Podcasts about what nick

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Best podcasts about what nick

Latest podcast episodes about what nick

Trailer Blazers
Trailer Blazers Podcast Episode 92 "Right Away, My Prawn"

Trailer Blazers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 60:09


Episode 92 "Right Away, My Prawn" 0:00 Introduction: Ben is Tired, bad South African accents, and Prawns 5:08 Dumb Dudes News 12:40 New New Trailers 13:05 Eternals https://youtu.be/x_me3xsvDgk 16:05 Occupation Rainfall https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFrm-UnX84c 19:22 Catch the Bullet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hlqr8HonQ7A 22:15 Last Man Down https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tjtYgEvtTY 24:35 Wild Indian https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_63LAQByXiU 27:25 Broadcast Signal Intrustion https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y-zCemn5GuE 30:15 He-Man and the Masters of the Universe https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZXApnj-ztIE 32:20 Foundation final trailer https://youtu.be/phZNbeEQZYw 35:25 Night books https://youtu.be/aQO16k5Vdow 37:57 Best Sellers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eLoImpAr9fA 39:50 The Survivalist https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WobnidFUeQI 42:00 Star Wars Visions https://youtu.be/lle0NNmvIyU 45:30 Contact Info 46:10 Quick Mickey 47:45 VidYOgames ¼ Portion 48:10 What Nick's Been Playing 49:40 Industry news 52:40 12 Minutes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XuL8FPhKr2Y 54:38 Pokemon Legends: Arceus https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqLibUGxrE0 56:00 Black Myth Wukong gameplay Unreal 5 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6T-YPdyttM Email us @ TrailerBlazersPod@gmail.com Instagram us @TrailerBlazersPodcast Twitter @Trailer_Blazers   Rate & Review us on Apple Podcasts please!

Brick & Mortar Reborn
PODCAST 66: Nick Delyani

Brick & Mortar Reborn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 19:01


Retailers know that things can change fast, so getting real-time data can make a big difference in allowing them to make the decisions they need to make to provide customers with a great experience. That's what Nick Delyani's business, Xovis, provides to retail clients – real-time information that can help ensure they make informed decisions. Listen to today's conversation to learn more about what Xovis does, what Nick has seen change in retail over the last 18 months, and the benefits of real-time data over historical data. Topics Discussed in Today’s Episode: ✔ What Nick does ✔ What Nick's company, Xovis, does ✔ The types of companies that use Xovis's services ✔ Biggest changes that Nick has seen with consumer behavior ✔ Nick's favorite experiences in retail ✔ Advice Nick would give to retailers about building a great experience ✔ Benefits of real-time data vs. historical data ✔ The insights that retailers are getting from COVID ✔ What clients learn from using Nick's business ✔ Important in-store movement patterns ✔ Elements that provide great in-store locations ✔ Technology that's going to have a big impact on brick-and-mortar retail Resources: Nick Delyani QUOTES: “We've seen the customers come in and spend maybe less time in space than they have in the past.” “It's important to make decisions quickly to react to the customer's experience.” “I think really what we've figured out so far is that people like painless checkout.”

The Fit2Fat2Fit Experience
EP307: Take a Hike with Nick Mallory

The Fit2Fat2Fit Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 42:30


Nick Mallory is the Director of Marketing at Elysian Brewing Co, a long time Fit2Fat2Fit follower, and he recently lost nearly 60 pounds by following along with Drew's Back2Fit program. In this episode, Drew talks with Nick about what it took to make such an amazing transformation, the mental shifts that were key for Nick, and how something as simple as a daily walk was instrumental in making a permanent lifestyle change. If you want to hear a real success story, and learn some everyday strategies to aid in making mental and emotional shifts, then this episode is for you!   HIGHLIGHTS:   [05:44] Nick's background, how he found Drew, and what led him to eventually join Drew on his Back2Fit journey.   [14:59] How much weight Nick lost, and his biggest successes as he progressed through his weight-loss journey.zz   [19:41] Some of the biggest struggles that Nick ran into, and how simply taking a walk in the morning shifted his entire mindset, enabling him to overcome any struggles that he ran into.   [30:37] Nick's goals moving forward, and how he plans to maintain his incredible progress.   [36:05] What Nick would say to his old self to encourage him to take control of his health after looking back on his journey, and Nick's favorite Complete Wellness supplements.   SPONSORS:   Dry Farm Wines — You can have alcohol on the ketogenic diet. Use this link for a bottle of wine for $.01 with any order.   Paleovalley — Paleovalley makes 100% grass fed beef sticks that are fermented using old-world methods in order to preserve the meat in a healthy way, rather than using unnatural preservatives like other companies. They make an amazing on-the-go snack, are packed with probiotics, and they taste delicious! Use the code fit2fat2fit at checkout to receive 15% off of your order!   Complete Wellness Supplements — Shop Drew's hand-formulated, high-quality, pre-workout greens, Keto Meal Replacement with grass-fed collagen, MCT Oil soft-gels, bone broth, and more! Use the code “podcast” to get 20% off of your order!   SHOW LINKS:   @thenickmallory Fit2Fat2Fit Take the Fit2Fat2Fit Podcast Listener Survey Fit2Fat2Fit on Facebook  @Fit2Fat2Fit on Instagram Fit2Fat2Fit Book  Keto School Program Complete Keto Book Email Drew: info@fit2fat2fit.com

GoBundance Podcast
Episode 142 - Nick Stageberg

GoBundance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2021 60:49


In this episode, you will learn: • Nick's brief bio • What the nine-figure exit is like • Real estate investing as the simplest trade • Nick's current annual horizontal income • What Nick does to stay healthy • About Nick's authentic relationships • Nick's life happiness index score • What Nick does to give back to the community • About Nick's GoPod • The next big adventure for Nick • Nick answers a random question from the GoBundance card game • Where to follow Nick • Plus, so much more! Nick grew up in Rochester, Minnesota and obtained a bachelor's degree in computer science and Ministry. He ended up going to school in Oklahoma, staying there for 10 years, and going to work at Mayo Clinic building a new software startup from within the organization after being removed from the startup he worked at in Oklahoma. Nick slowly started taking his money and started buying single family homes doing the BRRRR strategy. He realized how much easier it was than tech and applied everything he knew from running software projects. Nick's biggest focus is his family: His wife and three kids (5, 3 and a new baby).

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey
#55 - Nick Kifyak: STOCKX & THE GLOBAL SNEAKER MARKET; THE SHADY WORLD OF OLYMPICS TICKETING; KANYE WEST & THE YEEZY BRAND; STREETWEAR & THE SNEAKER COMMUNITY

TRENDIFIER with Julian Dorey

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 185:01


Nick Kifyak is a sneaker / streetwear expert, investor, and entrepreneur. He currently owns KIF -– a high-end sneaker / streetwear Ecommerce & Retail Platform. KIF's flagship 4,000-square-foot store is located right outside of New York City in the Shops at Riverside. ***TIMESTAMPS*** 5:45 - Limited Releases; StockX explained; The problems with StockX; Amazon delivery speed 25:00 - Revisiting the day Kobe died; Kobe's shoes on the market today 35:47 - PJ Tucker's shoe collection; Shoes NBA Players wear in gams; Dwyane Wade's endorsement deal with Li-Ning in China; The rise of Streetwear 50:41 - Nick's previous experience working in international ticket distribution for the Olympics; That time the Secret Service lowered Nick's drone 1:00:46 - How Nick got into sneakers and StockX; Why Nick hated his job out of college; How Nick built the KIF brand online; Nick's parents' immigrant background and success and in America 1:22:35 - KITH and streetwear trends; Julian tells a story about the first time he went to the KITH Store in Manhattan (NYC); Nick tells a story about expensive ugly Yeezys that leaves Julian in disbelief 1:39:15 - Nick talks about leaving his job to open KIF's flagship store after the EComm business took off; Julian recalls his first time coming across Nick's page online 1:50:25 - What Nick's clientele is like; What his customers are looking for; his total inventory; the streetwear he sells in KIF's flagship store (located in The Shops at Riverside - Hackensack, NJ) 2:04:46 - Jordans: how often they come out, the different models, their value, etc.; the bots problem online with sneakers; Nick's Colin Kaepernick Nike's; The relationship between scarcity and value 2:21:27 - Why people buy things to impress other people and how that drives value; Spotting Fakes and authenticating sneakers 2:33:39 - The Chinese market for sneakers; Nick talks about the Ichiro Suzuki Jordans; Kanye West and the brilliance of the Yeezy Brand; What makes Kanye a genius 2:55:22 - The future digital metaverse and its incoming collision with shoes; Nick's issue with Social Media ~ YouTube EPISODES & CLIPS: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0A-v_DL-h76F75xik8h03Q  ~ Get $100 Off The Eight Sleep Pod Pro Mattress / Mattress Cover: https://eight-sleep.ioym.net/trendifier  Julian's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey  ~ Beat provided by: https://freebeats.io  Music Produced by White Hot

GoBundance Podcast
Episode 129 - Nick Pavia

GoBundance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 30:35


In this episode, you will learn: • About Nick • Nick’s streams of income • What Nick tells his clients • All about Authentic Relationships • Nick’s life happiness index score • How Nick gives back to the community • Nick’s future greatest hits • Some of the most poignant moments in Nick’s life • Nick answers a random question from the GoBundance app • Plus, so much more! Nick was born in Queens, New York and raised in Raleigh, North Carolina. He currently lives in Charleston, South Carolina. Nick is passionate about family, work, travel and being outdoors. His most memorable adventure was when he went skiing in Switzerland. Nick owns a non-profit called One World Health. They set up hospital clinics in different countries such as Nicaragua and Uganda. Nick went to college in Charleston, South Carolina. He started in Northwestern Mutual selling life and disability insurance for a year. Nick is a financial advisor by trade, but his main role is to grow and develop the firm, Commonwealth Financial Group. He does marketing and attracts clients to his firm where he is a Partner.

Sales Reinvented
Proper Prospecting: Cultivate an Awareness of Needs [with Nick Kane], Ep #240

Sales Reinvented

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 19:47


Why are lead generation and prospecting so important? How do they complement each other in the sales process? Why is keeping your pipeline full so important? How does cultivating an awareness of needs lead to a higher close rate? Nick Kane—a Managing Partner at Janek Performance Group—shares his point of view in this episode of Sales Reinvented. Nick is a published author and sales performance expert. Don’t miss out on his expertise—listen now! Outline of This Episode [0:55] The difference between lead gen and prospecting [1:44] Why are both important to sales? [2:53] What Nick’s prospecting process looks like [4:44] The 3 components that lead to successful prospecting [7:42] Skills sales professionals need to develop [9:24] Top 3 prospecting and lead generation dos and don’ts [14:27] Prospecting in the life insurance industry What Nick’s prospecting process looks like Without prospecting and lead generation, Nick shares that you’ll struggle to generate new business. You have to keep the funnel full or you have to rely on a high close rate. An organization must focus on generating enough leads to keep their salespeople busy and help them hit their quotas.  Nick emphasizes that both activities are complementary and benefit from each other. Lead generation consists of getting new opportunities in the pipeline and moving them through the funnel. It is a multi-prong activity that could include paid search, SEO, content development, sponsorships, and more. It does depend on the organization and target audience.  Nick points out that prospecting depends on who you are going after. Prospecting should include leveraging social media and social selling, networking events, business development activities, referrals from existing clients, and more.  The 3 components that lead to successful prospecting Nick believes three components lead to successful prospecting: Mindset: Direct prospecting activities require the ability to deal with rejection. You have to be prepared to handle rejection. You must also help your customer create an awareness of needs to provide valuable insight, to raise a customer’s interest.  Skillset: You must have a willingness to help, be persistent, and be consistent. You can’t just focus on the opportunities right in front of you and neglect prospecting. When deals are closed out you’re left with very little.  Process: To Nick, top-performing sales professionals are not just calling anybody. You need to identify the right targets who will value what you have to offer. Narrow a list to a smaller pool for targeted prospecting efforts.  You want to have strong initial questions to ask prompted by data or insight. It is important to create awareness of needs because prospects aren’t waiting for your call. You need to have the capability to identify good data to be thought-provoking. You just need to win the phone call, conversation, and meeting. You also need the ability to work through initial objections and earn the right to have the conversation. Prospecting in the life insurance industry Nick had the opportunity to work with a global life insurance organization. Prospecting in that industry is extremely challenging. You operate independently and there isn’t a lot of lead generation. The salespeople didn't have strong processes, skills or strategies. So Nick’s team put together a strong and effective approach to support the sales professionals prospecting activities. They needed to maximize their personal and professional contacts to develop prospects.  They helped develop a personal brand for each sales professional. How did they want to be viewed online? How did they want to come across to prospects? They started to adjust their personal brand and enhance their efforts. They helped them come up with key metrics and how to track those activities. What level of activity is needed to fill the pipeline and drive results? The combination of those three things drove results for that organization. Prospecting led to more appointments being booked. Their conversion rates are up. Overall revenue is up. They drove overall results for their clients. You can’t just ask salespeople to go out and prospect and let them figure it out on their own. They need support. They need preparation. They need to learn how to cultivate an awareness of needs in their prospect. Learn more about Nick’s process by listening to the whole episode! Connect with Nick Kane Connect on LinkedIn Follow on Twitter Connect With Paul Watts  LinkedIn Twitter Subscribe to SALES REINVENTED Audio Production and Show notes by PODCAST FAST TRACK https://www.podcastfasttrack.com

Raising Financial Freedom
What Is A Good Side Hustle For A Kid To Start?

Raising Financial Freedom

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2021 25:07


#018 What’s riskier: starting a business or relying on your job as your only source of income?Today, I am lucky to have Nick Loper, Chief Side Hustler at Side Hustle Nation. He is an entrepreneur involved in a variety of projects. Like any business, it has its ups and downs, which can be stressful, but Nick learns something new every day. Nick started this Side Hustle Nation because he believes in the hustle.For complete show notes and transcript please go to Raising Financial FreedomIn This Episode:[ 0:05 ] All about Nick Loper [ 2:05 ] Why you need multiple sources of income [ 4:50 ] Teaching our children about multiple sources of income [ 9:25 ] How Nick will teach his children about entrepreneurship [ 12:00 ] Examples of unique side hustles [ 14:40 ] The biggest challenge that Nick had to overcome [ 18:55 ] What Nick would change about his journey [ 21:30 ] Advice for starting a side hustle Links Mentioned: Side Hustle Nation: https://www.sidehustlenation.comListen to The Side Hustle Show: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-side-hustle-show/id655135292Side Hustle Nation on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/sidehustlenationSide Hustle Nation on Twitter: https://twitter.com/nloperCheck out our website: https://raisingfinancialfreedom.com/Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RaisingFinancialFreedom Like us on Twitter:https://twitter.com/RF_Freedom

Whiskey Queens
Season 2 E9: The spirits that fund our whiskey

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2021 31:09


What Nick’s drinking: Green Hat Gin - by New Columbia Distillers - Washington, DC The Fall/Winter Gin - read about the notes here. The Man In The Green Hat Recently acquired by MGP: https://www.mgpingredients.com/more-information/news-press/news-releases/mgp-announces-acquisition-new-columbia-distillers-llc What’s Paul Drinking: Civic Vodka - Republic Restorative Distillery - Washington, DC Civic Vodka (RR’s first offering) 80 Proof (40 ABV) Mashbill: 100% North American Grown Eastern Sweet Corn Tasting Notes: Nose: light notes of lemon peel Palate: sweetness at the tip of the tongue; creamy mouthfeel - middle pallet; smooth, dry finish with no lingering burn After distillation is is charcoal polished 2,300 times through a meter of activated charcoal, a proprietary filtration process (charcoal filtered) What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

INVESTTHIS
Better Financial Portfolio Management for DIY Investors

INVESTTHIS

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2021 28:20


No more spreadsheets, and no more financial advisors. Sound good? I’m talking today with the owner of Passiv, who caters to busy high-earning professionals who are DIY Investors. Creating your retirement nest egg shouldn't be so hard, and traditional financial portfolio management can eat up your time and money, but no more!  Today’s guest is Nick McCullum, who is the owner of Passiv, which is a portfolio management tool that makes it easier for DIY investors to maintain a balanced portfolio and build a passive investment strategy at their online broker. It eliminates the need to use spreadsheets, saves investors from logging into their broker to place trades, and helps DIY investors stick to their portfolio’s target allocation. It’s the ultimate wealth manager! During today’s episode, Nick and I talk about how Passiv can help investors, how the platform works with brokerage houses, understanding target asset allocation, and managing self-directed accounts. If you are looking to get a higher return on your investments, which will allow you a larger retirement nest-egg, then this podcast is for you. Key Insights: Making DIY investing more accessible for investors who manage their own portfolios How Passiv does all the work for you Investing perfectly in your target portfolio Why they don’t use AI to manage your portfolio Who benefits from Passiv Designed for everyday investors who are planning for retirement What differentiates Pasiv from other one-click trading platforms Understanding your target asset allocation  Passive replaces the dreaded spreadsheet as well as your financial advisor How passive works with brokerage houses What makes passive unique is their trade capabilities  Alternative investments tracking First-time user tips How COVID has affected the online trading space When the markets are volatile, people trade more.  How Passive’s technology determines the right investing moves for customers Walking through how investments may get off track  What Nick is Reading: https://www.amazon.com/Elon-Musk-Biography-Billionaire-Entrepreneur/dp/B08N84XBQV/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=elon+musk+biography&qid=1611155371&sr=8-4 (Elon Musk:) A Biography of Billionaire Entrepreneur Elon Musk (Robert Hanson) Get in Touch with Nick: https://passiv.com/ (Passiv)

Whiskey Queens
Season 2: A Holiday Quickie

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020 27:56


What Nick is drinking: Ghost of Bourbon Past 1.5 oz bourbon (used: Knob Creek 9 Year) 3/4 oz aperitivo  (used: Cerasum)  1/2 small can club soda cherry garnish What Paul is drinking:  Willet Pot Still Reserve - Kentucky Bourbon Whiskey  -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Bloom and Grow Radio
Low Waste Plant Parenthood with @farmernicknyc

