Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - YAPCreator: How Successful Entrepreneurs Think Before Starting a Business | Entrepreneurship | Presented by Intuit

Episode Date: July 22, 2025

Now on Spotify Video! Entrepreneurship isn’t just about launching a product; it starts with building the mindset to navigate risk, rejection, and uncertainty. Before you can turn passion into profit..., you need clarity, confidence, and a deeper purpose to push through the tough moments. In this first episode of the Passion to Profit series, presented by Intuit, Hala Taha dives into the mental preparation it takes to build a profitable side hustle or startup. You’ll hear from successful entrepreneurs like Mel Robbins, Pat Flynn, and Benjamin Hardy on why mindset, grit, and resilience are the keys to starting a business. In this episode, Hala will discuss:  (00:00) Introduction   (01:20) Clarifying Your Purpose as an Entrepreneur   (07:58) Taking Imperfect Action to Start Your Business   (17:19) Using Discomfort and Fear as Fuel for Growth   (22:11) Embracing Setbacks in Entrepreneurship   (25:08) Committing to Your Vision Without a Plan B Intuit, the maker of TurboTax and QuickBooks, is expanding its world-class network of tax and bookkeeping experts. Whether you want a side hustle or a career pivot, Intuit offers the tools to help you grow as an entrepreneur. Their supportive team, mission-driven culture, and Intuit Academy—a free, self-paced training platform—mean you’re set up to succeed, even if you’re just getting started. Learn more or apply now at intuit.com/expert. Sponsored By: Intuit, The Maker of TurboTax and QuickBooks. Learn more or apply now at intuit.com/expert.  Resources Mentioned: YAP E344 with Dave Ramsey: bit.ly/5StagestoBuildaBusiness  YAP E353 with Krista Williams: bit.ly/FriendshipIsaBusinessSuperpower  YAP E206 with Benjamin Hardy: bit.ly/_Achieve_Your_Goals  YAP E329 with Mel Robbins: bit.ly/The_LetThemTheory  YAP E359 with Pat Flynn: bit.ly/SurprisingProductivityHack  YAP E294 with Dean Graziosi: bit.ly/PassionintoEntrepreneurialSuccess  YAP E111 with Jay Samit: bit.ly/Future_ProofYourself  YAP E298 with Ginni Rometty: bit.ly/Lead_withPurpose  YAP E239 with Tina Wells: bit.ly/TheElevationApproach  YAP E347 with Ryan Holiday: bit.ly/StoicismTransformsLeadership  YAP E274 with Rory Vaden: bit.ly/BuildPersonalBrands  Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals  Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new  Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business Podcast, Passive Income, Online Business, Solopreneur, Founder, Networking

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This episode of Young and Profiting is brought to you by Intuit, the maker of TurboTax and QuickBooks. If you're looking for a flexible career opportunity that lets you help others while building your own path, Intuit is inviting YapGang to join its world-class network of tax and bookkeeping experts. Visit Intuit.com slash expert to learn more or apply now. Hey, Young and Profitors! Welcome to episode one of our brand new series, Passion to Profit.
