POPULARITY
Spiritual business coach Calvin Correli shares how integrating spirituality with entrepreneurship transforms not only business results but inner growth. Through personal stories, he illuminates how facing fears and shifting beliefs unlocks creativity, abundance, and authentic leadership for coaches.Calvin Correli is a spiritual business coach and the founder and CEO of Simplero.In this episode, Melinda and Calvin talk about:The integration of spirituality and entrepreneurship in coachingHow personal beliefs, subconscious conditioning, and early life experiences impact business resultsThe idea that business problems are often spiritual or personal growth challenges in disguiseAwareness and self-reflection in identifying and transforming limiting beliefsThe shift from a victim mindset to a creator mindset for coaches and entrepreneursEmbodying feelings and states of being to achieve desired outcomesSimple spiritual practices, like relaxation, breathwork, and openness, for coaches and clientsBalancing practical business goals with spiritual growth and non-attachment to resultsHow coaches can model growth for clients and attract ideal clients by showing up authenticallyOvercoming fear of judgment and embracing heart-led, service-oriented practices in building a coaching business“If you dig deep enough into reality, you will find spirituality. If you dig deep enough into spirituality, you will find reality.” — Calvin CorreliGuest Bio:Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero, as well as a speaker, author, investor, and spiritual business coach. A coder since he was 5, Calvin thinks in systems and constantly looks to simplify everything he touches.Resources or websites mentioned in this episode:MiraseeCoaches ConsoleMelinda's books: The Confident Coach and The Professional CoachCalvin's website: CalvinCorreli.comCalvin's book, Show Up and Serve: Simplero.com/bookSimplero's website: Simplero.comCredits:Host: Melinda CohanProducer and Editor: Michi LantzExecutive Producer: Danny InyMusic Soundscape: Chad Michael SnavelyMaking our hosts sound great: Home Brew AudioTo catch the great episodes that are coming up on Just Between Coaches, please follow us on Mirasee FM's YouTube channelor your favorite podcast player. And if you enjoyed the show, please leave us a comment or a starred review. It's the best way to help us get these ideas to more people.Music credits:Track Title: CloudsArtist Name: AcreageWriter Name: Marshall UsingerPublisher Name: BOSS SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONSTrack Title: Coastline DreamArtist Name: Wild SkyWriter Name: Adam SimonsPublisher Name: BOSS SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONSTrack Title: Coo CoosArtist Name: Dresden, The FlamingoWriter Name: Matthew WigtonPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONTrack Title: Stars & TreesArtist Name: Outside The SkyWriter Name: Dustin RansomPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONSpecial effects credits:24990513_birds-chirping_by_promission used with permission of the author and under license by AudioJungle/Envato Market.Episode transcript: Your Soul Built Your Business to Wake You Up (Calvin Correli).
In this episode of the Inner Edison Podcast, host Ed Parcaut welcomes Calvin Correli, a seasoned entrepreneur with a fascinating journey that started when he sold his first piece of software at just 12 years old. Calvin shares insights into his upbringing in Denmark, his early introduction to the world of software, and how his entrepreneurial spirit was nurtured from a young age. As the conversation unfolds, Calvin discusses key transformational moments in his life, such as his personal development phase and spiritual awakening, which led to the integration of spirituality with entrepreneurship—a unique path he has been paving for over 16 years. The discussion delves deep into Calvin's creation of Simplero, an all-in-one software solution designed to streamline operations for coaches and entrepreneurs by integrating billing, email marketing, website building, and more into a single platform. Calvin's story is a testament to the power of combining personal growth with professional endeavors, and how successfully navigating these areas can lead to innovative creations and impactful personal achievements. Ed and Calvin also explore broader themes such as the evolution of technology, overcoming personal challenges, and the importance of mindset in achieving entrepreneurial success. Calvin's journey emphasizes how every experience, whether a triumph or a trial, contributes significantly to personal and business development. This episode is particularly insightful for those interested in entrepreneurship, technology evolution, and the fusion of personal and professional growth. **Contact Ed Parcaut:** -
Combining a deep-seated spiritual journey with entrepreneurial drive, Calvin Correli reflects on his unique path. From early coding to founding Simplero, Calvin explores how inner growth fuels business success, emphasizing the harmony between spirituality and entrepreneurship.Making It! explores the lives and stories of entrepreneurs as they share their unique perspectives on their success and the path to making it.“So it's not just businesses over here, and my spirituality is over there, but what does it look like if you put the spirituality to the core of the business?”— Calvin CorreliGuest Bio:Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero, as well as a speaker, author, investor, and spiritual business coach. A coder since he was 5, Calvin thinks in systems and constantly looks to simplify everything he touches.Resources or websites mentioned in this episode:MiraseeSimplero Website: Simplero.comCalvin Correli's website: CalvinCorreli.comCredits:Producer and Editing: Michi LantzAudio Editor: Marvin del RosarioExecutive Producer: Danny InyMusic Soundscape: Chad Michael SnavelyMaking our hosts sound great: Home Brew AudioMusic credits:Track Title: The Sunniest KidsArtist Name: Rhythm ScottWriter Name: Scott RoushPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONTrack Title: Love and CircumstanceArtist Name: ShimmerWriter Name: Matthew WigtonPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONTrack Title: You and MeArtist Name: LNDÖWriter Name: Landon BaileyPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONSpecial effects credits:24990513_birds-chirping_by_promission used with permission of the author and under license by AudioJungle/Envato Market.To catch the great episodes coming up on Making It, please follow us on Mirasee FM's YouTube channelor your favorite podcast player. And if you enjoyed the show, please leave us a comment or a starred review. It's the best way to help us get these ideas to more people.Episode transcript: Blending Code and Spirituality (Calvin Correli).
Key Highlights from the EpisodeThe Intersection of Personal Growth and Business: Calvin shares his perspective on how personal development and spirituality are intertwined with entrepreneurial success. He emphasizes the importance of understanding oneself and aligning personal values with business goals.The Birth and Growth of Simplero: Learn about the inspiration behind Simplero and how Calvin's vision has evolved over the years. He discusses the challenges and triumphs he faced while building a platform that not only serves technical needs but also fosters a community of like-minded individuals.Navigating Challenges with a Spiritual Mindset: Calvin provides valuable insights into how he navigates business challenges by staying true to his spiritual practices. He talks about the role of meditation, mindfulness, and self-awareness in maintaining a balanced and resilient mindset.Advice for Aspiring Entrepreneurs: For those looking to embark on their entrepreneurial journey, Calvin offers practical advice on finding one's purpose, staying authentic, and creating a business that reflects personal values. He stresses the significance of continuous learning and adaptation.Future Vision and Projects: Get a glimpse into Calvin's future projects and his vision for the continued integration of technology and spirituality. He discusses upcoming initiatives and how he plans to further support entrepreneurs in their personal and professional growth. EndoDNA: The breakthrough DNA test that matches you with the right cannabinoid products for your wellness journey.Endo·dna gives you two guaranteed ways to uncover your unique endocompatibility today.Click here to check out which product is right for you. Connect with EndoDNA on SOCIAL: IG | X | YOUTUBE | FBConnect with host, Len May, on IG
Does the legal jargon make your head spin as a health coach? Do you wish running your business was as easy as sipping a green smoothie? Lisa Fraley, an attorney and legal coach, shares some great insights on the legal landscape of the health and wellness industry. She provides valuable advice on avoiding common legal pitfalls and setting up compliant health coaching practices. She demystifies the complex legal issues to help you understand the legalities that come with the health coaching business so you can focus on helping clients without legal worries. Whether you are a health coach, a doctor or any other licensed medical professional, this episode has some great insights for you! In this episode, they talk about: How can a burned-out psychologist hire health coaches to work while complying with HIPAA How can doctors hire health coaches to work with their patients Differences between functional medicine and functional wellness coaching Can health coaches work with labs HIPAA compliance requirements for health coaches working with medical practices Changes in telemedicine laws, especially post-pandemic Risks of using medical titles (e.g., Dr.) in health coaching practices Difference between licensed medical professionals and health coaches Can licensed medical professionals sell their books on a health coaching website Rules for health coaches practicing online in green and red states How to get a free 20-minute legal chat with Lisa's team Memorable Quotes “It's frustrating when we want to be holistic and help people holistically and reach people farther and wider. But the law just isn't still quite there yet.” “Doctors are doctors, and health coaches are health coaches. If a doctor wants to become a health coach, they need to go get trained as a health coach and become a health coach. Or they can educate people from their medical background, but they can't cross the two. They have to be separate because one is licensed and one is not.” BIO: Lisa Fraley, JD is an Attorney, Legal Coach®, and Holistic Lawyer®. She takes a holistic approach to law and business by blending her expertise as a former health care attorney in a large corporate law firm with the care and support as a Health & Life Coach. Her goal is to make law easy to understand, accessible and affordable, with lots of “Legal Love™”. With a Certificate in Sustainable Business Strategy from Harvard Business School Online, she's the author of Easy Legal Steps…That Are Also Good for Your Soul, a #1 Amazon best seller in both Corporate Law and Ethics, and the host of the “Legally Enlightened Podcast” on iTunes which offers bite-sized, digestible legal tips in 20-minutes or less. Lisa has spoken on international stages from the Bellagio to British Columbia, including for Jonathan Fields, National Association of Nutrition Professionals, Functional Diagnostic Nutrition, Maryland University of Integrative Health, World Conference on Food Science & Technology in Rome, Italy (upcoming), JJ Virgin's Mindshare Leadership Summit (upcoming), and Maine Women's Network. For her expertise, she has been a legal expert on over 300 podcasts and interviews, including mindbodygreen.com, “Entrepreneur on Fire” hosted by Jon Lee Dumas, Health Coach Institute, Integrative Women's Health Institute, Chris Kresser, Dr. Tom O'Bryan, Functional Diagnostic Nutrition, Functional Nutrition Coaching Academy, True Detox, Institute of Nutrition & Fitness Sciences, Dr. Stephen Cabral, Russ Ruffino, Primal Health Coach Podcast, Practice Better, The Health Coach Group, The Limitless MD Podcast, Doctors Unbound Podcast, Wellpreneur Podcast, That Clean Life, The Wellness Business Podcast, National Association of Counselors in Private Practice, Dietitians in Business & Communications, The Flourishing Center, Dieticians in Private Practice, Entrepreneur Now Podcast, In Her Voice Podcast, Simplero, Shining Mentor Magazine, Australia's YMag, and “Good Day Maine” (WGME-13 Portland). Mentioned In This Episode: Easy Legal Steps...That Are Also Good For Your Soul book: lisafraley.com/book Lisa Fraley Website: https://lisafraley.com/ https://lisafraley.com/services/ Links to resources: Health Coach Group Website https://www.thehealthcoachgroup.com/ Use the code HCC50 to save $50 on our website Leave a Review of the Podcast
"Intimacy is what we offer to our customers. We make them feel seen, heard, and felt."--
In this episode of the Road to Growth podcast, we are pleased to introduce you to Calvin Correli. Calvin is the founder and CEO of Simplero, as well as a speaker, author, investor, and spiritual business coach. A coder since he was 5, Calvin thinks in systems and constantly looks to simplify everything he touches. Learn more and connect with Calvin Correli by visiting him on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@CalvinCorreliOfficial Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecalvincorreli Website: https://simplero.com Website: https://calvincorreli.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/calvincorreli LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@calvincorreli Be sure to follow us on Twitter: Twitter.com/to_growth on Facebook: facebook.com/Road2Growth Subscribe to our podcast across the web: https://www.theenriquezgroup.com/blog Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2Cdmacc iTunes: https://apple.co/2F4zAcn Castbox: http://bit.ly/2F4NfQq Google Play: http://bit.ly/2TxUYQ2 Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKnzMRkl-PurAb32mCLCMeA?view_as=subscriber If you are looking to be a Guest on Podcasts please click below https://kitcaster.com/rtg/ For any San Diego Real Estate Questions Please Follow Us at web: www.TheEnriquezGroup.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKnzMRkl-PurAb32mCLCMeA or Call : 858 -345 - 7829 Recently reduced properties in San Diego County * Click **** bit.ly/3cbT65C **** Here* ************************************************************ Sponsor = www.MelodyClouds.com
Ever wondered how a Danish environmental innovator turned tech entrepreneur weaves spirituality into his business model? Calvin Correli takes us on a journey that blurs the lines between professional aspirations and personal evolution. He discusses how early dreams of advising world leaders and a childhood intuition for spirituality took a backseat as he embarked on an American technology career, only to re-emerge and profoundly influence his work and life philosophy. Correli's brainchild, Simplero, stands as a testament to his vision, offering a seamless tech solution for the spiritually inclined and the practically overwhelmed, and his written works fuse personal growth with entrepreneurial prowess. This episode peels back the layers of authenticity in the corporate landscape, with Correli arguing for a work-life blend where one's entire self is not just welcomed but necessary for success. We tackle ideas such as branding being the soul of a company, with anecdotes on Microsoft's branding journey and Zappos' corporate culture coup. Then there's the challenge of ignoring instincts and the paralyzing effect of shame on our work personas. Correli shares how his approach to streamlining business operations—rooted in shedding fears and embracing vulnerability—has spurred Simplero's growth and resonated with its user base. In our inspiring conversation, we reveal how Simplero's nurturing culture fosters personal and professional development among its team, highlighting the importance of coaching and emotional growth in the tech world. Correli underscores the counterproductivity of comparing our journeys to others and focuses instead on cultivating our unique paths for a more significant impact. The discussion also ventures into Simplero's strategic position in the market, its bespoke offerings for coaches and educators, and how Calvin's unwavering belief in oneself is the secret sauce to everlasting growth—both for individuals and for ventures like his. Join us for an episode that's a riveting mix of entrepreneurial spirit and soulful insights with Calvin Correli. We're happy you're here! Like the pod? Visit our website! Check out our sponsor PitchDB! Start your trial on Simplified!
Dive into the latest episode of Creative Chats where we welcomed the incredible Calvin Correli, CEO of Simplero, for an enriching conversation that's as much about personal development as it is about business growth. Listen as Calvin delves into his unique journey, overcoming personal challenges, and integrating spirituality into successful business practices.
Jag försöker hålla mig till att använda ett fåtal program i mitt företag. Att byta program och hoppa mellan olika datorprogram tar mycket tid och kostar dessutom en hel del pengar med alla licenser osv. Jag håller tex både mina digitala möten och mina webinar via Zoom. Jag har mina utbildningar och kurser via Simplero där jag också har min hemsida, landningssidor och maillistor. Jag sänder live via Ecamm. (Här fuskar jag lite ibland med StreamYard och OBS om jag ska vara ärlig men oftast använder jag Ecamm) Och med hjälp av de här programmen gör jag alltså också mina webinar. Vill du ladda ner hela min utrustningslista. Hela listan över vad jag använder när jag sänder live i sociala medier och håller webinar så hittar du den här: www.pixelhouse.se/live Har du inte kameran på under dina digitala möten så förlorar du en hel del mandat! du har mycket lättare att få igenom dina förslag och synpunkter om du har kameran på. Känner du dig obekväm så kan du få hjälp i webbkursen Bli Bekväm Framför Kameran LÄNKAR SOM NÄMNS I PROGRAMMET Lista över utrustning för Live & Webinar Webbkursen: Bli Bekväm Framför Kameran ÖVRIGA LÄNKAR : Facebookgruppen: Pixelpodden - en podd om video Instagram: @Stockholm Pixelhouse Threads: @Stockholm Pixelhouse LinkedIn: @heleneaberg TikTok: @heleneaberg Facebook: @Stockholm Pixelhouse Youtube: Helene Åberg - Stockholm Pixelhouse Hemsida: www.pixelhouse.se PÅVERKA INNEHÅLLET I PIXELPODDEN Vill du vara med och påverka vad jag tar upp i podden och diskutera video i sociala medier så är du varmt välkommen att gå med i Facebookgruppen Pixelpodden - en podd om video. Här kan du också ställa frågor inför kommande avsnitt i podden där jag kommer svara på dina och andras frågor. TYCK TILL & PRENUMERERA Å ingen blir förstås gladare än jag om du vill skriva en recension om podden på iTunes. Ju fler stjärnor, desto gladare blir förstås jag :-) Å extra glad blir jag ju förstås om du vill prenumerera på Pixelpodden så att du inte missar något avsnitt! /Helene
In this episode of the Thoughtful Entrepreneur, your host Josh Elledge speaks to the CEO of Simplero, Calvin Correli.Simplero is a platform designed to streamline the use of multiple tools needed to operate a business. Calvin discussed how coaches, course creators, and members of the info business community often manage up to nine different platforms for their website, email marketing, shopping cart, funnels, and more. Simplero consolidates these services into a single, user-friendly platform, enabling users to focus on client engagement and impact.Calvin emphasized that while other platforms might specialize in marketing or content and community separately, Simplero excels in both, offering marketing flexibility and strong content and community management in a simple interface.He is dedicated to helping entrepreneurs achieve self-awareness and purpose. He notes that business challenges often mirror personal issues. By confronting these personal challenges, entrepreneurs can grow and realize their potential.Key Points from the Episode:How to achieve consistent and predictable sales activity without spam and adsOverview of Simplero and its services for coaches, course creators, and info business ownersDifferentiation of Simplero from other all-in-one platformsSimplero's suitability for higher ticket engagement and clientsCalvin Correli's vision for personal impact in the business owner communityResources available on Calvin Correli's personal website and InstagramGetting started process for investigating SimpleroCalvin Correli's book "Show Up and Serve" and its messageAbout Calvin Correli:Calvin Correli is the innovative mind behind Simplero, a comprehensive platform designed specifically for coaches to transform lives on a large scale effectively. As the founder and CEO, his unique journey began at the age of 5, when he first delved into coding, which laid the foundation for his future endeavors. Correli's ability to think in systems and his pursuit to simplify complex processes have been central to his success, enabling him to create a tool that integrates multiple aspects of online coaching business management into one seamless service.Beyond his entrepreneurial achievements, Correli is recognized for his contributions as a speaker, author, investor, and spiritual business coach, focusing on personal and spiritual growth. His expertise in these areas has positioned him as a future special advisor to the President of the United States on conscious nation-building. This role underscores his vision of leveraging technology and spirituality to create impactful societal changes, embodying his commitment to technological innovation and personal development.About Simplero:Simplero addresses a common pain point for small business owners: the struggle of juggling multiple pieces of software to run an online business. This often leads to unnecessary complexity, high costs, and significant time investment, which are particularly challenging for small enterprises. By consolidating marketing, sales, and business management tools into a single, integrated platform, Simplero aims to eliminate these issues, allowing business owners to focus on growth rather than managing technology.With Simplero, entrepreneurs can effortlessly create and manage their websites, email lists, and online products, including courses and memberships. Its all-in-one solution facilitates the automation of business processes, from marketing to sales and customer management. This simplifies the technological demands of running an online business and provides a more streamlined and efficient approach to business management. By offering a...
Don't Miss This New and Powerful Episode!In this latest episode of the Spartan Leadership Podcast, I have with me Calvin Correli. Caving is a speaker, author, investor, founder of Simplero, and spiritual business coach. At age five, he started coding and quickly realized computers were his safe haven from the harsh world around him. For many years, Calvin labeled himself a weirdo and struggled with socializing until a series of eye-openers changed his entire perspective.Calvin opens up about his rocky relationship with his father, the profound moment that finally bridged their divide, and how spiritual entrepreneurship became his true calling. You'll discover why every business problem is actually a personal one, and every personal problem ultimately stems from spiritual issues. Calvin also shares the importance of leaders being "clean instruments", and so much more! You're best equipped to help your previous self! Don't miss these insights that could revolutionize your entrepreneurial journey and self-perception.Tune in NOW!Here are the timestamps…00:00 Intro02:38 Started Coding at Age Five04:43 Socializing with Humans Isn't Scary07:52 Calvin's Relationship with His Father15:53 Spiritual Entrepreneurship21:09 Leaders as Clean Instruments23:44 Focus on Things That Energize You29:30 Mistakes Entrepreneurs Make31:32 Advice to People Who Feel Different39:23 Outcome-United Country49:12 You're Best Equipped to Help Your Previous Self52:00 Autobiography of a YogiCONNECT WITH CALVIN CORRELI HERE:Instagram https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli/?hl=enLinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin/Simplero: https://simplero.com/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@calvincorreliWebsite: https://calvincorreli.com/X: https://twitter.com/calvincorreli?lang=enCONNECT WITH ME HERE:FacebookInstagramLinkedInTwitterTikTokYouTube SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST HERE:Apple PodcastsSpotifyYouTube
Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero, as well as a speaker, author, investor, and spiritual business coach. A coder since he was 5, Calvin thinks in systems and constantly looks to simplify everything he touches Lon talks about the importance of finding your niche, getting close with the buyer, sales for a big brand, and much more! Calvin talks about his introduction to online courses, health, filtering out the noise, spiritual and personal growth, and much more!
The entrepreneurial journey is both an internal and external game. As individuals, what we experience and the support and tools we seek is often the same things our customers seek and can often be the key to the work with do in the world. In today's episode, I sit down with Calvin Correli, the founder of Simplero, as he shares his journey of integrating spirituality and entrepreneurship. He discusses the challenges he faced in managing multiple software tools and how that led him to create Simplero, a platform that combines all the necessary features for entrepreneurs. Calvin emphasizes the importance of aligning with your purpose and getting support to build a successful business. He also explores the process of peeling away layers to let your true self shine, and how allowing yourself to do this is paramount in both your individual growth and the growth of your business. Calvin also shares how this has led him to coaching entrepreneurs and integrating solutions for them both on the software and coaching side. Mentioned in this episode Calvin Correli on Youtube Calvin Correli on Instagram Calvin Correli on Facebook Simplero Main Site Calvin Correli on the Web Calvin Correli on Twitter Calvin Correli on LinkedIn Offer Optimization Scorecard Leave a Podcast Review Subscribe Work/Connect with me: Offer Optimization Scorecard Book a Call Tune in to start taking your business and life to the next level today and don't forget to subscribe or follow the podcast to make sure you don't miss any future episodes. Visit https://jessicamillercoaching.com/ to learn more. You can also follow me on Instagram (@jessicadioguardimiller) and Facebook.
As we part ways, ponder over this: 2024 is not just a year; it's an opportunity for all of us to build remarkable businesses, bond over creativity, and support each other's dreams.
Simplero helps knowledge creators build a coaching, course, educational or consulting business they love by simplifying their tech with one simple. Does it feel like your business is duct-taped together with different software? The truth is most marketing software is expensive, complicated, and doesn't have everything you need. That costs you time and money that, as a small business owner, you really don't have. Connect with Calvin
Calvin Correli is a serial entrepreneur passionate about software and spirituality. So he founded Simplero, a fully integrated platform for coaches to transform lives at scale. In this episode, he talks about his unique journey as a child of an entrepreneurial family, and the lessons he learned along the way.
Calvin Correli is a serial entrepreneur, speaker, and the founder and CEO of Simplero, a CRM shopping cart marketing automation tool for coaches, consultants, and creators. The company does $4M/year with 35 employees and has served thousands of customers worldwide. Up until recently, Calvin wasn't really aiming for company growth. Instead, he put his energy into the two areas that are most important to him: building a great product and outstanding customer service. Today, you'll learn about the project management tools and tactics Calvin uses to improve operational visibility, his vision for scaling his company to $100M, and the specific elements behind creating a client experience that leads to a continuous flow of referrals. Key Takeaways with Calvin Correli How Calvin grew to $4M/year in revenue without a marketing plan Calvin's process for managing and tracking his team's progress to ensure projects get done. How to cultivate a culture where people actually give a damn. What criteria can founders put in place for finding the right employees? The idea of "abstractions" and how entrepreneurs can use them to drill down into what customers really want. The tie between spirituality and entrepreneurship. How an emphasis on interactive customer service can lead to innovations in product development. The difference between product managers and project managers — and why the nuances matter. How entrepreneurs can use rest to boost productivity. Balancing a desire to move forward on a creative project vs. waiting until you have a defined path. Leveraging referrals to create a customer base that compounds your success. The reason why most recurring billing products suck. Get the full show notes here: https://beyondamillion.com/113 Subscribe to the Podcast We hope you enjoy this episode and that you find some golden nuggets within this interview. Trust us, it's there! If you want episodes delivered straight to your inbox, consider subscribing to the show and we'll email you each time a new episode is released! Thanks for tuning it & keep being awesome. BAM!
Det finns många sätt att tjäna pengar online. Och det finns många bra sätt att tjäna pengar på att skapa video online. I det här avsnittet går jag igenom flera bra sätt att använda video för att tjäna mer pengar. Närmare bestämt 10 stycken. Men det finns förstås ännu fler. Om du bemästrar hantverket och berättartekniken för att skapa video och dessutom är bekväm framför kameran så finns det massor med pengar att tjäna.
