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Kinch Reindl
Your Business Podcast » Your Business Podcast Feed

This podcast includes tips covering motivation, website motivation, small business interviews and much more.

Épisodes

  1. 18/05/2016

    Book Review: Mindset, The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck

    This is another book review about one of my most favorite published works recently – the phenomenal book Mindset, The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck. I love this so much I bought 100 books to give away to people – to teachers at my kid’s school, friends and podcast audience. My Mom got this book a couple of weeks ago and said she wished she had this 20 years ago. Below are some of the highlights – there are lots of good chapters here, from teaching to parenting to being an entrepreneur and I am going to discuss each chapter briefly section by section. Carol talked about the two mindsets: This is phenomenal in figuring out what kind of mindset you need to have in all aspects of your life. A fixed mindset comes from the belief that your qualities are carved in stone – who you are is who you are, period. Characteristics such as intelligence, personality, and creativity are fixed traits, rather than something that can be developed. People who have a fixed mindset think their intelligence is, well, fixed, and they care the most about looking smart. They avoid challenges (because they might lead to failure), give up easily (because setbacks might hurt their self-image), and see hard work and effort as a waste, because they think they’re either talented enough to do something or they’re not. A growth mindset comes from the belief that your basic qualities are things you can cultivate through effort. Yes, people differ greatly – in aptitude, talents, interests, or temperaments – but everyone can change and grow through application and experience. Folks that have a growth mindset see their intelligence as malleable – they see their mind as something that can be developed, and they have an intense desire to learn. They embrace challenges, persist against setbacks, and see hard work as a chance to get better at something. Human skills can be cultivated through human effort. If you are not failing, you’re not going to succeed. Most of us think that our intelligence is something we were born with – but it can be cultivated. People’s ideas grow out of their own mindset – people who are open to growth are welcoming of challenge and motivations. Self-insight – people who know themselves more and pretty much have self-awareness, willing to put effort to improve and grow. The other thing exceptional people have is the talent of converting personal or life setbacks into future successes. Effort is what makes you smart or talented. Low effort is the biggest risk in the growth mindset – as long as you learn something, it was a good experiment. It is very important how you challenge your kids, how to reward them. The growth mindset doesn’t mean that everything that needs to be changed has to be changed. We have to accept some of our imperfections.

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  2. 10/05/2016

    Who to emulate?

    I must admit reading is addictive! I thank James Altucher and Tai Lopez for talking about how much they read. I heard them talking about reading on their podcasts and was intrigued by how much they learned from reading. As a person who likes to share and help others reading is fuel for my fire. And copying them could lead to their success. So I challenged myself, friends and followers to also read a book or more a week. After all other successful people also read a lot every day including Warren Buffett and Bill Gates. But then I read more and learned more about Gary and his methods of madness . So emulating Tai and James seems like a logical thing to do to find success. But maybe you don’t like to read but you feel like you should because other successful people do. Here is something to ponder. James Altucher and Tai Lopez read a lot and are both considered successful by many people. Contrast this with the habits of Gary Vaynerchuk who has read less books in his lifetime than Tai and James read in their average week. So you can’t emulate Tai and Gary or can you? And another contrast appears when you compare Chalene Johnson to Gary Vee. you will notice she doesn’t want people to be all about the hustle but rather to have a great work and life balance and she likes to take off for a month or two at a time. I did hear Gary mention he had a good week or two vacation. I’m wondering if he will start to enjoy less of the grind as his kid grows up a bit. Maybe he will look into Chalene’s methods in the years to come. Gary doesn’t read so what does he attribute his success to? Well he hustles aka works a lot, works efficiently and knows where to put the effort which he calls “Clouds and Dirt”. But how does he learn and keep a pulse on what works in the advertising world and what startups he should invest in? He says he watches people to see what they are doing, he watches which mobile apps are in the top 150, he reads websites that collate stories. Compare this to James Altucher who tries not to know what is going on by avoiding the news and media and suggests to only read things that have passed the test of time. And James used to be a regular on the cable networks as a guest so he advises to avoid watching the news since he has seen how it is curated. Yet James also invests in startups. If you are trying to replicate success by taking the action of successful people the action you copy will be very different depending on who you emulate. So who or what should you emulate? So what do you do? Should you emulate all their actions to cover all the bases? Reading lots of newspapers and a book a day like Tai? Maybe avoid books like Gary Vee? Oh wait you can’t do both of those or can you. How are they both so successful with different approaches? I’d like you to consider that each of them just like each of us should do things we enjoy. They find success is doing what they enjoy. I think Gary really enjoys watching people in person and online to learn so much so he said he thought a dad got the wrong impression when he was watching the guys daughter to see what she was doing on her cell phone. He really wants to know which apps and sites people are using. James Altucher says he still knows what is going on in the world because people will tell you about the important things. I can attest to that! I’m betting James learns a good deal from his weekly podcast where he interviews people who surely bring up some of the day to day topics along with the topics for the episode. Oh he interviewed Gary V which I thought was great and now has me putting the Crush It book on my list to read. Back to who you should emulate. Some of their actions will vibrate with you in a positive way while others feel like a chore. Trying different things that intrigue sounds great. We all will create our own mix of things we do that lead us to success.After all we can’t emulate all of someone else’s actions, doubtful they even know all the

