327: Why Entrepreneurs Lose Money to Banks

June 19, 2026 00:51:52
327: Why Entrepreneurs Lose Money to Banks
Wealth On Main Street
327: Why Entrepreneurs Lose Money to Banks

Jun 19 2026 | 00:51:52

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Hosted By

Richard Canfield Jayson Lowe

Show Notes

The Problem Nobody Talks About in Entrepreneurship You built the business. You’re generating revenue. From the outside, things look successful. But inside? You’re quietly dealing with limited financing options, unpredictable cash flow, credit lines that cost you, and a banking system that wasn’t designed with entrepreneurs in mind. That’s not a personal failure. That’s the system working exactly as intended, just not for you. In this episode of Wealth on Main Street, hosts Jayson Lowe and Richard Canfield sit down with IBC practitioner and Ascendant Financial teammate Leslie Corbett and his client Tara, a mindset coach, entrepreneur, and former realtor, for […]
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Episode Transcript

[00:00:00] Speaker A: Foreign. [00:00:11] Speaker B: Welcome to wealth on Main street, where conversations about growing your wealth are fun and entertaining. Wealth isn't just about money. It's the skills and the knowledge that we develop to pass on to future generations. Tune in each week to grow your mindset and your net worth at the same time. [00:00:36] Speaker C: All right, well, welcome back to wealth on Main street. And today's episode is actually a really special one. We always, always, always love to share great conversation with existing clients who have been implementing the process, whether they've been doing it for for a month or they've been doing it for 20 years. It's going to be a really special episode because we're joined not only by our teammate Les Corbett, but also by Tara, a client of Les's, one of the clients that Les has had the privilege of working with. And Tara's an entrepreneur. We're super excited to dive into a conversation, but really, the feedback that we get from you as viewers and listeners is that these are conversations that really matter the most to you because they're with real people in process implementing this concept and experiencing it the way that they desire. And so people genuinely want to know, like, what happens when an actual person, an actual family, an actual entrepreneur implements this concept for themselves in real life. And so this is going to be a real conversation. Whether you're brand new to The Infinite Banking Concept, whether you're curious about working with a practitioner like Les on our team, or simply just someone trying to become more intentional and abundant financially, this episode is going to give you an honest inside look into that journey. And so, Tara, welcome to the show. [00:02:03] Speaker D: Thank you so much for having me. [00:02:05] Speaker C: And so what was your overall mindset, you know, around money and financial planning as an entrepreneur? And had you heard about The Infinite Banking Concept before meeting Les? [00:02:17] Speaker D: Well, I had met Les just because we're locally kind of shared a zone. But the conversation wasn't about IBC and it wasn't about finances. But I feel like I should mention I'm a mindset coach, so this will make a little bit more sense. I don't think, like normal people, I'm very much outside the box. And before I talked IBC with Les, my husband and I were looking into, you know, some more financial options, specifically insurance and whatnot for our kids. We've got two young boys, and I had heard kind of like some snippets on TikTok that something like this existed, but I didn't know what it was. So I kind of started searching for, well, I want some sort of insurance to Protect our family. But what about this extra? You know, I was hearing about this extra, and so I started reaching out to people to try and find the extra, and they would understand. But I'm like, but no, there's more to it and I don't understand. But, like, my money can do six different things. I'm not going to pay money here that can serve these other purposes. So I wouldn't commit to working with any of them. Then I, I don't remember. Les and I had already known each other, so I reached out to him and I was like, is this what you do? He's like, yeah. I'm like, hey, this is what I've been looking for. Let's talk, you know? So then he started to teach me about ibc. And I'm like, yes, that's what I was looking for. But I didn't know what to call it. But I just, I. I think very differently now about money than I used to. But I was searching for something, and if I'm going to spend a dollar on anything, my mindset now is I want it efficient and well spent and consciously chosen. And IBC was that for me in so many different ways. Especially as an entrepreneur. [00:03:59] Speaker B: I love that conscious choice. I like that. That's really well stated. And, you know, mentioning that you're mindset driven and that you, you're a coach, you help people, and you help people realign their own thinking. What's so interesting about that is how many opportunities we have in our own world, our own circumstances, to do that for ourselves. And we're not always presented necessarily with the way of doing it. It just kind of shows up, it materializes. And so here you are seeking to solve a problem, find out that the, you know, a guy who's got a solution to that problem is in the backyard to some degree. Granted, I've seen what it looks like outside of Les's backyard, and I know it's a bit of an expanse up there on a snowy day, but it's really interesting that that's kind of how this occurred for you. Teresa, I love the story. And not only that, just the importance of. You had an issue of just needing better or more quality, more insight into insurance for your family needs. And then there's this other idea of creating additional efficiency that just made a lot of sense. So I really think that's cool because a lot of people come in because they've heard about the concept and they're like, well, but I don't need insurance, or they're not Even recognizing the value of that. And for you, it was almost the opposite occurrence, which is very interesting. [00:05:10] Speaker D: Well, because again, with the mindset stuff, I. I try different perspectives out because what we're taught in the masses, in society, whatever you want to call that, and not positive, negative just is. But what most people are taught, myself included, isn't necessarily a good thing. And the beautiful parts of life is usually rewiring, choosing something different, thinking outside the box. Right. So what's familiar isn't always the best. And the more that you do that in the different categories of your life, it's easier to get there. But that's one part of discussions I've had with Les over the years, because, like, we're friends too, is the fascination where I'm like, IBC is such a mindset shift for people, and it's only because it's out of their comfort zone, it's out of familiar. It doesn't mean that it's not incredible. You know, usually what's outside the normal is