Bloom and Grow Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2020 75:01


One of the major things that plants do is help connect us with nature. I think as plant parents, once we use plants to reconnect with ourselves and make our homes look beautiful, they also get us thinking more about nature and the earth and how important it’s preservation is. So today’s episode is exploring just that: plant parenthood and low waste living, and what it means to make intentional decisions about preserving our planet while taking care of ourselves and our plants. I think we are all anxiously looking at 2021 and getting excited about the changes that will come. This is the time to set new years resolutions and just think about how we want to show up in 2021 for ourselves and I think more importantly, there are global conversations happening about how we can show up for those around us and the environment.   As I continue to fall deeper in love with plants, I’m finding that I’m falling deeper in love with nature itself and feeling a stronger sense of responsibility to take care of our planet. I’m so excited to welcome Nick Cutsumpas of @farmernicknyc  to the podcast and share this conversation with you and to inform and encourage our community to think about how we can apply these concepts of low waste living to not only our lives, but to our hobby of plant care. Nicks been a plant friend of mine for a while and I’ve loved learning more about sustainability from him, and figured he is the perfect intersection of plant parent and environmental activist to have for this chat about how to lead more sustainable lives as humans and plant parents.  In this episode we learn: [00:02:26] Introducing Nick Cutsumpas and episode key ideas [00:07:18] What Nick does, what started his plant journey (mothers DO know best!), and how plants served as his ‘saving grace’ when he moved into the city [00:10:38] Check out Nick in Netflix’s new show The Big Flower Fight! [00:11:14] What is regenerative environmental action? Nick explains sustainability vs regenerative [00:13:22] Are houseplant people practicing regenerative methods with their plants? According to Nick, to see is to believe when it comes to taking care of our environment [00:15:01] How Maria realized she could be doing more sustainable practices [00:15:22] Maria’s current idea obsession: plant blindness — Nature Not Furniture! [00:16:32] What Maria thinks of ‘zero waste’ and her reservations with the movement [00:17:17] Nick shares why he thinks plant blindness is similar to waste blindness [00:17:37] Why Nick strives for low waste consumption vs zero waste, how we as consumers can apply low waste consumption to the products we buy [00:19:45] Why the time to be more conscious is NOW more than ever and how taking care of plants reminds us that we can take action [00:20:47] Why Bloom and Grow Radio is doing an episode on low waste [00:21:45] Low Waste Beginner Tip #1: Reuse everything [00:22:46] Do you have tons of bubble wrap from your online orders? Save them for your next plant cutting gift! [00:23:50] What is ‘waste’? For Nick, it’s everything that ends up in a landfill [00:24:38] Maria’s lightbulb moment on her waste consumption: New York’s composting system [00:25:11] The negative effects of plastics in our environment and how we can be smart and responsible with our plastic consumption [00:26:54] Why we should be cautious about greenwashing, waste segregation, and biodegradable vs compostable materials [00:28:24] Nick’s sustainability influences [00:29:13] Low Waste Tip #2: Buy quality over quantity (Yes, you save more money this way!) [00:30:12] Nick’s sustainability progress: he hasn’t bought anything new in more than a year! The secret? Thrifting! [00:31:52] The eco-friendly furniture and mattress stores that Nick recommends [00:33:56] How the pandemic enabled more waste production [00:34:48] Why the most impact can be achieved through collective action; ‘10% is better’ [00:35:14] The BEST recycled and sustainable wall planters and the BEST plant kits to give this Holiday season! [00:38:56] Nick reveals the most common mistakes we all do when it comes to composting [00:39:54] How to REALLY begin your low waste journey [00:40:39] Why you need to wash your recyclables [00:41:22] Low Waste Tip #3: Find bulk stores and bring your own jars [00:41:50] How Nick manages to do zero-waste grocery shopping [00:42:25] What is ‘produce paralysis’? What is Nick’s proposed solution to packaging waste? [00:44:04] Low Waste Tip #4: Avoid single-use plastic in the produce section [00:45:24] Nick’s low waste hack: Put the jar in warm water for 10 minutes to remove the adhesive label, and reuse the jar for drinking or plant propagation! [00:46:47] Low Waste Tip #5: Don’t be shy to ask if you can use your own containers for your consumables! [00:47:39] Maria weighs in on the different straws from her own experiences (make sure you clean them!) [00:49:28] What do we do with our plastic nursery pots? a. bring them to a nursery, b. cache, c. make a tent for your drainage hole [00:53:38] Low Waste Tip #6: Grow something new in your used nursery pots [00:54:06] The company that Nick trusts to recycle his plastics [00:55:31] Propagating your plants can also help your recycle and upcycle [00:56:30] Low Waste Tip #7: Choose sustainable soil options [00:57:44] Low Waste Tip #8: Know your plant number! (we’re serious!) [00:59:00] Your plant consumption should be healthy AND environmentally-responsible [01:00:28] Low Waste Tip #9: Buy your plants from your local businesses [01:01:46] Plant shops that Nick and Maria recommend [01:04:05] Listener Question #1: Can you compost perlite? [01:04:49] Listener Question #2: Are there alternatives to plastic nursery pots and stickers? [01:06:28] Why you should support CSA [01:07:47] Why low waste and sustainable living is important to Nick [01:09:09] Our responsibility to our environment as plant parents! [01:10:24] Maria’s realizations and future commitment to the low waste living movement Check out the youtube video snippets of this interview! (airs 6 pm 12/15/20 Mentioned in our conversation: Produce Paralysis Blog by Nick Cutsumpas BAGR Episode  How to Manage a Large Plant Collection Netflix’s The Big Flower Fight Pela Case Lucy Biggers of NowThis Medley Furniture Avocado Green Mattress Recover Brands WallyGro Precious Plastic Folia Collective Espoma Greenery Unlimited noissue Crop Swap LA Glow Up Alert FYI The Bloom and Grow Website got a pretty epic makeover and I’d love for you to head on over and check it out- you can learn a little more about me, snag all of the freebies I’ve created for ya over the years, shop the Bloom and Grow Merch and Plant Friends Apparel line AND we’ve got a shop now that houses all the sponsor discount codes, my favorite books and courses and more. Thanks to Digital Grace Design for doing such an amazing job. Compostable Mailers   Thank you to our episode sponsors: Soltech Solutions Soltech Solutions Luxury Grow Lights: Whether its simply getting through the lower light winter- or if you’re like me and you’ve just got too many plants  and too few windows and need to bring more light indoors so your collection can keep growing- Soltech Solutions has the luxury lighting option for you! Soltech is offering BAGR listeners 20% off with code "20BLOOM" at soltechsolutions.com once again thats soltechsolutions.com and code 20BLOOM at checkout for 20%off. Wallygro Wallygro just launched it's "greenwall in a box" WALLY KITS that are everything you need to plant up their Eco or Loop planters: the plants, the potting mix, the fertilizer, and of course... the pots! It's the perfect gift for the holidays that you can order on your couch!! Check out the Wallygro Kits and pick the best one for you! Wallygro is offering BAG listeners 15% off for a limited time only so redeem this code if you are interested ASAP! BLOOM15 for the Wally Plant Kits active for Dec.15 to Dec. 29.   Follow Nick Instagram: @farmernickynyc https://www.farmernicknyc.com/ Grow Green Newsletter- you can join on the homepage of his website   Follow Maria and Bloom and Grow Radio: Take the Bloom and Grow Plant Parent Personality Quiz (Get the perfect plants, projects and educational resources for YOUR Lifestyle) Support Bloom and Grow Radio by becoming a Plant Friend on Patreon! Instagram and Facebook: @BloomandGrowRadio Tiktok: @bloomandgrowradio Subscribe to the Bloom and Grow Youtube Show! /Bloomandgrowradio Website: www.bloomandgrowradio.com Join the (free) Garden Club: www.bloomandgrowradio.com/garden-club

Whiskey Queens
Season 2 E5: Bourbons, ryes, and mispronounced cocktails

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 33:27


What Nick is drinking: Woodford’s Boulevardier INGREDIENTS 3/4 OZ Straight Bourbon Whiskey 3/4 OZ Sweet Vermouth 3/4 OZ Campari® INSTRUCTIONS Combine all ingredients to mixing glass, add ice and stir Strain to tumbler over block ice Garnish with an orange twist Know your mash bills: Bourbon - 51% corn High-Rye Bourbon - 51% corn / rye is usually around 25% (no official standard) Rye - 51% rye What Paul is drinking: KO Distillers Reserve of KO Distilling in Virginia Moonshine University: https://moonshineuniversity.com/ -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Season 2 E4: A Drunken History Lesson - American Whiskey

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2020 40:32


What Nick is drinking: Woodford Reserve Kentucky Straight Bourbon Official Tasting Notes 45.2% ABV / 90.4 Proof Regularly $36 - purchased for $30 for the 750 ML bottle Mashbill 72% corn (locally grown from Shelby County in Kentucky) 18% rye 10% malted barley (They say this provides a balance between the sweetness of the corn and the rye spice and nuttiness of the malt) NOSE - Heavy with rich dried fruit, hints of mint and oranges covered with a dusting of cocoa. Faint vanilla and tobacco spice. TASTE - Rich, chewy, rounded and smooth, with complex citrus, cinnamon and cocoa. Toffee, caramel, chocolate and spice notes abound. FINISH - Silky smooth, almost creamy at first with a long, warm satisfying tail. What Paul is drinking: Uncle Nearest Paul gave us a brief history of whiskey in America - this is a great article (LONG) article if you want a deeper dive. -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
S2 Episode 2: Water & Whiskey

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2020 34:45


What Nick is drinking: Green Spot Nose: Oak, green apple, mint/menthol Taste: Vanilla, caramel green apple Finish: Long and smooth finish - almost no bite Green Spot History Page Wikipedia What Paul is talking about: Adding water to whiskey “The best way to drink whiskey, according to science,” The Washington Post “Here’s Exactly How Much Water to Put in Your Whisky,” Whiskey Advocate Guaiacol (gwai·uh·kaal) - is a naturally occurring organic compound that contributes to the flavor of many substances including whiskey and roasted coffee. What gives whiskey that smoky, spicy, peaty flavor. Theory is that these and other flavor compounds are not attracted to water and are more likely to become trapped in ethanol clusters. So adding water moves the molecules closer to the surface -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
S2 Episode 1: We're back!

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 48:06


What Nick is drinking: Monkey Shoulder Tasting notes: Smells sweet and smooth - vanilla notes and spice with a bit of citrus. There is a definite bite at the end that is almost a citrus rind flavor. How To Taste Whiskey - A great, 5 minute read from Wine Enthusiast on how to best taste your whiskey and not kill your nose. Simpler tasting wheel What Paul is drinking: Uncle Nearest 1856 Premium Whiskey Vanilla & baking spices - there is a definite sweetness to the whiskey when tasting it. It also has a fresh smell on the nose that can be described as “fresh cut grass.” NYT article touching on Nearest Green's impact on the whiskey world -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Episode 10: Ryes and Reflections

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 50:43


What Nick is drinking: A Tincup Manhattan What Paul is drinking: Sagamore Signature Rye Check out the distillery and their awesome mission to bring Rye back to Baltimore: Sagamore Spirit In Review: Don't forget the basics - we're drinking water, yeast, and a grain that's distilled and matured in casks, which lend the color and all those awesome vanilla and caramel notes! A “mash bill” is really just referring to the ingredients in a particular whiskey And the process: Malting (if using malted barley) Mashing Fermentation Distilling Maturation Finishing Bottling DRINKING We'll be back on November 11th! -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Episode 9: Rye'd On Ptown Poney

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2020 41:37


What Nick is drinking: Pinhook Rye'd On “Rye'd On” - 97 proof / 48.5% ABV $38.99 in Provincetown, MA 20% corn / 20% malted barley / 60% rye Nose: peach, spearmint, and cinnamon Taste: cherry, toffee, and clove “Pinhooking” is a term for purchasing young thoroughbreds, holding them until they mature, and selling them when they are ready to run. What Paul is drinking: "The Queens' Manhattan" (A spin off a black manhattan which" Recipe: 2 parts - One Eight Distilling District Made Rye Whiskey 1 part - Don Ciccio and Figli Cerasum Aperitivo 2 dashes of Fee Brothers Aztec Chocolate Bitters 1 luxardo cherry A little history on the "Black Manhattan" Black Manhattan - Created by bartender Todd Smith when he worked at San Francisco’s Bourbon & Branch, the Black Manhattan recipe uses Averna in place of sweet vermouth—a groundbreaking move when it was created in 2005. Averna Amaro - an Italian herbal liqueur made from an infusion of aromatic herbs, dried flowers, spices and liquorice Created in 1868 for Salvatore Averna by herbalist monks of the San Spirito Abbey in Caltanissetta First licensed spirit in Sicily and to this day remains one of the best selling amaros Tattoo Healing - Saniderm D'Vines in DC - located in Columbia Heights (our old neighborhood!) Ptown! (Gay heaven) P-Town blog post: https://www.wayfaring-images.com/post/provincetown-2018-vacationing-in-a-safe-space -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Episode 7: The Death Episode

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 52:11


What Nick is drinking: Jameson Irish Whiskey Quick read on the history of Jameson - Culture Trip Article What Paul is drinking: One Eight Distilling Rye One Eight Distilling Drink Recipes Details on the distillery at Mt. Vernon - George Washington's Distillery What Nick is reading: Superlife by Darin Olien What Paul was reading: Lake Fearless - Summer Stories by Wit Talcott Shows mentioned: Departures Wiki Down To Earth -- What we're (also) reading: The Complete Whiskey Course Our ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Episode 2: Single Malts, Corporate Overloads, and Cheetos - Oh My

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2020 52:58


This week we're talking about Dingle Distillery in Dingle, Ireland and Talisker Distillery in Carbost, Loch Harport, Scotland. What Nick was drinking: Dingle Distillery Single Malt Batch #4 What Paul was drinking: Talisker Select Reserver Corporate Overloads Pernod Ricard + Diageo The ultimate goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: The Show @thewhiskeyqueens | Paul @pdashton | Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey Visit us at www.whiskeyqueens.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Whiskey Queens
Episode 1: Introducing the Whiskey Queens

Whiskey Queens

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2020 53:36


Introducing the Whiskey Queens - two friends who met in DC and have remained friends through the years and the whiskey. Join us as we talk about our show concept, what we're drinking, go off the rails a little bit - and generally just be our ourselves. Let us entertain you! What Nick was drinking: Method & Madness What Paul was drinking: Oban Whisky The goal adventure: The Irish Whiskey Academy Our Instagram handles: Paul @pdashton Nick @wayfaringandwhiskey The Show @thewhiskeyqueens --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whiskeyqueens/support

Being Human
#118 The Post-COVID Ecomony - Nick Bloom

Being Human

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 35:12


> Sign Up For Our Newsletter: http://www.firsthuman.com/being-human-newsletter/This episode's guest is Nick Bloom, a fellow Brit and professor in economics at Stanford. He's been an avid researcher in remote working since 2014. Pre-COVID likely only 8% of employees worked from home. Nick expects this to be 40% in the aftermath of the pandemic, an extraordinary transformation of economic life.In this episode, we talk:- What Nick learned studying working from home at 'China's Expedia' Ctrip- The optimum set-up for home working- The shape and drivers of inequality in today's society- How lockdowns may be driving inequality- The future for capitalismEnjoy!To your humanity,RichardLinks:Nick's research

Being Human
#118 The Post-COVID Ecomony - Nick Bloom

Being Human

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 35:12


> Sign Up For Our Newsletter: http://www.firsthuman.com/being-human-newsletter/This episode's guest is Nick Bloom, a fellow Brit and professor in economics at Stanford. He's been an avid researcher in remote working since 2014. Pre-COVID likely only 8% of employees worked from home. Nick expects this to be 40% in the aftermath of the pandemic, an extraordinary transformation of economic life.In this episode, we talk:- What Nick learned studying working from home at 'China's Expedia' Ctrip- The optimum set-up for home working- The shape and drivers of inequality in today's society- How lockdowns may be driving inequality- The future for capitalismEnjoy!To your humanity,RichardLinks:Nick's research

Being Human
#118 The Post-COVID Ecomony - Nick Bloom

Being Human

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 35:12


> Sign Up For Our Newsletter: http://www.firsthuman.com/being-human-newsletter/This episode's guest is Nick Bloom, a fellow Brit and professor in economics at Stanford. He's been an avid researcher in remote working since 2014. Pre-COVID likely only 8% of employees worked from home. Nick expects this to be 40% in the aftermath of the pandemic, an extraordinary transformation of economic life.In this episode, we talk:- What Nick learned studying working from home at 'China's Expedia' Ctrip- The optimum set-up for home working- The shape and drivers of inequality in today's society- How lockdowns may be driving inequality- The future for capitalismEnjoy!To your humanity,RichardLinks:Nick's research

Trailer Blazers
Trailer Blazers Podcast - Episode 34 "Live, Laugh, Lovecraft Country"

Trailer Blazers

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2020 72:11


Episode 34: Live, Laugh, Lovecraft Country0:00 Intro: Welcome Back1:37 What Nick done been watchin’5:56 What Ben done been watchin’9:12 The Questions Times15:20 New New Trailers16:47 The Vast of Night https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEiwpCJqMM020:46 Four Kids and It https://youtu.be/oD8s58AM_AY24:05 Darkness Falls https://youtu.be/N2gMSgppQlQ25:30 Secret Society of Second Born Royals https://youtu.be/lzfEeTGpOKE27:34 Viena and the Fantomes https://youtu.be/-xR4eRp9AVY29:50 Curon https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUg_lpDHN8o31:19 Perry Mason trailer 2 https://youtu.be/3cwKTtWV7DM33:16 Japan Sinks https://youtu.be/yfys-2KA3oQ36:33 Murder Manual https://youtu.be/G5Rf2_Hi1DI38:45 Lovecraft Country https://youtu.be/viVRAE3_vaU42:17 Bill & Ted Face the Music https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EE59OY4KGJg42:17 Doom Patrol season 2 https://youtu.be/C6CVfIciTYU44:11 Eurovision full trailer https://youtu.be/wXAoznWmuL848:24 Fan made One Punch Man trailer https://comicbook.com/anime/news/one-punch-man-saitama-genos-fight-live-action-trailer/49:00 Trailer Mailers54:41 The Quick Mickey Update56:43 VidYOgames ¼ PortionVideo Game Trap Music “Day Dream” by HeatleyBros https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-0nCC3kDKA57:03 PS5 Reveal & Hardware trailer https://youtu.be/RkC0l4iekYo59:10 Spider-Man Miles Morales https://youtu.be/gHzuHo80U2M59:18 Horizon Forbidden West https://youtu.be/Lq594XmpPBg1:00:18 Resident Evil Village https://youtu.be/AmH3Am2L_PA1:03:15 Paradise Lost Paradise Lost https://youtu.be/_efX8XgdFOk1:04:09 Fast and Furious https://youtu.be/QPPxcIA4xJY1:06:44 Nick & Ben come up with a chill driving game they wish existedEmail us @ TrailerBlazersPod@gmail.comInstagram us @TrailerBlazersPodcastTwitter @Trailer_BlazersRate & Review us on Apple Podcasts please!

The Modern Bar Cart Podcast
Episode 151 - Measurements: A Proportional Cocktail Guide

The Modern Bar Cart Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2020 62:43


In this conversation with designer and cocktail author Nick Barclay, some of the topics we discuss include:   How Nick made his way to Australia by way of the UK, and how the Land Down Under’s flourishing cocktail culture inspired him to start designing for the liquid medium. What Nick means when he aims for “simplicity” of design, either in a print, in his book, Measurements: A Proportional Cocktail Guide, or in an actual cocktail. Some of the challenges behind creating 2-dimensional visual representations of 3-dimensional objects like cocktail glasses and garnishes. How color became an important consideration when representing the proportional relationships between different ingredients in drinks. A few thoughts on the wine culture in Australia as compared to consumer tastes in Canada and the US. The trials and tribulations of a cocktail lover who doesn’t enjoy the taste of whiskey And much, much more.

Sports In The Making
Nick Gismondi - Announcer & Reporter, Chicago Blackhawks, NBC Sports Chicago & World Team Tennis

Sports In The Making

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2020 56:07


2:00 - Welcome to Nick Gismondi2:45 - What Nick has been doing since Covid-19 disrupted sports.4:23 - What it’s like working as an announcer for the Chicago Blackhawks, one of the Original Six NHL teams.7:15 - What it’s like as the rink side reporter for the Blackhawks. 7:51 > 8:4511:17 - How he came to love hockey & the NHL and how he got into sports broadcasting.15:25 - How a chance meeting at Los Angeles International Airport changed his broadcasting career.19:43 - How it takes tenacity to work in sports broadcasting as an on-air personality.23:08 - Nick talks about his formula for building relationships.26:33 - How Nick has developed relationships with celebrities, athletes and people in sports.28:18 - What Nick does for World Team Tennis on CBS31:06 - How the WTT show “Up Next with Nick Gismondi” began.33:02 - Future guests on “Up Next with Nick Gismondi.”34:45 - How Nick is able to connect with fans.38:27 - Nick shares an anecdote working with Olympic Gold Medalist Dan Jansen while covering speed skating.40:54 - What Nick’s future is for announcing.41:56 - How Nick prepare to call a sport or event he’s never covered.43:52 - What makes a good sports tv producer.47:49 - Nick is in a military family and he talks about the relationship with sports and the military.50:20 - What Nick would like people to know about what he does that they might not otherwise know.51:43 - What the best advice he’s been given in the sports broadcasting industry.53:20 - What rewards there are working in sports broadcasting.

