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What No One Tells You About Ageing in NZ

February 18, 202601:43:21
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Welcome to the Domavvey podcast. Great
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conversations with fascinating people.
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On this episode, I talked to Hannah
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McQueen, a powerhouse Kiwi entrepreneur.
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She built, then sold a company called
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Enable Me, and with it helped thousands
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of families get control of their
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finances.
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>> I've got nothing else to lose now. Like,
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I remember thinking, I am at the bottom.
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of being humiliated upon humiliation and
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pay withheld and kind of all these
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things which now if you went back
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you would sue
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well I won't
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>> sue the [ __ ] out of them
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>> yes [laughter] I don't know we allowed
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to say that on this podcast
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>> of course now she's starting all over
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again this time in elderly healthcare
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with a company called Brightly she's on
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a mission to completely rethink how we
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care for aging New Zealanders
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is genuinely the most unguarded I have
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ever heard Hannah McQueen before. And I
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hope you enjoy getting to know the real
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Hannah as much as I did. Hannah McQueen,
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welcome to my podcast.
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>> Hi. [laughter]
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>> I'm I can't believe you're nervous.
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>> I know. I'm slightly apprehensive. I'm
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not sure where you're going to go with
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this, but I'm pleased to be here. Thank
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you for having me.
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>> It's wonderful to be here. We've we've
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got to know you here at uh the Pod Lab
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Studios over the last couple of months
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because we've been helping you working
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on a project and uh it's been um a joy
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so far getting to see how you work.
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[laughter]
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You're you're a force.
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>> Yes, I think I am. I've been told that.
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>> Have you [laughter] Have you Yeah,
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you're you're a force, but yet um very
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very trusting in in other people like
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not a a force without being a control
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freak. as in you know you you you pay
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someone for their advice and you trust
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them if they know if if they know more
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than you in a different field you trust
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them and it's um I think that's quite a
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powerful thing.
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>> I think it's like self-awareness like
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you know when you're good at something
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and you know when someone is better than
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you and being okay with that makes life
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a whole lot easier. And I was even
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talking to my son. I said, "It would
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just be so much easier, Cam, if you just
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acknowledge the areas you need help in."
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[laughter] You know, like for example, I
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want to be fit, but I'm not naturally
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inclined to do anything. Or um I want to
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eat well, but I find it hard to do that.
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Like just knowing that about myself
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means I can get the right help, and then
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I trust that help. I'm not I'm
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definitely not the type of person that
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enlists someone the expert and then
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overrides their kind of recommendation.
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>> A lot of people I think struggle with
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that piece for some maybe it's an ego
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thing, maybe it's a pride thing, but a
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lot of people struggle to say I don't
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know
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>> really.
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>> I think so.
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>> Yeah.
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Oh well,
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how exhausting. [laughter]
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>> It's a lot easier just to acknowledge
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when you don't know.
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>> Anyway, it is great to have you here.
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Um, when people introduce you as the
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money lady, what's the big part of
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Hannah McQueen that they're missing?
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>> Oh, um,
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well, I guess that's
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back in the day that was my day job and
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something I took really seriously and
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something that I it was a craft for me
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and I wanted to be the best in the world
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at what I did. [laughter] Um, but that's
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just your day job, right? Like that's
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what you suit up for and then you've got
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a life outside of that. And um in my
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real life, I'm quite introspective and
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quite quiet. Um I have
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Yeah. I like I like to think and have
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the space to think. And I think when
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you're um when you have a persona,
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you're there. That's what you're engaged
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to do. So you deliver that. But I think
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the private Hannah McQueen is um
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still a force but [laughter]
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um just yeah just reserved.
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>> What's something you're deeply proud of
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that has nothing to do with work?
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>> Probably um my family
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>> um whether that's
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my relationship with my husband or my
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kids, my parents. I think it's funny cuz
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when you when you have success and and I
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have been fortunate enough to have kind
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of different layers of success in life
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and when I exit and enable me I think a
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lot of people objectively would say that
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was a very successful move uh that
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brings the measure often is money um
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but if you don't have kind of my
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reflection
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is that if you don't have a good
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relationship with friends with family.
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You can have all the money in the world
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and it you're empty.
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>> And I remember thinking or reading about
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Steve Jobes and I don't know if he was I
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don't know the person he was. He it
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feels like he openly um acknowledged
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that he wasn't a particularly nice
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person, but I it always just made me sad
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that he was potentially one of the most
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successful people in the world, yet just
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a life filled with dysfunction with
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those relationships that are so
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critical.
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>> It's hard though. I I've had Sir Peter
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Beck from Rocket Lab on the podcast and
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uh he had a quote that stuck with me
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saying um if you're going to achieve
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something huge in life, you can't do it
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on a 8 to 5 Monday to Friday schedule.
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>> So there are sacrifices that have to
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make. So to be like a Steve a Steve Jobs
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and create Apple um Yeah. I mean there's
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only so many hours in the day that
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you've got to choose how to spend them.
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>> Yeah, you do. And with those hours that
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you're not working, right? like you've
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got to be present and engaged and that's
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really hard to do like when you've kind
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of had a full day of work and you are
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just
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>> spent to then kind of switch into okay
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now it's time to be a mom or a partner
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or a daughter.
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>> Um but that's something I guess it's
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that that will be my life life's
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journey.
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>> Um
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>> these things things you're proud of. You
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said nothing about your marathon journey
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so far. I've got here I'm holding up for
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those [laughter] listening to it.
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>> He was certificate from the um the 50th
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Berlin Marathon last year.
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>> Um why are you embarrassed about this?
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So what have you done? You've done the
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New York Marathon, Berlin.
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>> Yes. Uh and the London. It's not that
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I'm embarrassed. [laughter]
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I am just a bit more discreet. And and
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[laughter] I think because I am yet to
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achieve the time that I want, I'm just
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keeping it on the down low. So,
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[laughter]
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um, God,
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>> you're so competitive, eh? So, your your
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your New York time was, um, 5:05. Your
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Berlin time, you shaved like 25 minutes
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off it.
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>> 4:40. Um,
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>> yeah, I was going for 4:30. So, it
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actually felt like a fail. [laughter]
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>> Did you? Oh, that's Hannah, that's
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terrible. Like, there's there's some
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stupid stat like one or two% of the
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world's population ever will run a
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marathon. So, the fact that you're even
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there doing it and anytime um puts you
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in this really elite little pointy
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group.
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>> Yeah. Yeah, I get it. But I I just I
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know what I want to achieve and so I
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when I have a goal I set out to achieve
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it and when I don't um I in fact the
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Berlin marathon I think the highlight
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for that mar marathon I mean I was
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pleased with my time 440 I was going for
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4:30 um but at the end I mean my body
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just pretty much shuts down at the end
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and I was lying in um a paddic somewhere
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when you kind of walk through to the
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paddic
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And I'm I don't think I'm going to be
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able to get back to the hotel. Like this
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is not cool. And I called my son who was
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17 and he was there. Um and I said,
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"Cam, I don't know where I am.
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[laughter]
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I think I'm in a paddic, but can you
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come and find me and can you take me
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back?" Cuz my husband was with our
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daughter. And
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he found me and he pretty much carried
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me back to the hotel. And that was
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probably the proudest part of that
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marathon for me cuz I thought he's
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actually got empathy. Who knew? That's
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so nice. And he came through. [gasps]
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Yeah. Cuz life's about coming through at
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the right times. And he came through for
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me. And so that I was just as proud of
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that moment as I was um finishing that
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wretched race.
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>> Finishing. Um you by the way you you you
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think of you you go through the
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Brandenburg Gates and then it finishes,
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but it's actually like another half
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kilometer. I am so sick of those stupid
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kind of like false finishes. And that is
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life, isn't it? It's like you
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>> you think you're there and then you're
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uhoh, no you're not. Here we go again.
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Yeah. Cuz the same as with New York when
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you run into Central Park and you're
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like ready to kind of um yeah, hang up
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your gloves. But when I did Well,
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something I probably was proud of was
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when I did the Coast to Coast. This is
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like many, many years ago. Um but it was
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a similar feeling. you bike into um
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Christ Church and you kind of think,
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okay, we're finally here, but there's
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another 20ks to get to SAR. So, that
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that feeling of you're there. No, you're
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not. Uh that's something that I think
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you've got to get used to in life.
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>> Oh, so you've got a history with
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insurance. I I didn't know you'd done
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the coast to coast.
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>> Yeah. Yep. I did. Well, it was so long
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ago. I kind of think your life often
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fits into two parts. There's what you
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did before kids and what you did after
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kids. and any I always think it's weird
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when people who have kids, you know,
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that are almost adults are referring to
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days before kids as sort of as if it was
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really close. That was another lifetime
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ago. In my other life, I did coast to
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coast. I trained for an Iron Man. I
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ended up doing a half iron man. Um, I
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don't think I did any of them
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particularly well, but I
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Yeah, I think the coast to coast
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probably was a moment for me that
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probably changed the trajectory of my
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life because um it was weird like I
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don't know how old I was, maybe 22 or
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23. And um [snorts] you go away and you
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do it in a weekend and and then you come
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back to work on the Monday, right? And
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so everyone else has just had a normal
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weekend. And I remember walking into
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work, I think I was working at KPMG at
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that point and I just thought I have
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changed the direction of my life over
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the weekend and for you it was just
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other people walking around. It was just
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another another normal weekend and it's
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just interesting that sort of in that
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moment you can have that sliding doors
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experience and suddenly you're through
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to
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>> another dimension.
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>> Yeah. And and no one knows or sort of
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respects it or appreciates it either.
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[laughter]
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>> No. If you wear the coast to coast
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medal, they'll be like, "Oh, well."
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>> Well, I'm I'm not really I think people
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who wear the medal, I'm just like, "Put
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that medal away." Cuz that's what they
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do after the marathon. Like people are
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prancing around the city with their
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medals and I'm like, "Oh, is that
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necessary?" Like, [laughter] but for
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them it's it's part of their moment as
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they clink clack around the the city
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with their medals. But
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>> I I've sort of changed my perspective on
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that a little bit. Like the first time I
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did the the American ones in particular,
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the Americans wear it with pride and
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they'll wear it for days afterwards. And
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I thought it's a Kiwi thing to sort of
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fold it up and put it in your pocket. So
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I I feel like there's at least maybe a
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period of 24 hours after
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>> you can celebrate it. Yeah. Look, I
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don't judge. Well, maybe I do. I just
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I'm just like this is weird. Yeah.
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>> But I remember I think I've followed
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that coast to coast experience. How that
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started was I think it was like a
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Saturday afternoon back in the day, you
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know, like 20 odd years ago where I
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think there was sports on Saturday.
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Firstly, there was a TV that you would
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watch and there was a sports in the
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afternoon and um and it was always
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something dad would watch. It was always
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boring. But I saw this clip of the coast
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to coast. I think it was Steve Gurnie.
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Is that is that the same?
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>> Yeah. Yeah. Coast to coast legend.
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>> Yeah. Amazing. I saw this. I'm like that
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looks amazing. Like I'd never even kind
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of thought of this endurance event
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thing. I thought I think I'm just going
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to do that. And it was sort of as
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instant as that. But the problem is I
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didn't know how to run. I didn't own a
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bike and I'd never kayaked. And I
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remember um so it was sort of a standing
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start if you will and I just thought
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well I was looking at these people and I
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do this often maybe I am super
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judgmental. I'm like if they can do it
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I'm pretty sure I could. So I kind of
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assess my own ability initially with who
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I'm surrounded by. But that's when I
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called Barry McGee and I said um I don't
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know how to run but I need to be able to
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run 30ks or whatever. and he said
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[laughter]
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something like, "Come back to me when
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you can run 10ks or something like
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[laughter] that."
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>> Barry McGee, by the way, one of the
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early guests on my podcast, uh, bronze
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medalist at the, um, Olympic marathon in
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Rome in 1960. Incredible, incredible
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event.
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>> Great.
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>> He was amazing. So, he trained me for
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the running for that. And I actually,
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weird fact, um, we went to a YouTube
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concert in that Rome stadium and I had a
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minute where I'm like kind of saluting
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the legends of the past, Barry McGee,
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Peter Snell, you know, like these
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>> Yeah. Hellburg Liard.
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>> Incredible. Incredible. So that was
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quite um,
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>> yeah, just a little quiet moment. Um,
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but yeah, so I did that and then I took
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kayak lessons and what a drama that was
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and then had to ride a bike. I mean, I
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knew how to ride a bike, but I just
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hadn't ridden distance. And but the
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actual event was was kind of interesting
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because back in those days, you could
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you couldn't not that I actually would
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have done this, but I you couldn't do a
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one-day event. You had your first entry
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had to be a two-day event. Um, and so I
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get in and
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I didn't know there were a few things I
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didn't know how to do. And I had tried
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to learn. I just didn't know how to do
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them. I just could not change a tire on
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my bike for love or money. I just
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couldn't do it. They're so skinny and
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[laughter] it was annoying. And I
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couldn't flip my kayak back up. So, if I
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fell over, I couldn't flip. I couldn't
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roll. And I had tried I had coaching and
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I'm like, "This just isn't going to
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happen." And I [snorts] got to um
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the end of the first day. So, I think
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you you' done the 60k bike ride perhaps
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and maybe a run beforehand and then the
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60k bike ride and then the mountain run.
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Ghost Pass.
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>> Yeah. Ghost Pass. And you're only
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supposed to maybe do like 10 or 12 river
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crossings. I think I did 22. Like I was
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just so confused as to where I was on
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this course. And I got to the end and my
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husband grabbed my bike and I had two
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flat like slow punctures on my tie and
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so he got it and he was able to change
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that for me before I started the next
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day. But I was just like imagine if I
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was on the course and I had these flat
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tires. I just wouldn't know what to do.
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And then the the next day you we're
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going in to do the kayak and um my dad
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and Billy, that's my husband, they push
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you off. So, you've done like a 25k.
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You're feeling so sick from the day
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before. Like, I just like what am I
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doing? And my mom's like, "What are you
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doing?" Like, "You should have been
00:14:45
doing this isn't good for the a woman's
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body, [laughter] you know, like yap yap
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yap." And um so then you do this this
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25k bike ride and then you're up for
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this 70k kayak. And I thought, look, I'm
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not particularly fast, so I'm going to
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make up all my time in my transition.
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So, that's where I'll make up some time.
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And before that, I had made the
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conclusion that you're either fast or
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you're endurance.
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And I'm like, well, I'm definitely not
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fast, so I must be endurance. But I have
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since concluded you can be neither,
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which I possibly am. That
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>> Oh, come on. You've definitely got
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endurance. I think you're you're made of
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tough stuff where you
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>> Well, phys Yes, I can do like mental
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endurance and I guess I can do the odd
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sporting event, but when we got to the
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kayak because I was making my transition
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so fast. My dad, they pushed me off and
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and you've got your skirt on. I remember
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I can't flip or anything. And I'm like,
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you haven't given me my pedal. And so I
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yell out, I'm like, "Dad, my paddle."
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And this like the YAC at that point was
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traveling pretty fast. So I was moving
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fast and there were like some of these
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moments in life where you're like you
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you cannot afford to fumble this. I had
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one of those moments. Dad
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>> got my um
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paddle thing and he javelin through it
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to me and I was cuz I was like moving
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away like they were there and I was
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moving away and I'm like okay I've just
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got to catch this. and I caught it.
