Money Making Conversations Master Class

Rushion McDonald

Hi, this is Rushion McDonald. Welcome to the podcast world of Money Making Conversations Master Class. I interview profits and nonprofits to learn their "Secrets to Success."  I'm a former IBM Executive with a degree in Mathematics. I started my entrepreneurial career as a stand-up comic, then became a sitcom writer, award-winning baker, social media influencer, award-winning television Executive Producer, and brand architect for super-successful celebrities and products. Money Making Conversations Master Class interviews a diverse group of celebrities, entrepreneurs, and influencers in the financial and business community with their advice and tips so you can be successful, too. It's time to stop reading other people's success stories and start building your own. People always talk about their purpose or gifts. If you have a gift, Lead with your Gift, and don't let your friends, family, or co-workers stop you from planning or living your dream. Keep Winning! https://www.moneymakingconversations.com https://www.youtube.com/MoneyMakingConversations https://www.facebook.com/MoneyMakingConversations/ https://twitter.com/moneymakingconv https://www.instagram.com/moneymakingconversations/

  1. Career Change: Black Ambition, a national initiative that funds and mentors Black and Brown entrepreneurs.

    51m ago

    Career Change: Black Ambition, a national initiative that funds and mentors Black and Brown entrepreneurs.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Felecia Hatcher. Purpose of the Interview To spotlight Black Ambition, a national initiative founded by Pharrell Williams that funds and mentors Black and Brown entrepreneurs. To share insights on entrepreneurship, access to resources, and strategies for scaling businesses. To inspire and educate small business owners and innovators on how to leverage opportunities for growth. Key Takeaways About Black Ambition Founded by Pharrell Williams to close the opportunity gap for Black and Hispanic entrepreneurs. Provides capital, mentorship, and masterclasses to help founders scale. Has invested in 131 companies and awarded millions in funding. Competition Structure Annual national competition with 2,500–3,000 applications. Categories include HBCU, National Finalists, Top Prize Winner, People’s Choice. Process: Applications → 250 semifinalists → 3-month cohort → Demo Day for top 20–25 companies. Unique Approach Focus on high-quality mentorship, not “low vibrational” guidance. Includes mental health and wellness support for entrepreneurs. Partnerships with brands like Louis Vuitton for luxury retail insights. Challenges for Entrepreneurs Many fail by rushing applications and skipping info sessions. Success requires clarity, traction, and persistence—sometimes multiple attempts. Black women are the fastest-growing entrepreneurs but often remain solopreneurs; Black Ambition prioritizes team-building. Pharrell’s Motivation Believes in democratizing opportunity: “Talent is not equally distributed by zip code, but opportunity can be.” Inspired by those who believed in him early in his career. Felecia Hatcher’s Journey Former founder of Center for Black Innovation and Black Tech Week. Emphasizes resilience: “I’m a C student and a college dropout, but I never let that define me.” Advocates for creative pathways to success and capital access. Notable Quotes “Success leaves clues.” – On learning from past winners. “Talent is not equally distributed by zip code, but opportunity can be.” – Pharrell’s guiding principle. “If it doesn’t work on you in that moment, it works for you in that moment. Either way, it works.” – On persistence. “We have to start enjoying the process… be stretched, be cut by the process.” – On entrepreneurial growth. “Wealth has a need for speed.” – On urgency in closing the wealth gap. #SHMS #STRAW #BEST See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    23 min
  2. Financial Advice: The interview covers being rich and the mindsets required for long-term financial growth.