Dark Coffee Podcast
57. Coping With Transition through Understanding

Dark Coffee Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 55:55


How do transitions affect our mental health? Today’s podcast episode is with Nick Wilson, a speaker on mental health, resilience and change. Nick talks on a range of topics surrounding mental health in the workplace, including resilience and impact of change and transition. Having served 14 years in the Army, including deployments on several Operational Tours in Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, Nick speaks about his experiences with depression and PTSD and the difficulties of transitioning from the military back into society. Also discussed: (1:22) Introduction to the episode (2:46) Nick’s introduction (6:54) The concept of ongoing mental health rather than crisis intervention, Mental Health First Aid, how the concept of suicide has changed from that of purely a crisis point to the everyday representation (11:55) Nick’s sense of ‘purpose’ behind his work and his reasoning/purpose for joining the army (14:46) Nick’s perception of wellbeing and self-care whilst being in the army, lack of training around mindset/wellbeing and mental resilience, the issues with approaching mental health & wellbeing in the army due to the hierarchy (20:19) How it was for Nick starting in the army beginning in Northern Ireland, experiences of what he saw *WARNING: includes detail of seeing bodies for the first time* (29:24) Afghanistan & Iraq and the differences in how graphic the violence was, how specific memories stick, how different it was to what people expect in war (38:28) The debrief process and the practicality of it, rather than the mental side of it, the mentality of ‘manning up’ (44:23) Implementing actual change within the entire hierarchy, (47:25) PTSD, how Nick first experienced/recognised it, the stigma of acknowledging it, how people didn’t notice the signs (56:02) Suicide attempt, how reducing people’s options can often lead them to suicide, the response post-suicide attempt, implementing self-care and acknowledging our capacity to cope (1:03:00) Where Nick was mentally, including selling his business and the uncertainty of what to do next, integrating veterans back into society and how they often face barriers in employment despite having extensive training in valuable skills (1:15:13) How the extensive training in other skills is in stark contrast to the lack of training about mental health/wellness, the difficulties of preparing for civilian life, the career/job distinction, support systems (1:24:04) The difficulties of transitioning into civilian life without assistance in combination with isolation and judgement, feeling invisible, transferable skills and being overlooked due to being a veteran even with relevant skills (1:35:11) Identifying who you are now & knowing your priorities, adapting in business/life (1:39:05) What Nick is doing currently, including empowering individuals to manage their own mental wellbeing, understanding who you are and how to achieve goals you set (1:47:43) Setting small goals to give yourself a boost, the process of understanding who you are now, identifying your options, support networks (1:57:37) Closing comments, where to find Nick   Resources: www.talkmentalhealth.org.uk nick@talkmentalhealth.org.uk Nick’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/360wellbeing/?originalSubdomain=uk Talk Mental Health LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/360wellbeing/   Welcome to Dark Coffee, the podcast that starts engaging and approachable conversations around mental health.     Join wellbeing advocate Alice Lyons as she attempts to normalise the conversation around mental health, from suicide to satisfaction and everything in between. Dark Coffee aims to create a safe space to explore dark topics with curiosity, compassion and courage to empower people to build their mental strength, resilience and sense of connection. Join the conversation by sharing this episode, subscribing to the podcast or following Alice on Linked In.   Your reviews will help Dark Coffee reach more people. If you like what you've heard, please consider leaving a review to help spread the conversation further.   Suicide and Emotional Support Organisations - UK   Samaritans: Confidential suicide discussion and emotional support. Free helpline available round the clock. Text - 116123.  Call - 08457 909090  Email -  jo@samaritans.org. Website - www.samaritans.org Mind: Support and information for anyone suffering from a mental health issue. 0300 123 3393 Website - Mind.org.uk Saneline: Practical information, crisis care and emotional support to people affected by mental health concerns. Helpline: 0845 767 8000, open daily from 6pm – 11pm.

Anime Summit
Welcome to JurassNick Park

Anime Summit

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2020 58:19


Episode 249: We finally did a Nick appreciation episode. After everyone else already got one we finally decide to peak inside the mind of Too Slick Nick. Just having fun and poking at the mindset of how Nick consumes anime and how he hates food. Show Nick some love! 05:30 Listener Question of the Week 10:45 Waifu and Husbando 14:15 What Nick disklikes in a show 16:05 Podcast origins 22:25 Early anime years 38:00 Nick's tastes --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/anime-summit/message

JMU X-Labs Podcast
Episode 3: Nick Swayne

JMU X-Labs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2020 19:44


About this episode:· Nick’s role on JMU’s campus [00:25]· How JMU X-Labs was formed [2:24]· What the interdisciplinary innovation classes normally taught at JMU X-Labs are like now that they are held online [5:03]· Why Nick wanted JMU X-Labs interns to start a podcast about JMU [9:23]· How Nick is keeping up with his passion for innovation during quarantine [14:10]What Nick is excited about for next semester [18:54]

Is it Recess Yet? Confessions of a Former Child Prodigy
"It's a weird time to try to reinvent yourself." A chat with Nick Photinos, innovative cellist and founding member of Eighth Blackbird, about career transformation and the importance of preserving our mental health during this time of pandemic.

Is it Recess Yet? Confessions of a Former Child Prodigy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2020 67:29


Subscribe to the podcast here! Nick Photinos4:23 - Struggling with productivity and career transformation during the pandemic.4:38 - Nick talks about the "profound change" his career is taking now as he prepares to leave Eighth Blackbird and how we all identify with our professional personas.6:00 - The challenges of reinventing oneself during the uncertainty of COVID-19.8:29 - The genesis of Eighth Blackbird at Oberlin. Tim Weiss.12:52 - How Nick decided it was time to leave Eighth Blackbird and move onto the next stage of his career.15:00 - The complexities of interpersonal relationships within small ensembles. How Eighth Blackbird defined their mission and made artistic choices in the beginning.17:35 - What happens when something we identify with changes?21:28 - How competitions helped Eighth Blackbird at the start of their career. How uniqueness helped their career and why it can be hard to differentiate yourself if you stay on a very traditional career path.24:28 - How staying true to what "lit him up" is what gave Nick clarity in his career and artistic goals.25:38 - Why Eighth Blackbird could only have formed at Oberlin.27:55 - How Nick got started playing music and the importance of collaboration.31:45 - How Nick is finding ways to collaborate in his home with his family.32:38 - Nick's arrangement of Aphex Twin's tune, Avril 14.33:43 - Nick's work with Dana Fonteneau on how all of the ways musicians are used to measuring themselves is gone and how this time can be best used for musicians to ask themselves "why are we doing this?" In the absence of all the traditional reasons to making music, why should we keep making music?35:19 - The joy of playing new music because there is no "right" way to play it.35:47 - Bob Dylan's ability to communicate despite his "horrible voice" and the importance of asking ourselves "what am I saying?" How to be authentic and fresh.38:43 - How the well worn paths have become too well worn and why it's important to ask yourself "where does this eventually lead?"40:20 - Nick and I talk about the c0mplexities of the classical music world's obsession with youth. e.g."From the Top."43:07 - The ways we derive our sense of worthiness from our professional successes and identities and the challenges that come from this over-identification.44:33 - Why people skills and "soft" skills are the most important for the success and longevity of your ensemble.47:43 - Memorization and why it's especially important in performing new music and how it can liberate the performers and also increase the audience's understanding and enjoyment of a piece. Michael Torke's Yellow Pages.53:45 - What Nick is planning for the next stage of his career as a solo artist.55:17 - Why deadlines are useful for Nick in his creative work and development.58:29 - How Nick cultivates his creative courage.1:01:14 - Nick talks about his interest in miniatures and how his first solo album, "Petits Artéfacts," developed from his interest in encores and short pieces.George SaundersLydia Davis1:04:16 - Why Nick would tell his younger self to focus on the people and things that "lift you up."1:04:55 - Why "not beating yourself up" is especially important during this time of pandemic and the importance of preserving our mental health during this time.

Trailer Blazers
Trailer Blazers Podcast - Episode 28 "Apple Juice Instead of Milk"

Trailer Blazers

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2020 88:08


Episode 28 “Apple Juice Instead of Milk”0:00 Welcome to the Ancient Roman Trailer Blazers1:30 Ancient urban legend lessons w/ Nick & Ben2:00 Groundhog Day life of 20203:15 What Nick watched this week6:50 What Ben watched this weekWhen we gon’ get?7:40 Dune screenshots are popping up9:40 Artemis Fowl release date revealed!10:35 Casting for Fantastic Four in the MCU? Possible Whedon involvement?14:30 Moon Knight and She-Hulk casting?17:45 You won’t BELIEVE this segment!31:45 New New Trailers32:07 Dangerous Lies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzJJo0whbJ435:15 Middleditch & Schwartz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Vao8d50hzw36:50 Dummy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BeIDLtnCKR438:40 The Trip to Greece https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgwpeZafRfE&feature=youtu.be40:32 Walkaway Joe https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oeKsfKO4_Tg&feature=youtu.beHello My Future Girlfriend video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ge7mozA-ptI43:44 Space https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEqMMO6uF-k&feature=youtu.be47:00 Prop Culture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50uSYVzHxF448:50 Villain https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI0K39NkmR4&feature=youtu.be50:36 Proximity https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7GupqvKblE52:11 Capone https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I8TmZ6eZAKE56:24 Perry Mason https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xnN7JFOjyoQ57:46 Valley Girl https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLhYFWwACo4&feature=youtu.beTrailer Mailers1:00:50 Animal Crossing email from Bridget1:01:20 Dolph Lundgren workout video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A80KA6i50zE&feature=youtu.be1:03:05 Questions Times Responses1:12:39 Contact info & the Quick Mickey UpdateVidYOgames ¼ Portion1:15:40 This week in Island Life1:20:00 Ben’s stressful tire life and Just Cause 4 is free on Epic1:21:30 Seinfeld game https://www.ign.com/articles/seinfeld-adventure-inside-the-game-about-nothingUse the hashtag #SeinfeldGame across social media, keep the YouTube trailer playing on repeat, check out the website, and let @IvanRDixon and @JacobJanerka know that you’re master of your domain.1:22:53 The Dark Pictures: Little Hope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2Cal_LSC7k&feature=youtu.be1:24:45 Blaston https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGSV-EgZrL4&feature=youtu.be1:26:18 The Evil Within: The Assignment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5PKnBPRGxg&feature=youtu.beEmail us @ TrailerBlazersPod@gmail.comInstagram us @TrailerBlazersPodcastTwitter @Trailer_BlazersRate & Review us on Apple Podcasts plz~

GoBundance Podcast
Episode 97 - Nick Romano

GoBundance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2020 44:53


In this episode, you will learn: • Nick’s brief bio • Nick’s horizontal income and personal expenses • What Nick does to stay fit • What Nick’s diet is like • How Nick gives back to the community • Nick’s life happiness index • The greatest moments in Nick’s life • Nick’s future greatest hits • Plus, so much more! Nick Romano is the President of New England Technology, Inc. the most competitively priced distributor for name brand consumer electronics in the industry. Founded in 2001, NETi offers several innovative distribution models based on retailer requirements and programs, specializing in e-commerce, Business to Business, and Business to Consumer marketplaces with a focus on price driven success for our customers. Nick is also an experienced owner with a demonstrated history of working in the wholesale/retail industry. He is a strong sales professional skilled in negotiation, Microsoft Office, sales, retail, and market research.

New Age Influencers
074: Why Success IS Happiness - Nick Troutman

New Age Influencers

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 57:53


In 2020 you can choose to live however you want. There is no "right" way to do it anymore. All you have to do is be willing to listen to your own inner voice. Nick Troutman is a professional kayaker, family man, and adventurer.  In this episode we discuss his unique nomadic lifestyle and the joy it brings him and his family. He shares with us how he's been able to stay true to his passion, what it takes, and advice for others looking to do the same. Nick is such a down to earth guy and and an inspiration for anyone looking to blaze their own trail.  Episode Timeline: 1:42 What Nick does 2:34 Professional Kayaking 3:33 Kayaking for life 6:38 Roots in Canada, marrying a kayaker 12:25 Types of competition 14:14 Living on the road: RV Nomads as a family 20:16 How he first made money in Kayaking 24:40 The game of social documentation 27:31 Capturing footage and balancing family 29:28 How to start a life by design 32:33 Value exchanges 35:33 LL Bean Family Partnership Deal 37:01 Brand contract details 39:54 Living your truth 41:44 Minor challenges when living on the road 43:00 Exploring the world with children: positives that travel brings 45:20 International travels 46:48 Why everyone should travel 47:45 Rapid Sentence Completions   Nick Troutman @nicktroutmankayak   New Age Influencers: @newageinfluencerspodcast @aaronbpatton http://newageinfluencers.com/

The School of Greatness with Lewis Howes
910 The Wim Hof Experience: Mindset Training, Power Breathing and Brotherhood

The School of Greatness with Lewis Howes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2020 84:03


“The breath is the carrier of consciousness.” If anyone has mastered their mind, it's extreme athlete Wim Hof.Wim Hof got his nickname “The Iceman” by breaking a number of records related to cold exposure. His feats include climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in shorts, running a half marathon above the Arctic Circle on his bare feet, and standing in a container while covered with ice cubes for more than 112 minutes. He developed the Wim Hof Method: a natural path to an optimal state of body and mind.He says that our brains have the power to guarantee us happiness, strength, and health. We can actually regulate our mind and the autonomous nervous system by breathing and being present.I had the incredible opportunity to travel to Poland along several other top entrepreneurs and business owners to experience a week with Wim Hof that I will never forget.As a group, we participated in several different exercises. Some involved meditation and breathing and others involved enduring intense cold and ice water challenges.On this trip, we all learned about the importance of brotherhood. Some of the physical challenges would have been unbearable if we were going at it alone. We all had each other to encourage, to motivate, and to push.We've all been in a place, where we think, "I can't do this anymore."That's a mindset roadblock that we were taught to overcome. Often in the midst of being uncomfortable, our minds and bodies panic. Our top priority is becoming comfortable again. But this is not often the correct way to deal with stress or pain.The mind is powerful, and if you teach it to avoid pain, then you'll never reach your full potential.If anyone has mastered the art of being uncomfortable while releasing stress, it's Wim Hof. He gave all us an experience we will never forget.How deep breathing practices create spiritual experiences in the body and mind (0:45)What Aubrey learned on the trip (2:52)What Steve learned on the trip (5:23)What Humble learned on the trip (6:53)What Mike learned on the trip (11:49)What Jesse learned on the trip (15:19)What Marq learned on the trip (20:59)What Matt (Cesar) learned on the trip (24:20)What Enahm learned on the trip (27:00)What Nick learned on the trip (33:30)Why Mike walked across America (37:14)What Taylor learned on the trip (40:18)What Mitch learned on the trip (41:28)What Matthew learned on the trip (43:45)What Peter learned on the trip (52:05)What Dalton learned on the trip (53:35)What Wim learned on the trip (55:23)Aubrey’s thoughts on the power of breathwork (57:30)Matthew’s thoughts on leadership (1:01:18)Plus much more...Wim Hof EpisodeSteve Weatherford EpisodeHumble the Poet EpisodeMike Posner EpisodeAubrey Marcus EpisodeMatthew Hussey EpisodeJesse Itzler EpisodeNick Symmonds EpisodeMatthew Hussey EpisodeWim Hof appWim Hof InstagramSteve Weatherford InstagramHumble the Poet InstagramMike Posner InstagramAubrey Marcus InstagramMatthew Hussey InstagramJesse Itzler InstagramMarq Brown InstagramNick Symmonds InstagramTaylor Jenson InstagramMitch Matthews InstagramEnahm Hof InstagramMatthew Hussey InstagramDalton Misner InstagramIf you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/910 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes

Trailer Blazers
Episode 16 - The Wiggly Dudes - In Which Ben's Mic Get's Wonky Like 3 Fourths of the Way Through

Trailer Blazers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2020 72:21


Ep 16 SHOW NOTESThe Wiggly Dudes - In Which Ben's Mic Get's Wonky Like 3 Fourths of the Way Through0:00 - Intro1:40 - What Nick watched this past week3:02 - Twin Peaks?5:03 - Square Jaw Guy 5:34 - Edgar Wright movies7:06 - What Ben watched this past week10:33 - Friends who have information on certain genres11:48 - When We Gon Get21:12 - The Questions Times What are the top 3 non-mutant and non-Fantastic 4 Marvel characters you want introduced into the MCU? You’re tasked with making a new Space Jam. What cartoons are in it? What’s it going to be like?25:21 - S.W.O.R.D. talk26:41 - in which we try to cast Adam WarlockGIFs of NBA players with anime additions:https://media.giphy.com/media/3oEdv2qNBprY4gDxMk/giphy.gif https://media.giphy.com/media/OkVMmBQwRKEsU/giphy.gif https://media0.giphy.com/media/p9YSFq1W0uyuA/giphy.gif New New Trailers - 34:19Horse Girl https://youtu.be/ieqemSsMxekClone Wars final season https://youtu.be/ZLW2jkd6E7gDispatches from Elsewhere trailer 2 https://youtu.be/_EUCA0rUZXgThe Last Thing He Wanted https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmrU6gMc1LcPokemon: Mewtwo Strikes Back - Evolution https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D0zYJ1RQ-fs(the longest video game cutscene ever)38:54 - On Ann Hathaway40:20 - Ben Affleck -> Alec Baldwin43:30 - Ultimate Versus1. Batman vs. Riddick2. Wolverine vs. Predator3. Xenomorph vs. Rancor4. Godzilla vs. Gipsy Danger49:37 - Trailer Mailers1:05:33 - VidYOgame One Quarter Portion

Trailer Blazers
Trailer Blazers Podcast - Episode 14

Trailer Blazers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2020 75:06


1:00 What Ben watched this week4:13 What Nick watched this week8:40 The Questions Times: We already freed Willy. What needs to be freed today?13:48 The Questions Times: If Disney decided to remake the Star Wars prequels, who would you tap to write/direct and star?New New21:50 The New Mutants https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4d_lrEA4l9A26:00 Hunters https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HBGkjmfIzAw 27:41 Locke & Key https://youtu.be/_EonRi0yQOE29:10 The Boy 2 https://youtu.be/5FWhmw3oFk830:52 Mythic Quest: Ravens Banquet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMaPCYRPhY032:24 First Cow https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRUWVT87mt833:56 Ben accidentally pepper sprays himself34:25 Harley Quinn and the Chamber of Secrets or something https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3HbbzHK5Mc36:47 Waiting for Anya https://youtu.be/PZmEOhEn9Iw38:40 FARGO!!!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcPU3mIuUmA40:57 Devs https://youtu.be/aoNloYTsH0YULTIMATE VERSUS43:30 Master Chief vs. Predator45:24 Master Chief vs. Iron Man46:13 Blade vs. Geralt47:36 Goku vs. Saitama (One-Punch Man)49:03 Hellboy vs. the Thing (F4)Question Times Responses50:19 Whose voice would you want doing AI?54:37 What personality for the AI?58:54 What invention you want IRL?VidYOgames1:06:45 Nick and Ben contemplate the upcoming Gollum game1:11:00 Nick’s most awaited of 20201:11:50 Ben’s most awaited of 2020Email us @ TrailerBlazersPod@gmail.comInstagram us @TrailerBlazersPodcastTwitter @Trailer_Blazers

The Ultimate Entrepreneur
217 - 11 Time Emmy Winner, Nick Nanton

The Ultimate Entrepreneur

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2020 49:12


Today's episode is an exciting interview with Nick Nanton, an award-winning director, agent, and author. He is an 11-time Emmy winner for directing and producing the short films Jacob's Turn, Esperanza, Mi Casa Hogar, and Visioneer. Nanton is the founder and CEO of The Dicks and Nanton Celebrity Branding Agency.In this talk, Nick will share the power of documentaries. He'll reveal how to elevate your brand with the power of effective storytelling so you can grow, succeed, and spread your message to the world. The success of his work shows in the numbers - as of the recording of this podcast, he's received 37 Emmy nominations.This interview is about a strategy to use when being preeminent. You'll discover common marketing mental blocks and why it's critical to see the big picture and even bigger message behind your business. Tune in and enjoy an insider's conversation with the man behind the camera. 01:30 - 09:30 - Introducing Nick, the work he does, and the success he has had.09:30 - 15:00 - How a great documentary fits within the strategy of preeminence.15:00 - 23:00 - What others do wrong when it comes to documentaries. 23:00 - 27:00 - Seeking and showing the purpose, passion, and humanness within a person. 27:00 - 37:00 - What Nick has learned and some success stories. 37:00 - 43:00 - The different industries and applications that Nick has worked in. 43:00 - The mental blocks people have in marketing and how to overcome them.