00:16:16
Amazing. And then off I go. And um and I
00:16:21
said to my parents, I said cuz they were
00:16:23
meeting me at the other end. So that was
00:16:24
the one of the first big transitions was
00:16:26
he didn't give me the equipment I needed
00:16:28
to do the job. I mean you can't do your
00:16:30
job if you don't have the equipment. So
00:16:31
that was one fumble. And then I said to
00:16:34
them, it'll take me about 6 hours, but I
00:16:36
actually did it in 4 and 1/2 hours. Like
00:16:38
I kind of surprised everyone. And so
00:16:40
they were they were saying these are the
00:16:42
numbers that are coming in. And um my
00:16:46
parents and and Billy were like, "Hold
00:16:48
on, that's Hannah's number. Like she's
00:16:50
earlier than thought than we expected."
00:16:52
And so I got out of the kite and you
00:16:54
just can't even move. Like you're just
00:16:56
it's just oh it's grim. And now carry me
00:16:59
up the road to transition to the bikes.
00:17:02
And so then mum's in charge of the bike.
00:17:03
Like that was her moment to shine was to
00:17:06
get me on that bike. And she gets me on
00:17:08
and she pushes me off but she had my
00:17:10
helmet on back the front. Right.
00:17:12
[laughter] So, I was I was just a mess.
00:17:13
I was a hot mess. Um, but I got to the
00:17:17
end and I remember uh trying to uncip
00:17:20
myself before you run the 800 m along
00:17:22
the beach and cuz I was on my bike and
00:17:25
I'm I just can't even uncip myself. And
00:17:27
so I'm saying to this this person, I'm
00:17:29
like, can you just uncip me? I'm just
00:17:30
lying on the ground with my bike on top
00:17:32
of me. I'm can't I am so spent. And
00:17:35
that's kind of how I finish my
00:17:37
marathons, just I've left it all out
00:17:39
there. It paints um it paints a good
00:17:41
picture, especially with the support
00:17:42
crew aspect, you know, your husband and
00:17:44
your parents. Um
00:17:46
>> yeah. So, let's go way back. What did
00:17:48
you want to be when you grew up?
00:17:50
>> I actually wanted to manage a fish and
00:17:52
chip store.
00:17:54
>> Oh, you're funny, [laughter] haven't
00:17:55
you?
00:17:57
>> Never too late.
00:17:58
>> That was And then I moved on to I'm
00:17:59
going to manage a McDonald's.
00:18:01
>> Um and then I wanted to be a pharmacist
00:18:03
and then I decided I hated science and
00:18:05
then I'm like, okay, I'm going to go
00:18:06
down the finance route. But my first job
00:18:08
that I ever wanted was to run manage a
00:18:12
fish and chip store because that was
00:18:13
back in the day where on Friday night
00:18:14
you go and get fish and chips from your
00:18:16
local Chinese takeaway or whatever. And
00:18:18
I just used to love how they wrapped the
00:18:20
fish and chips, you know, they were
00:18:21
really speedy like and then they pass
00:18:24
you. I just thought that was just
00:18:26
magical.
00:18:27
>> Um but yeah, so
00:18:28
>> even sometimes an old manual to evening
00:18:30
standards for me which doesn't seem
00:18:32
hygienic now.
00:18:33
>> No, it [laughter] doesn't. But there was
00:18:35
just something tasty.
00:18:36
>> Yeah. Um, what was the most trouble you
00:18:38
got in? Did
00:18:40
>> I didn't really get in trouble.
00:18:41
>> Yeah. Would you Would you describe
00:18:42
yourself looking back as a nerd?
00:18:45
>> Um,
00:18:46
yeah. Uh, I think my my kids certainly
00:18:49
would describe me as a nerd. [laughter]
00:18:51
>> I feel like the the word's been
00:18:53
reclaimed, right?
00:18:54
>> Yeah.
00:18:54
>> Like it can be viewed as a compliment.
00:18:57
>> Yeah. I guess when I think of a nerd,
00:18:59
they're not really socially
00:19:02
they don't interact so much. Whereas I
00:19:04
was very social. I just my friends and I
00:19:08
maybe I'm refusing we were nerds you
00:19:09
know like we wanted to do well we wanted
00:19:11
to please um we all did sports we all
00:19:14
did rep sports and
00:19:16
>> we played musical instruments you know
00:19:18
that and that was just the norm of the
00:19:20
people that I was surrounded by which my
00:19:22
son would definitely say well you just
00:19:24
sound like a nerd but I didn't feel like
00:19:26
a nerd then I always thought that there
00:19:27
were other nerds that were nerdier
00:19:29
[laughter] than me
00:19:30
>> it's quite funny cuz you and you I'm
00:19:31
slightly older than you but um and I
00:19:33
went to an old boy school palmy boys
00:19:34
high school and um if if you did the
00:19:36
things you described, you'd be called a
00:19:37
tryhard. And I look back now and I
00:19:39
think, well, a tryhard's a wonderful
00:19:40
thing. [laughter] Like, what's wrong
00:19:42
with what's bad about trying hard?
00:19:44
>> Yeah.
00:19:45
>> Yeah. I always think that a tryard is
00:19:47
someone who kind of tries to suck up.
00:19:49
That was it. And I never tried to suck
00:19:51
up. It was always just me. M
00:19:54
>> but the an observation was I think a
00:19:57
friend told me once she'd describe me as
00:19:59
a salmon where they always swim against
00:20:02
the current you know or the current
00:20:04
doesn't most people just drift along
00:20:06
with the current. I'm
00:20:08
>> not interested in drifting in any area
00:20:11
of my life and I'm very comfortable
00:20:13
swimming against it if I need to.
00:20:15
>> And so I think yeah that just comes
00:20:18
through.
00:20:18
>> Yeah. And you you left school early,
00:20:21
right? You left school a year early and
00:20:22
went to So you went to university when
00:20:24
you were 17.
00:20:25
>> Yeah, I just turned 17 that month.
00:20:27
>> What was that like? Was that lonely?
00:20:29
>> Um,
00:20:31
>> I'm just think at at that at that age
00:20:33
like one year is a a massive length, you
00:20:34
know, a massive time span. So did you
00:20:36
did you feel like heaps younger than the
00:20:38
other people in your
00:20:39
>> No, I didn't. Cuz I always felt quite
00:20:41
mature,
00:20:42
>> right?
00:20:42
>> Um I
00:20:46
It's funny. Uh yeah, it was daunting. Um
00:20:50
my first day, you know, I was a year
00:20:52
younger, so I'd missed a whole year of
00:20:54
learning and I wasn't particularly
00:20:56
smart. I mean, I was smarter than
00:20:57
average, but I wasn't like an amazing
00:20:59
student. Um and so you're going to this
00:21:03
new city and um cuz I was from Havlock
00:21:07
North and so I was moving to Oakland and
00:21:10
um
00:21:10
>> Oh, did you leave home?
00:21:12
>> Yeah.
00:21:12
>> Wow.
00:21:14
>> Yeah. So I guess it's all about your
00:21:15
references, right? Like my mom came to
00:21:18
New Zealand when she was 17 from
00:21:19
Australia. So that it it felt like there
00:21:22
was sort of a path that was already a
00:21:24
little bit it it wasn't out of the
00:21:26
ordinary. And mom I know that mom wanted
00:21:28
me to get out of Hawks Bay quite
00:21:30
quickly. I think she was seeing that I
00:21:31
was becoming bored and kind of um she
00:21:35
wanted to stretch me and kind of
00:21:37
distract me with other things. And so
00:21:39
she really encouraged me to go or I said
00:21:41
I wanted to and she really encouraged it
00:21:43
and supported that. Um but yeah, I
00:21:46
remember my first day of university. I
00:21:48
remember um meeting people for the first
00:21:51
time and I'm still friends with those
00:21:52
people cuz
00:21:53
>> they become your lifeline. Yeah.
00:21:55
>> And why accountancy?
00:21:58
>> I thought um
00:22:02
it it was just I thought I would run a
00:22:04
business eventually and when you look at
00:22:05
people CEOs who run businesses they kind
00:22:08
of come from two backgrounds. either
00:22:10
accounting trained or they are pretty
00:22:13
magnificent salespeople and uh I wanted
00:22:17
to run a business and I'm like well I'll
00:22:19
get the
00:22:21
I'll I'll kind of do the traditional
00:22:23
path cuz of what tends to happen is you
00:22:24
do your accountancy and then you become
00:22:26
a CFO and then that's how kind of the
00:22:28
transition the CEO leaves and the CFO
00:22:30
steps in I think and that's sort of a
00:22:33
path and I'm like yeah I can see that
00:22:34
path and I think I would like that. I
00:22:36
didn't um what I didn't realize is that
00:22:39
I um
00:22:43
can be quite influential and persuasive.
00:22:46
Uh so I had more of a a sales tendency
00:22:50
than what my um qualification suggested
00:22:53
because accountants generally aren't
00:22:55
people
00:22:56
people you know they uh they're boring
00:22:59
and all of those things whereas I
00:23:01
thought that I was quite uh in my
00:23:03
accounting way quite verbaceious and um
00:23:06
I remember when I was at um working for
00:23:09
one of the big four accounting firms um
00:23:12
one of the partners said
00:23:15
you'll ever going to be a partner here
00:23:18
or something like that. And that was
00:23:20
that was kind of for a lot of people
00:23:21
that you do that you you start that
00:23:25
trajectory. And so that was quite um
00:23:28
confronting. But I but at the same time
00:23:30
I'm like thank you cuz I don't want to
00:23:33
be but he's like you're just not suited
00:23:36
to the profession. And um
00:23:39
>> was he being mean?
00:23:41
Um,
00:23:41
>> was his delivery mean or was it a when
00:23:44
you reflect on it now,
00:23:47
>> if that's what most people's goal is and
00:23:49
he's saying that to you, it feels like
00:23:50
it could be crushing a lot of people's
00:23:51
dreams. Not your dream, but a lot of
00:23:53
other people's.
00:23:53
>> Yeah. I think that there was a um
00:23:58
um I think he was needlessly cruel
00:24:02
>> in the name of being honest.
00:24:05
>> That's a Taylor Swift lyric.
00:24:07
>> It is all too well. Are [screaming] you
00:24:09
a Swifty? I'm a Swifty, [laughter] but
00:24:11
I've only just become a Swifty.
00:24:12
>> So Casually Cruel in the name of being
00:24:14
honest. All Too Well, the 10-minute
00:24:16
version. I love I've got goosebumps. I
00:24:18
can't believe it. It's the greatest
00:24:19
Taylor Swift song of all time.
00:24:20
>> So good. So good. Well, this I don't
00:24:22
know if you know this about me. I went
00:24:24
to see her um in Sydney and also at
00:24:27
Wembley.
00:24:28
>> Oh, unbelievable. Wow.
00:24:30
>> Yeah.
00:24:31
>> Unbelievable. Oh, you know all too well.
00:24:34
>> I didn't even know it before someone got
00:24:36
me a ticket. And you know how the
00:24:38
tickets came out a year ahead. Um
00:24:40
they're like, "You need to listen to the
00:24:41
set list." And that's when I started to
00:24:43
listen to it. I'm like, "Oh, she's
00:24:44
actually quite good."
00:24:44
>> Oh, it's a phenomenal song.
00:24:46
>> Yeah.
00:24:47
>> So,
00:24:49
so, so you you do your degree.
00:24:50
[laughter]
00:24:51
That's amazing. I can't we connected
00:24:53
over that. That's wonderful. That's
00:24:54
really wonderful. Um so, you do your
00:24:56
degree, then you get a masters in
00:24:57
taxation, which sounds like the most
00:24:59
tedious and boring thing ever.
00:25:00
>> Yeah. So, there was sort of a means to
00:25:02
the end. I wanted to um pay the least
00:25:05
amount of tax possible [laughter]
00:25:06
and I wanted to do that legitimately.
00:25:08
And so I'm okay, I'm just going to learn
00:25:10
it. And for my accounting qualification,
00:25:13
I needed to do another year before I
00:25:15
could be signed off of university.
00:25:18
And so I I'm okay, I'm going to maximize
00:25:20
what I get out of that. So I ended up
00:25:21
taking, I think, 18 months to do it. And
00:25:24
um yeah, did a master of tax law.
00:25:27
>> And there's this moment um in the Hannah
00:25:29
McQueen story that's almost mythical
00:25:30
now. I've heard this I've heard you talk
00:25:31
about this story on so many podcasts um
00:25:34
where you've got this job and you
00:25:36
pitched the idea of what became enabled
00:25:38
me to your boss.
00:25:38
>> Oh yeah.
00:25:39
>> And um he fired you. Has that have you
00:25:42
added GST to that story? Is that
00:25:44
embellished? Were you actually fired or
00:25:46
did he just like shut the idea down?
00:25:48
>> No, no. Walked and cuz and remember I'm
00:25:51
a people pleaser and I'm a nerd. Um so
00:25:55
that that was kind of like it was a
00:25:57
pretty jarring experience. And people
00:25:59
ask me, um, do you think about him or do
00:26:03
you want to say anything? And I'm like,
00:26:05
I don't think about him. Well, maybe if
00:26:07
I'm asked a question, I think he was a
00:26:09
fool.
00:26:10
>> Um, I don't even know if he was
00:26:12
threatened or if he was just a fool,
00:26:14
>> but so much of life is those random
00:26:18
things. And and it was surprising and
00:26:21
cuz it was I was I was with a friend and
00:26:23
we were talking about the idea of hey
00:26:25
instead of helping people get into
00:26:27
mortgages why don't we help them get out
00:26:29
of debt and um
00:26:33
and that's what we pitched to him and
00:26:34
he's like but the thing that was
00:26:36
annoying is that he said and I'm again
00:26:39
I'm a nerd and I'm logical. He's like
00:26:40
that sounds like such a great idea. Can
00:26:42
you do me up the business plan? And so
00:26:44
we tutored around and I gave that to him
00:26:46
or we gave that to him. Um, and so we
00:26:49
just And then he's like, "Okay, well,
00:26:51
um, that's not going to happen and you
00:26:53
can leave cuz you're going into
00:26:55
competition."
00:26:56
And we weren't. And I remember saying to
00:26:58
him, "If we were going into competition,
00:27:02
why would we give you our business
00:27:03
plan?" Like, it was sort of illogical.
00:27:06
But anyway, he um, excuse
00:27:08
[clears throat] me, he marched us and I
00:27:10
remember I had my little box and I
00:27:12
waddled out of the office with my stuff
00:27:14
and I'm like, "How did this even
00:27:15
happen?" And like, you know, sometimes
00:27:18
you can do stuff that's um you're
00:27:20
pushing a boundary, you know, like you
00:27:22
know that you're pushing it and you're
00:27:24
waiting for someone to say kind of clip
00:27:27
your ears. There was no pushing of any
00:27:30
boundary. It was
00:27:34
>> But that people ask if I'm bitter and
00:27:36
I'm like, why would I be bitter?
00:27:37
>> Yeah. But did it do anything to your
00:27:38
self-esteem at the time?
00:27:40
>> Um
00:27:42
>> I mean here here you are. You're
00:27:43
reasonably young. You've got this idea.
00:27:45
you're you you're a people pleaser. You
00:27:46
think you're doing the right thing and
00:27:47
it it backfires in the worst way
00:27:49
imaginable.
00:27:51
>> Well, I'm I don't remember my
00:27:54
self-esteem. I mean, my friend had been
00:27:56
fired as well, so I we had each other.
00:27:58
[laughter]
00:27:59
Um, but I do think there was an
00:28:04
acknowledgment of what has happened,
00:28:07
what has happened to my life or what
00:28:08
have I become for this to be the thing?
00:28:11
and and that I've got nothing else to
00:28:14
lose now. Like I remember thinking I am
00:28:17
at the bottom [laughter] of being
00:28:19
humiliated upon humiliation and
00:28:23
pay withheld and kind of all these
00:28:26
things which now if you went back
00:28:29
you would sue
00:28:32
well I won't
00:28:34
>> sue the [ __ ] out of them. [laughter]
00:28:35
>> I don't know we allowed to say that on
00:28:37
this podcast
00:28:38
>> of course.