The laws around what health professionals can and can't do can be complex. Strictly following regulations is important to avoid legal issues, but the rules are also constantly evolving, which can be a little exhausting. Today's guest, Lisa Fraley, takes a unique approach to navigating the legal landscape of health coaching. She calls her method legal love — blending her expertise in healthcare law with coaching care and support. In this episode, we talk about: Options for psychiatrists/psychologists who want to build their business online but are afraid to hire anyone due to HIPAA requirements The difference between functional medicine and functional wellness coaching If a doctor wants to start an online business, should it be separate from their clinical practice Can a doctor hire a health coach from another state Story of a doctor who was investigated by the medical board in Colorado for practicing medicine without a license Ways for doctors to hire health coaches to work with people while staying compliant Lab testing laws Tips for doctors to structure their online health coaching business Memorable Quotes “If a doctor wants to become a health coach, they need to get trained as a health coach and become a health coach.” “Lab testing laws are state-specific, just like nutrition laws.” “There are so many ways you can do both medicine and coaching; you just have to set it up properly.” BIO: Lisa Fraley, JD is an Attorney, Legal Coach®, and Holistic Lawyer®. She takes a holistic approach to law and business by blending her expertise as a former health care attorney in a large corporate law firm with the care and support as a Health & Life Coach. Her goal is to make law easy to understand, accessible and affordable, with lots of “Legal Love™”. With a Certificate in Sustainable Business Strategy from Harvard Business School Online, she's the author ofEasy Legal Steps…That Are Also Good for Your Soul, a #1 Amazon best seller in both Corporate Law and Ethics, and the host of the ”Legally Enlightened Podcast” on iTunes which offers bite-sized, digestible legal tips in 20-minutes or less. Lisa has spoken on international stages from the Bellagio to British Columbia including for Jonathan Fields, National Association of Nutrition Professionals, Functional Diagnostic Nutrition, Maryland University of Integrative Health, World Conference on Food Science & Technology in Rome, Italy (upcoming), JJ Virgin's Mindshare Leadership Summit (upcoming), and Maine Women's Network. For her expertise, she has been a legal expert on over 300 podcasts and interviews, including mindbodygreen.com, “Entrepreneur on Fire” hosted by Jon Lee Dumas, Health Coach Institute, Integrative Women's Health Institute, Chris Kresser, Dr. Tom O'Bryan, Functional Diagnostic Nutrition, Functional Nutrition Coaching Academy, True Detox, Institute of Nutrition & Fitness Sciences, Dr. Stephen Cabral, Russ Ruffino, Primal Health Coach Podcast, Practice Better, The Health Coach Group, The Limitless MD Podcast, Doctors Unbound Podcast, Wellpreneur Podcast, That Clean Life, The Wellness Business Podcast, National Association of Counselors in Private Practice, Dietitians in Business & Communications, The Flourishing Center, Dieticians in Private Practice, Entrepreneur Now Podcast, In Her Voice Podcast, Simplero, Shining Mentor Magazine, Australia's YMag, and “Good Day Maine” (WGME-13 Portland). Links: Lisa Fraley's Website: https://lisafraley.com/schedule-a-free-legal-chat/ Links to resources: Health Coach Group Website https://www.thehealthcoachgroup.com/ Use the code HCC50 to save $50 on our website Leave a Review of the Podcast
Tid växer inte på träd. Och att lära sig nya program och komma ihåg hur man gör i alla olika program kan ta massor med tid. Så om du inte gillar att lära dig massor med teknik, har tid i överflöd och vill lägga massa pengar på flera olika program så är en allt i ett-lösning en bra lösning. Jag har använd Simplero för mina webbutbildningar, medlemstjänst, min maillista, mina landningssidor, hemsida, blogg, säljsidor… ja hela onlineverksamheter sedan 2017. Och jag är supernöjd! Det sparar så mycket tid och pengar att ha allt på ett ställe! I det här avsnittet går jag igenom vad Simplero kan (och inte kan) så att du kan avgöra om det är en en plattform för dig. Jag är så nöjd med Simplero så att jag sedan något år tillbaka ett betalt samarbete med Simplero. Och via min länk www.pixelhouse.se/simplero kan du signa upp till ett gratiskonto för att se om Simplero är något för dig. LÄNKAR SOM NÄMNS I PROGRAMMET: Prova Simplero gratis: www.pixelhouse.se/simplero Webbutbildning Bli Bekväm Framför Kameran Webbutbildning Kommunicera med video i sociala medier Webbutbildning Lyckas med Live & Webinar Avsnitt 40 • Utbildningsvideo • När du vill utbilda med videolektioner ÖVRIGA LÄNKAR : Facebookgruppen: Pixelpodden - en podd om video Instagram: @Stockholm Pixelhouse LinkedIn: @heleneaberg TikTok: @heleneaberg Facebook: @Stockholm Pixelhouse Youtube: Helene Åberg - Stockholm Pixelhouse Hemsida: www.pixelhouse.se PÅVERKA INNEHÅLLET I PIXELPODDEN Vill du vara med och påverka vad jag tar upp i podden och diskutera video i sociala medier så är du varmt välkommen att gå med i Facebookgruppen Pixelpodden - en podd om video. Här kan du också ställa frågor inför kommande avsnitt i podden där jag kommer svara på dina och andras frågor. TYCK TILL & PRENUMERERA Å ingen blir förstås gladare än jag om du vill skriva en recension om podden på iTunes. Ju fler stjärnor, desto gladare blir förstås jag :-) Å extra glad blir jag ju förstås om du vill prenumerera på Pixelpodden så att du inte missar något avsnitt! /Helene
Simplero recently signed up a new member who has 2 MILLION email contacts, and our systems weren't really ready for that. Here's what happened next … --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/calvincorreli/message
I get asked a LOT by people:: How do I set up my membership in Simplero? How? How? How? I'll show you how. It's dead simple. Let's slay that dragon once and for all :) Never let “how” keep you stuck. “How” is always easy to come by. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/calvincorreli/message
This is the framework I wish someone had shared with me when I started in online marketing 15 years ago. Alas, no one did, so eventually I decided to do so myself. Here it is. I call it "Simplero OS". Btw, if you want to implement this in your business, Simplero is the perfect platform to do so. Check it out at simplero.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/calvincorreli/message
Welcome once again to The Million Dollar Relationships podcast! Today, we are discussing life beyond money with Calvin Correli. Calvin is a software engineer, spiritual teacher, and the Founder and CEO of Simplero, an all-in-one marketing software for coaches, course creators, and online marketers. As a self-proclaimed serial entrepreneur, Calvin is also the Founder of several other companies, including Body Meal and Notable Nation. His mission is simple: to help fellow online entrepreneurs and leaders realize their true identities and live a life of purpose and passion. In today's episode, Calvin shares with us his personal story about his first through fourth-grade teacher named Edit, who completely changed his life. Despite a difficult home life, Edit saw him for who he truly was and helped him feel seen and belonged in school. He highlights the power of being understood and the importance of emotions and relationships in business and life. We discuss leaving a legacy and the importance of positive influence with personal anecdotes from Gay Hendricks and Matt Fury. Calvin emphasizes taking control of one's happiness and success and discusses transformative relationships with his wife, a mentor, and a body therapist. Body SDS helped him connect with his emotional and spiritual side, leading to breakthroughs. Tune in to this episode to learn more about building strong relationships that can help you achieve your goals while making an impact in people's lives. [00:00 - 16:21] The Power of Being Seen · Calvin simplifies areas of life for entrepreneurs and high-performing individuals with his software products · Calvin's first through fourth-grade teacher, Edit, changed his life by seeing him and supporting him during a difficult time, which was powerful for him. · Calvin emphasizes the importance of making people feel seen and heard is emphasized · Through personal crisis, the speaker realized that relationships are what truly matter in life. [16:21 - 33:05] Making an Impact in the Here and Now · Making a big impact leads to more revenue and the ability to make an even bigger impact · Legacy beyond oneself is important to some, but the value is in impacting people's lives in the present · Nobody will remember us when we're gone, but our choices in the present impact the future · Gay Hendrix had a huge impact on personal growth and learning to love oneself for Calvin [33:05 - 34:39] Closing Statements · Follow Calvin on LinkedIn and Facebook. Also, be sure to check his webpage at https://www.calvincorreli.com Thanks for tuning in! If you liked my show, please LEAVE A 5-STAR REVIEW, like, and subscribe! Find me on the following streaming platforms: Apple Spotify Google Podcasts IHeart Radio Stitcher Tweetable Quotes “For me, the value is in this lifetime of knowing these are the people whose lives I impacted in some way. I don't care whether I made money from it or not.” – Calvin Corelli
Calvin Correli is driven by his 'divine dissatisfaction' and on a journey to better himself. He is challenged to rise above his feelings of unworthiness and navigate between conflicting cultures and mindsets to discover his own unique path to success. You will learn: 1. What is code switching, and how does it affect our mindset? 2. How can we use conscious thought to reprogram our unconscious mind? 3. What role does culture play in our subconscious programming and limitations? Calvin Correli is a serial entrepreneur, spiritual teacher, speaker, author, investor, and the founder and CEO of Simplero. He is dedicated to creating the greatest force for personal and spiritual growth the world has ever seen, empowering humanity to solve its biggest challenges. Resources: Try Simplero
Calvin is the founder and CEO of Simplero, spiritual teacher, speaker, author and investor. His is a story of identity; of discovering who he truly is, and becoming that person. It's been hard work, but it's also been deeply rewarding for him. He's gone from struggling with business, health, relationships, creativity, and purpose, to having all of those areas working in perfect synchrony. He's gone from being this Gordian knot of mental, emotional, and physical baggage to being pretty darn clear and fired up. He's gone from smoking a pack a day, drinking quite a lot, eating like crap, and never working out, to having six-pack abs, a body he's proud to see in the mirror, and having more energy and stamina than ever. He's gone from being bankrupt to having four businesses making millions of dollars, and a team of 35 people. His mission is to create the greatest force for personal and spiritual growth the world has ever seen so that collectively we can create the world we want to live in. By helping people transform lives at scale, Calvin is empowering humanity to solve our biggest challenges.
My analysis of Simplero vs Kajabi, Podia, and a few other popular all-in-one platforms: https://www.georgekao.com/simplero (www.georgekao.com/simplero) This was a segment from my mentorship program: www.georgekao.com/group Comment here: https://youtu.be/sU3fPkzSfi8 (https://youtu.be/sU3fPkzSfi8)
Calvin Correli is a serial entrepreneur and founder of Simplero. Calvin is on a mission to raise the maturity-level of people all over the world... "I was born dead. Strangled in my own umbilical cord. In other words, my life started with a near-death experience. That shaped me for life. It gave me a strong connection to the divine. It also caused a lot of pain. The "other side" can be so appealing compared to this.That's why I strive to bring the light and love of the "other side" into the physical world we humans must interact with, to make the experience just a little sweeter.I do that through information, coaching, products, and services."- Calvin Correli You've probably heard the phrase “cancel culture” and are familiar with the notion of being canceled. You accidentally say something inflammatory about someone who is from a socially protected (and I use air quotes) group and boom… you're cancelled. Or if you're Joe Rogan, you somehow get pinned as a mascot for anti-establishment rhetoric and people forget that you're just a curious pothead comedian.My conversation with Calvin focuses a lot on what it means to be a fully functional mature adult, as broken down into the following categories: mental, physical, spiritual, and emotional maturity. Calvin's assertion is that Americans by and large have been parented poorly, and now we are left with a generation of adults who are struggling to mature in the previous 4 categories. Most of our role models in US culture do not check all for of these boxes, and our politicians hardly check any. Calvin and I discuss: the current broken state of the United states' political system, his entrepreneurial journey, his aspirations to be a Speical advisor to the president of the united states on conscious nation building, how he uses BodyMEal and a proprietary Danish workout method dubbed Pafei to stay in shape, as well as how he has found that his life's calling is to meld spirituality with entrepreneurship. SIGN UP FOR OUR EMAIL LIST TO STAY UP TO DATE ON NEW GUESTS AND TOPICSWhere Can I Find Calvin?WebsiteFacebookInstagramTwitterYouTubeLinkedInStandard WMCIS Show Info:Theme Music by Chantil Dukart - (Day to Day)START YOUR OWN PODCAST AND GET A $20 AMAZON GIFT CARDhttps://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1903566Learn more about Nick Pauly Sign Up for Our E-NewsletterSupport the show
Trying to build a membership website is a sizable undertaking for anyone... But building one in under a day, that sounds unrealistic, right? After all, you've got to wrestle with technology, create content and focus on building your audience - quite often ahead of your launch - all while generating ahttps://www.membershipgeeks.com/6-ways-generate-interest-buzz-membership-launch/ ( buzz) to ensure you get that initial influx of members when you open the doors to your membership... There are a lot of plates to spin... Surely it's not possible to do that in under a day? Well, if you're able to bring some of those elements to the table from day one... So if you already have an established audience who are eager to buy from you... Or a wealth of content curated from past projects, maybe via courses you've previously released or workshops you've delivered... Then it's entirely possible to build a membership website a lot quicker than you may think - in under a day. And in this episode of The Membership Geeks podcast we share how. Essential Learning Points: This approach isn't right for everyone. You need to make sure your expectations about the end result are realistic. Keep things simple, especially when it comes to technology. Stick to the essentials, avoid the bells and whistles at this stage. Create your content in real-time and utilize live video. Make lots of noise when you launch. Important links and mentions: https://www.membershipgeeks.com/6-ways-generate-interest-buzz-membership-launch/ (6 Ways to Create Interest and Buzz for Your Membership Launch) https://www.membershipgeeks.com/i-dont-want-use-wordpress-course-membership-site/ (What If I Don't Want to Use WordPress for My Course or Membership Site?) https://www.membershipgeeks.com/live-video-luria-petrucci/ (How to Use Live Video to Market Your Membership with Luria Petrucci) https://www.themembershipguys.com/kajabi (Kajabi) https://www.podia.com/ (Podia) https://www.themembershipguys.com/simplero (Simplero) https://circle.so/ (Circle) Key Quotes: “What we're shooting for here is “good enough”. So you have to accept that it won't be everything you want it to be initially, however the best memberships are always evolving and are a constant work in progress, so the good news is that you can make improvements as time goes on.” “As long as people can register, pay and log in, and can then access protected content, you have a working membership site.” “Don't create any content upfront. Instead, create a calendar of upcoming live webinars that will be only available only to paying members.” “Whatever the reason for needing or wanting to build your membership website in just a day, it's important to recognise that this approach shouldn't become the norm as your membership grows.”
Calvin Correli grundade Simplero med värderingen Kärlek. Här berättar Calvin om hur våra värderingar sprids vidare genom våra produkter och tjänster.http://annaaberg.se/ https://www.extendedfreedomacademy.se/
Rachel Weaver is a customer success and marketing strategist for Simplero, an all-in-one platform for coaches and course creators. She left the agency world two years ago on a mission to help more like-minded entrepreneurs and small businesses that aligned with her values. Since then, she's opened her own consulting firm, created her own course, and fell into the arms of Simplero, where she works with dozens of clients to set their online business up for success from day 1 on the platform. In this episode, Rachel shares why she left the agency world and how tried different entrepreneurial ventures before finding that what worked for her. Working for Simplero while also running her marketing business, Resilient Marketing, has given her the chance to work she loves helping entrepreneurs grow their businesses. What we chat about: → Why passive income isn't so passive, but very lucrative → The future of online courses → Tips for selling your online course CONNECT WITH SHANA http://shanadewitt.com CONNECT WITH RACHEL http://resilientmarketing.io https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachelcweaver/
Chances are you've spent a ton of time researching, comparing and deciding on which platform you should use to host your online course &/or create your funnels.
1:03 - Tracy Hazzard introduction. Co-founder and CEO of Podetize. https://podetize.com and https://thebingefactor.com4:07 - Nothing is impossible. Being curious is attitude and a state of mind.4:58 - What does attitude mean to you. Tie action and mindset together.7:02 - Talk to us about young Tracy. What are the lessons the people can get from listening to you? A drive to do more from a young age. Always doing something. Helping people find their voice. Being innovative. 9:37 - What is your definition of innovation? There's a difference between invention and innovation. Innovation is the "why not". 10:52 - What are you most proud of? Costco chair. Covertly feminine design. Fast-fail model. Does the market have what we want to sell? 13:14 - 40 active patents. Shark Tank? 14:59 - What are the biggest mistakes that people make in the product world? Refusing to talk about it. Entrepreneurs think you can build it as you go. Need proof of concept. Word of mouth referrals is huge. Own your own authority. 19:10 - What are the two biggest mistakes that podcasters make? Seeding your authority. People don't title and utilize all their space inside the podcasts platforms. Feed the search bots. Bot list. Have a great leading paragraph. Titles are so important. 23:27 - What are the two best things that people do with their podcasts. When you stay true to your audience. Be genuine. People not taking additional coaching on or advice. Improve over time. 25:27 - Coached with Mike Weiss. Web site development. Differences between WIX and WordPress. HubSpot, Wix, Simplero, Kajabi, and SquareSpace are among the worst website platforms. WordPress is the best.28:10 - What other advice would you have for a startup business? Get that product market proof. Testing the product. Concentrating on building really good systems. 31:09 - What's your attitude when it comes to business. If I'm not excited and energize by something then it's not worth it. Learn how to say no. 33:57 - Supply chain issues. The supply isn't there. China is having another variant outbreak. Labor shortage. Backups at the ports. Cascading problems. Product shortage in Q4 of 2021. Get your orders in as consumers.36:54 - Knowledge through the decades. What is the attitude lesson at birth? Gratitude for being in the world. 37:56 - Attitude lesson at the age of 10? Being resilient. Resilience under fire.39:41 - Attitude lesson at the age of 20? Rhode Island School of Design. 40:41 - Attitude lesson at the age of 30? Learned how to be scrappier. Hardships taught me a lot. 42:33 - Attitude lesson at the age of 40? Creating a better environment for ourselves. Innovating. What would we love and what does that look like? Clarity. Experience. 43:42 - Attitude lesson at the age of 50? So much more I want to do. Fix the things I don't love but dig deeper into the things that I do love. 45:01 - Closing thoughts. Message of hope and encouragement. Innovation doesn't happen in a vacuum. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ SUBSCRIBE / RATE / REVIEW
1:03 - Tracy Hazzard introduction. Co-founder and CEO of Podetize. https://podetize.com and https://thebingefactor.com 4:07 - Nothing is impossible. Being curious is attitude and a state of mind. 4:58 - What does attitude mean to you. Tie action and mindset together. 7:02 - Talk to us about young Tracy. What are the lessons the people can get from listening to you? A drive to do more from a young age. Always doing something. Helping people find their voice. Being innovative. 9:37 - What is your definition of innovation? There's a difference between invention and innovation. Innovation is the "why not". 10:52 - What are you most proud of? Costco chair. Covertly feminine design. Fast-fail model. Does the market have what we want to sell? 13:14 - 40 active patents. Shark Tank? 14:59 - What are the biggest mistakes that people make in the product world? Refusing to talk about it. Entrepreneurs think you can build it as you go. Need proof of concept. Word of mouth referrals is huge. Own your own authority. 19:10 - What are the two biggest mistakes that podcasters make? Seeding your authority. People don't title and utilize all their space inside the podcasts platforms. Feed the search bots. Bot list. Have a great leading paragraph. Titles are so important. 23:27 - What are the two best things that people do with their podcasts. When you stay true to your audience. Be genuine. People not taking additional coaching on or advice. Improve over time. 25:27 - Coached with Mike Weiss. Web site development. Differences between WIX and WordPress. HubSpot, Wix, Simplero, Kajabi, and SquareSpace are among the worst website platforms. WordPress is the best. 28:10 - What other advice would you have for a startup business? Get that product market proof. Testing the product. Concentrating on building really good systems. 31:09 - What's your attitude when it comes to business. If I'm not excited and energize by something then it's not worth it. Learn how to say no. 33:57 - Supply chain issues. The supply isn't there. China is having another variant outbreak. Labor shortage. Backups at the ports. Cascading problems. Product shortage in Q4 of 2021. Get your orders in as consumers. 36:54 - Knowledge through the decades. What is the attitude lesson at birth? Gratitude for being in the world. 37:56 - Attitude lesson at the age of 10? Being resilient. Resilience under fire. 39:41 - Attitude lesson at the age of 20? Rhode Island School of Design. 40:41 - Attitude lesson at the age of 30? Learned how to be scrappier. Hardships taught me a lot. 42:33 - Attitude lesson at the age of 40? Creating a better environment for ourselves. Innovating. What would we love and what does that look like? Clarity. Experience. 43:42 - Attitude lesson at the age of 50? So much more I want to do. Fix the things I don't love but dig deeper into the things that I do love. 45:01 - Closing thoughts. Message of hope and encouragement. Innovation doesn't happen in a vacuum. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ SUBSCRIBE / RATE / REVIEW
Hi, I am here with Calin Correli, He is the Founder & CEO of Simplero.com - a fully integrated platform for coaches to transform lives at scale. Future special advisor to the President of the United States on conscious nation-building. He is an expert on personal and spiritual growth.CHECK THIS AMAZING WEBSITE BY CALVIN CORRELI TO LEARN MOREhttps://calvincorreli.com/JOIN NOW!! AND BE PART OF MASTERMIND PROGRAMlearn how to activate yourself for a better future!https://createanewtomorrow.com/master...CHECK THIS LINK FOR A FREE GIFT FOR YOU!https://www.createanewtomorrow.com/giftDO YOU WANT TO BE OUR NEXT SPECIAL GUEST?Book an appointment now and let's create a new world together!https://booking.builderall.com/calend...CHECK THIS OTHER WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION!https://www.CreateAnewtomorrow.comhttps://www.Achievehealthusa.comCreate a fundamental change in the global community from a strictly reactive system of medicine that focuses on symptom and emergency treatment to a proactive system based on whole-being health as well as illness and injury prevention. Personally teach and influence at least one million people.We are a multifaceted Health and Wellness company that specializes in Corporate Wellness and Culture Consulting, Industry Speaking engagements and Continuing education for the industry.We Help corporations by solving the most costly problems they have with Productivity and Health Care while creating a culture that thrives on accomplishment and community.We help organizations think outside of the box and gain tools that allow them to be nimble and strong as tides and markets shift.We Up level the skills and tools of other practitioners by providing them continuing education that actually leads to greater success and standing in the business community.+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Ari Gronich 0:07 Welcome back to another episode of create a new tomorrow I'm your host Ari Gronich and remember to LIKE SUBSCRIBE rate review comments below, do all of those things so we can start conversations that matter and create a new tomorrow today. Today with me I have Calvin Corelli. Calvin is a sass founder, serial entrepreneur and spiritual teacher, he founded a company called sin pleroma, which is an integrated software platform for coaches, authors, speakers, and other information marketers to run their entire business in one place. So that's pretty cool. But he calls that more Alas, instead of a SAS, which is love as a service versus software as a surface. So, you know, your your mission is amazing. And I'm gonna let you tell a little bit more about who you are why you created this platform, but more than anything, what what it is that you think the world needs to do, and us, you know, in it can do to make the world a little bit better place. So we'll get started with with just kind of your your quick bio, tell us a little bit about how you became who you are.Calvin Correli 1:29 Absolutely, yeah, thank you so much. I super appreciate you having me on here. Looking forward to the conversation with you today. I started simpler. So I was born and raised in Denmark and and, you know, was building always sort of an entrepreneur, both my parents were entrepreneurs, I got into computers and programming super early when I was like five or six years old, and got off to a good start on my career, always working pretty much always working for myself, I had one job for a company in Boston, just around the year 2000. But that was it. But then really got into struggling as an underdog were really kind of struggling all around as a human being to be honest, I felt like I had failed as a as a father as a husband, as a son to my parents as an entrepreneur, on all levels. And so it really got me down this path of soul searching of discovering questioning beliefs, learning to feel I was I grew up like I don't you can recognize this from yourself or clients, right? Like just not able to feel a thing. It was like I was living from my neck up. And all of his feeling stuff was like, a mystery. And it was just every once in a while it explode. So I went through that process of therapy and coaching and body therapy and working with a spiritual teacher. And that was what led to a moment where I was like, you know, finally asking myself the question, What am I here to do? What is it I really want to do versus just trying to be successful? Just trying to make money just trying to make ends meet? Right? So yeah.Unknown Speaker 3:13 So.Ari Gronich 3:15 So then, you know, my contrarian point of view in life is, so if business is at the heart of the possibility of solving the world's problems, why do you think we've allowed companies, as conglomerations of people to do things that are the antithesis of solving the world's problems? More on the side of creating issues where there maybe previously weren't any issues? Right? Yeah.Calvin Correli 3:49 So I mean, it's a good question, right? Like, I think the short answer is because we're humans, right? Because I mean, it's not isolated to to companies, obviously governments do you know, their fair share problems. I think, anytime humans come together, we we create a mess because we are a mess, which is why for me the goal really is to raise the conscious level I talk about physical, mental, emotional, spiritual maturity, those four right? Physical we got to be healthy body and mind are not separate, right? If your body is a mess, your mind is a mess. Mental learning to question your beliefs, just you know, realizing that you are not your thoughts, you are not your ideas about yourself, right. emotional maturity, learning to not suppress feelings, not vomit them out and identify with your feelings, but just feel them and let them flow through you. And spiritual in the sense of having a sense of a bigger purpose in life, some sort of meaning without it or lost, right. And they all tie together. And and so once that happens And we grow up as people, I think I bet you would agree the most, quote unquote adults in the world right now are really kind of children emotionally, physically, mentally, spiritually, right? It just happened to be in a in a in an adult body. So there is really is like a big massive maturity that needs to happen in the world. If we want to solve these problems, and once that happens, solving the problems becomes fairly easy. And then business and government can become a vehicle for solving those challenges. But when it's done unconsciously, yeah, it's gonna have the opposite effect.Ari Gronich 5:36 Yeah, it's interesting, some of the statistics that I've that I've heard, and and research is that people are approximately the age of their first major trauma.Calvin Correli 5:49 And don't make sense yeah,Ari Gronich 5:51 or that first major trauma happened, they kind of you kind of get locked in, yep, the maturity level of that age. And then anytime something triggers that the same feeling that happened with that trauma, you revert back to that age of a person and that reaction and those kinds of things. So it's kind of an interesting way of looking at it and perspective. And, you know, in my world, as a, as a therapist, and healer, and so on, the only way to solve that problem is to go after the issues that are in the tissues, so to speak. Or, you know, you have a some somatic trauma, which basically means a trauma to your physical self. And the only way to heal that trauma is to go directly to where that trauma occurred. And so an emotional trauma almost always happens in the body, as well. So when you look at like Chinese medicine, anger lives in liver wery, lives in the kidneys, the sweetness of life, in your pancreas, the lungs are joy, you know, feeling joy, your stomach is contentment. And so these emotions, you can imagine anytime somebody says, right, you know, I'm feeling this this, you know, little queasiness in my gut? Well, that's an emotion that's creating a physical response. Right?Unknown Speaker 7:33 Yeah.Ari Gronich 7:34 Tell us how you've come along this, this journey of finding out that, you know, you are having some of these kinds of issues. And what did you do? Like, I mean, the actual steps that you took to start the process of healing, and let's go with the beginning of that process, because, you know, I know a lot of people, it's the beginning that they struggle with the most. Yeah,Calvin Correli 8:03 so let me just on what you were saying with the issue in the tissue and the ages for so I was fortunate because I'm from Denmark, I discovered there's a there's a therapy form there called body SDS, which is body therapy is a system that's developed in Denmark by this incredible genius has passed now, but they're like third and fourth generation are now actively, you know, working on it, my friend, I've become friend with the founder of the education there. He's 5657 karate champion has educated 600 therapists over there. So it's one of my projects is actually to bring that to the US. Because I have tried a ton of different things. And this is just so powerful, I really getting to those core wounds in the body, because a lot of this stuff is you can't really get through it with words, because it's pre cognition. And so the body is such a powerful tool. So I'm so with you on that.Ari Gronich 9:03 Interesting. So let's talk about the menu. So the menu, they found, as if it's more than two pages, it causes people to go into choice overwhelm.Calvin Correli 9:22 If we talk about like food menus at a restaurant, what kind ofAri Gronich 9:25 restaurant they found, the science this study, the research has found that if there's more than two pages on a restaurant menu, then people go into choice, overwhelm, and they are less satisfied with their choice than if they have a one page or a two page menu, and only have certain things that they can get. They choose what they want. And they're happy with their choice because the limit, so you talks about going onto Google, Google is to me A couple billion page menu. And you know, you got Dr. Google you got, you know, that a lot of people are using for their, their, their medical questions. But the idea behind this is that, do we have too many choices, and not enough truth to where people can't make a decision, they get overwhelmed with information and all of a sudden, they can't make a choice, they can't make a decision, they can't make an action because of this overwhelm. And, and now they're not satisfied because of too much choice.Calvin Correli 10:38 Well, yes. And I mean, that's not gonna go away, right? That's never gonna change. So we That's just a fact that we have to adapt. Like, the the being unhappy with your choice is just back to what we were talking about a while ago with, like, you know, believing your thoughts, right, so. So just ignore that voice. It's one of the things that we're not, it seems we're not teaching people is like fundamental thinking skills. But I'm not even gonna say critical thinking skills, just any kind of thinking, honestly, is in short supply. Right? So so just learning to be like, Okay, what is the problem? What is the outcome that I want? Even? I mean, honestly, even that is one of the things that fascinates me about politics, is we're constantly debating this intervention or policy versus that. And nobody's saying, Well, hey, why don't we stop it stop for a second? What does success look like? What do we actually want to achieve here? And like, Can we get agreement on that first? And then Alright, what parameters? Are there for a solution for an for a strategy where like, what values do we have? Can we get agreement that and then we can start brainstorm solutions, right? But if you haven't figured out what you want first, then nothing else makes sense. Right now, though, everything else just becomes a waste of time. And we people don't get these basic things about how to solve problems. I see it too in business, so many people who are focused on tasks, what are the things I need to do? And I'm like, well, but like, it's not working. We're like, this is what this is the goal. This is the outcome, like, what else can we try? Right? Because that didn't work. And so there's some fundamental thinking skills that people are missing. SoAri Gronich 12:20 yeah, this is one of the biggest issues that I have system wide in almost every system that we've created in the last 20 plus years. Maybe 30, maybe 40 depends on the system is we're all about procedures versus results. So we do digital marketing right now, because that's my biggest challenge. I'm not a digital marketer, put a body in front of me, I could turn it into Olympic champion, not a problem. Easy peasy. Put a computer in front of me and tell me to digitally market with web hooks and funnels and triggers and minutiae. And I go back. And so as I go to hire people, my biggest frustration is they're trying to charge me for tasks like, well, if I put 15 posts on your Instagram, that's going to be this amount of money. If I post, if I if I add, Instagram and Twitter, that's that amount of money, even though it's the same post and I created it, and I just took twice, but I'm gonna charge more. And then if I do this, it's that amount of money. Like, okay, so what are the results that are going to come? Well, I can't guarantee results. And I go, Okay, and then I look at medicine and I see the same thing. It's, we need to do an MRI or an MRI for for a knee injury, right? So you tear meniscus or muscle ligament, you need to do an MRI. But if you go to a doctor, first thing that you got to do is an X ray. Why? Because you got to do an X ray before you do an MRI. Why? X ray is not going to show me what an MRI is gonna show me. So why do I need to do the X ray first? It's another procedure. It's another task. It's another thing that makes absolutely no difference in outcome. Zero, zilch. NadaCalvin Correli 14:21 for you. But for them. It makes pocket book rightAri Gronich 14:25 make pocket book. But what that does is it creates a scenario in which we create incentivized fraud only, right? we incentivize fraud by doing those kinds of things. We do it in companies, we do it in business, we do it and all kinds of the aspects of our life these days, because we're doing task as you said, versus results. And so let's talk about that a little bit because I just had my now my nice little rant but what do you think the cost is of Task versus result oriented thinkingCalvin Correli 15:03 oh boy, I mean it's it's massive right it's everywhere and it's it's the it's the lack of transparency in in choosing right because if you could choose between doctors that did it one way versus the other like duh right but there's no transparency there oftentimes there's there's like de facto monopolies so and then it's the population just being aware of it and and and choosing based on that we have this tendency to just give her authority away to whomever right i think it was Warner Earhart, founder of s back in the day he had the saying that people walk around with their umbilical cord in hand just looking for someone to plug it in somewhere somewhere to plug it into, which I think is a great way to say it. I think it's really true like people are constantly looking to outsource their authority to someone right or something. So yeah. But it's it's it's everywhere. It's like one of my pet peeves is the the whole cookie thing like EU and GDPR all these privacy laws and like these specialties like cookie banners that pop up everywhere, it's like they're designed for people who visit like one or two websites per week, or maybe per day, right? But when you visit like 50 to 100 websites in a day you end up like clicking that damn thing over and over again. And we condition people just click the the Yeah, whatever, go away, right? Like we we don't read them, we can't. And so that's another like, someone is making a law. That's like making us more private see secure or whatever, on paper, but in practice, it does nothing. It does the exact opposite, at great cost to every company business needs to implement this every user of the internet that needs to click these stupid ass things, right? It's it's just, there's no accountability. We're not holding other people, businesses, politicians, bureaucrats accountable for actual results. And there's that yeah, it's like a lack of culture of thinking that way. The cost is a mess.Ari Gronich 17:10 Thank you so much, Calvin for coming on. I know the audience has gotten a lot of benefit from this conversation and the things that you had to say. And so I really am grateful for this conversation for you helping people create their new tomorrow today and activate their vision for a better world. I am your host, Ari Gronich. And this is awesome conversations with Ari. No, it's not. It's it's just creating a new tomorrow. But remember to LIKE subscribe, rate review, comment below so we can start conversations that move the country forward, moving ourselves forward, and create your new tomorrow today. Thank you so much, and I'll see you next time.