Starting point is 00:00:24 In this series, Passion to Profit. In this series, we're taking you step by step through the process of turning your big idea into a thriving business. Whether you're still sitting on a side hustle or already dreaming of quitting your 9 to 5, this series is designed to simplify your journey from passion to execution and help you actually make money doing what you love. In this first episode, we're diving into one of the most overlooked parts of entrepreneurship, the mental and emotional prep work that lays the foundation for everything that
Starting point is 00:00:49 follows. Before you launch your first offer or chase your first client, you need to make sure that you're ready for the ride. By the end of this episode, you'll learn how to unlock your purpose, show up consistently, build real confidence, face fear without getting stuck and protect your mindset when things get tough because success starts in your mind long before it shows up in your life. So if you're serious about turning your passion
Starting point is 00:01:11 into profit, this is where your journey starts. Let's dig in, young and profitors. PASSION PASSION IS POWERFUL Passion is powerful. It's the spark that lights you up, helps you to dream big, and pushes you to take the first step. But passion alone won't carry you through the late nights, the setbacks, or the moments
Starting point is 00:01:32 of self-doubt. When you're building something from scratch, you need more than passion. You need purpose. Passion gets you started, but purpose is what keeps you going. And here's the truth, that kind of fuel doesn't come from chasing money. Legendary entrepreneur and financial expert Dave Ramsey has seen a lot of businesses come and go. And when we spoke, he made it clear the ones that last are the ones that are rooted in purpose, not profit. If your only purpose in business is to make money, you will not last. Business is too
Starting point is 00:02:01 hard. It's too painful. There's too many emotional ups and downs. You work too freaking hard. And if all you want is a stack of cash, as soon as you get a stack of cash, you're going to figure out it doesn't do it. Now, I want you to make money. I like making money and I believe in making money. I'm not against profit. I'm a capitalist pig. I love it. And so I want you to go do that. But it does not get you there. It doesn't fulfill you spiritually, psychologically, anything else. And we always just say, you know, when I was a little kid, I never had lobster until I was like 14 years old because I grew up in a redneck neighborhood. And they red lobster came to town. That was the first lobster I ever got. But I loved it. It was my favorite. And I thought, man, if I ever get some money, I'm gonna eat lobster every day.
Starting point is 00:02:46 No, you won't. If you eat enough lobster, it tastes like soap. If you get enough cars, they're just a stupid car. If you get enough jets, it's just a stupid jet. I mean, you cannot get enough money for the stuff to give you fulfillment that your spirit is not built that way. Now, that's the truth.
Starting point is 00:03:03 If your only motivator is a quick buck, it won't be enough to sustain you when things get real. Krista Williams, entrepreneur and co-host of the Almost 30 podcast went even deeper when she reminded me that before you chase the title of entrepreneur, you need to get honest with yourself about why you're doing it all in the first place. I feel like a lot of people want to be an entrepreneur
Starting point is 00:03:23 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 like 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
Starting point is 00:03:50 and so low at times and so unsure of myself at times but it's also been so powerful. So I would check first, like 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 wanna be. You create what you're here to do. And then you become an entrepreneur. So I think you build what you want to do, you become who you wanna be, you create what you're here to do,
Starting point is 00:04:06 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.
Starting point is 00:04:20 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 doesn't even 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
Starting point is 00:04:53 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. Yeah, fam, that's the kind of purpose that makes your vision non-negotiable. Because it's not just an idea anymore, it's a calling. But clarity alone is just not enough.
Starting point is 00:05:10 To bring that purpose to life, you need practical tools and intentional strategies. That's where Dr. Benjamin Hardy comes in. He's an organizational psychologist and an expert on entrepreneurial mindset. And he shared actionable insight on the podcast on how to get clear on your why and use it to drive consistent, meaningful progress.
Starting point is 00:05:29 The why is the reason for doing it, right? So this is where you start to become intentional. So as an example, if someone's listening to this podcast, my question would be, well, why are you listening to it? And the why would then highlight what you're ultimately listening to it and the why would then highlight? What you're ultimately trying to do and what you ultimately value like everyone's gonna have a different why for why we're doing this You have a different why for? interviewing me as I have for being interviewed right and so
Starting point is 00:05:58 It's important to clarify and understand what what what the why is that's driving everything you're doing. And I'm of the belief that you do choose the why. Like you do choose it, you clarify it, but you can scrape away levels of understanding it. But the why is just the purpose. The purpose is the goal. Like what is the ultimate reason you're doing this? Aristotle would call that final cause, which is basically the end. So as an example, like if I get up and go to the kitchen and start eating, well, it's like, well, why did I get up and go to the kitchen? It might have been because I'm hungry, but it also might have been because I was triggered,
Starting point is 00:06:36 and I'm just trying to avoid working. And so it's just understanding the why and the purpose starts to help you realize what's driving your behavior. Is it something you really want? You know, like when you're a teenager, maybe your why was, which again, the why is the goal. And this is why the goal drives everything you do, including your identity. You know, when you're younger, the why might have been just
Starting point is 00:07:04 to impress your friends, right? And so there's always a why behind every action. And how psychologists frame it is every goal is either an approach-oriented goal, where you're trying to approach what you want or you're trying to avoid what you don't want. And so the why is always going to either be approaching something you want or avoiding something you don't want. And so it's helpful when the why is more approach oriented. Sure you want to avoid bad things from happening, but if everything you're doing is just to avoid negative things from happening, that kind of probably shows that there's a lot
Starting point is 00:07:40 of trauma that's unresolved in the past and so you're trying to avoid a lot of pain. So if you're wondering where to begin, don't start with a perfect business plan. Start by asking better questions. What's the deeper reason I wanna do this? What's pulling me forward even when it's hard? Because when your why is strong enough, you'll find a way. But young and profitors,
Starting point is 00:07:59 knowing your why is just the beginning. The real challenge is moving on that why. That's where most people falter. They wait, they wait till they feel ready. They wait till things are perfect. But let's face it, the universe isn't ever going to just wait for you to be ready. You've got to just get started. And I'm proof of this myself. It took me a lot of episodes to finally find my footing with Young and Profiting. But if I had waited for the perfect timing or a flawless plan or the perfect episode, I'd probably still be stuck and not a podcaster right now. But I didn't. I just went for it.