00:28:39
>> Yeah. you're just like this is just
00:28:40
unacceptable and
00:28:42
but you got to choose your battles,
00:28:45
right? And I'm a believer is you got to
00:28:47
face forward like let the the shadow
00:28:50
will fall away and it does and you you
00:28:52
just create such a gulf between you. Uh
00:28:54
but that was the catalyst to everything
00:28:57
and from there I was talk my friend and
00:29:00
I were like well should we actually give
00:29:01
it a go? and um
00:29:05
we we tried to together but that sort of
00:29:07
after a few weeks it didn't really work
00:29:09
and then that's when I decided that I
00:29:12
would call the calculus department of
00:29:13
the University of Oakland. And I'm like,
00:29:14
"Okay, it's sort of like, okay, game on,
00:29:16
Hannah." You know, like this is enough
00:29:18
of this, whatever this stage is, enough.
00:29:21
Um, let's do this. And that's when I
00:29:24
called them and I said, I'd like to you
00:29:26
to work on a formula with me to pay
00:29:28
mortgages off as fast as possible at the
00:29:29
lowest cost with maximum flexibility.
00:29:32
And that, I guess, went all the way back
00:29:35
to when I came to university early. Um,
00:29:39
that was the department that I had my
00:29:41
first courses in was in the mathematics
00:29:43
department. And so it was yeah it was a
00:29:47
yeah I it was just a moment I guess.
00:29:50
>> So this is like two decades ago now. Do
00:29:52
you think um innovation like what you
00:29:55
and your friend showed now is would
00:29:56
still be punished in some traditional
00:29:58
workplaces or do you think it would be
00:29:59
sort of flawed? You do do you?
00:30:01
>> Yes.
00:30:01
>> So nothing's changed. Oh, I think lots
00:30:04
of things have changed, but I think that
00:30:05
that you still when you're dealing with
00:30:08
um insecure people or people who are
00:30:11
wanting to patch protect I mean and on
00:30:14
one hand I guess the graciousness is
00:30:16
well if I had nothing else to offer I'd
00:30:19
patch protect as well you know like but
00:30:21
I see that with what I'm doing now when
00:30:23
I go into the health care industry I'm
00:30:28
>> I'm just seeing
00:30:30
worse versions or a whole lot more
00:30:32
versions of that character from back
00:30:34
then. The difference is I know how to
00:30:37
navigate those people now
00:30:39
>> and I'm pretty quick on my feet.
00:30:40
>> Do you think about that? You call him
00:30:41
that character back then. Do you think
00:30:43
about him very often?
00:30:44
>> No.
00:30:44
>> No. What do you did you think about him
00:30:46
at all like when there were like um
00:30:49
important or successful milestones with
00:30:50
enable me [laughter]
00:30:52
>> and the opportunity that he missed? No.
00:30:54
>> No. I have with some people I've felt
00:30:55
that but not with that particular
00:30:57
person. So um yeah 2007 at the age of 27
00:31:01
that's when you founded enable me um if
00:31:04
someone asked you back then when you saw
00:31:06
yourself and the company 18 years later
00:31:08
um what would your answer have been?
00:31:10
>> Where I am
00:31:11
>> really
00:31:13
I was planning to build um and at some
00:31:16
point I knew I would exit and I knew
00:31:18
that there would be people who could
00:31:22
help take the business to the next
00:31:23
level. I wasn't sure if I wanted at that
00:31:28
time in 2007 whether I wanted to be part
00:31:30
of that growth or whether there was
00:31:31
again a a kind of move to the side but
00:31:35
um yeah it's all kind of part of a plan.
00:31:39
>> So when it ended um you you sold for a a
00:31:41
great sum of money and how many staff
00:31:43
how many staff at Enable Me at the end?
00:31:45
>> I don't know at the end
00:31:46
>> like 100
00:31:47
>> close to 100. Yeah. Um I think the last
00:31:50
time we counted the staff um was in the
00:31:53
middle of CO and I think we had 99 or
00:31:55
100. Yeah.
00:31:57
>> And we sold just after CO.
00:31:58
>> That must be incredibly gratifying like
00:32:00
knowing that you've created jobs for
00:32:01
that many people.
00:32:02
>> That's huge, right?
00:32:05
>> Yeah. It's satisfying. Um I guess the
00:32:07
flip side in CO was because there was so
00:32:10
much uncertainty and life is about being
00:32:13
able to navigate the uncertainty. Um but
00:32:17
you know that's 100 families that are
00:32:18
relying on you to make sure the business
00:32:20
is a success.
00:32:21
>> I remember going to the um talking to
00:32:24
the banks and co and whether obviously
00:32:28
I'd followed my own advice so I was
00:32:29
mortgage free. [laughter] Um but going
00:32:32
back to the bank to say okay well we
00:32:34
might need to get a you know a mortgage
00:32:36
if if needed to fund
00:32:38
>> these families that you're proud of to
00:32:40
be part of your team and you you do see
00:32:42
them as an extension of your own family.
00:32:45
Um, but it didn't get to that. But
00:32:49
the thought that it could was
00:32:52
confronting.
00:32:54
>> What were the hardest lessons about
00:32:56
being an entrepreneur earlier in the
00:32:57
piece? What were those early years like?
00:33:00
Well, I think that I was
00:33:03
I think I just might live in my own
00:33:05
little bubble, you know, like
00:33:08
someone someone
00:33:10
had written
00:33:12
or had said something derogatory of me
00:33:15
and I remember this guy that I work
00:33:17
with, Hamish, who I just he's such a
00:33:18
great guy and I'm I can't believe that
00:33:22
person has said that about me and he
00:33:26
said, "There are lots of people who
00:33:27
don't like you, Hannah. we just don't
00:33:29
tell you about it. [laughter]
00:33:31
And I was like, really? How come they
00:33:33
don't like me? Uh, yeah. So, I
00:33:39
I'm okay. I'm okay with who I am. And I
00:33:43
try and be um I hold myself to a high
00:33:47
count. But in my mind, I don't know what
00:33:49
people hear in their minds, but in my
00:33:51
mind, I have quite an encouraging voice.
00:33:53
You know, it's a you've got this hand or
00:33:55
we can do this hand. Um there's never a
00:34:00
um
00:34:01
yeah I don't I don't have a negative
00:34:03
voice. I don't know if
00:34:05
>> your internal voice.
00:34:06
>> My internal voice. Yeah.
00:34:07
>> So that's reassuring.
00:34:08
>> That's brilliant.
00:34:09
>> Yeah.
00:34:09
>> But how long was it cuz um JJ and I have
00:34:12
just started this business called Pod
00:34:13
Lab in the last year or so.
00:34:15
>> We're still in this what we call the
00:34:17
sweat equity phase.
00:34:18
>> Yeah.
00:34:19
>> Um how long were you how long were you
00:34:20
in the trenches for? I did hear stories
00:34:22
early on about you like going to
00:34:24
Wellington for meetings and you had your
00:34:25
your son on your hip. Maybe this was
00:34:27
during the global financial crisis.
00:34:28
>> Well, we started just when the so 2007 I
00:34:32
found out that I was pregnant 3 months
00:34:34
later. Like what a cluster. Uh and then
00:34:36
it was 2008, the global financial
00:34:38
crisis. And what the that financial
00:34:40
crisis said to me was what the beauty of
00:34:43
the financial crisis is it gave everyone
00:34:46
permission to acknowledge that they
00:34:48
weren't that good with money. They had
00:34:50
always not been good with money. It just
00:34:52
gave them permission to be honest about
00:34:53
it. So I thought that was kind of an
00:34:54
interesting that kind of when there is
00:34:57
general consensus people are prepared to
00:35:00
give ground I guess. But yeah, so that
00:35:04
was pretty intense that period like the
00:35:07
sweat equity that probably gives me um
00:35:12
makes me feel uncomfortable for you if
00:35:14
if it was like my sweat equity
00:35:16
[laughter] because you're working I mean
00:35:18
I had my son and I didn't I wanted him
00:35:20
to be with me and we had an office in
00:35:22
Wellington and um I'd go down every week
00:35:25
and we were so we just had no money so I
00:35:28
had to excuse me for those I had to fly
00:35:30
Jet uh [laughter] with my son. Anyone
00:35:33
who knows me, I'm not I'm that isn't my
00:35:36
doesn't necessarily align with me. Um
00:35:39
>> I'm I'm the same, but I'm also in two
00:35:41
minds about Jet Star cuz I know that
00:35:42
they're important cuz without them, New
00:35:44
Zealand doesn't have a competitor.
00:35:45
>> Yes.
00:35:45
>> But I don't want to fly, but I'm pleased
00:35:47
they're there.
00:35:48
>> Absolutely. And so anyway, that's all I
00:35:50
could afford. Uh so I flew them with Cam
00:35:53
on my lap and then I couldn't even
00:35:55
afford a taxi at the other end. So, we'd
00:35:57
catch a bus and I did that for a year,
00:35:59
maybe even two years. Um,
00:36:03
>> and again, my mom always believed that I
00:36:06
could do it. She was an incredible
00:36:07
support during that time. Um, and I do
00:36:11
think if the people you love most or
00:36:13
respect most are encouraging you, that I
00:36:16
mean, that's probably one of the most
00:36:17
powerful medicines you can ever be
00:36:18
given.
00:36:19
>> Well, you must have been confident it
00:36:20
was going to work or you know what I
00:36:23
mean? Or do do you look you look back in
00:36:25
on that time and you um enjoy it
00:36:28
>> that time?
00:36:29
>> Yeah. A lot a lot of people say these
00:36:30
you when you're going through the
00:36:31
struggle of starting up a new business,
00:36:33
people go you'll look back and you know
00:36:35
think fondly of these of these times.
00:36:38
>> I [laughter] would say they're lying to
00:36:39
your face.
00:36:40
>> Oh, good. I'm so pleased you said that.
00:36:42
>> No. Um [clears throat] no. And that's
00:36:45
interesting. When I moved to what I'm
00:36:46
doing now, I had to think to myself cuz
00:36:49
I I am I like to think I'm brutally
00:36:53
honest with myself, but it was a moment
00:36:55
with my internal voice. Do I have it in
00:36:58
me to do this again? Because it was so
00:37:02
taxing and so grueling and I probably
00:37:05
think I've got um PTSD from it to be
00:37:08
honest. And it it went for at least 5
00:37:09
years.
00:37:11
>> Wow. And and you you are doing it again.
00:37:14
Um, and we'll get into Brightly later in
00:37:16
the podcast.
00:37:17
>> I I had Anna Moore from um, Zuru on the
00:37:20
podcast, and I asked her why she went
00:37:22
from Zuru to Zeal, which is a
00:37:24
recruitment app that she's got. She
00:37:26
described Zuru as a mountain and said
00:37:27
there's more mountains that she wants to
00:37:28
climb.
00:37:29
>> Do you Does that resonate with you, that
00:37:31
sort of terminology?
00:37:32
>> Yeah. Yeah. There are
00:37:37
>> You're still quite young, eh? So, you
00:37:38
get this payout from on the big scheme
00:37:40
of a of a life. So, you get this pay out
00:37:42
and it' be easy to think, I'm just going
00:37:43
to, you know, kick my feet up and pot
00:37:46
around, but you've still got so much um
00:37:49
brain power and energy to put into
00:37:51
something.
00:37:51
>> Yeah. And you you want
00:37:57
there's no right or wrong answer, but
00:37:59
it's I
00:38:03
I didn't expect to be working on
00:38:04
Brightly when I sold Enable Me. I wasn't
00:38:07
sure what I was going to do. um that
00:38:10
sort of happened. But I I know that and
00:38:15
I think most people are like this. Yes,
00:38:17
there are other mountains that you want
00:38:18
to climb, but
00:38:22
you you how do I say it? You I I guess
00:38:25
to whom much is given, much is expected.
00:38:28
>> And I feel very blessed to be in this
00:38:31
position. And you kind of can have two
00:38:34
options in life, right? like you can
00:38:36
either build a longer table or a higher
00:38:38
fence.
00:38:39
>> And I love that. [snorts]
00:38:40
>> Uh yeah, and that that just kind of
00:38:42
talks to my values. It's I've been
00:38:46
lucky, fortunate, blessed, whatever you
00:38:48
want to call it. Um
00:38:51
and I think
00:38:54
it's it's part of a bigger picture. And
00:38:56
so it's I could stop, but I feel like
00:39:00
I've got more to give. Um, and one of
00:39:03
the benefits of when you are cashed up,
00:39:06
the second time round is so much more
00:39:08
enjoyable cuz that's half the problem
00:39:10
[laughter] for the first time is that it
00:39:12
and I'm not saying this for you, but for
00:39:14
me, money was really tight and I wanted
00:39:16
to um get more people and you're you're
00:39:20
trying to grow and then you're trying to
00:39:21
do the stuff over here. So, you don't
00:39:23
tend to pay yourself what you're worth.
00:39:24
All of the I don't even think I took a
00:39:26
salary for like seven years, you know,
00:39:27
like it was just crazy. everything I
00:39:29
earn was going trying to grow that
00:39:31
business. And
00:39:33
and so what what that tends to mean is
00:39:36
that you can't afford the talent that
00:39:37
you really want and so you have to do
00:39:40
more and more of it yourself. Um and you
00:39:44
eventually kind of get to your high
00:39:46
performing team, but it takes you well
00:39:48
for me it took me years to afford that
00:39:50
high performing team. Whereas now I can
00:39:54
kind of fasttrack some of those things
00:39:55
and I'm like, well, I want you and you
00:39:57
and you and um
00:39:59
>> I don't want to fly jet stuff.
00:40:01
[laughter]
00:40:02
>> I want TO OWN THE PLANE, BABY.
00:40:07
[snorts]
00:40:07
>> You're not PJ Rich though, are you?
00:40:09
Private jet. You're not there.
00:40:11
>> Well, I believe in leasing the private
00:40:13
jet.
00:40:13
>> Oh, unbelievable.
00:40:14
>> I don't [laughter] I am not yet leasing
00:40:16
a private jet, but I wouldn't own one.
00:40:18
>> Yeah. Um, go I love these entrepreneur
00:40:20
stories and the fact that you didn't pay
00:40:22
yourself at least what you're worth for
00:40:23
seven years cuz it's so easy to think of
00:40:26
the entrepreneur thing about someone has
00:40:27
a business idea, they set it up and uh,
00:40:29
you know, everything works amazingly
00:40:31
well and you know, but it's not real not
00:40:34
the reality I think for most
00:40:35
entrepreneurs.
00:40:36
>> No. Well, I think most Kiwi
00:40:38
entrepreneurs, right, because we often
00:40:40
start with on the smell of an oily rag
00:40:43
and there is sort of this belief that we
00:40:44
can do it and blah blah blah and all of
00:40:46
that's true, but there's a trade-off for
00:40:48
all of that. It's either you're you have
00:40:50
to do a whole lot more, so you
00:40:51
compromise other parts of your life
00:40:53
because you're doing that or um it just
00:40:56
takes you longer to get there.
00:40:58
>> Uh and I also think that Kiwis aren't
00:41:01
particularly good at scaling fast.
00:41:04
[clears throat]
00:41:05
>> Why is that? Is that a conservative
00:41:07
conservative thing or
00:41:10
>> I don't think we get advice.
00:41:11
>> Is it a fear thing?
00:41:14
>> That's probably an ignorance. It's
00:41:17
it's almost like we kind of can our the
00:41:20
Kiwi attitude can get you this far and
00:41:22
it can definitely get you started on
00:41:24
something which is great. Uh but then
00:41:27
you have to be able to invest to grow to
00:41:30
the next level and I don't think many of
00:41:32
us are confident or know how to do that.
