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How Brandon Hatton infuses Conscious Wealth into his Family Financial Planning Advisory Ep. 117
Episode 11726th April 2023 • Fascinating Entrepreneurs • Natasha Miller
00:00:00 00:24:27

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Brandon Hatton began his career in the financial services industry, working tirelessly for one of the world's largest investment and wealth management firms, Merrill Lynch. However, he soon realized that his fixation on creating wealth had destroyed his health, relationships and sense of self. He knew that, for many like him, in the quest to have ‘enough’, people often fail to realize that they are enough. Brandon became determined to find a win-win approach to wealth management in order to help people thrive in the broader sense of the term. As such, he began to pivot from traditional wealth management to a more conscious approach. Brandon founded Conscious Wealth® to provide a framework around money that allows people to focus on what matters: a life of growth and fulfillment, rather than a life of endless desire and insecurity.

Where to find Brandon Hatton

Website: https://brandonhatton.com

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Transcripts

Brandon Hatton:

But as we start to think about money as something a little bit

Brandon Hatton:

beyond just our own, or to say that it's really not just our money as a thought.

Brandon Hatton:

Then who's is it and how can you use it to unify other people?

Natasha Miller:

Welcome to FASCINATING ENTREPRENEURS.

Natasha Miller:

How do people end up becoming an entrepreneur?

Natasha Miller:

How do they scale and grow their businesses?

Natasha Miller:

How do they plan for profit?

Natasha Miller:

Are they in it for life?

Natasha Miller:

Are they building to exit these and a myriad of other topics?

Natasha Miller:

Will be discussed to pull back the veil on the wizardry of successful

Natasha Miller:

and FASCINATING ENTREPRENEURS.

Natasha Miller:

My book, RELENTLESS is now available everywhere Books can be bought online,

Natasha Miller:

including Amazon and BarnesAndNoble.com.

Natasha Miller:

Try your local indie bookstore too.

Natasha Miller:

And if they don't have it, they can order it.

Natasha Miller:

Just ask them.

Natasha Miller:

The reviews are streaming in and I'm so thankful for the positive feedback

Natasha Miller:

as well as hearing from people that my memoir has impacted them positively.

Natasha Miller:

It is not enough to be resilient.

Natasha Miller:

You have to be relentless.

Natasha Miller:

You can go to TheRelentlessBook.com for more information.

Natasha Miller:

Thank you so much.

Natasha Miller:

Brandon Hatton is the owner of an unusual financial services business called

Natasha Miller:

Conscious Wealth based in Florida.

Natasha Miller:

We talk about how he works with his clients in a very non-traditional

Natasha Miller:

way, how abundance and love are at the forefront of their approach,

Natasha Miller:

and how to determine how much money you actually need or don't need.

Natasha Miller:

Now, let's get right into it.

Brandon Hatton:

I think it is all about abundance and that

Brandon Hatton:

sometimes is hard for people to.

Brandon Hatton:

Just maybe just might just be a word to a lot of people, but

Brandon Hatton:

when I think about abundance, we think about the lack of fear.

Brandon Hatton:

Just a knowing that there is enough, that there will be enough worrying not

Brandon Hatton:

only will not help me, but isn't even necessary that things will come to me

Brandon Hatton:

or are already in my life as I need it.

Brandon Hatton:

That's really what it's all about.

Natasha Miller:

And what services do you provide to people that come to you?

Brandon Hatton:

We really have two separate lines of business, and then

Brandon Hatton:

they're just so interwoven together.

Brandon Hatton:

Our newest one is what we're, and we're quite excited about, is the

Brandon Hatton:

Center for the Conscious Family, and that's where we bring families together

Brandon Hatton:

and work with family facilitation.

Brandon Hatton:

So we're having really difficult conversations with families about

Brandon Hatton:

whatever they need to talk about.

Brandon Hatton:

Oftentimes it has to do with money, and that's what's very valuable

Brandon Hatton:

about me being in the room.