incredible. We just are systems fight it because it's not familiar. Like, well, I've never heard of that, or I don't know anybody else doing that. It's like, that doesn't mean it's bad. That could mean, like, it's amazing. You just have to look into it. [00:06:12] Speaker C: That's such a great perspective and. And so true. I mean, that's how, you know, Richard and I were first introduced to the process as well. It was a completely different shift in thinking, and it raised a lot of good clarifying questions, but it was compelling. It was like, wait a second, like, there's something. There's something fundamentally wrong financially in the world out there. We just couldn't quite put our finger on it. And. And this was definitely the way forward and putting. Putting less on. On the hot seat here for a minute. Tara, I'm genuinely curious. So what made you comfortable moving forward and what stood out to you most about working with less? [00:06:52] Speaker D: Well, I already knew less, so that was easy. You know, I was just like, we. We already had the relationship of trust, so it was just like, you've got the answer. Okay, like, teach me and like, let's go. Because I also like taking action because, like, no one's going to do it for you for anything, Right? So if it feels right, trust your gut, go do it. But then he had to teach me how the heck it worked. Right? So that was. That was awesome. But we already had that trust. So Les was an easy yes because he's such a. Such A good person, an ethical person. Like, he wouldn't steer you wrong. He wouldn't sell you something that he doesn't totally believe in. He wants to help people with absolutely incredible intention. And I always felt that way about him as a person. And I don't think you have to spend a long time with Les to feel that way. So it wasn't. Les wasn't a hard sell. It was just like, teach me. [00:07:44] Speaker C: And, and how important was that element of education and understanding in your decision making process? [00:07:52] Speaker D: I didn't. Because of my history with changing my own mind on things, it didn't take a lot for me to buy into the concept, to open my mind to learn it, because I wasn't fighting it like I assume most people do. So it wasn't a lot for me to shift my thinking because it's not that I have to stop believing all the things that I've been taught. Just open your mind to maybe there's another perspective. Maybe it's both. Maybe it's a combination. Maybe, maybe. Maybe. So it wasn't hard for me to opened my mind to learn about the concept. And I sure as heck don't know all of it, but enough that I can use it. [00:08:25] Speaker C: That's awesome. [00:08:25] Speaker B: What, and what, what would you say has been one of the most surprising or interesting things? Because you seem like an extremely curious person, Tara, about, about the, the process since you've gotten going. Like, was there anything that you maybe had an expectation of that you thought, do you realize, wow, it's even more than that? Or there's, there's, you've been open to even additional things that you hadn't considered at the early stages compared to where you are right now today? [00:08:51] Speaker D: I guess the freedom of it and the responsibility because you, you want to use it, but you want to be smart about how you use it. Right? Because you have so much freedom. You know, I don't have to go to the bank and check these boxes to get financing. I've created my own opportunity so I can use it for whatever I want. But if I'm not conscious about it, I can also shoot myself in the foot. [00:09:14] Speaker B: So. [00:09:14] Speaker D: So I wasn't expecting that much freedom and opportunity with it. But also I wanted to make sure and be cautious that I was learning enough so that I wasn't. I don't know the terms, but like not paying myself the interest to make sure that we're always growing and moving forward, probably that. [00:09:36] Speaker C: I love what you said about that because, Rich, you can attest to this. You And I literally just recorded an episode yesterday on this very topic around when you have control and you have ready access to capital, you can access policy loan that are unstructured. You control the repayment schedule. That can be both good and not good, dependent upon the policy owner. It's the policy owner's behavior that's far more critical. And so, Tara, I'm so happy that you touched on that, because you're absolutely right. It. It comes with responsibility. Much like anything, right? That's worth something, and that's meaningful. It comes with responsibility. And I'm curious, like, what. What would you say to someone who is, you know, looking at this concept? They're very curious. What would you share with that person? If that person is hesitant or maybe just not yet clear, like, what would you say to them? [00:10:34] Speaker D: I don't know. The. The. The biggest is like, yeah, if it feels unfamiliar, go learn to the point that you understand it enough, because if you're not at the understanding level, you're not really making an educated decision. So dig into it until you feel confident that it's a no, not a default, because it's uncomfortable and unknown. Dig in and learn enough so that you can consciously choose what you want to do. And I'm obsessed with conscious choice in all parts of my life, so I'll probably say it 60 times. But also, like, when we had kids and we needed insurance, you know, I don't like insurance. It's just like, maybe it's a waste of money in some ways, maybe it's not. But this way isn't, because it's got all these multiple purposes. And then always, always to anybody who's an entrepreneur, you know what your options are, they're very limited. And you're going to pay extra here and extra here. And like, it's so hard to get your own capital for the things that you find important for yourself as an entrepreneur. The banks don't like you. You know, the. The system of the bank, it's. It's built for the maxes, masses, and what works for them. They don't like entrepreneurs. So especially if you're an entrepreneur, look into this, because you'll have more options than you realize. But, yeah, you have to understand it enough to make an educated choice, not a default. No, it's uncomfortable. It's new. I don't like it. You're. You're hurting yourself by dismissing it too soon. [00:11:57] Speaker C: That's great advice. [00:11:58] Speaker B: Les. What. What surprised you about some of the questions that Tara brought up and when she was in the Discovery process. And you know, now you've been, you've been working together for a period of time. You obviously had a prior relationship, but you have a bit of a different structure in that relationship and how you help in this environment. What's some interesting things that have made it more, I guess, fun and engaging for yourself even to tackle and learn about different questions? Because she does think differently than maybe some other people that you've bumped into so far. [00:12:24] Speaker A: Yeah, that's a great question, Richard. It was. Oh, and I'll circle back to when we kind of first started talking