00:41:34
And so we kind of keep bumbling along
00:41:36
for longer than what we should.
00:41:39
>> So enable me. Best and worst moments on
00:41:41
the job.
00:41:42
>> Oh.
00:41:44
Um,
00:41:45
>> and moments as in maybe it was periods
00:41:47
of time or days or weeks.
00:41:51
>> Oh gosh, I could I don't even know if I
00:41:53
could answer that. Um,
00:41:57
I think
00:42:00
when I sold it was a pretty good moment,
00:42:02
[laughter]
00:42:03
but that was hard.
00:42:04
>> Yeah.
00:42:05
>> And that was really hard. And um, but
00:42:09
that was And yeah, I was pleased with
00:42:12
how that played out. I was pleased who I
00:42:14
sold it to. Um,
00:42:17
>> so you sold it to AM or a division of
00:42:18
AM?
00:42:19
>> A subsidiary of AM. Yes. Um,
00:42:22
>> how long are those meetings going on for
00:42:24
it? Do they approach you or do you
00:42:25
approach them?
00:42:26
>> They approached me.
00:42:27
>> Yeah.
00:42:28
>> Uh, and it was in the middle of [snorts]
00:42:30
CO. Well, I had CO in fact and the
00:42:33
person [clears throat] who I was um
00:42:36
liazing with who was buying um he also
00:42:39
had CO. And one of the great things
00:42:40
about when you have CO is you just you
00:42:44
kind of there's no filter on on anything
00:42:46
you say. So you you just kind of cut to
00:42:48
the chase really really fast. And so
00:42:50
that did a whole lot of kind of dancing
00:42:52
did away with a whole lot of that. But
00:42:54
it was weird because at the same time we
00:42:56
had I think two other businesses try and
00:42:59
um kind of inquire as to whether we were
00:43:01
open to selling and I wasn't even
00:43:02
planning to sell then. I had a plan that
00:43:04
I'd sell 5 years after that.
00:43:06
>> Yeah. So um but that that was that was
00:43:10
hard to do. And I remember talking to my
00:43:12
um cuz I'd obviously never negotiated
00:43:15
something so significant. And I remember
00:43:17
talking to um my uncle who's pretty
00:43:21
amazing negotiator in Australia um and
00:43:25
he said and he's Australian, right? So
00:43:27
they're just brutal. And he said,
00:43:32
"Hannah,
00:43:34
let them see the whites of your eyes.
00:43:37
Be prepared to walk away from the deal
00:43:40
and remember this is what you've trained
00:43:42
for." And I'm like, "Okay, I'm ready."
00:43:45
And it was sort of like just the the
00:43:47
perfect words at the perfect time.
00:43:49
>> Um, and that helped me, I guess, kind of
00:43:53
navigate what was a a challenging
00:43:56
process, but I was really proud of how I
00:43:57
handled myself in that process. And, um,
00:44:01
yeah, I was.
00:44:02
>> Is it anything like like the movies
00:44:04
where someone writes a figure amount on
00:44:05
a folded bit of paper and slides it
00:44:07
across the table to you?
00:44:09
>> No. No.
00:44:10
>> Well, not for me. Um,
00:44:12
>> I've I've had Rod Drury on the podcast.
00:44:14
He sold a business before zero and it
00:44:16
was like that with some American dudes.
00:44:17
>> Yeah.
00:44:18
>> They wrote wrote the dollar amount on a
00:44:19
servette and folded it across the table
00:44:21
which seems very uh very Hollywood.
00:44:23
>> Yeah. Well, I I had an idea of what I
00:44:26
wanted and um yeah, I had I don't know
00:44:29
where I had been or what I was possibly
00:44:32
presenting on a panel and there were
00:44:34
some very successful people on this
00:44:36
panel and [clears throat] one of the one
00:44:39
of the gentlemen on there who had sold
00:44:41
businesses over and over again. He says
00:44:44
my someone and said when do you sell a
00:44:45
business and his learning was you sell a
00:44:49
business when someone wants it and so
00:44:51
that was this little nugget which again
00:44:54
I was planning to sell it 5 years and
00:44:55
then all these people wanted it and I'm
00:44:57
like okay well maybe maybe it's now
00:45:01
[sighs]
00:45:02
>> so the day the sale goes through what's
00:45:04
what's that like? So it's it's kind of
00:45:05
like I mean there's parallels with you
00:45:07
and your son like similar ages
00:45:09
[laughter]
00:45:10
>> they're both like babies that you raised
00:45:12
up. That is exactly what it felt like
00:45:14
and that's why there was kind of this
00:45:16
this beautiful arc in my mind that it
00:45:18
had kind of completed this whole circle.
00:45:20
Cam was leaving school and he was moving
00:45:21
on to his building apprenticeship and
00:45:24
this was the end of the era and I was
00:45:26
passing over this beautiful gift to
00:45:29
someone else to nurture going forward.
00:45:32
Um it did yeah the timing felt
00:45:35
poetically.
00:45:36
>> Was is there an element of sadness? No,
00:45:39
>> no, not sent no sort of sentimental
00:45:42
attachment.
00:45:43
>> Well, I I have strong feelings for the
00:45:46
people that are there. I loved working
00:45:48
with them. Um,
00:45:49
>> but no, my my that was my era. I'm into
00:45:53
my next era. And I felt that I honored
00:45:55
that era and I honored the people that I
00:45:57
worked with and I could do no more. And
00:46:01
I knew that and it was time to go. And I
00:46:06
so
00:46:07
no, I have I have fond memories. Um
00:46:11
it's it's strange seeing other people
00:46:15
promote the business. That's not me.
00:46:17
That that's a really strange feeling.
00:46:18
It's not good or bad. It's just
00:46:21
>> weird.
00:46:21
>> Yeah. Because you were sort of the the
00:46:22
front face of it for many years. ZB ads.
00:46:25
>> Yeah.
00:46:26
>> Everything. Interviews.
00:46:27
>> Yeah. But they've got great people doing
00:46:29
that. And um and my final management
00:46:33
team
00:46:34
>> [clears throat]
00:46:34
>> uh they are working with me. Excuse me.
00:46:36
[cough]
00:46:38
My final management team largely have
00:46:40
moved with me to my next business. So I
00:46:42
I know that I'm working with amazing
00:46:44
people.
00:46:45
>> But was it a strange feeling though when
00:46:47
you sell and you're still involved with
00:46:48
the company? There's that period where
00:46:50
you stay on. Um, is it a strange feeling
00:46:52
suddenly like waking up and going to
00:46:54
work and it's, you know, different level
00:46:56
of responsibility or it's not it's not
00:46:58
yours anymore?
00:46:59
>> Yeah, but it's I think you've got to see
00:47:02
things for what they are, not what
00:47:03
they're not. I mean, that was um yes, I
00:47:06
could say I don't have full control and
00:47:08
all of those things, but I guess I'm
00:47:11
more um
00:47:16
philosophical
00:47:17
>> and it I I don't like when people want
00:47:23
what they don't have or that they've
00:47:25
given away. I if I'm like, well, if you
00:47:27
wanted it, why did you give it away? you
00:47:29
know, like it's sort of and I but
00:47:30
there's a lot of the grief of leaving
00:47:34
happened
00:47:36
well before I finished working there,
00:47:39
but there was probably a year of grief
00:47:41
where you're just trying to get get the
00:47:44
right roles and kind of where you fit
00:47:46
in. But
00:47:47
>> um
00:47:47
>> yeah, was it like a sense of a loss of
00:47:49
identity in a way? Yeah, but I was happy
00:47:52
to lose the identity
00:47:54
>> because um I'd given a lot to that
00:47:58
identity and it actually wasn't me. It
00:48:00
was it was part of my identity, I guess,
00:48:02
to that point. But um I was ready for my
00:48:05
next era.
00:48:08
>> Another Taylor Swift reference there.
00:48:09
[laughter]
00:48:10
>> So many. We should like try and stack
00:48:12
them.
00:48:14
[laughter]
00:48:15
>> Um okay, be honest. Did you Did you buy
00:48:18
anything silly when you cashed out? Did
00:48:21
you go overboard? No.
00:48:22
>> Buy yourself those um rebop Reebok shoes
00:48:25
that you always wanted that define your
00:48:26
teenage years. [laughter]
00:48:28
>> That was my first purchase. Um
00:48:31
no, we bought a a farm a little farm up
00:48:36
at Mangafi. But no, not silly things
00:48:38
like that. No. Um
00:48:40
>> I suppose by by that point any little
00:48:42
little luxuries or things you wanted,
00:48:44
you probably already had.
00:48:45
>> Yeah. Yeah. I think my probably the one
00:48:50
trigger I remember my son saying what is
00:48:54
the point of having all this money if
00:48:58
you're not going I mean it's all
00:48:59
relative uh if you're not going to um
00:49:04
spoil yourself or treat yourself but but
00:49:06
I felt which I thought was a a valid
00:49:08
point. I mean, he obviously wanted me to
00:49:09
treat him, which I think was where he
00:49:11
was angling with that comment, but I
00:49:14
yeah, I I lived a good life already.
00:49:16
It's I didn't really want for anything.
00:49:18
Um, and I do think that if you if you
00:49:21
have money coming in, it just tends to
00:49:24
amplify whatever feeling you've got. Uh,
00:49:26
so if you're feeling content, you'll
00:49:27
continue to feel content, but if you're
00:49:29
feeling anxious or coveting things, then
00:49:32
it'll it won't fill a void for you. Um,
00:49:36
but my probably probably the biggest
00:49:38
treat to myself that was my Taylor Swift
00:49:42
wormly tickets cuz we got a corporate
00:49:44
box. [laughter]
00:49:46
>> Oh no, you left that bit out.
00:49:48
Unbelievable. Who's we? Who do you
00:49:51
>> My daughter and I.
00:49:51
>> Unreal. Oh, what an experience. What a
00:49:54
thing to be able to do.
00:49:55
>> It was incred. Like it really [laughter]
00:49:56
was incredible. Um,
00:49:58
>> what do you pay for a corporate box at
00:49:59
Wembley? I can't even remember because
00:50:02
we booked it so long ago and my PA
00:50:04
actually did it for me. The the weirdest
00:50:06
thing is that I wasn't sure if it was a
00:50:08
legit ticket and I paid all this money
00:50:10
for it. Like maybe it was
00:50:12
>> like a few thousand each.
00:50:14
>> Yeah. Yeah. Um and it's cuz they're not
00:50:19
legit tickets. And you remember with the
00:50:21
Taylor Swift, you couldn't like buy and
00:50:24
sell tickets. It had to go through that
00:50:26
whatever that website. But what I found
00:50:29
out about Wembley is all those corporate
00:50:32
boxes, they're actually owned by
00:50:34
hospitality companies and they own the
00:50:36
seats that give them the tickets to the
00:50:38
concert. So you're buying a ticket from
00:50:41
the hospitality company, not from Ticket
00:50:44
or whoever distributed her tickets, but
00:50:46
that I was sort of hoping that that was
00:50:48
the case. That's what they told me. But
00:50:49
it's not until you walk in and that
00:50:51
you're like, well, here's hoping these
00:50:53
tickets are legit.
00:50:55
But I didn't realize the extent of what
00:50:57
we had bought until we arrived. So that
00:50:58
was quite cool.
00:50:59
>> Oh my god, that's amazing. Yeah. Is it
00:51:01
um is it is it hard not to spoil your
00:51:03
kids? Obviously like the you and your
00:51:05
husband, there's a lifestyle that you
00:51:06
want to want to leave uh lead.
00:51:10
>> Yeah. I Well, you kind of you work out,
00:51:12
well, what's the
00:51:17
what is a good life for a kid? And I
00:51:19
don't think having everything you want
00:51:22
is necessarily a good thing. Um, and my
00:51:25
dad would be pretty strong on you,
00:51:27
you're spoiling, which is kind of you're
00:51:29
ruining your children if you did that.
00:51:31
>> But I mean, my kids want for nothing. I
00:51:33
mean, but I had a a much smaller
00:51:36
lifestyle. My parents were just
00:51:37
workingass parents and I never wanted
00:51:40
for anything then. So, it's it's
00:51:42
relative.
00:51:42
>> Yeah.
00:51:42
>> Um,
00:51:44
>> yeah, I think they've got a good life.
00:51:46
And you with your um accountant um
00:51:48
brain, you must have always had like a
00:51:50
figure in in in mind which in the back
00:51:52
of your mind at least that would be like
00:51:54
a good amount for a good retirement.
00:51:56
>> Um in terms of what you sold enable me
00:51:58
for, how many times more than that
00:52:00
figure was it?
00:52:02
>> Um
00:52:04
I was trying to think what the figure
00:52:05
was. Um maybe seven times more that.
00:52:10
>> Wow.
00:52:11
>> Yeah. What do you how much for the
00:52:13
average New Zealander like how much do
00:52:14
we need for retirement? Is it a million,
00:52:16
two million?
00:52:17
>> Well, they they I could tell you based
00:52:20
on the literature and things that I've
00:52:22
read that you normally need if you want
00:52:24
to live a comfortable lifestyle, that's
00:52:26
defined by what you're used to, right?
00:52:29
It's um but for most people, it's a
00:52:33
mortgage free home and you want about a
00:52:34
million dollars in the bank to live kind
00:52:36
of that comfortable lifestyle. Now, you
00:52:38
could live a whole lot smaller than
00:52:39
that. It's not that you couldn't, it's
00:52:41
just it would require you to change your
00:52:42
lifestyle. Uh, and for many the
00:52:46
definition of financial success is you
00:52:48
can maintain your lifestyle through
00:52:49
retirement. Um, but I've got or I had
00:52:54
clients that could survive on the
00:52:56
pension alone. I couldn't. I I spend too
00:52:59
much and I like cruises too much, you
00:53:01
know. So, and all that costs money, you
00:53:03
know, like when they when they do a um
00:53:06
the sort of studies on this is how much
00:53:08
you need to spend each week or this is
00:53:09
the average amount of spending. I'm
00:53:11
like,
00:53:12
how is that the average? That's not even
00:53:14
my reality. You know, they'd say maybe
00:53:16
you're spending like a $100 a week on
00:53:18
food. That's how they've come up with
00:53:20
the number that you're um needing for
00:53:22
retirement. I'm like, I can't even
00:53:24
remember when I spend $100 a week on
00:53:26
food.
00:53:26
>> Yeah. Yeah. Buy a buy a bottle of wine,
00:53:28
block of cheese, and it's 100 bucks.
00:53:31
>> Yeah. I remember at university I only
00:53:33
had $30 a week to spend on food. But
00:53:36
>> that's when I couldn't afford a jar, a
00:53:38
jam jar. I had to have jam in a tin.
00:53:41
>> Jam in a tin? Is it?
00:53:43
>> It was [laughter] a thing. I'm like,
00:53:44
what is this? It was so cheap. It was
00:53:45
great.
00:53:46
>> What was that like? Like waddies or oak
00:53:47
or something?
00:53:47
>> Yeah, I think it was oak.
00:53:48
>> Oak. That was a brand.
00:53:50
>> It was.
00:53:51
>> Yeah, [snorts] those were the days.
00:53:52
>> Why Why are Kiwis so weird talking about
00:53:54
money?
00:53:55
>> I feel like the conversation sort of
00:53:56
changing a bit, but it's always been
00:53:58
like a quite taboo. E.
00:54:00
>> Well, I'm not sure most Kiwis are that
00:54:02
successful with their money, so I guess
00:54:04
you don't really want to talk about it
00:54:06
if you're not successful. Um,
00:54:09
>> I I don't know. It just feels like we're
00:54:10
a little bit behind the times in that. I
00:54:13
mean, I'm I'm just a believer if if you
00:54:15
know like just be honest with yourself.
