Wedding Business Solutions
If weddings are all or part of your business, then the Wedding Business Solutions podcast is for you. You’ll hear ideas to help you sell more, profit more and have more fun doing it from Alan Berg CSP, FPSA. He’s the author of 13 books, who’s been included, for the 3rd year in a row, as one of the “Top 100 Speakers To Watch in 2025”, by Motivator Music on LinkedIn. He's also one of only 44 Global Speaking Fellows in the world! Whether it’s ideas for closing the sale, improving your website conversion or just plain common-sense ideas for your wedding business, the episodes here, whether monologue or dialogue are just the thing to get you motivated to help more couples have great weddings, and more profits for you . . . . . . . . . You can read full transcripts of each episode at podcast.AlanBerg.com . . . . . . . . . Don't forget to subscribe to this podcast so you'll know about the latest episodes. And if you have a question, comment or suggestion for topic or guest, please reach out at Alan@WeddingBusinessSolutions.com . . . . . . . . . And if you don't get his email updates for new episodes, as well as upcoming workshops and Master Classes, you can sign up at www.ConnectWithAlanBerg.com . . . . . . . . . If you'd like to find out about Alan's speaking, sales training, consulting or website review services, you can reach him at Alan@AlanBerg.com or visit Podcast.AlanBerg.com ------- Note: I invite my guests on for the value they provide to you, my listeners. Occasionally I have a guest on where I'm an affiliate or have a relationship that may involve compensation for me. My first priority is the value to you and therefore I don't sell placement or guest spots on my podcast.
Wedding Business Solutions
Jason Hewlett - The Promise to The One
Jason Hewlett - The Promise to The One
Are you keeping the promises that matter most—to your clients, your team, and yourself? What opportunities are you willing to walk away from to stay true to your values? In this episode, I explore how honoring your promise, even when it means saying no, leads to greater success and deeper fulfillment—in weddings, business, and life.
Listen to this new 29-minute episode for real-world stories and practical ways to make your promises your brand—and find lasting purpose beyond just chasing the next sale.
About Jason Hewlett
Having delivered thousands of presentations over 2 decades, Jason Hewlett is the world's only Keynote Speaker utilizing entertainment, musical impressions and comedy to teach leaders how to capture their unique Leadership Promise and Signature Moves. He has performed in every major Casino in Las Vegas, is one of the youngest inductees in the prestigious Speaker Hall of Fame, and is the author of the acclaimed self-help book, "The Promise To The One". Husband, Father, Writer, Mentor, Hiker and Coach, Jason's blog "The Promise" is enjoyed weekly by people worldwide, his online videos and courses inspire learning and entertainment, while educating and uplifting corporate executives, artists, leaders and families.
Follow/Connect With Jason...
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonhewlett/ LinkedIn: @jasonhewlett
https://www.youtube.com/user/jasonrhewlett @jasonrhewlett
https://www.instagram.com/jasonhewlett/ Instagram: @jasonhewlett
If you have any questions about anything in this, or any of my podcasts, or have a suggestion for a topic or guest, please reach out directly to me at Alan@WeddingBusinessSolutions.com or visit my website Podcast.AlanBerg.com
Please be sure to subscribe to this podcast and leave a review (thanks, it really does make a difference). If you want to get notifications of new episodes and upcoming workshops and webinars, you can sign up at www.ConnectWithAlanBerg.com
View the full transcript on Alan’s site:
Have you ever wondered... "What would Alan say or do about this?" - well, now you can ask my AI Alter-Ego "Ask Alan Anything" the things you'd ask the real Alan, any time of the day or night. And as a listener of this podcast, you'll save 50%, so starting at only $10 per month you can "Ask Alan Anything"!
Go to www.WhatWouldAlanSay.com and use the 50% off coupon code - podcast - to start asking Alan anything today.
I'm Alan Berg. Thanks for listening. If you have any questions about this or if you'd like to suggest other topics for "The Wedding Business Solutions Podcast" please let me know. My email is Alan@WeddingBusinessSolutions.com. Look forward to seeing you on the next episode. Thanks.
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©2025 Wedding Business Solutions LLC & AlanBerg.com
What is the Promise to the One? Listen to this episode and find out. Hey, it's Alan Berg. Welcome back to another episode of the Wedding Business Solutions podcast. I am so happy to have my friend Jason Hewlett on to talk about his book and many other things. Jason, how you doing?
I'm great. Thank you for having me, brother.