about this. I was looking for a mindset coach at the time, at the same time that Tara was diving into this or thought about IBC a little bit. And I'd reached out to her because I wanted to work with somebody local and somebody in my backyard, as you'd mentioned. And so I reached out to her at the same time and then we just kind of started talking about mindset and then we went from there. So a lot of the questions I want to say that she had were very similar to the ones that I had, but more in the way of the way we think and changing the way we think, because I knew that if I didn't change the way I thought, my behaviors wouldn't change. And I had a huge desire to change my existing behavior to where I was at. And then, so we met. And a lot of those questions that came up because Tara had the same thing. She had that same burning desire to make a change in her life financially. And then we were talking mindset. She goes, so you said, I, you said ibc. I just mentioned it real brief. And, and that came aboard. So it was like, okay, tell me more about this. And she already had a really good, I say, understanding of there's more out there. But she couldn't put a finger on the specifics of it. So it was more about the aspect of control. And then we kind of went into how the banking function works and how we could apply that in our lives and kind of Reese and you know, mimicking that banking function for ourselves. So then the conversation kind of steered to that and it was absolute pleasure because Tara is open minded and open to other thoughts and other ideas and willing to change the mindset. So it was just, it was so natural and so easy to, to form that working relationship with Tara. [00:14:22] Speaker B: Yeah, I love that. That's, that's really cool. And also just coincidentally inspiring that those two things happen at the same time. And that that's definitely not a conversation we've had on the podcast before, right, Jay? [00:14:35] Speaker C: No, I'm kidding. [00:14:36] Speaker D: That's how the universe works. It, there's a dance going on, I just don't have to understand all the steps. [00:14:42] Speaker C: Well, you know, we, we look through the very same lens, Tara, as entrepreneurs. You know, that's, that's the world that we've been in since being on this journey. And no, nobody, nobody's really talking about the pressure that entrepreneurs, you know, carry financially. I think at any stage. You know, if you're, if you're in a business that's in startup mode or you're in a business that's in sustainable or durable or even scalable, as the entrepreneur, you're always carrying some degree of pressure financially. And our experience in implementing this process ourselves with our families as well and our companies is that it is an incredible relief valve as it relates to that pressure and it just keeps getting more and more and more relieving. But I'm curious in terms of this early in your journey, you know, what your experience has been as it relates to that. [00:15:41] Speaker D: It just, I mean, it just helped us play a lot of catch up because of like backlog, because of what you're talking about. You know, I, I was a realtor for nine years. I've now I'm a full time mindset coach. But in the real estate years, you're not taught a lot about finances or how to run a business. It's kind of like, here's your ticket, go. And there was a lot of pressure and a lot of ups and downs. And when we first started using ibc, it was to kind of clean it up and get things in a different position. But it, yeah, it's it that I, I don't want to say the struggle is real because your words are, are spells. I want to watch my words. But the reality of my past is the, the struggle was real. You know, there was a lot of debt, there was a lot of bills, there was a lot of decisions, there was a long. Brought a lot of wrong decisions and not a lot of guidance. And that's fine. Um, but we got to a place and it was just like, okay, we've got to catch up, we've got to clean things up. We need to do things smarter. Nobody's going to come teach it to you, especially as an entrepreneur, unless you hire somebody to, to teach you. But without that, you're just kind of lost, figuring it out, trying to make it up as you go. So IBC helped us really clean up the debt and organize it so that we were paying ourselves back instead of the credit card and the whatnot. And that made a big difference even in the. The monthly spend while we were in cleanup mode. That's kind of the big purpose that we used it for in the beginning. Not yet to, oh, here's cash value to invest in this for the business and whatnot. And I did a little bit of that too, but initially it was a lot of cleanup. And I wish I would have found that years ago because there have been so many times in my life where I had to do cleanup. And you're either paying the bank through your credit card or you're paying the bank through a credit line, or you're consolidating through the bank to like, like all opt you're paying somebody else except this. But I didn't know it was an option. And I mean, you. We don't. I don't believe anymore that we should force behavior change. We make the behavior change really, really easy when we change the belief. So if you can find what you believe about money and, and if you can see that, I'll get a little mindset coachy. But when you want to change your belief, you can either use repetition on purpose or, or you can just see that it's not true, then it's just gone, right? So if you can see what your money beliefs are specific to IBC and see that it's false, you just start operating with a distance, different system in your mind, and then your behavior follows and it's super, super easy and use it for everything. But, like, I don't know, I always think of our conversations, that lesson I have had about ibc. And I'm like, did you need to scream this from the rooftops? And I know the challenge because the norm is, is it's hurting us, not help. So, like, you got to get out there, you got to talk about it like, like you have the cure for cancer. That's how important this needs to be in your mind. Scream it from the rooftops, because they only know what they know. And you're like, I mean, it's, I guess the same for all of us. Like, nobody is for everybody. If you're trying to be for everybody, you're diluting yourself and you're going to miss the opportunity with your real people. But, like, you got something special here. I love things that are out of the norm, that are powerful like this. Like, it's so good. Like, tell everybody, you know, well, Rich [00:19:06] Speaker C: and I will be in the parking lot selling cigarettes and we're going to let Tara take care of the rest of the episode. Tara, that was outstanding. I mean that and entrepreneurs that are watching and listening, they're saying, she's talking to me. [00:19:21] Speaker D: Well, it's just like, to me it's just like, well, yeah, but I had to get myself there, right. I wasn't taught this stuff, you know, like the best case scenario before was like, okay, let's get an eye to five job that pays some bills so that I can