00:54:17
Do you think you're on track? If you're
00:54:19
not, get help. Like, but there I think
00:54:22
that money is linked to your self-esteem
00:54:24
and your self-worth, your general
00:54:27
well-being. It underpins relationships.
00:54:29
It's a status thing. And so, there's a
00:54:32
lot there. There's a lot of emotional
00:54:33
baggage attached to what you earn and
00:54:36
what your life looks like.
00:54:39
>> Does does money buy happiness?
00:54:42
>> I think money can help with happiness. I
00:54:45
it's certainly a lack of money can cause
00:54:47
an unhappiness,
00:54:49
>> but no, I think you've got to have you
00:54:51
got to have the basics right, which has
00:54:53
nothing to do with money,
00:54:55
>> you know, relationships.
00:54:57
>> Yeah, there'd be nothing worse say like
00:54:59
the stressing about money. Yeah. What
00:55:01
was what was your upbringing like? We as
00:55:03
I said, we're similar ages. I'm from
00:55:05
Palmerston North. We I grew I grew up
00:55:08
>> one of my worst fears I think is being
00:55:09
is being broke. And I think it's
00:55:11
probably stems back from a psychological
00:55:12
perspective for how I was raised.
00:55:14
>> You know, the the whole money doesn't
00:55:16
grow on trees sort of [laughter]
00:55:18
>> like it just always felt like there was
00:55:20
um there was there was a shortage or
00:55:22
less than what we needed. And I look
00:55:23
back now like we we had a microwave, we
00:55:25
had a a video, we shared bedrooms and it
00:55:27
was a small house, but I think we were
00:55:29
just very there was this massive sort of
00:55:30
middle class and I think we were
00:55:32
probably in there.
00:55:33
>> Yeah, I think we were also slapbang kind
00:55:35
of in the middle class. Um but I always
00:55:38
um
00:55:40
yeah, I thought we had a very com I
00:55:41
never felt like we went without. I never
00:55:44
I've looked back at my parents'
00:55:45
personality around money. Like my mom is
00:55:47
a really good saver
00:55:49
>> and my dad is just not a spender.
00:55:53
>> So
00:55:54
>> he's kind of a typical surfer that can
00:55:56
live off wheat books for a week and
00:56:00
[laughter] and a raspberry bun or
00:56:01
something. Yeah. So no, I never I think
00:56:05
some people's earliest relationships
00:56:07
with money come from their parents and
00:56:08
if that's not a healthy relationship or
00:56:10
if there's an undercurrent that can have
00:56:11
a huge impact in your own relationship
00:56:14
with money. If I was to describe mine,
00:56:16
it I just had a neutral. It was there
00:56:18
was there was always enough when we
00:56:20
needed and um we were happy to kind of
00:56:23
adjust as required.
00:56:25
>> Yeah.
00:56:27
>> So, enable me. You're completely removed
00:56:29
from that now. Um what do you hope the
00:56:31
legacy of that company that you've built
00:56:32
will be?
00:56:34
>> I hope that it goes on and it grows. Um
00:56:36
I hope that they continue to have the
00:56:39
tough conversations and the honest
00:56:41
conversations around money. Um, but
00:56:44
there's a system that I help built that
00:56:47
I know works and it's very effective.
00:56:49
So, they will do well
00:56:52
>> and I wish them well.
00:56:53
>> Yeah. Do you um
00:56:54
>> All too well.
00:56:55
>> Do you do [laughter]
00:56:57
There we go again.
00:56:59
>> I knew you would trouble when you walked
00:57:01
in. [laughter]
00:57:02
>> Um, do you do you hear people coming up
00:57:03
to you like in supermarkets or malls
00:57:05
saying, "Hey, I was an Enable Me
00:57:08
client." Yeah. Yeah. Well, many of my um
00:57:11
closest Enable Me clients I still am in
00:57:13
contact with or have become great
00:57:15
friends with. Um and many of them are
00:57:18
even coming to the opening of my new
00:57:19
business because they shared their life
00:57:21
with me and I want to share what's
00:57:23
happening in my life with them. But it's
00:57:24
a very intimate relationship. You're
00:57:27
you're seeing behind the curtain of a
00:57:29
couple if it's a couple. Um, you're
00:57:32
seeing some of their idiosyncrasies,
00:57:35
how they engage. Um, when one partner's
00:57:39
not pulling, doing what they're supposed
00:57:41
to, how they respond to that, they're
00:57:44
sharing that with you. And that is, um,
00:57:49
that I guess that's a it can be very
00:57:51
awkward, but it's a it's a great
00:57:53
privilege that they would be prepared to
00:57:55
do that. Um, so yeah, I I'm I'm grateful
00:57:59
that I had that and
00:58:01
>> have made some of my closest friends
00:58:02
through those relationships.
00:58:05
>> Yes. So you finished with Enable Me then
00:58:07
how much of a break before you have the
00:58:08
idea for Brightly which we'll get into
00:58:10
now.
00:58:11
>> Yeah. So I
00:58:14
[clears throat]
00:58:15
I sold Enable Me and this is the thing
00:58:16
when they you sell a business certainly
00:58:18
the type of business that I had so like
00:58:20
a service related business you have to
00:58:22
stay in the business for a couple of
00:58:23
years and they call that your earnout
00:58:25
period and you never really get to this
00:58:28
is the thing that kind of ripped my
00:58:30
nighty cuz I wanted that celebrity uh
00:58:34
this is amazing we've done it we've
00:58:36
crossed the finish line but there's
00:58:38
[snorts] just milestones that you have
00:58:40
to keep on hitting the whole way through
00:58:42
and by the end you're just like you are
00:58:44
crawling to the finish line much like
00:58:47
the marathon that [laughter]
00:58:49
uh
00:58:51
but I remember when we sorry when I
00:58:53
first sold it and I was working really
00:58:56
closely with um someone from the people
00:58:59
who purchased us and we s finally signed
00:59:02
off on everything and it was
00:59:05
>> I think it was Christmas Eve kind of a
00:59:07
few years ago and I went to bed
00:59:10
afterwards like it was done It was right
00:59:12
up till like 10:30 at night. It felt
00:59:14
maybe five lawyers on the call. It was
00:59:16
just like heavy. Um,
00:59:20
and that night I had so it was done. The
00:59:22
line was drawn. Everything was signed
00:59:25
off. It was done. Um, I still had my
00:59:28
earnout to do, but the agreement was
00:59:30
finally signed. And I
00:59:34
I had the best night's sleep of my life.
00:59:36
>> Actually, yeah. Yeah. And I thought,
00:59:37
well, I woke up the next day and I'm
00:59:39
like, um, everyone said, "How did you
00:59:42
sleep?" And I'm I slept great. And
00:59:43
that's sort of my feeling. I'm okay,
00:59:45
it's done. It's done. And I think that
00:59:48
process um someone who I worked really
00:59:51
closely with um from the purchaser Mark,
00:59:53
he made that process uh as good as it
00:59:56
could be
00:59:57
>> and I was really grateful to him for
00:59:59
that.
01:00:01
So in the earnout, so we do that sign it
01:00:04
off and then we're moving into the
01:00:05
earnout and I'm kind of no longer hold
01:00:07
the reigns at that point. Um so that
01:00:10
that was sort of weird. Uh but necessary
01:00:12
and to be expected, right? It's just
01:00:14
it's very similar to your kids getting
01:00:17
older, right? They move to the next
01:00:18
stage, they need you less. You've got to
01:00:20
consciously step back. Um and that's
01:00:23
sort of what the business was doing. And
01:00:25
and it helped that I could see that it
01:00:27
was uh going into safe hands. Um
01:00:31
uh but at that point, so I still had
01:00:33
another couple of years in the business.
01:00:35
Uh
01:00:36
and one of my clients came to see me, uh
01:00:40
Gerbin, and I had been working with her
01:00:43
for a few years, her and her partner,
01:00:45
and um she came to see me kind of from a
01:00:48
different perspective because her mom um
01:00:50
she believed needed to go into a rest
01:00:52
home. And she asked me to look at the
01:00:55
rest home contract. She was tossing up
01:00:57
between a few of them. um and
01:01:01
she wanted to know whether she could
01:01:02
afford it. But I could see she was under
01:01:04
kind of huge stress and I was trying to
01:01:06
understand what actually is happening
01:01:07
behind the scenes and there's sort of um
01:01:10
there's just a lot that she was working
01:01:12
through and I personally hadn't I hadn't
01:01:17
experienced really an aging parent at
01:01:20
that point. Like my grandparents were
01:01:21
still alive and my parents were still
01:01:24
young and and fit. Um,
01:01:28
so I didn't have any lived experience at
01:01:31
that point. Uh, but I read these
01:01:33
contracts and it's the first time I'd
01:01:35
seen these contracts and I'm pretty good
01:01:38
with property and law. Like that's sort
01:01:40
of my background and finance. Um, and I
01:01:42
looked at these contracts and I'm like,
01:01:44
sheesh, these are are these legit? And
01:01:49
anyone who's gone through the process of
01:01:51
buying into a retirement village or a
01:01:53
rest home knows that they are completely
01:01:55
legit. that's what the market has
01:01:56
accepted. And I read them and I just
01:01:58
thought these are these are a bit gross
01:02:01
actually. You know that and I'm thinking
01:02:03
how on earth can they be allowed to do
01:02:07
that?
01:02:09
And I had this feeling and it was the
01:02:14
same feeling I had when I decided am I
01:02:16
going to do the enable me thing which
01:02:19
was when I realized that the banks
01:02:21
charged three times what I was going to
01:02:23
pay back three times what I borrowed to
01:02:25
the bank. So I my first mortgage was
01:02:27
$350,000. I was going to pay a million
01:02:29
dollars back. And I was just like how is
01:02:31
that even legit? Like it was it was
01:02:34
weird. And I had that same feeling like
01:02:37
this. It felt like an injustice somehow.
01:02:41
I didn't know enough at that point, but
01:02:44
I started to pull on this little thread
01:02:46
and and I was I have said to others, you
01:02:50
know, I was ready to saddle up and ride
01:02:52
on out of this town and straight up to
01:02:53
mangify, you know, like I wasn't looking
01:02:55
for anything, but I pulled on this
01:02:58
thread and this thread became something
01:03:01
completely different. It's I thought it
01:03:03
was a property play. I thought there was
01:03:04
an injustice on that. And I still think
01:03:06
that there are terms within those
01:03:08
contracts that I'm like, come on, this
01:03:10
is this is not okay. [snorts]
01:03:12
>> But that actually is largely in response
01:03:16
to the fact that they can't deliver the
01:03:18
care to these people with the funding
01:03:21
you get from there isn't enough funding
01:03:23
from the government. So they run that
01:03:24
part of their business at a loss and
01:03:26
they make it all work commercially by
01:03:28
kind of overcharging
01:03:30
in my mind the property side of things.
01:03:33
And that's how the whole thing works.
01:03:35
And we need these players. Like if if
01:03:36
they're not the ones building these rest
01:03:38
home beds, who is going to build them?
01:03:39
Cuz the government certainly isn't.
01:03:41
>> So I'm sort of coming to terms with all
01:03:43
all of this. And I'm like, oh well, this
01:03:46
feels like if I'm going to try and get
01:03:47
the property thing sorted, I have to
01:03:50
first address the care problem.
01:03:53
And I'm like, [laughter]
01:03:56
I don't know if I want to. And you know,
01:03:59
I've got people around me. They're like,
01:04:01
you look, you can do it, Hannah. You can
01:04:02
do it. I I know what it's like to start
01:04:04
up a business. I I know like they could
01:04:06
say whatever and I'm like you're not
01:04:08
fooling me. I've done this. Um
01:04:12
but I took a minute and I wanted to try
01:04:15
and understand the problem more so I
01:04:18
could work out okay where it's the
01:04:19
solution to fix this to then determine
01:04:22
am I capable of building that solution
01:04:24
to then decide and do I want to so I I
01:04:27
wanted to invest enough to get to the
01:04:29
point of do I want to even do this
01:04:32
>> and
01:04:35
do you want me to tell you that process
01:04:37
or absolutely
01:04:38
>> so I spoke to different people and they
01:04:41
said look the this problem isn't unique
01:04:44
to New Zealand. So the the one we've got
01:04:47
an aging population and we don't have
01:04:49
enough rest home beds and we've got
01:04:52
these retirement villages which are
01:04:54
different to rest home. Rest homes are
01:04:55
when you have cuz I had to learn all of
01:04:57
this. I kind of piled them all together
01:04:59
and said you're a back pack of fat cats
01:05:02
and I'm not impressed. That was sort of
01:05:04
my initial judgment that that judgy
01:05:06
Hannah [laughter] was coming through
01:05:07
again. But as I looked deeper that I got
01:05:10
it wrong. I actually got it wrong. That
01:05:14
the these rest home beds need to be
01:05:15
built, but they have these nurses that
01:05:17
look after you when you're in a rest
01:05:19
home. So when you move into a rest home,
01:05:20
no one wants to be in a rest home, but
01:05:22
you actually don't realize that choice
01:05:23
is taken from you. If it's unsafe for
01:05:25
you to remain at home, then you will be
01:05:27
put in a rest home. The government
01:05:29
subsidize. They pay a lot of money to
01:05:31
that rest home care, to that care. So
01:05:33
the nurse round the clock nurse um
01:05:35
attention like 70 well it's not the
01:05:38
government the taxpayer is paying 70 to
01:05:41
80 grand a year for that person to be to
01:05:43
get that care but that and that might
01:05:46
cover the care just not really but let's
01:05:48
say it does normally they need the
01:05:50
family to put a little bit of money in
01:05:51
as well
01:05:53
but that just covers the care that
01:05:55
doesn't cover the fact that they there
01:05:57
are
01:05:58
there's food to pay you know there's the
01:06:00
cost of food for these people that
01:06:01
someone needs to pay for and at the
01:06:03
moment it's the rest home and it doesn't
01:06:05
cover the fact that their buildings need
01:06:06
to be maintained. So there's just not
01:06:09
enough money and so that's why they
01:06:12
what feels like kind of rape and
01:06:14
pillaging on these property agreements
01:06:16
because if they don't make this care
01:06:18
work then the whole thing crumbles.
01:06:21
So that's what I I came to realize and
01:06:25
and when I was talking to age concern
01:06:28
and trying to understand the problem,
01:06:30
they said, "Look, the problem's worse in
01:06:31
the regions and it's worse if you're a
01:06:34
not for-p profofit." You know, I'm
01:06:35
thinking these fat cats, but um in the
01:06:39
regions,
01:06:41
so I'm okay, well, if the problem's
01:06:42
worse in the regions, then I need to go
01:06:43
to a region to kind of understand what
01:06:45
is the state of this problem. And that's
01:06:46
when I took um
01:06:49
uh a
01:06:51
an acquaintance Dr. Minaj with me. I
01:06:54
didn't know him particularly well at
01:06:55
that point. And we went to Southland for
01:06:58
a couple of weeks to try and understand
01:07:00
what is the process of aging in this
01:07:01
country from 65 living not pre- frail,
01:07:05
living well through to something
01:07:07
happens, you end up in hospital, you go
01:07:09
home, you end up in hospital again, then
01:07:10
you're probably in a rest home and then
01:07:12
you're on a 18-month trajectory to
01:07:14
death. That's how grim as it is. And I'm
01:07:16
like, okay, that's the that's how it
01:07:18
works. We don't have enough hospital,
01:07:21
they call them hospital beds, but rest
01:07:22
home beds. So, what are we going to do?