Brandon Hatton:

I am a trained facilitator, but also an investment manager.

Brandon Hatton:

And then my colleague and close friend Alyssa Harper is in the room

Brandon Hatton:

and she's a licensed therapist.

Brandon Hatton:

And we say it's not financial advising and it's not therapy, but

Brandon Hatton:

it's somewhere in the middle, and it's a really exciting process to

Brandon Hatton:

bring families through that process.

Brandon Hatton:

So there's that

Brandon Hatton:

- Natasha Miller: Who, and opts in for that.

Brandon Hatton:

Who's gonna say, yes, come to my home and talk about this really

Brandon Hatton:

challenging thing that no one wants to talk about, especially with their

Brandon Hatton:

family, with a therapist, even though it's not therapy and a financial

Brandon Hatton:

planner, even though it's not that.

Brandon Hatton:

How do you get people to say yes to that?

Brandon Hatton:

First I will say that we don't meet in people's homes.

Brandon Hatton:

Because that's not neutral territory.

Brandon Hatton:

So ideally what we do is meet with individuals potentially in their

Brandon Hatton:

homes, but then we bring them somewhere like neutral territory.

Brandon Hatton:

It may be a vacation home, or it may just be flying them down here to Miami

Brandon Hatton:

and staying in a hotel and putting them through a weekend of dinners and

Brandon Hatton:

group activities and conversations.

Brandon Hatton:

Who opts into it?

Brandon Hatton:

There's always someone in the family who's seeing that they're not where they

Brandon Hatton:

are as a family, where they want to be.

Brandon Hatton:

Sometimes it's the younger generation.

Brandon Hatton:

Oftentimes it's, the matriarch and we're called in from that person and

Brandon Hatton:

saying, "Hey, look, we want to get there, but we don't really know how to."

Natasha Miller:

Very interesting.

Natasha Miller:

I have personally never heard of this approach.

Natasha Miller:

Is anyone else doing this?

Brandon Hatton:

Not a lot.

Brandon Hatton:

What makes us unique about it is that we're doing it, but

Brandon Hatton:

informed with the financial side.

Brandon Hatton:

So if it were just informed from the psychotherapy side, which is how Alyssa

Brandon Hatton:

and I met studying that, that's nice, but like you need real hard numbers behind it.

Brandon Hatton:

And if it's just coming from the money side, it becomes dry and it

Brandon Hatton:

misses the humanity part of it.

Brandon Hatton:

So us combining it, it's not common and it's, that's what

Brandon Hatton:

we're so thrilled about it for.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

So that's our new, that's our new software.

Natasha Miller:

I think you're pioneer in your industry.

Brandon Hatton:

Pioneers get slaughtered, but we'll see.

Natasha Miller:

You're somewhat post pioneer.

Natasha Miller:

I don't know.

Natasha Miller:

I'm trying to feel better.

Brandon Hatton:

No, it's okay.

Brandon Hatton:

I'm just,

Natasha Miller:

Entrepreneurs are often, including myself chasing shiny

Natasha Miller:

objects and the next big best thing.

Natasha Miller:

What do you make of this and how do you speak to that?

Natasha Miller:

When you talk to your clients?

Brandon Hatton:

Entrepreneurs are always chasing the next big shiny thing.

Brandon Hatton:

I think that's great.

Brandon Hatton:

I think that's wonderful fighting that would be fighting their, potentially their

Brandon Hatton:

nature, and at the same time, it might also be really helpful to understand.

Brandon Hatton:

Why they're chasing it.

Brandon Hatton:

And so I just got back from a really big trip.

Brandon Hatton:

I was in Nepal with a really close friend of mine Bruce and Bruce in 1999 went to

Brandon Hatton:

Nepal and had a five year old, sorry, a seven year old waiting tables on him.

Brandon Hatton:

And he said to his "Sure", he said, "What's going on here?"

Brandon Hatton:

And he said she was adopted by the family.

Brandon Hatton:

She worked for two years, but now we need to get her in the workforce."