Hi, I am here with Calin Correli, He is the Founder & CEO of Simplero.com - a fully integrated platform for coaches to transform lives at scale. Future special advisor to the President of the United States on conscious nation-building. He is an expert on personal and spiritual growth.CHECK THIS AMAZING WEBSITE BY CALVIN CORRELI TO LEARN MOREhttps://calvincorreli.com/JOIN NOW!! AND BE PART OF MASTERMIND PROGRAMlearn how to activate yourself for a better future!https://createanewtomorrow.com/master...CHECK THIS LINK FOR A FREE GIFT FOR YOU!https://www.createanewtomorrow.com/giftDO YOU WANT TO BE OUR NEXT SPECIAL GUEST?Book an appointment now and let's create a new world together!https://booking.builderall.com/calend...CHECK THIS OTHER WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION!https://www.CreateAnewtomorrow.comhttps://www.Achievehealthusa.comCreate a fundamental change in the global community from a strictly reactive system of medicine that focuses on symptom and emergency treatment to a proactive system based on whole-being health as well as illness and injury prevention. Personally teach and influence at least one million people.We are a multifaceted Health and Wellness company that specializes in Corporate Wellness and Culture Consulting, Industry Speaking engagements and Continuing education for the industry.We Help corporations by solving the most costly problems they have with Productivity and Health Care while creating a culture that thrives on accomplishment and community.We help organizations think outside of the box and gain tools that allow them to be nimble and strong as tides and markets shift.We Up level the skills and tools of other practitioners by providing them continuing education that actually leads to greater success and standing in the business community.++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Ari Gronich 0:00 I'm Ari Gronich, and this is create a new tomorrow podcast.Welcome back to another episode of create a new tomorrow. I'm your host Ari Gronich. And remember to LIKE SUBSCRIBE rate review comments below, do all of those things so we can start conversations that matter and create a new tomorrow today. Today with me I have Calvin Corelli. Calvin is a sass founder series, serial entrepreneur and spiritual teacher, he founded a company called some clairo, which is an integrated software platform for coaches, authors, speakers, and other information marketers to run their entire business in one place. So that's pretty cool. But he calls that more Alas, instead of a SAS, which is love as a service versus software as a surface. So, you know, your your mission is amazing. And I'm gonna let you tell a little bit more about who you are, why you created this platform, but more than anything, what what it is that you think the world needs to do, and us, you know, in it can do to make the world a little bit better place. So we'll get started with with just kind of your, your quick bio, tell us a little bit about how you became who you are.Calvin Correli 1:37 Absolutely, yeah, thank you so much. I super appreciate you having me on here. Looking forward to the conversation with you today. I started simpler. So I was born and raised in Denmark and and, you know, was building always sort of arms when we're both my parents were entrepreneurs, I got into computers and programming super early when I was like five or six years old, and got off to a good start on my career, always working pretty much always working for myself, I had one job for a company in Boston, or just around the year 2000. But that was it. But then I really got into struggling as an entrepreneur really kind of struggling all around as a human being to be honest, I felt like I had failed as a as a father as a husband, as a son to my parents as an entrepreneur, on all levels. And so it really got me down this path of soul searching of discovering, questioning beliefs, learning to feel I was I grew up like I don't you can recognize this from yourself or clients, right? That like just not able to feel a thing. It was like I was living from my neck up. And all of his feeling stuff was like, a mystery. And it was just every once in a while would explode. So I went through that process of therapy and coaching and body therapy and working with a spiritual teacher. And that was what led to a moment where I was like, you know, finally asking myself the question, What am I here to do? What is it I really want to do versus just trying to be successful, just trying to make money just trying to make ends meet? Right. And that was what I sat down one day, and and in that process, sort of arrived the answer to me, I'm here to integrate spirituality and entrepreneurship. At the core, we're not spiritual on Sundays, or, you know, sort of, you know, on the side, it's, it's at the heart of what I do for a living what I do in business, my my company's here to be an integral part of my spiritual mission, if you will, my life purpose. And I was like, what I realized is that that's really how we can solve all of the challenges that we're facing as humanity is by it's not through government. It's not through, you know, nonprofits, because business business is at the core of like creation. And if business has done well, it can really solve all of the challenges that we're facing. And I mean, business is just a collection of people coming together to solve problems. That's kind of all it is, right. Yeah. So yeah. So.Ari Gronich 4:25 So then, you know, my contrarian point of view in life is, so if business is at the heart of the possibility of solving the world's problems, why do you think we've allowed companies, as conglomerations of people to do things that are the antithesis of solving the world's problems? More on the side of creating issues where there maybe previously weren't any issues? Right? Yeah.Calvin Correli 4:59 So I mean, Good question, right? Like, I think the short answer is because we're humans, right? Because I mean, it's not isolated to two companies, obviously governments do, you know, their fair share problems. I think anytime humans come together, we we create a mess because we are a mess, which is why for me the goal really is to raise the the conscious level I talked about physical, mental, emotional, spiritual maturity, those four, right? Physical, we got to be healthy body and mind are not separate, right? If your body is a mess, your mind is a mess. Mental learning to question your beliefs, just you know, realizing that you are not your thoughts, you are not your ideas about yourself, right? emotional maturity, learning to not suppress feelings, not vomit them out and identify with your feelings, but just feel them and let them flow through you. And spiritual in the sense of having a sense of a bigger purpose in life, some sort of meaning without it or lost, right. And they all tie together. And and so once that happens, and we grow up as people, I think I bet you would agree the most, quote unquote adults in the world right now are really kind of children emotionally, physically, mentally, spiritually, right? It just happened to be in a in a in an adult body. So there is really is like a big massive maturity that needs to happen in the world. If we want to solve these problems, and once that happens, solving the problems becomes fairly easy. And then business and government can become a vehicle for solving those challenges. But when it's done unconsciously, yeah, it's gonna have the opposite effect.Ari Gronich 6:46 Yeah, it's interesting. Some of the statistics that I've that I've heard, and and research is that people are approximately the age of their first major trauma. AndCalvin Correli 6:59 don't make sense. Yeah,Ari Gronich 7:00 over that first major trauma happened, they kind of you kind of get locked in, yep, the maturity level of that age. And then anytime something triggers that the same feeling that happened with that trauma, you revert back to that age of a person and that reaction and those kinds of things. So it's kind of an interesting way of looking at it and perspective. And, you know, in my world, as a, as a therapist, and healer, and so on, the only way to solve that problem is to go after the issues that are in the tissues, so to speak. Or, you know, you have a some somatic trauma, which basically means a trauma to your physical self. And the only way to heal that trauma is to go directly to where that trauma occurred. And so an emotional trauma almost always happens in the body, as well. So when you look at like Chinese medicine, anger lives in liver wery, lives in the kidneys, the sweetness of life in your pancreas, the lungs are joy, you know, feeling joy, your stomach is contentment. And so these emotions, you can imagine anytime somebody says, right, you know, I'm feeling this this, you know, little queasiness in my gut? Well, that's an emotion that's creating a physical response. Right?Unknown Speaker 8:43 Yeah.Ari Gronich 8:44 Tell us how, how you've come along this, this journey of finding out that, you know, you were having some of these kinds of issues, and what did you do? Like, I mean, that the actual steps that you took to start the process of healing, and let's go with the beginning of that process, because, you know, I know a lot of people, it's the beginning that they struggle with the most. Yeah,Calvin Correli 9:13 so let me just on what you were saying with the issue in the tissue and the ages for so I was fortunate because I'm from Denmark, I discovered there's a there's a therapy form there called body SDS, which is body therapy. It's a system that's developed in Denmark by this incredible genius has passed now, but they're like third and fourth generation are now actively, you know, working on it, my friend, I've become friend with the founder of the education there. He's 5657 karate champion and has educated 600 therapists over there. So it's one of my projects is actually to bring that to the US because I have tried a ton of different things and this is just so powerful. I really getting to those calls. Core wounds in the body, because a lot of this stuff is you can't really get to it with words, because it's pre cognition. And so the body is such a powerful tool. So I'm so with you on that. And one a part of my journey has been to rediscover my relationship with my masculine side and with my father. And so that was a very deliberate process of, of reconnecting with sort of like an six, eight year old version of myself, and then figuring out how to reparent him up to being you know, a young, healthy adult. But that's more recent, that was like three years ago that that journey started for me. The the going back in time to answer your question was like, the beginning. I think, very early moment was in 2003, when, when a friend of mine I had I had called an advisory board meeting for my company. And I brought some some really smart friends of mine, people that I knew. And afterwards, one of them looked me in the eyes and you're like, dude, we've been here for three hours, and I still don't know what you want. And there's something in that question that just made me like, wow, like, you know, how those like questions that just open open a gap in your consciousness, your mind somewhere, you're like, wait, I didn't know that there was a, like any, like, a bit, there was a hole here. But now there is, it was like, I didn't know that you were allowed to watch anything in business. I thought it was all like, you know, oh, we just do business stuff. And, and then I was like, I didn't know what I wanted. I just wanted to be, quote unquote, successful. So that I would feel okay or worthy. I didn't have any clue what I wanted. And I think that was the moment that sort of sparked that realization that I don't know what I want. Because I can't feel a thing. I can't feel myself. And so one of the things I did was my mom had a friend, who was a therapist, really interesting guy, by the way. So he had started as a surgeon doing breast operations on women with breast cancer. And what he had noticed was that they all had the same psychological pattern. There was resentment towards men, and there's resentment towards their own femininity, and serious like, what is that and so he hates went back to school to study psychology, because he's like, hey, if I can solve this before I have to cut these ladies breasts off, that would kind of be a lot better. And so that was what he did. He he's passed now, but that was what he dedicated his life to since then. And so I, I kind of found his phone number and gave him a call. And I was like, Hey, I think I need some help here. I think I need to talk to a therapist, and I was terrified. I was terrified of admitting that I wouldn't, I didn't want my parents to know, I didn't want any of my friends to know, I had this idea that if you need to talk to a therapist, you're really broken. Right? That's kind of admitting defeat, like, at that point, you might as well go kill yourself. But then, like, I wasn't gonna do that. So this was as close as they got. But that was really my belief system was that there had to be something terribly wrong with you, if you needed that, like I learned. Everybody needs help, right? We're all kind of, you know, messed up with their from our, from our upbringing, and it's our job to go sort out that mess, right? reparent ourselves, because our parents probably didn't do a great job. But that was like, it was a big step for me. I'll tell you just admitting that I needed help. And yeah, that was, that was my first step. And then like, once I got going on that I was like, let's, you know, I hired a coach at one point that felt kind of safe to write like business coaching. Yeah, that's good. hired a coach and she was like, a couple sessions into it. She was like, you should you should take this coach education and learn to become a coach. Iwas like, wait, me, like, I'm a tear. I'm not a people person. Everybody tells me I'm terrible with people, like what would I do doing that? But I did, and I loved it. And so, you know, and I remember thinking like, Alright, once I've taken this education, then I know everything there is to know about like psychology, like, you know, humans and how their brains work. Yeah, no.Ari Gronich 14:34 It's a pretty deep topic. Yeah, absolutely. So you know, if you were to just take a look behind the scenes, so to speak behind the curtain at what it is that is at the root cause of kind of all of this. Let's say opposition to nature. Right, which is opposition to nature, meaning we don't do the things that we know to do to feel good. Like, connect with community and family on a regular basis. That's something we've studied, we know that the people who do that live the longest are the happiest, etc. We don't do that here. So why don't you kind of break apart or break down for us some of the things that you've found to be solutions for kind of the, the state we find ourselves in as far as emotionally drained, I mean, you obviously we see all of the current suicides and abuse and protests and dissatisfaction with the world as as it is. And then we'll get into kind of my perspective on it, is, we created this shit out of our imagination. And now we're complaining about it rather than fixing it. So if we can realize that we've made this whole thing up, maybe we can start the process of making it better. So what what is your take on from your education, the experiences that you've had, on what it is that we would need to do, to kind of come back to that natural way of being with each other and with ourselves? Yeah.Calvin Correli 16:43 I think at the root of it is us believing our thoughts. I like we believe that the thoughts that are in our heads are true, right? And that they have something valuable to tell us, which sometimes they do. But oftentimes, they don't, right. If you could imagine living in a state where there are no thoughts or that whatever thoughts are, they're just kind of passing by, and you're not, you know, attached to them like meditation, right? Once you do that, in that state, inside, you will find every single time is this sense of spaciousness, and joy. And you're just present in the present moment, right? There's never any dissatisfaction in that, never ever, right? It doesn't exist, right? The dissatisfaction only exists, because we're telling ourselves a story about something that should be the way it's not. And then we become unhappy, right? That's the only way that happens. And it happens reflexively. And will, like, we can still have feelings in that state in that thoughtless state, you will, but they pass through quickly, right? Like, they just like, you know, they're just waves and we ride the wave and then it's gone. And then it's out. Right? So it's, it's when we when we get stuck in our belief patterns, and then that we do that so habitually, that it really gets in and becomes part of our biochemistry, right. Like if it infects our liver. I remember you mentioned with the lamprey liver and the anger, right that I saw studies some years ago, where they gave multivitamins to prison inmates and violence in the prison dropped, because it actually helped their liver, and then they're less violent, right? It's like, these things are tied together. So I really think at the at the root of it is our believing in our thoughts. Like, Oh, I got it, I'm behind, I gotta rush I got like, all these things, right? And then we, then we just, like, stop being present with ourselves. And then with others. I mean, that's, that's the route.Ari Gronich 18:58 So you've had I'm sure a lot of clients, a lot of people pass through your your software, so you get to see a lot of data. What do you think is the number one thought that you've seen with your clients the number one thing that is recurring amongst the people that that you've talked to your clients, the data that you've seen, that number one thing that's stopping people from being happy, the number one thought that's keeping them out of, you know, being in life fully?Calvin Correli 19:40 Yeah, it's, I just need to get to here and then I will write I just need like, no more customers or I just need like this to change or my health or whatever it is. It's kind of like that, you know, like the, the horse or the donkey with a carrot on a stick out in front. Right. And that's how we live our lives, like, I just get to get this, like, finish with with school, then I gotta get this degree, then I gotta get this job, then I just gotta get this promotion, then I just gotta get like, whatever it is right? Like, you know, I'll just have to find a good partner and then, like, have kids then like when the kids are in school, when they're out of school, like when they leave, like, and then we wake up one day, and we're old and retired. And we're like, oh, yeah, like all the things that we were going to do. And now we don't have the health or the energy or, you know, the desire anymore. It's, it's so habitual for us to always be looking to the future.Unknown Speaker 20:41 Hmm.Ari Gronich 20:42 I'm so looking to the future. When I look to the future, because you know, and I'll take a saying, out of context and out of probably exact, exact repeating, so it's, it's me just paraphrasing, but a man's grasp, or reach should exceed his grasp, or else what's heaven for? Yeah, that's the saying. And yeah, dia is that you're reaching much, much, much further than you think you possibly can grasp? Because that's how you reach to heaven. Right. But that seems to be what you just said is something that is causing people a lot of anguish and emotional drainage and, and pain. Yeah. Yeah,Calvin Correli 21:40 that's challenges. There's a concept that I talked about, which is the satisfied drive. Right. So I love that like divine dissatisfaction, It's never good enough. We're always striving to do better, we're always going for more, I think that's a natural part of life, right? It trees constantly growing. But that doesn't mean that you have to be dissatisfied with where you're at. Right? It's that feeling that like, Okay, this, I'm unhappy right now, because I feel unworthy. That was my thing, right? I'm not worthy until I'm, I'm successful to some metric, whatever arbitrary metric that was, sometimes it would be like, I have to have a company with 50 employees. I think that's because my mom's software company, she grew it to about 50. Other times, it was like, I have to have Bill Gates level wealth before I turn 30. That was a little bit more challenging, and challenging. And it was gonna waver, right? In order to prove myself worthy of even existing, right, that's not a good place to be in. It's not right. So it's really the ability to love ourselves. And love life as it is love the present moment love reality, exactly as it is right now. And yet still be driven out of love, but not out of fear, not out of unworthiness, and needing to prove ourselves but but out of the love of creating stuff of expressing yourself and putting it out there. That's where we want to, that's where we want to create from. Right, right. AndAri Gronich 23:15 so the question becomes, you know, we were in this interesting world, at the moment, where there is the perception of a massive amount of problem, meaning, we're being locked down or being shut down, we're being censored, all these kinds of things, right. And so, the complaining is, at this level of unimaginable, worldwide, whining, you know, so to speak. The people that I've talked to, that I that I like to talk to, are the people who are creating solutions, who are pivoting who are moving towards something else. And that gives them a sense of value. And what you're talking about with this unworthiness, I think that this is a bigger issue, then. Then we talk about for sure. How many people and this is going out to the audience right now? How many of you have felt unworthy in your life? Not just unworthy? Until but unworthy, even though, even though I've already been a success, even though I've already made a massive impact, even though so if you're a leader in the world right now, and you're still feeling that, I'm unworthy thing, so how do you unpack that? worthy thing for your clients because i don't think that most people understand how to unpack that that's such an ingrained human mindset place to beUnknown Speaker 25:15 yeahCalvin Correli 25:18 i think i agree and i think and relate it to is the sense of guilt right guilt for for for a hat maybe having achieved and you don't again quite feel worthy of it and then that leads to sense of guilt or you know sense of privilege or whatnot yeah to me it's it's one of the things that tends to work for me is to just say alright so whatUnknown Speaker 25:45 so whatCalvin Correli 25:46 maybe i am unworthy that can i can i just accept that can i live with that like what is it really it's it's it's a belief right that starts a feeling and then that feeling we like label as something unwanted like oh i don't want this like a bad feeling right we don't even really feel it but we just don't want it there's a saying that i love which is every any struggle is a struggle to avoid feeling a certain feeling and so we just go out of our ways to avoid touching that thing that makes us feel unworthy instead of going the other way and just being like alright let me just feel it and then let me one of the things i love to do is instead of like going into sort of the label of the feeling of unworthiness just what is the sensation is it like a slight vibration in my chest is it like tingling since it is like what is the physical sensation forget the label forget the thoughts just focus on your body and when you go to that really unworthy place like what is what is it the body sensation and then just breathe into that and allow it to expand and expand and just like roll with it enjoy it and what you realize oh it's actually kind of fun it's a little ticklish is little you know it's you realize it's not dangerous at all it's not scary at all and then it stops having this this power over you and maybe it's okay like instead of being like oh no i want to prove that i am worthy like go away stupid unworthiness feeling right just allow yourself to maybe maybe i am unworthy unworthy for what what does it even mean right and then starts to kind of break downAri Gronich 27:33 right bucky fuller who's an inspiration for the show he was kind of the inspiration for my book and you tomorrow i don't know if you know who buckminster fuller was but do one of his quotes and i'm gonna bastardize this you know pretty good but it's we have to get over the auspicious notion that people need to work in order to be a value there is currently and this was back in the 60s he says there's currently approximately 10,000 people on the planet that have the technology and creativity to create enough technology that nobody else on the planet will even need to work let alone have that be the their value system so you know going with this thought since i completely paraphrased the actual quote but going with the thought that we don't need to work to be of value that completely goes against the nature of this country at least of the united states and a lot of countries as well as that we need to work in order to be a value and yet we end up working 40 to 80 hours of you know a week of of the of our life and doing that for 40 plus years and never really living so how do we how do we break that auspicious notion that in order for people to be of value and deserve food and health and life right that they need to be actively working at a thing that may or may not even be the thing that they're you know passionate about good at or wanting to doUnknown Speaker 29:37 yeah so hereCalvin Correli 29:38 here's my thoughts on that i think there's an inherent need for humans to feel of value to be of service to other humans right to do something that other people appreciate and and the way that we show that tend to show that appreciation is with money right that that we exchange values ideas money i think I think that's deep in us, like that need to contribute in some way to to be part of this exchange. I think I do think it's, I think any form of feeling unworthy, or guilty or wrong is unhelpful. I think, you know, self love is superior, I think a lot of the things that people associate with, you know, people being too full of themselves, and that kind of stuff is really, you know, just lack of self love, really. So I'm a huge, I'm a huge fan of self love. So, and there is this tendency, right, like, whenever we get new technologies that allows us to work more efficient, so we'll have more free time. Yeah, right. Right. That never ever happens. Because it just, you know, then it just ups the competition game. And the reality is, we live in it in a competitive world, right? That's just by nature. That's how it works. Right? Like, just in the animal world, it's still a competitive world. So yeah, so I'm not really sure. One thing I'm not personally a fan of the government stepping in. And, and sort of, like, you know, taking over and paying people like, for me, it's like the, the more that we can just do amongst people, amongst ourselves, the better it is so. So I don't, I'm just yeah,Ari Gronich 31:19 I'm gonna, I'm gonna kind of put my two cents in here, right at that at this place. The government is people. And I'm, I'm saying that in a way, I want to really drive this home to the audience, the government is people, we made it, we created it, we built the systems around it, we turned it into this massively, you know, massive machinery of of life, but we created it. And I and I'm really, I get really tired of people saying things like the government shouldn't as if it's something separate from We the People, right? Because we the people, are the people that make up the corporations, we make up the government, we make up the rules, we make up the systems and we make up the entire way in which we live by. And I find that people use the government as a really great scapegoat so that they don't have to take any responsibility in what's going on by saying, well, the government shouldn't or the government should, or the government this as if it's something separate from us. And so what I would say to what you just said, is to the audience, if you don't like how big the government is, how slow the government is, how inefficient the government is, how whatever it is that you have an opinion about the government, for you are the person responsible for making that government different. So if we got 50 million people who are really dissatisfied with the government that's made up of, like, 500 600 people, then shouldn't those 50 million people stop the machinery of the government and shift it or do something to change it or, you know, run for office, so you could be a part of the solution versus a part of the problem and the whining? So it's just my controversial side that says, I get it, that people think that these governments are such evil entities, and the people who run them are such agenda driven people. But the fact of the matter is, it's you.Unknown Speaker 34:00 Yeah, well, yeah.Calvin Correli 34:02 I agree. Like, we we we like for some for some version of we, like people created the government, right. And people run run the government. Yes. Absolutely. And, yeah, and there's there. I think my point is just there's, you know, there's several organizational vehicles with which to achieve certain ends, right. Government is one business is another just neighbor to neighbor or communities or, or, you know, our other vehicles, NGOs or vehicles, nonprofits. So there's different organizational structures that can achieve different things, and some are better suited for certain things than others.Ari Gronich 34:46 Right. Really, I and then I can totally agree with and like I said, the only the only caveat I would say is, I don't find anything different about a bureaucrat at a company versus a bureaucrat. government versus a bureaucrat in your homeCalvin Correli 35:04 right yeah yeah the difference is like the monopoly situation that the government inherently has right whereas if it's a company and then you might presumably have choice assuming that they're not a monopoly but yeah it's it's fascinating how i keep seeing these numbers just anecdotally of like how many people distrust the government and yet keep giving power to the government right it's like wait what's the disconnect here rightAri Gronich 35:29 exactly that's cognitive dissonance about who needs to do right so two people i think that we've created a society where you got to work 40 to 80 hours a week just to survive and even that may or may not be a good survival right and in normal jobs and and so people have stopped doing civic kind of work in many cases and and paying attention to the issues of the day and therefore the issues of the day have snowballed and by snowballing now it's like this massive thing versus what could have been something small that just could have been melted away now you've got this massive solid ball of you know rolling ice right right for the town so to speak and and so yeah we you know getting back to a place where people can remember their civic duties in some cases their community duties and and you know i get it politics are all about national international now but getting into your local community government where the initial fraud is happening where theUnknown Speaker 36:57 show rightAri Gronich 36:58 you know where that's going to be what really affects you the audience the most so anyway that's yeahCalvin Correli 37:06 and that's a good point because i was just talking to someone who's who's working with the i forget it was an honestly if it was like new york city or new york state government whatever whatever like the board or like whatever the i don't even know what it's called but like the kind of like congress for the city of the state level and they're just having tremendous trouble just getting people who are willing to run right people who are willing to you know occupy those seats like which is fascinating because like it's work that that you know needs to be done but there's very few people who are willing to do and i totally understand why they're not real i mean i wouldn't do that right like it's i could you know create a much better life and make more money doing doing what i'm doing why would i why would i do that so it is it is kind of fascinating umi had another thought which was i forget what that was but anyway yesAri Gronich 38:04 yeah i would rather be a consultant to the government than in the government but that's yeah that's just because i like