maybe afford to get a loan for a vehicle. And it's like, I think so much past that now, but it's like you have to get out of the norm. Just because this is what your family did doesn't mean that you're limited to that, you know, in all aspects of your life. Play with it a little bit, you [00:19:48] Speaker B: know, and playing with it is, is fun because you know it. If you turn it into a game and it actually becomes fun and engaging, it's more interesting to be a part of too. Most people look at their finances and they would, you know, what does Nelson say? So only some people think and everyone else would rather die than think. And so people, he's talking about real thinking, real thinking. People with their finances, you know, they just kind of want to be the ostrich and stick their head in the sand often because it can be stressful or it could be painful or they have a past experience and then they're dragging that along like a boat anchor into their future, their bigger future. And they're not able to see how they can turn it into something that is fun and engaging or how there's, there's, there's an element of prosperity and impact and longevity and stuff to it. And, and I think it's really interesting, Tara, all the things you've identified that are all, all super powerful. There's also this amazing element around the, you know, the cleanup and the reset and the, and the things you're moving forward with. But you've also created this structure of protection for your family, which is what you originally were seeking. So like you were able to check that box off at the same time. And I think that's really, really powerful. [00:20:56] Speaker D: Well, that's the multi purpose, right? Like, like if, I mean, in IBC you hear about like generational wealth, right? Okay, that's not normal. In my family, we don't talk about that. Who the hell do I think I am thinking about generational wealth? Says who? You know, I, I have phrases replay in my head a lot, but a lot of them like says who? Says who? Says who? Says who? Who's making these rules? Who's they? You're actually the boss. You get to pick whatever you want. Just because everybody in your family thinks this doesn't mean you have to. Just because everybody else. Oh, that's of money. It's your. It's your choice. It's your life. You know, you don't have to be put in these boxes. Says who? [00:21:34] Speaker C: 100%. [00:21:35] Speaker B: Did you ever read the Far side comics from Gary Larson? [00:21:39] Speaker D: Oh, probably. Which first? Yeah, yeah. [00:21:41] Speaker B: There's this one of my favorites where there's a guy in a dark room, and he's hovered over all these telephones, and he's got one phone in here, and he's got another one in his hand, and the door creeks open and there's a lady there kind of with the big kind of beehive hair. Howard Johnson, you're the they. And that's what they say. And all these phones are labeled they. [00:22:00] Speaker A: Yeah. [00:22:01] Speaker B: So your. Your commentary brings that, like, popping right into focus in my mind. And I think, what. Because it's like, right, who are these? Who are the people that say that? Who are these they that we keep talking about? I think that's really interesting. It's a great way to look at the experience of how we receive and are taught information where we don't even remember where the original source of the information came from. [00:22:20] Speaker D: Right. So why is it one of your [00:22:21] Speaker C: rules, 100% and doesn't have to be, you know, Tara, so what would you say to the entrepreneur that's listening right now who's successful outwardly. Right. But internally feels maybe financially scattered or uncertain? [00:22:40] Speaker D: Call me and call somebody from ibc, because it's. All the torture is here. All of it. All of the pain. All of the torture. I know there's also physical pain and, like, literal torture, but, like 90% of our lives, it's just what's happening in your head. And it's like, even if you have a ton of death. Sorry for swearing. [00:22:56] Speaker B: All right. [00:22:57] Speaker D: Still call because you're probably thinking of your limited options. There's probably more out there. You know, we didn't necessarily think we had the money for a policy, but once you start spinning it around and looking at the different perspectives. We actually did. You know, the financial position you think that you're in might not be exactly what you think that it is, as limited as you think that it is. [00:23:18] Speaker C: It's very true. And Nelson shared that brilliantly in his book Becoming Your Own Banker, where he Said that you're already presently allocating 100% of your financial resources to what you've deemed to be and prioritize to be important. And so it requires a period of introspection. It requires the desire, you know, to obviously to build that bigger future financially, to get out of financial prison, as Nelson would say. And then it requires a reorganization of priorities. And, and you, you just spoke to that perfectly. [00:23:52] Speaker D: Yeah, and we, we had to do that too. You know, our, what our families typically did. I mean, I've called them about IBC and they're. Oh, no, no, no, no, no. Like, I tried. It is not my job to convince you. I suggested that's all. That's my job. But it just kind of solidifies the fact it's like to each their own. But if you want to change your entire life, one that I love is like, nobody's coming to save you, but nobody's coming to stop you either. So what do you want to do [00:24:23] Speaker B: with that love that put the snowball down the mountain and let it, let it grow. That's when I look at it. Snowball down the mountain. [00:24:35] Speaker D: Right. People assume different is going to be hard a lot of the time. It's like, it's hard in the beginning and then it's so much easier looking back. You always know how easy it is, but there's this fear that a different way is going to be the hard way. Says who? Not necessarily. And looking back, it's, it's not so many times, it's not. It's easier. [00:24:53] Speaker C: Very true. [00:24:55] Speaker B: Now, as part of the process, I would imagine, you know, Les may have put a few learning resources in front of you. Oh yeah, obviously he would have done a lot of that, you know, on some of those one to one conversations, getting into the nitty gritty, you know, getting the clarifying questions that you had and I suspect that your husband had as well. But what, what would, what did you find in your process as you were in the early stages, around what you were able to access for your learning? You know, Nelson's book, you know, we have a couple of books, we have podcasts, we have videos. Was there any of those things that really helped, I guess improve the, the, the, the quality of the meetings? You're able to have less because you had already gone through some of that content. What, what did you find in their discovery process as you were going through the learning once you got off the Tic Tacs, you know, the TikTok stuff, and you got, you know, you knew what some resources were that you could