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Plz help me. Plz I’m at the end of my rope. I am sober 4 yrs I went from making 700$ a week to making 3000$ a week I went to crane school and changed my life again. But I can’t keep the money I make it seems like all my money goes out the door. I need help
Can you help me understand what’s going on here? With all due respect, you're a businessman, yet you're focusing on a 2.5 EUR subscription. Sorry to say this, but it doesn’t quite make sense, mate.
Army reserves at 17, moved out at 18, trade school at 19, apprentice at 20, married and bought my first home at 22, journeyman at 24, master craftsman at 38, owner at 42, semi-retired at 54, I’m now 58. I didn’t know what the steel trade was at 19. I just knew no one in my maintenance platoon knew how to weld, so I learned how to weld. Do the hard thing no one else is doing. Work your ass off when you are young. Love yourself and share that love.
Great advice decades ago, today the person whom loved used stole everything and left to leave me the bill, and the "hard thing" I chose to do for others suddenly the industry vanished due to corporate greed leaving no alternative path
Your whom kids should look up to, but sadly kids these days would see your journey and compare it to what they see on TH-cam and TikTok and just think it took you way too long not realizing that’s just reality for everyone outside of those people whom get lucky off internet money.
Growing up without a father, I didn’t have anyone to really guide me. But when I found this channel, it became that for me. I got all the advice I wish I had when I was younger, about money, relationships, health, and more. The guests here have years of experience, and as someone who doesn’t like reading books, this podcast has been life-changing. knowledge, shared in a way that’s both professional and easy to understand. I can’t thank you enough!
I'm sorry to hear about everything you've been through, but I'm glad that I'm not alone in feeling this way. Keep your head up, brother. More things to achieve!
The second half of this interview is significantly better than the first. When she stopped generalising her own story to everyone ('anyone can do that), and admitted that one needs to be passionate and exceptional in something and willing/able to invest significant time, then her advice became much clearer and insightful. And by the end she came out as a geniun and considered person, who is worth listening to.
She bought a laundromat. She maid a positive ROI. She self declared herself business owner and no she is charging 5 figures for courses you can find for free online. That's how media millionaires are. People good at selling themselves.
This woman seems to be the personification of "live to work", especially when you work for her. I had that mentality, until I realized how toxic and damaging that was to my life. Now I enforce the boundaries between work and private life, as well as the weekly agreed upon work hours (with a little flexibility in emergencies). Not only am I doing MUCH better mentally now, I also earn around 3 times as much and life is good.
The thing is that all these people you hear talk about work like that.. actually like work. It's not giving up life. It is life. It's hard but also really fun and fulfilling for them. It's ok if that's not you.
@@ItzjahSon Just because you're grinding doesn't mean it'll pay off. I'd much rather have some private life, some fun, build non-work connections and have a reasonable 40 h work week with 30 days PTO plus public holidays each year. I save around 70% of my net income in ETFs and other forms of savings despite that, and I'm not frugal either, just not wasteful. Just waiting for a good opportunity to buy a house, and with the rate I'm saving, it's unlikely that I'll need to work until my 60s if I don't want to. A steady income that doesn't come at the expense of your health or social life, in my book, is a much better deal long term.
@@Anpanator and that's perfectly fine if you want that life but not everyone does. She's talking to a specific audience and it obviously isn't you. I personally want freedom to do whatever I want with my family and take care of my family and help other people with the wealth I eventually build.
I think it's about not bring it up at work and keeping your private life at home and not bringing it at work or job interview. You can easily work hard as hell and have a life outside of it as well. Just don't mix both. Keep them separated.
We’ve hit 7M subscribers! As a way of saying thank you, and since you’ve loved our subscribers' raffle so much, we’re going to continue doing it 🎉 If you're subscribed to the channel, you're in the raffle. We will be picking subscribers at random. 🖤 Thank you from the bottom of my heart and good luck! X
I appreciate listening to financially successful people who have so much ambition to gain material wealth. Personally, I am more interested in listening to successful people who care about work/life balance who are allowed to be a well-rounded human and present in their communities. At the end, everyone chooses their path.
I agree with you on work/life balance; however, I think you’re missing that the people who are wealthy enough to talk about work/life balance while still making money got to that point but following her method earlier in life. She’s being bluntly honest about how you get to the put to have enough money coming in to be able to then say I have the power and ability to create the lifestyle you want
You are correct she’s come out in various way saying she’s not the one who will encourage work life balance. Any time I listen to her talks I keep that in mind. Her insights are still valuable but not all make sense for my goals.
FOR 30:00 THE REASON THAT MOST OF US DONT DO THIS IS BECAUSE EVEN AFTER GOING BEYOND TO SHOW YOUR LEVEL OF COMMITMENTS AND DOING EXTRA FREE THINGS FOR THE INTERVIEWER OR THE COMPANY OWNER, THEY TAKE IT, PROMISE YOU FAKE THINGS AND NEVER DELIVER SO IT GOES BOTH WAYS!
Yeah that line about only engaging with someone only that has ‘a level of expertise that you don’t have’. Urrrgghhh these speaker is the worst, with the most stupid advice. Really got under my skin.
@@carolineb7796 Why would she hire someone that knows less than her? That makes no sense. Would you hire a salaried social media person if they knew less about social media than you? Just think about that. She built a business, she invested a lot of time, money, and sweat, and she's considering give you some of her hard earned money, but only if she believes you can do something that she can't already do herself. She wants to hire the best person she can, what's so hard for you to understand about that? If you're not good at anything, that's not her fault. Learn something, go to trade school if you have to. If you aren't great at anything, you probably aren't a good learner, and if you're not good at learning, you're not worth much as an employee. Sorry if the cold hard truth hurts.
I agree. Its never rewarding to any employee to take on more responsibility to prove your worth to a company or employer. I left the podcast at the work no balance bit. Its not worth it. You will never get to think about actualizing your goals or planning them out accommodating your company at every whim/text/call.As a society we are past these funny working conditions and expectations.
I love how she drops "earning $65k" like that's a bad salary. It's quite a bit higher than the median US salary. If you're earning that in your early 20s, you're doing quite well for yourself, not putting up with a crappy job.
The entire premise of this discussion is how to become rich. She didn't pass judgement on any salary or job. She is pointing out how you should be thinking if you want to become rich...
If I had a penny for every "how I became an entrepreneur" video I've seen where the person used to work in finance or have another $100k job and then left it to make TH-cam videos where they talk like they started from scratch.
@@BabyEmber "You're going to do a $65k a year job for 2 or 3 years, and it sucks" is not passing judgement? My point was that she's making the argument that you've got to sacrifice in your 20s to do better later on, but her idea of a sacrifice is a job that pays more than the median salary and significantly more than the median salary for someone in their early 20s, which is just $38k.
$65k seemed mid-range for US STEM grads when I’d graduated roughly 12 years ago. I ran an inflation calculator and that has the buying power of $90k today. Yeah $65k isn’t as elegant anymore especially when inflation is factored in lol
I hope our society develops to the point that people can pursue their passions, without falling into poverty, rather than everyone chasing money/youth/financial dominance. Our technological development has outpaced our spiritual and social development, as a civilization. That’s the issue, not laziness.
It could be that way....but the governments in most 1st World Western nations are all burying their citizens in billions or even tens of trillions in debt, which devalues every dollar they earn, and every hour of their life spent earning it. So that leaves little time to purse anything, except their next meal.
I completely agree. These Channels portray such toxic messages to the youth, and then are the first to go on to complain about them once the damage has been done.
Passion moves things forward. Always strive to do what you're passionate about. Too many want the easy way instead. If you're passionate you will do what is necessary to get you there.
South African entrepreneur here, inspired by both Codie and Steven. Everyday I walk to school which is 2 hours away. I listening to a podcast a day repeated to and fro. Hopefully one day I’ll get to meet y’all both once my business gets me on your radar🙏🤍
Hoping the SA gov gets its act together for your generation and you get at the very least a school bus. They can run precious metal and material mines but can't run national school buses? Well done SA. Shame you're forced to exert so much energy for your rights. I dread to think how many kids aren't healthy or mobile enough to do the same.
@@collected_tradinghe’s lying. No kid walks for 2 hours to school in SA even in the deepest of rural areas. If he is that deep in rurals, he wouldn’t be here on the internet watching 2 hour long podcasts
Where were you in my twenties? Loved this! I joined Corporate America after college all they did was suck the life out of me. I did Everything...volunteered, asked questions, offered ideas and got nothing in return. All the Execs were consumed with themselves, had no interest in mentoring, promoting, seeing others succeed.
I do not know what people expect when listening to a podcast as I see a lot of negative comments; she offered a lot of excellent advice: (1) Gain expertise, (2) Follow through, (3) Chang the job where you earn more and learn more (4) Do not invest in start-ups (5) How to succeed in job interview (6) How to leverage your skills to make more money, (7) Do not believe super young people saying they are successful entrepreneur showing off their wealth on social media. These are all great advice!
@samiratabrizian8777 from experience, the quickest way to see someone's definition of a happy existence is by asking them "what's your definition of a work-life balance?"; what she said wouldn't even be considered a "red flag" it would be a sign for someone to get in the car and do 200mph in the opposite direction. Many people have given the same advice as her (follow through, experience, invest, level up etc) the real sign of expertise is being able to balance that with all the other beautiful elements of being human, otherwise you're just setting yourself up for psychological problems... but hey I'm just my opinion on youtube
Geez, I've worked hard to build a career as a software eng here in the UK and now earn £76k a year which taken over a decade to get, she makes it sounds like it's nothing and you should basically become obsessed with it. For what exactly? There is a threshold for money vs happiness and more money isn't the be all and end all. She uses a lot of generalisations, one being your job sucks in your 20s. Also, this idea of 'front-loading pain' to your younger years - what about people who get a carer into their late 20's or even late 30's and then realise they want a change? They will have to learn all over again. She makes it sound like you figure it all out before you're 30. I'd argue some most people have some kind of identity crisis around mid-life and then they get the quality insight about what they 'really' want to do. I can't help but find her advice inflammatory and irritating.
Bad advice from her. Who starts off a job making 65,000? That alone is just not realistic. More like you’re gonna start a job making 20k a year or 35k if you have a degree.
I donno, I think she's more speaking from her own experience, and I know from mine and a lot of people's, in your twenties you are less afraid to fall down, to break shit, to try new things and experiment, to put yourself out there and to take the path less driven because you are still learning it all for yourself. so in your 30's and beyond you are less likely to have that kinda mindset, its just something that happens to everyone I think to some degree, mostly because you have responsibilities now and a lot of things/people/teams/colleagues etc. that depend on you. So you are more risk averse and time poor. If you want a change its gonna be harder, but its more about what are your transferrable skills, exactly how they did with the whiteboard exercise, so what skills do you bring to the table, then applying that to whatever it is you want to do and getting there that way, going the traditional route from the bottom up again is never the path you want to take at a later stage in life, believe me, I'm in that stage myself, but I'm not going to approach it in a traditional way, I'm gonna find my own way in and do it that way because I know it will be the right way for ME.