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  3. 27/04/2016

    Tips from Tai Lopez Mastermind

    Tai Lopez’s Mastermind Talk Recap This is a recap of the Mastermind Talk with Tai Lopez I attended in California. In addition to learning from the speakers a big benefit is to meet and hear from other entrepreneurs. Sometimes you realize really successful people are very much like you and thus you gain the confidence to achieve more. It is great to be around people who in my eyes are more successful than I am. It was also fun to hear new ideas, give advice and get advice. Jay Samit spoke to us – wikipedia info on Jay Samit – He asked us how many of you would hire a PR agency? I thought I wouldn’t until he explained why we should. You should if you want to partner with a company who has a PR agency and the tip is to higher the same PR agency as the other company you want to work with. Justin Sener – Known as the T-shirt Cat Guy, who is successful at selling t-shirts online. He talked about how to create T-shirts and how to market them on facebook. I noted that they create 10 T-shirts, market each on facebook for very little ($5) and then increase the marketing for the ones that sell. Tip – women buy the most t-shirts. Sites that can set up clothing business: THREADMEUP.COM and Shopify plug in Book recommendations from Cole Hatter who runs the Thrive Connect conference are: Persuasion Skills by Rentu Basu (I’m almost done with this short book) and Learn how to speak to people to be better in sales: Spin Selling by Neil Rackham And a marketing recommendation (this is a much larger book)The Advertising Effect by Adam Ferrier and Jennifer Fleming A great podcast for learning about Facebook, Linked In and Google advertising: The Art of Paid Traffic Podcast – always do sponsored post, never advertise on the right side Utilize Facebook Live and Snapchat – they are the main thing now – Tai Lopez thoughts Social media should enhance your life Challenge yourself – do it for practice

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  4. 02/04/2016

    Book Review of Gary Vaynerchuck’s Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook

    This is a Book Review of Gary Vaynerchuck’s Jab, Jab, Jab, Right Hook If you want to or need to learn more about social media and how it applies to marketing and business this is a must read. I know a little about advertising and marketing online but this book took my knowledge to a new level. He gives you his insights as to how to use social media and how each plat form is different. The book includes actual examples of ads on the different platforms as well as how to use each platform. And he points out how we should all keep up with the latest and greatest. With over 80 detailed case studies from Facebook, Twitter, Instagram & Pinterest – this book is a learning material for those who are marketing their businesses online, with social media being the best tool at this point in time. Below are some of the best lines from the book. Jab—the one conversation, one engagement at a time that slowly but authentically builds relationships between brands and customers—the  78 but because it embraced authenticity and “realness.” And maybe I needed to make sure that my clients and others who turned to me for advice were doing the same.  106 I’d spent the majority of my time and effort over the years emphasizing the importance of the long view, and teaching people how to communicate in such a way that would develop authentic and active customer relationships.  108 No matter who you are or what kind of company or organization you work for, your number-one job is to tell your story to the consumer wherever they are, and preferably at the moment they are deciding to make a purchase.  131 Consider this book a training camp to prepare you to storytell on today’s most important social media sites.  140 But the secret sauce remains the same: The incredible brand awareness and bottom-line profits achievable through social media marketing require hustle, heart, sincerity, constant engagement, long-term commitment, and most of all, artful and strategic storytelling. Don’t ever forget it, no matter what you learn here.*  150 Where’s your phone? In your back pocket? On the table in front of you? In your hands because you’re using it to read this book? It’s probably somewhere within easy reach, unless you’re one of those people who are constantly misplacing their phones and my question has you rummaging through the laundry basket again or checking under your car seat.  155 HOW SOCIAL BLENDED INTO DIGITAL  183 In fact, adding a social layer to any platform immediately increases its effectiveness.  191 every social media platform has its own language. Yet most of you haven’t bothered to learn it. Most big companies haven’t put in the financial resources, and most small businesses and celebrities aren’t putting in the time.  226   • Delete this highlight HOW STORYTELLING IS LIKE BOXING  235 Jabs are the lightweight pieces of content that benefit your customers by making them laugh, snicker, ponder, play a game, feel appreciated, or escape; right hooks are calls to action that benefit your businesses.  246

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  5. 02/04/2016

    Book Review of Philip McKernan’s Rich On Paper Poor On Life by

    Another fantastic book that I just had the amazing chance to read recently – a book called Rich On Paper Poor On Life by Philip McKernan. This is the link to the book on Amazon $12.95 kindle, $19.95 paperback. Quote: We are accustomed to a life where we work endlessly to belong, to assimilate to what is normal, what society dictates us to be. This sort of pressure misaligns us to our true values, to the things the things we truly want against what we work for to achieve. The real life stories in this book is such an inspiring reflection to make us question the way we are living – are we working towards achieving our goals through the things we are passionate about? Or are we merely existing to please the society that sets the standards on how we are supposed to be – having checklists of accomplishments for success. If you feel are doubtful about the way you’re living your life, feeling stuck, wondering if there is more, GRAB THIS BOOK! I heard about Philip McKernan first on one of the Mastermind Podcast episodes. To listen to that, soundcloud.com has the episode 28 in which he was featured. Below are the key notes which are helpful in finding your authentic self. Many (if not most) people keep their truth inside for fear of looking stupid or because they believe they have nothing to add. How many people have a hidden desire to write, sing, paint, get involved in politics, or start a business? How many of them don’t get involved because they don’t believe they’re good enough? I believe the majority of people feel this way. They won’t speak up or act up as long as they place a low value upon themselves. 136 Our Biggest Fear: The Truth 140 Finding one’s voice is a process that takes time. Life can beat us down. Many of us endure years of being told we shouldn’t believe in ourselves. 141 Fear of speaking in front of others is not our greatest common fear. Our greatest common fear is that we don’t believe that what we have to say matters. In this way, the fear of public speaking stems from a fear of not being loved. Let me repeat: when we say we’re scared of public speaking, what we’re really saying is that we are scared of making a mistake, of being judged. Deep down, we’re afraid of not being loved. 143 I admit there’ve been times I’ve done exactly that. But it wasn’t until I started speaking vulnerably that I felt fulfillment from speaking. 150 In spite of the fact that we fear we won’t be loved, speaking our truth is one of the most important things we can do to put ourselves on the path towards authentic love. 152 The voice I speak of, is our intuition. 157 Who Am I Really Am I really the person I see in the mirror whose face is wrinkled and worn? Or is there something I don’t see in this one-dimensional window? Am I really the work I do or the house I live in? Or is there something I have not yet met within myself? Am I really the husband I am told I am? Or the voice I hear echo back at me when I speak to others? Am I really the person others see when they look at me? Or are they seeing a person through a set of eyes they themselves do not know? What if there is someone within me that I have yet to meet who is better looking than I am, smarter than I believe I am, and more famous than I could ever be? Would you like to meet him? 158 “Success in manufactured in the mind while happiness is cultivated in the soul.” ~ Philip McKernan 170 Individuals were ignoring their own truths. Individuals had lost our own voices. In sum, we got greedy. We forgot what was important. We chose gadgets over happiness, fancy over fulfillment. 245 Looking back, I was one of the lucky ones. I managed to escape the worst of the financial carnage. What I didn’t escape was the loss of my peace of mind. In the pursuit of money and growth for growth’s sake, I did what most of my countrywomen and men did; I ignored passion and happiness in my own life and pursued wealth with the naive assumption that happ