    3h ago

    Financial Advice: The interview covers being rich and the mindsets required for long-term financial growth.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Dr. Willie Jolley. SUMMARY OF THE INTERVIEW In this energetic and motivational conversation, Hall of Fame speaker Dr. Willie Jolley joins Rushion McDonald on Money Making Conversations Masterclass to discuss his new book, “Rich Is Good, Wealthy Is Better.” The interview covers the difference between being rich and being wealthy, the mindsets required for long-term financial growth, and how individuals—no matter their background—can build generational wealth. Jolley also emphasizes discipline, humility, planning, multiple streams of income, overcoming setbacks, and the importance of insurance and protection of assets. PURPOSE OF THE INTERVIEW The interview aims to: 1. Introduce and promote Dr. Jolley’s new book “Rich Is Good, Wealthy Is Better” and the teachings within it. 2. Educate listeners on the distinction between rich and wealthy Jolley wants audiences to understand wealth in generational, not short-term, terms.  3. Motivate individuals to shift their financial mindset From “working money” to “mailbox money.”  4. Empower entrepreneurs and families To adopt discipline, drop pride, and create multigenerational financial systems.  5. Share Jolley’s personal setback‑to‑success story To reinforce that anyone can grow wealth with the right principles.  KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. Rich vs. Wealthy Being rich = high income, often tied to active labor (e.g., athlete contracts). Being wealthy = passive income, ownership, generational sustainability. A rich football player earns millions; the team owner earns billions and doesn’t have to “run up and down the field.”  2. The Five Money Mindsets Jolley explains five financial mindsets: One‑day mindset – living day to day. 30‑day mindset – fixed incomes/check-to-check living. One‑year mindset – annual thinking (raises, annual income). Decade mindset – typical for entertainers/athletes with multi‑year contracts. Generational mindset (Wealth Mindset) – building wealth to last multiple generations.  Jolley’s goal: move people up just one level at a time. 3. Five Types of Wealth Jolley breaks wealth into five categories: Financial Wealth Health Wealth (“A sick person has one dream; a healthy person has a thousand.” – Les Brown) Relationship Wealth Reputational Wealth (Brand) Intellectual Capital Wealth (What you know and can charge for) 4. Discipline Is the Key Wealth requires: Living below your means Investing the difference Consistency Avoiding arrogance and ignorance  5. Pride Is an Enemy of Wealth Pride leads people to overspend to keep up appearances.Jolley argues that pride “kills wealth” and must be replaced with planning and humility.  6. The Three Legs of Wealth To build sustainable wealth, you need: Income Investment (letting money work for you) Insurance (life, health, car, disability, long-term care)  7. Multiple Streams of Income Jolley urges everyone to build at least two streams of income from: Stocks Bonds Real estate Crypto Collectibles Jewelry Art Content creation 8. Overcoming Setbacks Jolley details his own journey from unemployed nightclub singer to globally recognized motivational speaker.He reinforces that a setback is a setup for a comeback—the core message of his earlier bestselling book. 9. It’s Never Too Late to Start He cites examples of: A secretary who retired with $8M by investing small amounts over time Invested $12,000 at age 65 and grew it to $890,000 by age 72  NOTABLE QUOTES FROM THE INTERVIEW On Time & Opportunity “I have only just a minute… but it’s up to me to use it.”  On Mindset “Wealth starts in your mind.”  On Rich vs. Wealthy “Regular folks work for their money. Wealthy people make their money work for them.”  On Pride “My pride was killing my wealth.”  On Growth & Learning “If you’re willing to learn, no one can stop you.” [On Setbacks “A setback is a setup for your greater comeback.”  On Starting Late “When is the best time to plant a tree? Eighty years ago. The second-best time? Today.”  #SHMS #STRAW #BEST See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    31 min
  3. Max Effort: Key takeaway: There is no 40‑hour workweek when you are building something of your own.

