Source: BevNET LIVE 2019

Each year, BevNET’s annual Best Of awards honors companies, brands, individuals, products, ideas and trends from across the dynamic and ever-changing beverage landscape.

As in years past, 2019 witnessed the emergence of disruptive newcomers developing alongside established players seeking out new frontiers. In ways both big and small, this year confirmed that there isn’t a singular route to success. In bottled water, we saw Essentia reap the benefits of a dedicated long-term growth strategy, fueled by strong execution, and at the same time we saw Liquid Death capture the imagination of consumers with a wholly unconventional (and unmistakable) marketing voice. We saw young companies in categories like energy and coffee help bring a new generation of functional beverages to mainstream audiences, while also watching as legacy brands extended their reach with new innovations. Some well-worn rules were confirmed, and others were torn up in style. There was truly a bit of everything.

With such a wide breadth of worthy nominees, the process of selecting our Best Of 2019 award winners was hardly simple. These honorees represent a vibrant and dynamic group of brands that we feel best encompass the ideas, personalities and products pushing the beverage industry in exciting new directions at the dawn of a new decade— and we can’t wait to see where they will take us next. Congratulations to all our winners!

LIFEAID Beverage Company:
BevNET 2019 RISING STAR Award

"The entire team at LIFEAID Beverage Company, LLC is beyond honored and thrilled to have been chosen as the recipient of a BEVNET Best of 2019 RISING STAR award! Thank you for this acknowledgment. Here's to rising to even greater heights in 2020," LIFEAID posted on their LinkedIn profile following the announcement at the BevNET LIVE event on Monday, December 9, 2019.

Product image of three LIFEAID cans arranged on a grass background

When functional beverage brand LIFEAID first made a name for its workout-based FITAID line through its partnership with CrossFit©, it seemed the company had settled into a strategy of cornering niche target demographics through a focus on hyper-specific use occasions such as partying, travelling and golfing. But after several years of incremental gains, 2019 finally saw LIFEAID and its entire product portfolio break into the mainstream. This past year the company’s risky take on functional beverages saw a vast expansion as it tripled its retail footprint, established a robust DSD network in the West, and made nationwide expansions in major outlets like Walmart and CVS. Co-founders Orion Melehan and Aaron Hinde said that LIFEAID’s mainstream breakout was always the long-term plan, even as it spent years with an emphasis on narrow channels -- part of an “incubation” strategy that through close customer relationships and ROI driven marketing is finally seeing validation in the broader market. Earlier this year, LIFEAID raised $7.7 million in April to fuel this growth and now with Fitness, Focus, Immunity, Partying, and Golfing all covered, the company has introduced sugar-free varieties with FITAID ZERO and FITAID RX ZERO. And the innovation isn’t done yet: the brand has announced LIFEAID HEMP as the latest addition to its beverage portfolio -- making it one of just a handful of established brands to date to jump into the hemp space.
—BevNET


> > > Live well.

Long-Term Consistency Beats Short-Term Intensity

This episode of Health Coach Radio discusses the idea of one degree of change, the power of changing your trajectory over time, pushing the chips all in, being aligned with your purpose, and so much more. (52:22)

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

The New Age of Conscious Capitalism

Co-Founder and CEO of LIFEAID, Orion Melehan shares his vision and thoughts surrounding building and nurturing a successful brand.

Click here to read the full article.

 

Healthy Pumpkin Pie for Thanksgiving

Try Ambitious Kitchen's version of classic pumpkin pie—made from scratch, delicious, dairy-free, and naturally sweetened with pure maple syrup and coconut sugar.

Find the healthy recipe here.

"Success is going from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm."

—Winston Churchill

Striking Thoughts: Bruce Lee's Wisdom for Daily Living

Discover the secrets of Bruce Lee's incredible success. His book covers 72 topics and 825 aphorisms—from spirituality to personal liberation and from family life to film-making.

Check out the book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 26

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. We are back here on Entrepreneur Nation, here on KUCI 88.9 FM in Irvine. I'm your host with the most, Ash Kumra. I have two amazing people. By the way, how do I say your last name?

[Aaron Hinde]: Hinde. Everyone screws it up.

[Ash Kumra]: Hinde. Okay, it's not--

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, like behind.

[Ash Kumra]: Behind. Okay [laughter]. You won't forget.

[Aaron Hinde]: There you go. I got Aaron Hinde with-- as you can see, this company-- people are checking in. FITAID, a dope product. I had mentioned this earlier, that I actually have had his product for almost a year now. A former guest introduced me. Bedros introduced me to your product.

[Aaron Hinde]: Oh, right on.

[Ash Kumra]: And then I went to F45, and they had your product. And so I was like-- and then I looked you guys up, and I saw what you're doing. And I'm like, "Dude, I got to talk to you," and there it is. You're here, so.

[Aaron Hinde]: Good to be here.

[Ash Kumra]: Super happy to have you. Berké Brown. Cape. He is the mindset coaches of mindset coaches. He is a performance coach. He's a behavior researcher. He's done some stuff. I mean a lot of people say they do behavior research and they do this stuff, but this cat got stuff from Berkeley. You know what I just realized? You know what's kind of funny? Your name is Berké, and you went to Berkeley [laughter]. I don't know if they named the school--

[Berké Brown]: [Wow?]. It was planned. It was the only reason I went there, actually.

[Ash Kumra]: I mean do they just say, "Hey, your name--"

[Berké Brown]: We're going to let him in [laughter].

[Aaron Hinde]: It's like a dentist named Dennis [laughter]. There's another [crosstalk], typically.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah, I'm going to go to Brown after this too. So that's the next university, right? To satisfy [inaudible].

[Aaron Hinde]: Dude, that'd be [crosstalk]. That would be intense.

[Ash Kumra]: So I have you both on here, but before we talk about the topic, mindset, is there anything I missed about your bios? Because I want to be respectful for all the great stuff you're doing. So why don't we start with you?

[Aaron Hinde]: I think you got it-- I don't know what you said, but I'm sure you got it covered.

[Ash Kumra]: I just said you've got a dope product. I mean FITAID has been around for a few years now, right?

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, since 2011.

[Ash Kumra]: And you guys are national, right?

[Aaron Hinde]: We're national. We are.

[Ash Kumra]: I went to Whole Foods yesterday, and I mean-- when did you get into Whole Foods?

[Aaron Hinde]: Probably four years back. Yeah? Yeah. Yeah, we're in all Whole Foods.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. Cool. Cool. And it's been a journey, right? Was this like you grew it in your lab or your well and farm in Santa Cruz, like you were saying? Or was it like-- how did the story start? I'm curious.

[Aaron Hinde]: Well, we visualized it. It's all about mindset, right? That's what we were talking about today.

[Aaron Hinde]: I mean it really-- as I was telling my man here, it's all about ignorance in passion for us. We didn't come from the beverage industry, but we're very passionate about health and wellness and what we put in our bodies as a direct reflection how we show up in the world and want to create better-for-you products, vitamins you'll actually enjoy drinking. That's what we're all about.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. And how about you, man? What's your story, man?

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. Well, it's funny. I started off as a personal trainer back in the day. I was always into Think and Grow Rich. The Magic of Thinking Big. Reading all the books. I was a personal trainer. A quick story is, I had a client who was extremely weak. Small. Quiet. Right? And I'm like, "I want to help this guy." So as I started training him, he started getting more confident. His personality started shifting. He started making more jokes. He's like, "Hey I got a girlfriend." I'm like, "That's awesome. I'm glad to hear that."

[Ash Kumra]: You're like, "Pitch."

[Berké Brown]: "Get back to the weights, bro." In a big way, it really was like that because he would start to feel more confident, and then he got a girlfriend, and then he got engaged. And there was a point when we were at the wedding rehearsal. He was looking at me, and it was amazing because I was sitting down. He was standing up looking at me with tears in his eyes, and he goes, "If it wasn't for you, I wouldn't have believed that I could get a girl like this." So for me, what became the most powerful thing was, "I wouldn't have believed." So I actually became more interested in the belief part than just the physical part. And so how do you empower people to believe that they're capable of getting a girl like that? A guy like that. A business like that. A family like that. A mindset like that. And so that's what kind of set me on the journey, and so I created a program that tied to the mindset and the physical. Then I just went to Berkeley, and I was like, "I got to research this mindset. How do you get people to change their behaviors?"

[Ash Kumra]: Hey, what did you find in your research? Because that's such a fascinating topic.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. Absolutely. Well, it's funny. People are always saying, "What's the answer? What's the answer?" And it's not about an answer; it's about an environment. How do you create an environment where it lessens the likelihood of you giving up? See, when people start things, they have certain things that stop them when they're excited, too, as they make the first mistake. And then they self-sabotage. So if you provide yourself with the right thinking and the right environment and the right behaviors, then it kind of increases your likelihood to be successful. So it's actually pulling from social cognitive theory, but it's an amazing process to watch somebody begin to believe and then surround themselves with other people that believe and then, from there, change their behavior.

[Ash Kumra]: What is social cognitive theory?

[Berké Brown]: So Albert Bandura talks about what causes people to to act. How do you move? So if I believe something about myself, like, "I'm not capable," then I won't try. I'll either avoid or I'll fail early. Right? So that's the mindset. If I believe I am capable, like what you said. You said, "Ignorance of passion." He was ignoring the fact that it wasn't an industry that he's in, but he was passionate about that industry. Therefore, he created it. So he only focused on what was capable and didn't focus on what wasn't. So that's the cognitive portion. The behavior is you just acting out on it and then kind of getting a feedback loop of seeing yourself succeed and then believing in yourself more. And the final thing is having a team. That's your environment.

[Ash Kumra]: One thing I find fascinating is what experiences lead you to work on what you're meant to do. So I'm curious here. What led you to decide to create FITAID?

