently good than occasionally great.
And there's a caveat to that where there's a difference between being all in and all
consumed.
And Jeff also taught me this, where when you're all consumed, if you have a goal and you're
all consumed by it, which I have been many times in my life before, it actually is destructive.
It takes away from it doesn't add, and it's different from being obsessed.
Being all consumed is where you actually
create more harm than good
because you can't get out of your own head
and you can't distract yourself
by being present with your family or friends
or your business.
Being all in is this hyper-focused ability
to really be consistent towards your goals
without it being destructive towards your life.
Now, I've had to learn the hard way that being all-in is different from being all-consumed,
especially now being a husband and a father to two young kids.
Life looks very different now than it did four years ago.
And you can be consistently good,
and you can be all in without it being destructive
to your life, because I have felt the destructive path.
Well, talk to us about how fatherhood changed,
how you think about Go One More.
They changed everything.
Fatherhood shook up my life in the greatest way possible
because when my daughter was born,
so my daughter will be three in July,
my son will be one in August.
And when my daughter was born,
it was around the same time that I was stepping down
from the CEO role.
And all of these things happened at once
because I didn't think that I could be
the ambitious entrepreneur that I wanted to be,
and also a present and content husband father that I wanted to be, and also a present and content husband father
that I wanted to be.
I thought I had to choose between one or the other.
And I realized over time that, well, you can be both.
And go one more for me is the outcome
of what it looks like is being a successful entrepreneur,
a really strong leader, making decisions, building product, leading the brand
through morals and values and ethics
and creating success for myself and other people with me.
But it's also being a really dedicated
and committed husband and father.
And with that comes a lot of sacrifice
and saying no to a lot of other things.
There's not much in my life right now outside of my work,
faith in family, and my fitness.
And that's completely okay with me.
There's not really any hobbies in my life right now
outside of that because there's something I said this past my life right now outside of that because
There's something I said this past year or these past two years that connected with so many people and it's not in the book
because the book was written prior to a lot of this and
It's that if it matters to you
You will make time and I briefly discussed parts of in the book but the whole message of it really didn't develop until recently and disconnected with so much of our audience
that if something matters to you, you will make time.
And I truly believe that.
And if you say your family matters to you, but none of your time in your
calendar reflects that, well, then does your family really matter to you, but none of your time in your calendar reflects that, well then
does your family really matter to you? If you say that you want to build a
nine-figure business, but your calendar doesn't reflect those priorities, does
it really matter to you? And I believe there's a difference between
responsibilities and routines. And before my kids were born, I would get really caught up in my routines,
especially my morning routine. And when I became a father and had kids, I realized the hard way
that those routines were oftentimes going to be disrupted and broken. And that's okay. And we have
to place our responsibilities in life
over routines.
And your routines can flex and change and adapt and evolve
as long as you consistently prioritize your responsibilities.
And my responsibilities are my family, my business,
my faith, my health and fitness.
One more question about Go One More.
And that is about motivation. You talk about the fact that we
need to prove ourselves right rather than prove others wrong. So talk to us about that.
This ended up being a brand campaign we launched a few years ago. I've never been someone who's been
motivated by having a chip on my shoulder or trying to prove others wrong.
I believe some people are motivated to do that and that's okay to each their own,
but it doesn't work for me.
I share it in the book because my hope is that that connects or resonates with some people.
You know, I've never been someone who wants to spend time pursuing a goal or objective just to prove someone else that I can do it.
Like what does it matter if someone else thinks you can or can't? One of my favorite things to say and I share in the book is that doubt is only dangerous
when we start doubting ourself. Everyone can say you can't do something.
Everyone in the world can doubt you. Let them think that.
But if you allow that doubt from them to shift over
and transpire into yourself, that's when it dangerous.
It's dangerous when you start doubting yourself.
And I guess it was 2020,
I went for my first sub three hour marathon attempt.
