1 hr 10 min

How to really win in practice with Yuri Elkaim Perfect Practice

    • Business

In this episode, Sachin interviews Yuri Elkaim. Yuri is prolific in the athletic world and the health and entrepreneur space. Sachin met Yuri at a conference that Peter Osborne was hosting. Yuri was onstage and “knocked it out of the park.” Yuri shares many nuggets of advice for the health practitioner who wants to move up to the next level. Listen in for a perspective that may improve your practice.
 
Key Takeaways:
[1:40] Sachin welcomes Yuri Elkaim to the Perfect Practice podcast. Yuri is a former pro athlete and current entrepreneur in the health and athletic space. Sachin looks forward to today’s conversation with Yuri about business and personality in the health space.
 
[3:14] Yuri trained, played, and competed in soccer from age 10, to become a pro player. He played professionally in his early 20s. When he was 17, he lost all his hair in six weeks, from an autoimmune disorder, alopecia. Before his hair loss, he had a lot of hair. Going from a full head of hair to bald in senior year was a transition, but his friends accepted it.
 
[5:12] Developing alopecia was one of the greatest things that happened to Yuri. It opened his eyes to what was going on with his health. Besides Western medical doctors, he was introduced to some amazing alternative practitioners. Nothing worked for his alopecia, but he is grateful for his exposure to these practices.
 
[5:59] Yuri studied kinesiology and health sciences at the University of Toronto and played pro soccer in France. After Yuri retired from pro soccer around 24, he came back and decided to pursue studies in holistic nutrition. That’s when his life changed. He was being exposed to information he never knew existed. He started applying what he learned.
 
[6:31] After about two months of cleaning up his diet at the university, Yuri grew back pretty much all his hair. The diet was such a profound change and he had so much more energy. He worked with personal training clients, practicing what he had learned in school. He realized that there were billions of people who didn’t know the holistic nutrition practices he had learned.
 
[7:29] That set Yuri on a mission. He started writing a book in the back row of nutrition class. Eight years later, he published the New York Times bestseller, The All-Day Energy Diet. Yuri’s passion for wanting to help others came from his own struggle. He struggled for seven years trading time for money as a one-on-one trainer-nutritionist; overworked and underpaid.
 
[8:18] Yuri had a bigger vision, wanting to help more people. He went online in 2005 and tried to figure it out for himself. It didn’t happen for three years. Then he hired a coach and things started to take off. With mentorship, coaching, and guidance, Yuri started to build a pretty substantial business. He helped half a million people to better health
 
[8:50] Yuri sold the company 13 years after starting it. During those 13 years, a lot of people had come to Yuri for business advice. He saw a space in the market and he started his current company, Healthpreneur®.about seven years ago. Some amazing health practitioners don’t know how to get their message out.
 
[9:36]  Yuri seeks to help them to build better businesses. His vision is to help a billion people improve their lives in some way, shape, or form. He knew he couldn’t get there, direct to consumer, but he thought if he had these skills and capabilities to help other practitioners build better businesses, virtually, then they could help more people and reach that goal collectively.
 
[10:22] Yuri truly cares about helping people stand in their power, shine their lights, and become the best version of themselves so they can share with more people. That’s what he is here to do. He works hard because it is so much joy.
 
[11:34] Yuri discusses practitioners who are not moving forward. There are some mindset blocks common to health professionals that keep them small. One is the

In this episode, Sachin interviews Yuri Elkaim. Yuri is prolific in the athletic world and the health and entrepreneur space. Sachin met Yuri at a conference that Peter Osborne was hosting. Yuri was onstage and “knocked it out of the park.” Yuri shares many nuggets of advice for the health practitioner who wants to move up to the next level. Listen in for a perspective that may improve your practice.
 
Key Takeaways:
[1:40] Sachin welcomes Yuri Elkaim to the Perfect Practice podcast. Yuri is a former pro athlete and current entrepreneur in the health and athletic space. Sachin looks forward to today’s conversation with Yuri about business and personality in the health space.
 
[3:14] Yuri trained, played, and competed in soccer from age 10, to become a pro player. He played professionally in his early 20s. When he was 17, he lost all his hair in six weeks, from an autoimmune disorder, alopecia. Before his hair loss, he had a lot of hair. Going from a full head of hair to bald in senior year was a transition, but his friends accepted it.
 
[5:12] Developing alopecia was one of the greatest things that happened to Yuri. It opened his eyes to what was going on with his health. Besides Western medical doctors, he was introduced to some amazing alternative practitioners. Nothing worked for his alopecia, but he is grateful for his exposure to these practices.
 
[5:59] Yuri studied kinesiology and health sciences at the University of Toronto and played pro soccer in France. After Yuri retired from pro soccer around 24, he came back and decided to pursue studies in holistic nutrition. That’s when his life changed. He was being exposed to information he never knew existed. He started applying what he learned.
 
[6:31] After about two months of cleaning up his diet at the university, Yuri grew back pretty much all his hair. The diet was such a profound change and he had so much more energy. He worked with personal training clients, practicing what he had learned in school. He realized that there were billions of people who didn’t know the holistic nutrition practices he had learned.
 
[7:29] That set Yuri on a mission. He started writing a book in the back row of nutrition class. Eight years later, he published the New York Times bestseller, The All-Day Energy Diet. Yuri’s passion for wanting to help others came from his own struggle. He struggled for seven years trading time for money as a one-on-one trainer-nutritionist; overworked and underpaid.
 
[8:18] Yuri had a bigger vision, wanting to help more people. He went online in 2005 and tried to figure it out for himself. It didn’t happen for three years. Then he hired a coach and things started to take off. With mentorship, coaching, and guidance, Yuri started to build a pretty substantial business. He helped half a million people to better health
 
[8:50] Yuri sold the company 13 years after starting it. During those 13 years, a lot of people had come to Yuri for business advice. He saw a space in the market and he started his current company, Healthpreneur®.about seven years ago. Some amazing health practitioners don’t know how to get their message out.
 
[9:36]  Yuri seeks to help them to build better businesses. His vision is to help a billion people improve their lives in some way, shape, or form. He knew he couldn’t get there, direct to consumer, but he thought if he had these skills and capabilities to help other practitioners build better businesses, virtually, then they could help more people and reach that goal collectively.
 
[10:22] Yuri truly cares about helping people stand in their power, shine their lights, and become the best version of themselves so they can share with more people. That’s what he is here to do. He works hard because it is so much joy.
 
[11:34] Yuri discusses practitioners who are not moving forward. There are some mindset blocks common to health professionals that keep them small. One is the

1 hr 10 min

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