This was so needed - the average person needs help here. No hacks, no shills, no pumpers, no fear mongers. Solid steps and some hope. We need more of this.
I signed up for her $2k business buying course and realized halfway through that it’s just a gimmick and a hook to get you to spend $10,000 on her Mastermind group and push her other businesses as services for your business. I learned more reading books than her cheaply put together course. It was incredibly unprofessional. I see now what a fake and wannabe she is. At least I got my money back!
It’s always nice to hear someone start their information with the only way you won’t succeed is if you’re lazy. Being hyper reductive is an interesting way to give out information. People are multidimensional and understanding the specifics shows maturity and understanding. Everyone out there who is actively working to achieve and make the best of their situation is doing the best they can Keep moving forward
@@joepiekl plus side is that the mentality they believe in means that when people follow them either they are successful. Or they aren’t and the “it’s cause they were lazy” seems more legitimate I just hope people continue to follow their best interest and make the most of the existence they have
@@flanderg123 I agree that being willing to help others is great. I think it’s also important to be intentional with wording. In general you have one opportunity to make an impression and starting with “if you’re broke you’re lazy” maybe isn’t the best message. Given the current state of the world maybe thinking about how your message could be received is important. I don’t think people need to be coddled and I also don’t think they need to be talked down to.
@@flanderg123Arguably she’s just selling success, which has been done over and over again because people want to succeed. But realistically the general lack of time, energy, intelligence, charisma, determination, and/or good fortune needed to make it will thwart most people from succeeding.
My biggest critique is not her work obsession. That’s fine if you are doing something you love or doing it because you have to for your family. The problem is the vague generalities that provide the listener without any actionable advice.
@@chrisbentsen1 having discussions is always good. I welcome discourse so that new information and learning can exist. The issue is that people tend to confirm their opinions and experiences even if they may not be applicable to everyone. Under a one solution model then no one (with a mental deficiency, physical impairment, etc) would exist because it’s all about “not being lazy” Again I genuinely enjoy these conversations and hope more happen. I don’t only want opinions I already hold. I just think that there should be a bit more discussion around the variety of life. Plants can grow in soil, sand, etc. Everyone has the right to feel heard and try their best. Keep moving forward
well, she loves money, I think that is a reason as good as any other, this isn't a talk of a one fits all recipe for happiness, it's one on where to find money.
Regarding stamina, I'm 47, I have a lot of stamina. More than in my early 20's because I didn't work out back then. Don't let age get to you. I started training in Muay Thai and BJJ at 42 and I'm still moving pretty well! I started my own business this year too. I'm working harder at 47 than any other year and I love it! I spent decades seeking comfort, I willingly choose hard work even though I'm doing great in my IT job. For me, it's fulfilling and I feel great doing something productive, I hope I can still do this in my 80s. It's not about money, it's a personal decision.
12 mins in and I cannot resonate with this person, my 20s were the best days of my youth ... the 1st 10 years of my children were comparable ... i work harder in my 50's than i worked in my 20's ... work ethic IMO does not change or diminish ... i have never worked so hard in the gym in my life
Saying a lot while not actually saying much at all. The last time Codie was on this podcast it was exactly the same except she didn’t get a fancy intro talking about her career on “Wall Street”??? The last time on this podcast she spoke about how she invested in laundromats. I feel like Codie’s career as a social media influencer is far more successful than her career as a so-called investor and entrepreneur
And how often do you hear a message one time and implement with excellence afterwards? Maybe reminders are important to override the puritanical skeptic in us that gives us excuses for why it wouldn't work or why someone else's message is somehow less legitimate...
She’s her own biggest fan. That’s how it comes across. Nothing she said resonated. This is the first podcast of Steven’s of all that’s I’ve listened to in years that I really didn’t like. She is so arrogant. ‘If you interview for a job in my companIES’. Shut up. And not at all an advocate for women. People need work life balance due to childcare etc. Please don’t bring this guest back. Shes awful.
Couldn’t get past 14:49 before I just went to the comments to summarize the video. This channel has other CEO with more charitable and wholistic values. From the comments it sounded like I wasn’t missing business or financial advice I hadn’t heard before from those same CEO’s.
One of the Codie's advises is to be a quick communicator. I do not personally like when people speak to me fast. Even Steven's previous guest (Evy Poumpouras) in her book says that fast talking exudes nervousness and sounds like hurrying to get the words out 😂 When someone speaks to me so fast like Cody, I have an impression that people just want to say what they have to, and do not want to spend much time with me explaining things.
You really took away the idea she wants you to talk fast? Like an audio book sped up? That's not the message at all. She spoke about not bumble-fucking your way through conversation/interviews and actually get straight to the point
I agree with DrChops, she didn't say talk fast. She said; take 1 minute to think things through, make a decision, and then move in that direction. Because the 'I'll get back to you next week ' mentality is what costs you and others time and money.
Codie sweetheart, there is tremendous value in taking the time to thoughtfully choose your words. If you want to be an inspirational and respected employer, skillful words are gold. They empower people to rise to the occasion whereas thoughtless words lay waste to potential. To be clear, wise words come from love, which is having another's best interest in mind, despite their perceived failures to support your ideals.
Why are there so many negative comments about Codie here? I'm reading folks saying she communicated nothing helpful...but what I learned: •Use your 20's to network and be mentored with the most successful people in your environment •learn valuable skills •build your wealth and use the excess to try new business ventures.
@@boigarashi7473 except common sense isn't all that common these days. After all, how many people do you know that actually do that stuff? People dismiss it as "common sense"... but those people also came to this video trying to figure out how to get rich. If it's common sense and they already knew the answer, why are they here instead of running their businesses? 🤷🏼♂
10 minutes in and she's saying you'll start out in your 20s making 65k a year for 2 to 3 years and it's going to suck. Meanwhile HALF of all HOUSEHOLDS in the USA are making less than 70k. In other countries much less. To me this puts her out of touch with reality and just makes me want to turn the rest of this one off
@@InsaneOaf It's okay that she might be talking to young big-city goers. It's okay that there are different types of audience members in the world. She's not talking to everyone. If anything, it feels like you're insecure & upset because of your own self judgement.
That's a limiting mindset. Remember, YOU are the one with your hand on the wheel and foot on the accelerator. Setting boundaries is good, but achieving drive is the goal...
Don’t pay attention to the numbers if they don’t apply. Pay attention to the message. It still applies no matter how much you make. She’s saying grind in your 20s so that you can make even more in your 30s. Progressively increase your income and goals every 2-3 years. You apply whatever amount you think is applicable
1:08:05 I learned something today - it's 3am on the dot and I haven't been able to catch a wink. Love the simple idea of surrounding yourself with rich people who are motivated to make money. It truly is contagious
I honestly am sooo happy you have Codie on! I have been so curious about what she has to say and I wanted to learn from a woman about money. I love this ! Thank you
Congratulations Stephen and your 50-person strong team for hitting 7 million *and more*! I never miss an episode of your interviews. Each and every one of them are AMAZING! Thank you!
I always read the comments first before listening. Happy to see the mindset of Americans are finally starting to change. Calling out the overwork mentality should've been a thing by now. Hopefully America will get to a true quality of life lifestyle eventually.
Congratulations, you judged a book by its cover. Because most of the people who left these 'bad reviews' either didn't listen, didn't understand, or didn't watch at all. Nothing about what Cobie or the host talked about attributed to 'toxic work culture'. In fact, many of her points were about handling toxic work culture from the owner/CEO perspective. Ex, hiring bad workers or managers makes your business bad for you, your goals, and everyone else you're supporting (your employees). It was primarily about self improvement and how you should decide what you should do with your skill-set to achieve success. I encourage you to actually try to listen instead of blindly listening to people who got offended by the idea of 'put in the effort now so that you don't need to strain yourself later'.
@Harbringer12 I actually listen to her first podcast. I'll pass on this one based on the feedback. I wouldn't say they were bad reviews, just a difference of opinions. Which is okay for people to have. Have a great one!
This is a successful, wealthy and powerful person giving advice and insight. Comments are full of poor people, many older, rejecting it because they dont like it. I know which side of the table I'd rather be on
or maybe comments of people who have enough life experience (or business experience) to smell the BS from far away... this person is making a ton of money selling courses, that is for sure absolutely factual
*I wasn't financial free until my 40’s and I’m still in my 40’s, bought my third house already, earn on a monthly through passive income, and got 4 out of 5 goals, just hope it encourages someone's that it doesn’t matter if you don’t have any of them right now, you can start TODAY regardless your age INVEST and change your future! Investing in the financial market is a grand choice I made.*
People dismiss the importance of advisors until they are burned by their own emotions. I remember a couple of summers ago, following my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to assist my business stay alive, so I looked for qualified consultants and came across someone with the highest qualifications. He has helped me raise my reserve from $275k to $850k, despite inflation.
Investing with an expert is the best strategy for beginners and busy investors, as most failures and losses in investment usually happen when you invest without proper guidance. I'm speaking from experience.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financial future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?.
@@EOO1186I live in the US. It’s not realistic here either. There a couple rare exceptions of course but rare enough that it’s statistically insignificant.
Most of these U.S. financial advice videos wouldn’t work elsewhere. Don’t even get me started with sales and marketing - try pulling off that U.S. style Tony Robbins energy salesmanship in my country and see what happens LOL
I love how you take your time to educate your viewers we all strive towards financial stability and a better Life. It is easy to achieve this through the right investment, by living frugally and budgeting. I'm glad I learnt early in life to work hard for financial freedom
Even though I engage in investing, I feel disheartened by my lack of expertise in assessing the performance of individual companies and determining the optimal timing for stock purchases. The erosion of my financial reserves due to inflation adds to my concerns. At this point, I require precise market trajectory information, but I find myself unsure about the appropriate course of action.
Yes true, I have been in touch with a financial advisor. With an initial starting reserve of $80k, my advisor chooses the entry and exit commands for my portfolio, which has grown to approximately $550k.
Sophie Lynn Carrabus is the licensed advisor I use and i'm just putting this out here because you asked. You can Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
As a 52 year old female that dedicated her life to her children yet went to a university and worked at the same time it hasnt paid off towards my retirement. I have creative ideas everyday and I have been layed off a couple of times so at this point I'm struggling to know what position is really best for me and how to get there. I think because of those reasons, I should own a business. Following Codie and Steven gives me the advice I never had from my parents or friends. I have much gratitude for your content and education. ❤
I’m almost done with inquiring my first business. And the cutest little Daycare that has a great cash flow. Thank you CODY for being so brave and teaching me how to do this and giving me strength that I can.