    3h ago

    Max Effort: Key takeaway: There is no 40‑hour workweek when you are building something of your own.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Al Smith. Interview Purpose The purpose of this interview is to explore life transitions, resilience, and financial discipline through the lens of elite performance, using Al Smith’s journey from NFL All‑Pro to executive, entrepreneur, and community leader as a blueprint. The conversation highlights how preparation, education, mindset, and adaptability are essential when dreams evolve or abruptly change. This interview also serves to connect the experiences of professional athletes with those of small business owners and entrepreneurs, emphasizing that success in both arenas requires discipline, accountability, and long‑term thinking. Major Themes & Key Takeaways 1. Education as a Safety Net and Strategy Al Smith made the deliberate decision to finish his college degree before fully committing to the NFL, recognizing that professional sports offered no guarantees. This choice gave him leverage, confidence, and security—both mentally and financially—throughout his career. Key takeaway: Always secure something tangible before going “all in” on an uncertain opportunity. 2. Turning Fear into Fuel Smith openly discusses fear—fear of being cut, fear of competition, fear of uncertainty—and how he learned to convert fear into motivation rather than paralysis. He treated each season as if it were his last, approaching preparation with urgency and focus. Key takeaway: Fear is inevitable; how you respond to it determines longevity and success. 3. Competition Is Not the Enemy Competition played a central role in Smith’s development. Rather than avoiding it, he embraced it, understanding that growth requires discomfort. He credits adversity, pressure, and coaching challenges with sharpening his performance and character. Key takeaway: Competition strengthens discipline and reveals accountability. 4. Financial Literacy and Lifestyle Discipline Smith addresses the common financial pitfalls faced by professional athletes, many of which also apply to entrepreneurs: Lifestyle inflation Supporting others without boundaries Delegating financial decisions without understanding them Trying to maintain an image instead of sustainability Smith’s financial stability was aided by mentors, personal involvement in decisions, and a mindset focused on not owing—not just earning. Key takeaway: Financial success is not about income—it’s about control, habits, and awareness. 5. Mentorship and Environment Matter Smith emphasizes the value of surrounding himself with successful, disciplined people both on and off the field. Mentorship influenced how he thought about money, effort, competition, and leadership. Key takeaway: Proximity shapes thinking; environment influences outcomes. 6. Preparing for Life After the Dream Even while succeeding in the NFL, Smith planned for the transition ahead. This forward thinking led to opportunities in the front office, business, and leadership. He viewed this transition as a chance to open doors for others and to understand the business side of sports. Key takeaway: The end of one dream can be the beginning of a larger purpose. 7. Athletes and Entrepreneurs Face the Same Reality Smith draws a direct parallel between: Athletes competing yearly with no guarantees Entrepreneurs running businesses without security or routine Both require maximum effort, preparation beyond the clock, and resilience. Key takeaway: There is no 40‑hour workweek when you are building something of your own. Notable Quotes “I turned my fear into fire.” “There are no guarantees—every year is a one‑year deal.” “I treated every season like it was my last.” “You don’t want to owe. You want to own.” “Don’t be scared of competition.” “The gain outweighs the strain.” “Prepare so that if it ends tomorrow, you’re still standing.” Overall Message Al Smith’s interview is a powerful lesson in discipline, foresight, and adaptability. It reframes success as something built through preparation before opportunity arrives and sustained by humility, mentorship, and intentional decision‑making. His story reinforces that dreams evolve—but character, work ethic, and financial awareness determine whether those transitions become setbacks or stepping stones. #SHMS #BEST #STRAW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    28 min
  4. Motivation: Founder of 1 Million Lives Transform, focused on empowering women to reclaim their voices.

    3h ago

    Motivation: Founder of 1 Million Lives Transform, focused on empowering women to reclaim their voices.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Dr. Stephanie Wall. Purpose of the Interview To share Dr. Wall’s expertise as a neuroscience coach, criminal justice professor, author, and mentor. To discuss her mission through 1 Million Lives Transform, a global movement helping women unmute their voices and lead with authenticity and confidence. To provide actionable strategies for overcoming self-doubt, fear, and imposter syndrome in professional and personal settings. Key Takeaways Background and Roles Served 20 years in law enforcement and continues teaching criminal justice and ethical leadership. Founder of 1 Million Lives Transform, focused on empowering women to reclaim their voices. Unmuting Your Voice Many professionals mute themselves due to fear, lack of confidence, or imposter syndrome. Techniques: Awareness: Recognize when you’re silencing yourself. Pause and breathe before responding. Stand up when speaking in meetings to command attention and project confidence. Use phrases like “I’d like to build on that point” to engage respectfully. Mindset and Fear What you tell yourself matters more than external criticism. Replace negative self-talk with affirmations and surround yourself with positive influences. Neuroscience supports that repeated positive input rewires thought patterns. Boundaries and Time Management Learn to say “No” as a complete sentence. Set boundaries for phone calls and social interactions to protect productivity. Busy professionals should establish communication rules (e.g., “Do you have a minute?”). Authenticity and Leadership Authenticity is key—embrace your natural gifts and use them to transform spaces. Leadership requires mindset shifts when moving from peer to manager roles. Mentorship should be intentional and specific, not generic (“pick your brain” requests need structure). 1 Million Lives Transform A movement to help women rewrite their narratives, reclaim confidence, and lead boldly. Focus on self-awareness, boundaries, and empowerment strategies. Notable Quotes “Notice in that moment that you are muting yourself.” “Stand up when you speak—you command the room.” “No is a complete sentence.” “Our gifts are not for us; they are for other people.” “What you say to yourself does more damage than anything anyone else could say.” “Authenticity isn’t lip service—it’s showing up as who you truly are.” “Boundaries are not selfish; they are necessary.” #SHMS #STRAW #BEST See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    41 min
  5. Storytelling: Discusses how Sylvia Moy helped save Stevie Wonder’s career when he risked being dropped by Motown. 