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  6. 11/03/2016

    Three Steps a Day Challenge

    I have been out attending conferences and just launched my new niche podcast site for Autocross so I wasn’t able to post much over the last week or so – but it’s a good thing that I got busy because I learned a lot from attending conferences and reading awesome books! I just started reading Will It Fly by Pat Flynn and when I was in a conference, he was one of the guest speakers. The book runs you through the things that you should do to help you organized get it done. Chalene Johnson – she records podcasts via periscope and sends it to her team. Three Tips – here are all the successful people do, these are what you need to do. Daily Brain Dump get it out, Tai Lopez said the best time is at night so you feel refreshed the next day I feel more relaxed when you do it before bedtime 2. Write down 2 or 3 ten-minute steps for the things I care for How can you get it done? If you take 20 minutes doing things – small steps toward your goal (my own 30-day challenge) How do you create this challenge? Before I get down of the car – I write what I need to do How can you tie it to a habit? If you have this list of small things, tick off some of them before mid-day – you’ll feel good about yourself. If you are really tired, take a rest. 3. De-clutter Clean something every day. Daily actions is important. Break down your process. Help people accomplish things – what can I help a specific type of person? I hope you will challenge yourself and learn where it leads you. FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Snapchat: kinchreindl Instagram: yourbusinesspodcast Twitter: justkinchit Periscope: justkinchit