Retirement Planning - Redefined
Ep 11: Social Security, Part 5

Retirement Planning - Redefined

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 13:31


Today is part 5 of our social security series and we will focus on the survivor benefit option. We will talk about a few situations that can arise and share a couple of client stories that have revolved around this topic.Helpful Information:PFG Website: https://www.pfgprivatewealth.com/Contact: 813-286-7776Email: info@pfgprivatewealth.comTranscript of Today's Show:----more----Speaker 1: Back here with us for another edition of Retirement Planning Redefined, the podcast with John and Nick from PFG Private Wealth. Gentlemen, how's it going? Nick, how are you today, my friend?Nick: Doing pretty well. How about yourself?Speaker 1: I'm hanging in there. Not doing too bad. We are into December. Moving along nicely on this. John, how are you doing? You doing all right?John: I'm doing good. I'm doing good. No complaints. It's a getting a little cooler here in Florida, which is nice. It's been been hot, so it's nice to get a little a cool, no more humidity.Speaker 1: Yeah. Yeah. Now, as planners, you guys plan a lot of things, but are you the same way when it comes to holiday shopping? Have you kind of gotten some of this knocked out? We're at about the middle of the month here now in December. So you guys ready to roll for Christmas or are you last minute?John: I'll take that one first. No, I do a lot of Amazon shopping [crosstalk 00:00:49].Speaker 1: Me and you both. But how about you, Nick?Nick: Anything I can do to avoid going to a store, I do, so the majority of my shopping [crosstalk 00:00:59].Speaker 1: I think so many of us are that way, right, which obviously we can see in the death of brick and mortar, for sure. But yeah, absolutely. I agree with you there. Well, hopefully, folks, you're out there getting your shopping done. Maybe you're checking out this podcast while you're driving around doing some shopping or walking around in the malls or whatever the case might be. That is kind of the beauty of podcasting. It's not like traditional radio obviously, so you have more options, and hopefully you're subscribed to the podcast Retirement Planning Redefined. Do it at Apple, Google or Spotify, and a couple others as well, and you can find the links if you want, and podcast episodes on their website at PFGPrivateWealth.com. That's PFGPrivateWealth.com.Speaker 1: All right, part five. I think this is going to probably wrap it up, too, for our series on social security. We're going to talk about survivor benefits. Guys, give us some things to think about here. Survivor benefits are available to children and surviving spouses, correct?John: Yeah, so it is available to children and surviving spouses. For today's session, we're going to focus more on surviving spouses because that comes into play more when we're doing retirement planning.Speaker 1: Okay.John: So we always like to actually joke around with the survivor benefit. Not many people are aware, but they get a nice $255 lump sum death benefit if the spouse were to pass away.Nick: Obviously has not been adjusted for inflation.Speaker 1: Yeah, no, that doesn't cover much of anything, does it?John: No, no it doesn't. But they do get a monthly benefit as survivor and when it comes to planning, that does help out quite a bit when we're talking about strategies and trying to figure out a plan for a survivor. Kind of some rules that go with that. A survivor can actually start drawing social security at age 60 versus 62, which is kind of the normal first spouse, which we discussed last week.Nick: It is important to note that as a reminder, even though they're eligible to draw at 60, there are still the income tests from the standpoint of reductions. So if that person is working, then it may not make a whole lot of sense to get that early.John: Yeah. What Nick's referencing, we talked about the earnings penalty if you start taking social security before your full retirement age. That does still apply age 60, so if you're still working, most likely that will wipe out any social security benefit you're going to get as a survivor.John: Some other things to consider, and I'll kind of give some examples of this. Survivor benefit is not available if someone remarries before age 60, okay, unless of course that marriage ends. So we've had situations where we were planning for clients and we were talking about doing some survivor strategies and they actually ... Let's just give an example. They were 57 and were considering getting married and actually deferred their marriage until age 61 to be safe, which I don't think the spouse is too happy with us on that because it deferred the marriage, but it made sense because we actually get some pretty easy strategies, which we'll talk about later, to maximize the social security.Nick: For the widow to the eligible for those survivor benefits, they had to have been married for at least nine months. There's a caveat to that where the death was an accident, that could come into play. So essentially, that's pretty lenient, but it is important to understand the nine month rule as well.John: Yeah. And we stress a lot on just understanding what your situation is. Just kind of give you an example of that, I had a client that thought she's eligible for social security because she was married, but he passed away when they were within eight months of marriage. And she was shocked [inaudible 00:04:23] the whole time, let's say the last seven years, she was planning on it and then didn't qualify for it. So it was shocking, and unfortunately for her, she was hitting 62 so it made a big difference to her overall plan.Speaker 1: Gotcha. Okay. So good information there. Surviving spouse's benefit is based on what?Nick: So essentially kind of the caveat to this is whether or not people have been collecting. So if both spouses are receiving their benefits and there is death, then the surviving spouse receives the higher of the two.John: Not both.Nick: Correct. Not both, which some people will be surprised about how that works. But it's important to understand that they receive the higher of the two, not both. And one of the big factors that gets calculated into the firm calculation of the amount of money that the widow will receive takes into account when the deceased spouse originally claimed their benefit. And it gets a little bit confusing, quite frankly, for most people, but it factors in essentially whether or not they took it before or after their full retirement age. So John will walk us through an example on that. But it is important to understand how this works.John: Yeah. Again, we like to do everything in the realm of planning. So this is where doing the social security maximization strategy is very important. Social security is a big part of someone's retirement income. So you want to make sure that you're making the best decisions available to you, because the last thing you is to look back 10 years ago, it's like, "Oh, I wish I did this. I could have had X amount of dollars or really been enjoying my [inaudible 00:06:05] a little bit more."John: So just going to touch on an example of that. We'll call them Jack and Jill. We talked about some survivor strategies last week, but let's say Jack's up for retirement benefits, 2,400. Doesn't take it [inaudible 00:06:20] 70. Basically, Jill can jump on and actually take ... Let's increase it to 2,976 increases. That will be her new basically benefit for social security, so she gets a nice increase and that's where we talked about really trying to protect the spouse and giving them more income for life. And if she tries to draw early, let's say she takes it at 62, which anytime you draw early, you get reduction of benefit or a reduction based off of now the higher amount that he deferred, which is a nice little caveat. We have to really do some planning for a spouse.Nick: And one of the things too from a comparison standpoint is when we discuss the spousal benefits and how the spousal benefits do not grow past full retirement age, the death benefits does, or the widow benefit, survivor benefit does grow past [inaudible 00:07:15] age, so another reason why that's really a big factor.John: Yeah. And one thing that we'll always do, if we're incorporating strategies, you always typically want to delay the higher benefit. So if you're looking at an opportunity to take a widow's benefit or my own, rule of thumb, and everyone's different, but rule of thumb is defer the higher ones. I'll give my family as an example. My father-in-law, his wife passed away young and basically age 60, he was able to actually draw her social security benefit at 60, which a reduced amount. Most of his income is from real estate and investment income, so an earnings penalty didn't apply to him. So the plan is he's taking the widow benefit at 60 and he's deferring his, and then at full retirement age, he's going to switch over to his and get his full retirement benefit. So from 60 to 66, he was actually able to get some type of benefit and then at 66, will jump to his own and he gets the full amount.Speaker 1: Yeah. So there's some good strategies, some good things to think about, good information here when we're talking about these survivor benefits. So a couple of final key points or key takeaways, guys, just to think about?John: Things to consider is a reminder that basically when the person passes away, their social security benefits stop. And if the surviving spouse is going to take one, they'll take either their own or the deceased spouse, whatever one's higher, just making sure that it's important to plan and make sure the strategy is best for you based on your situation. Social security ... This is everything, not just survivors ... it's very confusing, and there's a lot of different things you can do, so if you're working with an advisor, just make sure that they have the capabilities to stress test your decisions, to make sure you're making the correct decision based on your situation and not your neighbors or as Nick likes to say, up north, his clients, they've talked to their plumber.Nick: Yeah. Everybody likes to get an opinion from somebody else. We will talk about opinions. But so anyways, I think the biggest kind of overlying thing, and we talk about it a lot, but we can't emphasize it enough, and even when we do overemphasize it, people still ask, but this is not a decision to be made in a vacuum. So many other factors tie into this decision.Nick: And even when we plan ... As an example, I was walking somebody through a plan this week, and they are three or four years out from retirement, and even though we have a strategy set up for social security in the plan on what we plan to do from a baseline standpoint, they asked and I really had to emphasize that realistically this decision doesn't really get made until maybe three, six months before their retirement.Nick: So we may plan for a certain strategy for four or five years, but the importance of planning and updating your plan every single year cannot be understated, because especially with social security, if we're in the midst of a recession, if we're in the midst of a 2008, we're not going to have somebody take a bunch of money out of their nest egg even though over the last five years we planned to do that. We're probably going to have at least one of them take social security, protect the value of the nest egg, give it time to bounce back and then adjust accordingly. The planning is via kind of a living, breathing thing and we always have to adapt and adjust.Speaker 1: Nope, I think that's a great point. We've said that many times here on the podcast that you've got to have a plan and then you have to realize that that plan needs to evolve much like your life's going to. A lot of times we kind of get a collection of things. We have some investments, we have some insurance vehicles, we think about social security. Maybe you're lucky enough to have a pension and you say, "Okay. Well, I've got this collection of things. I'm good to go. I have a retirement plan." No, you have a collection of things. So pulling them all together in a full retirement plan is really important.Speaker 1: That's what John and Nick do every day at PFG Private Wealth, so give them a call if you've got questions or concerns. Get on the calendar at 813-286-7776. That's 813-286-7776. Don't forget to go to the website, PFGPrivateWealth.com. You can always subscribe to the podcast and get new episodes, check out past episodes, things of that nature on Apple or Google or Spotify. So check them out online as well@pfgprivatewealth.com and also share the podcast with folks that you think might benefit from it as well.Speaker 1: This has been Retirement Planning Redefined. Thanks so much for staying tuned into the show. John. Nick, thanks for your time, as always. I hope you have a happy and safe holiday and we'll talk actually I think in 2020.Nick: Sounds good.John: All right.Speaker 1: You guys-Nick: Thank you.Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely. Take care and enjoy the holidays, everybody, and we'll see you next time right here on Retirement Planning Redefined.

The Hypertrophy Hub Podcast
#142: Nick Shaw: The origin story of Renaissance Periodization; Scaling a company from 1:1 coaching to intelligent autonomy.

The Hypertrophy Hub Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2019


Find RPstrength and Nick online: https://www.instagram.com/rpstrength/ https://www.instagram.com/nick.shaw.rp/ https://renaissanceperiodization.com/   Check out my social media! https://www.instagram.com/james_walsham/ https://www.instagram.com/thehypertrophyhub/ Youtube Click here to sign up for coaching with me!   Timestamps: 00:00: The origin story of RP. 08:20: When it became bigger than 1-1 coaching. 16:00: Goal setting for entrepreneurship. 21:00: Automating nutrition and training for the general population. 25:30: How hard do you actually have to sacrifice to get somewhere in entrepreneurship. 36:00: Being a contrarian and ego as an ambitious young person. 47:15: What Nick realised at an early age that helped with success. 52:00: Difficulty integrating with other people who aren't successful. 1:05:00: How much work it takes to make any progress in entrepreneurship. 1:16:30: Where to find Renaissance periodization   If you would like to support the show there are a few ways to do so!  1. Leave a review on iTunes 2. share the show with others 3. Send feedback or critiques of the show to Walshammy@gmail.com or James_walsham on Instagram 4. Tag us in your Instagram stories!  5. For all business enquiries please contact Walshammy@gmail.com 6. To donate to the podcast, which would be appreciated, however, never expected jamesmarshallwalsham@gmail.com through PayPal. 

PRmoment Podcast
Nick Clark, MD of Nelson Bostock, on the PRmoment podcast

PRmoment Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2019 44:35


This week on the PRmoment Podcast, in the latest of our life stories series, I’m pleased to welcome MD of Nelson Bostock Nick Clark. Nelson Bostock is one of those firms that everyone’s heard of, but it probably punches below its weight in terms of it’s profile in the PR industry. For those of you that don’t know, Nelson Bostock was founded in 1987 by Martin Bostock and Roger Nelson. The founders of the business have left the firm and it’s now part of Unlimited Group which is owned by the private equity firm DBay. Unlimited Group has a turnover of over £70m and consists of digital agency TMW, research firm Walnut as well as Health Unlimited (previously Red Door), consumer agency Fever and Nelson Bostock. Nelson Bostock has a turnover of approximately £5.3m and has 65 employees. Here is a flavour of what we discussed: [00:02:01] How Nick has worked for Nelson Bostock for (almost) 21 years. [00:02:16] Whether it's a good thing to be in one job for that long. [00:04:24] Nick identifies the different phases of his career. [00:04:41] How the randomness of Nick’s brother sharing a flat with the ex-CEO of Nelson Bostock Group Lee Nugent lead to Nick working in PR. [00:06:13] How as the MD Nick divides his time between client work, the day-to-day management of the business and long-term strategy. [00:08:33] How Nick made the jump from being a good PR person, to a senior director in the business. [00:10:30] Nick describes how CEOs have a battle to understand how best to spend their time. [00:11:08] Why we all need to give ourselves more time to think. [00:12:36] Why do internal candidates tend to get the biggest jobs at PR firms? [00:14:39] How did Nelson Bostock grow at 25% last year? [00:17:14] How Nelson Bostock uses media relations as a bridge into more integrated work. [00:18:35] Why having strong media relations at the heart of an agency gives your a competitive advantage across other types of marketing agencies. [00:24:59] Nick talks us through Nelson Bostock’s acquisition strategy. [00:25:57] Why mid-sized firms are more likely to buy an integrated offer. [00:29:20] Why the nuanced and complicated sales cycle of B2B markets means specialised agencies are still in demand. [00:30:51] How B2B buyers are buying marketing services. [00:32:44] How Leigh Nugent, Roger Nelson and Martin Bostock were unofficial mentors in Nick's career. [00:34:58] Nelson Bostock is owned by DBay: how has Nick found it different working for a private equity firm? [00:37:17] What Nick has learnt about buying companies and the complexities of integrating them. [00:39:36] Nick talks us through the challenges and benefits of flexible working, particularly as an MD.

Play Ball Kid
Nick Tanielu, Astros prospect currently with AAA Round Rock Express

Play Ball Kid

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2019 5:20


Nick Tanielu was selected in the 14th round (406th overall) in the 2014 draft by the Astros from Washington State. He had a very productive Collegiate career, .364/.433/.506/.939 in 82 games with the Cougars, and was named to the Pac-12 All-Conference team after the 2014 season. His numbers were gaudy, but his lack of power from traditionally a power position and some defensive questions prevented him from being selected higher according to scouts and other sources. This season he is batting .297, with 17 home runs, .514 SLG and .873 OPS. He plays third base, second base and first. Nick and Sammy discuss: His baseball background How the Astros organization has changed in the last few years of player development What Nick's daily routine is like What Nick works on in his first few rounds of batting work How Nick works on his mobility You can follow Nick on Twitter. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/playballkid/message

NION Radio
161: Experimenting with Plant Medicine

NION Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2019 18:03


"It's like if you got shot by a bullet and it got lodged in your body. Well you're not just going to leave it in there. You're going to want to excavate it." Have you ever felt totally trapped by how you react and sometimes overreact to situations? Like you're not in control and by the time you know what's happening, the damage has been done? This kind of behavior is often caused by deeply rooted trauma that can take years of therapy to overcome. But what if there was an easier way? A backdoor into your subconscious where you can work on taking care of that trauma? Today's episode of NION Radio is all about my journey with plant medicine and the power I see in it as a tool for growth, both personally and creatively. I go over my recent experience at Rhythmia in Costa Rica, the different medicines and their effects, and how creatives can benefit from these experiences. You can Subscribe and Listen to the Podcast on Apple Podcasts. And please leave me a Rating and Review! "Ayahuasca is a big tool for clearing those subconscious traumas." Some things we learn in this podcast: Nick's first experimentation with plant medicine and how that changed his outlook on life [1:16] What Nick experienced at Rhythmia in Costa Rica [2:40] How plant medicine can help you dig down deep into your subconscious and heal wounds from the past [5:17] How Ayahuasca works and how it works differently in different people [7:38] What Nick learned about himself and his past [11:32] Why clearing out your negative energies increases your creative flow [13:46] The understated importance of our gut [14:49] Links Mentioned: Rhythmia A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose Ziva Meditation with Emily Fletcher Becoming Supernatural: How Common People Are Doing the Uncommon

Actualize Freedom | Amazon FBA with Danny Carlson | Private Label Ecommerce Selling on Amazon

1:23 - Finding and launching new products on Amazon.4:17 - What Amazon can do to detect manipulated giveaways.6:06 - Rebates on Amazon.10:24 - Manychat/Facebook Messenger marketing and direct emails.13:52 - Nick’s Manychat funnel.17:42 - Targeting/segmenting audiences.20:28 - Why is Seller Tradecraft’s team composed almost entirely of outsourced talent?24:40 - What Nick looks for when hiring new outsourced workers.27:02 - Diversifying your talent pool when hiring workers.29:50 - Relying on instinct vs logic when making business decisions.32:04 - Contemporary traits which separate failing business from successful ones.35:48 - Where to find Nick online?LinksSeller Tradecraft website - https://www.sellertradecraft.com/Seller Tradecraft Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/sellertradecraft/Seller Tradecraft Youtube channel -  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPHntYYv-dwbTP-g-y4RYsgNick’s Email - Nick@sellertradecraft.com

Actualize Freedom | Amazon FBA with Danny Carlson | Private Label Ecommerce Selling on Amazon
Ep 53 - Nick Young - ManyChat, Remote Teams, & Product Launch

Actualize Freedom | Amazon FBA with Danny Carlson | Private Label Ecommerce Selling on Amazon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2019 38:27


