Herman Dolce | Unlocking Success: Mentorship, Investment, and Financial Education with Herman Dolce
We'll also delve into the nuances of good debt versus bad debt, strategic business financing, and Herman's mission to teach financial literacy from high school classrooms to boardrooms. Whether you're looking to better manage your credit, invest wisely, or simply understand the tax laws better, this episode is packed with actionable insights and inspiring stories to help you achieve financial freedom. So tune in as we unlock the secrets to financial success and personal growth with Herman Dolce, only on "Mick Unplugged".Takeaways:
Financial literacy and education are crucial for achieving financial freedom.
Not all debt is bad debt; understanding the difference between good and bad debt is important.
Having a mentor and investing in coaches can provide valuable wisdom and shortcuts to success.
Initiatives like Bella Sloan Academy and the Blueprint Foundation aim to teach financial literacy to individuals of all ages.
Sound Bites
"Everybody should not have a business. But everyone should be an investor."
"We need to have amazing examples of what we truly want to be. It is the shortcut and hack to be successful in this life."
Connect and DiscoverLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/herman-dolce
Instagram: Instagram.com/Haitian_CEO
Facebook: facebook.com/BellaSloanEnterprises
TikTok: @Haitian_CEO
Website: bellasloanllc.com
Non-Profit: Blue Print Foundation
Podcast: Execute!
Books: ABC’s of Credit Bella Builds Business Credit
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Listen and follow along
Transcript
I think that there's so much pressure to be debt-free that that's really not financial freedom because some debt is good debt.
Because credit was first created for businesses and companies, like Christopher Columbus, when he came here and there was already people here, he borrowed money from the queen because this was his business to travel the world.
He found some stuff and he brought it back and he flipped it.
That's what credit was used for first.
And then the banks got hit.
They were like, yo, we can use this for consumers and charge them 20, 30%.
It's like, unless you own your your own, you'll never be free.
Everybody should not have a business.
I'm going to say this out loud, Nick.
Everybody does not need to own a business, but everyone should be an investor.
Everyone.
Your job is your first business partner.
Right.
So after you pay all the bills and whatever is left over, that $500, that thousand dollars you got left over, that should be your initial capital to invest into yourself or your business.
You don't have to take the stairs to success if you've got a mentor that has has wisdom that can get you on the elevator.
Welcome to Mick Unplugged, where we ignite potential and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves, and game-changing conversations.
Buckle up.
Here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged, and today we've got an amazing show for you.
We're talking to an exceptional guest who's a visionary entrepreneur and financial expert who has dedicated his career to helping individuals and businesses achieve financial literacy and success.
With a deep understanding of wealth management and financial strategies, he has guided countless clients towards achieving their financial goals.
Please join me in welcoming the inspiring, the influential, and Philly's own.
I call him the doctor, Dr.
Herman Dulce.
Herman, how you doing today, brother?
I appreciate you so much.
Thank you for having me and trusting me with your platform and your audience.
It means a lot to me.
Man, I love it.
And I know that you pull no punches.
And that's why I love you.
And that's why I follow you, man.
So, you know, this world, especially this day and age, financial literacy is something that...
Every individual needs.
And most people don't teach it in their homes.
And by the time they start, these are my words, not the words of Dr.
Herman.
It's too late.
They can be helped, but it's almost like if you'd have done these things earlier, you'd be set up.
It's great things.
Right.
It would have been so different.
Yeah.
So I love to just give you the floor, man.
Like, when did this become a passion of yours?
And what are you doing in this space now?
So just a little brief history.
Again, Herman Dalcy, born in Brooklyn, New York, first generation Haitian.
My family moved me, me and my siblings, my brother and sister, to Philadelphia when I was 11 years old.
So I can't rep New York anymore.
I'm 43.
I've been here 30 years.
And to fast forward to this financial financial literacy space that I'm in,
the name of my company is Bella Sloan Enterprises, where we started with credit restoration and then we tripped into business funding.
And how that all started was I got married.
And shout out to my wife, Jano.