Codie was stunning! So much of what she said I completely relate to. Learning + Financial gains always and of course levelling up. Every job is a new opportunity to learn and get better, add more skills and keep growing. I also love that you have to be fearless - you cant make big impact without the big risks. Im smiling typing this out because its just such a breath of fresh air! Love your work Steven and thanks do much Codie!
This is a gem of an episode. Please watch the whole thing even if it's over a span of days. It's a series of business lessons that you can keep coming back to as you practice in real-time.
what i understood is that she worked for this company in latin america and she was paid very well, she had an idea of linking business to make a new one so she left and did it and it was a success and she scaled from there.
Medical writer here. I have two scientific degress including an MRes (4 years). I have 3-4 years in the industry. Overall, I would say a decade in science roughly. Not a month haha, I wish...
No doubt your expertise makes a difference, but if you only had a fraction of the training, what kind of difference would that make in your writing? Do you think you would have been able to write something intelligible after just a few months? I realize it wouldn't be easy to get a job with out your experience, but just in terms of quality of work.
Thank you for consistently producing and sharing exceptional content. Codie is a ferocious force to be reckoned with. Steven is a superb host - thoughtful, measured, and comfortable.
I'm so glad I came across this channel when I did. I'm 30 years old and this podcast with Codie made me think about how I should be navigating the workplace and leverage the relationships I have to get to where I need to be. Thanks so much :)
23.5k when I started, but as she said, I was getting an education. Very little of her advice applied to me and the many people I knew on the bottom of society. Her advice is applicable by my late 30's- early 40's... and hopefully it can be applicable to my kids by their 20's. Sometimes that is the best you can do. Maybe my grandkids will go on podcasts telling other people to buy businesses with sweat equity.
I beg to differ on a few things. My 20s were my best years. I achieved a lot and worked in a job I absolutely loved and found my passion. I agree that they are for learning the most, because what I learned helped me grow and have the confidence I have now to know I am deserving. I’m sure a lot of what she has taught works but it is certainly not the only way.
This is one of the most inspiring things I've witnessed in a long time. Codie's view on life and culture in general is amazing, and as a fellow Texan I feel ashamed I haven't seen her before. What an absolute force
7 millions? I'd say the sky is the limit. For me your Podcast has the same value as Joe Rogan and I personaly prefer your Stuff even more. Don't you dare stop doing your stuff and educate us :)
Really didn't enjoy this one. Codie talks without saying anything, is clearly making money selling BS courses to people and my internal BS alarm was going off constantly during the interview! She says nothing of value and seems like her only success is scamming people into believeing she can make them rich. Waste of 90 mins listening to this one.
She can't make you rich. Her message is that you improve your odds of getting rich by surrounding yourself with the kinds of people that can help you get there. It's like that saying: "you are the average of the 5 people you spend the most time with". If you want to get richer, surround yourself with people richer than you are, so you'll learn stuff you don't know, and learn stuff you don't know you don't know. Until I read your comment, I had no idea she even sold courses-- so it obviously didn't sound like much of a sales pitch to me (except for a few seconds when she mentioned her book).
Just wanted to shout out and thank Steven for asking about the hypothetical scenario of the 38-year-old Nigel who is working a low-paying job. I would argue that most listeners of this podcast are in a similar position where they have little to no savings, and they are trying to find way to become wealthy. Codie seemingly talked a lot from the perspective of someone who has always had connections and capital, so it was important that she also applied her beliefs/framework onto this Nigel scenario. Thank you, Steven, for asking that. I think that proves that you have a lot of empathy and a great understanding of what your audience actually wants to know. I appreciate you.
Very out of touch with most people. What 20 yr olds are making 65k per year? This episode isn't for everyone. It's for people who already have the means to make 100k per year as their base salary.
When I was 20, I was lucky to find $35,000. The entry level management trainee at Hertz was $14/hr...and they wanted college grads. I quit after 3 months after I learned what my area manager made.
This is very inspiring. I'm working on my dream and feel bored. This video made me motivated to move forward. When I was 24, my company hired a consultant to give us retirement planning advice, and I had just started saving. The class, called "Starting Strong," recommended investing in a target retirement fund aligned with my 65th birthday. That was 20 years ago, and it's the only investment I've made. What other ways can I grow my finances?
target date funds made me a multimillionaire but i also watched them drop 40% in a very short time and take a long time to recover. my best suggestion is that you seek the guidance of a fiduciary to avoid mistakes.
Great! mind if I look up your advisor please? only invest in my 401k through my employer as of now, but enthused about investing for my eventual retirement.
I've shuffled through investment coaches and yes, they can be positively impactful to an individual's portfolio, but do your due diligence to find a coach with grit, one that withstood the 08' crash. For me," Teresa L. Athas" turned out to be better and smarter than all the advisors I ever worked with till date, I’ve never met anyone with as much conviction.
Searched the web and saw her profile and accreditations, someone with great experience i must say. Thanks for sharing with us! I sent her a mail already
It would be great if you can interview a creative individual who has also cracked the world the way Codie has. Many of the suggestions might not be applicable if one wants to also find their creative voice while earning money and becoming financially free. Would love to hear from someone especially interviewed by you! I enjoy watching your podcasts and they are extremely helpful.
With all forms of respect for the lady, but she is telling nothing new. It is pretty much the same thing as what Napoleon Hill did. Get in touch with people who really know how and what to do. Don't follow the "barking dogs" (the get rich "quick" guys who say they live "the life" in Dubai or drive around in expensive rent a cars. etc.), forget about your ego, be a "slave" for the big guy/girl and just take notes until you get the FEELING, get INTO the FLOW, get into the VORTEX (Abraham Hicks). Here is the ABSOLUTE BEST and only QUOTE you will ever need to "make it": Jim Carrey :" At some point when you create yourself to make it, you're going to have to either let that creation go and take a chance on being loved or hated for who you really are, or you're going to have to kill who you really are and fall into your grave grasping a character you never were." Mic drop....
That concept of economic interconnectedness is so true. It’s the only legitimate reason why I can rationalize why my brother and I became so much more successful than most peers from our upbringing. Even our other sibling who experienced a much different but equally as shitty living situation and experience as us, don’t seem to share the same drive, values, etc because they never surrounded themselves around “wealth”. Embrace the suck early and surround yourself with wealthy people even if they make you sick, there’s always something to learn.
I didn’t have much money spent it all on bills and fun worked 2 jobs and had a blast in my 20’s. “Work hard, play hard.” Was the key to my happiness. I believe happiness is success. Relationships and loving the work you do matter so much more than money at least here in the u.s where we have an abundance of resources. That would suck to spend all your time focused on making money and impressing others then get out of your 20’s and say they were horrible.
This lady is gonna get a hard slap of reality on the face when (IF) she becomes a mother. Maybe just then she’ll be humble enough to appreciate the importance of work/life balance… just like she learned with ego lifting.🤣
She was extremely clear on like ten thousand different occasions to put in all the hard leg work up front when you’re young and capable and able to dedicate the time towards setting yourself up She never suggested throwing your entire life away to work She very clearly stated work hard early to establish yourself so that you don’t have to do it later I swear peoples brains just shut off as soon as someone suggests that they should work hard
I am dying for someone to have a podcast that says what to do in your thirties because scott galloway, this podcast and so many people say "you have to start in your 20s" what if your 34 and have ambition but literally no connections because you got a late start due to uuuuh addiction or whatever reason. great podcast though and thank you both. I'll just shave my face and say im 25, I can pull it off.
Look up Gary v. He didn't start til late 30s . He's a big advocate for going after what you want at any stage in life. Trouble is for most people, you end up responsibilities and family. Same for all, but risk and dependency of people on you just increases later in life
I don’t get all the hate. I’ve only recently started listening to this podcast (and kudos to everyone involved in producing it) and the 5 I’ve listened to date have been excellent. But this one is seriously incredibly valuable. As someone who is doing well in my career and but was slow to learn the lessons that are being shared in this video today all I can say is I wish I’d had a chance to hear this discussion 20 years ago.
Absolutely! I don't get it either. I only discovered her recently, but her advice makes so much sense to me, and her ideas can be implemented. I wish people learned to listen to the whole podcast instead of commenting based on short clips they saw.
I think the reason for all the hate in the comments is the same as when she touches on the topic losing old friends. People who are driven, go the extra mile, take risks and achieve greatness are inevitably showing others what they're *not* achieving. This is basically the mindset behind communism, which is getting frighteningly popular with modern youth, and it's all predicated on jealousy and inadequacy.
Thank so much for asking that question about prejudice. I have biracial parents and White skin. When I entered my STEM major at UCLA there we only 15 undergraduates that looked like me and about 7 that looked like my Dad. I felt alone and isolated. In addition, I came from a heritage where college degrees didn’t exist. I noticed a class difference immediately. In my 20s I didn’t know how to handle it. Now in my 40s I’m getting counseling. My hope is that young adults listening to this podcast choose a better outlook. 😀
Work ethic does not decline as you get older, mine is stronger than ever. Look to the likes of Branson and Musk, Jagger and more they are all still working hard regardless of age. Physical stamina may decline but if you work on it, I refer you back to Jagger. Age is no longer limiting.
Can we get back to having people who are at the top of what they are doing? I.e. Courtney Dauwalter - her incredible running achievements, her mindset and how she moved from teaching to running etc.
Yup, me neither... And you know what, I will not point it out where she "lost" me - I can only guess that was the same thing for you - but I will let it there as a huge red flag for only those who are really listening.
@@MohammedDalvi-dn3xg if I answer you, I will be helping her to adjust the discourse and as you can see in the comments, for some good willing people who did it, the common reply is some version of "that's not for everyone", but I'll give you an analogy: What this woman is saying is like a jacked guy who clearly used "the juice" advising guys on how to be jacked like that with dieting and exercise or that girl with a perfect body full of plastic surgery advising girls to be like that with dieting only. But in both cases, they are offering you a huge "opportunity" for you to train with them for a very expensive price, you will carry all the equipment for them and will pay the necessary money in order for them to show this special dieting/training system and if you can't take the heat that's ok, because that's not for everyone. In that way the wheels will be spinning for them. (give it a thought on what's unwritten as well)
It’s been so interesting reading all the negative comments about this episode. I actually really like Codie. I like how she’s challenging the traditional mindset about entrepreneurship and encouraging people to become business owners. She’s absolutely right that the big transfer of wealth that’s starting to occur is wrapped up in baby boomers businesses. And good for her in pointing that out rather than people thinking they’re just going to obtain this wealth like a handout. I loved what she had to say about your product (or service) vs your marketing/leads, that was an enlightening point. I also like what she had to say about not being the victim (women, etc) and just know what you’re worth and do great work. I thought her attitude about age was ridiculous, because I’m 50 and probably in the best shape of my life. I do think she takes advantage of her position by charging people an exorbitant amount to learn about buying businesses. So, my two cents on this episode. 😊
I did a research on growth mindset last year and surprisingly related to this conversation is how the key component for growth in any aspect of an individual's life is "urgency." And something that I love about this conversation that I wasn't aware of is the idea of how to be urgency and obsession creates the ultimate formula. But the biggest challenge is driving those to "money" and when she says it that "just make large positive body movement when you think about money" just so we start to rewire our brain to be obsessed with money. And the fact that the biggest difference between high performers and low performers is urgency and time wasting. Those ones hits deep. I can see myself being a low performer at times. And I really want to go back to that hunger I used to have.