01:07:24
Well, Health New Zealand can't needs to
01:07:27
make it harder to get into a rest home
01:07:29
if we have less beds, and they need to
01:07:31
encourage people to build more. And I'm
01:07:33
thinking, well, can't we change it the
01:07:35
other way? Can't we slow the demand for
01:07:37
these beds down? Like, can't cuz no one
01:07:40
actually wants to be in a rest home.
01:07:42
>> Yeah. So, ju just so we're clear. So
01:07:44
there's um retirement villages which we
01:07:46
see the ads on TV happy hour bowling
01:07:48
green and rest home is sort of where
01:07:51
they that you're sitting in a lazy boy
01:07:52
in front of Iale farm all day.
01:07:54
>> Yes.
01:07:55
>> Okay.
01:07:57
>> Essentially so your your retirement
01:07:59
village is independent living. It's um
01:08:02
there's sort of social connection.
01:08:04
Everyone owns their own unit. Um well
01:08:07
they kind of do. They
01:08:09
>> Yeah. at all. [laughter]
01:08:12
But they they're in charge of their own
01:08:13
lives. They can live and do whatever
01:08:15
they want. They're managing themselves.
01:08:16
They don't require any nurse or any care
01:08:20
support.
01:08:21
>> When you get to a point though, normally
01:08:23
in your 80s, if you're declining, you
01:08:26
are going to need support with your
01:08:27
daily activities. That's when you move
01:08:30
into a rest home that provides that
01:08:32
support. Uh so most of us don't even
01:08:36
whether you go into a retirement
01:08:37
village, that can actually be a really
01:08:38
positive thing for a lot of people. It's
01:08:40
just most Kiwis can't actually afford to
01:08:43
get into the retirement village. Um, and
01:08:46
you still need to be able to pay to get
01:08:49
into a rest home.
01:08:50
>> Mhm.
01:08:50
>> And so there there's a bit of kind of
01:08:52
money Mary go around with that. So I go
01:08:55
to Southland and I'm like, well,
01:08:59
they don't even have you can't even get
01:09:01
a specialist down there. Like it's it is
01:09:03
nuts. And so we start right at the
01:09:06
beginning and we're like, well, hold on.
01:09:08
No one wants to be in hospital. Well,
01:09:09
once you get in hospital, that's kind of
01:09:10
the start of the decline into a rest
01:09:12
home. So, isn't the objective to bend
01:09:15
the curve the other way and keep them
01:09:16
out of hospital makes sense?
01:09:18
Preventative care. Like, that's that's
01:09:20
really all that is. No, no one wants to
01:09:22
decline at that rate.
01:09:23
>> And so, that was kind of the first
01:09:24
observation. And then the next
01:09:26
observation is, well, if you're going to
01:09:27
try and prevent people who are aging
01:09:29
decline, that's actually a really
01:09:31
complex thing to do because their health
01:09:34
needs are so complex. Bearing in mind
01:09:37
I'm an accountant. I'm and a business
01:09:41
may maybe an entrepreneur. I think we
01:09:43
kind of use that term loosely. Um I know
01:09:47
how to grow a business. I know how to
01:09:48
build a high performing team. I know how
01:09:50
to create systems, how to develop
01:09:52
technology. I know nothing about health.
01:09:55
Nothing. And so I'm observing all of
01:09:57
this and I'm talking to all the
01:10:00
stakeholders and I'm feeling
01:10:01
uncomfortable
01:10:03
at the patch protection at just the
01:10:06
nonsense policies that are in place.
01:10:09
Like one of the things that ends people
01:10:11
up in hospital is they have a fall, you
01:10:13
know, they just accidentally fall. Uh
01:10:16
well, you can get full prevention. Um
01:10:19
you can access funding for fall
01:10:21
prevention through ACC. I'm like, "This
01:10:23
is amazing." As I'm learning this cuz
01:10:24
I'm learning it. And they're like, "Oh,
01:10:26
yeah, but to access it, you need to have
01:10:28
fallen." [laughter]
01:10:30
>> I'm like,
01:10:32
"What? Like that?
01:10:33
>> Where's the common sense?"
01:10:34
>> You and you're just like, "How have all
01:10:36
these how has it been allowed to become
01:10:39
like this?" But you then you kind of
01:10:42
you're you're gracious and you're like,
01:10:43
"Well, I can actually see how how it
01:10:44
is." And unless we actually try and do
01:10:47
something collectively, it just becomes
01:10:49
a political hot potato and it's not
01:10:51
really a big enough problem yet. So we
01:10:52
don't really need to do anything yet.
01:10:54
That's my observation. But within that
01:10:57
there are some amazing people working
01:11:00
really really hard and those are the
01:11:03
people that I want to I want to help and
01:11:07
cuz I I feel that they are taken
01:11:09
advantage by the system
01:11:11
>> and I hate it when people are taken
01:11:13
advantage of and I hate it when
01:11:16
vulnerable people are exploited or not
01:11:19
vulnerable generous people are exploited
01:11:23
like nurses caregivers They're not even
01:11:26
paid market salary. I'm like they are
01:11:29
literally looking after our
01:11:33
citizens and we don't even I I don't
01:11:36
know. There's just I'm just like this
01:11:38
this has got to change. And so I'm like
01:11:40
well if I'm going to change if I'm going
01:11:41
to come in I'm going to try and change
01:11:43
it all [laughter] because someone's got
01:11:45
to fight for these people.
01:11:47
>> Did did your did your husband at any
01:11:49
point go oh Hannah do we do we need to
01:11:51
do this?
01:11:53
Yeah, cuz to use the mountain analogy,
01:11:55
if enable me was like Mount Moongi, it's
01:11:57
it feels like this is Everest.
01:11:59
>> Yeah,
01:11:59
>> this is a bigger mountain.
01:12:01
>> I always wanted to climb Everest. Quite
01:12:02
literally, that was a thing. Yeah. Yeah.
01:12:05
>> I'd want to get I'd be quite keen to go
01:12:06
to base camp.
01:12:07
>> I wanted to go to base camp as well.
01:12:08
>> To go beyond that, I don't know if I've
01:12:10
got any interest in that.
01:12:11
>> Well, it's pretty grim up the top. And I
01:12:13
thought, knowing me, I'll slip in the
01:12:14
place I wasn't supposed to. Oh. Um
01:12:17
>> Well, then you better get the fall
01:12:18
protection insurance.
01:12:19
>> Yeah, true. True. after I've [laughter]
01:12:20
fallen.
01:12:22
Um I think that this is a really hard
01:12:25
problem to solve
01:12:28
um because I I I sat with it um
01:12:30
objectively
01:12:32
and determine, you know, what what
01:12:34
actually needs to be done and how we're
01:12:36
going to do this um to then decide if I
01:12:38
want to do it. And I concluded
01:12:41
um
01:12:42
that I thought I could do it and
01:12:46
if not me, who? And if not now, when?
01:12:50
>> When? Yeah.
01:12:52
>> And
01:12:54
And I I don't know if it's because
01:12:57
I don't have anything to prove, you
01:12:58
know, like I'm comfortable. I could just
01:13:00
ride on out if I wanted to, but that
01:13:02
gives you a freedom. That really gives
01:13:04
you a freedom. It also allows you um
01:13:07
that ability uh to recruit really,
01:13:10
really good people to work with you and
01:13:12
to pay them what they're worth right
01:13:13
from the start. Because what happens
01:13:15
with startups for me, you don't really
01:13:17
pay people what they're worth to right
01:13:19
from the start because they're part of
01:13:21
kind of that journey and they get the
01:13:22
excitement of creating something new and
01:13:24
being able to influence that and that is
01:13:25
a value to a lot of people. Um, but with
01:13:29
that kind of sacrifice for me, I found
01:13:32
that really hard because I felt that
01:13:34
they were giving more to the cause than
01:13:37
what they were getting paid for. And
01:13:39
they were happy to do that, but it kind
01:13:41
of created an sort of an obligation in
01:13:43
my own mind that became quite heavy at
01:13:46
times that I felt that I owed more than
01:13:50
what I probably did. Uh, and that can
01:13:52
influence your thinking, your treatment,
01:13:54
your assessment of how they're
01:13:55
performing. that that becomes actually
01:13:58
something quite heavy to bear. And so I
01:14:01
I've freed my some of those learnings
01:14:03
I've managed to free myself from with
01:14:05
this next venture because they they are
01:14:07
the things that actually make it hard
01:14:09
>> for me. Not everyone's like that.
01:14:11
>> Would you now consider yourself an
01:14:12
accountant or a serial entrepreneur?
01:14:14
>> Well, I've never considered myself an
01:14:16
accountant. Um
01:14:18
I have an accounting qualification. I'm
01:14:20
I'm quick with numbers. I'm a quick
01:14:22
read. I understand law and finance and I
01:14:25
love that stuff. I mean, this is how I
01:14:27
know that maybe I am an accountant. I
01:14:30
love it when I balance something.
01:14:32
[laughter] That is just the coolest
01:14:34
feeling. And only an accountant will
01:14:36
understand that. Um, I don't think I'm a
01:14:39
serial entrepreneur. I think I'm a
01:14:40
problem solver.
01:14:42
>> I think I'm a pioneer. Um,
01:14:46
I think I can see what needs to be done
01:14:49
and I can assess the risk correctly and
01:14:52
I I see this as big. I'm not dismissive
01:14:55
of it, but I think I can do it and the
01:15:00
team around me, the clinical team is
01:15:03
incredible and my management team,
01:15:08
I trust them with my life because they
01:15:10
I've worked with them for many years.
01:15:13
And this is how our paths crossed. Um,
01:15:16
as part of Brightly, um, you've started
01:15:18
a new podcast called The Next Bit. What
01:15:20
is The Next Bit?
01:15:22
>> The Next Bit is a podcast aimed at
01:15:24
helping people age well, to be informed,
01:15:28
um, to
01:15:30
hear the things that no one talks about
01:15:32
honestly as it as it relates to aging
01:15:35
well. And I think when we think of
01:15:37
aging, whether you're the person who is
01:15:39
aging or the adult child of that person,
01:15:42
it feels pretty big. And my experience
01:15:46
with enable me, even retirement is big.
01:15:49
That's something we spend a lot of time
01:15:50
preparing families for. Um, if we can
01:15:54
just break it down into bits and let's
01:15:56
just focus on one bit at a time and
01:15:58
we're going to give you the next bit and
01:16:00
we're going to navigate this. And I
01:16:03
don't accept how we have supported
01:16:05
aging. I recognize how we've supporting
01:16:07
aging to this point, but I don't accept
01:16:10
that as being the way that it needs to
01:16:12
be or should be. And I'm keen to
01:16:14
reinvent that
01:16:16
>> and to take it to the world.
01:16:18
>> And the day before doing this podcast,
01:16:21
um, you had your first recording day and
01:16:23
it was a it was a joy to watch you work.
01:16:25
>> Uh, [laughter] this was your your first
01:16:26
experience at sort of hosting something.
01:16:29
>> Um, and I thought you did really really
01:16:30
well.
01:16:31
>> Thank you. It's been um fun watching the
01:16:33
way you approach things.
01:16:34
>> Yeah, I'm I'm quite quiet like in my
01:16:38
assessment of things. I'm not and I am
01:16:42
always trying to determine where
01:16:47
where I need to improve or what I'm good
01:16:49
at and what I'm not good at and where
01:16:51
other people can lift you.
01:16:55
>> This is going to be very exciting. the
01:16:56
next bit. I can't wait for it to be um
01:16:58
released into the wild and watch it
01:17:00
grow.
01:17:01
>> Yeah.
01:17:01
>> Um yeah, like when you think about um
01:17:04
Brightly and what you're trying to do,
01:17:05
like does it give you butterflies?
01:17:08
>> I feel and this I'm like do I even want
01:17:10
to say this cuz I'm like don't jinx it.
01:17:13
Um
01:17:14
I feel that
01:17:17
my professional life
01:17:21
um and maybe parts of my personal life
01:17:24
have brought me to this point
01:17:27
>> and this is what I have trained for and
01:17:31
I thought that it was enable me but
01:17:33
actually I think enable me was just the
01:17:35
testing ground for what I'm about to do
01:17:38
and and that you know
01:17:43
when
01:17:44
[sighs]
01:17:46
it's funny because when you're training
01:17:48
for something
01:17:49
actually um when I did the London
01:17:53
marathon with another cluster I mean
01:17:56
like there's a process with with
01:17:57
marathons like firstly when I did
01:18:00
started the New York I wasn't sure how
01:18:01
long it was going to take so I think I
01:18:03
said 5 and a half hours and so they put
01:18:06
you in your your pen your corral I was
01:18:09
literally with people who were wearing
01:18:11
tutus, like club feet. I'm like, "What
01:18:16
is this?" It was horrific. And you go
01:18:19
through the process of the run and you
01:18:21
and you kind of start with, "Okay,
01:18:22
you're feeling good." And then you're
01:18:24
like, "Oh, I'm starting to feel tired."
01:18:26
And then I'm like, "Oh, I'm feeling
01:18:27
really, really tired." And then you kind
01:18:29
of that next stage which you always hope
01:18:31
you never get to, which is, "Am I about
01:18:33
to soil myself?" Like, [laughter]
01:18:36
it is disgusting. And I'm pleased to say
01:18:38
I have never been there, but I was
01:18:40
always fearful of this when I did the um
01:18:44
London Marathon um and my husband did it
01:18:47
as well cuz the thing about New York
01:18:48
that I hated is that there was no one at
01:18:50
the end that could wait for you cuz
01:18:51
everyone they think everyone's going to
01:18:52
have a bomb or something so they usher
01:18:55
you through. Uh so I did the London and
01:18:57
it was hard but I was going for my four
01:18:59
and a half and I trained for it and I
01:19:01
was ready. The last thing my dad said to
01:19:03
me before I left to go to London was
01:19:05
look don't kill yourself Han. I'm okay.
01:19:07
Thanks, Dad. Like, [laughter] but I took
01:19:09
that on board and I um I was at my
01:19:13
halfway point and I was tracking to
01:19:16
because I want to do four and a half
01:19:17
hours and I think I'd done it for like 2
01:19:20
hours and 8 minutes or something like
01:19:21
that. So, I'm I'm actually in with a
01:19:23
shot. This is amazing, you know, kind of
01:19:25
all these things. And then I looked down
01:19:27
at my I don't even know if it was right,
01:19:28
but I looked down at my watch and it
01:19:29
said like my heart rate was like 180 or
01:19:31
something. I'm like, "Oh my gosh." Oh, I
01:19:33
did promise my dad I wasn't going to
01:19:34
die, so I'm just going to just Yeah.
01:19:37
Anyway, I get I get to the end and it
01:19:39
was just a terrible race and I was like,
01:19:41
"Oh, I felt I just felt like a dick." I
01:19:43
was just like, "This I tried for
01:19:46
something. I really wanted it and I
01:19:47
didn't get it." And um Billy was at the
01:19:51
end. I don't know how he managed to get
01:19:52
there. Obviously, he had finished a
01:19:53
whole lot faster than me. And he grabbed
01:19:55
me and he gave me a hug. And I was
01:19:58
thinking to myself, "You're not going to
01:20:01
be able to say anything in this moment
01:20:03
that's going to make me feel better.
01:20:04
this is what I'm thinking.
01:20:06
>> And um and don't even bother trying.
01:20:08
That's what I'm feel like. I was kind of
01:20:10
angry and I was crying at that point.
01:20:12
And um
01:20:14
>> I said, I just feel like such a dick.
01:20:16
Like it was just such a terrible run and
01:20:18
I trained for and it didn't happen as I
01:20:20
needed to. And he said to me, he said,
01:20:23
"Han, you carried the boats." And and it
01:20:28
was like the perfect thing to say. And
01:20:30
it was based on some weird Navy Seal. I
01:20:33
don't know if you've heard heard of him.
01:20:34
>> David Gogggins.