Well, thanks for coming on. Your book was referred to me by our mutual friend Rob Ferre. And. And I said, who else do we know in National Speakers association that I should read their books? He's like, you gotta read Jason's books. Like, okay. And read Jason's book. So I listened to your audiobook. So thank you for reading your book to me.
I appreciate that.
Yes, sir. I'm glad you did the audible. That's actually the best way I tell people. So good it is.
Especially when I know the person because I hear your voice there. And little side note for people, I already told Jason I always listen at 1.35 speed because I'm from New York, I live in New Jersey, and you need to talk fast to me. I had to slow him down. Not, not less than one speed, but I had to slow you down. So it was great. So first of all, just, just tell people real quick, what is. What is the book about?
Well, in the speed, you should have listened to it. It would have been like. The book is about the promise of the One. And I've spoken about promises for the last about decade. I like to say, why set a goal and you can make a promise? And that's not to say goals aren't important, because they are. But if you've ever set a goal, you just miss it and you set another one. But if you make a promise and break it, that's a one and done. So I talk about the various promises we make to.
And I'm a performer, so as a speaker, I say the promise to the audience, the promise to the family, the promise to the 1. There are three elements of the promise. And really, the promise to the audience is your clients and customers. The promise to the family is the people you work with and at home. But the promise to the One is the one that we deny the most or not really focus on, because it's easy to break a promise to ourselves more than anybody else. And so that's why I started with that book. And there will be more coming soon.
Well, that's great. That's great. And so many great stories in the book. Talking about when you were on mission. I was trying to picture you guys running in the Rain, in the Mud and let everybody listen to the book to hear their stories about this stuff. But the one that really stuck, because I see you as a performer, I've seen you perform, you're amazing. But you had an opportunity, the opportunity to be in Las Vegas, to be on the big stages. But that wouldn't have been true to the promise. Right?
Right. Yeah. So the story is. And I appreciate you enjoying that story. In fact, you know what, Alan? I never shared that story until a few years back when I was meeting with a speaking coach who said to me, jason, I. Why are you so worried about doing your show clean all the time? Like, what's the big deal? Who cares? And I was like, well, I have this thing inside of me that says that I can't do it, where it's going to be something that's too adult. And she said, what does that mean? And I was like, well, I made a promise to myself a long time ago. It would always be a family friendly, G rated Las Vegas experience.
And she was like, and how did you come to that? I mean, she was a great coach to be able to mine this story out of me because I had never shared what really happened. In the early 2000s, I was in my 20s, early 20s, I got the opportunity in Las Vegas to perform there. And people saw how good it was and how accepted it was. There was a guy named Danny Gans who was my hero. He was a musical impressionist. He could do comedy and perfect impressions. He looked the part, he sounded the part. He was an excellent, good man.
And he had signed $150 million deal at the Mirage in the 90s as an unknown entertainer, corporate entertainer turned Las Veg Vegas Strip headliner. And I was. I remember seeing him and Alan, I remember thinking, this is what I want to do with my life. I mean, that's it right there. Because it was inspiring and it was hilarious and it was awesome. So I put together a show that was very much like his. Just one impression after another. I'm flying through, you know, and you know these artists, Smokey Robinson, I do all like a Motown set.
Smokey Robinson, Diana Ross, Stevie Wonder, the Temptations, the Four Time. Like, I'm going through all the greats in one set of things. It was really an impression of Danny Gans doing them. And, you know, he was a generation past me, but I was in my early 20s just trying to be like him. Within a couple of years, I was being offered to take his place, which was crazy because he was moving into the Wynn Hotel. And within a couple of months, he was gone. He passed away. But which was tragic in Las Vegas and for the world because he was such a bright light.
But before that all happened, they were saying, who's next? And I guess that they thought it was me. And so the people that brought him to Las Vegas were saying, hey, in your early 20s, you're going to be the next guy. We'll put you on billboards, taxis. We're going to manage your career. But you're going to have to change a few things. The new slogan in Las Vegas at the time in 2004 was, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. So they went away from their 90s attempt at family friendly. When Danny got there, by the time I got there, they wanted it to change.
And, you know, my. My whole thing was that I wanted it to be family friendly, and they didn't want me to have all of these characters in there like Alvin and the Chipmunks. Like, I do all this weird stuff, right? And I do these funny faces and. And comedy that they were like, you know, it's just a little weird. We need it to be more adult. More kids wouldn't be coming to this show, man. The further I got down the road, the more I realized I was like, they're not going to break their promise to their audience. That's what the audience wants.