Love this woman. Can’t believe the amount of criticism in the comments section. Personally never heard of her or listened to her before this podcast. I found her genuine and unique in her personal and approach in business. So many golden nuggets shared. She is definitely very talented and successful. A very empowering woman. Thank you for this insightful podcast, I listened to this to the very end.
She was much more engaging the first time around, not sure how much more she's adding to what was already said. Maybe consider Vivian Tu next for a different perspective on the same topic?
It is if you want to find a landlord in Los Angeles. That's homeless, roommate, or subtenant money here. $65k/year gets you a couch to sleep on, not even a studio as no landlord will rent to you unless you make at least $6k per month or $100k as an employee or $120k self employed.
As a business owner here growing my 3rd business, not only was so much of this relatable and spot on but I also took away so many nuggets that made me take notes or things to look into. Wonderful interview! ❤
“I need this tomorrow vs I’ll get back to you next week” is one of the most important lessons from this interview. Seems like common sense but this 💯 a game changer with any successful venture.
Codie Sanchez astonishes me once again. If you want to listen to 2 hours of motivational talk and no actionable advice THIS is definetely for YOU. Otherwise, just SKIP this episode. I have huge respect for Steve, but this pod was nothing but fluff. The huge disconnect that Codie has from real life people is astonishing. One of the worst episodes so far this year.
It's a simple idea: "I'll enjoy working more than everyone around me who doesn't like working" You will build something out of that struggle and grind, it's experience that will be used to drive you into the realm of success. It's not for everyone
@@ShufflePetro but if you really enjoy something just for that, take the whole monetary benefits away, like I enjoy playing basketball, money don't matter around enjoyment. Like waking up early morning enjoying the atmosphere. I mean what I enjoy, I won't stop enjoying when I'm not being paid, and I'd keep doing that all time, if I miss it won't steal my peace just a day of enjoyment. Whilst your work isn't like that. If you would keep working without being paid since you enjoy let me know what you do, I'll not pay you but definitely have some work for you. Or even better you work I receive on your behalf. You'd enjoy.
The moment she said if she's in twenties she lost it all, if you are good at making money you'd be good irrespective of age, I have seen business people going broke and backup in no time.
This isnt "how to get rich", it's "how Codie does stuff". And it's dull too. Nothing about savings, pensions, investments, etc. you know, the things that are available to 99.9% of the population.
From $17K to $146K that's the minimum range of profit return every week I thinks it's not a bad one for me, now I have enough to pay bills and take care of my family.
I'm celebrating a $30k stock portfolio today. started this journey with 6k. I have invested on time and also with the right terms now I have time for my family and the life ahead of me
YES!!! That's exactly his name (Mark Richard) so many people have recommended highly about him and am just starting with him 😊 from Brisbane Australia🇦🇺
The speed thing is the biggest part. This part of the interview is the most realistic and actionable part that applies to anyone. That's made me stand up and listen because I overthink instead of doing.
Fear and uncertainty create major wealth. It's those who take the risk and have strong gut to endure the bloody days. When i notice extreme dips i tend to actually move more money to crypto...
I feel sympathy for our country, low income people are now suffering to survive yet inflation and recession keep increasing daily, many families can't even enhance the good cost of living anymore. You've helped me a lot Sir Brian! Imagine I invested $50,000 and received $190,500 after 14 days
Very possible! especially at this moment. Profits can be made in many different ways, but such intricate transactions should only be handled by seasoned market professionals.
Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like mr Brian C Nelson.
the book that changed my approach to money is The Comic Guide to Financial Bombs all recommendations. It's completely different from anything I've read so far.
Good interview and nuggets, but how realistic are some of these things she spoke about especially in this cost of living and economic climate and also being in the Uk.
Zero value interview. All I gathered from this was be a rich person's/your bosse's bootlicker and hope they will finance whatever idea you come up with. This woman hasn't said a single useful or remotely applicable thing
You're absolutely right, you have no business asking your boss for part ownership... if you can't think of a plan to grow their business and take it to the next level. In that case, it's completely inapplicable to you. Just stay inside your cozy little box,.
@@Rsiatatyeah, like the whole "go to college, get a degree, and you'll be good". People gotta use some common sense along the way. College can be good. Her advice can be good. Use discretion on how to apply it.
if you are in business of any kind and experience success, you already understand this woman is not actually what she claims to be.. she does however probably make a killing selling courses, books, seminars, one on one etc.. on "teaching" what she claims she did
I enjoyed this interview and I appreciate how she has been able to create wealth for herself and her team. What I don't really appreciate is the mentality of zero work life balance. Is the idea that we completely work ourselves to the bone and then just burn out? It's a very American view of the world. Yes there are those few obsessed people. Yes. But sorry I want my days off and my holidays. I often reflect back to Ramit Sethi and the concept of having a 'rich life' that YOU define. You don't need to be a narcissistic workaholic to achieve it and it IS more accessible than what Codie is trying to sell. The kind of monetary success she is talking about is NOT for everybody. It is for the few and far between. Mental and physical wellbeing have to take priority, especially as you get older if you want to live a long and fulfilling lift.
We've started a DOAC members hub on TH-cam with extra content, BTS, never before seen podcast briefs, giveaways and so much more 👀💥 You can get exclusive members access here 👉🏽 th-cam.com/channels/Gq-a57w-aPwyi3pW7XLiHw.htmljoin
Plz help me. Plz I’m at the end of my rope. I am sober 4 yrs I went from making 700$ a week to making 3000$ a week I went to crane school and changed my life again. But I can’t keep the money I make it seems like all my money goes out the door. I need help
Can you help me understand what’s going on here? With all due respect, you're a businessman, yet you're focusing on a 2.5 EUR subscription. Sorry to say this, but it doesn’t quite make sense, mate.
Congratulations on 7.77million subs! What a number 🎉
Y
@@donaldallen4257😮😢🎉
2 things that helped me and literally changed my wealth life
1. I started learning about Jewish Wealth
2. I read the book called 'Jewish Fifth Rule'
never thought a book could help me this much. highly recommend
@@vildana-lama it could just let me break it down for u
Abosultely!! Just divide your wealth journey into three parts: one-third in land, one-third in business, and one-third in cash or liquid assets."
where can i find the book?
google
Army reserves at 17, moved out at 18, trade school at 19, apprentice at 20, married and bought my first home at 22, journeyman at 24, master craftsman at 38, owner at 42, semi-retired at 54, I’m now 58.
I didn’t know what the steel trade was at 19. I just knew no one in my maintenance platoon knew how to weld, so I learned how to weld.
Do the hard thing no one else is doing. Work your ass off when you are young. Love yourself and share that love.
Great advice decades ago, today the person whom loved used stole everything and left to leave me the bill, and the "hard thing" I chose to do for others suddenly the industry vanished due to corporate greed leaving no alternative path
What?@@jtowensbyiii6018
Your whom kids should look up to, but sadly kids these days would see your journey and compare it to what they see on TH-cam and TikTok and just think it took you way too long not realizing that’s just reality for everyone outside of those people whom get lucky off internet money.
You got a couple negative winers here in your comments.
I think you're great! Awesome job!
" create a better mouse trap "........ speaks volumes....
Growing up without a father, I didn’t have anyone to really guide me. But when I found this channel, it became that for me. I got all the advice I wish I had when I was younger, about money, relationships, health, and more. The guests here have years of experience, and as someone who doesn’t like reading books, this podcast has been life-changing. knowledge, shared in a way that’s both professional and easy to understand. I can’t thank you enough!
how old r u and suggest some of the podcast
I'm sorry to hear about everything you've been through, but I'm glad that I'm not alone in feeling this way. Keep your head up, brother. More things to achieve!
Same thing man. Hard to learn it all on your own.
The second half of this interview is significantly better than the first. When she stopped generalising her own story to everyone ('anyone can do that), and admitted that one needs to be passionate and exceptional in something and willing/able to invest significant time, then her advice became much clearer and insightful. And by the end she came out as a geniun and considered person, who is worth listening to.
Thanks for this, as I was considering giving up 😂
She bought a laundromat. She maid a positive ROI. She self declared herself business owner and no she is charging 5 figures for courses you can find for free online. That's how media millionaires are. People good at selling themselves.
Everyone is selling courses these days.
*made* not maid.
And make sure to insult all poor people, crucial step
Yeah, I thought she was someone who had built businesses and added value, not just leveraged finance to make more money.
I don’t understand why people buy courses from these people.
This woman seems to be the personification of "live to work", especially when you work for her. I had that mentality, until I realized how toxic and damaging that was to my life. Now I enforce the boundaries between work and private life, as well as the weekly agreed upon work hours (with a little flexibility in emergencies). Not only am I doing MUCH better mentally now, I also earn around 3 times as much and life is good.
I think people forget how old she is. I personally think that grinding early to retire earlier is a lot better than working till your 60.
The thing is that all these people you hear talk about work like that.. actually like work.
It's not giving up life. It is life. It's hard but also really fun and fulfilling for them. It's ok if that's not you.
@@ItzjahSon Just because you're grinding doesn't mean it'll pay off. I'd much rather have some private life, some fun, build non-work connections and have a reasonable 40 h work week with 30 days PTO plus public holidays each year. I save around 70% of my net income in ETFs and other forms of savings despite that, and I'm not frugal either, just not wasteful.
Just waiting for a good opportunity to buy a house, and with the rate I'm saving, it's unlikely that I'll need to work until my 60s if I don't want to.
A steady income that doesn't come at the expense of your health or social life, in my book, is a much better deal long term.
@@Anpanator and that's perfectly fine if you want that life but not everyone does. She's talking to a specific audience and it obviously isn't you. I personally want freedom to do whatever I want with my family and take care of my family and help other people with the wealth I eventually build.
I think it's about not bring it up at work and keeping your private life at home and not bringing it at work or job interview. You can easily work hard as hell and have a life outside of it as well. Just don't mix both. Keep them separated.
We’ve hit 7M subscribers! As a way of saying thank you, and since you’ve loved our subscribers' raffle so much, we’re going to continue doing it 🎉 If you're subscribed to the channel, you're in the raffle. We will be picking subscribers at random. 🖤 Thank you from the bottom of my heart and good luck! X
Hey.. watching from Kenya, big love from here my Guy, your like my morning tv and a Cody fan since last the interview...Thank You for a lot
Congratulations 🎊 👏 💐 🥳
Congratulation Steve thank you so much for sharing knowledge, inspiration and positive mind through podcast ❤
Congratulations DOAC family!