to be artistic sure you know i like to to not have a position i like to not artificially labeled myself as any one thing and i think that when you're a politician we've gotten to a place where you have to label yourself something right so those labels to me as well are part of what helps create this divideUnknown Speaker 38:36 right hereCalvin Correli 38:37 there's an interesting there's a town over in the uk called froome if r o m e where there's a party called independence from so the city council has 17 seats and this guy decided to start a party where there's no party discipline so each member of the party is into an individual they get to vote however they want they're just a party for technical reasons first time they ran they got 10 seats out of 17 next time they got all 17 and so they have this process where when they argue they have facilitators sometimes and they'll they'll have this process where they need to argue the opposite viewpoint of what they like they have to switch sides and argue each other's case etc and they bring in people so it's more of a problem solving thing then then traditional politics and presumably works really really well so i'm fascinated with things like that right like there are things that we can do to solve this if people care enough i remember what i was thinking before which is what you're talking about was the people having to work you know you know a lot of hours they don't have the time etc i'm also fascinated with how it seems like i grew up into i live in new york city now but i grew up in denmark and i think that has been attended advantageous in many ways he had you know great school and my parents were very good at you know they taught me to program and all these things but there's seems to Be a complete lack of teaching people fundamental life skills in this country, right? Which is why we end up on that treadmill because you don't need to live on that treadmill. If you invest there communities that are that are consistently investing in their education. I think like Chinese Americans tend to be really good at that Asians maybe in general, right, some Jewish Jewish culture around like, get educated, you know, get good grades, you know, put in hard work. stay ahead of the game. I remember also just, they just released the hillbilly elegy on Netflix. I haven't seen it yet. But I read the book, have you heard of it? No. So as a guy named JD Vance, and you you grew up in, I think, in the Appalachian sort of redneck country, and when his parents, you know, grew up, you could make a decent middle way, you know, middle class, income, by far dad working some factory job, they can have their house and kids and you pay for the thing and like, upward mobility and things were working. And now these communities are destroyed, everybody's on drugs and opioids, and there are no jobs, the factories have closed. And it's, it's, it's, you know, crap show. And schools are terrible to what changed it for him. So he got out and got a good job. And most of his friends didn't. One of the things that changed for him was he got into the military, to the military, he got into the Marines. And in the Marines, they taught him how to eat, how to exercise, and how to how to manage money. So he's about to go out and buy a car, and then his surgeon was like, what kind of car Are you getting? And he was like, Oh, this car, and he's like, you can't afford that, like, get this one's much more, much more practical and economical. Then he was gonna get like, you know, some kind of loans, like, how are you gonna finance it? Oh, just whatever, you know, finance from the dealers? Like, no, don't do that shop around, get a good get, you know, good interest, get a good deal on the on the mortgage. And so these fundamental life skills that he'd never learned from, from his parents from his upbringing from his school, you know, learned it in the military. And it fascinates me that, like the military is also government, right? So there are parts of the government that actually is able to teach people some of the skills that they actually need to survive and function in society. And then there are others that do the exact opposite.Ari Gronich 42:28 Well, since you didn't grow up here, you probably didn't realize that while you were growing up here, and I was growing up, or while you were growing up there, and I was growing up here, they actually did have things like homak, in bowls and elementary schools in, you know, in high schools, and so on. We had classes and cooking, sewing, checkbook balancing things like that. They have since taken those things out of schools, and exchange for a football program, basically. Because the football program makes the money. But they've taken fundamentally out any kind of life skills and trades skills. So when I was going to school, we had auto shop, we had photography, we had, you know, obviously yearbook and journalism, we had debate clubs, we had Youth in Government programs, we had wood shop, metal shop, I mean, we had all kinds of trades that we could learn in high school. And those things stopped right around the late 60s, early 70s. Or, and then they started, you know, or they didn't stop, but they started to slow down. You know, thereafter. And as they started to slow down, we saw this big push for people to be into college, go into college, going to college, go into college. And as people would go into college, and then obviously graduate with huge amounts of debt and not really wanting or passionate about or able to be in the job of the thing that they studied in college, we started to realize that when they took the trade schools out of high school, they they took an entire population and turn them into people that could only get jobs at assembly, you know, as assembly men and manufacturing plants and so on and so forth, because they no longer had the skills to do trades, that they might have been interested that might have paid them more kind of interesting way of dealing with a society. And the excuse in the politics of that those educational plans is we don't have enough money to educate our kids. We need, you know, teachers are asking too much, we can't pay them enough, these kinds of things. And so we've really, literally sold our kids, you know, future to the highest bidder, so to speak, and, and shifted the way that they can even think about what trades and what things they might be actually interested in doing to make that impact, and we kind of are directing them. If you don't do this, you won't get ahead, which means that you have to do this. And if all of your friends are doing this, this is the other part of that problem, which helps with the emotional blocking is that they have to take drugs in order to get the grades to match the other kids in order to get into the position so that they can be in the college. And then the college. I mean, I got college level aged kids, step kids and the drug use that is in those schools is unbelievable. And it's all straight, non recreational, not all of it, but obviously, you know, it's non recreational, it's all study. It's all getting better in school. But they're not learning anything about how to live in the real world, as you were saying,Calvin Correli 46:29 Yeah, it's I mean, that what's going on with colleges seems to be to be nuts, right? I just the whole the college student loans that are that he can't bankrupt out of, and that is subsidized by the government. Like it's, you know, that seems to be some, some high level corruption going on there. Right? You're like, I mean, I have I have kids, my kids are 1315. They're in Denmark, with their mom, we divorced a decade ago. But if they were here, I mean, like, I would never pay for college for them, I would never encourage them to go to college. I wouldn't. I mean, I wouldn't do in Denmark, universities is, you know, paid for through taxes, I wouldn't encourage them to go to university either, right? I got a computer science degree. I learned way more in my first year after I quit, I got a bachelor's degree, I was on my way to a Master's, I quit that and took a job. Instead, I learned so much more the first job out of college than I learned five years in, in university. SoAri Gronich 47:32 yeah, do you think that, that there's a reason why college and university is getting that reputation of being as unnecessary, when you know, in my parents generation, and obviously, for me, it was like, if you didn't go to college, and I didn't go to college, I went to a trade school. But my brother, you know, was, if you're not going to college, you're not ever, ever going to be a success in life. That's the programming. And now that programming is, is getting shifted to where, you know, a lot of people are starting to say, college isn't, isn't where it's at.Calvin Correli 48:13 I mean, the internet, right? Like, there is there's anything that you could possibly want to learn, you can find online, most of it for free, right? You know, there's libraries to obviously still right, but books, online courses you can study from, from the from the universities, you want to buy, like single courses and things like that, you can do that. For me, it's about learning, you have to be passionate about where you're learning, you have to want to learn it because you want to because you care, right? Because you're interested in it. That's the only way we're ever going to get really good at something and, you know, presumably you're learning it to use it. And so if you're not really that interested in it and excited about it, like why would you? Why would you bother, right? So and if you're excited, the you learn, you learn by doing more than by studying, right? You can read it and studied, but then you have to do it and do it and do it and do it over and over again. So putting it into something where you're, whether it's you're starting something for yourself, or you're working for someone else, put it into the fat C drive results. And that's how you really learn stuff, right? So yeah, there's never been more resources for anyone to learn, which also proves that if you're not improving your skills, if you're not improving your your, your your, your your body and your mind and your life in a in every way that you care about. It's on you, right? There's no excuses at this point, right? Like it's available to anybody with a smartphone. There's so much stuff available for free to anyone who has a smartphone. There's just zero excuse. So if you're not progressing, it's because you don't want to it's just because you don't care enough.Ari Gronich 50:01 Interesting. So let's talk about the menu. So the menu, they found as if it's more than two pages, it causes people to go into choice overwhelm.Calvin Correli 50:19 If we talk about like food menus at a restaurant, what kind ofAri Gronich 50:23 restaurant, they found the science, this study, the research has found that if there's more than two pages on a restaurant menu, then people go into choice, overwhelm. And they are less satisfied with their choice than if they have a one page or a two page menu, and only have certain things that they can get. They choose what they want. And they're happy with their choice, because the limit, so you talks about going onto Google, Google is to me a couple billion page menu. And, you know, you got Dr. Google you got, you know, that a lot of people are using for their, their, their medical questions. But the idea behind this is that, do we have too many choices, and not enough truth, to where people can't make a decision, they get overwhelmed with information, and all of a sudden, they can't make a choice, they can't make a decision, they can't make an action because of this overwhelm. And, and now they're not satisfied because of too much choice.Calvin Correli 51:36 Oh, yes. And I mean, that's not going to go away, right? That's never gonna change. So we That's just a fact that we have to adapt. Like, the the being unhappy with your choice is just back to what we were talking about a while ago with, like, you know, believing your thoughts, right? So. So just ignore that voice. It's one of the things that we're not, it seems we're not teaching people is like fundamental thinking skills. But I'm not even gonna say critical thinking skills, just any kind of thinking, honestly, is in short supply. Right? So so just learning to be like, Okay, what is the problem? What is the outcome that I want? Even? I mean, honestly, even that is one of the things that fascinates me about politics, is we're constantly debating this intervention or policy versus that. And nobody's saying, Well, hey, why don't we start them at stuff for a second? What does success look like? Right? What do we actually want to achieve here? And like, Can we get agreement on that first? And then Alright, what parameters? Are there for a solution for an for a strategy? What like, what values do we have? Can we get agreement on that? And then we can start brainstorm solutions, right? But if you haven't figured out what you want, first, then nothing else. Makes sense, right? And then everything else just becomes a waste of time. And we people don't get these basic things about how to solve problems. I see it too in business, so many people who are focused on tasks, what are the things I need to do? And I'm like, well, but like, it's not working. We're like, this is what this is the goal. This is the outcome, like, what else can we try? Right? Because that didn't work. And so there's some fundamental thinking skills that people are missing. SoAri Gronich 53:18 yeah, this is one of the biggest issues that I have system wide in almost every system that we've created in the last 20 plus years. Maybe 30, maybe 40 depends on the system is we're all about procedures versus results. So we do digital marketing right now because that's my biggest challenge. I'm not a digital marketer, put a body in front of me, I could turn it into Olympic champion, not a problem. Easy peasy. Put a computer in front of me and tell me to digitally market with web hooks and funnels and triggers and minutiae. And I go back. And so as I go to hire people, my biggest frustration is they're trying to charge me for tasks like well, if I put 15 posts on your Instagram, that's going to be this amount of money. If I post, if I if I add Instagram and Twitter, that's that amount of money even though it's the same post and I created it, I just took twice, but I'm going to charge more and then if I do this, it's that amount of money. Like Okay, so what are the results that are going to come? Well, I can't guarantee results. And I go, Okay, and then I look at medicine and I see the same thing. It's we need to do an MRI or an MRI for for a knee injury, right? So you tear meniscus or muscle ligament you need to do an MRI. But if you go to a doctor, first thing that you got to do is an X ray. Why? Because you got to do an X ray before you do an MRI, why X ray is not going to show me what an MRI is going to show me. So why do I need to do the X ray first? It's another procedure. It's another task. It's another thing that makes absolutely no difference in outcome. Zero, zilch, nadaCalvin Correli 55:19 for you. But for them, it makes pocket book, right makeAri Gronich 55:24 pocket book. But what that does is it creates a scenario in which we create incentivized fraud. Totally, right. we incentivize fraud by doing those kinds of things. We do it in companies, we do it in business, we do it and all kinds of the aspects of our life these days, because we're doing task as you said, versus results. And so let's talk about that a little bit because I just had my now my nice little rant but what do you think the cost is of task versus result oriented thinking? Oh, boy,Calvin Correli 56:02 I mean, it's it's massive, right? It's everywhere. And it's it's the it's the lack of transparency in in choosing right because if you could choose between doctors that did it one way versus the other, like duh, right? But there's no transparency there oftentimes there's there's like de facto monopolies so and then it's the population just being aware of it and and, and choosing based on that we have this tendency to just give her authority away to whomever I think it was. Warner Earhart, founder of s back in the day, he had the saying that people walk around with their umbilical cord in hand just looking for someone to plug it in, somewhere somewhere to plug it into, which I think is a great way to say it. I think it's really true, like people are constantly looking to outsource their authority to someone right or something. So yeah. But it's, it's, it's everywhere. It's like one of my pet peeves is the the whole cookie thing like EU and GDPR. All these privacy laws and like, these specialties, like cookie banners that pop up everywhere, it's like they're designed for people who visit like one or two websites per week, or maybe per day, right? But when you visit like 50 to 100 websites in a day, you end up like clicking that damn thing over and over again. And we condition people just click the Yeah, whatever, go away, right? Like we, we don't read them, we can't. And so that's another like, someone is making a law. That's like making us more private See, secure or whatever, on paper, but in practice, it does nothing. It does the exact opposite, at great cost to every company business needs to implement this every user of the internet that needs to click these stupid ass things, right? It's it's just, there's no accountability. We're not holding other people, businesses, politicians, bureaucrats accountable for actual results. And there's that yeah, it's like a lack of culture of thinking that way. The cost is immense. I honestly think like, I heard a talk by Milton Friedman, a while back where he was talking about how when he was in high school, the government, all of us government, all levels, federal, state, local, all fees and taxes, everything included was about 10% of the entire GDP. I don't know what the number is now, but I'm sure it's a lot higher. But I don't really think though, we're getting that much value for money. And that's just that, that that sort of government level, right? That that this is, but this is everywhere, that we're just wasting so many resources. I wouldn't be surprised if the number is 90% wasted resources based on this inability to think clearly.Ari Gronich 58:56 What do you think the the about? I've heard this name touted. But the wholly owned subsidiary. You know, Corporation, United States of America or United States of America is a wholly owned subsidiary of corporate America. Right.Calvin Correli 59:16 Yeah. So I think that's pretty sure yeah,Ari Gronich 59:18 has become this corporate shill so to speak. And to me the answer, you know, they're they're pretty obvious answers of how this can be renegotiated. Right, getting out lobbyists changing the the elections from ones that have to be funded to, you know, just government we own the airwaves, so to speak, because we're the FCC so why don't we just take back the air. One of the things that I loved about ross perot way back in the day Now, here's what we got to do, we got to get rid of their staff to business right here, where he would go on air, buying his own airtime, we don't even need to buy your own airtime anymore, you get paid in sponsorship to go on YouTube. But what I would love to see politicians do is in 30 minutes segments with now, it's PowerPoints instead of charts, but I want to see them explain their policies in detail, and what they're going to do, and then compare them to the other person's policy and what it's going to do, and do it in a way that's factual. I would love to see that right. So that we can make decisions about policies and bills. Part of the wholly owned subsidiary is that every single bill is filled with pork, right, and what they call what they call pork or whatever, I don't know the exact term, but the it's filled with this bill is for this thing. And yet it's got 50 things in it that have been negotiated for other, you know, special interest in and so on. It would be nice if we did this bill is for this thing, nothing else is allowed to be in that bill. Right. There are things that I believe we could do easily to shift it. But what I want to get out for you is the mentality that we need, the emotional intelligence and maturity that we talked about at the beginning that we need in order to not be reactive, but be proactive in what we're doing. And the way we're doing it so that we can actually accomplish this stuff versus just talking about it in sound bites.Calvin Correli 1:01:59 As a me, it's it'sAri Gronich 1:02:02 what I said that was a long intro. I apologize for Drew. But I want to be really clear for you.Unknown Speaker 1:02:11 Yeah.Calvin Correli 1:02:12 To me, the problem, the challenge is that that the minute you make these rules, as long as the incentives are the way that they are the economic incentives, people are going to, like the people who want to do bad stuff are going to find a way around it. Right? And as long as we as people don't really care, or we're just so accustomed to like, yep, politicians are corrupt. It's just the way it is. I don't see that really changing, right? Like you can say, Well, okay, campaign finance law, you can only fund like, you know, government funds against brain blah, blah. But then you have Citizens United, right, like that, which, which is free speech, like what are you going to do?Ari Gronich 1:02:56 Over overturn it?Unknown Speaker 1:02:59 Yeah,Calvin Correli 1:03:00 but we still have free speech, right? So So are you and I allowed to sit here and talk and say, Hey, I like this politician. I don't like where's where's the dividing line? I don't maybe there's a simple solution. I'm not sure that there is a simple solution there. And and that, it wouldn't be something that again, people are going to find ways around, right? So that's my I'm skeptic calling me skeptical. I'm open, I'd love that. But But I don't know that. What I my thinking is like, from again, from a bottom up grassroots, like, the more sort of awake the people are, the more the more we live our lives, right? It's like Joseph Campbell, like or Gandhi, like Be the change that you want to see in the world. Like it starts here. It starts with you and I, and I, and with everybody here listening, starting to live their lives this way. And then naturally, you're going to start to demand more of others, including our leaders and our quote unquote, so called leaders, the people in charge, right.Ari Gronich 1:04:04 Yeah, you know, here's my only caveat to that. I agree that people need to take personal responsibility for shifting who they are. And that that will make a massive change in how we live. And I and I'll go back to the disagreement that the government or the thing or that whatever is somehow outside of that process, and not, we're not outside of the government, we're within it. We are the people and we have the, in my opinion, the responsibility, the obligation, the the, we are the ones who have to shift the system from the outside in and the inside out. And you know, Buckminster Fuller makes it perfect. He says, Don't challenge the system as it is make a better system and put it right next door, you know, so I In many cases, you've got to build the medical system that's going to work, and then actually put it to action before it becomes adopted as the next generation of medical system, you got to create something different, but the responsibility of the people to tell the government what to do, has been abrogated to the corporations that are now telling the government what to do. Yeah, well, it'sCalvin Correli 1:05:30 politicians are like, so the way my analysis is right, like, so if you're a member of Congress, right? There's the budgets to run these campaigns right now are ludicrous, right? Because these, like, you know, there's 100 senators, and the and the national budget is I don't know how much it is trillions, right. So for each seat, is it worth, you know, a fair share of that amount, right, because they can shift huge sums around. And so that's why there's a lot of money riding on this stuff, right? And so, like, I don't see, like, when there is this much money, riding on it like that money is going to find a way to influence your role as politicians. One of the things I forget which book it was, but someone was writing a book about how, like, you know, you can't directly bribe politicians, but you can bribe their family members, right. So then, like, its sons, or cousins, or whatnot, and then it finds its way, like, that's kind of the common practice, because that's legal, technically, even though it's, you know, immoral, but it's, it's legal. And so that's how it's done. And so that, like, it's kind of like, you know, those like when you when you outlaw something, that there's a lot of money riding on an interesting, it's gonna find a way to make a black market out of itself, right. So. But I'm, I do see sort of an awakening in the population where we're no longer a lot of people are waking up to, like, Hey, we're being lied to, like, things are not being very being very efficient or smart. There's too much corruption going on. And I believe that there's a new crop of leaders stepping up and being elected to to public office, whether that's going to be enough to it. At the end of the day, it comes down to do we care enough as citizens, right to be like, no, we're not gonna put up with this crap, right? Do we care enough? Do we care enough to run for office? Do we care enough to tell the difference between who's, you know, has character and moral morals and who doesn't and vote for the guy who with morals and character and not for the other person? Right? And given that, again, the media is bought and paid for as much as the politicians, right? So it's, it's a challenge. And it is, and the other thing that might happen is that people with morals and character get elected, and then, like, they get compromised very early on, right, I do believe that there's a lot of that kind of mafia kind of thing going on, where we tried to get something on you. And now you're gonna like, it's really hard to dig yourself out of that. Not impossible. But it's hard, right? So.Ari Gronich 1:08:16 So just as a matter of the media being hard to trust these days, and being bought and paid for that happened in the late 70s, early 80s, with deregulation, and deregulation was a thing about how the government control is so bad. So we deregulate but what we did is we stopped the news from being a nonprofit, to being allowed to be for profit. So prior to that, it was required that they report the news, when they deregulated is when they started this 24 hour news cycle that now allows them to be for profit, which is what allowed them to make this be a special interest thing. And so I think if we understand that this is a result of something very specific, any of the the things that we experience are results of very specific things that have been done that can be undone immediately, right? We don't have to wait we could reregulate the news to make sure that it's not for profit, that they have no financial incentives to report bad news. And maybe all of a sudden we'll be able to get journalists at journalistic integrity back where they have to name their sources, make sure that the information is correct before they put something out, and etc, and so forth. And like I said, I had a conversation with somebody in the media yesterday, so We had a great conversation about this kind of a thing. But, you know, going back to you, because I know I'm taking you completely off of topics, normally, you know, used to, to speaking about, you know, like software and, and all the wonderful hellCalvin Correli 1:10:19 actually if I can jump in here because I have this is is actually a passion of mine I have a project called notable nation notable nation calm, which is about that, and we talked about like that you mentioned the wanting, you would rather be, you know, a consultant for politicians and being one my stated goal is to be a future zoo, not not to be a future, but to be a Special Advisor to the President of the United States unconscious nation building. So I guessAri Gronich 1:10:49 we could team up.Calvin Correli 1:10:50 Alright, sounds like a plan. So that's, that'sAri Gronich 1:10:53 cool. I'm glad, I'm glad because like I said, I, I look at your background, and I go, Okay, I can have this conversation with him and talk to him about the software and then the niceties of life. Or I could, you know, challenge the status quo take you outside your box a little bit. And, and, you know, bring it to more of my kind of controversial polarizing, you know, conversations, because I think that the conversations that most people are having are at the surface level, and they don't really do much to benefit the world, right, or, or the world moving forward. So I had I had a, a message that I sent to, to a politician to Bernie, actually, so I'll just name him I sent this letter to him and his team, right, that I wanted to have a conversation with him about, about his health care program, because to me, he was just changing the payer, but not the incentive. Right? Until we change, the incentives will never change the outcomes. The incentives are going to get, or the outcomes are getting worse and worse and worse and worse and worse, as long as the incentives are there the way they are. And I guess the reason why I don't I don't like the the government is evil thing, or big government is evil, or any government is evil, or are those kinds of things is because some of the massive problems that we've had was as soon as we deregulated certain industries, like we do, deregulated the savings and loan industry, what happened with the savings and loan industry, we deregulated You know, there used to be a thing about conglomerations, you couldn't be too big to fail, because you weren't allowed to conglomerate your comp
Hi, I am here with Calin Correli, He is the Founder & CEO of Simplero.com - a fully integrated platform for coaches to transform lives at scale. Future special advisor to the President of the United States on conscious nation-building. He is an expert on personal and spiritual growth.CHECK THIS AMAZING WEBSITE BY CALVIN CORRELI TO LEARN MOREhttps://calvincorreli.com/Hi, I am here with Calin Correli, He is the Founder & CEO of Simplero.com - a fully integrated platform for coaches to transform lives at scale. Future special advisor to the President of the United States on conscious nation-building. He is an expert on personal and spiritual growth.CHECK THIS AMAZING WEBSITE BY CALVIN CORRELI TO LEARN MOREhttps://calvincorreli.com/JOIN NOW!! AND BE PART OF MASTERMIND PROGRAMlearn how to activate yourself for a better future!https://createanewtomorrow.com/master...CHECK THIS LINK FOR A FREE GIFT FOR YOU!https://www.createanewtomorrow.com/giftDO YOU WANT TO BE OUR NEXT SPECIAL GUEST?Book an appointment now and let's create a new world together!https://booking.builderall.com/calend...CHECK THIS OTHER WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION!https://www.CreateAnewtomorrow.comhttps://www.Achievehealthusa.comCreate a fundamental change in the global community from a strictly reactive system of medicine that focuses on symptom and emergency treatment to a proactive system based on whole-being health as well as illness and injury prevention. Personally teach and influence at least one million people.We are a multifaceted Health and Wellness company that specializes in Corporate Wellness and Culture Consulting, Industry Speaking engagements and Continuing education for the industry.We Help corporations by solving the most costly problems they have with Productivity and Health Care while creating a culture that thrives on accomplishment and community.We help organizations think outside of the box and gain tools that allow them to be nimble and strong as tides and markets shift.We Up level the skills and tools of other practitioners by providing them continuing education that actually leads to greater success and standing in the business community.+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++Calvin Correli 0:00 I was born and raised in Denmark and and, you know was building always sort of arms when we're both my parents were entrepreneurs. I got into computers and programming super early when I was like five or six years old and got off to a good start on my career, always working pretty much always working for myself. I had one job for a company in Boston, just around the year 2000. But that was it.