dig into properly. [00:25:47] Speaker D: Yeah, well, I read the Nelson's book. The. Is it the book Becoming Your Own Banker. That's right, yes. So I read that. I asked Les. Yeah, that one. It's back here somewhere. I asked a ton of questions, but a lot of it was the. The. Les gave me a lot of one on one support for asking questions. He would dig into it and explain because I really wanted to understand the concept because in the beginning it's like, okay, let's set this up and now what do I do with it? I felt kind of lost. But he, he answered a lot of questions or he would, you know, show where I can find it in the book and whatnot. And then one of the most recent ones, Les actually gave me a copy of the. What's the Beaver book? [00:26:28] Speaker A: Oh, the Beaver. [00:26:29] Speaker B: Beaver Bankers. [00:26:30] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:26:30] Speaker D: Yes, yes. So he gave me a copy. My boys are 5 and 7. I'm also very obsessed with the beliefs that I instill in them. What's modeled for them, what's normal for them. Because I have to change my mind, but they don't. Right, let's make it easy for them. So recently Les gave me that book and I wrote it with. Or wrote it, read it with Leo, who's 7. And I was like, it's about money. And so we read it and he knows how to read now he read it again, read it again. And then after that he decided to write his own book. So he's decided he's an author now, which is cool. But he keeps reading the book and wanting to learn about it. And I'm like, wow, I don't even have to push this on you or rewire your thoughts about this. You've already got an open mind for this. How awesome. You know, so it's not just about me, it's also about my kids, other kids generation. I'm obsessed with the ripple effect. So I'm like, the more that I can get things out there as their normal, we can flip the switch. So then it's going to get easier over time because like for ibc, the more people that are raised with IBC are familiar with ibc, it becomes the normal way of thinking. Good. That's the idea. [00:27:38] Speaker B: Yeah, I love that. A huge shout out to Becca Wilhite who wrote that book. And it is incredible. My daughter is eight. We've also been reading that book for now about a year and a half. She loves it, she brings it up frequently and in fact, we were walking in Fish Creek park the other day in Calgary and saw some beavers. And of course, they stroke up a conversation right at that time. So you never know when the physical environment or something that is, that, that's. That's in your ecosystem that people can see and relate to can create a powerful lesson that can be relatable to an individual. And I think that's really the, the key element of that book is it relates a really unique and interesting experience about the physical world, about the hard work involved in that beavers do. And, you know, we walking around and we're seeing these giant trees where these beavers have not, you know, taken them down, and they're like, you know, they're, they're like, they're a chainsaw, fundamentally. And it's unbelievable what they can do and create. And they're, they're, they're not impeded by anything. No one, no beaver walks up to the tree that's this big and says, oh, I can't do that. No, it's just like, let's get to work. [00:28:37] Speaker D: Well, and I love that it puts importance on that. This is what we do in our family too, you know, within the story, where it's like, well, we have these family meetings and, well, what's that? Now I'm getting involved in it. And I thought that was cool, too, because it's for the child in the book that is his normal. You know, he's always been around it. He's not going to question it. It just makes sense. And then he's excited to start learning and participate in it. It's like, yeah, that's. That's beautiful. [00:29:01] Speaker C: So good. [00:29:02] Speaker A: Absolutely. So good. [00:29:03] Speaker C: Les, I got a question for you. Oh. So I'm just, you know, and Rich and I were always curious when we talk to teammates, because we literally have literally hundreds of conversations a week with people from across Canada and the United States. We operate sea to shining sea, coast to coast. And from these hundreds of conversations, we're curious, you know, what. What patterns, Les, do you see consistently among people before they discover the solution to the problem? [00:29:43] Speaker A: I guess to answer that question, yeah, that's a great question. Like, to answer. I'll answer it broadly first. I guess one pattern that we're seeing or that I'm seeing is that a lot of people don't really understand. I'm going to say the problem first and foremost. And they don't. They don't really come in saying, you know, with the problem or the problem of banking, or they don't see the leaks that might be in their financial system. They're all kind of, everybody seems to be hyper focused on the tool. All these, the, no, I'll call it the noise rates of return. They're in trust seems to be a big thing now. And they're all, everybody's kind of hyper focused on, on the tool and they just don't see the broader picture of how the tool fits into what we're doing on a day to day basis. And it's almost like walking, walking past dollars to pick up dimes kind of scenario. So. And that it's kind of a broad answer to your question, Jason, but that's kind of generally what, what I'm seeing anyway. [00:30:47] Speaker C: What comes up for me, Les, when I hear that is, and, and you know, Tara, I'd love your perspective on this too. Is that so a few things like as a society, so we live in a world where people want success on a microwave time frame. And people think that if you look at it from this vantage point, if I walked into a gym and I said, yeah, I'm here to buy physical fitness, I'm here to buy this. I just, I just want to be physically fit. I'm just here to buy it. [00:31:25] Speaker B: I keep seeing it on TikTok, right? [00:31:27] Speaker C: Somebody's going to say, well, there's a process, there's a method, there's tools that you need to use, like dumbbells, free weights, you know, all sorts of treadmills, elliptical. [00:31:38] Speaker B: They might start you off with an assessment, Jay. [00:31:40] Speaker C: And so, yeah, like, it's just interesting to me that when people hear about the process and it's the, the conversation is guided primarily by the tool that's used to implement it, but a person doesn't have a clear understanding of what they're solving for. The tool might sound exciting and captivating, but unless you understand the problem, the solution just won't matter to you. And Tara, I'm curious, like, what, what lens do you see that through? [00:32:08] Speaker D: Well, I think they don't think that the current, so the banking system as it is, without ibc, they think it's okay, right? They don't, they're not looking for a solution to a problem. They think it's fine because this is all that there is. There's, that's the only options I've got to play with. But if you back up a little bit, that's the problem. It's not built to help us. It's built to help