Congratulations Steve for that milestone..you hit 7million.iam watching from KENYA 🇰🇪 🇰🇪 🇰🇪 and hope to be a winner of the ongoing raffle.
This lady is a quick thinker, the way she answers questions is amazing.
That’s because she has her schtick memorized. Go watch some of her videos and you’ll see she says the exact same thing down to the very words.
"I don't Like risks ... How to get rich? You try not to lose money !"
Wow, Great Advice🔥
I appreciate listening to financially successful people who have so much ambition to gain material wealth. Personally, I am more interested in listening to successful people who care about work/life balance who are allowed to be a well-rounded human and present in their communities. At the end, everyone chooses their path.
Yeah she lost me about 40 minutes in. Sounds more like a 'work for me till you drop' type of individual. Not for me, but to each his own.
Your strategy will make you die poor
yes, agreed
I agree with you on work/life balance; however, I think you’re missing that the people who are wealthy enough to talk about work/life balance while still making money got to that point but following her method earlier in life. She’s being bluntly honest about how you get to the put to have enough money coming in to be able to then say I have the power and ability to create the lifestyle you want
You are correct she’s come out in various way saying she’s not the one who will encourage work life balance. Any time I listen to her talks I keep that in mind. Her insights are still valuable but not all make sense for my goals.
FOR 30:00
THE REASON THAT MOST OF US DONT DO THIS IS BECAUSE EVEN AFTER GOING BEYOND TO SHOW YOUR LEVEL OF COMMITMENTS AND DOING EXTRA FREE THINGS FOR THE INTERVIEWER OR THE COMPANY OWNER, THEY TAKE IT, PROMISE YOU FAKE THINGS AND NEVER DELIVER
SO IT GOES BOTH WAYS!
Yeah that line about only engaging with someone only that has ‘a level of expertise that you don’t have’. Urrrgghhh these speaker is the worst, with the most stupid advice. Really got under my skin.
@@carolineb7796 Why would she hire someone that knows less than her? That makes no sense. Would you hire a salaried social media person if they knew less about social media than you? Just think about that. She built a business, she invested a lot of time, money, and sweat, and she's considering give you some of her hard earned money, but only if she believes you can do something that she can't already do herself. She wants to hire the best person she can, what's so hard for you to understand about that? If you're not good at anything, that's not her fault. Learn something, go to trade school if you have to. If you aren't great at anything, you probably aren't a good learner, and if you're not good at learning, you're not worth much as an employee. Sorry if the cold hard truth hurts.
I agree. Its never rewarding to any employee to take on more responsibility to prove your worth to a company or employer. I left the podcast at the work no balance bit. Its not worth it. You will never get to think about actualizing your goals or planning them out accommodating your company at every whim/text/call.As a society we are past these funny working conditions and expectations.
Learning is the goal, not the job.
your example shows lack of skill in negotiating a deal. This point is covered at the end of this podcast
I love how she drops "earning $65k" like that's a bad salary. It's quite a bit higher than the median US salary. If you're earning that in your early 20s, you're doing quite well for yourself, not putting up with a crappy job.
The entire premise of this discussion is how to become rich. She didn't pass judgement on any salary or job. She is pointing out how you should be thinking if you want to become rich...
If I had a penny for every "how I became an entrepreneur" video I've seen where the person used to work in finance or have another $100k job and then left it to make TH-cam videos where they talk like they started from scratch.
@@BabyEmber "You're going to do a $65k a year job for 2 or 3 years, and it sucks" is not passing judgement? My point was that she's making the argument that you've got to sacrifice in your 20s to do better later on, but her idea of a sacrifice is a job that pays more than the median salary and significantly more than the median salary for someone in their early 20s, which is just $38k.
But this is not only for Americans.. 65,000 is nothing in Canada.
$65k seemed mid-range for US STEM grads when I’d graduated roughly 12 years ago. I ran an inflation calculator and that has the buying power of $90k today. Yeah $65k isn’t as elegant anymore especially when inflation is factored in lol
I hope our society develops to the point that people can pursue their passions, without falling into poverty, rather than everyone chasing money/youth/financial dominance. Our technological development has outpaced our spiritual and social development, as a civilization. That’s the issue, not laziness.
It could be that way....but the governments in most 1st World Western nations are all burying their citizens in billions or even tens of trillions in debt, which devalues every dollar they earn, and every hour of their life spent earning it. So that leaves little time to purse anything, except their next meal.
I completely agree. These Channels portray such toxic messages to the youth, and then are the first to go on to complain about them once the damage has been done.
Passion moves things forward. Always strive to do what you're passionate about. Too many want the easy way instead.
If you're passionate you will do what is necessary to get you there.
South African entrepreneur here, inspired by both Codie and Steven. Everyday I walk to school which is 2 hours away. I listening to a podcast a day repeated to and fro. Hopefully one day I’ll get to meet y’all both once my business gets me on your radar🙏🤍
Hoping the SA gov gets its act together for your generation and you get at the very least a school bus. They can run precious metal and material mines but can't run national school buses? Well done SA. Shame you're forced to exert so much energy for your rights. I dread to think how many kids aren't healthy or mobile enough to do the same.
Why are you lying bro? 😂
@@collected_tradinghe’s lying. No kid walks for 2 hours to school in SA even in the deepest of rural areas. If he is that deep in rurals, he wouldn’t be here on the internet watching 2 hour long podcasts
I walk 2 hours a day but I do it for exercise and walking along with changing my diet allowed me lose 73 lbs and has kept it off for 2 years 8 months
How do you even walk around with phone out or headphones in without fear?
Codie just sold me on Main Street Millionaires on Audible. I'm 46 and have failed at several businesses but I will not quit!
Where were you in my twenties? Loved this! I joined Corporate America after college all they did was suck the life out of me. I did Everything...volunteered, asked questions, offered ideas and got nothing in return. All the Execs were consumed with themselves, had no interest in mentoring, promoting, seeing others succeed.
I do not know what people expect when listening to a podcast as I see a lot of negative comments; she offered a lot of excellent advice: (1) Gain expertise, (2) Follow through, (3) Chang the job where you earn more and learn more (4) Do not invest in start-ups (5) How to succeed in job interview (6) How to leverage your skills to make more money, (7) Do not believe super young people saying they are successful entrepreneur showing off their wealth on social media. These are all great advice!
Exactly I think everyone took the interview personally. Strange.
@samiratabrizian8777 from experience, the quickest way to see someone's definition of a happy existence is by asking them "what's your definition of a work-life balance?"; what she said wouldn't even be considered a "red flag" it would be a sign for someone to get in the car and do 200mph in the opposite direction. Many people have given the same advice as her (follow through, experience, invest, level up etc) the real sign of expertise is being able to balance that with all the other beautiful elements of being human, otherwise you're just setting yourself up for psychological problems... but hey I'm just my opinion on youtube
I agree with you @@SoulsSummit work life balance tells a lot about a person
Shame came off as unlikeable. Lots of words but not so much content.
People want you to hold their hands. Instead of them doing the work
Geez, I've worked hard to build a career as a software eng here in the UK and now earn £76k a year which taken over a decade to get, she makes it sounds like it's nothing and you should basically become obsessed with it. For what exactly? There is a threshold for money vs happiness and more money isn't the be all and end all. She uses a lot of generalisations, one being your job sucks in your 20s. Also, this idea of 'front-loading pain' to your younger years - what about people who get a carer into their late 20's or even late 30's and then realise they want a change? They will have to learn all over again. She makes it sound like you figure it all out before you're 30. I'd argue some most people have some kind of identity crisis around mid-life and then they get the quality insight about what they 'really' want to do. I can't help but find her advice inflammatory and irritating.
Most people get the sack before 45.
Agree. Boy it sucks. Living in pain every day.
Fuck man, leave brit, come to the silicon valley. 5 years into my soft eng carreer and make 320k 😐
Bad advice from her. Who starts off a job making 65,000? That alone is just not realistic. More like you’re gonna start a job making 20k a year or 35k if you have a degree.
I donno, I think she's more speaking from her own experience, and I know from mine and a lot of people's, in your twenties you are less afraid to fall down, to break shit, to try new things and experiment, to put yourself out there and to take the path less driven because you are still learning it all for yourself. so in your 30's and beyond you are less likely to have that kinda mindset, its just something that happens to everyone I think to some degree, mostly because you have responsibilities now and a lot of things/people/teams/colleagues etc. that depend on you. So you are more risk averse and time poor. If you want a change its gonna be harder, but its more about what are your transferrable skills, exactly how they did with the whiteboard exercise, so what skills do you bring to the table, then applying that to whatever it is you want to do and getting there that way, going the traditional route from the bottom up again is never the path you want to take at a later stage in life, believe me, I'm in that stage myself, but I'm not going to approach it in a traditional way, I'm gonna find my own way in and do it that way because I know it will be the right way for ME.
3 things that helped me and literally changed my life
1. I stopped watching porn
2. I read the book called 'Genius Hidden Tricks'
3. Stop drinking
@@RedRumble14 It's a scam
i do one of those and it's not the book lmao
Great book. Peope are really missing out if dont buy it.
Likewise and having faith and praying to God everyday, reading my Bible helped elevate my life so much!!
I’m reading your comment while drinking 😂
This was so needed - the average person needs help here. No hacks, no shills, no pumpers, no fear mongers. Solid steps and some hope. We need more of this.
Any money in the world, wouldn’t be good enough for me to work for someone like this woman.
#Truth. I've been watching her since COVID, and this isn't different than her first interview. She's not for everyone.
Did we just watch the same video? Wow
Same. It’s slavery adjacent
I signed up for her $2k business buying course and realized halfway through that it’s just a gimmick and a hook to get you to spend $10,000 on her Mastermind group and push her other businesses as services for your business. I learned more reading books than her cheaply put together course. It was incredibly unprofessional. I see now what a fake and wannabe she is.
At least I got my money back!
@@tanyalachance6 what books do you recommend?
It’s always nice to hear someone start their information with the only way you won’t succeed is if you’re lazy. Being hyper reductive is an interesting way to give out information. People are multidimensional and understanding the specifics shows maturity and understanding.
Everyone out there who is actively working to achieve and make the best of their situation is doing the best they can
Keep moving forward
But if you say that, when your advice or course inevitably doesn't work, your students will blame themselves rather than you.
@@joepiekl plus side is that the mentality they believe in means that when people follow them either they are successful. Or they aren’t and the “it’s cause they were lazy” seems more legitimate
I just hope people continue to follow their best interest and make the most of the existence they have
Best they can...for most people that means struggling. She's trying to help ppl grow and make their best much better.
@@flanderg123 I agree that being willing to help others is great. I think it’s also important to be intentional with wording. In general you have one opportunity to make an impression and starting with “if you’re broke you’re lazy” maybe isn’t the best message. Given the current state of the world maybe thinking about how your message could be received is important. I don’t think people need to be coddled and I also don’t think they need to be talked down to.