Third member and co-mastermind of Seller Tradecraft to be a guest on the Actualize Freedom Podcast Nick Young joins us today to share his wide breadth of knowledge, experience and expertise with running an Amazon business and successfully navigating its many grey areas. This episode contains integral information regarding running a successful Amazon business and is not one to be missed!   1:23 - Finding and launching new products on Amazon. 4:17 - What Amazon can do to detect manipulated giveaways. 6:06 - Rebates on Amazon. 10:24 - Manychat/Facebook Messenger marketing and direct emails. 13:52 - Nick’s Manychat funnel. 17:42 - Targeting/segmenting audiences. 20:28 - Why is Seller Tradecraft’s team composed almost entirely of outsourced talent? 24:40 - What Nick looks for when hiring new outsourced workers. 27:02 - Diversifying your talent pool when hiring workers. 29:50 - Relying on instinct vs logic when making business decisions. 32:04 - Contemporary traits which separate failing business from successful ones. 35:48 - Where to find Nick online? Links   Seller Tradecraft website - https://www.sellertradecraft.com/ Seller Tradecraft Facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/sellertradecraft/ Seller Tradecraft Youtube channel -  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPHntYYv-dwbTP-g-y4RYsg Nick’s Email - Nick@sellertradecraft.com

Inside The Greenroom With PV3
10. How to Win International Stages with Nick James

Inside The Greenroom With PV3

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2019 45:01


Connect with us! Facebook: Advance Your Reach Website: advanceyourreach.com info@insidethegreenroompodcast.com Greenroom goes Global Coming to you from London at Expert Empire with Nick James Welcome, Nick James, the host of Experts Empire, inside the Greenroom! Today’s episode is another “Greenroom on the Road” and our FIRST international Greenroom! There are stages all over the globe – and Nick and I are coming to you from London at his event, Expert Empires. Nick James has sold tens of thousands of tickets and generated millions of dollars in sales. He’s recruited top speakers such as Gary Vaynerchuk, Grant Cardone, David Goggins, Ryan Deiss, and Chalene Johnson. Today he shares how he’s done it – PLUS the advice he got from Gary Vaynerchuk that led to a BIG change in how he runs his events (a must listen for anyone who plans events!). If you want to expand your stages from stateside to international trips – THIS is the episode to listen to. We share what it takes to land international stages and the process Nick goes through to select speakers from different countries. Inside the episode find out how YOU can get an all-expense-paid trip to join us inside the Greenroom LIVE. Quick Episode Summary: 2:35 Welcome Nick 3:20 How Nick grew up at events 7:07 Learning from the greats  9:12 How Nick makes his events stand out 17:00 What you can learn from Nicks mistakes 18:34 How to create your luck 18:45 How one hour with Gary Vee changed Nicks life 23:11 The Difference between the UK and American stage 26:28 What makes a good speaker 28:10 What Nick looks for in speakers 34:27 Why Nick started Expert Empire 35:07 The speakers who have impacted Nick the most 36:23 Nick's favorite up-and-comers 37:06 Why Nick thinks live events are still important 39:83 Nicks final advice to speakers 41:25 My biggest takeaways Connect with Nick: www.seriouslyfunbusiness.co.uk Instagram Facebook Facebook Community

CTO Connection
Scaling Leadership in a Growing Tech Organization with Nick Caldwell, Chief Product Officer @ Looker

CTO Connection

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2019 25:41


In this episode of CTO Connection, host Peter Bell sits down with Nick Caldwell, Chief Product Officer of Looker, to discuss the challenges of scaling leadership in a growing tech organization. Nick shares his experience moving from a 15-year career at Microsoft into the world of Bay area startups, his approach for finding and developing tech leaders, and some of the hard lessons he learned early in his management career.  [00:53] Fundamental challenge of scaling leadership in pace with the business [01:33] Nick’s career journey from Microsoft to Reddit to Looker [04:00] Thinking about career progression and training in a growing business [06:26] Balancing priorities of product delivery and people management [09:34] What resources to provide managers for their career development [11:09] The MBA experience as a ‘forcing function’ for exiting your comfort zone [13:06] Is this an engineering manager or is it a replicant? [15:13] Different traits desired from an engineering manager versus director [17:07] Cringeworthy lessons from early days in management [21:25] View of opportunities in the Bay area and tapping talent across the country [23:51] What Nick gets out of attending the CTO Summits You can hear more at The 2019 Chicago CTO Summit, coming up May 1, 2019, where Nick Caldwell will be presenting his talk - Ignite the Fire: How Managers Can Spark New Leaders.If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to CTO Connection in Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts. It really helps others find the show.Episode produced by Dante32.

The Official SaaStr Podcast: SaaS | Founders | Investors
SaaStr 212: Who Must Fundamentally Own Renewals Within Your Organisation, Why Burying Customer Success Under Sales Does Not Work & The Biggest Truisms On Talent That Are False and So Dangerous with Nick Mehta, CEO @ Gainsight

The Official SaaStr Podcast: SaaS | Founders | Investors

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2019 38:33


Nick Mehta is the CEO @ Gainsight, the #1 customer success platform for corporate services, turning your customers into your best growth engine. To date Gainsight have raised over $156m from some of the world’s best VCs in the form of Lightspeed, Bessemer, Insight Venture Partners, Battery Ventures and Salesforce Ventures. As for Nick, prior to Gainsight he was the CEO @ LiveOffice where he grew cloud archiving ARR from $2m in 2008 to $25m in 2011 and drove and negotiated the acquisition by Symantec for $115m in cash. Before LiveOffice Nick was Senior Director of Product Management @ Symantec where he led $378 MM market-leading email archiving / security businesses managing over 180 people across 3 continents. I do also have to say a huge thank you to both Byron Deeter and Jason Lemkin for the intro to Nick over two years ago. In Today’s Episode We Discuss: How Nick made his way into the world of SaaS and came to lead the charge in the category creation of customer success as CEO with Gainsight? What were some of his big lessons from being CEO at 2 companies during 2 macro market crashes? What does Nick mean when he says, “customer success will fail if it is just a role and not a strategy?” What can the leader and CEO do to imbue this company wide approach to customer success? What tangible actions are on offer? What works? Where do many make mistakes? Nick has previously said, “burying customer success undel sales does not work”. Why does this have such a high rate of failure? What should the optimal sales to customer success relationship look like? What does Nick mean when he says, “product is to customer success what marketing is to sales”. How should product and customer success work together? Why does Nick believe the mythology of the “A player” when business building is fundamentally dangerous? What can leaders and CEOs proactively do to ensure a diverse and differentiated talent pipeline? What question does Nick find most revealing in terms of one’s character and potential? Where do many go wrong in building and scaling their teams in SaaS? Why does Nick push back against the “hire fast and fire fast” thesis? What are the negative consequences of it? Why is it short-sighted and premature in many cases? What does Nick suggest for individuals struggling to find their optimal role within an organisation? How much time does one give someone struggling to find their role? Nick’s 60 Second SaaStr: Who must fundamentally own the renewal, sales or customer success? What Nick know now that he wishes he had known at the beginning? What would Nick most like to change in the world of SaaS? Most surprising action that has moved the needle for a company in terms of retention? Read the full transcript on our blog. If you would like to find out more about the show and the guests presented, you can follow us on Twitter here: Jason Lemkin Harry Stebbings SaaStr Nick Mehta

The Beginner Photography Podcast
BPP 136: Nick Church - Beginner to Pro in 24 Months

The Beginner Photography Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2019 50:00


Todays guest is Nick Church. A UK based Bristol wedding photographer who until 2014 had never picked up a camera. 24 months later he had left his full time job as photography had replaced his income. Today I'm excited to talk about how Nick did it so quick! In This Episode You'll Learn: When was the first time Nick picked up a camera How Nick booked his wedding How Nick handled shooting 40 weddings a year with his full time job The hardest part of photography for Nick to learn A common misconception people think about going full time What Nick would do differently if he had to do it all over again Bad info Nick hears being taught to new photographers An embarrassing moment Nick had at a wedding Premium Members Also Learn: How to know when do go full time Why most photographers struggle to get bookings Nick’s Facebook ad strategy that you can implement right away Some tools Nick uses in his photography business to keep him organized Resources: Nick Church’s Website Nick Church’s Facebook Nick Churches Instagram  

Recruit & Retain: Trucking Edition
Episode 66: Stand-Out Recruiting Tips, with Nick Lacy and Alicia Flodder

Recruit & Retain: Trucking Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2018 33:01


Crum Trucking strives to identify and understand the unique needs of each customer, and go beyond the expected in meeting those needs, therefore, everything we do must be of high quality. We must maintain a modern logistics focus, discovering innovative solutions to improve our customers’ transportation processes and maintain competitive prices. Customers’ needs must be serviced promptly, accurately and economically. What you’ll learn about in this episode: Why Nick believes it's helpful for recruiting to share vital statistics about drivers at his company What Nick is doing differently during the application and orientation process, including rapid response Why "home time" is a major determining factor for whether a prospective driver will be a good fit How Alicia works to minimize the processing and application time, to get the driver hired as quickly as possible How orientation works and is designed to make the onboarding experience as smooth as possible for drivers How Nick and Alicia coordinate their efforts for a retention follow-up process, with set times to check in with the drivers How technology has helped Nick identify issues with drivers and customize solutions for them What methods have served Nick well for lead generation and reaching out to prospective drivers How their targeted Facebook advertisements work, and why Nick strives for 3-minute turn-around time How their word-of-mouth referral programs work, and what specific incentives they offer through them Additional resources: Website: www.crumtrucking.com  

Internet Explorerz
Creed II Review - The Kinda Funny Morning Show 11.26.18

Internet Explorerz

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2018 50:16


Andy and Nick catchup about what they watched over the holiday break including Narcos, Billions, Adam Sandler’s new special and Creed II! -Andy ate a lot over thanksgiving (21:58 mins) -What Nick watched over the holidays (24:35 mins) -Nick saw Creed II (32:30 mins) -Andy saw Adam Sandlers special (38:55 mins) Thanks to https://twitter.com/Kumailh for the timestamps!

The Next 90 With Nick
W.I.F.T | 100

The Next 90 With Nick

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2018 13:23


One of the things that Nick is proud of over his 39 years is that he has been able to display humility; accepting people for who there are and where they are. Being a chameleon of sorts, he has always been good at assimilating to the crowd he is in. Every person has a gift and being humble enough to be open to learning from others is valuable. What Nick does can't be done without the people he has empowered and trusts; including the younger guys he has brought on to do W.I.F.T.

Tax Pro Nation | The Podcast For Independent Tax Professionals

Nick Nanton joins the show to talk about the importance of surrounding yourself with high performers to become one, the traits required to reach the success you want in your career and life, and how your story can be your biggest asset as a tax professional.   To learn more, and for the complete show notes, visit: http://taxpronation.com/17   In This Conversation We Cover: [01:40] Who is Nick Nanton? [03:09] "You are the average of the 5 people you spend the most time with." —Jim Rohn [03:19] Ben Hardy, one of the top writers on Medium.com, wrote the book Will Power Doesn't Work about how your surroundings dictate who you become [03:57] What kind of decisions you make when your mind gets decision fatigue [04:12] How to set yourself up for making successful decisions by changing your environment [04:44] "Spending time around extraordinary people makes extraordinary become normal." —Nick Nanton [05:00] How Nick's childhood, parents, and growing up in the Caribbean (Barbados) shaped his life and set the foundation for his success [06:05] Why 90% of success is mindset, his early Tony Robbins influence, and his journey trying to become an Olympic tennis athlete [07:00] How choosing you relational environment is not just about money [09:55] The disconnect Nick has learned about the tax professional community that's costing you clients [12:32] Nick's 47 LLCs and his relationship with his tax professional [13:13] "The great news is ... the bar is so low!" —Nick Nanton [14:05] "Most entrepreneurs and successful people become successful in many ways because they break the mold in some shape or form." —Nick Nanton [15:33] The one thing Nick learned about law and why meddling in what you are not best at doesn't serve you [16:27] When my mindset shift happens, how do I go from where I am to where I want to be? [17:25] "Life is based on the exchange of value." —Nick Nanton [18:07] The story about how Nick became a clown for $150/hour [19:10] How to know when you need to hang out with different people [20:02] The mindset shifting story of Nick's driving reason behind so much of what he does today [22:38] The feeling of commoditization among tax professionals and how to stand out [24:45] The tough realization that simply getting past the bar of entry in any field is ensuring you are now just like everybody else [25:31] The story branding and positioning conversation that truly differentiates you [26:28] What is true branding? Why is it not your logo, appearance, products, or services? [26:53] The only thing you have that no one can copy [27:31] Why storytelling is a learned skill and how it gets him into Nashville songwriters rooms [28:24] "A story, in any way, shape or form, can never be too long, just too boring." —Nick Nanton [29:14] How false modesty hurts your story and how to get others to tell your story for you [30:43] The key turning point when you stop storytelling for you and start storytelling for others [32:58] Nick's story about working with his dad and how he successfully works with his family [35:40] What Nick's coach, Dan Sullivan, taught him about unique ability and what you should be paring down your time to focus on daily [38:02] What Nick learned from reading 3 pages of the book, DaVinci and the 40 Answers, and the 2 categories all people fall into [38:50] How to achieve the best outcomes when working and collaborating with others [39:42] What to do when you find you are not good at telling your own story   Tax Pro Nation is sponsored by Pronto Tax School, Inc. Sponsored links include: The Pronto Path infographic http://taxpronation.com/path Basic Income Tax (Federal) course link: http://taxpronation.com/basic Business Tax Verified online course link http://taxpronation.com/business To sponsor an episode, please email hello@taxpronation.com Tax Pro Nation is produced by Podcast Masters

Business with Purpose
EP 78: Greg Urquhart & Nick Barigye, Karisimbi Business Partners

Business with Purpose

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2018 48:08


For years, there’s been this strange distaste for business. People kept thinking business was bad and business owners were greedy and money grubbers. But the truth is, business is and can be a HUGE force for good. Business can change lives, communities, and countries. Business isn’t the enemy… business can change the world.  My guests this week are Nick Barigye and Greg Urquhart of Karisimbi Business Partners. What Nick and Greg are doing at Karisimbi Business Partners is incredibly unique and their approach to helping entrepreneurs in Rwanda is amazing. I know you’re going to love this conversation!  CONNECT WITH KARISIMBI BUSINESS PARTNERS: http://karisimbipartners.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KarisimbiPartners Twitter: https://twitter.com/karisimbiprtnrs Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1146432/   About Greg Urquhart: Greg brings 25 years of sales, strategy and management experience, working in international settings and across a number of vertical markets, including six years working in East and Southern Africa. His experience ranges from the Fortune 100 to startups, including Karisimbi Partners and its investee companies, and his role as VP of Partners Sales & Alliances for Xamarin Inc., a hyper growth San Francisco based startup focused on mobile technology (acquired by Microsoft in 2015). Greg has held a variety of senior roles for over 16 years with Microsoft, in the US and Europe. Results-oriented by nature, Greg has a passion for management excellence and people development, believing sound business planning and operational excellence are the keys to success. About Nick Barigye:  Nick brings extensive strategic, operating and general management experience to Karisimbi Partners. He has served as CFO of the largest juice and dairy processor, CEO of the largest soy processor and COO of one of the largest locally owned road construction companies in Rwanda. He has filled interim General Manager and various other roles for a number of companies ranging from commercial printing to building products manufacturing. Nick is a self-starter with deep entrepreneurial, operational, financial, and business development expertise. He has extensive experience in financial analysis, financial management and investment analysis. Special thanks to CAUSEBOX for sponsoring this week's podcast. Use coupon code MOLLY for $15 off! Join my Purchase with Purpose Facebook group and let's continue the conversation! https://www.facebook.com/groups/purchasewithpurpose/ Subscribe to the Business with Purpose podcast (and I'd love it if you left a review** on iTunes!) Subscribe on iTunes** Subscribe on Google Play Subscribe on Radio Public Subscribe via Podcast RSS Feed **Want to know how to leave a review of the Business with Purpose Podcast on iTunes from your iPhone or iPad? Launch Apple's Podcast app. Tap the Search tab. Enter "Business with Purpose" Tap the blue Search key at the bottom right. Tap the Blue album art for the podcast. Tap the Reviews tab. Tap Write a Review at the bottom. Enter your iTunes password to login. Tap the Stars to leave a rating. Enter title text and content to leave a review. Tap Send.  

Ali on the Run Show
55. Nick Symmonds

Ali on the Run Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2018 51:37


“I wanted to prove to everyone that all the sacrifices I’d made and dumb decisions I made were worth it.” Nick Symmonds was a professional track and field athlete for 12 years, specializing in the 800 meters. He made two Olympic teams — the first when he was just 22 years old — and represented Team USA in Beijing and London. Nick, who lives in Eugene, OR, and is the CEO of Run Gum, retired from professional racing last year, and is now a proud, self-professed “hobby jogger.” He made his marathon debut at the 2017 Honolulu Marathon, and is now training to break three hours in the 26.2-mile distance this spring. Here’s what you’ll get in this episode: — How Nick got into running (3:20) — When he realized he could make a career out of running and the life-changing training decision that launched his professional career (5:20) — Nick’s advice for mastering the 800m (8:45) — What it’s like competing at the Olympics (11:00) — When he was “the most nervous he’s ever been for a race” (12:35) — How Nick developed his mental strength and overcame “the rollercoaster of emotions” (14:00) — The sacrifices he made to become an Olympian (16:45) — How he made the decision to retire in 2017, and how he felt the day after his retirement (17:45) — Why he wanted to run a marathon (20:45) — Why he says the Boston Marathon pisses him off and “is B.S.” and that running it would be going against his core beliefs (26:00) — The Run Gum story (30:00) — What Nick sees as the biggest problems in professional track and field (35:00) — Nick’s take on doping in professional sports and lifetime bans (37:00) — The latest on Nick’s love life — plus how he ended up on a date with Paris Hilton (40:40) Follow Nick: Instagram @nicksymmonds: https://www.instagram.com/nicksymmonds/ Twitter @nicksymmonds: https://twitter.com/NickSymmonds Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nick.symmonds/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeXJQ2GQh4BoRuAEkteU0Wg Website: https://www.nicksymmonds.com/ Follow Ali: Instagram @aliontherun1: https://www.instagram.com/aliontherun1 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aliontherun/ Twitter @aliontherun1: https://twitter.com/aliontherun1 Blog: http://www.aliontherunblog.com/ Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/13333410 Thank you for listening to and supporting the Ali on the Run Show! If you’re enjoying the show, please subscribe and leave a rating and review on iTunes. Spread the run love!

DC Fitness
Episode 10 - Nick Ramsay - Transformation Client

DC Fitness

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2017 49:28


On this episode I talk to Nick Ramsay who trained with me in Elite just after becoming a dad to get into the best shape of his life and done his very own photo shoot to reward his hard work Nick opens up about his mental health and how training has helped him with this, being a dad for the first time and how he managed to get the leanest he's ever been whilst life was a bit crazy. He smashed it! Thanks a lot to Nick for opening up and doing the podcast, I hope you enjoy Podcast Breakdown 0:00 Intro 2:30 Why nick got into the gym 4:30 Why did Nick contact me to train with me 10:10 Nick opens up about mental health and how training has helped him 18:37 Becoming a dad for the first time & making time for exercise 25:00 How seeing his shoot pictures back made him feel 29:00 What Nick found hardest about dieting to get lean 32:40 How nick is finding building muscle post shoot & the struggle to get bigger or stay lean

CSU RamsCast
86: Gallup trots into NFL mock drafts, CSU hoops lands Jordan Brangers

CSU RamsCast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2017 30:02


Colorado State landed a new JUCO commit in Jordan Brangers, who will join CSU Men's basketball for one year starting in 2018. We talk about Brangers and a source gives us the inside scoop on him. Then, we look at Colorado State football, both the highs and lows. It's mostly all highs for Michael Gallup, who's not only part of Pro Football Focus' National Team of the Week -- yet again -- he's also being mocked in the first round of their mock draft. How does Gallup compare to Rashard Higgins at CSU and how will their NFL careers differ? We take some educated guesses on that. Then, onto Nick Stevens, who struggled against Air Force. What Nick has to do to help his team win and how they're affected by his interceptions. Finally, we get into some fiery quotes from Mike Bobo on the loss to Air Force, as well as a personal story about Jim McElwain. 