Brandon Hatton:

And he said can't I just give her money to not go to school?"

Brandon Hatton:

And they said there's no way to guarantee that, that's really

Brandon Hatton:

gonna get to the family or to get to them so you can give it.

Brandon Hatton:

But, she might still be working.

Brandon Hatton:

And so he came back, went back to Atlanta in mind view, he's an entrepreneur in

Brandon Hatton:

1999, running a big tech company and said, we're gonna start this thing.

Brandon Hatton:

And him and his wife started this.

Brandon Hatton:

Organization to help kids.

Brandon Hatton:

And they started just like pure entrepreneurs not really

Brandon Hatton:

knowing what they were doing.

Brandon Hatton:

I see a problem, let's try to solve it.

Brandon Hatton:

Let's put through two kids into private school.

Brandon Hatton:

Two kids turned into four kids.

Brandon Hatton:

I was on the trail hiking towards Everest base camp with four of his kids.

Brandon Hatton:

He's got over 20 kids in his programs.

Brandon Hatton:

He's got kids all over the country.

Brandon Hatton:

And what was really interesting is in 2006, he sold his company, got his big

Brandon Hatton:

payout and he still had, getting to your question, that entrepreneur drive.

Brandon Hatton:

But instead of taking that entrepreneur drive and saying, I'm gonna turn

Brandon Hatton:

my whatever million into two x that he said, I'm gonna have a

Brandon Hatton:

different way to measure my impact.

Brandon Hatton:

And he said, I work harder now than I ever worked building a software company.

Brandon Hatton:

So looking for the next big thing is good, but also looking at why am I trying

Brandon Hatton:

to build that next thing and is that really what's gonna give me what I want?

Brandon Hatton:

I admire a lot, him and Susan, his wife, for building up, and it's called

Brandon Hatton:

HCC a Himalayan Children's Charities.

Brandon Hatton:

If you wanna learn more about their story, it's pretty cool.

Natasha Miller:

Interesting.

Natasha Miller:

So you're not saying don't do it, but you're saying really

Natasha Miller:

look at the why and not the why.

Natasha Miller:

That's necessarily financially, but also internally.

Brandon Hatton:

Internal's the real big one.

Natasha Miller:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

Absolutely.

Natasha Miller:

So how can people, regular people and entrepreneurs.

Natasha Miller:

The unicorns of the world specifically determine how much money they need

Natasha Miller:

to make so they know they're bumpers.

Natasha Miller:

And I find myself in a similar situation, especially the more

Natasha Miller:

money I make or accumulate, I don't know what the ceiling is.

Natasha Miller:

And I think a lot of us don't.

Natasha Miller:

We just keep going and going and we forget.

Natasha Miller:

Why and when we can stop and maybe work on nonprofit things with more of our time

Natasha Miller:

and energy or just chill out for a minute.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

To help your clients figure this out.

Brandon Hatton:

Absolutely.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

That's a big part of our conversations that we have.

Brandon Hatton:

It reminds me of a story, and I just read this the other day, St.

Brandon Hatton:

Francis of the Catholic tradition, or Francis was in the garden chilling

Brandon Hatton:

soil, and somebody came up to him and said, "Francis, if you died today,

Brandon Hatton:

if you knew you were gonna die this afternoon, what would you be doing?"

Brandon Hatton:

And he said, "I'd be tilling soil."

Brandon Hatton:

Like it was just like, oh my God, that makes so much sense.

Brandon Hatton:

That makes so much sense to me.

Brandon Hatton:

And so you could apply that question to, okay, I just sold my company.

Brandon Hatton:

If I could do anything, if we knew I was gonna die tomorrow,

Brandon Hatton:

would I open another company?

Brandon Hatton:

Maybe not.

Brandon Hatton:

And is the purpose of opening a company to scale and sell, or are there purposes

Brandon Hatton:

beyond that and is the purpose profit?

Brandon Hatton:

Or is profit the outcome or the result of a purpose-based company?