    Jun 28

    Storytelling: Discusses how Sylvia Moy helped save Stevie Wonder’s career when he risked being dropped by Motown. 

    Here’s a clear, structured summary of the interview with Dr. Margena Christian on Money Making Conversations Masterclass with Rushion McDonald, including its purpose, key takeaways, and notable quotes. 🎙️ Interview Summary: Dr. Margena Christian ✅ Purpose of the Interview The conversation serves three primary purposes: Highlight Dr. Christian’s career and influence Showcasing her journey as a journalist, historian, and author rooted in Ebony and Jet magazine. Promote her book “It’s No Wonder: The Life and Times of Motown’s Legendary Songwriter Sylvia Moy.” Preserve and correct Black cultural history Emphasizing the importance of documenting overlooked contributors—particularly Black women like Sylvia Moy—whose impact has often gone uncredited. 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Legacy of Black media institutions (Ebony & Jet) Dr. Christian spent nearly two decades (1995–2014) at Johnson Publishing Company.  Jet and Ebony were central to Black visibility before social media, shaping careers and cultural narratives.  Being featured in these magazines was considered a milestone of success in the Black community.  👉 Insight: Media institutions played a critical role in documenting Black excellence and building public recognition. 2. Professional discipline and navigating the entertainment industry Christian stressed the importance of understanding the difference between business and personal relationships.  She avoided distractions and maintained professionalism, even in celebrity-heavy environments. 👉 Insight: Success in media requires boundaries, focus, and clarity about one’s purpose. 3. Investigative storytelling and historical recovery Her book began with a simple social media question: why hadn’t Sylvia Moy’s contributions been widely documented? [ She conducted deep archival and interview-based research to verify claims. 👉 Insight: True storytelling requires verification, curiosity, and persistence, not just surface-level narratives. 4. Sylvia Moy’s overlooked impact on Motown Sylvia Moy helped save Stevie Wonder’s career when he risked being dropped.  She co-created the hit “Uptight,” which kept him signed.  Despite her role, she was denied proper producer credit, illustrating systemic inequities.  👉 Insight: Many foundational contributors—especially Black women—were historically under-credited or erased. 5. The importance of documenting history before it’s lost Christian emphasizes that: History may be hidden but not erased. If stories aren’t told accurately, others may distort or erase them. 👉 Insight: Preserving cultural history is both a responsibility and a form of protection. 6. The power of lived experience and “being in the room” Christian highlights her firsthand role in shaping media history—not just reporting on it. [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] She reflects on witnessing major figures early in their careers. 👉 Insight: Experience and proximity provide unique authority and storytelling depth. 💬 Notable Quotes On purpose and professionalism “Never get it twisted… it’s business… but a friendly business.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] “Very few people are really your friends.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] On media influence and cultural validation “Before social media, there was Jet.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] “Some people didn’t feel like they made it until they were in Jet magazine.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] On Sylvia Moy and untold history “That woman made history as a producer but was denied the credit.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] “How are you getting the credit for something… and I don’t see a footprint?” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] On storytelling and legacy “People will write you out… of your own history if you let them.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] “History may be hidden, but it’s never erased.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] On purpose-driven work “You’re just doing it because you’re called to do it.” [Margena Ch...(Podcast) | Txt] 🧭 Overall Message This interview underscores a powerful theme: Document the truth, honor overlooked contributors, and take ownership of your narrative—before someone else rewrites it. It blends: Entrepreneurship and career advice Cultural preservation Investigative journalism Black media legacy #SHMS #BEST #STRAW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    29 min
  6. Following Your Passion: He shows you how to move from a steady secure job to a successful career in real estate.