And above my go one more tattoo,
I wrote in Sharpie marker, you effing can't because I didn't believe
myself. And when I do these fitness challenges, I make them public. And there was a lot of
doubt online from critics on forums all over the place saying you Nick bear will never
run a sub three hour marathon. So I went to that marathon thing. I'm going to prove everyone
wrong. So I wrote you effing can't above my get one more tattoo.
I didn't believe myself.
I was sitting out for that goal just to prove others that I could.
And I missed that goal by 24 minutes.
I ran three hours and 24 minutes in that marathon.
It's a huge miss.
It's not a small miss.
So after that, I went back to training for another year, not because I wanted to prove
to anyone else that I could, but to show myself, you can actually do this, man. Like you can, you can run sub three.
So I trained and I ran two hours, 56 minutes, and I got it. I did it. And I've just learned over
the years that if you set out on a life to consistently keep trying to prove to everyone else that you
can and prove them wrong and you have a chip on your shoulder, maybe that works for you,
but that does not work for me.
And for me, that comes from a place of insecurity and weakness as opposed to wanting to be better
and reach your full potential and continue to pursue greatness.
And it's a small shift in just mindset and positioning,
which might not seem significant,
but it deconstructs and rebuilds the whole framework
in which you go to pursue all these other areas
and aspects of your life.
Let's move on to talk about nutrition.
Just a few questions about nutrition and health.
One of the things that I've been really interested in,
which is new, is creatine.
And I know that's one of the products
that you guys sell at BPN.
I remember all my guy friends always using creatine,
but suddenly now I feel like more girls use it.
My wife uses it.
Yeah, and I'm really excited to try it
because I love to work out.
And as I'm getting older, I used to feel like
I would just do squats and gain muscle like right away now
I feel like I need something else to kind of help me build muscle
So talk to us about creatine the benefits of creatine if men and women need to take it differently or think about it differently
I mean creatine
Monohydrate is the most studied
Sports performance supplement in the world. It's been extensively studied.
Now there are different forms and purities of creatine monohydrate on the
market. The most pure form you can get is called Crea Pure. It comes from this
manufacturer called Alice Chem. So it's the most pure and safe form of creatine
monohydrate in the market. And there's a lot of misconceptions about what creatine does.
So many people think, oh, it's just going to make you hold water.
Yeah, I've heard that, hold water in your muscles.
And you're going to go bald and steroid and all of these things.
The way that creatine works, creatine has so many different benefits,
not from just power output and muscular development
and muscular endurance, but there's also studies now showing the benefits for mental processing
and mental acuity.
I believe that everyone can benefit from creatine monohydrate.
So when you consume creatine, and the typical dose is three to five grams per day, it doesn't
really matter when you take it.
It doesn't necessarily have acute benefits.
Like you take caffeine and you feel the effects of caffeine in 20, 30 minutes.
Creatine doesn't work that way.
Creatine loads into the muscle.
So when you consume creatine, it is stored in the muscle in what's called creatine phosphate.
So it's stored in the muscle in what's called creatine phosphate. So it's stored in the muscle.
And when you train, when you work out,
you're breaking down the energy source of ATP.
And as you're working out and you're breaking down ATP,
it's degraded and it loses a phosphate molecule.
The way creatine works is it's stored in the muscle.
It sees that ATP is degraded, breaking down.
So it donates a phosphate molecule to regenerate ATP,
so you have more muscular energy and ability.
And because creatine is stored in the muscle,
it will store some water with it,
but it's storing water intracellular, intramuscular,
where you want it, which is great for the muscle.
So you should look fuller and maybe bigger and stronger,
but it's not subcutaneous where it's like under the skin
and it's making you look watery.
It should make you look and feel fuller, more muscular.
Yeah, I'm excited to try it.
So I think a lot of people tuning in are like me.
They're entrepreneurs, they work out,
maybe they don't train. I know there's a difference between working out like me. They're entrepreneurs, they work out, maybe they don't train.
I know there's a difference between working out and train.
They might be in really great physical health
because I feel like a lot of high achievers are.
What would you recommend in terms of supplements
and what would you say are typically the big mistakes
you see in people's nutrition?
Biggest mistakes people make in nutrition,
there's like a bunch of different ways you can take this.