The Art of Online Business
#161: (Case Study) Facebook Ads Success for Local Fitness/Yoga Studios with Nick Wolny

The Art of Online Business

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2017 40:35


Art of Paid Traffic listener, Nick Wolny, joins me on the show today for a Facebook ads case study. Nick helps boutique fitness and yoga studios in the Houston, Texas area and he’s been using what he learns from the podcast here to get some incredible results for his clients. Today we dive in and break down two campaigns: One where he generated $15,000 in class sales on a Facebook ads spend of just $50 and another campaign that brought in over $58,000 in revenue with a spend of just $330. He reveals the strategies he used for each of these campaigns and how he’s been able to successfully grow his Facebook ads business. Nick also talks about how he gets his clients, how he’s charging for his services and what exactly he’s helping them accomplish in their local markets. Nick’s success is a result of his having a great mindset.  Not just because he listens to the podcast and implements, but he learns and doesn’t stop there -- he takes action. And, he’s just one example of living proof that what we talk about on the show works ;) . On the Show Today You’ll Learn: The strategy he used to generate $15,000 in class sales on a Facebook ads spend of just $50 He he then repeated that success, but even bigger, bringing in over $58,000 in revenue with a Facebook ads spend of just $330. The significant gaps that Nick has noticed local business owners are facing as they scale to multiple locations What the relationship with his typical client looks like What Nick’s clients really want and how he knows he’s doing his job well How he’s niching down to his ideal client and why this should feel uncomfortable to do Why Nick isn’t working with brand new businesses and those under a certain threshold for monthly revenue The ways he’s been able to use Facebook Live videos in his client’s launches – and why everything doesn’t have to be sophisticated and “perfect” to work! Coming up in the next episode, you’ll hear an interview with a local business owner who’s here in San Diego, and he shares how he’s been burned a few times by local marketers promising amazing results (at a cost of thousands of dollars). He opens up about how he’d like to be approached by somebody to locally market his business, and how he’d like to work with that person. Excited to share that one with you as I interviewed him on the fly in his business.

Callaway Podcasts
The Fitting Room EP. 56 - The Future Of Fitting

Callaway Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2017 36:36


In Episode 56 of The Fitting, Club Champion co-founder Nick Sherburne joins Nate and AJ to discuss his experiences in club fitting over the past 20 years, why fitting is so important, and where it might be headed over the next few years. JUMP TO A TIMESTAMP: (5:15) How Club Champion started (6:13) What makes Club Champion a unique fitting platform (8:55) How fitting has evolved since Club Champion was founded (11:00) The impact of data on club fitting (16:53) What Nick has seen in fitting players for the GBB Epic Driver (19:31) How the club fitting experience will evolve in the years to come (22:30) The influence of mobile in club fitting (25:44) Club fitting fact or fiction and questions from the Callaway Community (33:50) How often Nick gets fit Ask your fitting questions on this Callaway Community thread to have it answered on the show: community.callawaygolf.com/t5/The-Fitt…9364#U29364 What clubs should you be playing? Visit our newly revamped Custom Fitting page and try one of our selector tools: www.callawaygolf.com/customfitting Subscribe to our podcasts on iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/calla…id686017329?mt=2 Subscribe on Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/s?fid=100953&refid=stpr Follow us on TuneIn: tun.in/ph88L

Onward Nation
Episode 510: Become an essentialist, with Nick Snapp.

Onward Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2017 34:55


Nick Snapp is building the most effective, action-driven accountability platform for entrepreneurs on the planet, Real Accountable. He is the owner of Inspire Me Solutions, where he consults with organizations to remove bottlenecks, save time and increase profitability through productivity and project management. He obtained Lean/Six Sigma and Project Management Professional certifications and worked 14-years in the nuclear and phosphate industries, where he led teams as a capital project manager, responsible for multi-million-dollar projects. Nick leverages his leadership and technical background in everything he does. He is best known as the atypical-engineer host of The Make it Snappy Productivity Show podcast, and all things “snappy,” for that matter. What you’ll learn about in this episode What Nick did when he felt like his entrepreneurial spirit was squashed The story behind Nick’s first business that he started as a kid Why soft skills are more important than technical knowledge The importance of paying attention to where people are in the process of things to make sure they follow through How Nick harnessed his skills as a connector to bring people together and keep them accountable The importance of having a flexible mentality Nick’s number one tip for being productive and staying focused Why it’s important to learn to say no How decision fatigue can have a negative impact on your productivity A story about Nick Saban and how he avoids decision fatigue How Nick learned that you need to be on the same page with the people your entrepreneurial endeavors affect Why you should focus on agreements and eliminate all expectations An anecdote that proves that doing the same thing over and over again really does make a difference Why healthy eating, sleeping, and exercising are all essential for productivity and effectiveness Why it’s not sustainable to have an 80 hour work week The importance learning from mentors and actually applying what you learn How to best connect with Nick: Podcast: www.makeitsnappyshow.com Twitter: @thesnappyshow

The Amazing Seller Podcast
TAS 311 : How to Earn Extra Money FAST While Still Working 9 to 5 Job with Nick Loper

The Amazing Seller Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2017 44:58


One of the biggest obstacles to people who are considering the private label approach to online business is the cash to get started. But you don’t have to wait for a winning lottery ticket or go rob a bank. You can set up some kind of side job or side hustle to start earning some extra income that you can put into the start of an Amazon business. On the show today is Nick Loper, host of The Side Hustle Show to talk about different side income ideas that you can build that could launch your online business dreams. But I don’t have time to start a side hustle! Time is the one common denominator among every one of us. We all get 24 hours and what we choose to do with that time is what matters. On this episode of the podcast, Scott asked Nick Loper what he would say to a person who says they don’t have enough time and his advice was golden. If you’d like to hear what Nick said in answer to that question AND get some side hustle ideas of your own to try out, you’ve got to listen to this conversation. If you want it bad enough you’ll find a way to do it. When Nick Loper and Scott were talking about the time crunch we all feel when it comes to making a side hustle or other online opportunity work, they both came to the same conclusion. If you want it badly enough you’ll figure out a way to make it happen. You can’t give yourself any excuses, you just have to find a way to do what you say you want to do. It’s the people who take action who see success. Find out more about Nick’s approach to carving out the time to build side income, on this episode of The Amazing Seller. Make extra money by buying low and selling high using flea markets, garage sales, etc. One of the ideas Nick Loper had about how people could begin building side income to help fuel their Amazon private label dreams was to find things at flea markets that you can sell for more on eBay, Amazon retail arbitrage, or other places. It’s an amazingly simple thing to do with just a little bit of research and know-how. And guess what, Nick is on the show today to give you some of that knowledge, so what are you waiting for? Are you interested in making your first $1000 quickly to get a private label business started? Scott and his buddy Dom Sugar have been brainstorming a way to help you get a start even though you don’t have any money to put toward a traditional private label launch. Dom has been selling products through retail arbitrage for years and is a pro and knowing how to do it, how to find the right things to sell, and how to make a profit doing it. He and Scott are putting together a 50 person pilot program to see if they are able to help people earn $1000 quickly like they think they can. Would you like in? Listen to this episode to find out how! OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE AMAZING SELLER [0:03] Scott’s introduction to the podcast and his guest Nick Loper! [1:54] A project Scott and his team have been working on behind the scenes. [6:04] How Nick got started working on side hustles and started his podcast. [11:16] How do side hustlers find the time to build a part time income? [15:07] Strategies for just getting stuff done. [21:48] What Nick says to a person who thinks they don’t have time to work on a side hustle. [25:08] Side hustle ideas to start earning money immediately. [34:38] Nick’s areas of low hanging fruit - the sharing economy opportunities. [41:00] Why Scott believes YOU need to give some of these ideas a shot. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE www.1KFastTrack.com www.SideHustleNation.com - Nick’s site. BOOK: The Compound Effect www.TimeHackers.io podcast Toggl tool Ebay http://www.inventright.com/ Red Bubble Zazzle www.Clarity.fm Upwork Fiverr www.TheAmazingSeller.com/300

Solo Parent Life | Single Parent | Divorce | Single Mom | Single Dad
17: Diary of a Single Dad with Nick Bender of the Single Parent Podcast

Solo Parent Life | Single Parent | Divorce | Single Mom | Single Dad

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2017 31:49


Nick Bender, the guest on today's show, is the twenty-seven-year-old single dad of a gorgeous five and a half-year-old son. He also has a podcast, called Single Parent Podcast, a nitty gritty bare bones kind of show, offering great suggestions to single parents about all aspects of single parenting. Today, Nick talks to Robbin about how much he loves living the life of a single parent. He also talks about his podcast, how it came about, his motivation in doing it and how it has helped him to grow into becoming a better co-parent. Listen in and find out how you too, can create a better life for yourself and your child, going solo.   Listen to this episode as Nick and Robbin talk about:   What Nick has learned about the court system and how it can help you. How his podcast has helped him to better articulate his thoughts and feelings around being a parent. Nicks “recording studio” in his car. The amount of energy it takes to be a single or a co-parent. How he came to love his single parent life by embracing it. Why Nick thinks it's easier to be a co- parent than to be married with kids. Why it's really important to spend time alone. The 3 things Nick recommends to make co-parenting so much easier: 1) Develop trust 2) Be flexible 3) Don't sweat the small stuff Being flexible, yet maintaining firm boundaries. How in the past, Nick's need to avoid conflict outweighed his need to be honest. How much easier life can become when you learn to brush (the small) things off. How children feel the weight of unspoken resentment between parents. How changing your attitude for the better will feed through to the other co-parent and that they are likely to start doing the same. You cannot control other people.   Links:   Find Single Parent Podcast is on iTunes and on Facebook.   Nick on Facebook: Nick Bender   Robbin's website: soloparentlife.com   To ask questions or leave feedback, go to: www.bit.lysoloparentlife17  

Mobile First
Ep. 4 - Ampush w/ Co-Founder & COO, Nick Shah and Jordan Bryant on the Mobile First Podcast

Mobile First

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2016 51:09


Our guest for this episode is Nick Shah, Co-Founder & Chief Operating Officer at Ampush. Prior to Ampush, Nick worked as an investment banker at Morgan Stanley in New York and Mumbai advising a range of deals, from IPOs to mergers, in the media and telecom industries. Nick graduated from The University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School with a dual concentration in Finance and Operations, and Information Management. Nick can be found playing basketball, participating in dance-offs, fearing bicycles, loving all things India, cheering for the Detroit Pistons, and always being positive. He was born and raised outside of Detroit, Michigan. Here are the highlights of our conversation with our Guest: - Getting to know Nick professionally and personally from his rich childhood, his interest in basketball, being a rebel, to becoming an eventual entrepreneur. - Nick shares details of his story on what led him to deviate from the family’s expectation of him becoming a doctor and how he pursued business and finance with his co-founders. - How being friends with his Ampush co-founders since high school helped in his success and why he feels that building long-standing relationships is an essential facet in your journey as an entrepreneur. - What prompted his transition from finance to advertising and how it was like for them quitting their jobs during the recession and building their company during challenging times. Nick also shares obstacles and lessons gained along the way including analysis paralysis and underestimating the work it took to put things into place; and the wins they have celebrated which caused them to pivot. - An introduction to their company, Ampush, their objectives and what their teams do. He also talks about how they worked with the Dollar Shave Club and their initial hesitations in taking them on as a customer. - Nick shared strategies they have employed specifically for the Dollar Shave Club which helped them grow and achieve a 6-7 figure/month spend, including starting with insights gained that the bottom-line issue was customer service innovation and planning awareness campaigns from there. - Learning the things that Ampush had done for the Dollar Shave Club through Facebook advertising which allowed them to reach their targeted demographics and most importantly, to convert them. - What Nick thinks of the current situation of mobile advertising, the opportunities he sees in the current trends and how he foresees the industry will evolve into. - Nick shares his opinion on what he thinks will happen if Facebook fails to acquire other social networks to reach the younger demographic and the potential risks the company may face.

The Small Business Big Marketing Podcast with Timbo Reid
335 - How To Encourage Customers To Buy More With Afterpay's Nick Molnar.

The Small Business Big Marketing Podcast with Timbo Reid

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2016 53:04


Nick Molnar has figured out how to encourage customers to buy more. He is the founder of Afterpay, a simple payment system that lets customers buy what they want today (in fact, they can take it home immediately), then pay for it over 4 equal fortnightly installments. It's also proving a great way for retailers to sell more. Here's how Afterpay works for merchants. We cover plenty of ground in this chat including: What Nick learnt working in his family's retail jewelry business How to encourage customers to buy more How the idea for Afterpay came about How Afterpay enables retailers to increase sales How Nick rallied his most loyal customers to do his marketing Plus plenty more Plus I launch a new segment called What Have You Got To Lose? in which I share one simple yet effective marketing idea that you can go and implement immediately. An idea that won't cost a fortune (if anything) to implement, and that might just generate you more awareness, more enquiry, and ultimately more sales.  EPISODE TIMELINE 00:00  Love for Cornerstone Business Solutions & WebCentral 00:56   Teaser 01:25  Welcome & overview 03:32  Today's guest introduction - Nick Molnar of Afterpay 07:08  Interview with Nick Molnar of Afterpay 39:06 Insights into Cornerstone Business Solutions & WebCentral 41:36  My Top 3 Attention Grabbers from my chat with Nick Molnar of Afterpay 44:00  [New Segment}] What Have You Got To Lose? 45:59  Listener feedback 49:24  Wrap-up and an insight in to both a past guest & next week's guest   MY TOP 3 MARKETING ATTENTION GRABBERS   Be customer-centric. Never stop looking at your business through the eyes of your precious customers. Be a customer of your own business. Ask customers what they think. Hold focus groups. Do whatever it takes to make this a fundamental tenant of how you grow that beautiful business of yours. Get your customers to do your marketing. Nick's social media push asking AfterPay customers to encourage their favourite retailers to get AfterPay is genius. What can you get your tribe to do? Know your numbers. This one scares a lot of business owners. But chunk it down. Start by identifying two or three metrics that you could track on a daily basis. It might be website traffic, phone enquires … maybe even sales! As you start to see trends, then put in place ideas to see if you can effect a positive change to these numbers.   RESOURCES & LINKS MENTIONED How AfterPay works Interview with Karl Schwantes about how to market a retail jewelry business Podcast Listener Survey - 70-seconds of your time will lead to an even better show ;0) Create Freedom Through Outsourcing Tour #3 What Have You Got To Lose? blog post- This will build each week as a new idea gets added   EPISODE SPONSORS WebCentral - Exclusive listener offers Get your online marketing sorted with these exclusive listener offers. Cornerstone Business Solutions Reduce your wages bill by up to 75%     OVER TO YOU … What was your biggest marketing learning or ah-ha moment from this episode? Leave your comment below. My guest and I respond to each and every comment. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Between Heaven and Earth
Visiting the Sacred Places of France – guest Nick Inman

Between Heaven and Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2016 60:02


LisaK Radio http://LisaKRadio.com Perhaps you have or want to visit places like Sedona, Machu Picchu, Lourdes, Stonehenge, or perhaps great places of worship to connect to divinity, your angels, to receive blessings, be healed or just connect to something higher than you.  How do you do that? Are you prepared to gain all that you can from a sacred place? Nick Inman is the expert on sacred travel and will show us how. What Nick says mystical travel to sacred places; 1) To make any trip infinitely richer, you have to travel with greater awareness. 2) At the same time, allow the place to reveal itself more fully to you. So, you can step into a sacred space and see or feel nothing, but if your third eye is open, you can experience what the place can offer. Nick Inman has written for some of the best-known travel book publishers such as DK Eyewitness, Insight, Berlitz, and Michelin. Whether you are traveling to Paris or many of the great towns and villages in France, there always seems to be a mystical sacred place there. His latest book, A Guide to Mystical France, shows you amazing places where you can encounter Mary Magdalene, Mother Mary, the Knights Templar, King Arthur, angels, the Tarot, and other secrets, mysteries and sacred sites. About Nick Inman: Nick Inman is a professional writer and translator. He is the author, coauthor or editor of more than 70 books, most of them travel guides to France and Spain. His latest book, A Guide to Mystical France, grew out of his work a travel guide writer: “there were just too many odd things that wouldn't fit into the style of a conventional travel guide and I decided they deserved a book of their own.” Born in the UK he now lives in rural France. He is married with two children. Guest Website: http://www.nickinman.com Learn more about Lisa K. and receive a free Intuition eBook at:  http://www.LMK88.com r.

Between Heaven and Earth
Visiting the Sacred Places of France – guest Nick Inman

Between Heaven and Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2016 60:00


LisaK Radio http://LisaKRadio.com Perhaps you have or want to visit places like Sedona, Machu Picchu, Lourdes, Stonehenge, or perhaps great places of worship to connect to divinity, your angels, to receive blessings, be healed or just connect to something higher than you.  How do you do that? Are you prepared to gain all that you can from a sacred place? Nick Inman is the expert on sacred travel and will show us how. What Nick says mystical travel to sacred places; 1) To make any trip infinitely richer, you have to travel with greater awareness. 2) At the same time, allow the place to reveal itself more fully to you. So, you can step into a sacred space and see or feel nothing, but if your third eye is open, you can experience what the place can offer. Nick Inman has written for some of the best-known travel book publishers such as DK Eyewitness, Insight, Berlitz, and Michelin. Whether you are traveling to Paris or many of the great towns and villages in France, there always seems to be a mystical sacred place there. His latest book, A Guide to Mystical France, shows you amazing places where you can encounter Mary Magdalene, Mother Mary, the Knights Templar, King Arthur, angels, the Tarot, and other secrets, mysteries and sacred sites. About Nick Inman: Nick Inman is a professional writer and translator. He is the author, coauthor or editor of more than 70 books, most of them travel guides to France and Spain. His latest book, A Guide to Mystical France, grew out of his work a travel guide writer: “there were just too many odd things that wouldn’t fit into the style of a conventional travel guide and I decided they deserved a book of their own.” Born in the UK he now lives in rural France. He is married with two children. Guest Website: http://www.nickinman.com Learn more about Lisa K. and receive a free Intuition eBook at:  http://www.LMK88.com

Teenage Entrepreneur with Jordan Agolli
TE 2.17: Nick Mares- Co-founder of Kettle and Fire

Teenage Entrepreneur with Jordan Agolli

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2016 35:06


Nick Mares is the co-founder of Kettle and Fire, the first and only shelf stable, grass fed bone broth on the market. Bone broth is a hot up and coming health food trend which is a nutritious broth that you can drink with numerous health benefits. The company was founded in 2015 and within 4 months they did 7 figures in revenue. Fast forward to 2016 and the company is still growing at a fast rate.    In this episode we discuss: Nick’s family life and the impact that growing up in a house of 9 had on his path as an entrepreneur. Why Nick took a gap year between high school to college and the advice he’d give to others.  How Nick turned a knee injury into the business that would eventually become Kettle and Fire.  Where the name Kettle and Fire came from.  The operational process of how their bone broth is created. The rigorous process it took to manufacture and sell the product.  How they grew the company from 0 to 7 figures so quickly.  What Nick does on a difficult day and how he picks himself up. Nick’s dream that he wants to turn into a reality. For more details on this episode or resources and support on building your business, please visit www.teenpodcast.com We have built a community of entrepreneurs from all around the world to help you on your journey.    The podcast is produced by Force Media. 