them and it's a profitable business for them. So do you want to be the profitable business or do you want them to continue being the profitable business. Both are fine. But I kind of wonder, like, are they looking for the solution like I was, or are they not seeing that the bank system is a problem and then there is a solution? Because they, they. It seems like, or at least the people that I talked to, the friends that I was trying to introduce to Les, they're like, they don't have a problem. It's fine. It's like. But you do. You just can't see it through that lens. [00:33:05] Speaker A: Exactly. [00:33:07] Speaker B: Well, and in, you know, working with people, in mindset, in the way that you do, there's patterns that develop over time. And those patterns, they. They start somewhere and then they often get reaffirmed or they get a repetitive habit built in. Because, you know, if you keep smashing your head against the same wall, eventually you're going to develop a thick skin around where you keep smashing your head against that wall. And I think that that happens to us over time in life in different areas. And we often, to the point where we can't even see it. We don't know. We just know that we've now got this shield that's been created to protect our noggin every time that we bump up against that same thing. And that often leads to. What Nelson talks about was the arrival syndrome. Sometimes it's not just based on what we know. It's based on maybe the pain of the past and a previous experience. And then we just kind of lump things that are sort of in a similar environment into one area. And what I find happens. And Jason, we talked about this yesterday. I don't know if this is true or not. [00:34:04] Speaker C: It's. [00:34:04] Speaker B: Maybe it's just my. My connection experience. The word insurance brings up emotional connotation in the human brain. People seem to have had an experience one way or another with just the general broad term of insurance. And it brings up this immediate feeling of, you know, a premium, a cost, or what are my rates going to be? And like, all these thoughts start flooding your brain immediately. And then, you know, a buddy or a friend or an uncle who went on an airplane one time and paid for baggage insurance or travel insurance, and the trip got canceled. And abc, you know, airline made it really difficult and they couldn't make their claim, and it was a huge pain in the butt. And therefore, travel insurance or luggage insurance was a scam or it was a this. And so, like, it, like, it takes the label around this whole ginormous industry that literally exists in all kinds of things around the planet. [00:35:04] Speaker A: And it. [00:35:04] Speaker B: And it and it skews the behavior and the mindset around it because of one experience or a friend's experience. And then it causes like a, like a freeze position where you know, you're just trying to break through the ice because you know, on the other side of that ice maybe you can go fishing and you could, you could fill your table full of food, but you gotta, you gotta crack through that ice and it's very difficult to get through it. It gets really thick over time. That's what I've experienced with people and I think like a lot of our teammates, our advisors run into that. And with all this marketing that's there, that's very tool focused, it almost seems to amplify that degree. I'm really curious, from a mindset perspective, does that resonate with you? What, what, what do you see in that, from a perspective of what you see with people just in the coaching that you do? [00:35:47] Speaker D: I think the word insurance triggers the sales stuff to them because what, what do they believe sales is? And even as a salesperson, what do I believe sales are? Right. But everybody, if you think sales the easiest is people go to the used car salesman where it's going to be a rip off and the sales process is them winning and you losing. If that's your mindset, that's what's guaranteed to happen. But then also I always think of environment like you're the average of the five people you spend time around. So let's say I'm a person just learning about IBC for the first time, but my current environment matches who I am right now. So those people around me, they don't know anything about ibc. So I start looking into it and I mention it to them and they all go, that's stupid, don't do that. So then what am I going to do? Because I'm the, the average of my five, right? So if you change your environment, you think a different way, you start hearing different things, you automatically become that by changing the environment. But I think the word insurance triggers the sales stuff for people. But on the sales person side, the person who's doing the selling, if you know that like the transfer is win, win for both people, like you know it in your soul that like the value exchange is there, it easy to sell and then that comes across and can kind of untrigger them a little bit because it, it can come from both sides I think, or, or it does come from both sides. But insurance I think just goes sales to them and thinks of like that skeezy Used car dealer. And it's like, no, it's actually win win. Like to me sales is win win for both people with fair value exchange and then some. But if you don't feel good about what you're selling, that can come across. But they, they all have this hesitation generally until they consciously choose different but the default. [00:37:33] Speaker C: Why are you not on our team? [00:37:36] Speaker D: Because I need to teach this to people. [00:37:40] Speaker C: Business that was coming up in my brain the whole time that you were. I was like, yeah, okay, yeah, I could see her coaching. Yeah, I could see. Yeah, clients would love her. Yeah, okay. Sorry. [00:37:50] Speaker B: Okay. [00:37:51] Speaker C: I digress. [00:37:52] Speaker A: Okay. All good. [00:37:53] Speaker D: Well, maybe we should just talk more. We'll see what happens. [00:37:55] Speaker C: 100%. [00:37:56] Speaker D: Yeah. [00:37:56] Speaker B: One of the things you mentioned, I think I really appreciate it goes directly to page 65 which Jason had mentioned earlier in Nelson's book. And at the bottom it says organize or join one already in existence. A wealth club that meets periodically. Here you have the support of others working their way out of darkness. Be sure to include members already with a good track record and practicing the principles ibc. This is important because you need to surround yourself with others of like minded understanding. You don't want to be a victim of feeling that you are the lone ranger. We all need the nourishment of a favorable environment. No one elevates himself or herself much above the environment in which they operate. So like everything you identified is boom, right here in black and white in Nelson, when Nelson's identifying. That's, that's a lot of why we like to have these episodes where we have folks like you on Tara to share your experience. You know, less, Less. You're doing this as an advisor now, but how many years was it that you and I