Starting point is 00:08:29 I published episodes even when it felt messy or not perfect. And once I did that, the right opportunities started to show up. Simply put, success happens for those who take action, even when it's messy. And no one breaks this down better than Mel Robbins, the bestselling author, speaker, and host of the Mel Robbins podcast. When I asked her how she got started and why she waited so long to go public with her famous five second rule,
Starting point is 00:08:51 she told me it all began with her taking action before she felt ready. If you're waiting for permission, this is your wake up call. You did not share this fully with the world for three years. Correct. You felt like you weren't, you know, ready to give advice, like who would want to listen to you. You felt like you weren't ready to give advice, like who would want to listen to you?
Starting point is 00:09:08 You felt like you didn't really know the science behind it. So how did you build up the confidence to then put it out to the world and put in the reps, quite frankly? It's a great question. And as you're listening to this conversation, whether you're in a car or you're at the gym, or you're watching us on YouTube, there is something that you want to do in life. Whether it's launching a business, or becoming an influencer, or monetizing social, or building a YouTube following, or publishing books, or maybe it's starting your own podcast. I don't know what that thing is. Maybe you want to become a touring musician. Maybe you want to become a touring musician. Maybe you want to start a fashion line.
Starting point is 00:09:47 There is something in your heart. Maybe you want a Lambo. I don't know. It's your goals. Whatever it is that you want, I'm here to tell you. That you do not need anybody's permission. And you do not need to have it all figured out. In fact, you're never gonna have it all figured out. In fact, you're never gonna have it all figured out.
Starting point is 00:10:07 And every single day that you talk yourself out of, beginning or taking one step forward is a day that you're keeping yourself locked in a prison of your own making. Because if you know something that you want, how dare you withhold it from yourself? How dare you talk yourself out of it? How dare you sit there and spend more time
Starting point is 00:10:34 and energy manufacturing excuses and worrying about what other people think? You get one life. And no one is coming to save you, no one is coming to do the work for you, nobody is gonna pick you from Obscurity and make you a star Nobody is gonna build the business that you want to build and while you're sitting there drinking with your buddies bitching about your current job
Starting point is 00:10:54 Or you are sitting there telling yourself. I don't know what to do Your whole life is waiting for you there's literally a door right in front of you that is waiting for you. There's literally a door right in front of you that is waiting for you to reach out and freaking turn the knob and open it. And I'm gonna tell you something. My secret to success is very simple. I get out of fucking bed when I don't feel like it.
Starting point is 00:11:17 End of story. And Yap Gang, Mel's totally right. Waiting to feel ready is a trap. But even after you commit, it's easy to fall into a different kind of paralysis. The productivity illusion. You tell yourself you're making progress because you're soaking up information, researching every option, listening to every single podcast out there, but you're actually not making real progress. And you might be slowing yourself down.
