This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewMike Malatesta grew up in a small world. He moved four times before the age of ten, each time practically within the same neighborhood. In middle school, he became a good enough football player that he was able to get into a nice private school for high school – a drastic change which he resisted at first.
There, he felt that he was behind his peers in some ways. There were so many kids from different backgrounds, many with much more money than he grew up with. But he quickly learned that when he went out on the field, there was no difference. That helped him understand that, as people, we are all the same.
He had a love of trucks from a young age. From sitting outside his home and watching them go by, all the way to college, where he got a job driving a garbage truck in downtown Philadelphia for the fun of it. It was there that he realized his passion for the work extended beyond a love of trucks. There was purpose (and profit) to be found in the refuse industry.
Later on, at a low point, a friend of his reached out, recognizing his value, with interest in partnering up on a business idea. Mike’s entrepreneurial path had many successes and failures, but as the business grew, he stopped learning and eventually burned out, entering a negative feedback loop that he calls The Valley of Uncertainty. It took him years to climb out of it.
It was through coaching that Mike was able to break through, turn his business around, and eventually sell it. Now, he hosts his own podcast, wrote a book called Owner Shift, and coaches entrepreneurs on how to make the futures that they want.
What Brett asks:
To learn more about intentional living, and for the complete show notes, visit: kaufman.com">brett-kaufman.com
Resources:
Gravity is produced and published by Crate Media.
Mike Malatesta grew up in a small world. He moved four times before the age of ten, each time practically within the same neighborhood. In middle school, he became a good enough football player that he was able to get into a nice private school for high school – a drastic change which he resisted at first.
There, he felt that he was behind his peers in some ways. There were so many kids from different backgrounds, many with much more money than he grew up with. But he quickly learned that when he went out on the field, there was no difference. That helped him understand that, as people, we are all the same.
He had a love of trucks from a young age. From sitting outside his home and watching them go by, all the way to college, where he got a job driving a garbage truck in downtown Philadelphia for the fun of it. It was there that he realized his passion for the work extended beyond a love of trucks. There was purpose (and profit) to be found in the refuse industry.
Later on, at a low point, a friend of his reached out, recognizing his value, with interest in partnering up on a business idea. Mike’s entrepreneurial path had many successes and failures, but as the business grew, he stopped learning and eventually burned out, entering a negative feedback loop that he calls The Valley of Uncertainty. It took him years to climb out of it.
It was through coaching that Mike was able to break through, turn his business around, and eventually sell it. Now, he hosts his own podcast, wrote a book called Owner Shift, and coaches entrepreneurs on how to make the futures that they want.
What Brett asks:
To learn more about intentional living, and for the complete show notes, visit: kaufman.com">brett-kaufman.com
Resources:
Gravity is produced and published by Crate Media.
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