[Aaron Hinde]: Well, how I was raised was very supportive. I mean talk about the environment. And I was thinking about the topic today on the plane and thinking about the type of reinforcement I got from my father. Specifically, he would say things like, "Your attitude is your altitude," or "The sky's the limit." I mean those became mantras around my house, so I always came from a can-do attitude, "We're gonna do something big." And like we were talking about before the interview here, it's like every challenge that we have in life, every entrepreneurial venture, every "failure," is actually just an obstacle that was meant to be there, meant to put us on a certain trajectory, meant to give us a certain skill set to get us to that next level. And so this is a culmination of years of those "failures" and successes and learning experiences and then meeting the right business partner that really had a certain skill set that I was lacking in. Having the support structure from our significant others, our wives. I mean I couldn't imagine trying to be an entrepreneur and not having support from your significant other. Talk about sabotaging. If you came home and every day when you weren't making any money [laughter]-- the sky is falling, and all you heard was, "You piece of crap," and "I told you we shouldn't have done this." Imagine being in that environment. Instead it's like, "No, this is going to work. We're going to get through that." Having that and then building out our team, that's just such [inaudible] your players to be able to execute. I mean it's that combination of all of these ingredients have to come together mixed with the right timing and the right products and the right vision. And fortunately, it's been working out for us.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. How about you, man?

[Berké Brown]: It's amazing. Amazing.

[Ash Kumra]: Tell us about your background, your upbringing. Specifically what helped you make this foundation you have now?

[Berké Brown]: Yeah! Absolutely. No, it's such a great question, man, because it really doesn't matter. It's the environment. And how you move through the environment is what really makes a difference. My father, he was about the books: Think and Grow Rich, The Magic of Thinking Big, Og Mandino, these books. What he would always say is-- he goes, "Whatever the mind of man can conceive, he can achieve." And it's just kind of harking back, hearing these stories. It's like, "Wow, how important the upbringing is in a lot of ways," or surrounding yourself or finding that. But that's just the way my father was. He was always into-- he did Amway. He was reading those books, and everybody was talking about those things, and so that mindset really just-- it bled onto me. And I always knew that I was capable of doing more. Right?

[Berké Brown]: And I also knew that I had this ability, as random as it was. I could see two people speak, and I don't know if it was hyper empathy, but I could understand where a person was coming and when they said something, how it negatively affect the other person, how their ego would kind of rise up, and how an argument would come out of nothing. And so at first, I thought that it was just, "Why can't anybody see what I'm seeing?" I realized that I had a skill set, and there's this ability to have compassion for understanding what people are going through, and that they're really-- no bad guy thinks he's the bad guy. You know what I mean? In your mind, you think that this person cuts me off because he hates me or he doesn't like me, but the truth is, when you cut somebody off, you're like, "I didn't mean to. I was late. I forgot." You know what I mean? So when you have the ability to stand in the shoes of another person, it gives you compassion, and it gives you that kind of perspective from a higher level. And so my work is, when I look at people, I'm looking at them from a higher level. There's a great quote. I heard it from Les Brown. He goes, "Look at a man the way he is, he only becomes worse. Look at a man as if he were who he could be, then he'll become who we should be." Right?

[Aaron Hinde]: Powerful. Yeah.

[Ash Kumra]: Wow. That's deep.

[Berké Brown]: And I live by that. You see the greatness that's already there. And Abraham Lincoln, he says, "I am the person I am today because I had a friend who believed me, and I didn't have the gall to let him down." [laughter] Right?

[Ash Kumra]: Wow. That's true.

[Berké Brown]: So when you set that up, when you set people up, and you say, "Hey, you are great," and not in a cliché way-- I kind of see myself as the guy who breaks open clichés and holds the pearl. But when you realize that greatness is actually a right, like you were born into it, and when you take off that veil of doubt, then you become empowered to make change that's real. That's real. You know what I mean? So--

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah. We all have our own unique ability, right?

[Berké Brown]: Absolutely.

[Aaron Hinde]: And it's negative programming between 0 and 7 years old that--

[Berké Brown]: To 10.

[Aaron Hinde]: --gives us the doubt and the fear and the anxiety. And when you're a kid, you're the best salesman there is. I mean a kid wants something, and they're like, "No. Yeah, I'm getting that. I'm getting that." They can be persistent as heck. Right? And they can wear you down as a parent. So they don't learn-- they're programmed from us, parents, and from teachers, especially. Teachers notoriously come from scarcity mode, unfortunately. The system. Their friends. There's so many forces. Television, the big one, right? I mean that's why cut out cable when we got pregnant with our oldest. It's just I saw that negative programming. I'm like, "We've got to get away from this."

[Ash Kumra]: That's a smart move. So you have no cable in your house?

[Aaron Hinde]: No. Haven't for 17 years.

[Ash Kumra]: God. That's so good.

[Berké Brown]: When I was a kid, my dad actually-- my mom and dad didn't let us watch TV on the weekdays.

[Ash Kumra]: Smart.

[Berké Brown]: But at the time, you're like, "What devils." [laughter] All my friends are just like-- and I'm like, "Can I please, a little bit? Can I just watch a little bit?" So Friday and Saturday, you're making up for all the lost time, but you don't realize that you don't become attached to television. It's like kids who were raised eating healthy. They don't understand why people eat unhealthy. Because your body has adapted to it. So that was a huge benefit, too, so I loved that. That's awesome.

[Ash Kumra]: Going back to both your businesses, and then we're gonna dive into the main topic mindset. Where in your life did you realize you needed to make this product? Were you in a health situation yourself? Did you have someone, and you're like, "I can't believe that happened to them"?

[Aaron Hinde]: No. Great question. I had always been a little bit of a chemist in my own kitchen, making up my own shakes with turmeric and ginger powder and Creatine and peanut butter and protein powder and doing-- I used to make, always, all my own stuff. But I was a sports chiropractor for 10 years in Santa Cruz and seeing a lot of high-level athletes come into the office drinking not-so-healthy beverages and really encouraging them to get off of those because I felt it would negatively affect their performance in the long run. And they would say, "Okay, I'd get off it, but what else? What should I drink?" basically asking for advice on what should they turn to outside of water. And there wasn't anything to point them to. There wasn't anything to point them to. And Orion and I, my business partner, we both have young kids, and it was like we knew. We wanted to create something that we have full authenticity in offering to our own children.

[Ash Kumra]: So dope.

[Aaron Hinde]: So I mean I couldn't put something out where, if I knew it had 300 milligrams of caffeine, it's going to give my kid an arrhythmia. Or it's jacked full of artificial sweeteners or colors and all that garbage. Right?

[Ash Kumra]: Yeah, your FOCUSAID has 100mg, right? I had your Focus in the past. 100 milligrams, right?

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah. 100 milligrams green tea and Nootropics as well.

[Ash Kumra]: Yeah. I love that. And I mean you're in phenomenal shape. You told me last time we met, a week or two ago, that you'd been into bodybuilding again. What role did fitness and working out play with what you're about?

[Berké Brown]: Such a great question. Well, I'll say this. The Internal Gym is the name of my business. The internal gym is your mind. I came from the gym, the external gym, and realized that the exercises of the brain are the most important. What I say is, "Before you go to the body first, you first must water the mind." When you are physically training, certain things happen. When I face resistance, I'm doing resistance training. I grow; my muscles grow. Resistance equals growth. But in the real world, when people experience resistance, they're like, "Oh, it's a bad day," right? It's Mercury retrograde. I mean whatever it is. These are the things, but we don't realize it. If I saw resistance in the gym as growth, why don't I see resistance in my life as growth? And so my ability to kind of correlate the physical experience with the mental experience is what's so powerful. Like we were talking outside is, if you say you can't run a distance, and you run it, you're out of breath and excited. And I say, "What else in your life do you believe that you can't do?" Right? When you lift something you said you can't-- our brain, when we're-- if put yourself in an exercise situation without hurting yourself and go to where your brain tells you to stop, your body can continue to go. But your brain is actually verbally saying something. And if you can start to hear those sentences, then you realize that it's just truly self talk. Talk, it's all talk. Then there's a physical place that you can get to. And so really, what I wanted to do is create a program that ties around those experiences where it's physical and mental. And as time went by, I started focusing more and more on the mental because the mental will then enact the physical. Right? So all clients, they have to go through some type of health, whether it's meditation or anything like that, in order to increase their their cognition so that they can make the changes. So I was like, "Okay, I'm going full board in this. I want to do The Internal Gym. I want to create this program that helps people exercise their minds so they can change their lives."

[Ash Kumra]: So one thing I admire about both of you, it sounds like you both have good work ethics and habits. What are some daily rituals that both of you do? And I'll start with you. What do you do? And it could be anything. There's no right or wrong.

[Aaron Hinde]: I have a very detailed daily ritual.

[Ash Kumra]: Oh, okay. I thought you were about to say, "I don't do anything. I just wake up--"

[Berké Brown]: "I just woke up like this."

[Ash Kumra]: "I drink focus, and I'm like, 'Ah, ready to be fit.'"

[Aaron Hinde]: "I'm ready to go. Shower and FITAID [laughter]."

[Ash Kumra]: You're doing it well. I'm telling you. I have this idea that you had [laughter].

[Aaron Hinde]: No, I'll make it as quick as I can, but basically, I get up at 6 o'clock every morning. I'll fill out the five-minute journal. If you're not familiar with it, it's three things that you're grateful for, three things that'll make today great in one's self-affirmation. I'll hop in the shower. I'll do one round of Wim Hof breathing. I'll slam the hot water off and do about a minute cold plunge. I'll do a Keto coffee with, usually, some eggs from our chickens, and I'll take some supplements. I take my son to school. We'll do a morning prayer together, and then I'll ask him, verbally, the five-minute journal. What is he grateful for? What'll help make his day great? And then one self-affirmation. And I go down to Natural Bridges beach. I do a short walk, about a quarter mile. Get to the beach. Let the sun hit me. Do another deeper round of Wim Hof breathing. I ground myself, so I'll take my hands and just put them into the sand [inaudible] and just kind of feel that and what that's all about and then do some box breathing, a little bit of meditation, walk back, and then I'm ready to rock and roll. Get in right around 8:00, 8:15.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. Any certain foods you eat consistently when you're in your peak time of work, or?