Talking Better Business with Craig Oliver
The story of Green Meadows Beef, and the success of their Paddock to Plate business model

Talking Better Business with Craig Oliver

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2016 36:45


Green Meadows Beef is an unique family business providing grass feed beef direct to the consumer. This is the story how the Carey family have built their business of providing raw materials to the end user and the way they have used social media to take it to market     Today’s guest is Nick Carey, Director and General Manager of Green Meadows Beef based in Taranaki.  Green Meadows Beef is a unique family business who have built their business primarily using online and social media platforms.  The business has experienced tremendous growth over the last five years.  Craig and Nick talk about what started as an offbeat idea that has become big business for his family.   In 2012, his family decided they wanted to add value to their products.  This propelled them to launch a paddock to plate system.  This involved shipping products from their farm through their own processing and distribution channels.  Their direct-to-market through online sales has formed a big growth part of their business.   Nick’s father, suggested for them to try and market their beef product directly to the consumer.  They sat together as a family and formed a new way to get their products to the market, and soon, they recognized the opportunity of selling online. This propelled them to launch a paddock to plate system.  This involved shipping products from their farm through their own processing and distribution channels.  Their direct-to-market through online sales has formed a big growth part of their business.   Nick started his career as a commercial lawyer in Wellington and New Plymouth His role in this new family business was in the development, branding, and logistics.  Soon enough this was taking most of his time and he eventually decided he needed to quit his job as a lawyer.    That was a leap of faith for Nick, who has had to adjust to being an entrepreneur.  There were four key problems Green Meadows Beef was solving for the consumer.  These were (1) Time saving (2) Ease of purchase (3) Quality assurance, (4) Provenance.   Nick and Craig also talk about how wildly successful My Food Bag has become.  It is a website that allows it’s customers to order a food bag for a varied number of people.  It is also customized for them in terms of the number of people and their diet.  My Food Bag has revolutionized the industry.  Countdown eventually came up with a similar concept of online selling.  There was a big shift in the market of people being more open to purchasing food products online.  That assured Green Meadows Beef of its market.    In terms of marketing research, they were lucky that Green Meadows Beef was nimble enough to adapt their offering as well.  This included having to tweak their operations on the way.  They started out selling bulk-frozen packs and delivering them through chilled or frozen trucks.  However, it has now evolved to a point where they can customize their own products and deliver them the next day, chilled, through a courier.   Nick’s journey has not been without challenges.  One day, his company’s freight company informed him that they were no longer going to deliver Nick’s frozen meat packs.  As a result, he was forced to change his business model, which led to better results because they are now selling fresh produce instead of frozen produce.   Another challenge Nick has had to face was the price of raw materials.  Over the last three to four years, the price of raw materials has almost doubled.  At the same time. One of the things that has raised the price of the raw product is the price that it can otherwise be sold elsewhere.  Export of demand has been high.   They now run their farm as a separate business from their meat processing.  Each company has different governance, advisers, and processes.  Ensuring that the two businesses were independent of each other will help with succession planning and will force each one to be profitable on its own.  .  However, with the easing off of demand in the United States, the farm gate prices have been affected.    Nick learned to focus on the role of governance and the value of the right independent advice.  Another crucial area that Nick has focused on is being able to get accurate and timely business information, dealing with changes in technology and how scalable that is, and finally, achieving a profitable core business before evolving into other paths.   Another thing that Nick has focused on is learning how to work with his people.  Getting the right staff onboard has been a good learning experience for him.  He makes sure his employees have clearly defined roles, responsibilities, and reporting lines so that he could focus on working on the business and growing it.  Nick has been able to retain his staff for 4 years now.  He hardly needed to do cold hires because he utilized the benefits of his networks.   As for online selling, Nick uses mostly social media such as Facebook and Twitter to connect with people and to build an audience.  They do mostly paid advertising now.  He initially did everything in-house but has started outsourcing it already using a marketing consultant who works remotely for them.   In terms of content, Nick suggests that you keep it personal, relevant, and fun to keep his customers engaged.  With competition sprouting up more, there is a need to ensure that you get heard.  Nick’s friend once said that content is king but engagement is queen and she rules the house.  You need to be able to engage your followers.    Currently, they are on Pinterest and Instagram but it has been a challenge to maintain everything.  They use third party tools to help with the marketing side.  They also use cloud based systems that help cut costs and get things done.   What Nick enjoys about being in business is building something from the ground up, seeing the evolution of that business, and having a chance to enjoy its success.    As a lawyer, Nick had a structured and disciplined career.  At the moment, he says he has very little structure in his life now.  Working with creative types, for example, causes him to work longer hours and deadlines extended.  He deals with it by communicating well with his people.  He says that if you spend a good portion of your day through communicating, it makes the day go so much better. This goes back to having structures in place so the rest of the team can function harmoniously while you’re communication with them.    Nick’s challenge working with his family is ensuring that there is regular communication in terms of what’s happening in the business as well as asking for feedback.  He suggests that there has to be a clear distinction of business and family time.  It is important that everyone gets their chance to have a say but at the end of it, they are able to sit down and have dinner together.   In terms of having external professionals and mentors for his business, Nick says that one of the critical things is finding the right independent advice.  His solution has been to persevere until you find exactly what you need at a particular time.  As your business continues to change, so does the levels of advise.  Nick has found that having an independent director has helped him fill the skills gap.  Engaging the services of experts can be beneficial to his business as well.    Nick does not dwell on the past.  His company has a year end review where they identify what worked and what didn’t so that in the future, they can learn from these experiences. Nick says that in hindsight, he would have focused on margin analysis in his business and having a better handle on his cash flow and budget.  This has become one of their strengths and has allowed them to diversify the business for a more consistent cash inflow.   Being content in terms of business and the industry that you’re in is a mistake that business owners make.  As an example, the evolution of online selling has had an effect on traditional purchasing.  Nick suggests that you need to stay on top of things and not rest on your laurels because you don’t know what’s around the corner.   Strengthen your core business and ensure that it is profitable and sustainable before you venture out into other business opportunities.  At the moment, there is a need to develop relationships with consumers because people want to know where there food comes from, how it’s produced, and what’s going on.    Visit www.GreenMeadowsBeef.co.nz for more information.   TRANSCRIPT NICK CAREY    Craig: Hi guys!  Craig here from The Project Guys. Today in our podcast, really happy to introduce Nick Carey.  Nick is a Director and General Manager of Green Meadows Beef based here in Taranaki.  Green Meadows Beef is a unique family business who built the business primarily using online and social media platforms.  They specialise in suppling New Zealand consumers’ grass fed premium beef, where you online, and delivered to your door in twenty four hours.  And their business has experienced tremendous growth over the last five years.  What started as an offbeat idea and working from home office is now having their own dedicated butchery and retail premises and offices.  So, welcome Nick.   Nick: Thanks Craig.  Thanks for giving me the opportunity to tell a little bit about our story.    Craig: No drama at all! . Tell us a little bit about your background and why you decided to go into business.   Nick: Well, my background was as a commercial lawyer for a few years both in Wellington and New Plymouth.  We as a family, I guess, back in 2012, decided that we wanted to add value to the products we were producing which was mainly meat or beef and as a way to, I guess, cement the family farm and those plans through a formal succession plan, we decided to launch an integrated pallet to plate business which is shipping products from our farm through our own channels and processing channels, as Craig mentioned, direct consumers New Zealand wide through the different channels we utilise it at supermarkets, restaurants, and caterers and of course, direct-to-market through online sales, which is our biggest growth part of the business.   Craig: So, you’ve mentioned that you were a lawyer and then from a lawyer to an entrepreneur, it’s not a traditional path, was it your idea to do businesses with family?  How did it all sort of evolve?   Nick: Yeah.  Evolve is probably the right thing to say.  It was my father’s idea to try and market the products.  Obviously, we soon recognised online was a much easier path than let’s say the traditional paths of standing at farmer’s markets or carport sales or whatever it may be where other people are maybe trying to sell similar products.  So it’s at that time, all of us, I’ve got two siblings.   We all became involved to help form a plan to get the products to market and I helped here on the side with development and branding and things and arranging all of that and then once we launched the business, it became pretty evident that I wouldn’t be able to continue in my day job and helping out with the business.  So it was about, I guess, 3 months in that I gave up…   Craig: Oh, that quick! Yeah.  Yeah.   Nick: Yeah.  Yeah.…full-time paid employment to jump into the business.   Craig: To be poor for a couple of years.    Nick: Yes!  Yes!    Craig: [laughs]   Nick: Forever.    Craig: Forever.  [laughs] Yes!  Yes!  So, when you started, obviously, it was just quite a bit different and there’s a new concept.  Get away from the farmer’s markets or selling to a wholesaler, direct….did you guys do any market research and that actually work out where you had a legitimate market and business…   Nick: Uhm…   Craig: And what are the problems you’re solving which are and I suppose were time saving and ease for the purchaser, wasn’t it?   Nick: That and also quality and provenance.  So those are I guess the 4 key messages or key problems we’re solving for the consumer.   Craig: Yeah.  Yeah.   Nick: In New Zealand, at that time, there was a limited range of producers doing what we were doing.  Certainly that landscape has changed now and more and more are coming on board to be…whether it’s in meat or other ___ farm products or whatever.  The launch of things like MyFoodBag and you know and the whole…   Craig: Which is wildly successful.   Nick: Exactly.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: And a great example of success in this market.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: So I guess in…when the business was in its infancy, there was only a couple of competitors in New Zealand.  I don’t even think Countdown had really launched their…   Craig: Right.   Nick: Online sales at that time so obviously, we’ve noticed a big shift in the market and people being far more open to purchasing food products online.  So, with our research, it was really based on looking at producers in Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States, seeing what they were doing, what offerings they had.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: And obviously, because we…we were selling online, just online only at the start, it did allow us some chance to scale as time went on so there was no pressure of having products ready to go with no markets.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: So I guess, we…we are currently on to building website number three.   Craig: Right.   Nick: So there has been multiple chances to refine the offering based on our own learnings…   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: Rather than…than doing too much…   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: market research at the beginning, I guess, which  potentially a pitfall…   Craig: Yeah.  But…   Nick: that were fallen into but we’ve been lucky that we’ve been nimble enough to be able to adapt that offering to…   Craig: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah…   Nick: to see that…what does that mean?   Craig: Yeah.  Oh, it’s a case sometimes of getting that ___ to market and then work out having to… and having to tweak everything on the way, isn’t it…   Nick: Exactly.  We’ve started out in our industry selling bulk frozen packs and delivering it via the chilled or frozen trucks…   Craig: Yes.   Nick: all over the country where it could take anything from a week to two weeks.   Craig: Right.   Nick: To be delivered to the model that we have now and it’s evolving as you can customise and pick and choose your own products…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: …and it’s delivered the next day, chilled via courier, so…   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: You know, there’s different challenges that come at you and one of that for example was the freight company telling us, “No, we’re no longer gonna deliver your frozen meat packs.”  So…   Craig: Oh, is that right?   Nick: So your business if often forced to change…   Craig: Yes.   Nick: …which can obviously lead to better results…   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: …because the consumer appreciates…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: fresh produce versus…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: frozen produce.    Craig: So there.  So tell us a bit more about the challenges and the learnings you had in those early years and maybe also the challenges you’re facing now and how that evolved?   Nick: Definitely.  I guess the critical challenge for us been the price of our raw materials.   Craig: Alright.   Nick: Just to put them in a little bit of context and background, we run the farm as a totally separate business from the meat processing…   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: Different governance, different advisers, everything and we thought that was a critical distinction from a…   Craig: Uhm…   Nick: …a governance point of view particularly in the family situation so that we had two separate business which were hopefully, hopefully independent of each other, both supporting…   Craig: Uhm…   Nick: …themselves.  So…   Craig: Also that.  I guess it also helps with succession planning too.  Exit strategy is one [incomprehensible]…   Nick: Exactly.  And obviously that’s what we’re focusing…   Craig: Uhm…   Nick: The meat processing business now is taking on a life of its own with contract manufacturing…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: …and things like that so…obviously anytime, I mentioned it at the start that the farm is very much part of the succession plan but if there were something that caused the farm to go, well, we’ve got another business…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: And vice versa, we could always onsell the meat processing side of things.   Craig: Uhm…uhm…uhm…   Nick: …and keep the farm…   Craig: That’s right.   Nick: But so…part of it is that the farm must obviously make a profit…   Craig: Yes…   Nick: So we have to purchase the animals that we’re using through the Green Meadows Business from the farm at the prevailing market rate…   Craig: Yes…   Nick: Over the last three to four years, that price of raw materials has almost doubled…   Craig: Oh sh….   Nick: Without a corresponding rise in meat prices at the consumer end…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: There’s still a certain barrier at the consumer end as to what a sausage or whatever may cost so I guess that’s been the critical challenge that we’ve face and we’ve had to really adapt and change our product offering.  So…   Craig: So what’s driven the price of the raw product up?  Is it the price on the farm to produce that product?   Nick: No, it’s the price that it can otherwise be sold elsewhere...   Craig: Oh, okay.   Nick: So, export demand, primarily out of the U_S where ground beef, easier ground beef is exported…   Craig: Okay…   Nick: …to the U_S and it’s been in quite high demand in particularly out of China as well…   Craig: Right.   Nick: So, depending on what’s happening in those markets, I’m assuming we’re seeing an easing off in the United States at the moment on demand which, of course, is then having a…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: …a correlation back to farm gate prices here.   Craig: Cool…   Nick: So I guess with that challenge, we learned quite a lot and kind of like it’s focused a lot on what’s happened in the business so there are a couple of points off the top of my head…   Craig: Yes…Yeah…   Nick: I guess the role of governance and the value of the right independent advice has been a critical things that we’ve taken from it, I guess the information we’re pulling out of the business in terms or accurate and timely…   Craig: Yup…   Nick: …business information, technology and how scalable that is, what machines can really make our day better…   Craig: Right.   Nick: Versus culling out some of those manual processes, cause obviously, bearing in mind making food can sometimes be a relatively manual process…   Craig: Yup!  Yeah…   Nick: And then it all comes back to achieving a profitable core business before evolving into other paths.  So, we’ve really focused over the last year or two on what is our core business, how to make it profitable before launching into some other opportunities as well.    Craig: So how do you take yourself out of the business to work on the business around those things you just…   Nick: Yeah, well, as the businesses continue to grow, we’ve been able to put staff into roles that I was otherwise doing, so for example, we’ve just taken on an operations manager who is handling most of the day-to-day production and supply side of the business whereas I’m just handling the demand side and obviously everything else.  So the finances and working on the business so, I guess that’s been a good learning is getting the right staff on board, making sure that they have clearly defined roles and responsibilities and reporting lines so that that then frees you up to do as you say, “working on the business,” and growing it.  So we have that clearly…clear definition of okay, operations manager was gonna focus on the supply side and production, I was gonna handle the demand, so that’s where my focus is now…is on the demand side and when you’ve got the right people and the right positions, everything is fine and it works well.    Craig: So, you’ve gotta run on a fierce podcast business and about staffing.  How’d you go and find the right staffing?  How’d you know?  Do you know?  [laughs]   Nick: I guess, that’s a good question, “Do you know?”   Craig: Cause that’s critical, isn’t it?   Nick: It is and we are fortunate that in nearly 4 years, we’ve retained all our staff which I guess, obviously speaks of our environment also.  The direction that we’re pushing the company.  It…it’s…I guess it comes down to clear jobs…just clear job descriptions when you’re going so you know exactly who you’re looking for so when you find them, you know, they tick all the boxes and utilising the benefit of networks because all of our staff have been knowing to….   Craig: Someone…someone…   Nick: Yeah.    Craig: Someone who knows somebody…Yeah…   Nick: Exactly, so now I’m doing that thing with cold hires but I can see that the next thing we’re already looking for our next staff member, which is scary…   Craig: Yeah…   Nick: But I can see that that will be a cold…a cold hire so I guess that will come down to getting clear…clear pre-employment checks and questions and also making sure they’re the right fit for the…   Craig: thing…   Nick: Exactly.   Craig: Cool.  Awesome.  So, you have used a lot of online tools and platforms that you’ve touched on before to build the business to where it is.  Tell us about the strategy and has that changed over the years and if so, how or….yeah…   Nick: Yeah…It’s a different __part obviously with online selling.  You wanna connect with customers in real time and I guess social media in particular is great for that.  We’ve primarily used Facebook and Twitter for the connecting with people and building an audience at the beginning.  I guess how that’s changed is we’ve now moved from just connecting with customers and building that brand and that relationship through the more paid advertising now.  So we do a lot of online marketing in terms of ECO and pre marketing and also direct marketing through the likes of Facebook.  So, I guess it’s building a network and a platform, which would then turn into an opportunity to market, so…   Craig: Did you do all that in-house, or do you outsource it?   Nick: We did start all that in-house but now I’ve outsourced it.  We have a marketing consultant who works remotely for us, who handles all that ECO and ECM marketing.   Craig: And what about all your Facebook engagement?  Cause I know when you first start your business, you’re massive on engaging with your audience, you do a lot of that at the start.  Is that still done in-house?  Or…   Nick: It’s still done in-house and obviously that’s been one of the challenges I found is that I handle that role as the businesses grow, keep it…personal, and keep it relevant and keep it fun which is how we engage with our customers and perhaps that’s something I could be doing better.    Craig: [incomprehensible]   Nick: I think as we came and set the so high with using that as a focus, it’s kind of…you can easily fall by the way, so…   Craig: That’s so much of a big challenge, isn’t it because that’s how you built the brand and showing you some of the loyalty stats.   Nick: And I’m definitely seeing that with other influences that I follow that they came out with a good solid two years of social media engagement and then now it’s sort of dropped back…   Craig: Yes…   Nick: And I don’t know whether that’s just the maturing of the market and there are a lot of these platforms now and monetising, they’re successors, so it now makes it difficult to instigate…seen whereas in the beginning it was relatively easy but I think you raise a good point about engagement because a lot of the focus on social media a few years ago was all about content and posting the right sort of content but now, I know a person who writes and used to podcast a lot of Facebook.  She said that content is king but engagement is queen and she rules the house.   Craig: Yes…   Nick: And it’s sort of something that’s always always stuck with me because you can have great content but if you’re not getting anything back from the people you’re publishing it to, what’s the point?   Craig: Yeah, you could have 100,000 followers but if you’re not engaging them, what’s the point?   Nick: Yes.  So I think, you know, that’s a key thing to keep it at the back of your mind because it’s not a question of numbers because it’s like you said, it’s how they’re engaging.    Craig: You said when you sell your products you use Facebook and Twitter, yet have you tried the other platforms at all?   Nick: We do have a little bit on Pinterest, obviously we’re in a food business and Instagram, but it’s again, it’s the challenge of maintaining everything.  We do use a lot of third party tools to push the marketing side of things which we find works well and we obviously into the day to day side of things prefer to use online tools for managing the business, whether it be accounting software, our website is all run on a third party CMS which is obviously cloud based and what else do we use in the cloud?  Design tools and everything like that that’s all accessible now which really help (a) cut costs and (b) get things done.   Craig: So what do you enjoy most about being in business?  What strokes your ties?   Nick: Tough question, but I guess it’s with building something from the ground up and seeing the evolution it’s having the chancing to leap at success.  There are days obviously that I don’t enjoy leading.    Craig: You wish you were a follower there mate? [laughs]   Nick: Yeah.  Exactly.  When you bring in HR and customer issues and things like that.  Obviously, you want to do a good job, whether it be your staff or your customers but I guess that’s the critical thing is having that chance and opportunity which I do feel fortunate for that you know, we’re in a position that I was able to leave my fulltime employment to follow something which I could see working and it…with just a few challenges and refinements.  We’re now well on a path to making a success.    Craig: Yeah.   Nick: So that’s pretty special and something that I hold dear and try not to abuse really but it is a bit of a privilege to do this so if I can keep looking at it like that, then it’ll keep me focused and also keep me grounded.   Craig: Grounded, which is what New Zealand ___ is all about.  Cool, you hear that?   Nick: Yeah, I guess we at the start to kinda pushed the business and I do believe in it is we did a lot of PR work which is obviously the opposite to the grounded because you’re having to put yourself out there and tell your story and that can be difficult at times especially when you get…things like TV involved, so yeah, I think that’s a good balance to have.    Craig: So, ____ what have you learned from you know, five or six years ago, when you left the safe little confines of a lawyer’s office…   Nick: To me, just by one and a half years…whatever it was…   Craig: You were very structured and disciplined to doing this.  What have you learned as a leader?  Here, professionally and personally?   Nick: Yeah, I guess a couple of things, you do mean structure, I have very little structure in my life now.    Craig: [laughs]   Nick: Just by trying to plan things, you know, obviously things never really go to plan.  So that’s been difficult in terms of deadlines and things like that as I’m understanding how things work in the real world versus a lawyer’s world where 5 o’clock Friday was your excellent deadline and you wouldn’t dare go past 5 o’clock Friday whereas when you start involving perhaps creative types into the mix and deadlines can often extend.    Craig: Yes.   Nick: So that’s been one challenge for me personally and also from a managing or leadership type of thing.  Communication and understanding the importance of communication internally and externally and you can never really over communicate particularly with staff and things of concerns.    Craig: Yeah.   Nick: I guess that’s another that I’ve really learned is you spend a good portion of your day through communicating and it makes the day go so much better.   Craig: Yes.   Nick: But then it comes back to what I mentioned earlier about having the structures in place so that the rest of the team can function harmoniously while you’re communicating with them…the team…   Craig: Yeah.  And what about the family dynamic, isn’t that communications is key?  Sometimes, the family businesses, they can either go really well which is good or goes real bad because one of the first rules of business is don’t ever do business with family members, isn’t it?   Nick: It is.    Craig: Yes, back to the question.  Sorry about the rain everybody!  So I asked Nick about the dynamic of working with some family members.  One of the first rules of business is don’t go into business with family.  So I guess it has worked here.  From a leadership point of view, the communications point of view, have you managed that?   Nick: Yeah, it has been both a benefit and a challenge to go into business with family.  On a daily basis, I work with both of my peer, so on a day to day to basis, I mean, both of my brothers work externally from the business so two problems obviously, or challenges working with family day in day out but also having family interested in the business but not having the experience or benefit of seeing what’s happening day to day so we have pretty regular communications between in terms of what’s happening in the business, asking for feedback that they’re both very helpful and useful, these are my brothers who don’t work in the business.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: But balancing that you also have a clear distinction of what’s business time and what’s family time because there’s always that tendency to make family time always business time and I think that’s critical particularly in terms of my own domestic situation as well, I’ve got a partner who doesn’t work and the person that’s end to end in terms of say my parents with their grandchildren and things like that.  It’s still got to operate in a normal situation and we are very open with each other so there’s never any issues in terms of overstepping lines or boundaries.   Craig: Yeah.   Nick: And I think it’s really important that everyone gets their chance to have a say but at the end of it, we still sit down for dinner.   Craig: Yeah, yeah, yeah.  Cool.  Cool.  So you’ve always had external professionals and mentors for your business and I believe now you’ve got a Board of Directors and an independent director tell us about what made you decide that you needed this and the benefits of using these strategies and advise that is out there around using mentors or Board of Directors, etc.    Nick: I guess one of the critical thing is finding the right advice, independent advice and it can be a struggle at times, so I guess what I sort of found is keep persevering until you find exactly what you need at that particular time and your levels of advice and who can advise you changes as the business continues to change…and…   Craig: Evolves.  As the business evolves…   Nick: Exactly, so I think the best thing you can do is get out there and take advice as step one but then if you’re not getting the right sort of advice is going out and looking for some different advice.   Craig: Yeah.  Yeah.   Nick: So, we’ve had, as you mentioned, a range from formal strategic planning with our accountants through the business mentors through to now an independent director who I work with closely on a daily basis and they’ve all had their uses and purpose but having an independent voice daily looks like some of the skill gaps that we have or that I have as well is really important and I guess that’s what I see the benefit…the main benefit of the independent board is to plug the skill gaps and I mean we are looking now at maybe bringing another independent onto the board who has some different skill set that none of us have secure around dealing with marketing to the end consumer…   Craig: Right.   Nick: And events cg and things like that so it’s…   Craig: So it’s skill gaps or experience gaps?   Nick: I guess both are incredibly relevant because you get the skills from experience so I think yeah.  I think both are intertwined.   Craig: And you said before that when you first started out your sort of a range of advisers, I mean, it’s the right advice.  When you start out were you ever nervous and scared about what’s going on.  So how do you know if you get some right advice?  If you’re speaking to for example an accountant and they say you should be doing this strategy, how do you know, is that the gut instinct or it is…how do you know if it’s the right one or the wrong one?   Nick: Yeah, it’s a good question because I guess when you go into business you’re always confident and pigheaded and you don’t really wanna take advice.   Craig: No.   Nick: And then to sit over the table with someone and, no offence when you’re listening to maybe to sit over the table with someone, no offence to any listeners who may be in the accounting profession or something.   Craig: Someone’s profession…   Nick: Who’s telling you you’re doing this wrong, you’re doing that wrong.  You know, it can be difficult so I think it’s not a case of knowing or choosing what that right advice is at the start but getting a lot of advice and really going out there and getting as much in as you can and taking bits and pieces from different sources to kind of form that plan because you and only you, I guess will know exactly how the business is going internally or what your dreams and goals and things are but it does help to get as much advice from them.   Craig: So that could be what we’ve talked about accountant, but there could be other business owners that could be lawyers, other professionals, and that’s where networking comes in, isn’t it?  You realize that when you network, you understand that same…your peers to having the same issues you have even if they might be in a different industry.   Nick: Exactly and as many people you can speak to as possible.  You know, whether it’s just a friendly ear or someone that you admire, in your industry or a different industry.  It can be really beneficial to have that engagement.    Craig: Awesome, so the benefit of hindsight, we all do this.  What would you do differently?   Nick: Hindsight, oh yeah, it’s a great thing.   Craig: No, it’s not.  It’s a terrible thing!   Nick: I guess that’s one thing our plan is not to dwell too much on the past.  We do a year review the end of each year and pick out the points of what went good and bad and then put it together and then don’t really dwell on it too much because again, it’s what you’re looking into the future that really controls things.  So I guess with hindsight, what I would do it has been more of a focus on margin analysis in our business, so which products work well, where we can extract the most value and also a better handle on cash flow and budget so that financial side of the business from the get-go.  I spend a lot of focus now on cash flow and planning cash flow a couple of months in advance and…   Craig: So you turned into an accountant?   Nick: Yeah, well, I…   Craig: [laughs]   Nick: I think maybe I’m turning into an accountant but that was a chance to really tighten the skill gaps that I had.   Craig: Right.   Nick: In the financial management side of things and now that’s one of our strengths where a lot of similar sized businesses I see don’t have a handle on cash flow, which in my business, can actually be quite difficult with online selling because we don’t know when people are gonna bulk buy meat packs and what’s gonna happen which is why we’ve diversified the business from just straight online sales to other traditional sales so that we’ve got consistent cash flow coming in.   Craig: A little bit of advice to people.  Look after your cash flow and mind your  budget, sounds like you’re good at. A couple of hours a week takes to analyse what else has happened that week which is critical.    Nick: I guess that’s one thing that having an independent director allows me to do because we have a phone call every Friday afternoon, which…   Craig: Hi guys, so from your experiences, what are some of the mistakes that you see business owners are making.  So, we talked a little bit about cash flow.  Anything else that…   Nick: Yeah.  I guess, something a little different and that I can see out there I see is that they are content both in terms of their businesses and their industries and not pushing their boundaries and or doing the… trying alternative ways to do things and obviously in the retail side of things.  I guess something else I am saying is people being content in terms of their…inside their businesses and in terms of marketing their businesses as well so obviously, the example is that the evolution of online selling and the effect it has on traditional purchasing, and brick and mortar stores and it kinda seems like…to some of them that it’s come out of nowhere whereas the evolution of online selling has been happening in time over the last ten years or so.  So I think, I see that both as established businesses and the traditional business being content can often come back to hurt them later on.  So, i mean, that’s something else we noticed and why we’re doing things differently as well.   Craig: So, the moral of the story is don’t be scared of pushing the boundaries and thinking outside the square box, just give it a go.   Nick: And also staying on top of things and not just resting on your laurels because you don’t really know what’s around the corner.   Craig: Don’t be scared of what’s around the corner.    Nick: Yeah.  That’s just saying a little bit no matter how established you are.   Craig: So is that the sort of advice you’d give to…if you were to mentor for a better general word, either both established or a startup…what other things would you…   Nick: Yeah, it’s different keeping on top of thinss, looking overseas, seeing what’s happening whether you’re selling shoes or cats, or whatever.  It’s…there’s a lot to…we’re fortunate in this part of the world that we’re a little behind as well.   Craig: Yes, yes…I was gonna ask that.   Nick: So, it’s kind of a good thing I think for us because we can have a look and see what’s happening overseas.   Craig: You think sometimes, people fall into the trap of going overseas either to Europe or America, seeing something, trying to do it New Zealand but they’re too soon   Nick: And obviously given our market size as well as the other key issue here, and also how spread out the market is.  It’s a long way from the top of the North Island to Steward Island.  Yes, I know, I definitely think that’s true and that’s where the difficulty, I guess comes in with what I just see is…do you become an adopter or do you follow…   Craig: Become second tier.   Nick: Yeah and there’s lot of risk, in obviously going out and being an early adopter and it falling in your face which…   Craig: But then fortune favours the brave and…   Nick: But again coming back to what I mentioned earlier on in the podcast is that’s where you’ve got a profitable and sustainable core being you’ve got those opportunities to go out and expand and you’ve still got that core business to I say loosely, to fall back on but you know…   Craig: Yeah.  To pay the bills…   Nick: Yeah.  Yeah.   Craig: Yeah.  Cool.  Awesome.  And so where do you see your industry going in the next five to ten years?   Nick: Yeah, well in the markets, the direct food market, there’s differently more choice for quality and more relationships with…between consumers and producers so I definitely see that as an important step in what we’re trying to stay ahead of because people increasingly do want to know where their food comes from and how it’s produced and what’s going on so I think it’s only gonna get more and we’re gonna see return as one kind of crystal ball return to a lot traditional ways of doing things because the end user or consumer’s putting a price on all those so in our case, it’s manufactured products and more real products and people are prepared to pay more even though it costs more to produce but that’s where I see it headed.   Craig: Alright.  Cool.  Awesome!   Nick: And you’ll be more disrupters, I’ve already talked about MyFoodBank and seeing markets online so we find those disrupters coming into the market so I guess, listening to my own advice that’s where I need to stay ahead of and say exactly what’s happening in the market and what trends are coming up.   Craig: Awesome.  Awesome.  Hey Nick, we’ll wrap it up.  Thanks very much for your time.  .  How do we find you?   Nick: Yeah so we are an online business.  Our website, so you can check out our products at greenmeadowsbeef.co.nz and find us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram with our page will get you there.   Craig: Awesome!  Right.  Thank Nick!  Good stuff!   Nick: Sure!    