Brandon Hatton:

And obviously I'm biased towards that.

Brandon Hatton:

If you've read my book Conscious Wealth or know that it was published by

Brandon Hatton:

Conscious Capitalism, you would know.

Brandon Hatton:

That's where I'm leading towards purposeful business by far.

Brandon Hatton:

One of the most, like I'm way past the money on business right now.

Natasha Miller:

But are you past it because you have enough

Natasha Miller:

and you know what enough is?

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

For your circumstance, could be completely

Natasha Miller:

different than mine, right?

Natasha Miller:

You may need a different number.

Natasha Miller:

Clearly you're still charging money for your services, so it's

Natasha Miller:

not that you're like, okay, I have enough, and now everything is free.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

I'd like to add a little qualifier in there.

Brandon Hatton:

I do have enough, or I will have enough when I need it.

Brandon Hatton:

So I can't just stop working today.

Brandon Hatton:

I would have to drastically change my lifestyle, but I can just let

Brandon Hatton:

go of the need to earn money.

Brandon Hatton:

And also, as I was gonna say before, my job's entirely too

Brandon Hatton:

stressful to do it for the money.

Brandon Hatton:

I do it because I like to see my teammates grow.

Brandon Hatton:

They're younger.

Brandon Hatton:

I do it because I like to serve my clients, but if I was just doing it on

Brandon Hatton:

the money that you can't get paid enough for, it's a really stressful work.

Brandon Hatton:

And as most of our as many our jobs are, So having enough isn't necessarily

Brandon Hatton:

there's enough zeros in my bank account.

Brandon Hatton:

Having enough is that also I will have enough and I made it to this point

Brandon Hatton:

and I'll make it to the next point.

Brandon Hatton:

And I don't know how long I'm gonna live.

Brandon Hatton:

Like I have no idea how long I'm gonna live.

Brandon Hatton:

If I knew how long I was gonna live, I would know how much money I need.

Brandon Hatton:

But I don't, I could die tomorrow.

Brandon Hatton:

I could die today.

Brandon Hatton:

So

Brandon Hatton:

- Natasha Miller: I never really

Brandon Hatton:

Certainly I have, but not in the how much do I need?

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

I'm not thinking about, I have an estimate of how long

Natasha Miller:

I'll live based on ancestors, but that does not take in account for.

Brandon Hatton:

Getting hit by our garbage truck.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

When I walk outside.

Brandon Hatton:

I like to get hit by ice cream trucks, but garbage is funny too.

Brandon Hatton:

Mine has a happier ending.

Brandon Hatton:

I'll tell you two people who have too much money, and I tell this story a lot.

Brandon Hatton:

The first is dead people.

Brandon Hatton:

They have entirely too much money.

Brandon Hatton:

Whatever they have, it's just too much.

Brandon Hatton:

The second group of people that have too much money are people who are ill.

Brandon Hatton:

Or even a health scare.

Brandon Hatton:

You don't even need to have a bad diagnosis, but just a,

Brandon Hatton:

"Hey, maybe you should come back in and get this checked out."

Brandon Hatton:

You look at your bank account, be like, "Why didn't I spend that?

Brandon Hatton:

What is the hell doing there?"

Brandon Hatton:

So that's when you know you have too much, and when you get to the point of

Brandon Hatton:

too much, and it could be that I also, it could be a divorce, it could be

Brandon Hatton:

any type of major tumult in your life.

Brandon Hatton:

Then you can come back and say, okay, now I know what is too much.

Brandon Hatton:

Let's work towards figuring out what is enough.

Natasha Miller:

And what is your, your own opinion?

Natasha Miller:

Because of course, all your clients will have their own about leaving

Natasha Miller:

your wealth to your children and to the generations after you.

Natasha Miller:

I have an opinion about that.

Natasha Miller:

I will share with you, but not until I hear yours.

Brandon Hatton:

Actually, every single one of my clients has the same belief

Brandon Hatton:

on this conceptually, is that they want to give their children enough

Brandon Hatton:

money to be successful, but not so much that it ruins them or it takes

Brandon Hatton:

away the joy of being successful.