[Aaron Hinde]: I do pretty good on a heavier keto, higher protein diet. I have such a sweet tooth. I love carbs, but it really throws me off. So I do better in my much higher protein and healthy fat content, yeah.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. Cool. How about you? What's your rituals?

[Berké Brown]: I love it. Yeah, my ritual starts at night. I have a night ritual, and so what it is is real basic. I separate it into kind of grand vision, then small things to do. Did you fight the urge to-- the sleep urge?Because sometimes when you're working so hard, you're like, "Okay, I just got to keep going." So if I fight the sleep-- and I actually give them points, so there's a higher point system. If I fought the sleep urge, it's a higher point system. Right? So I have this on this-- I created it on Survey Monkey. And so it asks, "Did you fight the urge? Did you go to bed on time?" And it says, "What are the top three tasks that you have for tomorrow? Were you successful achieving your top three tasks today?" And then the little area from notes, lessons learned-- because I'm trying to, every time, fix myself a little bit more. Why is my ratio-- is it either that I'm putting too much on my plate-- I just need to know how long it takes me to do what I need to do so I can go to be good at that. And then I have a little space for kudos, where I get myself kudos on any successes in the day, even if I didn't do well. And then I get a percentage grade, which sets me up for the morning.

[Berké Brown]: When I wake up, I have a morning ritual. The morning ritual is the first three things that you're grateful for. It says, "What do you want to create in the world? What do you want to create in the world for others? What you want to create in the world for yourself?" Some type of affirmation. Three topics, three main things that you want to get done. Oh, ''What is the theme?" because I have my weeks separated by themes, so--

[Ash Kumra]: What do you mean by that?

[Berké Brown]: So Monday would be client day. That's when I have a major focus time for clients. So anything that, if I'm putting-- because the thing is, when you're just throwing all of your tasks out, randomly, throughout the week, there's no story. And the narrative is everything to be internally motivated. I have to have a reason why I'm doing this as opposed to just checking off the list. If my highest motivation is to check off a list, then I'm not motivated by my purpose. Right? So clients day, I set my clients, and during the focus hours that I have, then I have shotgun tasks. Those shotgun tasks are just any tasks that randomly need to get done that day. Right? And then I have a day where it's focusing on the finance or focusing on the marketing or focusing on-- so each day has its theme and its power. Right. So then I make sure that everything is put into the proper bucket, and then, from that space, I can allow myself to not have to think, "What day am I going to do that?" I'm going to do that on marketing day. It's as simple as that. Oh, personal self-motivation day? Sunday. That's when I connect to God. That's when I connect myself, to my spirit, and my social life. Who are the people around me that I need to connect with? Reach out to people.

 

[Berké Brown]: So then I have-- so I finish off. I do my meditation, and I do different types of meditation depending on how I feel. I used to be very strict on what type of-- I was trying to do transcendental meditation, but what happened was, because I felt like if I didn't do it, I was bad, it worked against me. So now, what happens is, I have flexible meditation. So what I do is, either I can do something as simple as [headspace?] or calm, where certain breaths that I do-- or if I decide to do transcendental, but I do it for a kind of period of time. And then I'm off into my day. And it ends with simple, "Did you do your stretches? Did you make your bed?" Because it's these small wins that give you the motivation to push on forward from there.

[Aaron Hinde]: I love it.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. So those are kind of like-- I say the night and the morning is actually one time. But it's your sandwich. From there, you're either controlled by what pops into your phone or by who talks to you or by what intention you want to set. You know what I mean?

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah.

[Berké Brown]: So that's extremely important to me.

[Aaron Hinde]: I love that, setting the intention for the day. Having a client day as the focus of this day or this week. That's powerful. Because I'm one of those multitask type of guys, where I know there's no such thing, but I like to have organized chaos going off, and I feel like I can hop from one thing or another. But because I get distracted so easy, having a theme-- it's like, "Okay, I'm going to crush New Business Day, and that's all I'm going focus on, and just kind of clear it out." That would helpful for someone like myself.

[Ash Kumra]: That's rad. It's funny. One little hack I use-- I keep my phone on silent the whole time. Because do you really need to hear the ring? I mean you will look at your phone. If someone's ringing, you will see a little light. You know what I mean? I think it's very easy for us to get distracted by our own distractions, like the phone. What are some distractions that you have learned to get out of your life? You mentioned TV. Is there anything else either you have gotten out? For me, it's not having the ringer on.

[Berké Brown]: Right. I'm thinking about my distractions. I think the distraction-- I'm not trying to go meta, okay?

[Ash Kumra]: Go meta.

[Berké Brown]: Because I'm not trying to-- it's not a philosophy class.

[Ash Kumra]: Remember, I said you can do anything...

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. Okay. Because the thing is, at the end of the day, meta comes down to what are you doing. I don't care what you can speak about. What do you end up doing? But I think, for me, one of the things is, even recently, you can have bad days or bad hours. You can have a little pity party sometimes. What happens is, when you're in a space that you're not feeling strong, you acknowledge it. So before, what I could do is, I could find myself being like, "I'm supposed to be strong now." Right? But the reality is, this is just that time that will pass. And when you allow that, you don't allow the self-sabotaging thoughts to get a grip on it. And when the grip is there, then you start to pull in narratives. You ever had that, where you're having a bad day, and you're like, "Oh, of course that would happen." Somebody smiles at you; you don't acknowledge it, but some somebody frowns, "Of course that would happen." And you pull the narrative to say how guilty or how bad the day was.

[Aaron Hinde]: Well, you're manifesting it.

[Berké Brown]: Absolutely. And manifestation is an interesting thing because I think it works both ways. You can actually create from nothing, a thing, or you can put up the station. 88.9 is going to only pick up 88.9 Right? So your antenna is the manifestation or whatever it is you're creating from nothing. Right, so but are you-- but the thing is, for me, one of the greatest things is that, when I'm with my clients, whether it's with an organization or with an individual, it's how quickly can we get you to bounce back. You're going to fall. It's not about how high can I get you. It's how fast can I get you to bounce back because that'll determine how high you get.

[Aaron Hinde]: Love it.

[Berké Brown]: So that's why, for me, if I have a bad day, it was just that moment, and I accept it; I honor it. I gave it its voice, but I'm not going to let it continue to talk to me because it's past. So that's something for me that's been very, very helpful. And so I'm going to try to have my clients engage in--

[Aaron Hinde]: What do they say, "All anxiety--" you look at a lot of psychological issues that we're dealing with that are heavily medicated today: depression, anxiety, right? It's focusing on things that have happened in the past that we cannot change or focusing on a future that has not happened yet. They're both symptoms of the exact same disease which is lack of being present right now. So for me, I find, when I get in the funk, or I get the demon on my shoulder whispering into my ear a little too frequently, or I get in that negative mindset, I will go for a little walk, take some deep breaths, and then be hyper vigilant, hyper present about everything, the way the sun is hitting the leaves and the wind is blowing and what the birds are doing. And just be so engaged because when you're hyper-present, you get very appreciative. It's so amazing. I mean that's why I live out in the mountains. It's so beautiful. We're so blessed to be alive right now and live in this ...

[Ash Kumra]: The greatest time to ever live.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, in this state. I mean--

[Ash Kumra]: I know. You're so right.

[Berké Brown]: Especially where you live.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah. It's just so amazing. And just to "stop and smell the roses" once in a while and appreciate that. Then guess what? All that negative self-talk goes away because they can't coexist. You can't exist in presence and appreciation and through negativity, depression, and anxiety at the same time.

[Ash Kumra]: You have an interesting energy about the Santa Cruz area because CrossFit was started down there, right?

[Aaron Hinde]: Greg, yeah. Started in Santa Cruz.

[Ash Kumra]: So did you guys know each other when you guys were building your business? I'm just curious because he launched around 2011. Maybe not right at that time, but he launched around the time when you launched FITAID.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, I never knew Greg. I saw him because I had memberships at World Gym, Gold's Gym, and Nautilus, mainly because the memberships were like 10 bucks a month each, and there were different sets of ladies at each gym [laughter]. And so I would hop around training at all three, and I'd see him running small groups of people in a gym and taking up three or four pieces of equipment at Gold's. And then two weeks later, he was gone because he got kicked out of that gym [laughter]. Then I'd see the 24 hour, doing the same thing--

[Berké Brown]: It's just beautiful.

[Aaron Hinde]: --and get kicked out of there. Then I'd see him at World's and get kicked out of there, and then, I think, out of frustration, is why he finally started his own gym. He's like, "I'm getting kicked out everywhere--"

[Ash Kumra]: I love that.

[Aaron Hinde]: --so I only knew Greg through that. And then very early in CrossFit, when I was a chiro, I was treating a lot of people from CrossFit headquarters and some of the athletes coming into town. My office was in Scotts Valley in Santa Cruz County, and that's where CrossFit headquarters is as well.