I can't break the promise to myself. And my wife and I chose to walk away and go back to our very quiet life in Utah as a corporate performer. And that was a great decision, although it was a very hard one. Right.
So that's story. Yeah. But again, there's the promise to yourself. Are you being true to yourself? I think when I was reading the book, it reminded me of times in my life where I'm by myself, thinking about something and going, I know what the right thing to do right now is, and that's what I have to do. It might take me more time, it might take me more money, but if I'm going to deliver what I promised, whether it's to myself or someone else, I got to do it right. I have to do it right. We don't do halfway. And the people listening, a lot of them know my story, why I'm in the wedding industry.
I was in a job. I was making really good money, company car, paid benefits, and hating going to work every day because I felt no integrity in the job and what I had to do. But I had to do a good job because I also knew that my parents always Said, you take a job, you do the best you can. You never do a bad job. If you. If you don't like the job, you leave. You don't do a bad job, you don't stay into a bad job, you don't check out. And you probably never heard this, but I took a job in a new industry.
I knew nothing about cold calling, which I had never done. Outside sales, which I had never done. I had to buy a car because I had a company car to give it back, and my wife was pregnant.
Oh, my goodness.
Oh. And it was straight commission. It was no salary, no draw, no minimum, no guarantee, no anything. But again, if I think back, using your phrasing here, the promise was, I know I can sell, but I cannot do this job anymore because it's eating me up. I'm never home. Our son's turning three. My wife's pregnant. Oh, and by the way, the kid she was pregnant with, his son is turning nine soon.
That's how long I'm in this industry now.
Right. Yeah.
But again, that was a moment where I actually uttered the words, and this is going back to your story. They showed me how much money I was making, and it was good money. It wasn't Vegas money, but it was good money. And I said the words out loud in my 20s, it's not the money. And I had an epiphany. I was like, I actually meant that. Like, I heard people say that, but I. I didn't imagine they meant that.
Right. Like, we know people. It's always the chase for the bigger house, the bigger, the better car, the more money. The more money, whatever. I always thought, you know, of course it's about the money. Right? And I was like, no, it's not. That doesn't make up for this. So that was, again, one of those moments.
I posted the other day that I hit 1700 days on Duolingo, doing French every day for 1700 days. And that's a promise to myself. If I don't do at least a little every day, I'm not going to get better at this. Right. I don't know what the end is. I'm not going to get better. But. But that was, again, why I wanted to have you on, because this is promised.
But talking about weddings, we're talking about this a little bit before the people listening to weddings and events. And I made this comment that every time they say yes to you, they've said no to everybody else. And I consider that a privilege. And I think we can relate to that as Speakers and you certainly, as an entertainer, Right?
Well, yeah. And thank you for sharing your incredible story. I did not know that. And I love it. And well done. You could write the promise yourself, bro. And, and so when it comes to the wedding industry and as well as performance and so forth. Yeah.
They are saying no to everybody else. And I consider it such a privilege to get the chance to be on stage anytime. And you know, there are times when you get to a gig and everything goes wrong. Everything goes wrong on the way to the gig. Maybe even landing the event itself is horrible. Going to the event could be terrible. And then when you're at the event, all things could go bad. Now, but what's your promise?
Right?
That's the, that's the whole rub. And, and I, I, I learned this in Las Vegas. And because I did do Vegas before the big Vegas offer. I started in Vegas, I was with Legends in Concert. I was an Elton John impersonator. And that was at Legends in Concert. So I got to be, you know, can you feel the love tonight? And I'm singing In my early 20s, looking out at an audience of asleep, drunk, down and out people that got the tickets because they just stayed at the hotel. Now, this is the worst audience you can fathom, right? And I'm like, I remember performing out there, looking in the audience, thinking, how are the people that I'm performing with doing this every single night? Like, this would suck your soul.
Yeah.
And then they would tell me, they were like, dude, whether there's one person or a thousand, perform as if it's your last opportunity. And I was, I thought, well, that's an interesting way to look at it. And so in my early 20s, I learned quickly, perform as if it's the greatest opportunity you've ever had. Because that one person watching might say, I needed this and this is going to help me live through tomorrow. I was like, okay, that's a big promise, right? So I would show up at every single event. And my promise was I'm going to give 100% no matter who's watching, no matter who likes me, no matter how terrible the drive was or the client was. And that has been my mantra for my entire career. And I believe although I'm good on stage, I'm good, I'm, I'm very good at what I do.