worked together just doing this for yourself? I mean, six, seven years maybe, something like that. And, and I mean it was, it was a good, it's been a good chunk of time, so. And I got some great smoked bee honey out of that from Saskatchewan by the way, which was still the best honey I've ever had at this point in time. I used to call Less the bee Man. And what's really cool about that is, you know, we have our quarterly group coaching sessions, we have our online membership, we have these kinds of things that's all in support of that. And then these conversations while maybe we didn't have other people, other clients joining us in. When this gets produced and it goes out on the YouTube channel or you're driving in your car on those long roads in Saskatchewan and you get an opportunity to listen to Tara and less and what they're sharing. You're vicariously being a part of that environment at the same time. [00:39:39] Speaker A: And further to that, Richard, appreciate you bringing that up because Dan, another wonderful teammate of ours, has started the Wealth Builders Club Saturday mornings where we meet every Saturday morning in an open forum, like minded people, people who are practicing and you know, a few that are curious but just to be in that environment and you know, kudos to Dan for starting that and starting that little Wealth Club. So we have that opportunity to be around like minded people and ask those questions and just bounce ideas off each other. And I haven't missed one since I found out about it. It's fantastic. [00:40:14] Speaker D: Well, community is, I mean everything works the same way. You know, it doesn't matter if it's relationships or mindset or ibc, like it's just how things work. But yeah, the value of community, especially like the beliefs that I've been changing for myself on purpose. I actually just recorded a podcast that I was trying to get online before this call, see if I figure it out today. But we talked a lot about the importance of community because when you're changing your thinking, if you're alone, you feel crazy. If you're part of a community that everybody goes, yeah, I was there, yeah, I remember. This is what helped me. And, and you're doing it as part of like a tribe. You don't feel crazy and you're not, you know, you're not at all. But, but that community of to learn from each other, to feel supportive, to be a part of something, it's huge. It's very important. [00:41:01] Speaker C: I agree completely. And two things that have come up for me in the conversation that, that I think deserve to be surfaced. So you mentioned earlier, Tara around, you know, this, this, this common phrase that we've all heard that you know, you become, you know, if the five people that you hang around with the most and we, we, we like to share and expand on it and say, you know, that you become the five people that influence you the most. And so when you're among community, if you think about that influence and if you understand that transformation is habits based, that's where it all happens. And so if you are accustomed to the habit of like you shared, you're dealing with conventional banks, you were taught to do things a certain way financially, if, whether that influence came from family, from friends, from acquaintances or all the above, if you want to achieve your desired outcome financially, whatever that desired outcome is, then you should be influenced by People who are already achieving that. And good things will happen because you'll be in motion and you'll be developing habits that transform. [00:42:19] Speaker D: Well, it reminds me of, like, if. If you want to go to the gym and the people you spend. I always think of, like, the. Who do I spend the most time talking to? Who? So it's like, the more you want to do something, be conscientious, like, what do I want to do? And who am I hanging out with? And what's there in that one piece where it's like, if I want to hit the gym and all of a sudden I'm going to be in a bikini competition. Cool. Who do I spend time with right now? What are my average? 5. Does anybody go to the gym currently? Nope. So what are the chances of me forcing my behavior to change to go to the gym and do this? But if I get a partner, I get a coach, I. Whatever. Now my. My average has changed, and without forcing myself to, I'm going to want to. I'm going to believe different things, and it doesn't have to be so hard to reach the same result. But I don't know, like, I wonder if it's my. My five loudest opinions or my time spent. I'm gonna have to think about that now. Interesting. [00:43:16] Speaker B: Always an opportunity to ruminate, which I appreciate. Now you have a book yet to be released. I love the title, Let that Shit Go, which is phenomenal. [00:43:24] Speaker C: Oh, yeah. That is, yes, I love that. I absolutely love that. [00:43:30] Speaker B: We'll probably have to have you back on when the book is released, so we could talk a little bit about that. But, you know, in. In the spirit of. Of that, one of the things I'm hoping you'll let go for our listeners is the understanding that we can share with you around who you most want to be a hero to. Tara, based on all the work that you do and mindset, helping people find more ways to let that go. How would you like to most be remembered and who would you like to be a hero to? [00:43:57] Speaker D: That's a big question. I want to change the normal for the world, but so let that go is. Is using my mindset stuff to help people physically declutter their space. So I think what I've figured out and the superpower that I want to utilize is my function within the topic. So that one helps people literally declutter their house. But I want people to consciously choose every single belief that they operate by, you know, not what society throws on us, not what the normal is. Show them how to see the beliefs they have, so they see that they have choices and they can consciously choose differently. So I want to show people how to do that. But the whole purpose is to help the next generation. But I don't want to teach the next generation. I want to teach us. Which, yes, it's harder to teach ourselves while we're teaching our kids, but if we do it, it becomes their normal. And anything that's hurting us, I want to shift to helping us in whatever way. But all of it is just with changing our beliefs at the core. So I'm obsessed. I hope that I can help people in some category, but that has to be my mission. [00:45:02] Speaker B: Well, at least it's just a. It's just a small vision. [00:45:05] Speaker D: So totally. Like Friday, an hour a week. [00:45:08] Speaker B: Well, it's kind of global, so baby steps. [00:45:11] Speaker D: Yeah. Today. No. [00:45:14] Speaker C: Well, Rich, I want to do something that we do. So whenever we. Tara, Whenever we share just an incredible conversation with an existing client and especially a fellow entrepreneur, we. We like to. We like to do our top 10 this or that. Now, fair warning to everybody who's watching or listening, if you're an entrepreneur like Tara and Rich and I, unless are there's about a 97 