I've been married 11 years last week.
And so we're over the decade hump.
So I think I'm going to stick around.
All right.
So
we went, she got pregnant and we went on a baby moon to Italy.
Now, a baby moon is when for the for your listeners who's never heard that before that's when you go on a trip the final trip with your significant other before the baby comes because your life is never going to be the same again um so we went to we went to italy and she planned an amazing trip mick like i'm talking about venice and rome and amafi coast like we just did a tour of italy got back and that took two that took two weeks and shoestring budget i was a social worker at the time so i was making 39.5
um um at at that job.
So barely under 40, but that was 11 years.
That was like eight years ago.
So we pulled it off.
Anyway, I got back home and I was not able to spend time with Bella when the baby was born with Bella, right?
Me and my wife.
And that bothered me because I use all my vacation time to go to Italy.
So my brother said something.
He's like, he heard it from somewhere.
He told, he said, he repeated it to me.
He's like, unless you own your own, you'll never be free.
So, and I was like, well, what am I going to do?
I'm going to start real estate like everybody else is doing.
And he's like, That credit thing you do, he was like, You should make that a business and stop doing it for free and charge people.
Because I knew a little bit about credit
before it got saturated, and millions of letters are being sent to all the credit bureaus, and the internet made it cool.
He, uh, and I only knew that because my father has the same name as me, so his stuff was on my credit.
So, I used to just call him or write letters, and it was a lot easier back then.
He was like, That credit thing, um, start charging people for it.
And I was like, No, like, people people really need that and he's like listen they're gonna pay somebody they might as well pay you the genesis of bella soon enterprises it first started as a credit restoration company and then you know the you know the drill nick you go on youtube to try to do better at your craft and then you go down the rabbit hole and i ran into funding and that was it i was like wait a minute You telling me if I got good credit and I got a LLC, I can get $50,000 just with my signature?
And that's what blew me up because then I brought that back to my my people and they're like, no way.
And I'm like, yo, I'm telling you, it's crazy.
You can get 100 grand.
Like, I'm telling you.
And anyway,
it was bonkers from that.
And then from that, we started Bella Sloan Academy, where we are teaching people financial literacy, how to get funding, how to set up their business properly, et cetera, et cetera.
And it got me on one of the most amazing podcasts in the world.
So I'm doing pretty good.
I don't know what that podcast was, but I'm going to check it out.
How about that?
Listen, Mick Unplugged.
They need to tap in.
My fellow ball-headed brother.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Man, so I'm a huge fan of yours, huge follower of yours, and you talk a lot about financial freedom.
And one of the things that I want to bust this myth, and I want people to understand, and I'd love for you to go deeper on it for me: debt-free is not the same thing as financial freedom.
I think that there's so much pressure to be debt-free
that that's really not financial freedom because some debt is good debt, right?
And so, when you go to a rush to be debt-free, but you have no more cash left,
you didn't help yourself.
Exactly.
All right.
So how much time you got, Mick?
I mean, let's go.
The floor is yours.
We can go down a rabbit hole.
So let's bust a couple of the myths.
So not all debt is bad debt, for example, because people always tell me this when I show people how to get credit limit increases and things like that.
And people in the comments, are you showing people how to get into debt?
I'm like, no, I'm showing people how to get capital so that they can invest in themselves and in their businesses.
Because credit was first created for businesses and companies like Christopher Columbus, when he came here and there was already people here, he borrowed money from the queen because this was his business to travel the world.
He found some stuff and he brought it back and he flipped it.
That's what credit was used for first.
And then the banks got hit.
They was like, yo, we can use this for consumers and charge them 20, 30%.
So that's the bad that when you're using credit to buy things that don't make you money, right?
So such as a car and such as like the flat screen TV everyone's going to buy for the hundredth time on Black Friday, versus
me taking debt to purchase,
literally, I just came from looking at an abandoned property not too far from me, $500,000 is what they're asking for, but the cost of in the neighborhood is 1.2.