I think what's hard right now for so many people is that they're being fed so much different,
contradicting information.
Yeah, it's like, can't eat anything.
There's this fear mongering online of every food is going to make you sick or you should
fear it.
Do you not eat meat?
Do you go plant-based?
Do you only eat meat? Should you avoid seed oils at all costs?
Should you go organic, non-organic?
There's like so much out there.
And I think you just have to find what works for you
and what you prefer.
I prefer a diet that's well-rounded of meats.
I mean, I love cooking meat.
I could probably eat all meat for my diet,
but meats, I eat lots of lean red meat.
I incorporate eggs into my diet, whole grains, oats, fruits, vegetables.
I'm an endurance athlete, so high carb, moderate protein, moderate fat.
And that for me works.
I like a well-balanced approach.
For some people, that might not work and they
don't enjoy that. So I think you have to find a diet that works for you, that you enjoy,
that you feel good with, but also isn't deficient in the macronutrients that you need to fuel
your body. The macronutrients are proteins, fats and carbs. They all serve a different
role and then micronutrients as well. And for most people, I don't think you have to
get caught up in the deficiencies of micronutrients
you're going to experience.
You can get blood work done if you want to,
but if you focus on just a well-rounded diet,
it's going to point you in a good direction.
Most of us know what we should be eating.
It's just making the decision to do that.
And I think most people can set themselves up for success
by meal prepping and having the right foods
in their house at the right times.
Living here in Austin, we have accessibility to great foods.
I saw just around the corner,
there's this store called Local Pastures,
which I don't know if you've ever been there.
I've never been there yet.
I highly recommend it,
where they have the best eggs there that are open pasture, fresh
eggs, cage free, a lot of organic grass fed meats and produce.
And there's also a really cool grocery store in Butcher in East Austin called Radius.
I don't know if you've checked that out yet.
No, I'm so new.
I don't know anything.
I get all the food.
Yeah, you got to let me know. Grocery store. I'm so new, I don't know anything. I get all the food. Yeah, you gotta let me know.
Grocery store, I'm a big foodie myself.
But I also, I love going out to dinner with my wife
and friends and family and enjoying a meal.
I don't get too rigid or strict with that.
And I believe food should be celebrated and enjoyed,
but 90% of the food, maybe 95% of my food and diet
is, it's dialed in, it's accounted for, it's fueling my body.
I look at foods in terms of like,
how is this gonna make me feel?
Not necessarily what am I craving,
but like, how is this gonna make me feel?
And then I crave a certain feeling.
Like I know if I'm gonna, for lunch, eat some rice
and some veggies and some ground elk or bison or beef
and maybe some hummus with that.
That's gonna make me feel really good.
I crave that feeling as opposed to like I'm gonna go crush two double cheeseburgers.
It's gonna taste really good, but I have this association with the feeling that drives my
cravings.
That's where most people should start with diet. Don't get all caught
up in the minutiae, but it's important to find what works for you, what you actually
enjoy and then educate yourself around food and nutrition through credible people and
resources. So I believe that's the first step there. For me, like having a whey protein powder or a plant-based
protein powder in the house is a non-negotiable. You have to, in my
opinion, have that. Getting enough protein in our diet helps with building lean
muscle tissue, keeping you full for longer. If you go and make a protein shake or a
protein sludge bowl, that's gonna keep you full and fueled and filled up
for longer than just going to eat some simple carbs.
So having a protein powder source in the house
for convenience is super beneficial.
Creatine is another one of those products
that I believe everyone should have.
I'm personally a big fan of omega-3 fatty acids
from fish oil. So I take fish oils
every day that are concentrated in EPA and DHA. Great for the heart, the mind, the body.
I take a multivitamin every day just to ensure all of my nutritional insurance is covered and
not deficient anything throughout that day or the week or my life.
And then from there, it's what are your specific goals?
Are you trying to solve for digestive issues?
Are you an endurance athlete?
Do you need carbohydrates and electrolytes and fuel sources
around your training?
The minimums for everyone are lower.