‘Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world’. It is a wonderful part of life, to share and grow together. The opportunity to learn from each other and educate can be so enriching in a chaotic world. Calvin Corelli, found true happiness and purpose in the opportunity to integrate spirituality with entrepreneurship. As he went on his own journey to discover his purpose, he created Simplero. It is a Software that provides all the tools you need to build and grow a successful online education business all in one place. As this solution saves time, money and mental bandwidth it is transforming the lives of the coaches as well as those on the receiving end. As Calvin continues to be authentic in his life he is equally authentic in his growth and marketing strategies. SImplero is continuing to improve their website and Calvin has taken the time to educate himself too, as he works to understand what makes a great conversion website and integrate intentional paths for the buyer journey. Calvin wants the website to offer value for everyone while understanding where users are in the buying journey. With the goal to provide intentional paths in the conversion funnel they will offer a clear and focused message with a well-balanced website. Take a listen to gain not only insights into great strategies but some inspiring life advice too.
125 - Calvin Correli is a serial entrepreneur, spiritual teacher, author, and the founder and CEO of Simplero. For the past 17 years, Calvin has combined conscious entrepreneurship and self-development to discover and live in alignment with his life's purpose.Calvin joins the podcast to discuss what "success" really means, integrating conscious leadership in business and politics, and ways we can build our own individual foundation that is committed to truth, integrity, and love.Connect with Calvin below:Official WebsiteInstagramFacebookEvan's new book The Story of Interconnectivity: A Guide to Awakening to Your Natural State is available now! Purchase a copy below!Lulu | Amazon | Barnes & NobleIf you like the show, please subscribe & leave us a Review :)Interact with The Fifth Dimension!EvanMcDermod.orgThe Four Week TransformationThe Fifth Dimension (Instagram)YoutubeThe Fifth Dimension ShopEvan McDermod (Instagram)ParlerTelegramMake a one-time donation to help keep the show running! :)PayPal | VenmoTheme Music:Highland Song by Alexander Nakarada | https://www.serpentsoundstudios.comMusic promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.comAttribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/evanmcdermod)
Calvin Correli, Founder at Simplero appeared on the Launch Legends Podcast and shared how he overcame failures during his entrepreneurial journey and built a successful product.
In this episode, I talk with Calvin Correli, CEO of the holistically focused software company Simplero, about his passion for helping business owners do precisely what brings them most alive. He shares the deeply personal and often spiritual, and political lessons he learned in founding and operating his million-dollar business ventures.www.calvincorreli.comJimmy&Mary's Authentic Body Care Jimmy&Mary's take pride in creating quality handcrafted products for the entire family.Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SoundBalming)
This week on the show, I have Calvin Correli. He is the CEO and founder of Simplero. Calvin and I talk about bootstrapping a SaaS business and why bootstrapping is so important in order to preserve the founder's original vision.
Want a simple to use B2B sales outreach formula that is guaranteed to change your business? Every sales rep should be doing this. Come find out what it is. FINAL QUESTIONS: 1. Hottest digital marketing technology that you recommend SIMPLERO - the all in one platform to send emails, create products and host online content. https://simplero.com/?ref=8501-Dolores-Hirschmann FINAL QUESTION 2. Who is the most influential person in marketing today? Mmmm so many....Stu McLaren is one. Key takeaway or call to action The TED Way to Raise Visibility & Get More Clients eBook https://www.we.mastersinclarity.com/standout-podcast BIO Dolores Hirschmann is an internationally recognized strategist, coach, speaker, and founder of Masters in Clarity, a strategy and coaching company that helps clients clarify their message and implement virtual business growth systems. Dolores has been a remote employee and virtual business owner for over 20 years. As a former TEDx organizer, Dolores understands how to help experts, authors, consultants, coaches, doctors and other service business owners position themselves as thought leaders in their field and scale their business. Want to discuss your video or eCommerce program with Mark? Start here: Marketing Discussion Call Scheduler https://app.acuityscheduling.com/schedule.php?owner=17597053&appointmentType=9891456
In this weeks episode of PixlFeed Radio I have the pleasure of having Calvin Correli who's a serial entrepreneur, spiritual teacher, author, and the founder and CEO of a growing SaaS company called Simplero. Ten years ago he would have never thought that his life could be so vibrant and fulfilling. For most of his life he was trapped in bad relationships, poor health, and a constant feeling of fear and uncertainty. Until he decided to make a change. He has spent the last decade learning, growing, and reimagining to get aligned with my life's purpose. And his purpose is to help people realize who they truly are so they can live impactful and meaningful lives.Simplero is an all-in-one marketing software used by over 1,000 businesses to earn more than $100,000,000. Easily create your website, sell products, host online courses, build a membership community, and automate virtually everything in your business, all in a simple, practical and affordable web app.You can follow Calvin Correli Here:
Rachelle Deem is an automation and integration specialist from Australia who specializes in helping female entrepreneurs put some of the more mundane or manual tasks of their day-to-day work on autopilot in order to free up more time to scale their business. She's very well versed in many of the course creation all-in-one portals as she helps clients as they transfer from one to another and integrate different pieces together. In this episode, Rachelle shares how she was able to very gradually switch over from her desk job of 25 years to working from home as a virtual assistant on her own schedule after she had her sixth child. She's moved her home office around to different parts of her house and has also moved into more of a consulting role as she is building a team to help as she scales her own business. She divides her week into two parts, three days where she's working in her business, like an employee, and two days where she's focusing on her own self care as well as working on more of the big picture aspects of her business as the CEO. April and Rachelle met in a networking portion of an online conference, and April met with Rachelle virtually a few weeks later for a "tech breakthrough session" where they were able to talk about which products and services April was interested in working with after deliberating over the choices for several months. They settled on using a lesser known site called Simplero for hosting her website and some of the other projects, courses, and membership options for Yes, I Work From Home that are coming soon. The conversation focuses a lot on some different ways female entrepreneurs and small business owners in general can work to avoid getting to the point of overwhelm through things like automating scheduling and some email responders and such by freeing up more time for other tasks or time for self care or family. Rachelle Deem: https://www.rachelledeem.com/ (https://www.rachelledeem.com/) You can check out her free resources such as the Ultimate Automation Tools Guide here: https://www.rachelledeem.com/resources (https://www.rachelledeem.com/resources) If anyone would like to check out https://smpl.ro/al/OKVv9v_e/19136 (Simplero), the site that both Rachelle and April use, here's April's referral code: https://smpl.ro/al/OKVv9v_e/19136 (https://smpl.ro/al/OKVv9v_e/19136) ***** Can't watch the video right now? Check out the full transcript on our podcast website at: https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com/podcast/episodes/15 (https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com/podcast/episodes/15) Our podcast is now live on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, Amazon, Google, and anywhere else you prefer to listen to your podcasts. We appreciate any of our listeners who listen, download, subscribe, or leave a positive rating or review. Thank you! **** If you'd like to be a guest on the Yes, I Work From Home Podcast, please go to https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com/podcast/guest (https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com/podcast/guest) and click on the first big green "guest interview" button to let us know more about you and your work-from-home life. We are on the lookout for people with interesting stories about how they're making their WFH life work, whether you're working for yourself or someone else. You can also recommend someone else who you think would be a great fit for this podcast using the second green button "guest recommendation." Find out more about our host, April Malone, and Yes, I Work From Home at our website https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com (https://www.yesiworkfromhome.com) If you work from home as an remote work/teleworking employee, freelancer, independent contractor, or entrepreneur, please join our work-from-home community on Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/groups/yesiworkfromhomecommunity (https://www.facebook.com/groups/yesiworkfromhomecommunity)
Calvin Correli is a software engineer, spiritual teacher, and the Founder and CEO of Simplero, an all-in-one marketing software for coaches, course creators, and online marketers. As a self-proclaimed serial entrepreneur, Calvin is also the Founder of several other companies, including Body Meal and Notable Nation. His mission is simple: to help fellow online entrepreneurs and leaders realize their true identities and live a life of purpose and passion. In this episode… What do you want from your business? Are you simply striving for success or is there something larger driving you forward? It’s important to have an answer to these questions, no matter where you are in your path. For serial entrepreneur Calvin Correli, business is his way of transforming his life and serving others. Before Calvin started his software company, Simplero, he experienced a transformative journey of personal development and self-reflection. This helped him clarify his true purpose, both in business and in life, and inspired him to build a career that integrated spirituality and entrepreneurship. Now, Calvin describes his business as a LaaS company rather than a SaaS company, providing Love as a Service” and making a deeper impact on its users. Calvin Correli, the Founder and CEO of Simplero, joins Dan Kuschell in this episode of the Growth to Freedom podcast to talk about his journey toward business enlightenment and personal transformation. Calvin shares the lessons he learned from the lowest points in his career, the power of identity and self-talk, and the importance of always investing in your own personal growth. Stay tuned to discover how to create a more purpose-driven business today!
Episode #43 What a great conversation with Calvin Corelli as we try to solve the world’s problems from very different points of view. Later we get on to what’s really real, finding your purpose, living meaningful lives and how he started his business Simplero. I could write more here about right wing propaganda machines mentioned in the podcast, but not really necessary as nobody reads these notes anyway. From his website: I'm a serial entrepreneur, spiritual teacher, author, and the founder and CEO of a growing SaaS company called Simplero. Ten years ago I would have never thought that my life could be so vibrant and fulfilling. For most of my life I was trapped in bad relationships, poor health, and a constant feeling of fear and uncertainty. Until I decided to make a change. I've spent the last decade learning, growing, and reimagining myself to get aligned with my life's purpose. And my purpose is to help people realize who they truly are so they can live impactful and meaningful lives. https://calvincorreli.com/ https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli/ https://www.facebook.com/thecalvincorreli https://twitter.com/calvincorreli Music for all episodes by Jon Griffin. My YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCugOLERePPuD4nwtZO-Zwnw?view_as=subscriber My Instagram: @joelyshmoley and @slideswithjohn FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/wereyoustilltalking/ Twitter: @JoelAAlbrecht
This week Benton Crane talks with Calvin Correli, the mastermind behind Simplero, a software company that helps coaches and mentors effectively sell their courses. Calvin shares what led him to integrate business with spirituality, how he stopped comparing himself to Bill Gates, and why exploring his emotions reshaped his career.06:16 Adults need to grow up too07:47 Calvin’s poop to gold moment16:39 Calvin’s mindset change22:41 How to live a balanced life24:13 Master your thoughts and emotionsYou can find links for Simplero and Calvin’s various platforms below. If you’re interested in learning more about Harmon Brothers, you can grab a copy of our book at harmonbrothersbook.com.Don’t forget to like, subscribe, and share. Episodes published every Tuesday at 6 am EST. We’ll see you on the next one.Find Calvin Correli here:https://calvincorreli.com/https://simplero.com/https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli/?hl=enhttps://twitter.com/calvincorreli?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthorhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin
What do you get when you mix programming, SaaS, and spirituality? Calvin Correli answers this and more in today’s episode of Business Lunch. Born to two cutting-edge programmers in Denmark, Calvin Correli is CEO and Founder of Simplero, an all-in-one integrated software for information marketing. He’s a SaaS Founder, Serial Entrepreneur, and Spiritual Teacher, and you’ll enjoy this well-spent conversation with our host Roland Frasier. “I got into a life crisis around age 33 or so. I had this idea that to be even worthwhile as a human being, to justify my existence and take up space…that I had to be like a billionaire by 30.” Calvin Correli If you love this show and it helps you with your business(es), head over to our site https://businesslunchpodcast.com/ and sign-up our memos. You can also connect further with Calvin at CalvinCorreli.com. It would also really help us get the word out if you would subscribe and write a review on ApplePodcasts. Listen For, The power of asking yourself, what do I want? What happened as a result of Calvin joining the Richard Branson Meet-Up at Traffic & Conversion Summit in 2019? Stories to inspire you to take a leap and say YES to opportunities. The simple strategy that helped him move into the US markets (from Denmark). What he focused on first before he started investing in marketing. “So I love creating the best product that I know how to do. And I love offering just exceptional customer service, like at a level that people are not used to. Where they feel seen and supported and heard.” Calvin Correli. And so much more! Find & Follow Calvin On Youtube, https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqw6ZLy-oTjqjfXwTIP6rew On Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/thecalvincorreli At his web site, https://calvincorreli.com/ Follow Roland Frasier On Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/rolandfrasier Through his Web site, https://www.rolandfrasier.com/ Follow Business Lunch Podcast On Twitter, https://twitter.com/bizlunchpodcast Thanks so much for joining us this week. Want to subscribe to Business Lunch with Roland Frasier? Have some feedback you’d like to share? Leave us an honest review on ApplePodcasts! Your feedback will help us improve the show, and connect us with more high flyers like you. Here's a link to find us on your favorite podcast player, https://linktr.ee/firecircle
Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero. The company is an all in one online platform that strives to help coaches run and manage their online businesses. Simplero’s ideal customers are trainers, authors, educators, and speakers. In general, Simplero targets online business entrepreneurs and helps them scale their businesses through online courses. Listen in to find out Calvin’s journey into achieving his software big break. What You’ll Learn Why Calvin established Simplero.com How Calvin transitioned from programming to entrepreneurship How your background can affect your entrepreneurship path in the future The importance of knowing what you want to do in business Find out what happened when Calvin finally figured out what he wanted to do What is the purpose of a CEO in the opinion of Calvin? Why entrepreneurs should have a coach who understands them well The importance of delegating How Calvin made money to support his business when starting out Importance of networking in business Why entrepreneurs should enroll in online courses regularly How Calvin got his first Simplero customers in various parts of the world Strategies that Calvin used to get his venture to $30,000 MRR in 2013 Understanding traffic conversions Why entrepreneurs should build a personal brand In his Episode Before starting Simplero, Calvin took some time to think about what he wanted to do as an entrepreneur. At some point, he realized that he harbored so much knowledge that he wanted to share with the world. Then, Calvin says that he was a programmer and a terrible entrepreneur. He decided to invest in research to understand more about entrepreneurship and carve a niche for his interests. Listen in as he shares his journey when starting the company and how it evolved. Calvin says he had always been in the software industry, seeing that his parents owned a software company. He grew up around computers and programs that somehow shaped his future. Calvin tells Geordie how he spent many years trying to figure out what he wanted. He kept trying many things all at once. At some point, Calvin had to consult professionals to help him identify his niche. Calvin mentions that he was shocked when one of the professionals admitted that after spending hours with him, he too did not know what Calvin wanted. According to Calvin, that statement was his wake up call. However, he did not define what he wanted to do until one day, all his ventures dried up. Calvin discusses how frustrating that moment was and how it took him away from his comfort zone. Amid that moment, Calvin took the time to consider his passion, childhood dreams, and subjects that he studied in school. He was committed to establishing what he wanted to do, and this is how the thought of entrepreneurship crossed his mind. Calvin explains the events that led to him connecting with his company. You will need to hear how passionately Calvin explains the term Love as a Service as well. Refresher courses are critical, and this is something that Calvin discovered at some point in his journey. He shares his experience after enrolling for an online marketing course and the impact it had on his business. Calvin says that until recently, he did not know the effect of traffic conversions on a business. Someone introduced him to traffic conversions, which is how he discovered how essential the concept is. Calvin would later come up with a course to explain traffic conversions to his customers. Listen to Calvin as he tells Geordie what the course is all about and how entrepreneurs can benefit from the same. According to Calvin, getting a customer to use a product is one of the ways of retaining them. Running challenges is a strategy that companies use to reach a wider audience and potential clients. Simplero runs challenges through its Facebook platform that facilitates engagement with its customers. Calvin mentions that the company representatives try to answer as many questions from their followers as possible. After being an entrepreneur for years, Calvin learned that some customers want to interact with a specific brand because of the person behind it. In a bid to retain as many customers as possible, Calvin and his team have started building his personal brand. The company is also committed to giving back to the community, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. They have collaborated with experienced staff who can help people who have lost jobs learn new skills. Calvin’s mantra is “spreading love through software.” He also encourages everyone to go for what they are passionate about. Resources Simplero.com Calvin Correli Calvin Correli Facebook Calvin Correli Twitter Calving Correli Instagram
Eileen was fantastic! She encouraged me to NOT upsell (it makes me uncomfortable) but to have different programs that meet different needs, Have sponsors for scholarships using businesses I know, I need to learn how to best help people and what my end result is. A strength I have is meeting people where they're at and holding space for them, so to remember that. She emailed me about my homework post-interview and here's what I had done: I"m currently moving my website to a new host (Wordpress to Simplero) and their team has a list of things to do. One of them is editing my pages, adding the coaching, speaking, "as seen on", FAQ. Part of the new website is also a scholarship program "create a scholarship" plan I can use I"m working on my coaching programs! YAY! And workshops, 5-day events, 2-hour events, etc.. Putting them together. I've updated the FB group and am working on the page Launching a second podcast (Compounding Joy) Creating 12 topics or "pillars" for subjects that videos and blogs will go under. That breaks it down into 12 months, and LOTS of videos under each topic I now have taglines for the podcast(s), mom of 18 (working on it still) and compounding joy and created the infographics for them On the list is to do a new skillset sheet (take me through my own program) Created a job description to hire out some of the tasks that take time and I'd like to off-load - possibly an intern through our university I had a meeting last week for social media marketing I have a separate company looking at keywords, SEO and my competitive market (decided it shouldn't be parenting, but more transformational coaching) which will give me two different perspectives on this I completed opt-in freebies for my podcast page(s) - it's AWESOME!, my home page (a quiz I created and offer), and a media kit for the speaking page I'm taking two courses that each give an additional certification in coaching SINCE THEN: I've completed almost all of the above. I need to take myself through my skillset workshop again and I'm in the process of completing 5 courses. On top of completing the above, I've also hired several people to help me with the things I'm not great at - Pinterest, copywriting, re-titling all blog posts, creating infographics, updating and finishing the website content, a sales page, my LinkedIn profile is being updated, I have one webinar ready, the FB group is now private and growing, I have one main coach for a year, a "dress for success" branding coach, a finance and energy coach that I've worked with before. It's been a lot, but having the support makes things easier AND I'm feeling much more confident because I'm not trying to do everything myself. I'm also looking at what I can hire out that will bring in income, not just hiring tasks to get them off my plate. Connect with Eileen: https://cdn.filestackcontent.com/RSWVr3XcQVWcdwqJdGG4?www.corethinkingblueprint.com?text/html (https://cdn.filestackcontent.com/RSWVr3XcQVWcdwqJdGG4?www.corethinkingblueprint.com?text/html) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-naked-podcaster/message Support this podcast
In this episode, Calvin Correli sits down with Lloyd Burnett—a long time Simplero customer and friend. Lloyd got triggered over one of Calvin's Instagram stories, where he was taking a friendly jab at the rioters and looters. That led to a private dialogue, and we decided to take it public, because we both felt that what we'd uncover would be valuable to other people and the larger healing of the racial conflicts the world is experiencing right now, and has experienced for a long time. We both believe in the importance of open, honest, respectful, and loving dialogues, as the most important tool we have for healing as a nation. Listen to this episode if you want to experience a healing deep dive into the pain. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/calvincorreli/message
Simpler Trading & SimplerTrading.com John Carter Review: Is it a SCAM? [Opinion] Is Simpler Trading a scam? Learn my OPINION about SimplerTrading.com Options: Shifting Gears Simpler Trading https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJOD4... https://www.youtube.com/user/SimplerO... Fibonacci Queen: What do you need to know if you are long TSLA? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UjgLf... Options: Short Squeezes When the Market Is Making New Highs Simpler Trading https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2gq9J... Simpler Options: Earnings Secrets Webinar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dY2Tk... Simpler Options: A Simple But Effective Trigger? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Zyck... _________ By becoming a student of BestStockStrategy, you can maximize your trading profits AND reduce your risk while also saving yourself time and avoiding mistakes. We provide the absolute best strategy and education so that you can optimize your success and become consistently profitable. --------- ✔️ Receive $400+ of Free Training by visiting https://BestStockStrategy.com ✔️ Enroll as a Student (Options Trading Education & Real-Time Trade Alerts): https://beststockstrategy.com/members... ✔️ 7 Day Trial of Real-Time Trade Alerts for only $19: https://beststockstrategy.thrivecart.... ✔️ Receive a FREE week of trade alerts by signing up for Tastyworks using my referral code: https://start.tastyworks.com/#/login?... ✔️ Book a 30-Minute Call: https://beststockstrategy.thrivecart.... ✔️ Discover how to Land a Finance Job: Insider Secrets Revealed: https://LandaFinanceJob.com ✔️ **NEW** Podcast: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6J7zlcl... Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/weal... --------- BestStockStrategy provides the absolute best way to be a profitable trader in the stock market. You will receive the best financial education, real-time trade alerts and Options Trading education products, You'll learn the best options trading strategy and you'll learn optimal stock market strategies that Tastytrade and Option Alpha don't teach. You can become successful in stock trading and learn how to make money by trading stock options Learn how to invest in the stock market, option market and how to make consistent profits in the financial markets. We teach our students how to become successful and profitable investors and traders. Please subscribe, comment, like & share this video.
Here in the first episode of Marketing To Go, I talk to Calvin Corelli, the man behind Simplero. He combines entrepreneurship and online marketing with spirituality. Calvin Corelli's business is based on his own experience and solutions he has developed for his own needs. At first, he offered his solutions for free to others – today, he runs a business with 15 employees.Hear him talk about:- why your work on yourself internally is the key to success externally– and how your inner growth is reflected in your business- why focus on conversions, sales and earnings neither creates a good business nor makes you happy but, on the contrary, leads to early death- how you build a solid business based on integritywhy you should talk about what you believe rather than your products and services- the evolution of online business and online marketing over the past 10 years – and a look into the crystal ball for the next 2–3 years- how to ensure success by focusing on your customers instead of your productMake a differenceCalvin Corelli clearly practices what he preaches: He is excited and enthusiastic about what he does. And when he says: "Focus on the meaningful things", I have no doubt that he is passionate about making a difference for others – on the commercial as well as the personal level.According to Calvin Corelli, the key to success is delivering true value to your customers – and focusing more on that than on the bottom line. Magically, that is the path to a solid bottom line. As he puts it: "Be of help and you can't lose". I couldn't agree more.If you want a business that makes a difference AN:D is a good business – then have a listen here.https://www.renehjetting.com/a-good-business-is-founded-on-integrity/
Det er en jungel av valg å ta – vi snakker om det å bruke WordPress som plattform for onlinekurs. Hva må man passe på? Er det noen fordel med å bruke WP fremfor ferdiglagde plattformer som Simplero og Kajabi? WP skolen tester og undersøker det de anbefaler videre. Dersom du ønsker å bygge egen hjemmeside og lage onlinekurs etc her, så er WP skolen fantastisk støtte å ha. Vi har invitert med oss Kristin Skjæringrud. Hun er ekspert på WordPress. Kristin er rektor og grunnlegger av WP skolen. Har du lyst til å høre hva Kristin snakker om, så lytt til denne lærerike episoden.