01:20:35
>> Yeah. Yeah. And you you know when
01:20:37
they're training and
01:20:38
>> Yeah. Who's going to carry the boats?
01:20:40
>> Yeah. And you know that. So that's the
01:20:42
people they're rowing till they die cuz
01:20:44
I used to row and people stop rowing.
01:20:48
Not helpful. Like lay down sally in your
01:20:50
boat. And the people who are still
01:20:52
rowing are literally carrying the whole
01:20:54
boat.
01:20:55
>> And I'm like that's just the perfect
01:20:58
thing to say. I just carried the boat. I
01:21:00
didn't do what I wanted to do. I didn't
01:21:01
achieve in that situation what I wanted
01:21:03
to achieve, but I got it done.
01:21:05
>> And I think that strengthens me for
01:21:07
other things.
01:21:07
>> Yeah. And you got something done
01:21:09
regardless of your time. I say to people
01:21:11
that finish a marathon, you you've got
01:21:12
something done that 98% of the
01:21:14
population are never going to do.
01:21:15
>> I know, but you can't look at life like
01:21:18
that. You've got to look at it, but what
01:21:19
could I have done? Not I'm better than
01:21:22
them. [laughter]
01:21:24
>> But yes. But yeah,
01:21:25
>> you're still in a very, very special
01:21:27
group.
01:21:27
>> Yeah. Yeah.
01:21:28
>> Yeah.
01:21:29
>> But we try.
01:21:29
>> Okay. So, you're a you're a solver,
01:21:31
you're a doer, you're a fixer. How good
01:21:33
are you at asking for help?
01:21:34
>> I'm great.
01:21:35
>> I am.
01:21:35
>> Yeah.
01:21:36
>> Yeah. Um, but I I want to first kind of
01:21:39
scope where the where the help is. I
01:21:41
think sometimes you can get the wrong
01:21:43
you you know you need something, but if
01:21:45
you ask the wrong person or if the
01:21:48
question is not framed correctly, you
01:21:50
don't actually get the right answer. So,
01:21:52
I spend time kind of reflecting and
01:21:55
thinking on that and Yeah. But I'm good
01:21:57
at asking for help.
01:21:58
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, from your background
01:22:00
it would be like you most people asking
01:22:01
their uncle for financial advice or for
01:22:03
stock market tips.
01:22:05
>> Yes, I can do all of those. What's
01:22:06
interesting with the cuz I'm not medical
01:22:08
and I do think that this is the um the
01:22:10
superpower of Brightly. So there's this
01:22:12
incredible clinical team, 10 or so
01:22:15
expert clinicians in older person care
01:22:18
and then there's an advisory group of
01:22:20
some of the best medical minds in the
01:22:22
country. you know, they are they're like
01:22:26
on one hand I'm like you're amazing. On
01:22:29
the other hand, they look at everything
01:22:31
from a clinical perspective and I'm a
01:22:33
consumer and I don't care about some of
01:22:36
the stuff that they care about. I like
01:22:39
as a um the daughter of someone of
01:22:42
parents who are aging, I want to know
01:22:44
particular things and that's been a
01:22:47
we've had some very robust conversations
01:22:50
where they are trying to present
01:22:51
something clinically and I'll be like I
01:22:53
just don't care. I don't care. What I
01:22:56
care about is this. Or similarly, they
01:22:58
say something and I don't even
01:22:59
understand it. I'm like, I don't even
01:23:01
know what you're saying to work out if
01:23:02
that's important. And I think we're
01:23:04
going to start to break down. Those are
01:23:05
barriers in an industry where these
01:23:07
amazing people are not actually getting
01:23:09
the results that they should because the
01:23:12
system, the way that we communicate is
01:23:15
is separate from what the consumer
01:23:17
needs. And so I've tried to build
01:23:19
brightly so that it's person centered.
01:23:22
Let's start with people and that's the
01:23:23
the the patients or the members that
01:23:25
we're working with, but it's also the
01:23:26
team, the nurses and the geriatricians
01:23:29
and all of those. Let's start with the
01:23:30
right people and let's design something
01:23:33
that the person wants. And there's this
01:23:37
concept and [laughter] this is slightly
01:23:40
um this is not meant to be egotistical
01:23:42
at all, but there's this concept of so
01:23:46
often when people start businesses, they
01:23:48
start something that's already there and
01:23:51
they try and make it better. And that's
01:23:53
fine. and the market knows what they
01:23:55
want and they are trying to create a
01:23:58
better version. And that's great. That's
01:24:00
how most businesses work. But there's
01:24:02
this other concept called the lighthouse
01:24:04
identity, which is when you are a new
01:24:06
concept, the market doesn't even know
01:24:08
what they want because they haven't
01:24:10
experienced it yet to know that that's
01:24:11
actually what they need. And because
01:24:13
you're you're instead of just a instead
01:24:16
of being a mirror and reflecting back to
01:24:18
the market what they think they want,
01:24:20
you're actually a lighthouse and you're
01:24:21
kind of projecting a light. this and the
01:24:24
best example of that is um Steve Jobes
01:24:28
with Apple products. Like who knew that
01:24:30
we need we couldn't live without these
01:24:32
Apple products and this is what I want
01:24:34
Brightly to be that every family needs
01:24:37
this and I'm going to prove to you that
01:24:39
you you will want this for your family
01:24:42
and I'm designing it so that you
01:24:43
genuinely believe that.
01:24:45
>> Yeah. Steve Jobs famously against focus
01:24:47
groups. He he said um you know people
01:24:50
can't describe what they want but he
01:24:53
can. And even way back Henry Ford with
01:24:54
the Model T Ford I think his quote is
01:24:56
something like if I asked consumers what
01:24:58
they wanted they'd say faster horses.
01:24:59
>> Exactly. Exactly. And that's that's what
01:25:02
we're pioneering here.
01:25:04
>> Well that's [snorts] really exciting and
01:25:05
I think that the the timing's never been
01:25:07
better. You know aging population.
01:25:09
>> Yeah. Around the world.
01:25:11
>> What about politics? Did you consider
01:25:12
politics?
01:25:14
>> I think I've got too many skeletons.
01:25:16
[laughter]
01:25:16
>> Have you? I don't believe it.
01:25:18
>> I [gasps]
01:25:19
know people well I won't say what people
01:25:22
have said but um I think I can be more
01:25:25
effective
01:25:27
uh for
01:25:29
whoever is in government like we want to
01:25:31
create change. I want New Zealand to be
01:25:34
the new like I want us to be progressive
01:25:36
and productive but there was an essence
01:25:40
to being a Kiwi maybe from 10 or 20
01:25:42
years ago. I don't know how or why we
01:25:44
have lost that, but I want to start to
01:25:46
bring that back. And that was when we
01:25:48
were brave and we were supportive of
01:25:50
people and you were proud to be a Kiwi.
01:25:53
Um, I think I can create that in the
01:25:57
wild rather than through policy setting.
01:26:02
>> I'm curious about these skeletons and
01:26:03
what you you [laughter] you
01:26:05
self-censored before. What what have
01:26:07
people said because you've you curious
01:26:08
about this cuz you've had detractice
01:26:10
your entire life. like when you left
01:26:11
school early, there was a school teacher
01:26:12
that said, "You're making a big
01:26:13
mistake."
01:26:14
>> Um, you got married early. There was the
01:26:17
the boss that um fired you after the bad
01:26:19
idea. Yeah.
01:26:20
>> It feels like um you've had this ability
01:26:22
to use negativity as fuel along the way.
01:26:25
>> It's definitely fuel. One of my favorite
01:26:26
sayings and I say it to my mom when when
01:26:28
I'm debriefing some disaster. I'm like,
01:26:31
they they will ru the day. That's that's
01:26:34
my saying. And um it's satisfying when
01:26:40
though it just it doesn't get to me
01:26:42
those comments. What people have said is
01:26:44
um politically uh that they think that I
01:26:48
should um I'm not even going to say it.
01:26:51
It's too [laughter] embarrassing.
01:26:54
No, no, no. [clears throat] Too
01:26:56
embarrassing. Um but yeah, we're coming
01:27:00
for you, so you better do a good job
01:27:01
whoever's running this country.
01:27:03
>> Yeah. Um, what is the biggest stuff up
01:27:05
you've ever made? Is there anything that
01:27:07
springs to mind?
01:27:10
>> Probably um
01:27:16
I I'd need to think about that. I've
01:27:18
I've made lots of mistakes, but I don't
01:27:21
>> tend to attribute it as a stuff up
01:27:24
because it's a learning for me. So, I
01:27:25
don't I'm not
01:27:28
regretting something. Oh, I wish I
01:27:30
hadn't done that. um pro probably my not
01:27:34
my stuffups but it's a learning that I
01:27:37
have made now I I used to find it hard
01:27:42
to give direct feedback to people when
01:27:45
it was negative of often because
01:27:49
they were working so hard and had
01:27:51
sacrificed other things in order to be
01:27:53
doing what they're doing
01:27:55
>> uh I think that that puts pressure on
01:27:59
other members of the team if you're
01:28:01
carrying
01:28:02
low performance or poor performance. It
01:28:04
certainly isn't fair to the high
01:28:06
performers.
01:28:07
Um, and one of my learnings is it
01:28:09
doesn't matter how hard you're rowing if
01:28:12
you're rowing in the wrong direction.
01:28:14
>> And so sometimes having the ability to
01:28:18
assess are you still on track is just as
01:28:20
important.
01:28:22
>> Yeah. How did you overcome that that
01:28:23
fear of difficult conversations? Uh you
01:28:26
you we sort of established before that
01:28:27
you you know your people people pleaser
01:28:29
tendency. So it definitely goes goes it
01:28:32
aligns with that.
01:28:33
>> Did you did how did Yeah. How did you
01:28:35
>> I actually had in Enable Me I bought on
01:28:38
um
01:28:40
someone into the CEO role. Um
01:28:45
his name was Jonno and
01:28:48
and I he's sort of like my antithesis
01:28:51
but we work very very well together. Um
01:28:54
but in his spare time he um is an
01:28:58
international referee. So he referees uh
01:29:01
net and also rugby.
01:29:04
And what that means is that he enjoys
01:29:08
conflict and making a decision very
01:29:11
quickly in the moment and calling people
01:29:14
out very quickly and [snorts] it comes
01:29:16
naturally to him. So you kind of you see
01:29:18
these photos of him and he's got, you
01:29:20
know, two rugby players up in his face
01:29:21
and he's giving one a red card or
01:29:23
whatever the case is. It it just doesn't
01:29:25
even bother him. And he comes to
01:29:28
so he's all about trying to create high
01:29:30
performance. And his observation to me
01:29:32
was, Hannah, you're carrying more of the
01:29:35
load than you should and that's
01:29:37
impacting our ability to grow and your
01:29:40
inability to tell people that they're
01:29:42
not performing as they should is putting
01:29:43
pressure on everyone else. So, he kind
01:29:44
of just he he called it like to my face.
01:29:47
>> And that was probably the the reckoning
01:29:50
that I needed.
01:29:51
>> Um, and I've just learned to get better
01:29:54
with that. It's a lot easier to do it
01:29:56
when the relationship starts that way,
01:29:58
you know, where it's you kind of lines
01:30:00
aren't crossed and sacrifices aren't
01:30:03
made that play out perversely um down
01:30:06
the track. It's a lot easier when it's a
01:30:07
clean slate. Definitely.
01:30:09
>> Do you do any tricks like the compliment
01:30:11
sandwich? like give give them some good
01:30:12
news then the bad news then [laughter]
01:30:15
>> um it's
01:30:16
>> or you just more direct? Uh well there
01:30:19
there's this concept um that they
01:30:22
studied at Harvard Business School and
01:30:25
it's called when you red team someone
01:30:27
and it's when you basically give them
01:30:29
feedback right between the eyes and you
01:30:31
kind of tell them things that they might
01:30:32
not have even thought of or considered
01:30:36
and
01:30:38
it can be quite confronting and it can
01:30:40
be quite jarring but it is one of the
01:30:41
most effective ways that you can
01:30:43
communicate with any team is just give
01:30:44
it to them straight. my I've had to
01:30:48
learn to do that and I normally need to
01:30:50
preface it with hey I need to give you
01:30:52
some feedback and then I'll go into it
01:30:55
not
01:30:56
>> the compliment sandwich is [snorts]
01:30:58
>> it it can be helpful at certain levels
01:31:00
of an organization or certain maturity
01:31:02
of people in the organization but if you
01:31:04
are in the trenches with someone or you
01:31:07
consider yourself a Navy Seal of which I
01:31:09
actually consider myself a Navy Seal
01:31:10
[laughter]
01:31:11
I've always thought I'd love to do that
01:31:12
training
01:31:14
>> well the hell week looks terrible It
01:31:16
does, but kind of amazing, right? It
01:31:18
would just be so cool to get through.
01:31:20
>> But when you're in the trenches with
01:31:22
someone,
01:31:23
>> I just think it's
01:31:25
>> you you make it harder for them to be
01:31:28
successful if you can't be honest with
01:31:31
them.
01:31:32
>> And that's that's always hard to get the
01:31:34
balance right. Even in relationships,
01:31:36
that can be hard. You know, that's your
01:31:37
your working relationship, but personal
01:31:39
relationships or with your kids, you
01:31:41
don't want to just nag all the time. And
01:31:44
so you yeah, you choose kind of when you
01:31:47
want to say something, but when you do
01:31:48
say something, you want it to you want
01:31:50
it to land.
01:31:52
>> When I had Sir Steve Hansen on the
01:31:53
podcast, he he's got a name for it. I
01:31:55
think he calls it the 20% conversations.
01:31:57
And he says to when he was in charge of
01:31:58
the All Blacks, say something like,
01:31:59
"Look, 80% of the conversations, eight
01:32:02
out of 10 conversations we have are
01:32:03
going to be positive. Two out of 10 are
01:32:04
going to be difficult, and we just need
01:32:06
to accept that
01:32:06
>> and we need to be okay with it." Yeah. I
01:32:08
don't think the Kiwi mentality is that
01:32:11
is wired to deliver that well or to
01:32:14
receive that as they should. I when I
01:32:16
think of the Australian mentality, I
01:32:19
think that they are definitely wired for
01:32:20
for that. Maybe because their living
01:32:22
conditions back in the day were a whole
01:32:24
lot more brutal, you know.
01:32:26
>> How happy are you on a scale of 1 to 10?
01:32:29
How happy are you today? And when have
01:32:30
you been your happiest?
01:32:32
>> Um, I'd probably say I'm nine. I'm
01:32:36
probably
01:32:36
>> That's a great number. Yeah. Yeah. I I'm
01:32:40
happiest when my kids are doing well.
01:32:44
Certainly when they're not getting in
01:32:45
trouble. Um I'm not happy when if my
01:32:49
son's getting in trouble. [laughter]
01:32:51
>> What sort of trouble does he get in?
01:32:52
>> We don't even want to talk about that.
01:32:55
Um but I love my son. Let Let me know.
01:32:59
Let me say that. We we have this this
01:33:01
farm as I mentioned up at Mangafi and
01:33:03
it's the most special place and it has
01:33:07
this essence to it which I always was
01:33:09
trying to create where you go there and
01:33:12
you just kind of shake off the cares of
01:33:14
the world and you just you go back to
01:33:16
what it once was where you can talk to
01:33:18
people and um so we've we've built this
01:33:21
kind of amazing outdoor kitchen beside
01:33:23
this lake and and it's incredible. So,
01:33:27
we've just had over Christmas, we've had
01:33:28
heaps of people over, but on that farm
01:33:31
we've kind of it's that it's my
01:33:33
homesteading era. So, um we've got two
01:33:36
coonies and three dogs and four
01:33:39
chickens. Um soon to have some cattle
01:33:42
and sheep. It's just a little farm. But,
01:33:45
um, that's where I'm probably my
01:33:48
happiest because people come and I feel
01:33:51
like you
01:33:53
you can kind of help them take a load
01:33:55
off. And
01:33:57
with Enable Me, I was trying to help my
01:34:00
clients take a financial load off. And
01:34:03
with Brightly, I'm wanting families to
01:34:06
have a load off through that process.