But then goal specific and dependent,
what do you need supplements for
that you can't get in your diet?
Like for me, if I'm in a big endurance training block
for an Ironman or an ultra or a marathon,
I need electrolytes, I need endurance gels,
I need carbohydrate powders,
because my energy demands are much higher, and those products
help facilitate higher performance demands and needs.
So, I think that's the best way to approach it.
What are the minimums to cover your bases?
Protein, multivitamins, fish oil, creatine.
And then from there, what are your goals and what products
you need to support those
goals?
That makes a lot of sense.
That's smart.
Okay, I want to end our conversation with a fun game called supplement this.
So basically, I'm going to throw out a common challenge that entrepreneurs face and then
I want you to give us the solution with supplements.
So if I say like burnout, you can say, okay, the solution might be taking a pause taking
more breaks whatever so you can just ingredients can be hypothetical not like
real food or anything like that okay ready I'm ready okay how about somebody
who's afraid to launch their business how would you supplement this action we
all have these curiosities and that curiosity will always be a curiosity
if you don't have the courage to take action. I believe courage is the answer to many
of life's problems. Apply courage when you have a curiosity because the curiosity will
maintain and be a curiosity as long as you just wish and hope for it. So courage and action, apply courage and action.
How about somebody who feels like an imposter?
They want to be a creator entrepreneur, but they feel like an imposter.
Just accept the fact that we all go through that.
Everyone feels like an imposter at some point.
That's one of the reasons I stepped down from the CEO role in my business.
That's why I struggled creating YouTube videos in the beginning.
I wish people could see what the early years
of YouTube looked like.
I remember this one night, the first year I started YouTube,
I was afraid to film anything outside of my apartment
because vlogging wasn't really a thing then.
And it took me years to get comfortable walking around
in public holding a camera.
Where I got really comfortable with that was actually South Korea.
Because I realized no one really knew what I was saying
or could understand me.
And I felt like I was invisible.
So in 2014, I remember setting up my tripod in my apartment,
speaking to the camera,
because I won't take that camera outside of the apartment.
And somebody, one of my neighbors, was passing by by and they looked into my window and they saw me filming
myself and I was so embarrassed that they saw me.
And in that moment I felt so stupid that I was embarrassed that someone who I didn't
know and didn't know me was looking at me and I just assumed that they were making fun
of me even though they weren't.
And we create these narratives in our head that everyone cares what we are doing
and is thinking about us all the time.
And the reality is they're not.
So if you think you're an imposter
and that people think you're an imposter,
they're not spending that much time or energy
thinking about you.
I can promise you that.
It's in your head.
It's in your head.
So just be okay with being an imposter
and a new person early on.
I love being the new guy now.
I love being vulnerable and putting myself in positions that I don't know what I'm doing.
And if you get and become okay admitting that like show up somewhere and say,
I'm new to this.
I don't know what I'm doing.
Can someone help me ask me for help automatically?
It says I'm starting at baseline,
everything from here is up in growth.
You wanna be the new guy in certain positions and places,
be okay with that.
Let's say your business is stagnant,
your business is not growing.
There's a reason.
I have to tell myself that there is this
three year business growth rule.
Because people told me,
oh, don't worry, you know, those first couple years,
don't worry, it takes three years for business
to really start getting off the ground.
And I bought into that.
So year two, I thought,
well, I'm not at the three year mark yet.
It's just gonna take time.
Three year mark, no growth yet.
Like, people told me it takes three years,
what's going on? You have
to have the ability to take responsibility for lack of growth. If something's stagnant,
it's not the market's fault. I hate that excuse. Oh, the market's not primed right now.
You have to be able to identify that you're responsible, take accountability. You're
probably going to have to make some sort of change or pivot,
and just continue to find resources and tools
and learn and test and try and see what works.
One of my favorite podcasts is Founders,
hosted by David Sentra.
I can't remember who he quoted in this one episode,
but he said that change breaks the brittle and that if you aren't
willing to change, what that quote means is if you aren't willing to change and if change
scares you, it is going to break you because it's a weakness.