Today my guest is Kara Maria Ananda from KaraMariaAnanda.com. Kara is an expert in the healing and wellness space, and has built her successful online business creating health-related courses for women. Her first courses were all about natural health, but then when she saw other wellness professionals needing help building their own businesses, she moved into educating these budding online entrepreneurs. In this interview, we talk about Kara's journey from healer to teacher, and how she organically grew her business to help solve her customers' problems. I think you'll find Kara inspiring. She is continually looking to improve her life and her customers' lives, by adding lots of positive energy into the world. Resources: Kara Maria Ananda Catch My Party MiloTree Awesome Birth Teacher Training Women's Healing Arts Teacher Training Tailwind Simplero * May contain affiliate links. If you click and make a purchase, I might receive a small commission at no cost to you. Transcript -- How to Grow an Online Business in the Wellness Space with Kara Maria Ananda Host 0:03 Welcome to The Blogger Genius Podcast. Brought to you by MiloTree. Here's your host, Jillian Leslie. Jillian Tohber Leslie 0:11 Hello everybody. Welcome back to The Blogger Genius Podcast. Today, my guest is Kara Maria Ananda. Now Kara is a women's healing arts educator. She is also a holistic business coach. Jillian Tohber Leslie 0:28 What she wants to do is help women in the wellness space, get their message out. So welcome to the show, Kara. Kara Maria Ananda 0:29 Thank you so much, Jillian. I'm really excited to be here and talk with you today. Jillian Tohber Leslie 0:34 Yeah, we were starting to talk offline and I'm like, No, no, let's wait wait. Both of us would start talking. I'd be like, Oh no, no, let's wait till we get on the show. You were talking just about your philosophy and all that. Jillian Tohber Leslie 0:56 So the way I found you was I was looking at our current customers who use MiloTree, and I saw your site and I thought, wow, I wanted to talk to you. Getting into the wellness space as a blogger Jillian Tohber Leslie 1:07 And I haven't interviewed that many people in the wellness space. So I thought this would be really interesting. So tell us a little bit about your journey and how you got to be this online entrepreneur in this very specific space. Kara Maria Ananda 1:25 Oh, well, thanks so much. I've had a long journey in the wellness world and healing arts. I've always been passionate about natural healing. It's been a part of my life since I was younger and I found myself always gravitating towards that. Kara Maria Ananda 1:39 My very first job was actually at an integrative health clinic and massage therapy school when I was a teenager, and then later in life, I decided that I really wanted to focus on that professionally So I became a massage therapist. Kara Maria Ananda 1:54 Then I got really passionate about women's health and my practice as a massage therapist and evolved into really focusing on pregnancy and birth and women's cycles, and became a birth doula and a postpartum doula to childbirth educator. Kara Maria Ananda 2:11 I started teaching about women's health and for many years I had a private practice. Jillian Tohber Leslie 2:15 And where are you located? Kara Maria Ananda 2:17 Oh, well, uh, currently. Kara Maria Ananda 2:19 So I'm actually located in Southern New Hampshire about 45 minutes from Boston, and I'm in my hometown right now where I grew up, but I actually spent 20 years living all over the West Coast. Kara Maria Ananda 2:32 I moved to Seattle, where I studied massage therapy and became a doula. I've lived in Oregon and California and Sedona, Arizona, and recently just last year, actually moved back to my hometown, which is really cool. Jillian Tohber Leslie 2:47 Can you just briefly explain what a doula is for people who don't know? Kara Maria Ananda 2:51 Oh, yeah. A doula is a companion for somebody who is pregnant and going through birth and labor and postpartum. Kara Maria Ananda 2:59 They provide emotional support physical comfort measures like touch and massage, and heat packs and ice packs and all that kind of stuff, and but it's really somebody who supports women through through the childbearing process. Jillian Tohber Leslie 3:15 I wish I could have had you. Kara Maria Ananda 3:19 It was so special, so I was really very involved in the doula world, and was attending a lot of births and was teaching doula workshops where I would travel. Kara Maria Ananda 3:33 What happened was, I was on call at the at the end of like doing all this for about 10 years in person. Kara Maria Ananda 3:39 What shifted me to working in an online business was that, I love all the doula work, but is really working one on one with people and I was on call 24 hours a day seven days a week. Kara Maria Ananda 3:52 I would then travel somewhere and then teach for multiple days, and was back on call and then some things happen in my life that really changed. Kara Maria Ananda 4:01 My mother passed away and I felt like I needed to shift, and I really just focused on how I could reach more people in more places, and be able to spend more time with my family. Creating an online business in the wellness space Kara Maria Ananda 4:11 So about 9 or 10 years ago, I really focused on the online business and so I started creating classes online to teach people about birth and women's health, and then that evolved into also business coaching and support and online business. Kara Maria Ananda 4:27 It's been really amazing. It allowed me to spend more time with my older son as he was growing up, and I've had two more children, but I'm able to be home with and homeschool. Kara Maria Ananda 4:36 I get to help support women to discover natural health, and become leaders and provide support in their own community all over the world from North America to Europe and Asia and the Middle East and South America. Kara Maria Ananda 4:52 It's been really satisfying for me to be able to feel like I'm making a bigger impact online, while also being able to have that freedom to actually spend more time with my own children. Jillian Tohber Leslie 5:09 This audience is predominantly women and these are predominately moms. Although there are some, of course not moms, but what would you say to a female entrepreneur? Where do you think she needs the most support? Kara Maria Ananda 5:30 Oh, women, we need so much support, right? And especially if you're an entrepreneur and you're a mom, I get this question a lot. Kara Maria Ananda 5:37 People want to know how do I have this growing online business that I'm running, as well as being with my children and spending a lot of time with them and homeschooling. ADVICE: Setting clear boundaries as an online entrepreneur Kara Maria Ananda 5:49 Really, time management and being able to set really clear boundaries and ask for support when you need it. Like my husband. He supports me a lot and our business we really run it together, and homeschool our kids together. Kara Maria Ananda 6:02 So having that support is really key. And you know a lot of women that I know who are entrepreneurs, we need to ask for what we need and set time whether that's childcare or really prioritizing what we're doing. Kara Maria Ananda 6:19 Because it's not just the time that we spend with our children. That's important. But it's also the example that we're spending that we're showing them. Kara Maria Ananda 6:27 So spending time investing in our dreams and our passions and our hobbies and saying, this is important, you need to do something else, you need to find a quiet activity so I can do this. Kara Maria Ananda 6:36 It shows them and it demonstrates to them as they grow up that, investing time in their passions is important, too. So I think that there's a balance and we need to let go of guilt and having to do everything perfect and ask for what we need. Jillian Tohber Leslie 6:54 I completely agree and I think that I've mentioned this previously on the show, which is I have a daughter and she has watched my husband and me running Catch My Party or our first business and MiloTree. Jillian Tohber Leslie 7:10 And I like that we don't just go to an office and stuff happens. And then we come home and see her. She sees everything. Kara Maria Ananda 7:16 That's so great and what a fun business for her to grow up watching too, parties. I bet she has some opinions and ideas. Jillian Tohber Leslie 7:23 Oh my gosh, yes. Very much so. Kara Maria Ananda 7:28 Educational too, you're teaching about how to be an entrepreneur. A lot of kids aren't learning this in the school system today. And I think it's one of the most important skills for children to learn to. Jillian Tohber Leslie 7:38 Yeah, so my husband and I are talking business all the time and, and we only have one child, so she's there listening. And she created her first business, which is back like a year and a half ago, when fidget spinners were a big deal. Jillian Tohber Leslie 7:52 My husband is a 3D printer guy. So he printed her 3D printed fidget spinner and she's like, Oh my god, I want to do this and sell them to my friends at school. Jillian Tohber Leslie 8:05 So they figured out how to personalize them with somebody initials. And then she started a business. Jillian Tohber Leslie 8:12 What was so funny was, they were kind of outlawed at school. So it was almost as if there were like these drug dealing transactions going on. Jillian Tohber Leslie 8:20 I've watched her kind of open her backpack up and like, take out the spinner. And then somebody would handle this wad of cash and she shoved in her backpack and she'd come home with all these singles and she'd be like, counting her money. Jillian Tohber Leslie 8:36 And it was so funny, but I think because she has grown up with us as entrepreneurs. She's gonna be one. Kara Maria Ananda 8:43 Yeah, absolutely. You know, my oldest son, he just started college this year as a freshman. I have an 18 year ol,d a seven year old, and a two year old so they're pretty spread out. Kara Maria Ananda 8:57 But the the oldest one, he actually got really involved in entrepreneurship too, he did some programs during high school in the summers and entrepreneurship, but before that he got involved in it in junior high. Kara Maria Ananda 9:09 He figured out that on the way to school, he could stop off at the corner store and buy candy, and then he would buy the candy bars. He didn't eat them because we weren't really into candy. Kara Maria Ananda 9:20 I mean, he probably ate a few, but but he wasn't bringing them home and eating them. He would buy them and the take them to school and sell them for double what he bought them at the corner store. Kara Maria Ananda 9:29 He did this all on his own. I found out about it after it been going on for a while. Jillian Tohber Leslie 9:35 Were you proud? Kara Maria Ananda 9:37 I am. I am kind of proud. Yeah. And then he ended up, as he was older in high school, he actually got a wagon and he would take it and park in the summertime and sell sodas to people in the park during the heat waves and yeah, entrepreneurial spirit. Kara Maria Ananda 9:51 I feel like I have more faith in him as he's growing up. I'm like, okay, he has the ability to like figure out strategies and solutions for things. Kara Maria Ananda 10:01 And I think that's one of the most important skills that that kids can have as they're becoming adults, actually, in a world that's changing so rapidly. Jillian Tohber Leslie 10:08 Yes, yes, I totally agree. Okay, so let's talk about your journey. So you decided that you were going to move your business online and you created your first course? Creating your first course as a blogger Kara Maria Ananda 10:19 Yes, I created my first course before I totally decided to go online. It was kind of like a little test. Kara Maria Ananda 10:25 I created a childbirth education class for parents. I didn't even really promote it. I just kind of tried it out to kind of feel around with the online space and had a few customers and it inspired me. Kara Maria Ananda 10:35 And then I realized, you know, after thinking about it, that I really wanted to shift and I wanted to reach more people. And that online was really a way the way to do it. Kara Maria Ananda 10:46 So then I really jumped in, really focused on the online business. And I created the what's now the "Awesome Birth Teacher Training" and started teaching, reaching out and educating childbirth teachers around the world. And it was so inspiring. Kara Maria Ananda 11:02 And so that developed. Then the next was the "Women's Healing Arts Teacher Training," which covers all the different cycles of a woman's life from menstruation, fertility, pregnancy, and menopause, and sexuality and different natural healing arts that we can use for empower self care during all these cycles. Kara Maria Ananda 11:20 And then after that, I realized that some of my students were amazing, and were had taken both of these trainings, and I knew that they had other certifications and other trainings. Kara Maria Ananda 11:31 But I was still seeing them struggling to actually get their business out in the world, and start teaching workshops or doing consultations and creating a website. Kara Maria Ananda 11:40 So then I created the "Healing Arts Business Academy" to support women's wellness leaders to create online businesses and products and services and find confidence to share and publish online. Kara Maria Ananda 11:54 And then that's grown into a variety of courses now, for all about women's leadership, and holistic wellness, and how to create online courses. Kara Maria Ananda 12:04 And I do a lot of private mentoring also, with women in the wellness field, who are coaches and midwives and doctors and massage therapists who want to expand their online presence and share their message in a bigger way. Building an organic online business by listening to your customers Jillian Tohber Leslie 12:19 What I think is so interesting about what you said just now, is that you started with something and then you started to listen and see problems that you could solve and that it sounds like it was like organic growth. Jillian Tohber Leslie 12:36 Like, "Oh, I see that these women are taking my courses, but then they don't know how to start to build businesses, I will help them." Kara Maria Ananda 12:43 Yes. Jillian Tohber Leslie 12:44 So it sounds as if it was this natural progression. Kara Maria Ananda 12:48 Yeah, it's very organic. Sometimes people look at me, and they're like, well, you do all these things, and how do you do all these things all at once, but I did them one at a time. And they've built up and it's been very organic. Kara Maria Ananda 13:01 I'm very passionate about what I do, and helping the people that I work with. Kara Maria Ananda 13:05 So for me, I have to feel really passionate about something. So I listened to my intuition and what I'm writing about to people, what I'm talking to people about in my coaching sessions. Kara Maria Ananda 13:15 And then these subjects that are the passionate kind of hot topics of the day, that's what tends to evolve into the next offering, the next course, the next sale. Jillian Tohber Leslie 13:25 So just basics, what kind of platform are you using to build your courses? Kara Maria Ananda 13:33 I use Simplero, it's a great, very simple all in one holistic business management system that's really specifically designed for people that are creating online course businesses. Kara Maria Ananda 13:45 And I've been using Simplero for the past five years. I love it. So that's the heart of my business. Jillian Tohber Leslie 13:50 I've never heard of it. Kara Maria Ananda 13:50 Yeah, it's smaller. It's not as popular as or well known, because it's a smaller company. But they've been around and naturally growing. Kara Maria Ananda 13:59 I connected with the CEO of the company about five years ago, through an entrepreneur group. And as he was starting the company, and I was like, this is a perfect fit. Kara Maria Ananda 14:09 He was a holistic coach that wanted to create a platform for other holistic coaches to be able to share their their courses online who are really focused on this. Kara Maria Ananda 14:18 And it's has a lot more than just online courses. So I actually run my shopping cart and my email list. And email automation, and you can do deadlines. And you can do landing pages. You can even do a whole website, although my website is on squarespace. com. But Simplero is really the heart of my business. Kara Maria Ananda 14:38 It's been pretty awesome. I have a blog post on it on my website about Simplero about how we use it. And actually, if you go to my website, I have a tools bar where I list my favorite tools, and Simplero is number one. Jillian Tohber Leslie 14:51 Is MiloTree on there, by the way? Kara Maria Ananda 14:54 Oh, I'm going to add it. Jillian Tohber Leslie 14:56 Do you know, we have an affiliate program? Kara Maria Ananda 14:58 Yeah, yeah, definitely. I will add it, actually it's on my list of things to do. But you know, as being a mom, there's one thing at a time, right. Jillian Tohber Leslie 15:07 So let's talk about how to share this. Kara Maria Ananda 15:09 I will share more about how how your program has been helping me too. Jillian Tohber Leslie 15:13 Oh, well, here, okay, so tell me. So that's how I found you was I saw MiloTree on your site. Jillian Tohber Leslie 15:21 Would you share actually about Pinterest and your thoughts and how you ended up with MiloTree? Kara Maria Ananda 15:27 Absolutely. See, I've been using Pinterest since the early years, like what was that 2012 ? And I always enjoyed it. And I've always, tried to share my blog images. Kara Maria Ananda 15:38 And over the years, I've focused on creating vertical images and my blog posts that could be shared on to Pinterest. But I didn't really focus a lot on it over the last year. How Pinterest can grow your business as an online entrepreneur Kara Maria Ananda 15:51 But then what happened was that I've consistently noticed that even without putting a lot of effort into Pinterest, by sharing my blogs there, and by other people, pinning my blogs to Pinterest that I consistently get a lot of traffic. Kara Maria Ananda 16:06 And I have been quite focused on Facebook and Instagram over the last couple of years. But honestly, with the algorithm changes and the loss of organic growth, it's a little disappointing to see how everybody's organic growth is, is going down. Kara Maria Ananda 16:21 I still think that Facebook and Instagram are fantastic for connection and essential for entrepreneurs, especially for the ad platform. But I love that Pinterest was just bringing all this organic website traffic that was equal to Facebook without putting effort into it. Kara Maria Ananda 16:38 So I realized I should put more effort into this if all this traffic without really focusing on it, what happens if I really focus on it? Kara Maria Ananda 16:46 So the last, two, three months, I've been really focusing on daily going into Pinterest, really creating, super optimized vertical images with words for all my blog posts and sharing them on Pinterest and and and seeing what I can do. Kara Maria Ananda 17:02 And so I found MiloTree because I was like, yeah, how do I get more traffic. This is a really amazing place to be connecting with people through Pinterest. Kara Maria Ananda 17:13 And so MiloTree is really cool because I got this little pop up now on my website, and it just pops up and invites people to come follow me on Pinterest. Kara Maria Ananda 17:21 So now I've been naturally growing and my Pinterest followers and my reach. And just last week, I actually hit a million monthly viewers on Pinterest for the first time. Kara Maria Ananda 17:34 It was really cool. Now it's like 800k, but I'm still like super psyched about that because it was like 7 k for like the last year and I realized it went up to 90k. Kara Maria Ananda 17:45 And I was like, Look, this is growing. I should do something about this. And so with my effort with having MiloTree, with using Tailwind with really optimizing my Pinterest images, that it's grown. Kara Maria Ananda 17:59 Specifically the monthly viewers is nice, but a lot of that honestly, is for pins that aren't even my own, to but my own personal website traffic, which is the indicator of how is Pinterest working for me since I started using these putting an extra focus on it. Kara Maria Ananda 18:16 My Pinterest website, referral traffic has grown from where it's been consistently been 4% of my monthly viewers to now 17% of my website traffic. Jillian Tohber Leslie 18:26 Wow. Kara Maria Ananda 18:26 Just from putting effort into Pinterest. So I'm super stoked about it. Jillian Tohber Leslie 18:31 It's motivating, isn't it? Kara Maria Ananda 18:32 Yeah. Jillian Tohber Leslie 18:33 When you see results. It's funny, because with Catch My Party, we were totally all into Facebook. And then all of a sudden we started noticing we were getting traffic from Pinterest. Jillian Tohber Leslie 18:46 And it told us go deep into Pinterest. And so that's why we built MiloTree and all of that. And so it was really kind of like, Whoa, we see this and almost like I think Pinterest is a sleeping giant because I don't think it's a sexy as Instagram. Kara Maria Ananda 19:06 Yeah, because you don't put selfies on Pinterest. Pinterest is not a selfie platform. Kara Maria Ananda 19:12 It's funny, they say that faces don't generate as much interaction on those pins as having to like just information. Jillian Tohber Leslie 19:20 Right. Kara Maria Ananda 19:21 Yeah, Instagram. I love Instagram. And I put a lot of effort into it. But recently, I haven't. I have just been kind of posting when I want to because Pinterest has been so satisfying. And the fact that it's an information place. Kara Maria Ananda 19:35 So I realize that as an entrepreneur, where I'm excited about sharing information and articles and blog posts and not like, necessarily pictures of myself. Jillian Tohber Leslie 19:44 Right and the truth is that your audience wants to be inspired by you. But really, it's about them. Them learning and solving their own problems. Jillian Tohber Leslie 19:58 And it isn't as much like a cult of person like oh my God, like what's Kara doing? No, it's like, what can Kara teach me? Jillian Tohber Leslie 20:10 And so that's where I would say, why it it doesn't surprise me that Pinterest is a richer platform for you then Instagram. Kara Maria Ananda 20:20 Yeah, and I think a lot of people don't realize that. I think you're right when it's like a sleeping giant because it's been around for a while. But this new phase, it's really changing. Kara Maria Ananda 20:29 And I think that it's different. I think a lot of people are really realizing that it's a great place for people who are sharing information. And it's a great place for being a wellness entrepreneur. Kara Maria Ananda 20:39 It's not just for crafts and food. People are looking for health information all the time on Pinterest. It's awesome. Jillian Tohber Leslie 20:50 Maybe it's just my awareness. But I feel like the wellness space right now is blowing up. Kara Maria Ananda 20:56 It is. Absolutely. I have a couple articles about that on my website too. I have a lot of blog posts about what's going on in the wellness field. And it is huge. Kara Maria Ananda 21:07 So health and wellness specifically like natural, holistic wellness, alternative medicine. Healthy Food is a $3.7 trillion global industry. And it's poised to grow significantly in the next five years. Kara Maria Ananda 21:22 And women are leading this category. Not only are women leading as entrepreneurs and small business owners, which is really empowering and exciting. But women are the main consumers to women make 80% of the choices for the health care and food shopping and all these kind of, you know, healthy lifestyle changes in in households today. Jillian Tohber Leslie 21:43 What's funny, so I would say that really Pinterest started and it was cupcakes and weddings and things like that. Jillian Tohber Leslie 21:53 And then I feel like food blogging just took off on Pinterest. And typically the ooey gooey unhealthy foods that you just look at and you just start dying to eat. Jillian Tohber Leslie 22:06 But at the same time that is always has always been really popular. You know, beautiful cakes and cupcakes. And you always want to get that like chocolate shot, you know where it's like oozing out. Jillian Tohber Leslie 22:17 But then now I'm seeing wellness coming in. Especially with like Whole 30 and just this focus on living a healthier life. I feel like that is like this new wave of experience for women. Kara Maria Ananda 22:35 Yeah, people are looking up, like healthy snacks has been like trending as one of the top things that people are looking up on Pinterest recently. Kara Maria Ananda 22:44 And you know, there's tons of like paleo bloggers and wellness bloggers who have really blown up. I mean, you can find like thousands of recipes for like, how to make homemade bone broth and how to heal your gut and how to eat paleo and keto on Pinterest Jillian Tohber Leslie 22:59 And the combination. So for example, we just made, this weekend delicious chocolate cookies with almond flour. Kara Maria Ananda 23:08 Oh, that's awesome. Jillian Tohber Leslie 23:09 And we found the recipe on Pinterest. Kara Maria Ananda 23:11 I love almond flour last night. I just made homemade baked apple cider donuts with almond flour. Jillian Tohber Leslie 23:21 You know you can have that ooey gooey experience now. But with like a healthy twist. A somewhat healthy twist. Kara Maria Ananda 23:27 Yeah, high protein. Jillian Tohber Leslie 23:31 So thank you. By the way, I'm so glad that MiloTree is working for you. And one thing that's nice, I just want to say, here's my little plug, which is MiloTree will grow your Pinterest followers. Why MiloTree grows high quality Pinterest followers Jillian Tohber Leslie 23:42 But what's great about it, it will grow Pinterest followers who've already come to your site, because it's your visitors. And those Pinterest followers are the Pinterest followers who are aligned with your content. Jillian Tohber Leslie 23:54 So Pinterest will show your pins first to your followers. And if your followers respond to them, then Pinterest will show those pins to other people on the platform. So if you align your followers with your content, then you will have even more success on Pinterest. Kara Maria Ananda 24:15 That's awesome. And I think that's really cool. Because like I said, I've been on Pinterest for a long time. So I think that a bunch of my followers might have started following me like five years ago, they might not still be active on the platform. Kara Maria Ananda 24:28 And well, you're like reach and your monthly views, you can have a really small following on Pinterest and reach a lot of people. Kara Maria Ananda 24:35 I just have over 4,000 followers. And probably a lot of those came from a long time ago. But I just reached like a million monthly views. Kara Maria Ananda 24:43 But at the same time, having new engaged followers that are going to see your content interact with it first is really important. Kara Maria Ananda 24:50 And because of the platform, I don't feel like it's super easy. Like, you know, you click on pins, and you save pins, but you're not always looking to follow people. Kara Maria Ananda 24:58 So having a prompt for people that are visiting your website to also follow you there is is really helpful. I feel like it kind of closes that loop a little bit. Jillian Tohber Leslie 25:07 That's interesting. I hadn't thought of it that way. But you're right. I mean, we currently with Catch My Party every day, we follow new people, because I think the algorithm likes that right? Jillian Tohber Leslie 25:21 It says, Yeah, active. But the truth is, when I'm like browsing for myself, I'm looking much more for pins than I am to find new people to follow, right. So that's interesting. I hadn't even thought of that. Kara Maria Ananda 25:34 Yeah, but now I see MiloTree or other bloggers, websites. And so it'll pop up, I'll be looking at somebody's blog, and it'll pop up and I'll be like, Oh, great. You're active on Pinterest, you know, right? Kara Maria Ananda 25:45 So it's kind of like a, it's kind of like a letting people know, like, I'm active on Pinterest right now, and tells me the sites that I think we're older. And so becoming more active and engaged now and sharing really good pins like, those are the people I want to follow. So it's a little badge. Jillian Tohber Leslie 26:03 It's like a little bit of social proof. Kara Maria Ananda 26:04 Yeah, little social proof, which is really good. That's one of the things I've been focusing on a lot today. Kara Maria Ananda 26:10 I think that as the way that we interact online is changing. Like, now we have all these Voice Search technologies, and people are using Pinterest as a search engine. Kara Maria Ananda 26:19 And social media is changing, like having our own websites is really important. But also trying to think about how would our websites change into the future, and with this new interactivity, how can people interact with us in our websites, and we create more opportunities for interaction. Kara Maria Ananda 26:38 So that's one of the things I've been focusing a lot on recently, is giving people more options of things to do that engages them with my website, and content that can be like fun. Jillian Tohber Leslie 26:47 Can you give some examples? Creating interactive experience on your website as a blogger Kara Maria Ananda 26:50 Recently I created an online oracle deck on my website, which is really cool. So you can actually go to my website and choose a card of the day. Kara Maria Ananda 27:01 In the top navigation bar, it says oracle and you can click on that page. And they'll invite you to discover your card of the day. Discover your destiny. Kara Maria Ananda 27:13 And so these are messages for, like, positive motivation, living inspiration for leaders. Jillian Tohber Leslie 27:22 Oooh I like it, so today, mine is "Trust your