Brandon Hatton:

Everyone now where that is, what that number looks like is where

Brandon Hatton:

the center for the conscious family comes in, or consulting and all that.

Brandon Hatton:

Or just even looking through the investment side of our business, which is

Brandon Hatton:

looking at what money can do and teaching next generation like what money can do.

Brandon Hatton:

Because one kid may think one inheritance is really big and the other

Brandon Hatton:

may think the same number's small.

Brandon Hatton:

They don't really under, not all children, adults, or youth

Brandon Hatton:

understand what money can do.

Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

Have you always thought you had a book inside of you?

Natasha Miller:

Have other people told you've got to write a book?

Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

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Natasha Miller:

I've seen it in the San Francisco Bay area, will not name names, but

Natasha Miller:

children of a billionaire family.

Brandon Hatton:

Sure.

Natasha Miller:

Just lost

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

Just,

Brandon Hatton:

yeah

Natasha Miller:

no purpose,

Natasha Miller:

miserable

Natasha Miller:

and I don't wanna set the stage.

Natasha Miller:

I'm likely not to be a billionaire and I'm not sure I'd want to, but

Natasha Miller:

I would never do that to my kid.

Natasha Miller:

I would never give that much wealth to my 27 year old daughter, or

Natasha Miller:

even lead her to believe that was something for her in the future.

Natasha Miller:

Because man, I think that kills the spirit.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah, so that type of communication's really important with

Brandon Hatton:

Next Generation and what we try to bridge, because although some people

Brandon Hatton:

will say it's dangerous to tell your kids how much they'll inherit, I believe

Brandon Hatton:

that it's more dangerous to not tell them, because then their imagination

Brandon Hatton:

could take away and then they could be sorely disappointed or they could be

Brandon Hatton:

making life decisions based on something.

Brandon Hatton:

So real transparency around that over time with guidance, giving them some

Brandon Hatton:

money, seeing how they do with it over time is a lot more effective than.

Brandon Hatton:

The proverbial reading a will in a dark room or a library or studying.

Natasha Miller:

Does that still happen?

Brandon Hatton:

Not really.

Brandon Hatton:

Just on tv.

Brandon Hatton:

Just on tv.

Natasha Miller:

It's definitely still happening on tv.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

So switching back to your company, not just what you

Natasha Miller:

do and who you serve, but your team, what is it comprised of currently?

Brandon Hatton:

So we have a core team of two planners that work on the

Brandon Hatton:

investment side and they meet with clients on day-to-day needs, financial

Brandon Hatton:

planning investment management, and then the three of us with some

Brandon Hatton:

external accountability partners manage all of the money internally.

Brandon Hatton:

So that's five.

Brandon Hatton:

I would say three, and then I won't, we have some really strong partners,

Brandon Hatton:

but these are the three of us work.

Brandon Hatton:

And then on the other side, which is the living side or what the Center for the

Brandon Hatton:

Conscious family is, Alyssa Peace and I

Natasha Miller:

I asked this question because when I started this podcast, I

Natasha Miller:

was only interviewing people that had two to three full-time in employees.

Natasha Miller:

And I was so adamant about that because we talk about company culture

Natasha Miller:

and core values and team bonding.

Natasha Miller:

Especially since the pandemic business owners are changing

Natasha Miller:

the way that they work.

Natasha Miller:

And in fact, for instance, someone that I recently interviewed has a 10

Natasha Miller:

million company with no employees.

Natasha Miller:

Everyone's contract.

Natasha Miller:

And I used to think that , it was a level of pride that I was employing my employees

Natasha Miller:

and giving them these benefits and such.

Natasha Miller:

And I just, I feel like the tide is changing.

Natasha Miller:

What do you think about that and how would you see yourself in the next year or two?

Natasha Miller:

There's no way to know for sure, 10 years from now what you might do.