@@flanderg123Arguably she’s just selling success, which has been done over and over again because people want to succeed. But realistically the general lack of time, energy, intelligence, charisma, determination, and/or good fortune needed to make it will thwart most people from succeeding.
My biggest critique is not her work obsession. That’s fine if you are doing something you love or doing it because you have to for your family. The problem is the vague generalities that provide the listener without any actionable advice.
She's full of hot air.
She's terrible
@@chrisbentsen1 having discussions is always good. I welcome discourse so that new information and learning can exist. The issue is that people tend to confirm their opinions and experiences even if they may not be applicable to everyone. Under a one solution model then no one (with a mental deficiency, physical impairment, etc) would exist because it’s all about “not being lazy”
Again I genuinely enjoy these conversations and hope more happen. I don’t only want opinions I already hold. I just think that there should be a bit more discussion around the variety of life.
Plants can grow in soil, sand, etc.
Everyone has the right to feel heard and try their best.
Keep moving forward
well, she loves money, I think that is a reason as good as any other, this isn't a talk of a one fits all recipe for happiness, it's one on where to find money.
Thank you all, you just saved me 2 hours of my day off.
Regarding stamina, I'm 47, I have a lot of stamina. More than in my early 20's because I didn't work out back then.
Don't let age get to you. I started training in Muay Thai and BJJ at 42 and I'm still moving pretty well!
I started my own business this year too. I'm working harder at 47 than any other year and I love it!
I spent decades seeking comfort, I willingly choose hard work even though I'm doing great in my IT job.
For me, it's fulfilling and I feel great doing something productive, I hope I can still do this in my 80s.
It's not about money, it's a personal decision.
That's amazing
you are missing the point. congratulations!
Codie has so much depth of knowledge that she can very easily switch to an esoteric guru.
12 mins in and I cannot resonate with this person, my 20s were the best days of my youth ... the 1st 10 years of my children were comparable ... i work harder in my 50's than i worked in my 20's ... work ethic IMO does not change or diminish ... i have never worked so hard in the gym in my life
That’s you. Some people figure it out in their 40s. Consider yourself w🚀
she actually provides really good business insight & advice further into the interview
Yeah, can't resonate at all. Everyone's life is different.
Maybe it just feeeels like you're working harder because you have less energy in your 50s than in your 20s :)
Literally stopped at the 12 minute mark too
Saying a lot while not actually saying much at all. The last time Codie was on this podcast it was exactly the same except she didn’t get a fancy intro talking about her career on “Wall Street”??? The last time on this podcast she spoke about how she invested in laundromats. I feel like Codie’s career as a social media influencer is far more successful than her career as a so-called investor and entrepreneur
Exactly! She's the female Tai Lopez.
Yes, I was sure this was a repost. I was sure I'd heard this one before.
And how often do you hear a message one time and implement with excellence afterwards? Maybe reminders are important to override the puritanical skeptic in us that gives us excuses for why it wouldn't work or why someone else's message is somehow less legitimate...
Agree
She’s her own biggest fan. That’s how it comes across. Nothing she said resonated. This is the first podcast of Steven’s of all that’s I’ve listened to in years that I really didn’t like. She is so arrogant. ‘If you interview for a job in my companIES’. Shut up. And not at all an advocate for women. People need work life balance due to childcare etc. Please don’t bring this guest back. Shes awful.
39 mins in and I’m still waiting for the financial advice
Couldn’t get past 14:49 before I just went to the comments to summarize the video. This channel has other CEO with more charitable and wholistic values. From the comments it sounded like I wasn’t missing business or financial advice I hadn’t heard before from those same CEO’s.
I'm at 75' and i'm still asking what's going on 😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I love Cody. So glad you put her on your platform. She's the real deal!
One of the Codie's advises is to be a quick communicator. I do not personally like when people speak to me fast. Even Steven's previous guest (Evy Poumpouras) in her book says that fast talking exudes nervousness and sounds like hurrying to get the words out 😂 When someone speaks to me so fast like Cody, I have an impression that people just want to say what they have to, and do not want to spend much time with me explaining things.
You really took away the idea she wants you to talk fast? Like an audio book sped up? That's not the message at all. She spoke about not bumble-fucking your way through conversation/interviews and actually get straight to the point
I agree with DrChops, she didn't say talk fast.
She said; take 1 minute to think things through, make a decision, and then move in that direction.
Because the 'I'll get back to you next week ' mentality is what costs you and others time and money.
Codie sweetheart, there is tremendous value in taking the time to thoughtfully choose your words. If you want to be an inspirational and respected employer, skillful words are gold. They empower people to rise to the occasion whereas thoughtless words lay waste to potential. To be clear, wise words come from love, which is having another's best interest in mind, despite their perceived failures to support your ideals.
And while those may be “words of love”, such sentiments - when spoken from the heart - can also be difficult to hear.
Get out of you mother's basement.
Sweetheart? Really?
@@katie8325 I know, right? I didn’t read or respect anything written after the sweetheart.
Why are there so many negative comments about Codie here? I'm reading folks saying she communicated nothing helpful...but what I learned:
•Use your 20's to network and be mentored with the most successful people in your environment
•learn valuable skills
•build your wealth and use the excess to try new business ventures.
Ummm so common sense?
@@vegahw Exactly.
@@boigarashi7473 except common sense isn't all that common these days. After all, how many people do you know that actually do that stuff?
People dismiss it as "common sense"... but those people also came to this video trying to figure out how to get rich. If it's common sense and they already knew the answer, why are they here instead of running their businesses? 🤷🏼♂
10 minutes in and she's saying you'll start out in your 20s making 65k a year for 2 to 3 years and it's going to suck. Meanwhile HALF of all HOUSEHOLDS in the USA are making less than 70k. In other countries much less. To me this puts her out of touch with reality and just makes me want to turn the rest of this one off
This channel might not be meant for you
@@louisarthur8443 This was an ultra 💩 interviewee and episode. The channel is fine.
@@InsaneOaf It's okay that she might be talking to young big-city goers. It's okay that there are different types of audience members in the world. She's not talking to everyone. If anything, it feels like you're insecure & upset because of your own self judgement.
That's a limiting mindset. Remember, YOU are the one with your hand on the wheel and foot on the accelerator. Setting boundaries is good, but achieving drive is the goal...
Don’t pay attention to the numbers if they don’t apply. Pay attention to the message. It still applies no matter how much you make. She’s saying grind in your 20s so that you can make even more in your 30s. Progressively increase your income and goals every 2-3 years. You apply whatever amount you think is applicable
1:08:05 I learned something today - it's 3am on the dot and I haven't been able to catch a wink. Love the simple idea of surrounding yourself with rich people who are motivated to make money. It truly is contagious
I honestly am sooo happy you have Codie on! I have been so curious about what she has to say and I wanted to learn from a woman about money. I love this ! Thank you
“ Surround yourself with rich people” the disconnect of it all 🙄
Congratulations Stephen and your 50-person strong team for hitting 7 million *and more*! I never miss an episode of your interviews. Each and every one of them are AMAZING! Thank you!
I always read the comments first before listening. Happy to see the mindset of Americans are finally starting to change. Calling out the overwork mentality should've been a thing by now. Hopefully America will get to a true quality of life lifestyle eventually.
Congratulations, you judged a book by its cover.
Because most of the people who left these 'bad reviews' either didn't listen, didn't understand, or didn't watch at all.
Nothing about what Cobie or the host talked about attributed to 'toxic work culture'.
In fact, many of her points were about handling toxic work culture from the owner/CEO perspective.
Ex, hiring bad workers or managers makes your business bad for you, your goals, and everyone else you're supporting (your employees).
It was primarily about self improvement and how you should decide what you should do with your skill-set to achieve success.
I encourage you to actually try to listen instead of blindly listening to people who got offended by the idea of 'put in the effort now so that you don't need to strain yourself later'.
@Harbringer12 I actually listen to her first podcast. I'll pass on this one based on the feedback. I wouldn't say they were bad reviews, just a difference of opinions. Which is okay for people to have. Have a great one!
This is a successful, wealthy and powerful person giving advice and insight. Comments are full of poor people, many older, rejecting it because they dont like it. I know which side of the table I'd rather be on
or maybe comments of people who have enough life experience (or business experience) to smell the BS from far away... this person is making a ton of money selling courses, that is for sure absolutely factual
*I wasn't financial free until my 40’s and I’m still in my 40’s, bought my third house already, earn on a monthly through passive income, and got 4 out of 5 goals, just hope it encourages someone's that it doesn’t matter if you don’t have any of them right now, you can start TODAY regardless your age INVEST and change your future! Investing in the financial market is a grand choice I made.*
That's awesome!!! I know nothing about investment and I'm keen on getting started.
What are your strategies?
People dismiss the importance of advisors until they are burned by their own emotions.
I remember a couple of summers ago, following my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to assist my business stay alive, so I looked for qualified consultants and came across someone with the highest qualifications. He has helped me raise my reserve from $275k to $850k, despite inflation.
If you are using really a good broker or account manager is easier to earn from the market
Investing with an expert is the best strategy for beginners and busy investors, as most failures and losses in investment usually happen when you invest without proper guidance. I'm speaking from experience.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financial future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?.
You got the SICKEST intros in the history of podcasts! Shout out to your team, they're nailing this thing 👏
I admire the American approach to success, but it’s challenging to apply it in the context of English audiences and economic realities.
I was thinking the exact same thing. Is this realistic to the Uk audience.
Same here… it’s just doesn’t apply in Ireland 🤷🏻♀️ it is different world - I’m not saying worse… just different.
@@EOO1186I live in the US. It’s not realistic here either. There a couple rare exceptions of course but rare enough that it’s statistically insignificant.
I'd go further - Brits are amazing at seeing through BS and this was a 90 min of BS and humble bragging.
Most of these U.S. financial advice videos wouldn’t work elsewhere.
Don’t even get me started with sales and marketing - try pulling off that U.S. style Tony Robbins energy salesmanship in my country and see what happens LOL
I love how you take your time to educate your viewers we all strive towards financial stability and a better Life. It is easy to achieve this through the right investment, by living frugally and budgeting. I'm glad I learnt early in life to work hard for financial freedom
Even though I engage in investing, I feel disheartened by my lack of expertise in assessing the performance of individual companies and determining the optimal timing for stock purchases. The erosion of my financial reserves due to inflation adds to my concerns. At this point, I require precise market trajectory information, but I find myself unsure about the appropriate course of action.
Considering the prevailing economic climate, I recommend seeking a mentor or a knowledgeable advisor who can provide guidance and support.
Yes true, I have been in touch with a financial advisor. With an initial starting reserve of $80k, my advisor chooses the entry and exit commands for my portfolio, which has grown to approximately $550k.
I’ve been looking to switch to an advisor for a while now. Any help pointing me to who your advisor is?