    Jun 23

    Following Your Passion: He shows you how to move from a steady secure job to a successful career in real estate.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Todd Kroupa. 🔷 Interview Summary Todd Kroupa, a former firefighter turned top-performing real estate agent (No. 1 in Georgia, nearly $1B in lifetime sales), shares his journey of career transition, entrepreneurship, and success in real estate. [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] The interview covers: Leaving a stable career for entrepreneurship Building a real estate business from scratch in a new market Customer-first sales philosophy Practical advice for buyers and sellers Real estate as a long-term wealth-building strategy It blends career reinvention, sales mindset, and real estate expertise. 🎯 Purpose of the Interview 1. Inspire career transition and risk-taking Show how to move from a secure job to a high-reward entrepreneurial path 2. Educate on real estate buying and selling Provide practical insights for: First-time buyers Families Sellers 3. Highlight relationship-driven sales success Emphasize service, trust, and referrals over commissions 4. Promote real estate as a wealth strategy Explain why real estate is a strong long-term investment 5. Share resilience and mindset lessons Demonstrate how persistence and belief overcome doubt and rejection 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Career pivots require courage and clarity Kroupa left a stable firefighting career despite outside doubt He trusted his long-term vision over short-term safety [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] 2. Block out “outside noise” He avoided negativity and advice that could derail his decision Focus and conviction were essential to success 3. Skills transfer across industries Firefighter experience taught: Problem-solving under pressure Customer care These skills translated directly into real estate 4. Relationships drive real estate success The business is built on: Trust Referrals Long-term client relationships Not just transactions 5. Service > commission mindset Top agents prioritize: Client outcomes Long-term value Income follows service 6. Emotion drives buying decisions Buyers decide within minutes based on: Feeling Personal connection Logic comes later in the process 7. Realtors must guide, not just sell A great agent: Identifies hidden issues Advises clients—even against a deal 8. Inspection is critical Key deal-breakers: Mold Foundation issues Roof problems Buyers must be willing to walk away 9. Real estate decisions require discipline Avoid overpaying or emotional overcommitment Think long-term resale and investment value 10. Neighborhood matters as much as the house Buyers should: Visit at different times Talk to neighbors Research schools and environment 11. Market strategy matters when selling Presentation is key: Neutral design Strong first impressions Buyers decide quickly 12. Real estate is a powerful wealth builder Benefits over stocks: Control (improvements, rental, usage) Tax advantages Tangible value 13. Multi-generational living is rising Driven by: Cost of living Family dynamics Post-COVID lifestyle shifts 14. Buying the most expensive home isn’t optimal Property value is influenced by surrounding homes Overpricing limits appreciation potential 💬 Notable Quotes On career transition “I walked away from a very stable career… to something that can be unstable.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On ignoring doubt “I avoided a lot of phone calls… I didn’t want anybody to persuade my decision.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On motivation “That put the fire in me.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On mindset and focus “I just cut the noise out.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On service approach “It should never be about the commission… it should be about helping that person.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On relationships “This business is about referrals… connections.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On buyer psychology “They’re looking emotionally first—logic comes second.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On inspections “If you’re not comfortable now, you won’t be comfortable after you close.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On real estate vs stocks “You can’t control a stock… you can improve and live in a home.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] On pricing strategy “You don’t want to be the most expensive house in the neighborhood.” [TODD KROUPA iHeart | Txt] 🧭 Bottom Line Todd Kroupa’s message is a blueprint for success in both entrepreneurship and real estate: Take calculated risks → growth requires leaving comfort zones Focus on people, not profits → relationships build sustainable success Think long-term → especially in real estate decisions Balance emotion with logic → in major financial choices Stay disciplined and informed → avoid costly mistakes 👉 His core philosophy:Serve people first, make smart decisions second, and success will follow. #SHMS #BEST #STRAW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    27 min
  7. Education: He is helping individuals enter high-paying tech careers (UX design and AI) without a traditional four-year degree.