Starting point is 00:11:40 That's why entrepreneur Pat Flynn warns us against over learning. He told me more information can sometimes do more harm than good, especially when it keeps you from actually taking action. So over learning, I think we can all relate to this where we're subscribed to, you know, way more than we need to consume, whether it's YouTube channels, podcasts, books. I mean, if you think about the way most of us consume books, we go and we read those books, and we might then pick up the next one and then pick up the next one.
Starting point is 00:12:06 And if we implement anything, it might just be a small sliver of what we had just read. And I think that's a waste of time. And we're at a point now in the world where there's just so much information that we can pretty much get whatever we want, whenever we want, just in the power of our phone. We could, like, all the information's out there. And if information were the answer, we'd all be where we want to be. But we're not. And the trouble is,
Starting point is 00:12:30 not only are we now at this buffet line of information and stuffing our plates full of it, and over-consuming, and similarly to a diet, we are lethargic, we are tired, we're overweight, if you will, with information. We're also being force-fed information, right? There's algorithms putting things in front of us that we don't even know we need. And again, we're consuming it.
Starting point is 00:12:49 And when we think about, like, the brain and why we do that, we're treating information like it's a scarce food source. Because, you know, if you go back to, you know, cave person days or whatever, if you come across a food source, you port it because you might not find another one later, right? This is like survival. The trouble is we're treating information in the same way. And right now we need to make that distinction between just in case learning, which is what we've all been doing, and just in time learning, which is finding exactly what you need for what it is that's most important to you right now.
Starting point is 00:13:19 Knowing that when you reach that next step or next phase, those resources will be there. Yeah. Yet again, we are just, I don't know, conditioned, if you will, from school or just society on learning everything about everything first, and then probably never taking action at all, or convincing ourselves that there's just too much or we're not cut out for this. The classic example of over-learning is the person who is in their car listening to just whatever the next podcast is on their list just simply because they have that time. And although, and again, that was me for a while, although it sounds like you're being
Starting point is 00:13:53 productive, there is also such a thing called over-inspiration where you now get drawn over here and then you get drawn over there and then you get drawn over here. And every time you say yes to that new thing, you're also saying no to the thing that you've already committed to and that you're never going to follow through with anymore. What Pat said really hit me because overconsuming without action doesn't just waste your time.
Starting point is 00:14:13 It drains your confidence too. And as an entrepreneur, confidence isn't optional. It's the anchor that keeps you steady when everything else feels uncertain. Dean Graziosi understands this better than most. As an entrepreneur, and investor who's built more than a dozen successful companies, he says protecting your mindset isn't just helpful,
Starting point is 00:14:31 it's essential. Here's what Dean shared about becoming a warrior in your own mind. You must protect your confidence. In a shifting time, in a crazy time, in a time you wanna grow, you have to protect your confidence. You've never made a good decision when your confidence is down. You didn't get the date, you a time you wanna grow, you have to protect your confidence. You've never made a good decision
Starting point is 00:14:45 when your confidence is down. You didn't get the date, you didn't get the relationship, you didn't get the job, you didn't get the sale, you got nothing when your confidence is down. You know that. So you have to focus on anything you can. Borrow confidence from the past. Borrow confidence from a great podcast.
Starting point is 00:15:00 Borrow confidence from an incredible book. Borrow confidence from a mantra. I can do this, I can do anything, God gave me a gift and I'm gonna bring it to life. Whatever it is you need to do, you gotta work on your mindset because, again, not quoting simple quotes, but Henry Ford said, if you think you can, you will,
Starting point is 00:15:17 and if you think you can't, you won't. And so it doesn't matter if you have the greatest business, if you get in your head, you're dead, if you get in your head, you're dead. If you get in your head thinking this is gonna go wrong, inflation's gonna kill me, what's gonna go on with this election? You're focused so much on the outside,
Starting point is 00:15:30 your business suffers. So for me, I would say go upstream and work on you. Become unstoppable. Have a mind that you can question the negative thoughts. You can observe and say I get that part, but I'm going after the opportunity, not the obstacle. I'm going to focus on what I have, not what I've lost. And I think you need to be a warrior
Starting point is 00:15:54 inside your mind right now more than any other thing. Because once you have that, I would absolutely go with someone with an unstoppable mindset and a C opportunity, than someone who's scared with an unstoppable mindset and a C opportunity, than someone who's scared with an A opportunity. Now having confidence doesn't mean you're always crushing it or walking around feeling bulletproof. Real confidence is knowing how to steady yourself
Starting point is 00:16:15 when things get shaky, because trust me, in entrepreneurship, they will. You'll second guess decisions, you'll face setbacks, but your ability to protect and rebuild belief in yourself is crucial, because after the big mindset shift and the decision to start comes the real work. Facing fear, rejection, and failure, and then showing up anyway. When we come back, you'll hear from entrepreneurs who've done just that and found power in the process.