Sophie Lynn Carrabus is the licensed advisor I use and i'm just putting this out here because you asked. You can Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
As a 52 year old female that dedicated her life to her children yet went to a university and worked at the same time it hasnt paid off towards my retirement. I have creative ideas everyday and I have been layed off a couple of times so at this point I'm struggling to know what position is really best for me and how to get there. I think because of those reasons, I should own a business. Following Codie and Steven gives me the advice I never had from my parents or friends. I have much gratitude for your content and education. ❤
I’m almost done with inquiring my first business. And the cutest little Daycare that has a great cash flow. Thank you CODY for being so brave and teaching me how to do this and giving me strength that I can.
Working for her sounds like an absolute nightmare.
At least she is upfront about it, no sugar coating it.
There will always be someone with poor self esteem who will apply for the job. Sadly
Lol 😂
That's why she's rich and you aren't lol
@@pyros4333 Is she rich from applying her principals or is she rich from selling the dream and a business course?
Codie was stunning! So much of what she said I completely relate to. Learning + Financial gains always and of course levelling up. Every job is a new opportunity to learn and get better, add more skills and keep growing. I also love that you have to be fearless - you cant make big impact without the big risks. Im smiling typing this out because its just such a breath of fresh air! Love your work Steven and thanks do much Codie!
This is a gem of an episode. Please watch the whole thing even if it's over a span of days. It's a series of business lessons that you can keep coming back to as you practice in real-time.
what i understood is that she worked for this company in latin america and she was paid very well, she had an idea of linking business to make a new one so she left and did it and it was a success and she scaled from there.
So much wisdom here 🙏
Medical writer here.
I have two scientific degress including an MRes (4 years). I have 3-4 years in the industry. Overall, I would say a decade in science roughly. Not a month haha, I wish...
No doubt your expertise makes a difference, but if you only had a fraction of the training, what kind of difference would that make in your writing? Do you think you would have been able to write something intelligible after just a few months? I realize it wouldn't be easy to get a job with out your experience, but just in terms of quality of work.
Thank you for consistently producing and sharing exceptional content. Codie is a ferocious force to be reckoned with. Steven is a superb host - thoughtful, measured, and comfortable.
You're welcome! So glad you enjoyed 🙏
I guess stevens responses had more substance than codie. Largely talked common sense and uses (look pretty and talk to rich people)
THANK YOU for this Episode! Codie was intense but unarguably the best person to kick you into thinking about business.
I'm so glad I came across this channel when I did. I'm 30 years old and this podcast with Codie made me think about how I should be navigating the workplace and leverage the relationships I have to get to where I need to be. Thanks so much :)
I love the facts from Codie Sanchez [and the mention of Andrew Wilkinson];
She has exceptional knowledge on her area of expertise!
Very interesting!
65/k early twenties is not a starting salary 😅
It is in the US
If you account for the currency conversion and living costs in the US, that's about 20-25k worth of spending power in the UK.
It is for US university grads on average (counting for inflation, especially post-Covid), unless the new grad negotiated poorly
I started a 55k as a female, next
23.5k when I started, but as she said, I was getting an education. Very little of her advice applied to me and the many people I knew on the bottom of society. Her advice is applicable by my late 30's- early 40's... and hopefully it can be applicable to my kids by their 20's. Sometimes that is the best you can do. Maybe my grandkids will go on podcasts telling other people to buy businesses with sweat equity.
The fact that nobody talks about the book whispers of manifestation on borlest speaks volumes about how people are stuck in a trance
the fact that you are bot, makes me feel i am in trance
SPAM COMMENT ABOVE WARNING! Stop posting your spam all over the place about that book 📚
I beg to differ on a few things. My 20s were my best years. I achieved a lot and worked in a job I absolutely loved and found my passion. I agree that they are for learning the most, because what I learned helped me grow and have the confidence I have now to know I am deserving. I’m sure a lot of what she has taught works but it is certainly not the only way.
This is one of the most inspiring things I've witnessed in a long time. Codie's view on life and culture in general is amazing, and as a fellow Texan I feel ashamed I haven't seen her before. What an absolute force
You will miss a lot of good opportunities to make money online if you don’t have money.
As a new beginner you surely need a professional broker to assist you or you lose your money.
Having a good portfolio account manager is not just a good thing but also a blessing to anyone.
I can’t wait to reinvest more into this great platform I’m really excited about her skills.
If not Astrid Iwertz i would have lost all my savings in the hands of this fake account manager.
How can I get her contact.?
7 millions? I'd say the sky is the limit. For me your Podcast has the same value as Joe Rogan and I personaly prefer your Stuff even more. Don't you dare stop doing your stuff and educate us :)
Really didn't enjoy this one. Codie talks without saying anything, is clearly making money selling BS courses to people and my internal BS alarm was going off constantly during the interview! She says nothing of value and seems like her only success is scamming people into believeing she can make them rich. Waste of 90 mins listening to this one.
Came here to say this- it was a lot of word salad
She can't make you rich. Her message is that you improve your odds of getting rich by surrounding yourself with the kinds of people that can help you get there. It's like that saying: "you are the average of the 5 people you spend the most time with". If you want to get richer, surround yourself with people richer than you are, so you'll learn stuff you don't know, and learn stuff you don't know you don't know. Until I read your comment, I had no idea she even sold courses-- so it obviously didn't sound like much of a sales pitch to me (except for a few seconds when she mentioned her book).
Watch it again but next time take notes with a pen and paper, you will see something different
Learned a lot of interesting perspectives on few topics. What were you missing?
@@Miguel-yl6wk haha you paid to write this stuff?
Just wanted to shout out and thank Steven for asking about the hypothetical scenario of the 38-year-old Nigel who is working a low-paying job. I would argue that most listeners of this podcast are in a similar position where they have little to no savings, and they are trying to find way to become wealthy. Codie seemingly talked a lot from the perspective of someone who has always had connections and capital, so it was important that she also applied her beliefs/framework onto this Nigel scenario. Thank you, Steven, for asking that. I think that proves that you have a lot of empathy and a great understanding of what your audience actually wants to know. I appreciate you.
I love this woman. She is beautiful, knowledgeable and fierce.
The interviewer killed it.
(Had to leave a comment and like 👍)
Very out of touch with most people. What 20 yr olds are making 65k per year? This episode isn't for everyone. It's for people who already have the means to make 100k per year as their base salary.
When I was 20, I was lucky to find $35,000. The entry level management trainee at Hertz was $14/hr...and they wanted college grads. I quit after 3 months after I learned what my area manager made.
I like to believe money is like air: it’s there when I breath in. I usually don’t think about air, I just trust it’s there in abundance.
genius
I hope you’re joking for your own sake young man.
This is very inspiring. I'm working on my dream and feel bored. This video made me motivated to move forward. When I was 24, my company hired a consultant to give us retirement planning advice, and I had just started saving. The class, called "Starting Strong," recommended investing in a target retirement fund aligned with my 65th birthday. That was 20 years ago, and it's the only investment I've made. What other ways can I grow my finances?
target date funds made me a multimillionaire but i also watched them drop 40% in a very short time and take a long time to recover. my best suggestion is that you seek the guidance of a fiduciary to avoid mistakes.
Great! mind if I look up your advisor please? only invest in my 401k through my employer as of now, but enthused about investing for my eventual retirement.
I've shuffled through investment coaches and yes, they can be positively impactful to an individual's portfolio, but do your due diligence to find a coach with grit, one that withstood the 08' crash. For me," Teresa L. Athas" turned out to be better and smarter than all the advisors I ever worked with till date, I’ve never met anyone with as much conviction.
Searched the web and saw her profile and accreditations, someone with great experience i must say. Thanks for sharing with us! I sent her a mail already
personally I wouldn't ask over the internet in case you get sent to some website that is a scam.
It would be great if you can interview a creative individual who has also cracked the world the way Codie has. Many of the suggestions might not be applicable if one wants to also find their creative voice while earning money and becoming financially free. Would love to hear from someone especially interviewed by you!
I enjoy watching your podcasts and they are extremely helpful.
Thanks for the suggestion! 🙏
She’s a Star Wars person and that’s dope I got so much value from this. 💯
With all forms of respect for the lady, but she is telling nothing new. It is pretty much the same thing as what Napoleon Hill did. Get in touch with people who really know how and what to do. Don't follow the "barking dogs" (the get rich "quick" guys who say they live "the life" in Dubai or drive around in expensive rent a cars. etc.), forget about your ego, be a "slave" for the big guy/girl and just take notes until you get the FEELING, get INTO the FLOW, get into the VORTEX (Abraham Hicks).
Here is the ABSOLUTE BEST and only QUOTE you will ever need to "make it": Jim Carrey :" At some point when you create yourself to make it, you're going to have to either let that creation go and take a chance on being loved or hated for who you really are, or you're going to have to kill who you really are and fall into your grave grasping a character you never were."
Mic drop....
Big words. Her advice can give people years of misery
If u heard one u have heard them all
I'm 30. I don't trust anybody. Everybody is fake AF. Influencers are on the top of the list FYI.
That concept of economic interconnectedness is so true. It’s the only legitimate reason why I can rationalize why my brother and I became so much more successful than most peers from our upbringing. Even our other sibling who experienced a much different but equally as shitty living situation and experience as us, don’t seem to share the same drive, values, etc because they never surrounded themselves around “wealth”. Embrace the suck early and surround yourself with wealthy people even if they make you sick, there’s always something to learn.
I didn’t have much money spent it all on bills and fun worked 2 jobs and had a blast in my 20’s. “Work hard, play hard.” Was the key to my happiness. I believe happiness is success. Relationships and loving the work you do matter so much more than money at least here in the u.s where we have an abundance of resources. That would suck to spend all your time focused on making money and impressing others then get out of your 20’s and say they were horrible.
This lady is gonna get a hard slap of reality on the face when (IF) she becomes a mother. Maybe just then she’ll be humble enough to appreciate the importance of work/life balance… just like she learned with ego lifting.🤣
She was extremely clear on like ten thousand different occasions to put in all the hard leg work up front when you’re young and capable and able to dedicate the time towards setting yourself up
She never suggested throwing your entire life away to work
She very clearly stated work hard early to establish yourself so that you don’t have to do it later
I swear peoples brains just shut off as soon as someone suggests that they should work hard
Narcissist
I'm genuinely concerned she's going to burn out. I pushed myself to the brink until my mid-/late thirties; it doesn't end well.
And wait until she meets other rich people's children! I've taught hundreds of them!
Not fun to be around and entitled is just the beginning.
Ironically your comment feels like an ego-comment lolllll
I am dying for someone to have a podcast that says what to do in your thirties because scott galloway, this podcast and so many people say "you have to start in your 20s" what if your 34 and have ambition but literally no connections because you got a late start due to uuuuh addiction or whatever reason. great podcast though and thank you both. I'll just shave my face and say im 25, I can pull it off.