Brandon Hatton:

I just wanna make sure that there's W2 and 1099.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

W2.

Brandon Hatton:

That's not really that

Brandon Hatton:

I was talking about.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

And I'm not so concerned about the tax designation of

Brandon Hatton:

the people that work for me.

Brandon Hatton:

I'm more worried about the commitment that I have from them and the way

Brandon Hatton:

that we work as a unit and the way that we treat each other, and the

Brandon Hatton:

way that we build something together.

Brandon Hatton:

I'm not out we're in a very personal business talking to families about

Brandon Hatton:

very personal issues and their money.

Brandon Hatton:

Managing money is very personal, so everybody's gotta have full in terms

Brandon Hatton:

of we're not outsourcing people from another country that we never see.

Brandon Hatton:

It's a, and I don't think that'll ever change.

Brandon Hatton:

For us, I know we have external partners to support our investment accountability

Brandon Hatton:

or on accounting or HR and marketing, but as far as like the core group

Brandon Hatton:

that interfaces with clients, we're all in and I don't see that changing.

Natasha Miller:

Is that a new structure for you, or have you In

Natasha Miller:

the past had everything in house?

Natasha Miller:

Everyone was a W2 employee and that was important to you?

Brandon Hatton:

You know what's interesting is

Brandon Hatton:

originally I was a W2 employee.

Brandon Hatton:

Like many advisors, investment managers, we get our chops in the big shops.

Brandon Hatton:

I started at Merrill Lynch went to Raymond James and now broke off

Brandon Hatton:

independently to run my own company.

Brandon Hatton:

So it is a good way to learn the business and then some of us

Brandon Hatton:

just don't fit in that mold much longer and have to find a way out.

Natasha Miller:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

I guess we talked about earlier how families.

Natasha Miller:

Raise their hands to have this sort of service.

Natasha Miller:

But how are you sourcing your clients?

Natasha Miller:

And second of all, what is your strategy for growth this year?

Natasha Miller:

So two-pronged question.

Brandon Hatton:

You know what's amazing and such a gift about

Brandon Hatton:

my work is that we get a lot of referrals from our current client

Brandon Hatton:

base, and that's by far our largest.

Brandon Hatton:

But what we do is things like this.

Brandon Hatton:

We go out in the world, we talk about abundance, we talk about

Brandon Hatton:

love, we talk about generosity and unity, and we attract clients.

Brandon Hatton:

And if we don't see every engagement, whether it's a talk or a podcast or

Brandon Hatton:

a workshop as a quid pro quo, because at the end of the day, we just know.

Brandon Hatton:

That we're doing something that we believe in that creates value.

Brandon Hatton:

And when you do that enough, it comes back.

Brandon Hatton:

And I remember we, we were doing one in Atlanta about a half a

Brandon Hatton:

year ago, and on the other side of the wall was another advisor.

Brandon Hatton:

And my heart really felt for him because he was there talking about like annuities.

Brandon Hatton:

And I like,

Natasha Miller:

that's not very,

Brandon Hatton:

it could have been I've been in that position like,

Brandon Hatton:

are you ready for retirement?

Brandon Hatton:

Are you really ready?

Brandon Hatton:

And I'm sitting there talking to a community foundation

Brandon Hatton:

saying, how can you give more.

Brandon Hatton:

How can you be expansive during a time of financial contraction?

Brandon Hatton:

And we didn't get any clients from that, and we didn't care.

Brandon Hatton:

We just had a great day.

Brandon Hatton:

So that's how we do it.

Natasha Miller:

Speaking of retirement, I've been hearing a lot of people

Natasha Miller:

talk about I'm helping an 81 year old author with a book that she

Natasha Miller:

wrote called Refire Don't Retire.

Natasha Miller:

So Refire Your Life and Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

Other financial advisors saying, you may make an exit, you may be at

Natasha Miller:

retirement age, but is retirement really the solution for you?

Natasha Miller:

And do you work with people when they're about to retire?