So, now I'm going to call my
contractors and be like, hey, for a full gut, what is this going to cost?
They're probably going to tell me quarter of a million, 300,000.
So, I'm in the deal, you know what I'm saying, for under the arv i'll flip it make 200 grand so i'm using money to make money um so even people who be in the comments i had to reply back to somebody i was like listen this app that you're on telling me that it's it's not a good idea to show people how to get capital because they're going to go into debt is because you haven't been taught the good about debt because the instagram where you're commenting on the gentleman that owned it he had to raise capital right to to hire people to start the app the developers etc and then uh meta bought it for a billion dollars.
So, you know, there's good debt and there's bad debt.
When people buy real estate, nobody has the cash to buy real estate.
They have to borrow the money, right?
Flip it, make it more valuable.
And then you're able to debt services if you're going to keep it with renters.
So there's good that and bad debt.
So we like to teach that the way to wealth is understanding how money works in general, including debt, so that you can put yourself in a better position.
All day.
This is why I listen to Herman all day, because it's these type of tips that you get that are life-changing, no matter what situation you're in, individual or business.
It's these type of tips that you need to know to set yourself up for success.
Herman, what's another tip or myth buster that we could talk about?
Another tip or
myth buster that we can talk about.
Okay, well, I'll say this.
When people see me post on my Instagram or TikTok or YouTube, it's like, oh, I get somebody $100,000, $150,000, quarter of a million.
That's cap.
That's not real.
It's not possible to raise that type of capital for a new business.
I'm like, actually, it is.
Because
when we do raising money for people, we do it in a special strategy.
And I want to go through it real quick.
So banks, when you're first starting out, I want to give a shout out to Storm Lero.
He's one of my mentors.
Your job.
is your first business partner, right?
So after you pay all the bills and whatever is left over, that $500, that thousand thousand dollars you got left over, that should be your initial capital to invest into yourself or your business, right?
Proof of concept using your money first.
You want to start a t-shirt company, go buy $100 worth of t-shirt, the other $200 you print it, and then slap a website together and promote your business, start your brand, see what happens.
Let's see if you're able to flip that $1,000 you got left over.
Risk your money first into your business.
Now, if it works, whatever it is, if it works, that's when you go to your second second business partners where I come in, your business funding, your business credit, your business lines of credit.
Now you're getting 10, 25, 30,000, and you can take that money because you have proof of concept, and you're basically putting gasoline on what you know has already worked using your money.
So here's where the mythbuster comes in.
When I tell people I get them $50,000,000, it's like, how is that possible?
Because I use a strategy called credit stacking.
So I know that American Express pulls from Experian.
I know that Navy Federal pulls from TransUnion.
I know that Key Bank pulls from Equifax.
That means I'm going to three different banks who cannot see that I just got inquiry on my credit report.
So if I went to American Express, got an inquiry.
When I go to Navy Federal, they don't know I just got $10,000 real quick.
They don't know I just got $25,000 because they can't see it.
Boom, I got another $25, $10,000, $15,000, whatever it is.
And then I go to Key Bank, they can't see that I just got money from two banks.
So when I stack that way, which I call horizontally, right?
When I fund myself that way, my clients were getting $7,500,000,000, 0% interest money.
They're able to get that capital.
Make sure you have a business plan and use it responsible, fund responsibly.
They're going to put themselves in a better position than funding themselves vertically, where if they would have gone to American Express that pulls from Experian and Chase, that pulls from Experian, Chase would have seen that inquiry from American Express and gave them less money.
So cleaning up your credit report and cleaning up those
inquiries can really help you build up capital.
That's a brand new business just because you got good credit on the personal side.
We can do this all day.
All day.
So, for the listener or viewer, because you know how people are, Herman.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That sounds great.
It sounds good.
Where's the proof of concept?
Herman, without naming names, why don't you tell us about a recent success story that you've had?
Oh my God, without naming the name.
Jesus.
First of all, Bella Sloan Academy, we have a private Facebook group.
So anybody wants to join the the academy, they can.