[Ash Kumra]: It's a small world. Yeah. So Berké, I love that you talked about bad days, and that's actually the one part I wanted to ask you both about is, how have you used mindset to overcome something that's been hard with your business? And obviously, I'd rather talk about the earlier days when you've got nothing to lose, and you have no sources. And why don't we start with you? And if you can be specific, that'd be great for our audience. You don't have to use actual names or numbers, but a specific situation where things were tough, but because of your mindset, you were able to get through it.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, and I would not just call it mindset. I would call it, say, intentional mindset or mindful mindset. Because we all have a mindset, regardless of whether we're intentional about it or not. And the less intentional we are, the more negative it can spiral. And then we're either tuning into that station or we're manifesting those negative things in our life. So being intentionable about mindset-- I think some of that early programming was helpful. And now I think about it, I almost got some of the opposite programming from my mother around money, "Money doesn't grow on trees," and that type of programming. But for me, there's so many challenges in the early days. I mean there's still so many today. I mean being an entrepreneur and putting it all out on the line. Burning your ships at the shore. There's so many challenges. It's daily that you could easily say, "Screw this. It's not worth it," and "I'm done." And the financial realities, too, and the financial pressures. So being aware that I am creating; I'm manifesting this reality.

[Aaron Hinde]: And that awareness started happening, I think, when I was a chiropractor, and there'd be somebody that I hadn't seen in the office for a couple of years. I'd wake up in the morning. Their image, their name was in my head. I'd walk in. Guess who would show up that day? "Oh, I hurt myself playing tennis," or whatever, "I got a rotary--" And I used to be like, "Oh, my gosh. I was just thinking about you this morning," and then it happened so frequently that I expected it. I knew it. I knew I was manifesting, and therefore, I wouldn't even mention it to the person anymore. It was just part of that reality. So bringing that into our business, and when things were going really bad and going, "Hey. This is temporary. This obstacle is the way. This little challenge is exactly what we need at this moment to deepen our relationship." If you're talking about my business partner and I or figure a marketing piece out that wasn't working or turn an investor pitch that we were getting a no on into yes's. If everything's a yes, and everything is hunky dory, then you don't change anything that you're doing, and therefore, you become stagnant, and you die off. Right? So looking at those challenges and those obstacles in a positive light and really challenging and taking those head on and knowing that that is exactly what you need.

[Aaron Hinde]: Tony Robbins says, "Life is not happening to us. It's happening for us." Right? It's happening for us. So when you buy into that, and I totally buy into that - in my deepest parts of my soul, I buy into that - then how you're approaching things and being conscious about your mindset is step one. Observing your thought process.

[Ash Kumra]: Okay. How about you, man?

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. I think, really, there's something big about knowing the story. When you look at a magician, right, and you see them do magic, you're like "Wow." But as soon as you see what the magic trick is, it's no longer magic. Right? All of the mysteriousness just dissipates because you know what's happening. One of the things-- I had a tanning business back in the day called Mocha Express Tanning [laughter].

[Ash Kumra]: Are you joking?

[Berké Brown]: I swear to you. And I literally--

[Ash Kumra]: Like '93 [laughter]?

[Berké Brown]: Right. Yeah, exactly. Mocha Express Tanning. This was back in the day, and it was a perfect thing because--

[Ash Kumra]: It worked.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah, right? That's what I did [laughter]. That's exactly what I did. I was the after--

[Aaron Hinde]: We're both brown, for those that can't see.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah, exactly. Right? So what happens is, I had this business idea where $7 per spray tan, and I was charging it for $9. I'm like, "Hey, this is business. Let's make this happen," right? Before I started, before I jumped in, I wanted to-- there's a book that I was reading that says, "Worst-case scenario, what would happen?" Right? The worst case scenario, barring death.

[Aaron Hinde]: Barring death.

[Berké Brown]: Right? Or sickness or some randomness. For me, it was closing because at the time, it was at the gym. I was with my mentor. He was helping me out and stuff like that. So it was like, "For it to be unsuccessful, and my mentor would be mad." Right? I was a young guy. One of my first businesses. I'm like, "Okay. Let me let me try it out." So I wrote down what would happen, and it says, "Now that you know, what would it require for you to get back to the black?" So I wrote that entire narrative, that entire story, of what would happen to get back to the black. And guess what happened? One of my employees didn't show up for my mentor's client. And he's like, "Mocha Express is done." And I remember the moment where I was, living at... I remember what happened, what I felt, and it wasn't grey depression. It was déjà vu. I've been here before. And since I'm not dead, I know how to get out of this. So what I did was, I was able to not overwhelm myself with this feeling of failure and realize that there is a escape. There's a way out. Most people are afraid to do anything because they think they will die.

[Berké Brown]: It was an awesome story. I think it was Steve McQueen and Bruce Lee. They were running, and Steve McQueen's just like, "Bruce. Bruce, I'm out. I'm going to die." So Bruce Lee turns around, and he's just jogging in place, and he goes, "Then die [laughter]." Right?

[Aaron Hinde]: "Then die."

[Berké Brown]: "Then die." If you're going to die, then die, but the truth is, we fear we're going to die; we're not going to die. We fear we're going to die, and that fear is what kills us, not death. Right?

[Ash Kumra]: Dude, I love that story because remember, offline, we were talking about my near-death experiences?

[Berké Brown]: Right.

[Ash Kumra]: With mavericks. With skiing. It's because I didn't think I was going to die, in a way, which is why I got over it quickly. It was like it sucks; I was hurt; move on because I knew wasn't my time to leave this world. Not from a spiritual-- I was just like, "I'm just not ready to die."

[Berké Brown]: Dude, your thinking has so much to do with how you physically act, how you manifest, whether it's a real manifestation or just focus. But what happened was, I wasn't dead. And I was able to rebuild the business, have a re-grand opening with a partner, and then sell it off to them. So what happens? The narrative is, I literally made money to a massive lesson and tell a story that I'm sharing with the audience right now. And it's from my own experiences, and it's by me understanding that failure is not failure unless you stop. Right? It's that existence of understanding that that really sets the tone. So even with my clients, just a real quick aside is that when my clients start, I say, "You're going to have a down period." I'm waiting for that moment that you fail because that's when we can really get to work. I'm preparing you, and I'm letting you know what's going to happen. Then when you have that down moment-- what do you call-- it's like a valley of despair because you start off optimistic and excited, all the hype. And as time goes by, you realize it's not as easy as you thought it was. Then you're like, "Am I even capable of this?" At that moment, is where all the tools truly come out to empower people to push past that. So the downs are part of the tools and the data that you can pull out on how to bring yourself back up. That's the bounce back. So understanding the story is what makes it easier to live through it.

[Ash Kumra]: I love that you talked about mentors. And actually, that's actually my final question before we adjourn. Because I don't know if you realize, but it's already 5:46. We've been talking for over 30 minutes straight. That's how fast and inspiring this is. So it's been fun. Tell us. I'm curious. Who is someone you admire? You just think, "God, they have that intentional mindset, and they're learning and growing. They're just crushing it," and this can be-- I want to hear about someone besides family, someone you know. I want to hear for someone that you've read or you look up to and why. And then we'll talk about personal mentors.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah. I would say aspirational mentor that I've heard speak live but never met personally would be Richard Branson, for me. Because no, he's not a brilliant engineer, like an Elon Musk, and he's not a Steve Jobs, but he can take existing things and just make them so much better. And just the way he shows up in the world and how he holds space is so incredible. The guy is just like the ultimate entrepreneurial rock star, so he would be my pick.

[Ash Kumra]: How about you, man?

[Berké Brown]: You know what? It's interesting. There's, gosh, so many. It's such a difficult thing. What came to mind first, and it's not literally his leadership style, but Steve Jobs. And the reason I say that is only for the ability to see something so hard. I can't even say strong. He saw it so hard that other people believed in it and believed it and created it. There's something. I forgot what it was called. Do you know? He said that people said there was an aura, like the job aura or something like that.

[Aaron Hinde]: Reality distortion.

[Berké Brown]: Reality distortion field. Oh! That is all I'm talking about. That, right there. The ability to believe in something so clearly that other people get vision, and you distort reality, and all reality is what the rest of the world has accepted. To where what you accept and don't accept, others accept and don't accept. And because I accept that all people are great in their own unique way, then they accept that. You know what I mean?

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah.

[Berké Brown]: I've got to just say that my-- I'm going to share my vision statement real quick because I got to get out. It says, "I envision a world where boundless imagination and creativity is applied to life itself. Where the very art of living is mastered and evolved as each individual is empowered to express their unique greatness in the world." That's all I'm here to do. And anybody that has the ability to help bring that to reality is a mentor of mine. And when I see that reality distortion field, I want that vision to be the distortion field that people walk into when they come by me. And then when I come by the people that work with me. Because it's no longer just about me. It's an idea that's bigger. Right? So when I hear that phrase that you said, there's something powerful in it.

[Ash Kumra]: I love it.

[Aaron Hinde]: It's great.

[Ash Kumra]: How about personal mentors, someone whom you're around that's been in your life?

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, my father would be the first mentor of mine. And my mom has very late stage Alzheimer's right now and just watching him be so congruent with how he raised us and taking care of her. Ben Altadonna, a good friend of mine. I told a story before. When we were broke, just getting started, he wrote $25,000 check for us to be part of a big mastermind marketing group, which really made a difference for our business, with no paperwork, nothing. "Just pay me back when you can." And he's also opened my mind up to the possibilities with marketing and behavioral psychology, human psychology. He's been really big. Also, Michael Watkins, ex superintendent in Santa Cruz County, whose-- I was twice elected on the county board of education. He's the superintendent, and just made a major impression on me at that point in my life. I just wanted to acknowledge him as well.

[Ash Kumra]: How about you, man?