Who starts their first job in their 20s? I started working when I was like 16. 😂
You do the same thing they're saying, just in your 30s it's not that complicated! Don't stop yourself, one foot in front of the other.
@@romeromaine248to each their own, i started at 19
Lol victim mentality...
just do you
Look up Gary v. He didn't start til late 30s . He's a big advocate for going after what you want at any stage in life. Trouble is for most people, you end up responsibilities and family. Same for all, but risk and dependency of people on you just increases later in life
I don’t get all the hate. I’ve only recently started listening to this podcast (and kudos to everyone involved in producing it) and the 5 I’ve listened to date have been excellent. But this one is seriously incredibly valuable. As someone who is doing well in my career and but was slow to learn the lessons that are being shared in this video today all I can say is I wish I’d had a chance to hear this discussion 20 years ago.
Right ??????
It’s insane to read all these comments .
Absolutely! I don't get it either. I only discovered her recently, but her advice makes so much sense to me, and her ideas can be implemented. I wish people learned to listen to the whole podcast instead of commenting based on short clips they saw.
@@tsendpurevtsegmid2231 the whole world isn’t meant to be Rich . So leave em . Let them have fun .
I think the reason for all the hate in the comments is the same as when she touches on the topic losing old friends. People who are driven, go the extra mile, take risks and achieve greatness are inevitably showing others what they're *not* achieving.
This is basically the mindset behind communism, which is getting frighteningly popular with modern youth, and it's all predicated on jealousy and inadequacy.
Thank so much for asking that question about prejudice. I have biracial parents and White skin. When I entered my STEM major at UCLA there we only 15 undergraduates that looked like me and about 7 that looked like my Dad. I felt alone and isolated. In addition, I came from a heritage where college degrees didn’t exist. I noticed a class difference immediately. In my 20s I didn’t know how to handle it. Now in my 40s I’m getting counseling. My hope is that young adults listening to this podcast choose a better outlook. 😀
That’s a very powerful podcast. Thank you for sharing. She is indeed an inspiration
Work ethic does not decline as you get older, mine is stronger than ever. Look to the likes of Branson and Musk, Jagger and more they are all still working hard regardless of age. Physical stamina may decline but if you work on it, I refer you back to Jagger. Age is no longer limiting.
Can we get back to having people who are at the top of what they are doing? I.e. Courtney Dauwalter - her incredible running achievements, her mindset and how she moved from teaching to running etc.
This is the first episode from this channel that i didnt watch till the end..
Same. She came off to me as a snake oil salesman. Lots of words but little content.
Yup, me neither... And you know what, I will not point it out where she "lost" me - I can only guess that was the same thing for you - but I will let it there as a huge red flag for only those who are really listening.
@@AdalicioJuniorI would like to know what u found not right to take off
@@MohammedDalvi-dn3xg if I answer you, I will be helping her to adjust the discourse and as you can see in the comments, for some good willing people who did it, the common reply is some version of "that's not for everyone", but I'll give you an analogy: What this woman is saying is like a jacked guy who clearly used "the juice" advising guys on how to be jacked like that with dieting and exercise or that girl with a perfect body full of plastic surgery advising girls to be like that with dieting only. But in both cases, they are offering you a huge "opportunity" for you to train with them for a very expensive price, you will carry all the equipment for them and will pay the necessary money in order for them to show this special dieting/training system and if you can't take the heat that's ok, because that's not for everyone.
In that way the wheels will be spinning for them.
(give it a thought on what's unwritten as well)
It’s been so interesting reading all the negative comments about this episode. I actually really like Codie. I like how she’s challenging the traditional mindset about entrepreneurship and encouraging people to become business owners. She’s absolutely right that the big transfer of wealth that’s starting to occur is wrapped up in baby boomers businesses. And good for her in pointing that out rather than people thinking they’re just going to obtain this wealth like a handout. I loved what she had to say about your product (or service) vs your marketing/leads, that was an enlightening point. I also like what she had to say about not being the victim (women, etc) and just know what you’re worth and do great work. I thought her attitude about age was ridiculous, because I’m 50 and probably in the best shape of my life. I do think she takes advantage of her position by charging people an exorbitant amount to learn about buying businesses. So, my two cents on this episode. 😊
I did a research on growth mindset last year and surprisingly related to this conversation is how the key component for growth in any aspect of an individual's life is "urgency." And something that I love about this conversation that I wasn't aware of is the idea of how to be urgency and obsession creates the ultimate formula. But the biggest challenge is driving those to "money" and when she says it that "just make large positive body movement when you think about money" just so we start to rewire our brain to be obsessed with money.
And the fact that the biggest difference between high performers and low performers is urgency and time wasting.
Those ones hits deep. I can see myself being a low performer at times. And I really want to go back to that hunger I used to have.
Love this woman. Can’t believe the amount of criticism in the comments section. Personally never heard of her or listened to her before this podcast. I found her genuine and unique in her personal and approach in business. So many golden nuggets shared. She is definitely very talented and successful. A very empowering woman. Thank you for this insightful podcast, I listened to this to the very end.
Same here!this is invaluable information for me personally ❤
She was much more engaging the first time around, not sure how much more she's adding to what was already said. Maybe consider Vivian Tu next for a different perspective on the same topic?
I was lost at "$65,000 per year job", as if that is bad money for a 20 year old.
Get the help of Knox jarrati
I could live quite well on 65k a year in my 50s...
Worked hard my entire life, then Ai took all three of my careers. And it's coming for more.🤬
Yeah. I make like 35k and I'm 40. If I was making 65k I'd be thrilled.
It is if you want to find a landlord in Los Angeles. That's homeless, roommate, or subtenant money here. $65k/year gets you a couch to sleep on, not even a studio as no landlord will rent to you unless you make at least $6k per month or $100k as an employee or $120k self employed.
Thats where your mentality is wrong
As a business owner here growing my 3rd business, not only was so much of this relatable and spot on but I also took away so many nuggets that made me take notes or things to look into. Wonderful interview! ❤
“I need this tomorrow vs I’ll get back to you next week” is one of the most important lessons from this interview. Seems like common sense but this 💯 a game changer with any successful venture.
Codie Sanchez astonishes me once again. If you want to listen to 2 hours of motivational talk and no actionable advice THIS is definetely for YOU. Otherwise, just SKIP this episode. I have huge respect for Steve, but this pod was nothing but fluff. The huge disconnect that Codie has from real life people is astonishing. One of the worst episodes so far this year.
Totally agree, I felt the same.
It's a simple idea: "I'll enjoy working more than everyone around me who doesn't like working"
You will build something out of that struggle and grind, it's experience that will be used to drive you into the realm of success.
It's not for everyone
Yeah yeah yeah... Whatever....... She's hoootttt and realll sweaatttyyy and seexxxxxxxyyyy sooooooooooo sexxxxxxy
@@ShufflePetro but if you really enjoy something just for that, take the whole monetary benefits away, like I enjoy playing basketball, money don't matter around enjoyment. Like waking up early morning enjoying the atmosphere. I mean what I enjoy, I won't stop enjoying when I'm not being paid, and I'd keep doing that all time, if I miss it won't steal my peace just a day of enjoyment. Whilst your work isn't like that. If you would keep working without being paid since you enjoy let me know what you do, I'll not pay you but definitely have some work for you. Or even better you work I receive on your behalf. You'd enjoy.
The moment she said if she's in twenties she lost it all, if you are good at making money you'd be good irrespective of age, I have seen business people going broke and backup in no time.
This isnt "how to get rich", it's "how Codie does stuff".
And it's dull too.
Nothing about savings, pensions, investments, etc. you know, the things that are available to 99.9% of the population.
From $17K to $146K that's the minimum range of profit return every week I thinks it's not a bad one for me, now I have enough to pay bills and take care of my family.
I'm celebrating a $30k stock portfolio today. started this journey with 6k. I have invested on time and also with the right terms now I have time for my family and the life ahead of me
How
..? Am a newbie in crypto investment, please can you guide me through on how you made profit
Thanks to Mr Mark Richard.
His a licensed broker here in the states 🇺🇸
YES!!! That's exactly his name (Mark Richard) so many people have recommended highly about him and am just starting with him 😊 from Brisbane Australia🇦🇺
The Diary Of A CEO, i love this video
The speed thing is the biggest part. This part of the interview is the most realistic and actionable part that applies to anyone. That's made me stand up and listen because I overthink instead of doing.
Fear and uncertainty create major wealth. It's those who take the risk and have strong gut to endure the bloody days. When i notice extreme dips i tend to actually move more money to crypto...
I feel sympathy for our country, low income people are now suffering to survive yet inflation and recession keep increasing daily, many families can't even enhance the good cost of living anymore. You've helped me a lot Sir Brian! Imagine I invested $50,000 and received $190,500 after 14 days
Very possible! especially at this moment. Profits can be made in many different ways, but such intricate transactions should only be handled by seasoned market professionals.
Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like mr Brian C Nelson.
Brian demonstrates an excellent understanding of market trends, making well informed decisions that leads to consistent profit
I'm surprised that you just mentioned and recommend Mr Brian Nelson. I met him at a conference in 2018 and we have been working together ever since.
the book that changed my approach to money is The Comic Guide to Financial Bombs all recommendations. It's completely different from anything I've read so far.
Where do you find it?
Where can i buy the book (internet) ?
@@w.ferreira9739 find this magic on morlest
THIS IS A SCAM.
Good interview and nuggets, but how realistic are some of these things she spoke about especially in this cost of living and economic climate and also being in the Uk.
Zero value interview. All I gathered from this was be a rich person's/your bosse's bootlicker and hope they will finance whatever idea you come up with. This woman hasn't said a single useful or remotely applicable thing
Yes, and her advice can screw so many people's lives.
You're absolutely right, you have no business asking your boss for part ownership... if you can't think of a plan to grow their business and take it to the next level. In that case, it's completely inapplicable to you. Just stay inside your cozy little box,.
@@Rsiatatyeah, like the whole "go to college, get a degree, and you'll be good".
People gotta use some common sense along the way. College can be good. Her advice can be good. Use discretion on how to apply it.
Thanks for saving me time.
if you are in business of any kind and experience success, you already understand this woman is not actually what she claims to be.. she does however probably make a killing selling courses, books, seminars, one on one etc.. on "teaching" what she claims she did
I enjoyed this interview and I appreciate how she has been able to create wealth for herself and her team. What I don't really appreciate is the mentality of zero work life balance. Is the idea that we completely work ourselves to the bone and then just burn out? It's a very American view of the world. Yes there are those few obsessed people. Yes. But sorry I want my days off and my holidays. I often reflect back to Ramit Sethi and the concept of having a 'rich life' that YOU define. You don't need to be a narcissistic workaholic to achieve it and it IS more accessible than what Codie is trying to sell. The kind of monetary success she is talking about is NOT for everybody. It is for the few and far between. Mental and physical wellbeing have to take priority, especially as you get older if you want to live a long and fulfilling lift.