The Physical Performance Show
13: Nick Willis - Olympic 1500m Silver Medallist

The Physical Performance Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2016 49:58


In this episode of The Physical Performance Show I have a fire-side chat with Olympic 1500m Silver Medallist, Nick Willis. Listen in as we delve into the following: Nicks London Results Team morale at the London Olympics Growing up as a talented runner The support people that believed in Nick The Penn Relays Nick finding out that he run a 100 year record Other sports Nick has tried Favourite Performance Nick's health and commitment waiver Favourite Training Session Nick and snowboarding Most admired athlete What Nick wants to be remembered for If you have enjoyed the show please hit SUBSCRIBE for to ensure you are one of the first to future episodes. Jump over to POGO Physio - www.pogophysio.com.au for more details Follow @Brad_Beer Instagram, Twitter, and Snapchat Please direct any questions, comments, and feedback to the above social media handles.  Powered by POGO Physio, Mermaid Waters, Australia 

Occasionally Awesome
#130 Merry Christmas, Satan!

Occasionally Awesome

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2015 55:23


What better way to celebrate the Christmas spirit than to read and discuss the 11 Satanic Rules of the Earth. Anyone can do a regular Christmas episode and talk about Jesus and presents, but Occasionally Awesome dives right into the mysterious worshippers of the dark lord Lucifer and figure out what their belief system has them living. What Nick and Kevin find just might surprise you. HOLIDAY SPECIAL: From Christmas Eve through New Years Eve, buy one Nick Youssef coffee mug pin and get the second half off. use promo code: mughead at checkout. Happy holidays everyone!

Octane Athletics Training Systems Fuel Your Fire Podcast
Episode 35: Nick Salazar (@tririg) from TriRig.com on WTF is up with the Mercury Pedal and more...

Octane Athletics Training Systems Fuel Your Fire Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2015 41:53


Nick Salazar (@TriRig) started TriRig.com initially to do product reviews. His product reviews are detailed and have some great photography even today. What Nick noticed in his research while doing the reviews is that there were some gaps in the marketplace that needed to be filled. It was then that he took things into his own hands and started to develop products to fill those gaps. Nick shares this unique story and discusses gear, bikes, and aerodynamic innovation. Give it a listen and let us know what you think at Octane-Athletics.com, at Facebook.com/OctaneAthletics, or on Twitter at @OctaneUSA.Support the Fuel Your Fire PodcastSupport the Podcast by doing your shopping on Amazon.com. It’s that simple.No hidden or additional fees. We just get a few cents every time you head over to Amazon using this link. Also…PLEASE RATE THE FUEL YOUR FIRE PODCAST HERELike the Facebook PageFollow Us on TwitterFollow Us on InstagramFollow Dave on TwitterFollow Randy on TwitterFollow Mike on TwitterGive us a call and leave us your questions or thoughts about the show at 740-414-FUEL (740-414-3835)ACTIVE LISTENER DEAL EXTENDED… You get 10% off the purchase of any RecoveryPump System until September 7, 2015 by going to RecoveryPump.com and using the promo code: OCTANE at checkout. You will also get a $25 shipping credit and a$50 gift card with the purchase of an RP system or a $150 gift card with the purchase of the RPX system.If you get value from the show and want to tell us you appreciate us, how about popping for a bottle of water, a cup of coffee or a sandwich. Would you do that? If so, become an Octane Patron and pledge $1, $5, or $10 to the show.Get your Gatorade Endurance from your local running or triathlon specialty store or at Amazon.com. If your local store doesn’t have it, ask them why. Train with what is on course at over 350 running events around the country and at Ironman Triathlons, Gatorade Endurance.Be sure to check out octane-athletics.com.

The Twenty Minute VC: Venture Capital | Startup Funding | The Pitch
FF 007: Founding Europe's Largest Trading App with Nick Bortot, Founder @ Bux

The Twenty Minute VC: Venture Capital | Startup Funding | The Pitch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2015 22:05


Nick Bortot is the Founder & CEO at Bux, Europe's largest mobile trading platform with an incredible 175,000 active users. In his former life he was one of the driving forces behind the Dutch market leader in online brokerage, BinckBank. There he held several commercial positions before he was elected member of the executive board. After having spent five years in the boardroom, Nick started dreaming about a new company that would make the financial markets both fun and exciting. This dream turned into BUX. Bud has attained many incredible mentions and awards including being named on the Fintech50 2015. You can also check out their first TV add right here! In Today's Episode You Will Learn: How Nick made the move from broking to founding Bux? What are the benefits of being a slightly older founder? What Nick would recommend to anyone looking for a technical co-founder? How to build a team of individuals with complimentary skills? What are the drivers for the incredible growth to 175,000 users? How is Nick planning to convert an audience of non trader to start trading? What advice would Nick give founders entering into heavily regulated markets? How Bux have built a great brand in a competitive market? Having raised funds from Orange Growth Capital, what was surprising and challenging for Nick about raising angel and VC money? What would Nick do differently if he was raising funds again? Does Nick agree with the concept of building a 'war chest' of funds? Items Mentioned in Today's Episode: Nick's Fave Book: Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future, Steve Jobs: The Exclusive Biography Nick's Fave Newsletter or Blog: VICE News Nick's Fave App: BRAINTOSS: Toss your thoughts straight into your inbox As always you can follow Harry, The Twenty Minute VC, Nick and Bux on Twitter right here!

Don't You Know Who I Am? Hosted by Josh Earl
22 - Ronny Chieng, Dave Thornton, Nick Cody and Tommy Dassalo

Don't You Know Who I Am? Hosted by Josh Earl

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2015 51:03


A super funny episode of DYKWIA with Ronny Chieng, Dave Thornton, Nick Cody and Tommy Dassalo. We discover what Tommy's tailor did, What Nick did with his fish and who signed a contract to be a millionaire. Also a world exclusive impression by Ronny Chieng. Hosted as always by Josh Earl See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Get Fired! - An Apprentice Podcast!
Episode 6 - Best Boardroom Ever

Get Fired! - An Apprentice Podcast!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2013


Me and Kenny sit down to discuss Episode 7 of Series 9 of The Apprentice!Rants and rhapsodies (but mainly rhapsody) over this week’s Boardroom activites.  Also – Kenny gets used to Twitter! Jordan! Jordan vs. Neil! What Nick and Karen talk about off camera! The film history of Meet The Fockers! Harry Redknapp! It’s all in this lavely episode of GET FIRED!Welcome to GET FIRED! It’s an Apprentice Podcast covering the 9th Series of the UK Edition. Featuring two fanboys, Terry and Kenny, talking to each other down Skype with their ramblings and critiques of everyone’s favourite business show!Follow the podcast on TWITTER – http://twitter.com/apprenticefiredEMAIL us too at apprenticegetfired@gmail.comSearch and LIKE us on FACEBOOK via ‘Get Fired An Apprentice Podcast’BLOG us on http://apprenticefired.blogspot.co.ukFind us on ITUNES @ https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/get-fired!-apprentice-podcast!/id646954141Also SOUNDCLOUD - https://soundcloud.com/apprenticegetfiredEnjoy. Be Nice. Learning. :D(DIRECT DOWNLOAD LINK)-T

The Blow Show
#3 The Mi Goreng Episode

The Blow Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2012 67:48


What Randle eats.  What Dave would do with $66Mio. What March goes on strike for. What Nick does on an island. What happened to the pasta king of the 80s, and what happens, if a train stops and no one cares. Our sound has improved too. But wait until we spend a ridiculous amount of cash on audio equipment. Cause it's either that, or our EP stops eating during the show.