Natasha Miller:

Or thinking about the retirement, is that part of the suite

Natasha Miller:

of services that you have?

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah, for sure.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah, for sure.

Brandon Hatton:

I think that's still the number one goal for everyone.

Brandon Hatton:

It's just now retirement looks very different than maybe your

Brandon Hatton:

parents or indefinitely my parents'.

Brandon Hatton:

Vision of retirement and way different than the generation before them.

Brandon Hatton:

As I said, I'm in Florida and I see people who are retired all the time,

Brandon Hatton:

but it doesn't look like it used to.

Natasha Miller:

Do you bring in the other person, the therapist, to talk about

Natasha Miller:

what does retirement really look like?

Natasha Miller:

Like it looks like one thing and then you hear of people retiring and

Natasha Miller:

some of them, if they don't have a purpose, they aren't long for the

Natasha Miller:

earth sometimes and then those with a purpose or with another engagement.

Natasha Miller:

I think golf is always what a lot of people are like,

Natasha Miller:

I'm just gonna golf really.

Natasha Miller:

For 40 to 50 hours a week, you're gonna golf.

Brandon Hatton:

Can't imagine.

Brandon Hatton:

Can't imagine.

Brandon Hatton:

It's not my, it's not my thing.

Brandon Hatton:

I think when Alyssa comes in and the two of us work together with clients,

Brandon Hatton:

it's usually with more something like a contentious divorce or some type of issue

Brandon Hatton:

in the family, or even just transition of a business or transition of inheritance

Brandon Hatton:

when somebody gets stuck like that.

Brandon Hatton:

And at least in our client base, they find their way out.

Brandon Hatton:

And we have that talk with all of our clients right away.

Brandon Hatton:

Don't retire in the winter.

Brandon Hatton:

Don't watch the news.

Brandon Hatton:

You're gonna get nervous the first year.

Brandon Hatton:

You're laughing.

Brandon Hatton:

But these are the things we tell people you've been doing just fine, not

Brandon Hatton:

watching the news for three decades.

Brandon Hatton:

You don't have to start watching it every day now, and by

Brandon Hatton:

larger clients, stay active.

Brandon Hatton:

And that's really it.

Brandon Hatton:

So it's not so much of, we would gladly help, but I think they're doing okay.

Brandon Hatton:

They're really strong.

Natasha Miller:

Is there anything else that you wanna talk about

Natasha Miller:

with the two conscious brands that we started the episode out?

Natasha Miller:

Anything I'm missing?

Brandon Hatton:

I don't know if you're missing, but I think something that I was

Brandon Hatton:

gonna talk about and then we didn't really get to was the thought of inheritance.

Brandon Hatton:

And I think you told me your opinion.

Brandon Hatton:

I don't know if you had more to talk about that.

Brandon Hatton:

You said that you see some cases in your area that isn't working well.

Natasha Miller:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

In my social personal life, I see some people that have made, I think,

Natasha Miller:

catastrophic decisions with their wealth.

Natasha Miller:

And they probably met well with it.

Brandon Hatton:

Sure.

Natasha Miller:

It really ruined a lot of, and did it ruin it or did the individual.

Natasha Miller:

Was that just helped to not find the purpose.

Natasha Miller:

But yeah, like for my, my in my will and trust, I have steps of what my

Natasha Miller:

daughter gets at what age, right?

Natasha Miller:

Age appropriate receiving, age appropriate responsibility.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Natasha Miller:

And making sure that there's enough support, but enough room

Natasha Miller:

for her to keep discovering herself and not just rest on what she may inherit.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

That's great.

Brandon Hatton:

That's smart.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

This question of answering how much is enough or how do I, which is

Brandon Hatton:

really asking yourself, how do I cultivate more abundance in my life?

Brandon Hatton:

Part of it is just acting with abundance, and what that means

Brandon Hatton:

is just doing it, giving money away, and being very charitable

Brandon Hatton:

and deliberate about that charity.

Brandon Hatton:

The typical model or the traditional model is when I'm gonna save up all this money.