And all my mentees, all they do is just drop the receipts.
We recently,
we got a relationship manager in Chase, right?
Where he's like, Herman, you send me good qualified people.
We'll get them between 50 and $75,000, 0%
interest on one credit card.
And I got a client that $67,000 Chase business credit card, one inquiry for their business that's only six months old.
And we was able to get them that capital because he has really, really good credit.
And what else is really important about that success story that's super important is that i'm teaching other people how to start funding companies because once you fund yourself that means you can fund other people so now they're starting companies i'm like listen that's my plug you call in you tell people you fund people and you can go and help people and now they have another revenue stream that they didn't know was possible
bro
it's exciting it's exciting these are these are the goods that everyone needs to have like literally i'm messaging one of my homeboys i'm like i'm about to introduce you to somebody that's that's going to change your life tomorrow.
Yeah, I think it could help out.
Yeah, I'd love to be a service.
Absolutely.
So what are some of the
common financial challenges that you see individuals and businesses facing today?
And then part two of that is, how do you specifically help them overcome those?
Not having a plan, bro.
I mean, I can talk about this all day, every day.
I can get you $25,000, $10,000, up to $100,000, whatever the case may be.
But I always tell people you have to fund responsibly.
I remember when I first started this business, I didn't fund responsibly.
People came to me, they wanted the money, and I was able to get it to them with no questions at.
But that's where Bella Son Academy came in, where it was really important for me to teach financial literacy because you just can't go get this money.
What is your plan?
Do you have a business plan?
Have you done this before?
Do you have a mentor?
right in the space that you're getting in or is it the 20 minute um 22 minute clips that you're watching on hdtv and you think you could flip real estate right so i'll tell people you get that first fifty 50,000, 10,000 should go to a mentor.
Pay for other people's mistakes.
They've done it already.
So when I got my first real estate deal, I had my mentor come in, bro.
It was $100,000 triplex in North Philadelphia, right next to Temple University.
It was a gold mine.
ARV, after repair value, $300,000, right?
So I knew I was going to do great.
It's going to be a triplex, two bedrooms, each unit.
I was going to rent it out to the students, brought my mentor in there, and it's just the frame, and it's the sprinkler system.
There's nothing in there.
He walked in, bro, five minutes.
He's like, Yeah, it's a bad deal.
I'm like, what are you talking about?
It's a bad deal.
I was like, you see the numbers?
He's like, the framing has been done incorrectly.
So you have to rip out all the framing.
And when you rip out all the framing, you have to rip out the sprinkler system.
So you have to start over.
So you're in, yeah, you're going to pay 100, but that's another 170.
That's another 75 you have to put back in it.
So technically to purchase this is going to be 175.
So it's going to eat into your margins and then you have to do the rest of the work.
And I was like, oh my God.
And that was just a, that was just five minutes.
And I remember I paid him for his time.
I gave him a thousand dollars just to show up
because he's done these mistakes before and he sees things that I didn't see.
And I learned a thousand dollar lesson instead of learning $175,000 lesson.
Right.
So never be afraid to pay for people who really do this.
I know there's a lot of scammers out there.
You really need to do your research.
And how I'm helping solving that problem as the part two is where Bellasone Son Academy comes in because I don't know everything, Mick.
Right, I'm not a real estate guru, I don't claim to be one.
Um, yes, we do credit repair, but that was years ago, that was almost eight years ago, and I shifted more to the funding part.
So, I have amazing credit coaches, shout out to Regime, um, who come on and who teach people how to get the credit together.
I teach them how to fund, and now that they have this capital, people are like, Oh, Herm, I got 50,000, what do I do with it?
I was like, Well, I got a real estate guy, I got a Toro guy, I got an AI guy, I got a crypto guy, I got an insurance guy, I got this, and I bring them onto the platform to speak to them because I want you guys to invest responsibly.
Everybody should not have a business.
I'm going to say this out loud, Nick.
Everybody does not need to own a business, but everyone should be an investor.
Everyone.
You got to invest in something.