So the strongest people, the most successful people, the most durable people are okay with
change.
They embrace change.
They allow change to be an invitation and not a threat.
It's one of the ways I describe it
in the book, and if you view change as necessary,
you'll make decisions and you'll do things
when growth stops and halts and ceases,
and lean into that as an opportunity.
And being honest with yourself about things need to change,
things aren't going well, you've gotta change something
in order to progress.
Right.
Okay, last one.
Now, what if you're an entrepreneur
who feels like they have no energy?
Wake up every day with no energy, no drive,
how would you supplement this?
Well, I think all entrepreneurs are pretty tired.
So like, that type of energy, I would say that probably feels normal, especially as
responsibilities grow.
But in terms of having the drive and purpose, I need to be honest with yourself.
Am I doing something that I truly love?
Am I truly passionate about it?
Someone once told me, if you're doing something you don't like, change it.
But if you can't change it,
change the way you think about it.
That has always stuck with me.
Like there are certain parts of our life,
especially as entrepreneurs,
we have to do things that we don't wanna do.
90% of my job is doing things that I don't wanna do.
But how do you shift the way you view it and position it
to realize that it contributes to a greater cause in good? But if you can't find passion in what you're doing ever or appreciation,
it might be a point in time where it's time to pivot.
I referenced Lewis Howes in my book, and he talks about identity foreclosure.
And I think a lot of people are afraid of identity foreclosure where
you're doing this thing for so long, this job, and this job becomes part
of your identity, but you don't like it.
You try to change what you think about it,
but you still don't like it.
So many people are afraid of saying,
okay, I'm done with this, I'm gonna go do something else.
And certain situations in life, you just can't do that.
If you have responsibilities, you have a family,
you have people you have to take care of, I get it.
But if you can make that change,
close that identity that you've created for so long,
shift and do something new that brings life to you.
Because I don't want to be looking back at my deathbed
thinking like, I did this job for 40 years that I hated,
just to make a certain amount of money.
That's a wasted life.
Yeah. A lot of founders, especially first-time founders,
you forget that you can sell your company.
Start something new.
Yeah.
Where do you see BPN in 10 years?
I set all of our goals for actually 10-year targets,
and I just reset all of our 10-year targets this past year.
So I reference a lot of books because I read a lot of books,
but one of my favorite books that I read in the past few years is B.E. 2.0, Beyond Entrepreneurship 2.0
by Jim Collins. That book transformed my business this past year because chapter four is all about
vision. Jim says there's three components to vision. It's core values, purpose, and goals.
Core values and purpose shouldn't change more than one time
every 100 years.
Goals are 10 to 25 year targets.
So we hit 10 year targets.
Wow, that's like really long vision.
Exactly.
So some of our 10 year targets are that we are the most
respected and trusted endurance consumer brand in the world.
We are known as the Nike or Apple of endurance performance.
We sell more endurance gels than all other competitors.
And this is by 2035.
And that we inspire more lifters to be runners
and more runners to be lifters.
And that G1M Sport and the extensions of G1M Sport
that fall under that product offering line, that product line alone is a hundred million in revenue by 2035.
So those are where we want to be in 10 years, owning the endurance
performance space, being the most trusted and respected endurance consumer
brand in the world.
And the reason it's so important to define and write down vision is because your team can
then go operate and create strategy and tactics knowing that they are aligned with the core
values, the purpose, and the goals of the organization.
If that's not defined, then people, teams, departments will create strategy and tactics
that might be aligned with your vision, but
it's hard to tell if it's not clearly defined.
And it's great that it's not changing very often because I know one big complaint from
people is, oh, my goals are always changing so I don't know what to do and then things
get messy.
So having these consistent goals that are so long term, I feel like is really valuable.
Yeah, I agree.
If somebody never buys a single product from you, but they follow your brand,
what do you hope to leave them with or inspire them with? The power of going more and that
there's a realization that there is so much power and ability in the decisions we make in our
lifetime. There's millions and millions and millions of decisions, some way more than others and can shift the trajectory more than others.