intuition and you will succeed." Oh, that's so nice. Jillian Tohber Leslie 27:32 It's like you're just putting out some good energy into the world. So thank you. Kara Maria Ananda 27:36 Yeah, and the next right, you could choose a new card, you can come back whenever you want to, if you want, like a positive message. So little fun things like that. Kara Maria Ananda 27:45 The other thing that I did is I created a search bar on my website. So it's like my own little Kara Maria Google search bar. Kara Maria Ananda 27:53 You can actually type in any word like birth, or, sexuality, fertility your business, and it'll pop up all the different blog posts and pages that have that information. Jillian Tohber Leslie 28:07 That's wonderful. I like the way you're thinking how people are all different. Somebody's going to use your search bar, and somebody wants a little dose of positivity, and you've got something for everybody. Jillian Tohber Leslie 28:24 Which is, again, back to that strategy of like, let's say you're going deep now on Pinterest. And what I recommend then, is to show a variety of images for a certain post, because you don't know what somebody's going to respond to. Right? Kara Maria Ananda 28:40 Yeah, now, I've been spending a lot of time going back and updating my old blog posts, because there's some blog posts that still get a ton of traffic. And it's exciting to see. Creating new images for Pinterest and updating keywords for older blog posts Kara Maria Ananda 28:51 But then I realized, like, oh, wow, this is getting a lot of traffic. And it has an image that I created two years ago, what happens if I add a new image that we got to capture people's, current sensibility of what they're attracted to? Jillian Tohber Leslie 29:06 Yes. And then, are you adding new keywords? Are you adding more text or more information? Are you then updating the date? Kara Maria Ananda 29:16 Oh, yeah, that's another thing I did this year, I updated my website, and I took the date off of the blog post. So all of the blog posts will still have the date in the URL, but when you go to my website, it doesn't say right underneath the blog post, like this was written in 2016, Jillian Tohber Leslie 29:34 Okay, but you're not, you didn't have the date in the URL Kara Maria Ananda 29:38 I did at the very beginning, I didn't like 2013. And then I changed the blog URL around 2014, so that the date was no longer in the URL, right. Kara Maria Ananda 29:50 But it was still showing up on the blog posts until about six months ago, when I changed that. And I took that off so that now all those older blog posts, somebody could go to to it. And they would just see the title and they would see the content, they wouldn't know when it was published. So it feel more relevant. Kara Maria Ananda 30:07 And yes, I am changing keywords. I am adding keywords to headlines, I try not to take away the words that are already in the headlines, though. Kara Maria Ananda 30:16 If they are ranking on Google because you don't want to ruin a current ranking that you have. So I'll add an extra keywords. And I reformat the articles because some of my older ones, I realized that I had a lot more text, like multiple sentences and longer paragraphs. Kara Maria Ananda 30:30 Writing for the web today, we really want to create, almost a paragraph space between like every sentence or two. So definitely reformat it to make it more readable. Jillian Tohber Leslie 30:40 I love all these. I mean, everything you're saying. I'm like, Yes. Kara Maria Ananda 30:43 Yeah. So that is a huge, like getting a lot more traffic and more shares of blog posts that are still super relevant. You know, it's great Jillian Tohber Leslie 30:53 I see you have keywords at the top of your posts. Kara Maria Ananda 30:56 Oh, I do. Oh, those are tags. Jillian Tohber Leslie 30:58 Tags. Yes. So they're showing. Kara Maria Ananda 31:00 Those are actually searchable to on my website. If you click on the tag, you can find other blog posts with that same tag on my website. So that's another cool interactive thing on my website. Jillian Tohber Leslie 31:13 What I love is that as an entrepreneur, I can tell that you have been educating yourself, going from being a doula or a massage therapist, you wouldn't necessarily think online entrepreneur, but you speak in a very sophisticated way about your online business. Kara Maria Ananda 31:33 Absolutely, I am passionate about education, that's what I'm all about. And that's because I, myself, am a lifelong learner. And I'm super passionate about learning. The need to be a lifelong learner as an entrepreneur Kara Maria Ananda 31:41 So I consistently am also, taking online courses, and studying with mentors, and doing a lot of my own personal research. And really, you know, what entrepreneurs do is we learned a lot through trying things. Kara Maria Ananda 31:54 So I try a lot of things, and I really look at them and analyze what worked, what didn't work, and it's, those are all learning opportunities. And it's a great way to figure out how we can grow and evolve is through learning and trying and taking risks. Jillian Tohber Leslie 32:13 That's terrific. Now I just have been thinking about this as you think about building courses content, I've been talking to some people who are building courses. And it seems like it is one of these things where you never finish your course, building it. Jillian Tohber Leslie 32:29 So how do you get there because everybody says, I should I should write a course, I should create a course. But how do you get from beginning to end? How do you know, when that course is done? What's your process? Kara Maria Ananda 32:42 Oh, well, you know, that's a really good question. And I love all my courses. And I'm really passionate about supporting people to create online courses today. Kara Maria Ananda 32:50 I actually created a new program that I have on my website, it's called the, Of Course Academy, you can create your own signature online course. How to build an online course as a blogger Kara Maria Ananda 33:00 And to help break down the process of how I actually do this, because there is quite a process. Kara Maria Ananda 33:06 I think the first part is really research, you have to research what you're doing, how to be able to communicate it online, what's going on and really figure out as part of your research, how you can stand out. Kara Maria Ananda 33:21 It's important to have your own style, your own story, that's the part of what you're doing, to make it you know, unique in the online world, and, and give it that value that only, you know, that is something that only you can really offer. Kara Maria Ananda 33:37 And then I use Simplero and really use, you know, an outlining process of creating an outline, creating topic and my sub topics. And then testing those out first through like social media posts about those topics, through blog posts, see how people react to them, and then organizing them. Kara Maria Ananda 33:56 And then, you know, teaching and teaching them is a lot of fun. I love teaching online. Having the right equipment makes a great deal. Jillian Tohber Leslie 34:04 Are you making videos? Kara Maria Ananda 34:06 Yeah I do a variety of different things from different courses, I do videos of me presenting a teaching. I do screen shares, you know, presentation style videos about certain topics, or demonstrating things online and the online business and audios and PDFs. We can create so many different kinds of media and really create these amazing multimedia experiences. Kara Maria Ananda 34:29 And then, of course, yeah, there's also marketing and promotion. And, you know, you could have a launch. You could have an Evergreen Launch where you have your course available ongoing and there's different kinds of marketing strategies for each of those. Kara Maria Ananda 34:42 And then upkeep, yeah, it's really, it's never done. I mean, this year, I went back and I updated a lot of my courses and went through and redid the the course membership site that they were on to make them really beautiful and on point with my current branding. Kara Maria Ananda 35:00 So there's always more to do,. You can always go back. I think that if people want to create an online course, because they think it's just something that they just do once and the launch and it's just going to create passive income without them having to do anything else, that that's not going to exactly be how it turns out. Kara Maria Ananda 35:16 It's a path. And it's an ongoing process. And I love that about courses too, is that you can just do it the first time you get your course out, and whatever way it is, and then you evaluate, and then you can always upgrade it and add enhancements. Kara Maria Ananda 35:32 And so it doesn't have to be perfect. It just needs to be really valuable and passionate, and actually give people the value and the solution that you're offering to them. ADVICE: Done is better than perfect as an entrepreneur Jillian Tohber Leslie 35:43 I love that because I teach this all the time. I say it to my daughter, I say to my husband, because he can be more of a perfectionist, Done is better than perfect. Jillian Tohber Leslie 35:56 And Reid Hoffman, who founded LinkedIn always says this thing, which is, if you're not launching your product, and you're not embarrassed, you've launched too late. Kara Maria Ananda 36:09 I love that. Jillian Tohber Leslie 36:10 There needs to be that element of like, oh, you need to know that in a year, you're going to look back on this and be embarrassed. And if you don't do that, you've waited too long. Kara Maria Ananda 36:20 Yeah, upgrades are always happening. I'm consistently going through my website and just changing little things, we put things out. Kara Maria Ananda 36:27 And then as an online entrepreneur, we're always, you know, upgrading. And I like to do little upgrades. Because sometimes you see, this is really good, but maybe it could do better. Kara Maria Ananda 36:37 And sometimes it's just a few words or an image or phrase. So I like to go through and make 10% changes, I'll make 10% of a change to like the words in an area or try, you know, changing a photo and test it out and see if it gets better results or worse results. And if so, then change it back to what it was. Jillian Tohber Leslie 37:00 Now, given the you have a one year old -- Kara Maria Ananda 37:04 He's 21 months old right now. Jillian Tohber Leslie 37:06 Okay. So almost a two year old. Kara Maria Ananda 37:07 Yeah. Jillian Tohber Leslie 37:08 How many hours a week are you working on your business? Kara Maria Ananda 37:11 Oh, you know, I knew you're gonna ask this. And I've been stumped with this question. Because I don't work all at one time, right. And I don't keep a schedule. Kara Maria Ananda 37:20 I've been thinking maybe I should keep a timer for a week and test this out and actually see, because I work in little bits of time, a half an hour here or half an hour there, and then a couple hours here. Kara Maria Ananda 37:34 But I work a lot because I'm really passionate about what I do. And even when I'm not working on my website, or responding to emails or working with clients or create a course, I'm still working because there's other projects that I'm working on. Kara Maria Ananda 37:46 I have books that I'm writing slowly, creating images on Canva. So I'd have to say like, you know, at least 20 hours a week, if not, you know, up to 40, I don't know, I'm really not sure. Jillian Tohber Leslie 38:01 That's amazing. Yes. Well, again, if you're passionate about it, you do the work, the great thing about being an online entrepreneur is you have the flexibility to say, Oh, my baby's crying, I can go be with my baby. And then I can come back with my baby is napping. Kara Maria Ananda 38:20 Absolutely. And you can be at the playground so that the kids could be happy playing, and you can get on your phone and do Pinterest or respond to emails. Kara Maria Ananda 38:27 So absolutely I take advantage of all those little time blocks when I can. How to monetize as a wellness online entrepreneur Jillian Tohber Leslie 38:32 Absolutely and are you mostly monetizing via coaching and courses? Kara Maria Ananda 38:37 Yeah, those are my two main main things. Right now. I have an amazing selection of online courses for women's health, birth, business, spirit manifestation and life. Kara Maria Ananda 38:49 And I also provide private coaching mostly for women and wellness and small business and who are wanting to create a bigger online profit sense, or just designed their signature programs. Kara Maria Ananda 39:03 And I also do some writing and some speaking, but those are my two main main things. I love teaching. And I love helping people to enhance their communication and spread their message. Jillian Tohber Leslie 39:15 Great. Okay, we started the interview. And I said, when you work with female entrepreneurs, what do you think they need? Jillian Tohber Leslie 39:23 And you were saying they need support and all of that. So how do you go about getting support and feeding your own sense of self, so that you can be a mother, homeschooler, and also have this business? Kara Maria Ananda 39:41 Oh, wow. Well, self care is really important. I make sure to eat really good food, like a high nutrient dense food. Kara Maria Ananda 39:48 We have snacks throughout the house, like hard boiled eggs, things that I can like, grab, like one hand foods are really important, you know, green shakes, things like that. Kara Maria Ananda 39:58 Also, you know, I have doors. I shut doors, headphones, headphones are a magic key for mom entrepreneurs. Kara Maria Ananda 40:08 The kids are noisy, they're watching, you know, Paw Patrol or something. You really need some time to really focus, putting on your headphones. Kara Maria Ananda 40:15 When you sit down at your computer or laptop, or even phone and listening to like relaxing music. It creates your own little world where you can focus and calm down, and relaxes your nervous system. Tips on setting boundaries as an entrepreneur Jillian Tohber Leslie 40:27 Mm hmm. Ok. And then how do you get it? You were talking about boundaries. So what are your tips on setting boundaries? Kara Maria Ananda 40:36 Oh, yes. You know what, I ask for what I need. My husband and I communicate a lot. And I make sure to check in, not only do we have calendar systems online, and in our family area for a family, but I'll check in like, every day before we go to bed. Kara Maria Ananda 40:51 It's like, Okay, this is going to happen tomorrow. This is when you need to have the kids to do that. This is what I can do this. Kara Maria Ananda 40:57 And then in the morning again, because sometimes we wake up and things can get, you know, really busy with the kids doing stuff. Kara Maria Ananda 41:03 And so again in the morning we will like check in with our tea or coffee and be like, Okay, this is what we need to do today here at this time there at that time, and then we know what other parts of the day can can kind of flow. Jillian Tohber Leslie 41:16 That's great. That's great. Well, this has been such a pleasure, and I'm just like going to explore your website. Because you make me feel really good with my little moment of my oracle. Kara Maria Ananda 41:32 Oh, thanks so much. Jillian Tohber Leslie 41:36 I feel very inspired and like the universe is today set out to kind of conspire to bring me, to give me what I need and what I want so what I'm working towards that. Kara Maria Ananda 41:48 Absolutely, Jillian Tohber Leslie 41:49 Truly this has been such a pleasure and thank you so much for being on the show. Kara Maria Ananda 41:55 Oh thank you so much. Jillian Tohber Leslie 41:56 Oh wait, before we stop please tell people how they can reach out to you. Kara Maria Ananda 42:04 Oh, absolutely. Well, you can find me on my website KaraMariaAnanda.com and I have that free oracle and the top navigation bar you can get your personal message of the day. Kara Maria Ananda 42:15 And I also have some other great free resources to under the free tab on my website, including a masterclass right now for women on how to grow your wellness business, with the three tips to what is growing fastest and wellness businesses today. Kara Maria Ananda 42:32 And plus more fun stuff including some quizzes and women's wellness ebook and more. Kara Maria Ananda 42:39 And I love hearing from people to whether you have any questions about natural wellness for women or for creating an online business in the wellness world. Kara Maria Ananda 42:50 And I'd love for people to reach out to me through the contact form and say hello, and let me know you know if there's anything from this talk that was inspiring, and if there's any questions way that I can be of service or support. Jillian Tohber Leslie 43:02 Oh, well, Kara, thank you so much for being on the show. Kara Maria Ananda 43:07 Oh, thank you so much, Jillian. I really appreciate it. This is a lot of fun. Getting more Pinterest followers with MiloTree Jillian Tohber Leslie 43:11 Pinterest has been huge for Kara's business and that's why she uses the MiloTree Pinterest pop up because it pops up and it asks her visitors to follow her on Pinterest and her followers just keep growing. Jillian Tohber Leslie 43:23 If you want to get your own MiloTree Pinterest pop up, head on over to MiloTree.com. Sign up and you'll get your first 30 days free. Sign up for MiloTree now and get your first 30 DAYS FREE!
The SaaS Podcast - SaaS, Startups, Growth Hacking & Entrepreneurship
Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero. Simplero is a SaaS platform that makes it easy for topic matter experts to market, sell and deliver their information online. It combines email marketing, invoicing and billing, and digital delivery into one complete package to help you run your entire business. The Show Notes Simplero CalvinCorreli.com Calvin on Twitter Omer on Twitter Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe to the podcast Leave a rating and review Follow Omer on Twitter Need help with your SaaS? Join SaaS Club Plus: our membership and community for new and early-stage SaaS founders. Join and get training & support. Join SaaS Club Launch: a 12-week group coaching program to help you get your SaaS from zero to your first $10K revenue. Apply for SaaS Club Accelerate: If you'd like to work directly with Omer 1:1, then request a free strategy session.
The SaaS Podcast - SaaS, Startups, Growth Hacking & Entrepreneurship
Calvin Correli is the founder and CEO of Simplero. Simplero is a SaaS platform that makes it easy for topic matter experts to market, sell and deliver their information online. It combines email marketing, invoicing and billing, and digital delivery into one complete package to help you run your entire business.The Show NotesSimpleroCalvinCorreli.comCalvin on TwitterOmer on TwitterEnjoyed this episode?Subscribe to the podcastLeave a rating and reviewFollow Omer on TwitterNeed help with your SaaS?Join SaaS Club Plus: our membership and community for new and early-stage SaaS founders. Join and get training & support.Join SaaS Club Launch: a 12-week group coaching program to help you get your SaaS from zero to your first $10K revenue.Apply for SaaS Club Accelerate: If you'd like to work directly with Omer 1:1, then request a free strategy session.
Calvin Correli is the CEO of Simplero, a software company. He believes that it is not about success in any one area, but it is about the WHOLE PACKAGE. “My results come from my actions, my actions come from my beliefs. So let me just take all of the beliefs I hold up and re-evaluate them.” - Calvin Correli Learn more about this episode of The Rant with Baeth at www.baeth.com/22
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents — including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. What you’ll learn about in this episode Infusing spirituality and creativity into your business and your life Combining all of your talents to create your success Identifying the right people for the roles you have at your company Building your systems incrementally without taking on too much A comprehensive approach to developing a curriculum for coaching Using mind maps to conceptually refine your presentations Daily habits that keep you focused on your success Insisting on enjoying every moment today Self-awareness that can help you continue to move forward How to best connect with Calvin: Email: calvin@interviewsthatconvert.com Website: simplero.com Twitter: @calvincorreli
Creating a Single, Money-Making Platform to Bring Together ALL Your Creative Interests. In this episode, Michele interviews Calvin Correli, founder of Simplero, an online platform where you can get all the tools you need for an information business. On the podcast, he shares advice for waking up to who you really are, so you can incorporate all the best parts of yourself into what you do, every day. In this episode, you learn: Advice for what to do when one element of your life feels like a constant, uphill battle. The different ways in which creativity can show up—even if some of your passions or gifts don’t appear “creative” right now. How “going with the flow” can open up avenues for you to pursue the things you love—in ways you may not be able to imagine. The realization that transformed life for Calvin—and how it could transform your life, too, as you pursue a way to make money with your passion. How to uncover what you’re subconsciously scared of, so you can figure out what’s stopping you from waking up to who you really are. What to do when you hit roadblock after roadblock, to finally start moving forward. Powerful questions to ask yourself to dial in on your passion and to move past fears that hold you back from reaching your goals. And more. Calvin also talks about what happened when he faced his greatest fear, and how that led to him being able to incorporate all of his creative pursuits into his life and work—and make money at them. It is Calvin’s passion to help online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive. Sign up for Calvin Correli’s free newsletter, where he shares his own journey as a person waking up to who he is, here. If this topic resonated with you, you may be interested in Michele PW’s newest book, “Love-Based Money and Mindset: Make the Money You Desire Without Selling Your Soul.” It’s available at most online retailers, here.
Calvin Correli is the Founder and CEO of a multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about living life in abundance and with purpose. His life is filled with adventure and seeing the fullness of the moment. He is also a musician, artist, and influencer of entrepreneurs. Topics covered in this episode: True Abundance, Living a Fearless Life, Systems that simplify life, Holistic living, The importance of purpose, and so much more.Website: https://simplero.comLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvinFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/calvintrutInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli/
Your Career Podcast with Jane Jackson | Create Your Dream Career
Calvin Correli is the CEO and Founder of Simplero. An information busiiness that provides all you need to create a fully functional e-commerce membership website. Simplero, quite simply, exists to raise the level of consciousness on the planet. Calvin believes that he is here to teach a new way to do entrepreneurship that’s deeply rooted in our spirituality and he wishes for all to find self-realisation through entrepreneurship.
On this episode I’ll will be going through my takeaways from my interviews during the month of May with Simplero creator Calvin Correli, Pat Flynn from the Smart Passive Income podcast, and Sales Coach Petra Foster. I'm excited! This is going to be fun.
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. Calvin has an absolutely fascinating and rich background! He's artistic, passionate, and completely gifted in software design. One really different thing about Calvin is that he's taken the StrengthsFinder profile three times. Overall, he's had eleven different themes show up. If you've had a similar experience, find out what that means, and what it says about you in today's episode. You can find Calvin at: https://simplero.com/ or http://calvincorreli.com
Self Esteem can hold anyone back, and my guest today, on the Steve Jobs inspired Join Up Dots free podcast interview is a man who when you read his professional bio seems like so many others out there today He is an artist, entrepreneur, & CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. He is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive & is currently bringing all of his gifts—including music, spirituality and personal growth—into an exciting new video show called The Calvin Show. Similar stuff. But then read the personal from the heart stuff and you can see that this guy is very different in many ways. As he says "Fifteen years ago, I was completely shut down. I had really low self esteem, and a self worth at minus a billion. Every breath I took I felt like I was stealing the air from people who were more worthy than me. I felt like I always had to produce in order to stay above board. It was a never-ending struggle. I was emotionally completely shut down. My head was all that mattered. My feelings were just a nuisance that most of the time I had no connection to. To my mind, my body existed to ferry my brain around. I remember watching the movies once, and there was a very powerful scene about love and loss. I felt something that I recognized as tears pressing to come out. And even though I actually wanted to cry, I just couldn't. That lasted until I was in my late thirties. Only then did I really start to open up. There came a time where I cried. A lot. It felt great. I had so many unfelt emotions stored up inside me. Meanwhile I was a struggling entrepreneur. Always wanting to be successful at any cost. If I weren't successful I might as well kill myself. I thought about it many times. That balcony looked tempting. I remember getting into coaching and personal growth, and thinking “I want to do something with this some day”. But it was always about being successful first (at something else). Without the success I had no worth." So how has he crossed that bridge from trying everything with little success, to finding the things that work the best for him? And does he look back and think, "I could have done this so much quicker if I could only go back in time?" Well let's find out as we bring onto the show to start joining up dots with the one and only Mr. Calvin Correli Show Highlights During the show we discussed such weighty topics with Calvin Correli such as: Why men are so unwilling to show their emotions in their lives, and what a stupid premise of holding ourselves back from letting go. How he came about creating the company Simplero, and the steps he took to bring the company to fruition. Why he believes in a principle of surrendering to life and just allowing life to guide him to what he wants to do. and lastly…. Why Calvin takes the time to allow the space in his life to allow the good things happen. Limiting meetings and outside distractions to give the freedom to build success.
In this episode I speak with Simplero creator Calvin Correli. We discussed how he developed his skills as a coder, how he got the idea for Simplero and how he was able to grow the company organically.
Calvin Correli shares with us his journey through his business. He started without much vision about who he wanted to be, but rather, focused on what he wanted to produce. After losing all of his clients while living temporarily with his father, he began to explore working his business in conformance with pursuing his life purpose. Q & A Why is self love important in your personal life? Have you tried the opposite? Because in my experience it feels horrible, and it doesn’t really accomplish much. So I would say, “Why not?” I can’t think of a good reason not to do it. What was the number one thing that was holding you back from accepting self love? I was very committed to not allowing it. What is the best advice you have ever received? Follow your heart. What is a self care habit that you practice regularly? Sleeping, eating healthy, and meditating. Can you share a resource, an app or a tool that we can use to build our selfcare practice. I enjoy walking with Audible, various audible books. What book are you reading right now? Out of Your Mind, by Alan Watts. What is the one thing that you are most passionate about? Creating. Right now I am writing a book and making as much music as I possibly can. Guest Bio Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. http://calvincorreli.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin https://www.facebook.com/calvintruth https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli https://www.youtube.com/calvincorrelishow
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what makes them feel most alive and is currently branching out to bring all of his gifts, including his musical, spiritual and intuitive talents, into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. Calvin has been blogging since the late 1990s. A programmer by training and education, he founded his company Simplero after an epiphany he experience in February of 2008; namely, that we’re here to seek self-realization through entrepreneurship. What started as software for his own online courses, quickly became a vehicle to empower other entrepreneurs who needed its support. Calvin believes that "entrepreneurship is about allowing the creative force of the universe to work through us and make manifest in the world whatever it is that we feel compelled to create, with that unique essence and vibration that only we can contribute. Entrepreneurship is not some mundane worldly pursuit separate from our spirituality. It is the ultimate expression of our spirituality." In December of 2016, Calvin rebooted his blog as a vlog titled, The Calvin Show, wherein he shares his insights, advice, and personal experiences to support the success of others in finding who they are and loving themselves.