That is wisdom in and of itself, man.
And I totally agree with you on mentorship.
You know, one of my mentors is Les Brown.
And I talk to Les five times a week.
Wow.
And we started this relationship because he said, you know, Mick, all of us got taught wrong.
We got taught that experience is the best teacher.
It's not experience.
You can experience losing.
Yeah.
Right.
And what you've been taught is how to lose, how to continue to lose.
Exactly.
Wisdom is the best teacher.
And so to find mentors that have wisdom that can shortcut, right?
Like you don't have to take the stairs to success if you've got a mentor that has wisdom that can get you on the elevator.
Right.
You know what I mean?
And so I totally relate with what you're saying.
And people have to do that.
Invest in coaches because coaches have coaches.
I'm a coach, Herm's a coach.
We have coaches.
And I said plural coaches.
Coaches,
exactly.
And so I want people, in particular, our people, to understand that you got to have coaches.
You need to have mentors because wisdom is what you should be seeking isn't it fascinating that um people will pay almost double for a ticket to great adventure or disney world so it's probably like 200 bucks but they'll pay the 500 so they can use the fast pass so they can cut in front of the line but they don't understand the same concept in your life and your coaching and your investments and mental health and therapy those things are the fast pass those are the hacks to life people who have been there those are people you need to consult with when i was getting married i was getting advice from men i was getting advice from two type of to make.
I was getting advice from men who were married 10 plus years, right?
Because clearly they know something I don't know.
And I was actually talking to men who were divorced because they knew what not to do because they done it and they failed at it.
Or I talked to people who done it and were successful at it.
I needed to see both perspectives.
And those people gave me great advice.
And now I'm 11 years in marriage because I got advice from people who actually did it and failed
and people who did it and were successful.
Right now, we're just listening to friends and family, people who've never done the work, who never became millionaires, who are not financially free, and are telling you, oh, that's stupid.
You shouldn't do that.
Well, how do you know it's stupid?
You didn't do it.
So that's why you need to audit your circle.
And that's one of my taglines that I say.
One of the first
audit my circles, unfortunately, but fortunately, was my parents.
My parents are first generation.
So they had the concept of go to college, get an education, you'll be fine.
So I remember talking to my friends and I was telling them, my parents prepared me for a world that no longer exists because it's not guaranteed anymore for me to get a college education and I'll be fine.
And I wanted to become a millionaire.
I wanted to become financially free.
And the only way for me to do that was to fire my parents in that area in my life.
and hire new people, new coaches, and put people in my circle that can show me how to become millionaires, show me how to buy assets, show me the difference between assets and liabilities.
But my parents were still in my inner circle.
They gave me great advice.
They've been married almost 40 years now.
So they're giving me great advice.
They have a great relationship with God.
They're giving me a good blueprint.
And just a side note, not to damper the mood.
My father is on, is in his last days right now.
He's in hospice in my home, and he stopped eating on Monday and stopped drinking.
So everyone's coming to say goodbye to my father.
And why I'm bringing this to you, Mick, is that my mother,
70 years old, she put a cot next to the hospital bed.
And every night this week, she's laid with her husband right at the bottom of the bed, right?
So this is the example that I'm seeing of marriage, right?
This is what I'm seeing.
And my wife is a nurse.
And my wife wakes up at 2, 3 in the morning to go downstairs and check on my dad and change his diapers, right?
So these are the examples that I'm seeing.
right of what a good marriage look like while everybody's on social media talking toxic stuff of 50 50 and it's just weird but my mother married a janitor right um my my wife married me when i wasn't un when i was unemployed but i but i see i think she saw something special that's in me but i say all that to say is that we need to have amazing examples of what we truly want to be it is the shortcut and hack to be successful in this life yep totally agree man and condolences and love to you and the family on that note too on that note too so you know again one of the reasons i'm a big fan is you know i'm not even going to call it financial literacy I'm going to call it financial education because I feel like that's what I'm getting when I listen to you.
Talk to the listeners and viewers about the true importance of financial education.