But we have a responsibility to be very intentional with the decisions we make because my goal
in life is to create a legacy that I'm proud of, that when I'm old, that I'm trusted and
respected and that my kids want to be with me and my wife wants
to be with me regardless of how much money I make or how big the business is.
And if people can implement the action of Go One More, what I also understand the power
and the outcome, I believe that can guide the trajectory of people's lives to a place
where they can be really proud
of the legacy they leave.
I ask two questions at the end of all my shows to my guests.
The first one is, what is one actionable thing
our young and profitors can do today
to become more profitable tomorrow?
I'm a brand guy, so I would say you have to recognize
that we're all building brands and that brand is much different than
product. Brand has a heartbeat, brand bleeds, brand has DNA. You build a brand in drops
and you lose it in buckets. And to be profitable and to build a really strong business,
doesn't matter what business you're in,
I believe that building a brand through storytelling
and connecting with an audience
is extremely powerful and beneficial.
And that brand needs to be focused through a vision,
hyper-focused through a vision.
And what would you say your secret to profiting in life is?
And this can go beyond business advice. I honestly think it's consistency.
I say this very humbly.
I'm a very consistent person.
You will never see me winning races.
You'll rarely see me being the occasionally great,
but I can promise you I am always very consistently good,
even in terms of my running.
I wake up every morning and I go for my run,
regardless if I want to or not,
whether I got one hour of sleep the night before
or eight hours of sleep the night before.
I find so much power in being consistently good.
And you might not see the benefit from it in a week,
a month, or even a year,
but I've been building my business now for 13 years.
And just being consistently good for 13 years
can take you quite far.
60 million in revenue, annual revenue.
I mean, that's huge.
It compounds a lot.
It does, yeah.
That's amazing.
Nick, this has been such an awesome conversation.
I really enjoyed it.
I think our listeners are gonna love it.
Where can everybody learn more about you
and everything that you do?
So on YouTube, if you search Nick Bear,
I've been documenting my life literally since 2014.
Over a thousand videos there.
It's the whole story is there.
Can we see those early videos in that warehouse?
They're all still there.
Amazing.
We've kept them all up.
My company's website is bpnsups.com
and then Instagram, it's Nick Bear Fitness.
And then my book, Go One More, launches June 24th, 2025.
We'll stick all those links in the show notes.
I think this will be out by the time we put out the episode.
So everybody go grab that book, Go One More.
And thank you so much, Nick.
Thank you, appreciate it.
Well, young and profitors,
what an incredible conversation with Nick Baer,
a true example of what happens
when you stop making excuses and start making moves.
Nick's journey from army barracks
to building a multimillion dollar brand
reminded us that success isn't just about
having perfect conditions,
it's about showing up consistently,
especially when nobody is watching. You make time
for what matters and consistently prioritize what matters to you and the goals that you have.
What really struck me today was his distinction between being consistently good versus occasionally
great. So many of us get caught in chasing those big breakthrough moments, but Nick built BPN by
making the choice to show up
every single day, whether that meant filming YouTube videos from his barracks or grinding
through the unglamorous parts of building a business. As Nick put it, doubt is only dangerous when you
start doubting yourself. And he's absolutely right. Courage in action is the answer to life's
many problems. The strongest people embrace change, and that's exactly what Nick demonstrated throughout
his journey.
I loved how he redefined what it means to go one more.
It's not just about doing more for the sake of it, or pushing until you break.
It's about the moment when you want to quit, when your mind is telling you that you're
done and you choose to just push a little bit further.
That's where growth really happens.
So here's my challenge to you young and profiters.
What's your one more moment going to be today?
Where can you just push a little bit further than you think you can?
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of Young and Profiting.
If you listened, learned, and profited from this powerful conversation with the inspiring
Nick Baer, do us a favor and share this episode with somebody who needs a reminder that consistency, discipline, and courage
can change everything.
And if you enjoyed this show and picked up something valuable,
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And of course, I have to thank my amazing
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to put on this podcast.
So thank you for all that you do.
This is your host, Halataha, aka The Podcast Princess, signing off.