Starting point is 00:16:38 You already know we're all about leveling up. Your income, your mindset, your future. So if you're interested in tax or bookkeeping or looking for a new opportunity, then this one's for you. Intuit, the maker of TurboTax and QuickBooks, is looking for tax and bookkeeping experts to join their world-class virtual expert network. Whether you want full-time, part-time, or to make a career pivot, Intuit offers the tools to help you grow. Their supportive team, mission-driven culture, and Intuit Academy, a free self-paced training platform,
Starting point is 00:17:06 means you're set up to succeed, even if you're just getting started. Are you ready to turn your skills into a serious opportunity? Visit intuit.com slash expert to learn more or apply. That's I-N-T-U-I-T dot com slash expert. Welcome back to our Passion to Profit series. The bigger your dream as an entrepreneur, the scarier it's going to feel.
Starting point is 00:17:25 That's just the truth. The more something matters to you, the louder that fear will get. But what if fear wasn't something to avoid, but rather something to use? That's what Jay Sammet argues. He's a digital media innovator and author of a very popular book called Disrupt You.
Starting point is 00:17:40 And he shared with me how you can learn how to use your fear as fuel instead of letting it shut you down. The fear is something that can be harness. Fear is a positive. I hate, hate, hate, hate, hate the guru charlatans that say fear isn't real. We are biologically hardwired to be fearful. You're only here because your great ancestor saw that saber-toothed tiger and ran. The people that weren't afraid of it were lunch, okay? But athletes can harness fear to make adrenaline which makes their heart pump more and they get better
Starting point is 00:18:14 results. So if you're afraid of starting your company because you'll be embarrassed, because you'll fail, because you'll lose your money, you lose family money, lose other people's money, you'll lose other people's money. All real fears. But if you're crossing the street and a truck's about to run you over, you're not thinking about those fears, you're thinking about the existential one of
Starting point is 00:18:35 if I don't jump out of the way, I die. So now let's put this in context of those fears about your business. If you're at a job where you're not growing, where it's just paying you to survive but not to thrive and live, you're gonna trade a day, a week, a year, a month, years, 10 years, you're gonna wake up one day
Starting point is 00:18:53 and realize you gave away the most precious thing in the world, the only life you will have, for what, nothing? And if you don't believe me, go talk to your grandparents, go to an old age home, ask somebody at that stage what their biggest regret is. It's not what they failed at, it's what they failed to try. So focus on that fear and the others seem inconsequential.
Starting point is 00:19:16 And if people make fun of you, here's a tip. I have yet to meet a hater that's doing better than I am. Yeah. They're making fun of it because they don't have the guts to believe in themselves. Investors would rather invest in somebody that's already failed once than somebody that's doing their first business because it shows that you have grit. If fear is a signal that you're stretching yourself, then discomfort is the proof. That's how former IBM CEO Ginni Rometty sees it.
Starting point is 00:19:45 She argues that the presence of discomfort is often the best signal that growth is happening. In our conversation, she shared how she reframed discomfort as a green light, not a red flag, and how that shift empowered her to take on the kinds of high-risk opportunities that helped her rise to the top of one of the world's biggest tech companies. I came up with this phrase that growth and comfort never coexist. And I started to associate risk with growth, meaning, hey, if I feel nervous, oh, this is excellent. This means I am learning something.