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  7. 08/02/2016

    Book Review of Sam Walton’s Made in America

    This is a riveting story  full of inspirational and sometimes funny anecdotes about what they call the “rules of the road” of both Main Street and Wall Street, Sam Walton chronicles the inspiration, heart, and optimism that propelled him to lasso the American Dream. Click here to buy it on Amazon $5.97 paperback or $7.99 kindle If I had to single out one element in my life that has made a difference for me, it would be a passion to compete. It’s a story about believing in your idea even when maybe some other folks don’t, and about sticking to your guns. But I think more than anything it proves there’s absolutely no limit to what plain, ordinary working people can accomplish if they’re given the opportunity and the encouragement and the incentive to do their best. I learned from a very early age that it was important for us kids to help provide for the home, to be contributors rather than just takers. In the process, of course, we learned how much hard work it took to get your hands on a dollar, and that when you did it was worth something. One thing my mother and dad shared completely was their approach to money: they just didn’t spend it. Then I got to know Helen’s family, and listening to her father, L. S. Robson, was an education in itself. He influenced me a great deal. He was a great salesman, one of the most persuasive individuals I have ever met. And I am sure his success as a trader and a businessman, his knowledge of finance and the law, and his philosophy had a big effect on me. My competitive nature was such that I saw his success and admired it. I didn’t envy it. I admired it. I said to myself: maybe I will be as successful as he is someday. Note: Another mentor for him The principle behind this is simple: the best way to reduce paying estate taxes is to give your assets away before they appreciate. Note: Reminds me that Mark Shepard had his kids own part of his farm before it was anything other than a field. It wasn’t lavish or exorbitant, and that was part of the plan—to keep the family together as well as maintain a sense of balance in our standards. HELEN WALTON: “It was great moneywise, but there was another aspect to it: the relationship that was established among the children and with the family. It developed their sense of responsibility toward one another. You just can’t beat that. Read more at location 197 Here’s the thing: money never has meant that much to me, not even in the sense of keeping score. If we had enough groceries, and a nice place to live, plenty of room to keep and feed my bird dogs, a place to hunt, a place to play tennis, and the means to get the lads good educations—that’s rich. Read more at location 212 We all love to fly, and we have nice airplanes, but I’ve owned about eighteen airplanes over the years, and I never bought one of them new. Read more at location 215 Note: So far I can say I’ve never bought a new car, yet I’ve bought more cars than I needed so still not so wise. But sometimes I’m asked why today, when Wal-Mart has been so successful, when we’re a $50 billion-plus company, should we stay so cheap? That’s simple: because we believe in the value of the dollar. We exist to provide value to our customers, which means that in addition to quality and service, we have to save them money. Mother must have been a pretty special motivator, because I took her seriously when she told me I should always try to be the best I could at whatever I took on. So, I have always pursued everything I was interested in with a true passion—some would say obsession—to win. I’ve always held the bar pretty high for myself: I’ve set extremely high personal goals. Looking back on such boyhood episodes helps me to realize now that I’ve always had a strong bias toward action—a trait that has been a big part of the Wal-Mart story. I worry that it seems like I’m bragging or trying to make myself out to be some big hero. It particularly

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  8. 30/01/2016

    Book Review of The Art of Learning: An Inner Journey To Optimal Performance by Josh Waitzkin

    This is my review of the fascinating story of Josh’s journey from chess prodigy to push hands world champion. Below are some of the highlights of this wonderful read. A friend gave me this book because it is one of her favorites. You can buy the book on amazon Paper back $11.66 or kindle $11.99. He was the inspiration for the movie Searching for Bobby Fisher” – Book and Movie His dedication to learning and studying to be great is amazing.  I had no clue about the world of competitive chess including the mentors and coaching necessary to excel. He was an athletic kid who discovered chess at the age of six and it was almost as if he understood parts of the game intuitively. Searching for the next bobby fisher. Is a book and movie his dad wrote about him. He tells many a story about his time spent learning and competing in the world of chess. He looked back at some moments in chess he called the “Soft Zones” when he became part of the moment.  He studied that and has tips and techniques for creating these moments when necessary. He tells how he dealt with challenges and distractions from music to players kicking him, shaking the board etc.  Often he would turn a challenge or distraction into an advantage.  Start thinking to the beat of the music, not to react to the kicks by being distracted.  Taking a break to go and run sprints or climb stairs to regain focus. “Mental resilience is arguably the most critical trait of a world-class performer, and it should be nurtured continuously….When uncomfortable, my instinct is not to avoid thediscomfort but to become at peace with it….My instinct is always to seek out challenges as opposed to avoiding them.”  p 60 He then talks about his downward spiral in chess competitions. I took from this a few things: I like his explanation of playing chess the way that matched his personality and when he didn’t he didn’t play as well.  – so he wasn’t working through his strengths. He notes “pressing for wins in equal positions often results in losing” – you need to really know your circumstances especially after things have changed from one where you were at an advantage and now are not at one.  Pressing forward as if you still have an advantage can be costly. How can you apply this to life and business? The film Searching for Bobby Fischer came out when he as 16 – and this added fame as a challenge and distraction. “As a competitor I’ve come to understand that the distance between winning and losing is minute, and, moreover, that there are ways to steal winds from themaw of defeat.  All great performers have learned this lesson.” p 63 He talks about being present rather than being stuck in time. He speaks about two coaches with very different techniques – one nurturing and the other shock and awe of breaking you down. He mentions reading the books “On the road”, The Dharma Bums and the Tao Te Ching.  – “The Tao Te Ching’s windom cnters on releasing obstructions to our natural insight, seeing false constructs for what they are and leaving them behind.” While  competing in chess he He was introducted to Tai Chi and then later Push Hands competitions And  moved on to Martial Arts and eventually winning world championships.  Once again the dedicated he has for learning and competing is amazing.  He has a drive for challenging himself and getting the most out of himself. Then chapter on “Investment in Loss” – you need to be challenged enough that you lose and then learn from it to advance. “Investment in loss is giving yourself ot the learning process” “…it is essential to have a libverating incremental approach that allows for times when you are not in a peak performance state.  We must take responsibility for ourselfes, and not expect the rest of the world to understand what I takes to become the best that we can become.”  Great ones are willing to get burned time and agin as they sharpen their swords in the fir