Oh, financial education, unfortunately, is not spoken enough as much as it is
knowing the capitals of all 50 states.
or knowing your multiplication tables or the periodic table.
For some reason, that is kept out.
And Wall Street Trapper, this gentleman I follow online, he said something interesting.
He said, there's the financial prey and financial predators.
The financial predators, it is in their interest to keep us uninformed.
Because when you have bad credit, right,
you have to pay more money for a car note, your house note.
Your car insurance is more expensive, right?
So why would the financial predator who owns these institutions tell you or teach you about that?
Why would they do that?
It is in their interest for for you to be ignorant so you'll pay more money right so that's why it's been my mission statement to to be an educator to people of um credit to be um to tell them how insurance policies is not just for when you're dead it's for when you're alive because it's called life insurance how to borrow from it how to use it as a savings account um how to um you know, Donald Trump's running for president right now.
He learned how to use the system because the laws state that that you don't have to pay X amount in taxes, right?
And I remember when he was debating with Hillary, he doesn't pay anything in taxes.
And then he told Hillary, well, you're the one that wrote the laws.
But because we don't understand the laws, no, you can do what Donald does too, and mitigate and mitigate your taxes.
And your taxes are your biggest bill that you have.
It's the highest bill that you have.
It takes almost 33 to 40% of your income.
Right.
But we pay for it because we're so used to it and we're ignorant to it.
So I use this strategy.
Definitely talk to your tax professional.
So I use this strategy where some people come to me and they're like, hey, Herm, I'm in credit card debt.
I don't know how to get out of there.
I got to get a second job.
And I was like, what if I can show you how to pay down your credit card debt without getting a second job?
Of course, everybody lights up.
It's like, well, how's that possible?
I was like, well, your taxes, talk to your tax professional.
You were taught by your parents to take the highest deduction.
I think you put on your I-9 or your W-2s so that in January, you'll get a big
lump sum check, three, four, five thousand dollars.
If you have kids, it's more, right?
And then you're flossing on Instagram for 90 days because everybody's rich until April.
It burns my soul.
But the and when I see that, I know you're financially illiterate because you just gave the government four, five, six thousand dollars loan at zero percent interest because they're just giving you back your money.
So I tell them, this is what you're going to do.
You're going to talk to your tax professional and you're going to do this.
In January or in April, I'm not going to owe the government money and they're not going to owe me money.
It's going to be equal.
So now that two, three, four, $500 extra you're getting a month in your check because you made the proper adjustments, right?
You're going to take that $500, $600 and you're going to start to put that on your credit cards.
So now just paying the minimum $100, you're paying the extra $500.
Now you're paying $700 a month.
You're killing the debt.
Because you're at 20%, 30% interest and it's eating you alive and you'll never get out the rat race.
But instead, because you're not financially literate, you're going to drive Uber for an extra $20
for an extra 20 hours, breaking down your car, putting down that mileage, giving up dollars for hours for that same $500.
You know what I'm saying?
So I'm like, and now when that credit card debt is paid off, now you got an extra $600, $700.
You're going to put that $600, $700, act like you don't have it, put it on the next debt.
And then you really start to snowball the situation.
And depending on where you are, six, 12, 18 months, you're you're debt free bad debt free right now you have maybe a thousand two thousand three thousand dollars extra that you can invest in a new business or even yourself
ladies and gentlemen i mean
we should we should be charging for this listen this is my passion bro when i was taught this stuff i was like i gotta tell all my people this y'all won't believe this I'm telling you.
I'm telling you.
So what are some of the some projects or initiatives?
What do you have going on right now?
So a couple couple of things that we're doing.
So, Bella Sloan Academy,
it's the academy where we meet every single Wednesday night, seven to nine.
It's a subscription program.
It's only $50 a month.
We have thousands of people in our community.
And what I love about it is that when you have that type of community, everyone helps everybody.
So, I don't have to always be in the trenches, but we're there every single Wednesday night.