[Berké Brown]: Yeah. I would say my mom. She's Ethiopian-American, and she is the embodiment of love and compassion. And no matter how alpha or weight-lifting and all that stuff that I can be, there's this heart of compassion that I really got from her. And her ability to love and her ability to connect with her higher power, I think that's one most beautiful things. So no matter how much knowledge you have, no matter how much strength you have, no matter how much charisma you have, if you don't have that center, then you're using it wrong. Right? So I think that my mom is somebody that is a mentor to me. My father, when I was younger, provided me these books and this pathway. You know what I mean? So I have to absolutely acknowledge that. One of my mentors when I was at Berkeley, Dan Mulhern, just took me under his wing. And he talked about everyday leadership, and that's leading up. You are a leader no matter where you are. It is not to do with anything about what your title is or what your role is. Leading is something that a human does. And then Travis Mayfield. He's one of my first mentors. He had me read books and write essays about it. And one of the greatest things I got from him-- the guy, still to this day, he calls or texts and leaves a message on my phone. He does it for like 40 people. The guy was in Vietnam. He's amazing. He has three fingers. They call him The Claw. He's a beast, but he calls with a motivational quote every morning. He's been doing that for me for about four or five years. Right? But also, one of the things that he said that was the most powerful-- he goes, "Whenever somebody gives you a compliment, you give it away as quick as possible. Just give it away."

[Ash Kumra]: Give me an example of that. That's really cool.

[Berké Brown]: He said it. I just did right now. If I said, "Give it away," as soon as you said, "That's really cool," he did it. Because I don't need to own that. Because whatever I keep, my ego keeps. Whatever my ego keeps, my present self doesn't keep, and the world loses.

[Ash Kumra]: No doubt. Yeah. Okay.

[Berké Brown]: Right? So that's something that...

[Ash Kumra]: Well, I want to thank you both for being on the show. We're going to get you on for a-- [laughter]. We can talk about it. We could talk about life. And I'd actually love to talk about having a good parent because, by the way, I don't have kids yet. But when I'm near having kids, I'm going to call you because you seem like the best father ever.

[Berké Brown]: Right?

[Ash Kumra]: I am serious, man. I'm tearing up inside. Dude, your ritual with your son?

[Berké Brown]: I know!

[Ash Kumra]: And the way you--

[Berké Brown]: 00:37:25.747 It's awesome, man.

[Ash Kumra]: You're a very inspiring father.

[Aaron Hinde]: Any parent out there will tell you we're all doing the best that we know how. Our parents did the best. As much as they could've screwed us up or did screw us up, they did the best that they thought they could, and I mean we'll find out in the future [laughter] how it turns out.

[Berké Brown]: Manifest. Manifest. Manifest.

[Aaron Hinde]: Yeah, exactly [laughter].

[Ash Kumra]: My last question for both of you is just, what is a quote or phrase that you live by? We'll end on that note.

[Aaron Hinde]: Do you want to start? I'll jump in if you're still thinking, so.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah.

[Aaron Hinde]: So I mentioned Ben Altadonna, my mentor. I was at a marketing conference that he was putting on. There was a hypnotist there, Marshall Sylver. He's been on David Letterman. He's a big hypnotist. He has a show in Vegas. Flashy Rolex watch full of diamonds. He brought a bunch of people up, hypnotized them, and I tried to go up to get hypnotized. I'm not hypnotizable, apparently, so I got kicked out of the group. But he had people doing all kinds of crazy stuff. Long story short, he's at the bar after the day ended. I go up and sit next to him. I'm like, "Hey Marshall. I'm just starting out. Is there anything you can give me, anything I can put into practice that'll subconsciously train myself to be successful in life?" He said, "Aaron, yes there is." He said, "Every day, when you wake up, say, 'Today is a fabulous day filled with opportunity and potential.' And if you do that every morning for five years, you'll be a million dollars richer." That's how specific he was. So when I'm dropping my son off, and he opens the door to go to school, he always looks at me, and we both say, "Today is a fabulous day full of opportunity and potential."

[Ash Kumra]: Love it. How about you, man?

[Berké Brown]: That's beautiful, man.

[Ash Kumra]: That's awesome.

[Berké Brown]: I think it's the, "Wash your bowl." You know what I mean? Right?

[Aaron Hinde]: I love it. It's the greatest.

[Berké Brown]: It's got to be. Because literally, with my clients, and just with myself-- so I'll just tell-- the quick story is, there's a new monk. He comes to the monastery, and he sees the chief monk, the head monk, and he's like, "I'm going to go talk to him. I want to ask him a question." So he finished eating, and he walks up to the monk, and he goes, "Hey, I'm new here, and is there any advice that you can give me that can help me evolve in my time here?" And the monk just kind of smiled at him, and he looked at him. He goes, "Wash your bowl." And so he's like, "Wait, what?" So he grabs his bowl, and he's washing it, and as he's washing it, he's noticing the water. He's feeling the food cleaning off. He's understanding that he's cleaning off this bowl, and it's going to be repurposed and reused by somebody else, and he kind of becomes present to the moment. He realizes that there's a deep truth in it. And I think, for most people, everybody's spending most of their lives trying to get somewhere else, myself included. But when I think about, "Wash your bowl," it just means, "Be present." And so one of the things that is the most important thing is that of all the things that can happen the world, the only thing that ever does happen is what's happening right now. And to be present in that and to find joy in that because then the rest is just the cherry on top. You know what I mean?

[Aaron Hinde]: Amen, brother.

[Ash Kumra]: Well, thank you both for being on the show. Sincerely. This was a great interview.

[Berké Brown]: It was awesome.

[Aaron Hinde]: Thanks for having us. It was fun.

[Berké Brown]: Yeah, this was great.

[Ash Kumra]: All right, everyone, you are tuned in to Entrepreneur Nation on KUCI 88.9 FM. If you are interested in connecting with me, A-S-H K-U-M-R-A@KUCI.org. Or just find me on Instagram or LinkedIn. A-S-H K-U-M-R-A. We'll definitely make sure to promote all the projects that these two individuals are working on. And yeah, I'd love your support, and I'd love to hear your feedback on upcoming guests. We got a great show next week. We're actually going to talk about how to crush it in investing. We actually have Accelerate OC's Carey Ransom joining us. He's one of the top Angel Ventures investors in Orange County. He was actually one of the founding investors of Veggie Grill, so I'm curious to talk to him about that as well. But yeah, keep supporting the station. It's a 24 by 7 endeavor. One thing I love about this station is that there's always something on. Even on Christmas Day, there's something on. Even if it's recorded or prerecorded, it doesn't matter. You've got to support media, and you get to hear amazing stories and music and guests like the two that we just had. And yeah, have a great day, and I'm going to play you some music before our next show comes on. Thanks. [music]

[Ash Kumra]: All right. We done.

[Aaron Hinde]: All right [laughter].



> > > Live well.

Are You in the Mood for a Fall Float That's Actually Good for You and Delicious?

FitBiz Talk: Cashing in on the ATM

On this episode of FitBiz Talk, discover how LIFEAID co-founder Aaron Hinde found his calling, creating products that help get the sugary crap drinks out of the hands of as many people as possible. Aaron talks about this journey and his recommendation for those looking to enter the market—sky's the limit when you cash in on the ATM of life with Alignment, Trajectory and Momentum in your life and business. (63:00)

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

How to Find Your Business Niche

Whether you open a business in a unique industry or a saturated market, it is important to differentiate yourself from the competition to win over your audience. Find out how!

Click here to read the full article. 

 

Are You in the Mood for a Fall Float That's Actually Good for You and Delicious?

Who says immunity and dessert don't mix!? Sip, sip, hooray! Try this recipe for a Fall Ice-Cream Float that will rock your world while helping to actually boost your immune system.

Find the healthy recipe here.

"I fear not the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced one kick 10,000 times."
—Bruce Lee

Scaling Up: Business Solutions for Social Problems

A must-read practical guide for social and corporate entrepreneurs.

Check out the book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 25

Wellness Force Radio - Ep. 303: Faith, Family, Fatherhood & FITAID

On Wellness Force Radio episode 303, co-founder and president of LIFEAID Beverage CompanyAaron Hinde joins us for a second interview to take a deep dive into how you can cultivate mental resilience and fortitude, how to expand your consciousness through new ways of being, and how to be a good role model for your children by adopting healthier habits for life. (78:00)

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

 

Why is CBD Everywhere?

Cannabidiol (CBD) is being touted as a magical elixir, a cure-all now available in bath bombs, dog treats and even pharmaceuticals. Is it worth all the hype?

Read the full New York Times article here.

Dear Pessimist, Optimist and Realist—
While you guys argued whether the glass is full or empty, I sold the glass.
–Sincerely,
Entrepreneur-ist

Start With Why

Bestselling author Simon Sinek explains how leaders who've had the greatest influence in the world all think, act, and communicate the same way, and it all starts with why.

Check out his book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 24


Ep. 008 | James Stratman: Be the Leader They Won't Disappoint

On this episode of 20 Percenters, the podcast host sits down with founder of Peak Nutrition & Modern Warrior, James "the Viking" Stratman. They discuss leadership, goals, team-building and mentorship. "Those who go the distance focus on the things that matter: Health, Wealth, Relationships and Time!" (60:00)

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

FITAID Debuts New Technology at the 2019 Spartan World Championship with Custom Augmented-Reality App

Leading recovery drink brand LIFEAID Beverage Co. offers event attendees competitive mobile entertainment experience and chance to win $1,000s in prizes with "Spartan Search" in North Lake Tahoe on Sept. 28-29!
Click here to read the press release. 

 

30+ Healthy Fall Superfoods, According to a Nutritionist

Happy Fall Equinox! Load these fall foods onto your plate for the best nutrition — and flavor — of the season.

Read the full article here.

“If you give up at the first sign of struggle, you’re really not ready to be successful.”
–Kevin Hart

Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance

New York Times bestseller Angela Duckworth shows anyone striving to succeed that the secret to outstanding achievement is not talent, but a special blend of passion and persistence she calls “grit.”