Brandon Hatton:

I'm gonna use it while I have less human capital, and then I'm gonna

Brandon Hatton:

give it all of it to my family.

Brandon Hatton:

Right?

Brandon Hatton:

And I think that's what we're seeing is there might be some problems, it

Brandon Hatton:

might be problematic, but as we start to think about money as something a

Brandon Hatton:

little bit beyond just our own, or to say that it's really not just our

Brandon Hatton:

money as a thought and something that we talk about within conscious wealth

Brandon Hatton:

that it we're just custodians of this money because we can't take it with us.

Brandon Hatton:

I talked about if you die it's no longer yours.

Brandon Hatton:

Then whose is it and how can you use it to unify other people?

Brandon Hatton:

How can you give money to somebody, not just your children, but

Brandon Hatton:

somebody's children you've never met?

Brandon Hatton:

Which we call charity.

Brandon Hatton:

And in practice, use this as a unifying force, as a, so instead of

Brandon Hatton:

something like money that can divide us, how can it bring us together?

Brandon Hatton:

A lot of people say I gotta make sure I give my kids enough money, because if I

Brandon Hatton:

don't, it's a real tough world out there.

Brandon Hatton:

And that's a valid argument.

Brandon Hatton:

But on the other side of the spectrum is it's a really tough world out

Brandon Hatton:

on it, and I wanna make the world better that my kids live in.

Brandon Hatton:

And how do I find the two of those, like a compromise between the two, and

Brandon Hatton:

it doesn't have to be one or the other.

Brandon Hatton:

And there are stops along the way, such as I'm going to use my business to support

Brandon Hatton:

the families, my the people who work for me and their families, and have these

Brandon Hatton:

other types of ripple effects as well.

Brandon Hatton:

So there's it's not just all or nothing and practicing.

Brandon Hatton:

Generosity or giving, it will cultivate abundance.

Natasha Miller:

What led you to this conscious?

Natasha Miller:

I'm reminded, I just started hearing about conscious capitalism from Kent Gregoire.

Natasha Miller:

I, do you know him?

Brandon Hatton:

Kent's a good friend.

Natasha Miller:

Does everybody know each other in this space?

Natasha Miller:

So I started hearing about this, a few years ago for the first time,

Natasha Miller:

whether I was not aware before or if it's a new tagline or thought process.

Natasha Miller:

How did you come to that?

Brandon Hatton:

They had an event in Atlanta and I went to it and

Brandon Hatton:

read Raj and John Mackey's books.

Brandon Hatton:

So Raj Saso and John Mackey, who are the founders of the movement.

Brandon Hatton:

John Mackey was the founder and c e o of Whole Foods, and it

Brandon Hatton:

resonated, it made sense to me.

Brandon Hatton:

I think before that I had that health scare that I spoke of before.

Brandon Hatton:

I had a situation where I was back when I was working in the broker

Brandon Hatton:

dealers, the big name shop, and I had everything financially that I wanted.

Brandon Hatton:

Everything looked really good.

Brandon Hatton:

And the doctor said, "Hey, we need you to come back in.

Brandon Hatton:

We're gonna need to look at something."

Brandon Hatton:

And it was a pretty scary moment for me and started to reevaluate

Brandon Hatton:

like, okay, I've got too much and I don't have the right things.

Brandon Hatton:

And it was, I'm grateful for that moment.

Brandon Hatton:

Yeah.

Brandon Hatton:

For more information, go to the show notes where you're listening to this podcast.

Brandon Hatton:

Want to know more about me, go to my website, NatashaMiller.com.

Brandon Hatton:

Thank you so much for listening.

Brandon Hatton:

I hope you loved the show.

Brandon Hatton:

If you did, please subscribe.

Brandon Hatton:

Also, if you haven't done so yet, please leave a review where you're

Brandon Hatton:

listening to this podcast now.

Brandon Hatton:

I'm Natasha Miller and you've been listening to FASCINATING ENTREPRENEURS.

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