01:34:09
But I think just in life,
01:34:12
if I can be known for something, maybe
01:34:15
it's that I helped
01:34:17
wash your feet or take that load off.
01:34:20
And this this farm allows us to do that.
01:34:23
And and it is wonderful. And I feel that
01:34:26
it's um
01:34:29
I feel just so lucky that I'm that we
01:34:32
can be generous and gracious through
01:34:34
that. It's nice. Are you able to switch
01:34:37
off when you're out on the farm or are
01:34:38
you sort of like worring over like
01:34:40
there's a whole lot of tabs open in your
01:34:41
in your mind?
01:34:42
>> Yeah, I love I love that analogy. Um I
01:34:45
can definitely switch off, but I love
01:34:48
being able to go for long walks and
01:34:49
think. Uh that's one of the things I
01:34:51
love about running is that nothing kind
01:34:53
of allows you to think or forget like
01:34:56
running. Like just all the noise goes
01:34:58
away. Um
01:34:59
>> it's great processing time.
01:35:01
>> Yeah. Yeah. Often if I've got a problem,
01:35:04
I normally listen to music when I run
01:35:06
unless I have a problem I'm trying to
01:35:07
crack and then I won't and I'll just
01:35:09
think about that problem for the whole
01:35:11
run. And normally something shaken down
01:35:13
by the end. It's pretty cool.
01:35:16
>> We call that raw dogging nowadays
01:35:17
apparently.
01:35:18
>> Do we?
01:35:18
>> Yeah. If you if you run without music,
01:35:20
it's raw dogging.
01:35:21
>> Oh [laughter]
01:35:22
>> yeah. I used to do it without music. Now
01:35:25
I need the music.
01:35:26
>> Yeah.
01:35:26
>> And it's a thing that that whole Do you
01:35:28
listen to music
01:35:29
>> occasionally? Yeah. This morning I
01:35:31
didn't because I just I had some stuff
01:35:32
that I wanted to think about and I
01:35:34
wanted to think about this podcast today
01:35:35
and how I was going to structure it. Um
01:35:37
but usually I do but you do you become
01:35:40
sort of quite reliant on it.
01:35:41
>> That's the problem. Yeah. So when you
01:35:43
when I was um training for the coast and
01:35:45
the Iron Man and stuff that cuz I don't
01:35:48
think you back in the day I don't know
01:35:49
if it's the case now. I don't think you
01:35:51
were allowed to listen to music. So all
01:35:53
that training was without music.
01:35:55
>> But now cuz marathons are so kind of
01:35:57
long and boring I need something to get
01:35:58
me through. And when you kind of what
01:36:01
music you schedule at different parts of
01:36:02
the marathon is always interesting.
01:36:03
>> A playlist.
01:36:04
>> Yeah. Yeah.
01:36:05
>> Um what would you say your best and
01:36:08
worst habits are?
01:36:09
>> Oh,
01:36:10
>> I can probably come up with best. Okay,
01:36:12
let's not worry about that. What would
01:36:13
your worst be? What would your worst
01:36:14
habits be?
01:36:17
>> Um what are some examples? I don't think
01:36:20
>> I don't know. I don't know. It's over.
01:36:22
>> I'm pretty I'm pretty wholesome. Like I
01:36:24
don't really have I don't think I've got
01:36:26
bad habits. Hey, maybe I don't pick up
01:36:28
my clothes from the bathroom that night
01:36:31
or the next day. [laughter]
01:36:33
>> And having got got to know you recently,
01:36:34
I know you're like a a can of Diet Coke
01:36:36
per day. It's a a small luxury you
01:36:39
>> that I allow myself
01:36:40
>> never deprive yourself of.
01:36:41
>> Yeah, I love that. And it but it didn't
01:36:42
work well for me cuz I remember when my
01:36:44
son um when we found a vape in his room,
01:36:47
whole different story. Um
01:36:49
>> and what age?
01:36:50
>> 16.
01:36:52
>> Oh yeah. and we'd gone in there looking
01:36:55
for um Billy had gone and looking for
01:36:58
some money, found a vape. He calls me.
01:37:01
This is just such a mother thing. He
01:37:02
goes, "I found a vape in Cam's room."
01:37:04
I'm like, "What?" I go I'm like, "Well,
01:37:06
it couldn't be Cams. He's not that
01:37:07
stupid." And he's like, "It will be
01:37:10
Cams." He is that stupid. And I'm pretty
01:37:13
sure where there's one, there's going to
01:37:14
be a whole lot more. And it's that he
01:37:16
channeled his inner 15year-old or
01:37:19
16-year-old self and then managed to
01:37:20
find a whole handful of them. And I'm
01:37:22
like, "Oh my gosh." And [snorts]
01:37:26
in any case, when I was saying to
01:37:28
Cameron, "Why are you vaping? This is
01:37:30
just I don't get it. You know, it's bad
01:37:31
for you. We like and his response was,
01:37:35
"Well, you drink Diet Coke and that's
01:37:36
not good for you." And [laughter] and I
01:37:39
had no response. I'm like, I'm thinking
01:37:41
to myself, "Wow, he probably has a
01:37:42
point." Anyway, so that's kind of the
01:37:45
vape Diet Coke um blend.
01:37:49
>> Um when was the last time you cried?
01:37:52
Ah.
01:37:54
Um,
01:37:56
but within the last month.
01:37:58
>> Yeah.
01:38:00
What was it about?
01:38:03
I think there was a positive and there
01:38:04
was a negative. Um,
01:38:08
>> like happy tears, sad tears.
01:38:10
>> Yeah. Happy tears and sad. Yeah, that's
01:38:12
right. Two different scenarios.
01:38:14
>> Yeah.
01:38:14
>> The um
01:38:17
Oh, actually when I was doing the
01:38:18
podcast yesterday, I cried. When I think
01:38:20
of my grandmother, um, who probably
01:38:23
inspired me to follow through with this,
01:38:25
I I get quite emotional with that.
01:38:27
>> Yeah.
01:38:27
>> Yeah. She's passed now.
01:38:30
>> What are you most afraid of,
01:38:36
[snorts]
01:38:37
>> apart from finding another vape?
01:38:39
[laughter] Honestly,
01:38:42
um [snorts] what I'm I'm most afraid of
01:38:49
there sort of layers to that like that
01:38:51
if I don't know how deep you want to go
01:38:53
with that, but um
01:38:55
>> probably being dishonest with myself
01:38:58
>> like in terms of
01:39:00
>> um just pretending
01:39:02
>> something or romanticizing something
01:39:04
that's not there.
01:39:06
>> Um
01:39:07
>> just ignoring a reality in a way.
01:39:08
>> Yeah. Yeah. probably that which I'm not
01:39:11
really afraid of. I just try and pride
01:39:13
myself in not doing that. Um
01:39:19
if I go deeper
01:39:22
um
01:39:27
whether
01:39:29
probably that goes more into the
01:39:30
spiritual if I go deeper. So I don't
01:39:32
know if you want that.
01:39:32
>> Oh yeah. No, let's go there.
01:39:33
>> Oh god. Um,
01:39:36
>> are you are you religious in any way or
01:39:38
are you are you atheist, agnostic?
01:39:40
>> No, I definitely believe in God.
01:39:41
Definitely believe in God and I believe
01:39:43
in Jesus. Um, and I go to church
01:39:48
>> and I [sighs and gasps]
01:39:50
speak with the tongues of angels.
01:39:52
[laughter]
01:39:52
>> What does that mean?
01:39:53
>> I it it's um I can speak in tongues or
01:39:56
have the Holy Spirit. So, it's quite a
01:39:58
big thing. So, my biggest fear is that
01:40:01
um
01:40:04
uh that I won't that I'll be found
01:40:07
wanting.
01:40:10
>> Oh, so you won't make it to heaven.
01:40:12
>> Yeah. Yeah. But that's sort of in a um
01:40:16
that would be my Yeah. Probably my
01:40:18
biggest fear. Not because I think I'm
01:40:19
going to hell. Um I just wonder if the
01:40:23
path to heaven's different than what
01:40:25
most people think. There's there's sort
01:40:27
of a graciousness that you want to
01:40:29
receive. Yeah.
01:40:31
>> Is is that what sort of guides you on a
01:40:33
day-to-day basis?
01:40:34
>> At a deep level. Yeah.
01:40:35
>> Yeah.
01:40:36
>> Yeah. At a soul level. And I always
01:40:38
think that, you know, when and sort of
01:40:40
back to Brightly, I I'm like I feel that
01:40:42
at a soul level, I'm meant to be doing
01:40:45
this. Um but at a soul level, I want my
01:40:49
kids to have a great a great life and to
01:40:52
have fulfillment. And I don't think it
01:40:53
comes from money necessarily, but it
01:40:56
comes from purpose.
01:40:58
>> Uh, and I want it to be said, you know,
01:40:59
I ran a good race and um, and I tried
01:41:04
hard. And there's that beautiful
01:41:06
actually in our office in Brightly,
01:41:07
we've got that Roosevelt saying, you
01:41:09
know, that if you're going to strive,
01:41:11
strive valiantly. And you're in the
01:41:13
arena and you're covered in blood,
01:41:14
sweat, and tears. And you may, but at
01:41:17
least you you gave it a good shot. And
01:41:19
that's what I want to be said of me.
01:41:21
Like I'm not saying that I've got all
01:41:22
the answers. I'm not saying that um
01:41:26
definitely don't have all the answers,
01:41:27
but I reckon I can um
01:41:31
yeah, I've trained for it.
01:41:34
>> Say it's um say it's your funeral. Um
01:41:37
Oh, yeah. And your your children and
01:41:40
your husband, they're standing around
01:41:41
the coffin. You're on the the Jet Star
01:41:43
flight to heaven. [laughter]
01:41:46
>> No, definitely be Emirates, I'd say. Um
01:41:48
yeah. What three words would you like
01:41:50
your family to use to describe you?
01:41:52
>> Oh,
01:41:54
um,
01:41:57
discerning.
01:42:00
>> Uh,
01:42:02
loving
01:42:04
and generous.
01:42:06
>> They're great words.
01:42:08
>> Yeah. Is that Is that how you're living
01:42:10
your life?
01:42:12
>> No one's ever said There's lots of words
01:42:14
that come up like repeatedly. No one's
01:42:15
ever said discerning before.
01:42:17
>> It's a great word. Yeah,
01:42:18
>> great word. Are you proud of yourself?
01:42:21
>> Yes.
01:42:23
>> Hannah McQueen, this has been a great
01:42:25
podcast.
01:42:26
>> How's it been for you? Are are you going
01:42:28
to have a vulnerability hangover driving
01:42:30
home like you've just shared?
01:42:32
>> Probably.
01:42:32
>> I've heard a lot of podcasts with you in
01:42:34
the last couple of weeks knowing that
01:42:35
this was coming up and um a lot of them
01:42:38
had have been questioning you about
01:42:39
money and about, you know, the
01:42:41
psychology of money and Kiwi's
01:42:43
relationships with money. that I don't
01:42:44
think you've ever been as open or as
01:42:46
honest in a podcast as what you've been
01:42:48
today.
01:42:48
>> No, [laughter] I'm already thinking,
01:42:51
will I regret this?
01:42:53
>> Oh well.
01:42:55
>> Well, it's been wonderful. I've really
01:42:56
enjoyed it. It's been really um nice to
01:42:59
get to know you the last couple of
01:43:00
months as a client, but um also to get
01:43:02
to know you on a deeper level as a
01:43:04
podcast guest.
01:43:04
>> Thank you.
01:43:05
>> You're a great New Zealander. Thank you.

Podspun Insights

In this episode of the Domavvey podcast, listeners are treated to an engaging conversation with Hannah McQueen, a dynamic entrepreneur from New Zealand. Hannah shares her journey from founding Enable Me, a company that empowered families to take control of their finances, to her new venture, Brightly, which aims to revolutionize elderly healthcare. The episode is packed with personal anecdotes, including Hannah's candid reflections on her struggles, triumphs, and the lessons learned along the way.

Hannah opens up about the emotional rollercoaster of selling her first company, the challenges of being a parent, and her determination to make a difference in the healthcare sector. With humor and honesty, she discusses the importance of self-awareness, the value of trusting others, and the need for vulnerability in both personal and professional life. The conversation flows seamlessly, touching on everything from marathon running to the complexities of aging, making it a rich and relatable experience for listeners.

As Hannah dives into her motivations for starting Brightly, she highlights the systemic issues in elderly care and her commitment to creating a solution that prioritizes people over profits. This episode not only showcases Hannah's entrepreneurial spirit but also her deep empathy and desire to effect positive change in society. It's a heartfelt and inspiring listen that resonates with anyone interested in entrepreneurship, healthcare, or personal growth.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most inspiring
  • 95
    Best overall
  • 95
    Best concept / idea
  • 92
    Most satisfying

Episode Highlights

  • The Magical Fish and Chips
    A nostalgic reflection on the joy of getting fish and chips as a child.
    “I just thought that was just magical.”
    @ 18m 26s
    February 18, 2026
  • Swimming Against the Current
    A determination to not just drift through life, but to actively shape it.
    “I’m not interested in drifting in any area of my life.”
    @ 20m 08s
    February 18, 2026
  • Facing Forward
    A philosophy of moving past challenges and focusing on future opportunities.
    “I’m a believer you got to face forward.”
    @ 28m 45s
    February 18, 2026
  • Creating Jobs
    The satisfaction of knowing you've created jobs for nearly 100 families.
    “That’s huge, right?”
    @ 32m 01s
    February 18, 2026
  • Building a Legacy
    Success comes with responsibilities, and the desire to contribute remains strong.
    “I could stop, but I feel like I've got more to give.”
    @ 39m 00s
    February 18, 2026
  • Embracing Change
    Moving on from a successful venture can be bittersweet but necessary for growth.
    “I was ready for my next era.”
    @ 48m 05s
    February 18, 2026
  • A Fear of Financial Insecurity
    The fear of being broke stems from upbringing and psychological perspectives.
    “One of my worst fears is being broke.”
    @ 55m 09s
    February 18, 2026
  • A New Beginning After Selling
    After selling Enable Me, the speaker reflects on the relief of closing that chapter.
    “I had the best night's sleep of my life.”
    @ 59m 34s
    February 18, 2026
  • The Challenge Ahead
    Starting a new venture feels like climbing a bigger mountain than before.
    “This is a bigger mountain.”
    @ 01h 11m 57s
    February 18, 2026
  • Marathon Reflections
    A personal story about the challenges faced during a marathon and the lessons learned.
    “I just carried the boat.”
    @ 01h 21m 00s
    February 18, 2026
  • The Compliment Sandwich
    Exploring the effectiveness of the compliment sandwich in communication.
    “It can be helpful at certain levels.”
    @ 01h 30m 58s
    February 18, 2026
  • A Spiritual Perspective
    The guest shares their beliefs and fears regarding spirituality and honesty.
    “My biggest fear is that I won’t that I’ll be found wanting.”
    @ 01h 40m 01s
    February 18, 2026

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Starting Enable Me31:01
  • Creating Jobs32:01
  • Entrepreneurial Struggles36:39
  • Kiwi Challenges41:20
  • Next Era48:05
  • Best Night's Sleep59:34
  • Advocacy for Care1:11:16
  • Bigger Challenges1:11:57

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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