Check out her book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 23

There are few people in fitness — much less fitness entrepreneurs — who keep it honest and real like Aaron Hinde. He’s an open book, someone who’s just as eager to explain the bad as he is to celebrate the good. The Co-Founder and President of LIFEAID Beverage Company — makers of FITAID — Aaron is a constant presence at the CrossFit Games, where his company is one of the sport’s most visible sponsors. He counts top athletes and coaches among his friends. But that success didn’t come without major sacrifice and some serious “lean times” that left Aaron questioning whether his path was really correct.

In this episode of The BarBend Podcast, we talk about LIFEAID’s rise from scrappy startup to major fitness player. That includes guerilla marketing campaigns, bootstrapped operations, and trying to build a brand while living from one week to the next.

We also dive into how Aaron’s background as a clinical chiropractor impacts his perspective today, allowing him to spot trends in fitness before they even take off. Aaron also shares some of his craziest CrossFit Games stories, along with what you might not realize about the world’s top CrossFitters.

If you want to know what’s coming next in fitness, or simply need a dose of perspective when it comes to fitness entrepreneurship, tune in!


In this episode of The BarBend Podcast, guest Aaron Hinde and host David Thomas Tao discuss:


TRANSCRIPTION

Aaron Hinde: If you have a shitty day at work, it’s going to affect you at home. If you have a fight with your spouse, it’s going to affect you at work. It’s just life. Knowing that it’s just life, when I’m on the road, 55, 60 flights a year like I was a few years back, I’m going to enjoy myself as much as I can because I’m grinding it out.

 David Tao: Welcome to the BarBend podcast where we talk to top athletes, coaches, influencers, and minds from around the world of strength sports, presented by BarBend.com

Today, on the BarBend, I’m talking to Aaron Hinde, the president and co-creator of LIFEAID Beverage Company. Probably best known as the makers of FITAID. You may recognize them from their sponsorship of the CrossFit Games, on the social media pages of some of the world’s top fitness athletes, or in coolers and fridges in thousands of gyms and stores worldwide

Long before he became a ready-to-drink beverage tycoon, Aaron was a practicing chiropractor. His outlook on, and approach to fitness changed after finding CrossFit around 2009, and in many ways, Aaron’s company is a reflection on the gaps he saw in the wellness and recovery space. These days FITAID is a household name in the CrossFit community, but it wasn’t always that way.

In this episode, Aaron shares some borderline hilarious stories about guerrilla marketing in the company’s early days, including sneaking backpacks of product into events. He also talks about the early sacrifices he, his business partners, and his family made to get LIFEAID off the ground, including some very lean times where the company’s future and Aaron’s very livelihood was shaky at best.

If you’re someone who’s interested in the business side of fitness, or simply learning how one of the most driven people in that community thinks and approaches life, I think you’ll really enjoy this recording. Just a quick reminder, if you’re enjoying the BarBend podcast, make sure to leave a rating and review in your podcast app of choice.

This helps us stay on track in bringing you the best content possible week after week. If there’s someone you’d absolutely love to hear on a future BarBend podcast episode, please let us know in your podcast review. I personally read each and every review so your suggestions will be seen.

All right, today on the BarBend podcast, I’m joined by Aaron Hinde:. He is the president and co-creator of LIFEAID BevCo. You might know them a little better for their drinks like FITAID, GOLFERAID, TRAVELAID. Aaron, thanks so much for joining us on the podcast. I know it’s been a little while since we talked, but it’s great to hear your voice as always.

Aaron Hinde: David, thanks for having me on.

David Tao: I was first introduced to you and your company years ago through the CrossFit space, but LIFEAID goes way back. It’s a little bit older and has had a longer history than a lot of people might know of. Tell us a little bit about the early days of the company, how you met you business partner, and what inspired you to start a company like this in the first place.

Aaron Hinde: We just came from a CrossFit Games couple weeks ago. I was almost getting choked up being in the middle of a stadium. Justin Bergh brought me out there and we had the big branding on Sunday. We were the presenting sponsor on Sunday.

We’ve come quite a way since 2011 when we were sneaking half a case of product into the CrossFit Games with our backpack, trying to get cans to some key individuals. Ryan and I met in a CrossFit gym here in Santa Cruz in 2009 and hit it off. We became buddies. We started the company in 2011 and been off to the races ever since.

David Tao: Did you start out building a product for the CrossFit community, or were you targeting a different athletic community? What was the target consumer back in 2011?

Aaron Hinde: You could say that party goers are athletic out on the dance floor, but really our first concept and idea was a product called RAVERAID because we were going to festivals and Burning Man. A lot of us take certain supplements like 5HDB and milk thistle, B vitamins. You’re out having a good time for a weekend and dancing all night. That was the first concept.

We were thinking, “Well, shit, if we’re going to do something for the festival community, why don’t we do something for CrossFit because we CrossFit, too.” That’s where FITAID came along. Well, we golf once a week back when we had free time so why not something for golf. That’s a unique sport. We registered about 75, 80 domain names over one evening over some drinks.

David Tao: It’s interesting, too, because the festival-goer crowd, you might go to one, maybe two festivals as an adult every year because you’re living your life. It’s a lot of time off but when you’re a CrossFitter, or you’re an athlete, if you can target that community with a product, they’re going to take it every day, maybe twice a day.

Aaron Hinde: Yeah. We didn’t get serious legs with this company until we went all in with CrossFit and FITAID. We launched three products almost, back to back to back. FITAID, GOLFERAID and PARTYAID.

We actually launched GOLFERAID first because we thought it was the lowest thing through those, you know, no competitions, new product for golfers. Shortly after that we launched FITAID and then PARTYAID and we were so distracted. There was three separate businesses. Basically, we had three separate websites, different social media.

We were doing events where you know, we’d be at a golf event with polo shirt and GOLFERAID hats playing golf, go down to San Francisco to a fire spinning festival slinging PARTYAID, and then do a CrossFit comp, with our Lulu gear on, Reeboks, spinning FITAID. It was challenging from both the human and financial capital perspective.

We got some sage advice from an advisor saying, “Look, you’ve got to really choose a single target market,” and even though FITAID and CrossFit wasn’t generating most of our capital. Our funding at the time was coming primarily from GOLFERAID, we decided to go all in with FITAID and the CrossFit channel.

David Tao: Let’s talk about those early years at the CrossFit Games. In 2019, you couldn’t go anywhere in Madison without seeing LIFEAID, without seeing FITAID. I mean, you guys are very integrated into that, but back in 2011, sneaking backpacks of the product in to try and get it to athletes. What was that like?

Tell us about kind of the logic there and how you made those very early inroads in the community when a lot of companies and a lot of people who had ideas really didn’t know how to enter that market?

Aaron Hinde: I’d like to say that we brought the fun to CrossFit. I mean, for years CrossFit was a very conservative community, it still is. Very, very strict in all ways, which there’s a lot of benefit from that.

I mean the training regimen is superior to anything else out there. We’re all about work hard, play hard and so we brought the party to CrossFit and and we aligned ourselves with some early influencers.

Bailey was one of the first games athletes so we got on on the team. Influencers like Jackie Perez and Christmas Abbott, very early to partner with us. Kenny Santucci…We maintain those friendships and relationships to this day.

People like that were instrumental in creating some legitimacy, and then also the cool factor that I think the brand carries through to today.

David Tao: One thing I definitely remember from years ago at the CrossFit Games, interacting with you, is the FITAID house. It was kind of famous. You know that’s where the party was, after it was going on, or after the games or after the events. A lot of that is just your and Orion’s personal connections.

It’s just like brute force, you meeting people, befriending people, taking them under your wing, bringing them into the circle. When did you start realizing that marketing in this community, it wasn’t all going to happen online, it wasn’t just all paid acquisition, you were going to have to get out there be a face, shake some hands and make some buddies?

Aaron Hinde: I think too often people separate work life and personal life or home life as if they’re two different things. I recognized early on, that’s total bullshit. If you have a shitty day at work, it’s going to affect you at home, if you have a fight with your spouse it’s going to affect your work, it’s just life.

So knowing that it’s just life, when I’m on the road, 55, 60 flights a year, like I was a few years back, I’m going to enjoy myself as much as I can because I’m grinding it out and I’m not going to be with my family.

I’m going to forge relationships, I’m going to surround myself with the people that I want to hang out with, and that are fun, and that are energy chargers and energy trainers, people that are making emotional deposits to everybody around people that are coming from an abundance mindset and not scarcity.

So really being selective about who we’re investing our time and energy into good people. Good people, we get other good people, and then we create that community.

David Tao: You’ve been in the CrossFit community or around it for a long time. Back in 2009, you were you were doing CrossFit. That kind of makes you an early adopter. A decades like a lifetime in CrossFit years. What surprised you most about how the community has grown and what impact has that had on you as a business person and on your business?

Aaron Hinde: Well, CrossFit basically gamified working out. I’ve been going to the gym and Globo Gym my entire life. I was a personal trainer. I was a sports chiropractor for 10 years, that’s how I got into CrossFit is HQ.

Some of the athletes, when I was in Scotts Valley for 10 years, were coming into my office and getting treated and they’d challenge me. “Well, why don’t you come work out with us?” I was going to, I think, World Gym at the time. I’m like, “Yeah, no problem.”

I’ve been in all sorts of different training modalities. I’ll never forget that first workout where I saw the other two guys in the class that looked like they were in the best shape. I’m like, “All right, that’s who I’m going to pace myself against.” I can’t remember what the workout was. I remember there was a lot of running and pull ups and burpees.

Round one, I’m right with the top guys and then round two, something just happened my body just shuts down. I [inaudible 10:39] . I didn’t puke because I absolutely hate puke. I only puke like once a decade, but I was there and I was so on the verge of puking. I’m like, “All right, there’s definitely a piece of my fitness missing here.”