    Jun 19

    Education: He is helping individuals enter high-paying tech careers (UX design and AI) without a traditional four-year degree.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Everett Swain. 🔷 Interview Summary Everett Swain, founder of UXD Academy, discusses how he is helping individuals—especially underserved communities—enter high-paying tech careers (UX design and AI) without a traditional four-year degree.  The conversation centers on: AI as both a threat and opportunity Alternative education pathways (certifications vs degrees) Breaking barriers in tech through accessible training Building practical, job-ready skills quickly Empowering individuals to change their financial trajectory Swain’s approach blends self-learning, portfolio-based skills, and real-world application to create career opportunities. 🎯 Purpose of the Interview 1. Expand awareness of non-traditional education paths Show that high-income careers are accessible without college degrees Promote certifications, portfolios, and practical skills 2. Reframe AI as an opportunity Help listeners understand how AI can create jobs, not just remove them 3. Inspire career transformation Target people: Struggling financially Stuck in low-wage jobs Looking for a career pivot 4. Bridge opportunity gaps Focus on helping: Underserved communities People without access to formal education 5. Provide actionable entry points Direct listeners to: Free resources Self-learning paths UXD Academy 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. AI is both a disruptor and an enabler Two approaches: Replace workers Amplify workers’ productivity [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] 2. Degrees are becoming less important in tech Over 40% of tech companies prioritize skills over degrees [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] Real hiring focus: Portfolio Demonstrated ability 3. Skills can be self-taught Swain learned through: YouTube Online resources Practice This model is replicable for others 4. Portfolio > credentials Employers want proof of skill: Projects Real-world work This levels the playing field 5. Fast income growth is possible Swain’s trajectory: $75K → $105K → $140K within a few years [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] Demonstrates rapid upward mobility in tech 6. Accessibility is key to opportunity Training can be done: On a phone Without expensive tools Removes traditional barriers 7. Learn-by-doing model works best UXD Academy combines: Training Real client projects Apprenticeships 8. AI tools require minimal technical background No-code and low-code tools allow: Beginners to build apps, bots, workflows quickly 9. Small businesses are the biggest AI opportunity AI can help: Automate operations Improve efficiency Scale growth 10. Traditional education is slow to adapt Colleges struggle to keep up with: Rapid tech changes Agile programs like UXD Academy fill this gap 11. Mindset shift is essential Success requires: Initiative Discipline Self-learning 12. Exposure creates opportunity Many people don’t pursue tech careers because: They don’t know they exist Awareness is the first step 💬 Notable Quotes On AI’s dual impact “Companies are either using AI to replace people or to amplify their people.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On degrees vs skills “Over 40% of tech companies do not care about degrees anymore… they care about your portfolio.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On education alternatives “You can become an AI designer… without a degree.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On learning path “YouTube, Google, and books taught me everything I know.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On AI functionality “AI is like the smartest intern you know—you can train it to work for you.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On opportunity “You can change your life in under a year and a half.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On discipline “From five to 2 a.m., I was learning, building, and redoing my portfolio.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On mission “I want people to realize they can create their own reality with this.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] On urgency “AI is our opportunity… we have to get on the ball.” [Everett Sw...II iHeart | Txt] 🧭 Bottom Line Everett Swain’s message is a blueprint for modern career access in the AI economy: Skills beat degrees Self-learning is powerful AI is a career lever, not just a threat Execution (portfolio) matters more than theory Opportunity is available—but requires action 👉 His core philosophy:With the right skills, discipline, and access to knowledge, anyone can break into high-income tech careers—without traditional barriers. #SHMS #BEST #STRAW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    27 min
  8. Money Tip: He reframes taxes from a burden into a strategic wealth building advantage.

    Jun 16

    Money Tip: He reframes taxes from a burden into a strategic wealth building advantage.

    Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily.  I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur.  Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Michael Uadiale. 🔷 Interview Summary Michael Uadiale, a seasoned CPA and master tax advisor with 25+ years of experience, explains how entrepreneurs can achieve financial freedom in 5–7 years through strategic tax planning and wealth systems.  The discussion centers on: Understanding the tax code as a wealth-building tool Why most people overpay taxes The difference between tax preparation and tax strategy His proprietary DECIDA (six-step) framework Practical tactics (e.g., hiring your kids, structuring income) Long-term wealth-building through planning and compounding The interview reframes taxes from a burden into a strategic advantage. 🎯 Purpose of the Interview 1. Demystify taxes Reduce fear and confusion around the tax system Make tax concepts more accessible to everyday entrepreneurs 2. Shift mindset from avoidance → strategy Encourage people to engage with taxes, not avoid them 3. Teach wealth-building through tax efficiency Show how taxes are a major lever for: Increasing income retention Accelerating wealth creation 4. Promote proactive financial planning Emphasize year-round tax planning vs. last-minute filing 5. Provide actionable strategies Offer real, legal methods to: Reduce tax liability Build generational wealth 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Wealth cannot be delegated You can outsource operations—but not your financial destiny Individuals must understand and engage in their own wealth strategy [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] 2. The tax code is a system of incentives It’s designed to encourage certain behaviors: Investing Real estate ownership Business creation Those who understand it benefit most 3. The wealthy don’t break rules—they learn them Rich individuals use legal structures to: Minimize taxes Maximize retention The same opportunities exist for everyone who learns the system 4. Most people overpay taxes due to ignorance About 80% of small business owners overpay [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] Causes: Fear of taxes Lack of education Reactive (not proactive) planning 5. Tax preparers vs. tax advisors Tax preparers = compliance (filing returns) Tax advisors = strategy (planning ahead) Real wealth comes from advisory relationships 6. Tax planning must be year-round Waiting until April is too late Planning should occur: Quarterly Before major financial decisions 7. Taxes directly impact your time and income Without planning, up to 3 out of every 8 working hours go to taxes [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] 8. Simple strategies can create big gains Example: Hiring your children in your business: Tax deduction for the parent Tax-free income for the child These are legal, ethical, and underused 9. Compounding + tax efficiency = wealth Wealth = compound growth – tax erosion Starting early dramatically increases results 10. Structure determines outcomes How you earn and structure income affects: Tax liability Long-term wealth retention 11. The DECIDA Framework (his system) A structured approach to wealth building: D – Discover your wealth DNA (how you make money) E – Engineer tax-efficient structures C – Capture and preserve growth I – Integrate advanced tax strategies D – Defend against tax erosion A – Activate generational wealth systems 12. Financial freedom is accelerated through taxes Proper planning can shorten the timeline to wealth by years 💬 Notable Quotes On personal responsibility “Wealth cannot be delegated.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On the tax code “The tax code was not written for the little guys… but if you understand it, you can get the same benefits.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On mindset “You’ve got to embrace tax… it’s an education.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On opportunity “The tax code is one of your fastest ways of getting to financial freedom.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On behavior incentives “The tax law is a set of incentives… to make us behave the way the government wants.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On overpaying taxes “Close to 80% of small business owners overpay in taxes.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On poor habits “People only think about taxes when April 15th is around the corner.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On time lost to taxes “Three hours out of every eight hours you work goes to the tax man.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On advisors vs preparers “Most people work with tax preparers, not tax advisors.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On simple strategies “Hiring your kids… everybody should be doing that if you have a business.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] On wealth formula “Wealth really is compounding interest… less taxes.” [MICHAEL UA...ALE iheart | Txt] 🧭 Bottom Line Michael Uadiale’s message reframes taxes as a power tool for wealth creation: Learn the system → don’t avoid it Plan proactively → not reactively Work with advisors → not just preparers Use legal strategies → to reduce tax burden Protect growth → from tax erosion Build generational wealth → intentionally 👉 His core philosophy:Understanding and leveraging the tax code is one of the fastest, most overlooked paths to financial freedom. #SHMS #BEST #STRAW See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    27 min
4.6
out of 5
36 Ratings

About

Hi, this is Rushion McDonald. Welcome to the podcast world of Money Making Conversations Master Class. I interview profits and nonprofits to learn their "Secrets to Success."  I'm a former IBM Executive with a degree in Mathematics. I started my entrepreneurial career as a stand-up comic, then became a sitcom writer, award-winning baker, social media influencer, award-winning television Executive Producer, and brand architect for super-successful celebrities and products. Money Making Conversations Master Class interviews a diverse group of celebrities, entrepreneurs, and influencers in the financial and business community with their advice and tips so you can be successful, too. It's time to stop reading other people's success stories and start building your own. People always talk about their purpose or gifts. If you have a gift, Lead with your Gift, and don't let your friends, family, or co-workers stop you from planning or living your dream. Keep Winning! https://www.moneymakingconversations.com https://www.youtube.com/MoneyMakingConversations https://www.facebook.com/MoneyMakingConversations/ https://twitter.com/moneymakingconv https://www.instagram.com/moneymakingconversations/