Starting point is 00:20:16 And that to me is the most important. We say, how did you eventually get there? Because I was willing to then take on risky assignments, do risky things. And you know, they can go one way or another. There are many that I thought, oh, God, this is going to kill me, but they usually don't, and you really keep building your skills. I think that is the most important thing for, it's true for people, men or women, it's true for companies, it's true for countries, this idea that you will never get forward
Starting point is 00:20:40 without that feeling of discomfort, right? It's just how you choose to look at it. If as Jenny says, discomfort is the clearest sign that you're growing, then courage is what helps you lean into that discomfort. But courage isn't just being about fearless. It's about choosing to face fear with preparation. I had to learn that the hard way.
Starting point is 00:20:58 When I got fired from my first job at Hot 97, it felt like I lost a part of my identity. I was Hala from Hot 97. I had poured everything into that role, and suddenly I was forced not to just reevaluate my career, but who I was without that Hot 97 badge of honor. It was really painful, but that experience is what built my grit.
Starting point is 00:21:17 It taught me that early failure and rejection aren't just dead ends, they're information. They show you what to let go of and where to grow next. That's exactly what Tina Wells, an entrepreneur and the CEO of Buzz Marketing Group shared with me. I asked her what her main piece of advice to new entrepreneurs would be, and this is what she told me. I would say hands down, get curious.
Starting point is 00:21:38 Look at emerging technologies. Always be aware of where trends are going and things are headed, and don't be scared. Because the more you know, the more you can decide how you're going to use those technologies. So especially if you feel scared about something, move in that direction and get yourself into a practice of really not approaching anything with fear. I think to be a great entrepreneur, you've got to be fearless. And the best way to show up and be fearless is to have knowledge, right?
Starting point is 00:22:03 The whole idea of knowledge is power. Definitely means more today than it ever did. And so I would say hands down, get curious. Just because you've pushed through discomfort and done your homework doesn't mean that success is guaranteed. You can do everything right and still fall flat. And that's just part of the game. The most successful entrepreneurs, well, they don't dodge setbacks.
Starting point is 00:22:23 They expect them, they learn from them, and they level up because of them. Every flop sharpens your instincts and builds up resilience. Dave Ramsey reminds us that most ideas will fail, and that's not a problem. I'm convinced about 90% of the ideas that we've had at Ramsey, including me, during the 33 years I've done this, is about 90% of them suck. That we survived them. We lost money, we lost reputation. We look back on that stuff and we look,
Starting point is 00:22:52 that's pitiful, you were awful. Those old tapes make me laugh. But do it anyway. Because you don't know which 10% is gonna work. Quit doing the stuff that doesn't work, obviously. But you know, and every idea I have is a good one when I'm out walking in the morning, right? Or having a cup of coffee, every idea is a good one. But when it hits the market, most of them aren't. So go do it anyway. And keep going, keep going, keep going. Don't
Starting point is 00:23:17 stop, don't stop, never quit. Now, that was such great advice from Dave. And it's true what he says, most ideas fail. But the only real failure is giving up. So what happens when things don't go your way? Well, you've really got two options. Resist reality or lean into it. The best entrepreneurs choose the latter. They don't waste time wishing that things were different.
Starting point is 00:23:39 They use what is to fuel what could be. That's also the heart of the stoic philosophy and nobody explains that better than Ryan Holiday. He's the bestselling author of The Daily Stoic and he and I talked about why embracing reality is the most underrated growth strategy out there. Acceptance, which is what Amor Fatih is about. Acceptance means a love, Amor Fatih means a love of fate. Acceptance can be a hard sell to entrepreneurs
Starting point is 00:24:03 because they're sort of like, well, I didn't get here by just accepting things? Um, and so it feels passive or it feels weak. But actually, you did get here because of acceptance. You accepted that it's raining outside. You accepted that you're gonna need to raise money to start your business. You accepted that most people are busy and don't care about what you're doing.