I think it’s that community that CrossFit has. It’s the competitive nature that it has. It’s gamification, and that’s just that special…That secret sauce of utilizing multiple modalities. You can come from bodybuilding background, gymnastics, powerlifting, weightlifting, and it all works here in CrossFit.

David Tao: You were a sports chiropractor and that was a successful career of yours before LIFEAID even existed as a company, before it was a twinkle in your eye. How do you think that changed your perspective, getting in to CrossFit as an athlete, as opposed to someone like myself?

I had a sports background, I didn’t have that medical background, I didn’t have a decade or more of experience working with clients, working with patients. Did it create any hesitation for you to dive into CrossFit in a big way or did it maybe, you think, help the way you entered that community or approached that training methodology?

Aaron Hinde: Well, I really liked the functional move at CrossFit. A lot of people were, “Oh, you’re going to get injured.” I was treating bodybuilders and professional athletes for years and years. Bodybuilders have zero mobility to over-generalize.

The issues I was seeing treating CrossFitters it was usually due to lack of pre-hab or post-hab, that if you weren’t warming up properly, or you weren’t cooling down properly, then you’re going to get injured. Same type of issues that I was seeing with bodybuilders, a lot of rotator cuff injuries and low back injuries specifically. Those are the two areas that we can get jacked up.

Now, thanks to Kelly and MobilityWOD, ROMWOD, and things like that people are taking that more seriously and understand that you have to integrate that into your training.

David Tao: Yes, specialization can breed injury or it can breed weaknesses, as I’m sure you’ve seen.

Aaron Hinde:  Yes. 100 percent.

David Tao: When did when did you start realizing that LIFEAID could become the day job, so to speak? Was there a point where you were like, maybe I don’t want to be a chiropractor anymore full-time, maybe I want to do this or maybe I can. What was the moment where you thought that’s possible?

Aaron Hinde:  Probably way too early, when it wasn’t really possible. I do believe that to be successful in whatever you’re doing, you have to burn the ships to the shore and it’s impossible to serve two masters.

I knew that to make LIFEAID a household name, I had to sell my chiropractic practice and go all in. I think I did that like I said, way, way too early, and really put my family in some serious jeopardy.

We had some very lean times living in a 400-square-foot mobile home with two kids, off the grid, and living on basically no income, about 1000 bucks a month. California doesn’t get you much. Eating mac and cheese most days a week with a can of tuna. It was really lean.

I just thank God that things worked out and things fell into place because we could have gone out of business at least a dozen times. We had more bills than we had any revenue coming in. Those bills were due the next day.

Then miraculously, something would come through. A check would come through, an investor would come through, a purchase order would come through, something that just gave us a little bit more runway. We ran that game for multiple years until we finally started getting enough traction where we’re having more money coming in than was going out.

David Tao: I think a lot of people look at the big sponsors of the CrossFit Games. I’m not talking, the Reeboks of the world, I’m talking about the LIFEAIDs of the world, the ROMWODs of the world, these companies that are built around the CrossFit community and we see them with these big sponsorships now, these big tents putting on these awesome events.

There are very few companies that were built from the ground up in the CrossFit community that I think didn’t go through those lean times. A lot of those companies didn’t make it. A lot of the companies you saw at the Games in 2013, ’14, they didn’t make it.

Do you think that was the fact that you’re still here, that LIFEAID is a success? What percentage would you attribute that to luck or fortune, and what percentage would you attribute that to acumen that you had to build super quickly?

Aaron Hinde: I wouldn’t say we’ve built super quickly. We’ve been around for almost a decade now. It’s been a slow grind. You’re right, the majority, probably 90 percent of those companies aren’t around.

If you were to rewind back to 2013. What is it? Some of it’s timing, some of it’s luck, some of it’s just the team that we surround ourselves with, and the tenacity. We grind, we don’t take no for an answer.

Like you said earlier, we really focus on relationships and relationship building. I think if you’re doing the right things over time, it puts you on a certain trajectory. It’s all about trajectory. Many people, especially young people focus on velocity, how quickly are things happening.

That’s the exact wrong approach because as you’ve probably seen in your life, and I know I’ve seen with multiple acquaintances and friends. If you’re on the wrong trajectory, if you’re on a negative trajectory, and that gets fueled with, a relative dies and left you a couple of hundred grand, what happens? They just crash and burn even faster.

You need to be focused on trajectory, not velocity. That’s what we were always focused on. Doing good things, creating great products, forging relationships, making emotional deposits, and just keeping on a positive trajectory over time, and over time, that started to build that momentum and that momentum is what carried us through to today.

David Tao: It’s like you hear about the worst thing…The old saying, “The worst thing you can do is win the lottery,” because if you’re not set up for that success, then you don’t have the infrastructure around it, you’re going to burn through the cash, you’re going to end up lower than when you started.

Aaron Hinde: Yes. We saw that in my era, 15, 20 years ago in professional athletics. How many of the superstars of my time are completely broke? Now, fortunately, that doesn’t happen too often anymore, because they align themselves with smart financial advisors and things that protect their assets and money.

Back in the day, man, it’s amazing a guy making millions of dollars a year, broke after a few years after retirement because they just don’t understand that the money eventually does run out, it does get lean, you have to be prepared for the ups and the downs.

You can’t build a life and a business model around things always executing at 100 percent. The money’s never going to get lean against. I think it was a blessing that I had to go through some really rough times in 2009, 10′, 11′, 12′, and lived in a very lean fashion.

Now that things have eased up a little bit for me, I have have way greater perspective and respect when it comes to finances. That was never a strong suite for me.

David Tao: In the back half of this podcast, I want to get into your perspective on recovery and how performance has evolved in CrossFit over the years. I’d be remiss if I didn’t ask you, at this point, what is your most memorable, or craziest CrossFit Games experience? I know that you spend a lot of time with a lot of very interesting people.

They like to get up to some good things, they like to get up some situations that can sometimes get a little dicey in LA and now Maddison. Is there a moment that sticks out to you from the CrossFit Games, you’re like, “Man, I’m never going to forget this.”

Aaron Hinde: I don’t know if I could call anyone out here, although I could. There’s probably some stories that wouldn’t be rated for this podcast.

I think one of my most memorable moments was, we were still in LA. We were throwing the official after-party. We had an ’80s band, and it was an ’80s theme. It was the first time we did a theme party. We were like, “How is this going to turn out?”

Like 75 percent of the people that showed up, showed up in the craziest ’80s outfit. The ’80s band was jamming. We have a couple of MTV stars, Johnny Bananas was there, and Kenny, and a bunch of games athletes.

I just remember everyone jumping up and down to the likes of ’80s songs. I’m like, “All right, we brought the fun.” It was a good time, but that’s probably the PG version of it.

David Tao: You look around and you look at some of the games athletes…because I remember that after-party. You look around and you think, “I don’t think any of these athletes…I don’t think many of them were alive in the ’80s at a certain point.”

Aaron Hinde:  Yeah, that’s right. They probably listened to it through their parents’ radios and car stereos.

David Tao: To transition the conversation a little bit, LIFEAID was born out of this idea that there are products that could help athletic recovery. You mentioned some other companies that are doing that…MobilityWOD, ROMWOD.

This ecosystem that’s been built up around not only helping athletes perform better, but recover better, the other 23 hours of the day, or 22 hours of the day they’re not in the gym. What do you think athletes, specifically in the CrossFit community, might still get wrong about recovery?

Aaron Hinde: I think, as an athlete, you can’t just take a one-size fits all approach and go, “OK, yeah. I’m going to do this X, Y and Z. You need to figure out what works for your body. Someone might go to a chiropractor and be, “Oh, that didn’t work for me.”

That’s like going to a dentist and saying, “That wasn’t the right fit,” so dentistry doesn’t work now. There’s a chiropractor out there that can help you and seriously help you in ways with your bio-mechanics and mobility. You’ve got to find the right person that’s doing the right techniques and the right orders specifically for you.

The more you can be in tune with your body and dial it in, whether it’s nutrition, whether it’s mobility, whether it’s pre-hab, post-hab, chiropractic, PT, pain management, whatever it is. Make it specific for you because every body is unique. Every movement pattern’s unique. Old injuries are unique to you. Genetics are unique.

You need to have a very specific regimen or protocol that works best for you and your body and not just say, “Rich does this or Matt does this and therefore I’m going to do it the same way they do.” No, no, they’re doing what’s best for their body. You need to do what’s best for you.

David Tao: They’ve also built that support system over time. One reason we see Rich Froning and it seems like he was getting better every year. Matt Fraser, Tia-Clair Toomey, it’s like they’re getting better and stronger every year.

They’re fine tuning, not only the techniques they have for recovery and training, but their support system. Their coaches are getting smarter about what those individual athletes need.

Aaron Hinde: I’ve become friends with Henshaw over the last couple of years. The conversations we have are amazing. The attention to detail that he is aware of and teaching his clients is amazing. It’s like next level stuff. I don’t know how.

As long as he’s not injured, anyone can catch up with Matt because I know some of his coaches and the detail that they’re putting into the training. I’m like, “This is some next level shit.” It’s phenomenal how the sport has evolved, and the coaches have evolved.

David Tao: When you have perspective on these athletes, it’s not surprising that success begets success. If you work your way to the top, the resources open up, coaches want to work with you. You have the income from winning these competitions, from the sponsorships that allows you to train full-time.

That gap seems like it’s almost growing for those very elite athletes who can build the living around this, and those who are trying to get to the top. They might not even have the resources to catch up right now, it seems.

Aaron Hinde: That’s a great perspective and a great point. You’re right. Jacob Heppner just quit his job. He was working full-time, top 10 games athletes. How many people in the top 10 are working full-time? Zero. If you have the resources and ability to do this full time and access to the best coaches, you’re going to continue to excel so it creates a bigger and bigger gap.