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  9. 15/01/2016

    Kate Hagerty Interview: Intuition, Purpose and Life Coaching

    In this week’s podcast, I had a great conversation with Kate Hagerty, a career, life purpose, intuitive and relationship coach. We met at Toast Masters and known each other for several years. Kate used to work in the corporate world for 30 years – in sales, marketing and advertising – making her way up the ladder and on the verge of making it to top of the play field, she realized that she needed something more from life. Below are some of the great points during our conversation. Turning point – being unhappy and just didn’t care about the results. Kate began to ask herself some powerful questions about what she really want to do with her life – she was miserable and unhappy and she didn’t want to continue having to deal with that. Most people not really clear about their purpose. Growing up, she had an intuitive gift but ignored it. “You are gifted and keep moving.” Working with people once didn’t really get anywhere. It’s smart to start paying attention to your intuition. Turn off the ‘chatter’ part of the brain to focus more on the more important things. Start meditating. When you step out of the house in the morning, pay attention – there are lots of interesting things happening around. What you look for, you can find. “Miracle Morning” – focus on what thought and see where that leads you. We are so hard on ourselves and expect we are going to be good at meditation the first time we try it – some people need guided meditation, some need silence or music. It’s a challenge. It’s a process. Kate got very unhappy in 2011 and tried different coaching certifications – to figure out herself and help her clients. Do you want your health or do you want your benefits? “I will never tell someone miserable to quit tomorrow.” Kate You can be an empathic person but if you haven’t gone through something and suddenly meet someone who has, you can’t really completely understand. Even though it’s scary, it is worthy in the end because it’s exciting – you are doing what you’re supposed to do. Tell the truth without being mean. You’re usually the average of the 5 people you spend your time with. Are we supportive of each other? Do we support and learn from one another? Don’t be around toxic people. Just because they’re family doesn’t mean you have to be around them. Accountability partners are key to being successful for some people. For a ‘solopreneur’ – you got to have an array of people to help you out. Delegate the things you hate to do so you can focus on the things you love. James Altucher – write down at least 10 ideas a day Kate’s 8 Ways to Increase Your Intuition (1) Meditate (2) Work with angel or oracle cards  (3) Pay attention when you step out of the house with all five senses (4) Test out the intuitive hunches you get; try following one and not following another and see what you experience (5) Feel instead of think (6) Listen to your body (7) Learn from the past (8) Do not call yourself crazy; trust what you “get” To learn more about Kate, visit her website at www.soulpurpose.biz About Kate Hagerty Kate is a Career, Life Purpose & Relationship Intuitive Coach. She helps professionals discover their true life purpose and the specific next steps they need to take to align their life with what they REALLY came here to do, so they can finally find peace, clarity and direction. Learn more at www.soulpurpose.biz kate@soulpurpose.biz (303-562-8530)

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