Starting point is 00:24:27 And that's why you designed a marketing plan. That's why you designed a fundraising plan. That's why you got an umbrella, right? Like, you have to accept reality before you can set about changing it or you can set about succeeding despite it. And so Amor Fatih is this idea that instead of resenting things, instead of dreading them,
Starting point is 00:24:49 instead of wishing they were otherwise, you accept them for what they are, you embrace them, and you're like excited about it. You love, it's like turning the have to into get to's. It's deciding to embrace it and love it, and to love the challenge of it. To me, that's what it's about anyway. Once you learn to face setbacks head on,
Starting point is 00:25:10 the next challenge is sticking with it, no matter what. It's easy to stay committed when things are going well. That's where high performers set themselves apart. When things get tough, they double down. Rory Vaiden is an expert in influence and performance psychology, and he told me why true success starts when you remove Plan B and go all in on Plan A. Anything that matters to you is going to be hard to let go of. The things that matter to you are the things that you've put the most time and love and energy and money and prayer into.
Starting point is 00:25:47 and love and energy and money and prayer into, right? So you go, if you lose a loved one, why is it so hard? It's because we've spent so much time together. We have so many shared experiences. That's, you know, we have so many interests and stories. And so the irony is that the more we have invested into something, the less likely we are to let it fail. Well, what most people do is they keep their commitments conditionally. They keep their commitments as long as they're convenient to do so. But the moment it becomes inconvenient to keep that commitment, we typically question the commitment or we challenge ourselves to go,
Starting point is 00:26:20 oh, maybe I'm not cut out for this or maybe it's not worth it. So they go in search of something easier. And in reality, they find that there's not anything easier, they keep showing up and the same issues replicate again and again in their life because they struggle with commitment. And the real thing to do is when you are kind of tested to go, I'm not sure if this is going work out, I'm not sure if this is the right thing, is to increase your commitment. You increase your level of investment, right? If you're struggling on social media and you just go,
Starting point is 00:26:53 well, gosh, maybe it's not cut out, you know, I'm not cut out for that. Well, of course then it's not gonna be successful. But the people who are successful at it are the ones that go, no, I'm gonna figure this out. I'm gonna spend more time, more energy, I'm gonna hire coaches, I'm gonna hire an agency, I'm gonna learn, like, I'm gonna figure this out. So I think the difference here is going, you don't have a plan B. You only have a plan
Starting point is 00:27:19 A. Now, you have to be flexible to adapt what plan A is, but leaving or quitting or escaping is not one of the options. And that is one of the secrets of ultra performers, right? They lock in on a goal and they go, I am going to achieve this. How or when? I'm not entirely sure, but I'm target locked, and I'm gonna find a way. Other people go, I'll do it if it's comfortable. I'll do it if it's safe.
Starting point is 00:27:51 I'll do it if it's easy, but not ultra performers. So here's where we land, yeah fam. If your dream matters to you, don't just dip a toe in. Go all in. As Rory Vaiden reminds us, ultra performers don't treat commitment like a light switch. They don't flinch when it gets hard. They double down.
Starting point is 00:28:10 Because being mentally prepared to become an entrepreneur doesn't mean you have it all figured out. It means you're willing to act without certainty. You expect fear and you show up anyway. You welcome discomfort and see setbacks not as a stop sign, but as an invitation to rise. And that's a wrap for episode one of Passion to Profit. Thanks for tuning in. We've laid the mindset foundation of entrepreneurship and now it's time to get tactical.
Starting point is 00:28:34 Episode two of this series is all about crafting an offer your audience actually wants because big dreams are great, but a clear offer is what gets results and sales. All right, guys, I hope you enjoyed episode one. Again, episode two about building your offer drops next week, and this is your podcast princess, Hala Taha, signing off. I've gotta give a huge thanks to Intuit
Starting point is 00:28:54 for sponsoring today's episode. Intuit is inviting our YAP fam to join its world-class network of tax and bookkeeping experts. If you've got experience in tax and bookkeeping, or even if you're just getting started, this is an incredible opportunity with flexible scheduling and the chance to make a real impact in people's lives. It's a perfect side hustle or main hustle, so if you're ready to get started, visit Intuit.com slash expert to learn more or apply. That's Intuit, I-N-T-U-I-T dot com slash expert to get started.

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