That’s why we continue to see the top guys without too many surprises continue to be the top guys and the top gals because that disparity exists and will continue to exist for those that can put their full time effort and not have to have to a “day job” and have the sponsorship dollars, coaching and nutrition all given to them.

David Tao: It’s not to take anything away, I don’t mean to take anything away from what those athlete…the work they’re putting in. It’s a full-time job and they’re putting in every hour, every minute of their day is optimized for performance or recovery.

The coaches aren’t going to do the work for you. In fact, they’re going to give you more work to do, they’re going to give you more to work on. It’s taxing and one thing I have the utmost respect for the Matts and the Tias of the world, to stay at the top you have to…I hope that you do enjoy that success, but you got to stay hungry and it doesn’t get any easier.

Aaron Hinde: Right, and that door wouldn’t even be open if they weren’t putting in the work. That’s assumed. Is like when people talk about, “Oh, so-and-so got popped for steroids and this for and that’s for…” I go, “They might be juicing, but they still put in the work.” You don’t hit the home run Barry Bonds did without putting in the work.

He might have had some help from the special sauce…That type of thing has been prevalent through all types of sports, Lance Armstrong, same thing. You look at any great athlete who has been caught cheating, they still put in the work. The steroids don’t do the work for you.

David Tao: You have access to, and spend a lot of time with these top athletes. For the average fan, our window in to them is one or two competitions a year and it’s social media. Not everything…you don’t see everything on camera, you don’t see everything even behind the scenes, when those documentaries come out and you definitely don’t see everything on social media as far as recovery and training.

What are some things, you don’t have to name names, you think these top athletes are doing to optimize their recovery, to optimize their training, that the average fan might not be aware of?

Aaron Hinde: First of all, an average fan out there, you’ve got to realize. Matt is just a dude, Rich is just a dude, Heppner is just a dude, Tia is just a chick. Sara is just a chick. They’re no different than us, they are just dudes and chicks just trying to do the best that they can. They’ve realized that they are really good at this thing called CrossFit.

The more you put people up on a pedestal, the more they can set up for disappointment. That being said, there’s some great quality people in this sport that really are genuinely awesome human beings.

The biggest differentiator is not only the detailed training, that’s a given and the hours they put in, a lot of them guys and girls are training about three, four, five hours a day, but it’s really the attention to nutrition.

It’s so easy in CrossFit because of the modality of CrossFit, all it focuses on, “Well, how much can you snatch? What’s your back squat PR?” That’s the big aspect. You’ve got to put time in the gym, but nutrition is where you can really fine tune and dial it in.

Matt even talks about this, “Thank god, I got second place, whatever year that was, because I was eating shitty and without that, that was a wake up call that I really needed to pay attention to my nutrition.” That’s a big differentiator, is hyper-focus on what they’re putting in their body and what they’re not putting in their body at the same time.

David Tao: CrossFit comes on the scene, gets popularized, CrossFit Games become this runaway phenomenon. Nutrition becomes something that athletes start paying attention to a little later on and it’s something that an ecosystem was built around that.

Food services, companies like yours providing supplementary nutritional products, things like that. Then you had the wave of mobility companies that are still providing a lot of this services for athletes, the elite athletes and the athletes at home like you and me just trying to move a little bit better.

What do you think is the next wave, be it recovery or performance services in products that you think the community is going to be embracing?

Aaron Hinde: Mental, brain. I look at…Noah did great this year. Noah’s head space, just from looking at him and knowing him for years, was better than it’s ever been. Sara didn’t make the cut. I know she can work on her head space.

I think working in between the years, these athletes are all within one degree of each other. You look at a gold medal at the Olympics versus no medal at all, we’re talking tenths of a second.

Athletically, any of them can compete at any given day depending on how their body’s feeling, and how they prepped up for it. The mental aspect, how mentally prepared for this competition are you? How mentally prepared are you for adversity or for things not quite going your way? How do you bounce back from that? That’s going to be the next way of CrossFit evolution.

David Tao: Got you. I want to get into some a little bit more rapid-fire. Take the time you want to answer them for folks to learn a little bit more about Aaron Hinde:. What’s your secret talent or something that you’re good at that people might not know about?

Aaron Hinde: I’m really good at looking at things that are very impressive in life, in different businesses, what is working well for them, and how can I take that and apply that to what we’re doing in completely unrelated fields?

David Tao: What’s your pet peeve or something that annoys you most? Could be in business, could be in life, could be in athletics…the things that just grind your gears.

Aaron Hinde: Two things. I absolutely hate it when people litter. No, I’m not an enviro, but just living in Santa Cruz, is a beautiful place, it just drives me insane. Then the second thing, more business-related or life-related, is that I do not allow anyone on my team to say, “No, problem.” Like, “Thank you so much. Thanks for all your help.” “Oh, no problem.”

The reason is, when you’re helping somebody, you’re making an emotional deposit and they’re putting you on a pedestal by saying, “Thank you, Aaron. You were the only one that helped show up to help me move this weekend.”

When I say, “No problem,” I’m cutting that down and I’m minimizing their gratitude that they’re expressing towards me. It’s immediately making an emotional withdrawal. I strike that from the vocabulary.

David Tao:  It’s really interesting. Are there any other, you think, verbal tics or colloquialisms, or things we just might do in our everyday lives that cut down that gratitude?

Aaron Hinde: It happens all the time. If you’re aware of it and you start paying attention to it, then you can pick up on those cues. Anything from how you shake someone’s hand, eye contact, actively listening versus just preparing to respond.

There’s so many things in nonverbal communication that you could be making…A real common one, being on your phone or looking at texts when you’re engaging in a conversation with somebody. It’s like, “This is more important than what I’m talking to you about.”

David Tao: Who is the person in the CrossFit community you’ve learned the most from?

Aaron Hinde: Who have I learned the most from?

David Tao: Or it could be just one person and something that really sticks out to you as like, “This person did this or said this and it just taught me something that just changed the way I approached that issue for the rest of time.”

Aaron Hinde: I mentioned Henshaw before for his insight to training. Greg Glassman for his “don’t give a fuck” attitude, and this is the way it’s going to be and how things tend to work out according to his vision. I look at Jackie Perez and Christmas for, “Hey, you don’t have to be a top-level Games athlete to make a living in this space.”

Someone like Nela who puts in the work and is just a kind individual and shows that hard work over time pays off and working on your weaknesses. I try to learn something from everybody in the space. I don’t think there’s one thing that particularly stands out though.

David Tao: Awesome. Aaron, where can folks keep up with you personally on social media? I do want to ask at the same time about the “HindeSight” newsletter. Where can folks find out more about that?

Aaron Hinde: HindeSight’s on our website, lifeaidbevco.com. For me, personally, I’m most active on Instagram, @aaronhinde, A-A-RON, Hinde, H-I-N-D-E.

David Tao: Awesome. Aaron, I really appreciate your time. Thanks so much for joining us. I hope that we get to speak again in the near future.

Aaron Hinde: All right, brother. I appreciate it.



> > > Live well.

 


The Smart Passive Income Podcast: How to Become Indistractable

Host Pat Flynn talks with "Indistractable" author Nir Eyal about how destructive distractions can be to our success and productivity, both in life and business. (52:30)

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

Companies Founded by Amazing Young Entrepreneurs

Get inspiration from these 15 amazing kids and teens who have started successful businesses.

Click here to read the full article. 

 

50+ Healthy Meal Prep Recipes for Fall

Bring on the crunchy leaves, cozy sweaters and fall comfort foods. Here are 50 yummy recipes that will ensure you are eating healthy during the busyness of the fall season.

Read the Fit Foodie Finds article here.

"Want to start a BUSINESS? Discover a PROBLEM and create a SOLUTION that serves PEOPLE."

 

Indistractable: How to Control Your Attention and Choose Your Life

The best-selling author of "Hooked," Nir Eyal, provides a new framework that will deliver the focus you need to get results.

Check out his book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 22


The World's #1 Productivity Hack!

Host Rob Dial shares one very simple technique that is scientifically proven to be the best productivity hack out there on this episode of The Mindset & Motivation Podcast.

Listen to the full podcast episode here.

.

How We Stopped Counting Calories and Learned to Love Spindrift

The current trend towards real ingredients over zero calories says a lot about how we think about health today.

Click here to read the full article. 

 

39 of the Ultimate Back-to-School Recipes

Make hectic school (or work) days less daunting with these quick & delicious recipes from Joyful Healthy Eats.

Click here to read the full article.

"Change is not a four-letter word ... but often your reaction to it is."

—Jeffrey Gitomer

The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph

"What stands in the way becomes the way," according to Marcus Aurelius. This book reveals the timeless philosophical principles laid down by the Roman emperor who discovered a method for achieving excellence in any and all situations. Discover how to turn your own adversity into advantage.

Check out Ryan Holiday's best-selling book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 21

man holding surfboard standing in front of sea


A Decade of Fueling the Fittest on Earth

Learn more about LIFEAID Beverage Co.—tucked away in the back of the old Santa Cruz Wrigley Building—where they create the clean recovery fuel of CrossFitters worldwide.

Read the full article and watch the video here.

.

Consumer Guide: Best Fitness Recovery Products in 2019

Tips and guidelines for finding the right recovery products for you, as well as a list of the top-ranked products of the year.

Click here to read the full article. 

 

10 Paleo Family Friendly Dinner Ideas

Perfect for the whole family, try these quick & easy Paleo-friendly dinners that you can whip up at home.

Click here to read the full article.

"When you innovate, you’ve got to be prepared for people telling you that you are nuts."

—Larry Ellison

The $100 Startup: Reinvent the Way You Make a Living, Do What You Love, and Create a New Future

Chris Guillebeau shows you how to lead a life of adventure, meaning and purpose, all while earning a good living.

Check out his book here.

.
AH

HindeSight  |  No. 20