And what else that we're doing is we're starting a new primary line business where we're going to be putting primary lines on your credit report
in conjunction with their subscription with Bella's loan.
So imagine where you're meeting with me every Wednesday night and I'm putting a $5,000 primary line on your credit report.
Not an authorized user, it looks like it belongs to you.
So that's the one initiative that we're doing.
And then we have our Blueprint Foundation, where that's our nonprofit, where I find it,
what I started realizing, bro, is that it's a lot of adults that don't have this information and it's almost too late, like you said at the beginning.
So I was talking to Demarix, my CEO, like, let's figure something out.
So we started the non-profit where we are teaching high schoolers.
I just went to high school yesterday, right?
I spoke to a high school yesterday, and we're teaching juniors and seniors and colleges about financial literacy.
And we got two children's books that's coming out this fall: The ABCs of Credit, written by me and my daughter, Olivia Monroe, and Bella Bills Business Credit.
So, it's two children's books that are coming out because we want to get financial literacy in the brains of children as early as possible because we speak fluent English and that's literacy, right?
So if we can learn English, then my daughter can learn what an LLC is, what taxes are, what savings are.
She can learn that at six, seven years old.
Like right now, their brains are malleable enough to learn even a brand new language.
My girl can learn Chinese right now easier than she can if she was 16 years old or 18.
So now's the time to start putting in those good habits.
So those are things that are coming out in the third and fourth quarter of 2024, and we're super excited about it.
That's amazing.
And I'm going to make sure that I have the links for all of that in the show notes.
Absolutely.
And also, you're going to see me posting a lot about this and supporting Herman and what he does on social.
So Herman, man, like amazing that you are here.
I'm going to put this out there.
We'll talk about it offline, but maybe we need a monthly segment with my doctor, Dr.
Herman.
I don't know.
Hey, I'm here forever, but I love to serve.
Absolutely.
Let's do it.
So your social handles, where do you want people to connect with you?
Yes, if you want to connect with me, I'm on Instagram, I'm on TikTok, I'm on Twitter as Haitian, H-A-I-T-I-A-N underscore C-E-O.
So Haitian CEO.
And every day at 6 a.m., I drop new knowledge as long as they'll let me do it for 60 to 90 second clips.
But for long form where I go live and I teach much longer, and all this is for free education, you can check me out on YouTube at
Bella Sloan Enterprises on YouTube, YouTube, where we go on for hours and we just chat and we give a lot of good game.
And definitely check us out at BellasloanAcademy.com, where we have our subscription of monthly subscribers, where we meet every single Wednesday night.
And the stuff we can't put on the internet that's on YouTube, we dive in deep and we have group discussions and everyone shares their successes and failures.
And we even have a therapy call.
That's the fifth call we have in Bella Sloan Academy.
It's called our
accountability call.
Because you know what happened, Mick?
You get that video, that workout video, and you never press play.
But no, we have an accountability call where we have a coach that comes on, but hey, Mick, Herman, the inquiry thing didn't work.
What did you do?
Tell me what steps you did.
Did you watch the third video Herman posted last week?
Did you set an appointment with your one-on-one with your coach?
Did you do this?
We want to make sure you're doing these things, right?
Instead of me just taking your $50, I want to make sure that we're investing back into you to make sure you get the work done because we have too many receipts for us to believe that it is not possible.
It is possible because we have the receipts to show that it can be done.
Amazing.
Brother, I know you have a busy schedule.
I know you have a lot going on at home too.
So I just want to personally thank you for taking some time to spend with us today when you didn't have to.
It means more to me than you'll ever know.
And huge fan, huge follower.
Want to do this again.
I just want to say thank you, brother.
I appreciate it.
And again, thank you for trusting me, for talking on your platform.
I know you take your platform very seriously, seriously, and I think you're letting me talk to your people.
You got it.
You got it.
I appreciate you, brother.
And to all the listeners and viewers, remember: you're because
is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thank you for tuning in to Mick Unplug.
Keep pushing your limits, embracing your purpose, and chasing greatness.
Until next time, stay unstoppable.