chance you're gonna [00:45:44] Speaker A: feel [00:45:47] Speaker C: these questions landing with you. At least three of them, I think. But let's. [00:45:51] Speaker D: Awareness and seeing things. [00:45:52] Speaker C: Let's do it. Okay, here we go. So, Tara, you ready? [00:45:55] Speaker D: Yeah. [00:45:56] Speaker C: Okay. Number 10. Would you rather have unlimited leads or unlimited focus and attention span? [00:46:04] Speaker D: Focus and attention span. [00:46:05] Speaker C: Okay. Number nine. Would you rather lose 50,000 on a bad investment or spend six straight hours trying to fix your CRM all by yourself? [00:46:17] Speaker D: $50,000 or six hours on a CRM? I'd rather invest 50,000. [00:46:23] Speaker C: Okay, number eight, what's more stressful? No new leads this week or. Hey, do you have a minute from your accountant? [00:46:31] Speaker D: I don't buy into stress anymore, so I don't know how to answer that one. [00:46:34] Speaker C: Oh, okay. Very interesting. Very interesting. [00:46:37] Speaker A: Okay. [00:46:38] Speaker C: Would you rather take a cold plunge every morning for a year or read every terms and conditions agreement before clicking Accept? [00:46:48] Speaker D: If I didn't. I don't have any interest in cold plunge, so I think I'd make myself read it. [00:46:55] Speaker C: Okay. Okay, these are. Thank you for the honest answers. All right, here we go. Would you rather have a coffee addiction or check your bank account, stripe and sales dashboard 400 times a day? [00:47:07] Speaker D: I have a coffee addiction, so that's an easy one. [00:47:09] Speaker C: Ah, yes. [00:47:10] Speaker B: You and me alike. [00:47:12] Speaker A: Okay. [00:47:13] Speaker D: Keep my coffee away. We got a problem. [00:47:16] Speaker C: Okay. Would you Rather have a competitor copy your business or have your entire team see your actual screen time report? [00:47:25] Speaker D: Have my team see what I'm doing. [00:47:27] Speaker C: Ah, okay. [00:47:28] Speaker A: All right. [00:47:29] Speaker C: What's the bigger desire? Inbox at 0 or a vacation where you don't check your phone every 11 seconds? [00:47:38] Speaker D: Oh, second one. Because I was a realtor for nine years. That is valid, valuable. [00:47:43] Speaker C: Okay, here we go. I don't know if you have pets, but this one's going to be funny anyway. Would you rather pitch investors in your pajamas or accidentally have a cat filter on during an important client? Zoom. [00:47:55] Speaker D: Who's to say I don't have pajama pants on right now, But sometimes I do. [00:48:04] Speaker C: Now, what do you think? [00:48:05] Speaker A: We. [00:48:05] Speaker C: We've got two more to go. So what do you think would be more emotionally exhausting? Hiring people or realizing that you now have to manage them? [00:48:17] Speaker D: Man, is that the story of my life right now? Realizing that I have to hire people or managing them? I. That's a category I'm really learning about. [00:48:25] Speaker C: Okay. [00:48:26] Speaker D: It doesn't stress me out anymore to hire because I've changed my thinking on all parts of that, so I'm better at hiring and better at making the decisions within it, so I don't need to manage them the same way if I do the right hiring. [00:48:42] Speaker C: And, you know, given that you're a coach, something that my coach, Dan Sullivan, shared with me very early in my journey with him. For those listening and watching, if you don't know who Dan Sullivan is, you have an opportunity. And he said to every entrepreneur that was in the room, there were 40 plus of us in the room. And he said, always remember that your team members want to be coached. They don't want to be managed. Isn't that good? [00:49:10] Speaker D: It's so good. And if you're like, if you hire the right person and you're still managing them, that's a you thing. Like, you need to let go. You need to do it differently. And sometimes it's the wrong person. [00:49:22] Speaker C: And. [00:49:22] Speaker D: But, like, look at it from both sides, right? If you have the right person doing the job, you don't need to manage them. They don't want to be managed. Like, it's. Yeah, it doesn't have to be so hard, but, I mean, I had to learn that. I used to micromanage everything because I needed the control. [00:49:37] Speaker C: Amen. Okay, here's number one from the top ten. This or that. Would you rather have guaranteed business growth or guaranteed uninterrupted sleep every night for the next 12 months? [00:49:51] Speaker D: You know, I have Young kids, right? Oh, I'll go into uninterrupted business growth because I can sneak in a nap and I'll be all right. [00:50:00] Speaker C: Well, congratulations. You're officially an entrepreneur. [00:50:02] Speaker A: Door. [00:50:04] Speaker D: Those are great. [00:50:06] Speaker C: Thank you for. Thank you for being a good sport. We love to do that with. With every. Every client conversation that we have, and we always get a good laugh out of it because people are like, oh, those are pretty good, you know? Thank you. [00:50:16] Speaker D: Very good. [00:50:17] Speaker C: So, yeah, today was just a real pleasure and a joy. Rich, take us home. [00:50:22] Speaker B: Well, absolutely loved having you on Atara. It's so good to connect with you, to hear about your journey, to hear about what you're up, to hear about your new book. [00:50:30] Speaker D: Book. [00:50:30] Speaker B: And exciting for what the future holds, not just for what you're doing in your business, the big vision you have, but for your family and your kids at a young age. Embracing and learning about this process right now. I mean, it's only. It's only upwards from here, and it's really exciting and for you to have such a great coach in less so. Thanks, everyone, for joining us here today. Of course, those of you watching on YouTube, you'll see, poof. Magical. Just recommendations showing up all over the place. That's an indication. You should click one of those and keep going because there's lots more to learn. [00:51:04] Speaker D: If I can add a little piece. Oh, did it stop already? [00:51:06] Speaker C: No, no, go ahead. [00:51:07] Speaker D: Oh, good. [00:51:08] Speaker C: Yeah. [00:51:09] Speaker D: I was gonna say, I always want to say to people, like, if there's the tiniest little inkling in you to reach out, that's already like, do it. That's your intuition saying, just do it. It doesn't guarantee anything. Just get the info, reach out. Take that one step up. Don't regret it. [00:51:23] Speaker C: Well said. [00:51:24] Speaker B: Thank you, Tara. Thank you, Les. [00:51:26] Speaker A: Yeah. Thanks, guys. Appreciate it. That was awesome. [00:51:29] Speaker B: All right. You're a farmer, you're a rancher. It's time that you had more control. Figure out how you can finance your operation, have way more control, and keep your farm where it belongs, with you and your family. How are you going to do that? Well, visit growyourowncapital.com that's growyourowncapital.com and pick up a copy of this incredible book. It's going to teach you exactly how to do it.

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