www.alexandraharbushka.com Leave a review: http://bit.ly/ReviewSexMoneyandFood PSST. I will be reading your reviews in an upcoming episode so if you have any questions ask away :-) The Sex, Money, and Food Podcast Sexuality, Music, and Entrepreneurship Welcome to this of The Sex, Money and Food podcast! Have you considered what would shift if your life if you could tap into your sexual energy in every moment of your day? If you haven’t you will be after this episode! Today we’re talking with Calvin Correli about living from our sexual energy in every area of our lives. Calvin is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of Simplero. He is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive. He is also a healer and is currently working on bringing all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth - into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. On this edition of the Sex, Money, and Food Podcast, we talk about how Calvin fought against his innate nature for so long, how every act of loving, and supportive sexual intimacy between men and women heals the global collective, and why living from our sexual energy is a natural state for everyone. More About This Show Calvin grew up in Denmark and recalls a painful childhood of not being understood nor seen by his dad, and being an emotional caretaker for his mom. His parents also did not have a sexul or intimate relationship, and as a result he grew up with a self-described “messed up” relationship with women. On this episode of the show we talk about how he worked to heal his intimate relationships, and how he now sees the beauty in a woman with only appreciation for her beauty and not the resentment he had felt in the past or the need to act on his desire for her beauty. We dig into those topics a little later on but the first thing I asked him to share was how (and why) we can use our sexual energy throughout our day and in every area of our lives. Calvin has found it is fun and playful to bring sexual energy into every relationship - not in a way that is violating to someone's boundaries but in a way that reflects the reality of our ever-present sexual energy. He explains that by suppressing our natural sexual energy we make it worse; suppression and avoidance doesn't make it better. In fact, he says violations only happen because we have trauma around our sexuality. If every guy was cool with just feeling sexual desire and energy knowing that it doesn't mean it has to be acted on and that he can just feel the desire then he wouldn’t violate any woman. He goes on to describe how men and women are different, whether in the workplace or elsewhere. Aside from the obvious physical differences, the masculine energy is more about doing, fixing, and the like, while the feminine energy is about creation, collaboration, sharing, etc. And he also describes how the purpose of a woman’s orgasm is different from the purpose of a man’s. Women can orgasm in different ways and can access different areas than men can. In fact, sometimes when a woman has a particularly deep and/or intense orgasm she cries. Those tears are allowing her to open up deeper and deeper layers of her own femininity and the collective feminine. Calvin says the relationship between the global masculine and feminine has been horrible for so many years, but every time a man and woman get together in an open, loving space it is a tremendous opportunity for collective healing between the masculine and the feminine. And if we lived from our sexual energy rape, sexual assault and other violations would diminish (if not disappear). He explains why that’s true and how he shifted his own perception of women from caretaking and resentment to one of appreciation. You’ll also hear why sexual energy is spiritual energy, why we don’t need to abstain from pleasurable experiences like sex and food in order to be spiritual and why he’d outlaw guilt if he could! We dig into those scintillating topics and more on this episode of Sex, Money and Food with Calvin Correli. Tweetable: “Sex is deeply spiritual, and spirituality is deeply sexual.” - Calvin Correli Calvin Answers The Questions Q: Rank the following in order: Sex, Money, Food? A: That’s a tough one! Life without food is only so long. You can get along without money. Sex, food, money. Q: There is nothing better in life than… A: The first word that pops into my head was love. It feels a little cliche but I guess it’s true! Q: Your ultimate pleasure in life is? A: Sex is definitely up there! But there’s also a deeper feeling like feeling whole and complete and in union with everything, which sex can be a part of that. Q: What does self worth of minus 1 billion/true anarchy smell like to you? A: Rank! Like in a dark, humid, moist basement room that has old stuff in it and hasn’t been aired out for a long time. Q: What is a mistake or a circumstance did you go through regarding sex, money and food that is has allowed you grow and learn from. Or is there something that you would say...I will never do that again! A: I feel like I’m still doing all of this. Money was really tough for a long until I realized I was using lack of money to avoid looking inside at what wasn’t working with my work life and what I really wanted to do. I was actually scared of looking at what I really wanted to do because I was afraid I might not like it and it might not be what I wanted it to be. I really wanted to be a different person than it turns out I am - but now I kind of like it! Episode Resources Calvin Correli’s website Calvin Correli on Twitter Vagina: A New Biography, by Naomi Wolf There’s Nothing Wrong With You, by Cheri Huber The Red Paper Clip story Connect with me on Instagram Sign up for my Five Day Self-love Challenge Subscribe to the Sex Money and Food Podcast on iTunes
The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life
Calvin Correli. He’s the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar, online, all-in-one solution driven software company called Simplero. This company exists to reduce the stress associated with figuring out software systems and how to join them together. He’s passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them the most life. Famous Five: Favorite Book? – There Is Nothing Wrong With You What CEO do you follow? – N/A Favorite online tool? — FastMail Do you get 8 hours of sleep?— Not every night If you could let your 20-year old self, know one thing, what would it be? – “Invest in getting to know yourself, and who you are, and how you’re different” Time Stamped Show Notes: 02:20 – Nathan introduces Calvin to the show 02:49 – Simplero is a tool that helps people sell online 03:20 – Simplero is a SaaS business model 03:30 – Simplero was launched in 2009 03:39 – Calvin started to charge people in 2010 03:50 – Number of current paying customers is 700 04:02 – One of Simplero’s customers is Robin Green, who is an acupuncturist in California 04:25 – Robin decided to teach acupuncture online 04:42 – Robin made around $60K on her first program 05:10 – Simplero automates everything that can be automated 05:27 – Average customer pay per month 05:31 – Simplero charges monthly and takes a percentage of the revenue 05:51 – Simplero’s main revenue stream 06:25 – 10% is from the revenue fee and 90% from the SaaS model 07:15 – Average MRR 07:21 – Average ARR per customer 07:50 – Average customer retention 08:25 – Calvin shares how he got their customer LTV 08:58 – Calvin is based in New York, but he has team members in Denmark and on the West Coast 09:56 – Most of the people in the business started 6 months ago 10:20 – Simplero is self-funded 11:25 – Calvin is happy with how his company is doing at the moment 11:40 – Calvin wants to show the world a different way to live 12:01 – Calvin’s big dream is to be a presidential adviser for USA 13:00 – How do we measure happiness? 13:07 – Calvin is not a metrics guy 13:19 – There’s a sweet spot for every person where they are happy and work doesn’t feel like work 14:00 – How do we know if people are really happy? 15:10 – Productivity gains do not directly correlate to happiness gains 15:55 - The source of happiness vs. the thing you do for others or with others 17:30 – The Famous Five 3 Key Points: There’s a feeling of contentment you can find in helping others. Invest in yourself, first. There’s a sweet spot for every person where they are happy and work doesn’t feel like work. Resources Mentioned: Acuity Scheduling – Nathan uses Acuity to schedule his podcast interviews and appointments Drip – Nathan uses Drip’s email automation platform and visual campaign builder to build his sales funnel Toptal – Nathan found his development team using Toptal for his new business Send Later. He was able to keep 100% equity and didn’t have to hire a co-founder due to the quality of Toptal Host Gator – The site Nathan uses to buy his domain names and hosting for the cheapest price possible. Audible – Nathan uses Audible when he’s driving from Austin to San Antonio (1.5-hour drive) to listen to audio books. The Top Inbox – The site Nathan uses to schedule emails to be sent later, set reminders in inbox, track opens, and follow-up with email sequences Jamf – Jamf helped Nathan keep his Macbook Air 11” secure even when he left it in the airplane’s back seat pocket Freshbooks – Nathan doesn’t waste time so he uses Freshbooks to send out invoices and collect his money. Get your free month NOW Show Notes provided by Mallard Creatives
Calvin Correli is a software engineer, a creator, a meditator, a musician, an online entrepreneur and an all round mindful guy. He was born and raised in Denmark and currently lives in New York City. Calvin has created a million dollar software company called Simplero which is an all-in-one solution forselling courses and knowledge online. Calvin once created a product called Computer Zen which helped people use computers while using a Zen mindset. Calvin is a meditator and feels that’s a great way to spend quality time with your inner child. Contact Info Website: www.CalvinCorreli.com Most Influential Person Gay Hendricks Effect on Emotions Radically. I was completely cut off from my emotions for the majority of my life and so starting to get all that untangled. In the beginning of that process it seemed like everything was like a yawn of this untangled stuff. I couldn't tell things apart but now I see my emotions, which is great. I love my emotions. I want them. Thoughts on Breathing I do Gay's [Gay Hendricks] 'Yes Breath' every morning as part of my routine. I work a lot with my breath, trying to get different breathing techniques down. Suggested Resources Book: There is Nothing Wrong With You by Sherri Harper Book: F**k It: The Ultimate Spiritual Way by John Parkins App: No Apps - Calvin suggests to delete FB from your phone. Mindfulness Meets Bullying As a child, I was bullied quite a bit. I think people quickly figured out I was a pretty easy victim. Throughout the whole thing, mindfulness pretty much from anyone or anywhere, mindfulness in me and really seeing what was going on [would have made a difference]. It personally wasn't about me. Mindfulness in any of the teachers who were actually present to what was going on. Mindfulness in my parents. Anyone of those places would have made a big difference. What tended to happen was that, if they say something, people would be like, 'oh we've gotta do something' and then there would be parental intervention that was just not helpful at all, it just makes it worse. Being with me and how I was feeling, them and how they were feeling, Any of those things would have made a huge difference. There were some kids in the class just above me, for some reason they thought I was the funniest thing in the world to go after. Anytime they saw me around school they would hit me. They would just be looking out for me [to hit me]. During wintertime, I would never make it outside when there was snow because the minute they saw me, there would just be snow all over. Advice for Newbie Pay attention to yourself more than anything. Listen to other people and get inspired. Trust your own sense of what resonates with you because we're all alike in many ways but we're all different and what's gonna work for you is not necessarily what's gonna work for somebody else. Allow yourself to be selective, allow yourself to see what you resonate with and pick that. Do expose yourself to a bunch of stuff. That's helpful.
Manden bag Simplero, Calvin Correli, er den første gæst i min nye podcast, der hedder Marketing To Go. Calvin Correli har altid stået højt på min liste over mennesker, jeg gerne ville have en snak med, og i podcasten fortæller han blandt andet om: at forbinde følelser og livsformål med cool business hvordan vejen til … Få resten her »
Peak Performers | Tools, Strategies & Psychology to Get Things Done
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. About Simplero: Simplero is an all-in-one tool for coaches, authors, and speakers, who want to change lives and make a living by selling their courses and content online. It does everything you need, from email marketing, automation, billing, landing pages, through delivering the content to the right people at the right time. It's easy and fun to use, and lets you focus on the things you like to do most. https://simplero.com/ Social Media Links: https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin https://www.facebook.com/calvintruth https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli https://www.youtube.com/calvincorrelishow BUSINESS EXECUTION SUMMIT It's not what you know that matters but your ability to EXECUTE and get stuff done that matters. For more information about the upcoming exclusive live Business Execution Summit, text the word BESUMMIT to 41411 This event is for Business Owners, Corporate Executives, Entrepreneurs and Coaches that want to take their game to the next level and master execution once and for all. It does not matter what you know, only what you can execute that counts PEAK PERFORMANCE NATION A community dedicated to raising your game to the next level by learning how to Execute at the highest level and eliminating the obstacles that keep you from being the leader you were born to be. Join group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PeakPerformanceNation/ SPONSORS & FREE OFFERS Audible - Free Audio Book & 30 Day Trial Blue Apron - $30 Off Your First Order Acuity Scheduling - Stop Wasting Time Setting Up Meetings Thank you once again for listening Please follow us on: Facebook: Thor Conklin Twitter: @ThorConklin Website: http://www.thorconklin.com ThorConklin.com Thor Conklin Media Peak Performers Podcast Peak Performance Nation #1 Podcast on how to get things done. Learn from Peak Performers in all areas of life and Business. Do you know what to do but can't figure out why you are not executing what you already know? If so, this Podcast will give you the tools, strategies and psychology to not only break through the choke point but to truly become a Peak Performer. Thor will be sharing his tools and strategies as well as interviewing inspiring Peak Performers that are Entrepreneur's, Professional Athletes, Business leaders, Military, Technology guru's, Health and Fitness masters, Relationships Experts as well as Music & Entertainment superstars. Mission and Purpose - To engage, educate, entertain and inspire listeners to excel in any area of life through mastering the science of execution and Peak Performance. You will learn the necessary road map, strategies, tools and psychology to win this game.
Peak Performers | Tools, Strategies & Psychology to Get Things Done
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. About Simplero: Simplero is an all-in-one tool for coaches, authors, and speakers, who want to change lives and make a living by selling their courses and content online. It does everything you need, from email marketing, automation, billing, landing pages, through delivering the content to the right people at the right time. It's easy and fun to use, and lets you focus on the things you like to do most. https://simplero.com/ Social Media Links: https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin https://www.facebook.com/calvintruth https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli https://www.youtube.com/calvincorrelishow BUSINESS EXECUTION SUMMIT It's not what you know that matters but your ability to EXECUTE and get stuff done that matters. For more information about the upcoming exclusive live Business Execution Summit, text the word BESUMMIT to 41411 This event is for Business Owners, Corporate Executives, Entrepreneurs and Coaches that want to take their game to the next level and master execution once and for all. It does not matter what you know, only what you can execute that counts PEAK PERFORMANCE NATION A community dedicated to raising your game to the next level by learning how to Execute at the highest level and eliminating the obstacles that keep you from being the leader you were born to be. Join group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PeakPerformanceNation/ SPONSORS & FREE OFFERS Audible - Free Audio Book & 30 Day Trial Blue Apron - $30 Off Your First Order Acuity Scheduling - Stop Wasting Time Setting Up Meetings Thank you once again for listening Please follow us on: Facebook: Thor Conklin Twitter: @ThorConklin Website: http://www.thorconklin.com ThorConklin.com Thor Conklin Media Peak Performers Podcast Peak Performance Nation #1 Podcast on how to get things done. Learn from Peak Performers in all areas of life and Business. Do you know what to do but can't figure out why you are not executing what you already know? If so, this Podcast will give you the tools, strategies and psychology to not only break through the choke point but to truly become a Peak Performer. Thor will be sharing his tools and strategies as well as interviewing inspiring Peak Performers that are Entrepreneur's, Professional Athletes, Business leaders, Military, Technology guru's, Health and Fitness masters, Relationships Experts as well as Music & Entertainment superstars. Mission and Purpose - To engage, educate, entertain and inspire listeners to excel in any area of life through mastering the science of execution and Peak Performance. You will learn the necessary road map, strategies, tools and psychology to win this game.
Peak Performers | Tools, Strategies & Psychology to Get Things Done
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. About Simplero: Simplero is an all-in-one tool for coaches, authors, and speakers, who want to change lives and make a living by selling their courses and content online. It does everything you need, from email marketing, automation, billing, landing pages, through delivering the content to the right people at the right time. It's easy and fun to use, and lets you focus on the things you like to do most. https://simplero.com/ Social Media Links: https://www.linkedin.com/in/truecalvin https://www.facebook.com/calvintruth https://www.instagram.com/calvincorreli https://www.youtube.com/calvincorrelishow BUSINESS EXECUTION SUMMIT It's not what you know that matters but your ability to EXECUTE and get stuff done that matters. For more information about the upcoming exclusive live Business Execution Summit, text the word BESUMMIT to 41411 This event is for Business Owners, Corporate Executives, Entrepreneurs and Coaches that want to take their game to the next level and master execution once and for all. It does not matter what you know, only what you can execute that counts PEAK PERFORMANCE NATION A community dedicated to raising your game to the next level by learning how to Execute at the highest level and eliminating the obstacles that keep you from being the leader you were born to be. Join group here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/PeakPerformanceNation/ SPONSORS & FREE OFFERS Audible - Free Audio Book & 30 Day Trial Blue Apron - $30 Off Your First Order Thank you once again for listening Please follow us on: Facebook: Thor Conklin Twitter: @ThorConklin Website: http://www.thorconklin.com ThorConklin.com Thor Conklin Media Peak Performers Podcast Peak Performance Nation #1 Podcast on how to get things done. Learn from Peak Performers in all areas of life and Business. Do you know what to do but can't figure out why you are not executing what you already know? If so, this Podcast will give you the tools, strategies and psychology to not only break through the choke point but to truly become a Peak Performer. Thor will be sharing his tools and strategies as well as interviewing inspiring Peak Performers that are Entrepreneur's, Professional Athletes, Business leaders, Military, Technology guru's, Health and Fitness masters, Relationships Experts as well as Music & Entertainment superstars. Mission and Purpose - To engage, educate, entertain and inspire listeners to excel in any area of life through mastering the science of execution and Peak Performance. You will learn the necessary road map, strategies, tools and psychology to win this game.
This interview on Dancing with the Universe, Love and Business is rich in content as we dabble in relationships, music, embracing our situation, minimalism, conscious business and personal examples of facing and releasing our fears with our expert Calvin Correli. We start by defining love and Calvin's experience in India. We talk about the notion of passion, music and creativity as well as how this intersects with software. Coding can be a form of creative expression. Calvin offers you ways to bring your ideas and concepts in a tangible form in our society. To illustrate this, he shares his journey of product design coming from a background of dance and programming. He explains some of the fears and resistance that showed up to make a first product. You'll be surprised by the amount of time and effort involved in producing this 45 minute recording. The conversation gets personal as we delve into fears and Calvin turns the table by inquiring about the hosts relationship with money and finances. We connect the concept of Dance with online marketing and the building of Simplero which is a software designed by Calvin. You will enjoy his unique approach which involves food, entertaining and treating his guests to a good time. We make parallels with online integration and removing the clutter in our lives. The number one productivity tip is to remove what is not needed. Listen to The Spiritual Voice Podcast Ep.0118 for a cocktail of love, spirituality, business, marketing, revealing fears on death and money, and how to dance through life. 5 Minute Makeover to Serve More People Get our free course to develop a compelling message and magnetic presence to serve more people for spiritual and holistic professionals by visiting http://thespiritiualvoice.com/5-minute-makeover-to-serve-more-people/ . Contact Calvin's website: http://calvincorreli.com/about/ Simplero website: www.simplero.com About our expert Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs. Calvin's website: http://calvincorreli.com/about/ Simplero website: www.simplero.com Music Attribution 'Havens Above' theme music taken from 'Aural Architecture' by alucidnation. www.alucidnation.co.uk / www.fabermusic.com / www.interchill.com . If you're interested in buying CDs and/or digital then you could use the 'gift' facility via BandCamp:http://alucidnation.bandcamp.com/album/aural-architecture .
Meet Our Guest: Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. Calvin is passionate about helping online business owners do exactly what brings them most alive and is currently working on branching out to bring all of his talents -- including music, spirituality and personal growth into an exciting new service for entrepreneurs.
Calvin Correli is an artist, entrepreneur, and the CEO of a holistically focused, multi-million dollar software company called Simplero. We had a really entertaining talk about the present of being present, about how being a victim keeps us from being grateful, and much much more. DIRECT LINK TO THE MAIN IDEAS AND MENTIONED RESOURCES RATE AND REVIEW ON ITUNES Looking for an easy way to be more grateful and happy during workdays? Get the Daily Checklist with the Best 5 Ways To Easily Supercharge Your Gratitude During Workdays. Become a supporter of this podcast:https://anchor.fm/the-gratitude-podcast/support
Welcome to Episode 302 of Hit The Mic with the Stacey Harris. Hello, hello, Episode 302, and today we are talking about email marketing. There are a ton of email marketing tools to choose from, everything from MailChimp to ActiveCampaign to Infusionsoft and Ontraport and Mad Mimi and Constant Contact and all sorts of options. It can be a little overwhelming, how do you choose a tool and how do you know when it's time to change tools. That's what we're going to talk about today. Changing email marketing tools is something I have done a few times, more than I would like. If I had to do it all over again, I would have probably done it a tiny bit differently. That's the lessons I'm sharing with you today, so aren't we glad that I made those mistakes, right? Oh, they weren't really mistakes. They were just not the right tool for me long-term. Let's talk about what you need to consider when you are choosing an email marketing tool. Yes, budget's a factor, a small factor, but I want you to remember that cost alone should not make this decision. You also want to consider some other things. With that said, you need to get the best tool you can afford. I do not encourage you, in fact I actively discourage you from day 1 thinking Infusionsoft is the best option. Infusionsoft is not a bad option but it's not the best option ever. There are a lot of businesses, mine included, that function perfectly well without a tool like Infusionsoft or Ontraport where you have this whole collection of tools because for example, for me, I would use probably 5% of Infusionsoft because my business model doesn't need the other 95%. It's just the way it is. However, I know a lot of people who use and love and are obsessed with Infusionsoft and what it can do for their business. Here's the thing is there's not one right tool for everybody, but factor in your budget and then factor in a few other things we're going to talk about. The first thing besides budget and this is something that I really, really encourage you to look at is, what are your long-term goals? What do you want to be able to do with your email list? Meaning, do you want to have things like multiple lists and be able to send them different follow-up emails depending on which list they signed up to? By the way, the correct answer to that is "yes." Not all tools can do that. For example, Constant Contact only gives you 1 welcome email option, meaning when someone new signs up for your list, they get the same welcome email no matter what list they sign up for. That's a problem. If you want to have multiple welcome emails or multiple followup sequences, for example, depending on what you sign up for when you sign up for the VIP list which is my email list, you get a different follow-up sequence. If you sign up for the social media challenge, I'm delivering you something that if you sign up for a webinar or the Facebook ads campaign, you get something different in each of those cases. It doesn't make sense for there to be 1 follow-up option. If you want to have things like that down the road, you need to consider that. Do you prefer lists or tags? If you don't know what that means, then this might be worth having this conversation with somebody who does, whether that's a email marketing expert or a business coach or an email marketing virtual assistant or an online business manager, whatever, whoever the person is in your life. Honestly, maybe it's about talking to your accountability buddies or your mastermind and figuring out what tools they're using and why they love them. You got to think about what your goals are long-term. For me, I had always worked in lists. Okay, so I started with ... The first thing I ever used in any of my businesses was Constant Contact 5 years ago. I don't recommend Constant Contact for most people. I do have a client who still uses it, but I'm working on that, guys. Then I moved to AWeber which I enjoyed a lot until it wasn't doing what I needed it to do. Then I moved to Simplero which is a more robust system. It's got affiliates in it and things like that. Then I realized I could do what I needed to do in my business without a lot of those pieces. I didn't need the extra stuff. Like Infusionsoft, I just didn't need the extra pieces. Also, there is incredible automation and follow-up stuff in the tool I use now, which is ActiveCampaign. That automation and that follow-up sequence stuff really exceeded what Simplero could do at the time. I know Simplero has done a lot to update their ability with tags and automation sequences and things like that, so that's maybe not the case now. For me, ActiveCampaign is still where I call home. I've talked to the guys over at Infusionsoft a couple of times about whether I needed to move and everyone I've talked to there has been like, "You're not going to use 95% of our tool. Do you really want to go through changing?" The answer to that is, "No. No, I don't." ActiveCampaign is where I call home and will continue to call home for some time, I suspect. Again, those are based off my goals. Back in my Constant Contact and my AWeber days, I functioned very much so in lists, but because I do a lot more automation now and follow-up sequence and things like that, I like having a tool like ActiveCampaign where I do have some lists, for example, Hit The Mic Backstage members are not on the same list as my regular email list. Within my regular email list, everybody is tagged based on how they've engaged with my list and also how they got on my list. That's right. I can actually look at any person on my email list and tell you exactly how they got there. That's a really awesome part of tags. Again, you need to know how you're going to function best for the goals of your business. Again, automation, I come back to this. Are you going to need something like if-then situations and follow-up sequences? I've got automation sequences that go out to new Hit The Mic Backstage members, when you sign up that you get 4 emails over the course of your first 4 weeks in the membership talking about the different parts of the membership and where you could get the help that you need and where you can find the different tools that you're looking for and the opportunity to book one-on-one time with me if that's what you need. All of that's automated. I don't have to send an email to each new member. Whenever I'm looking for a tool, I know that that's got to be there. On the flip side, a lot of my sales happen via automation, so when you sign up for the VIP list, whether that's through the social media challenge or through the Facebook ads checklist, you get an opportunity to do a $1 7-day trial inside of Hit The Mic Backstage. There's now a follow-up sequence based on which response you choose. If you choose "yes," then you go down 1 path, and if you choose "no," then you go down another path. That automation piece is really important and really valuable from a sales perspective because if you don't say "Yes" when you initially get that offer, you sometimes say, "Yes" in the follow-up email or in a subsequent follow-up email because now I'm using automation to nurture that lead, grow trust, give you more value and really build that relationship. Again, that's possible because I have an automation set up. When you're talking about picking an email marketing tool, you want to make sure you're able to do things like that. You're also going to want to make sure that your deliverability is going to be solid. You want to make sure that you're using a tool that is well-respected, that is doing what it can to make sure that there's not any sort of foul play or black hat tricks that people are using. Sometimes it's frustrating to go through some of the hoops we have to go through as far as confirming our addresses and maybe getting another confirmation for emails we upload, depending on the tool you're using. A lot of that is because they want to protect the integrity of their system. They want to protect the integrity of the emails going out by their users. You want to make sure that you're using a tool that's really protecting that integrity and making sure that their deliverability is on par and really going to work for you because no email tool is going to be valuable if you're not getting in anybody's inbox. From there, you want to make sure that you're continuing to use that tool really well. The thing that I want to wrap up on in choosing an email marketing tool because I get a question, I get the question a lot from people about, "Oh, I think it's time I'm upgrading tools." Sometimes, it's not about changing tools. Sometimes, it's a lot more about making sure you're using the tool. Are you sending regular emails out? Are you nurturing those leads? Are you giving them value, and in that follow-up sequence? Are you getting your email opt-in out there? Are you sharing it via social? Are you funneling people into places where they can subscribe because if you're not, a new email marketing tool isn't going to change that. What's going to change that is a new email marketing strategy and then some new email marketing action. Don't jump on to the bandwagon of changing your tool first thing. Sometimes it's got to first be about making sure you're using the tool. Then the last thing I want to say is, if you're somebody who has listened to this whole episode and you're sitting there and you're thinking, "I will just keep sending emails through Gmail and I'll just put them all in Send or the BCC" or whatever, don't do that. Just stop. If you never, ever listen to another episode of this show, please listen to this next 5 seconds. You have to, I repeat, you have to be using an email marketing tool like AWeber or ActiveCampaign or MailChimp or whatever it is you want to use to be sending those emails. There's just no other choice, okay. Otherwise, it's unprofessional, it's spammy and it's not building credibility, okay. Use an email marketing tool. You can start with MailChimp for free. You can start with ActiveCampaign for as little as $9 and it will grow with you in the long-term. My recommendation for most business owners, not everybody because I don't think there's one tool that fits everybody, I would highly recommend skipping free at MailChimp and going right to the $9 level at ActiveCampaign. It's absolutely worth the value and it's absolutely going to grow with you over time. You're going to have an ability to do a lot more with automation, with follow-up sequences, and that's going to be incredibly valuable to you as you grow. Just start there because trust me, moving your list, not fun. Not fun the first time, not fun the second time, less fun the third time. Make sure that you're using a tool that's really going to serve your business and serve your growth in the long-term. Again, for me, that's ActiveCampaign. I highly recommend you check it out. ActiveCampaign let you have a free trial so it allows you to go in and see the interface and get used to it. Then, if you need some help, if you need help figuring out this tool or whatever tool you're using, reach out to your community. Reach out in your Facebook groups. I guarantee there's somebody who has used the tool or who's an expert in the tool, somebody that can help you get clear on the buttons to click and the best way to set it up. I know there's a lot of VAs who have an expertise in email marketing and all of these tools. Find somebody to help you. Outsource it. It doesn't have to be forever, but you can hire a little bit of consulting time to help get you there. We have a active campaign training, for example, inside of Hit The Mic Backstage. We also have some list building trainings inside of Hit The Mic Backstage in case it's not so much a tool issue, but a "getting people into the funnel" issue. Check those out at hitthemicbackstage.com, the place to be, and I will see you on Friday. Resources Join us inside Hit the Mic Backstage ActiveCampaign Connect with Me Connect with me on Facebook Tweet with me and include #HittheMic Be sure to leave your review on iTunes or Stitcher for a shoutout on a future show
We have a very cool show this week, I'm chatting with the Founder of Simplero. Calvin has such a cool story and an interesting background that he used to build a tool that drives a lot of businesses, including mine. Listen in as he talks about building based on something he needed, getting it out there, and even touching on a few things he's still working on as an entrepreneur. Resources Hit the Mic VIP My Interview at Simplero Simplero (Affiliate Link) Connect with Me Get YOUR question on a future episode Email me at hello@thestaceyharris.com Tweet with me and include #HittheMic Be sure to leave your review on iTunes or Stitcher for a shoutout on a future show
Evakarin Wallin, löser upp blockeringar och förändrar småföretagares mindset med sin egen metod MAP. Evakarin berättar hur det kommer sig att hon blev företagare, hur hon tog sig ut ur total utblottning till ett liv som framgångsrik företagare. I den här podcasten lär du dig: hur man lyfter sig och sitt företag till nästa nivå enligt MAP hur man tar sig ur total utblottning och blir framgångsrik företagare trick för att komma ihåg att allt faktiskt löser sig till slut Länkar som nämns i podcasten: Evakarinwallin.se (Gratis e-bok om metoden MAP) Mai Vu Nästa vecka lyssnar du till Calvin Correli, grundare av Simplero. Det blev ett mycket intressant samtal om business och andlighet.