But I believe a lot of it comes down to that lesson of learning, be a hundred percent, no matter who's watching at every single event, and you will succeed.
Yeah, I have this thing. I learned it doing martial Arts, not striving for perfection. And I thought we were trying to do the perfect punch, the perfect kick. I mean, it was a second degree black belt. And the master said, no, no, because if you achieve perfection, you can't improve on it. So I always say that I want, every time I'm speaking, training, whatever it is, I want it to be the best I've ever done, but not the best I can ever do, so that the next one will be better and that this is the. I hope this is the best speech I've ever given, but not the best I can ever give. And again, it's the promise to the audience, the promise to myself, to always be growing.
Right? I joined National Speakers association because I went to speak. I was vice president of sales, the largest wedding website in the world. And they booked me to speak in Montreal at an event. And there was no trade show, there was no booth, we couldn't hand anything out. And I was like, why am I going? And they said, well, we told them you're going to go. I said, but we have no marketing opportunities. They said, well, we told them you're going to go. And I'm like the little kid, okay, I'll go.
And I think I had to fly in from Denver and I had my wife meet me up there because it was at the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth where John and Yoko had their bed in. I was like, you know, it's a nice hotel, just make the drive up. So she meets me up there and I'm literally like, you know, what am I here for? I get on stage, I. I spoke, I get off stage and somebody said, alan, that was a great speech. You're a great speaker. Are you a member of the National Speakers Association? And I said, what's that? And why should I care? Because I didn't identify as a speaker. I identified as vice president of sales of this company. And it's because of going to that gig and giving it my best that 18 years later, I'm a member of NSA, I'm a CSP, I'm a fellow of the PSA, UKI and a global speaking fellow, because somebody said, I really appreciated that you should do this.
And same thing, right? It's the promise. So I think with weddings and events, you hit the nail on the head. You know, the traffic, everything is wrong. You know, flat tire on the way there, all these things. But when you get there, it's not their problem. No, it's not their problem. And I use the words, it's a privilege every time they Say yes to us. Because there's no law in the world that says you have to spend money on a party when you get married, or a bar mitzvah or a quinceanera or a sweet 16, or a communion or a christening or go down the line.
We do that because we want to celebrate with the people that are important to us, not because we have to. That is a privilege every time. And that promise where somebody the other day sent the thing to me, said, you know, what do I do about this? Bride comes up to me in the middle, I'm playing a song and she's like, that's on the do not playlist. Which it wasn't. Okay, it wasn't. But he apologized quickly. Turn it off. Right.
What do you do? Do you. Do you make. Do you say she's wrong. Right Again. You're happily married for a long time. I am as well. It doesn't work out to tell anybody that they're wrong.
Especially Bridezilla.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, in the middle of the song, or as when my son got married last year, part of my very short speech was that every day you wake up and you have a choice. You can be happy or you can be. Right.
Yeah, there you go.
So to choose wisely. So, you know, in, in weddings and events, the idea of the promise, it's the promise to what would the three be there? Right. It's. It's the promise to themselves.
Yeah. It's the promise to the 1. It's the promise of the family and the promise to the audience. And so, you know, when it comes to the promise to the audience, that's your customer, that's the client, that's the person paying for you to be there. If you don't deliver, then, man, you have broken the promise in a major way. And if you make your problems their problems, then that's not good business. You will not be referred again. You will not have more opportunity.
You will crush your own business by making it their problem. So show up, do your job, be your best. And that sounds like such basic 101, but for some reason common sense is not very common. And so what is your promise to the family? You're going to hire somebody to help you eventually, at some point, whether you're a one man show or if you're, you know, bringing a whole grouping of people. I know that when I was doing weddings because I've done a lot of weddings, man. You did. Probably didn't realize that about me, but I started in that, that space because after leaving Legends in Concert in Vegas and moving back to Utah, I started playing piano at weddings. And I realized that this was a really nice gig, right? To be at the nicest hotels and the nicest events and they'd give you a nice meal and all this Stu I wasn't charging at that time, didn't know that was even a thing until I then ran into like the, the Joe Muscalino band in Salt Lake.
And he was like, yeah, I've been doing this for 30 years. You should be charging money for this. And it was very helpful to have mentors that showed me. So essentially that became my family, right? Was like the other vendors, the people I could refer, I could be like, hey, you should have this caterer, you should have this AV person, you should have this wedding trio, because I'm not a trio. And all of the different ways that they almost became family around me, to be able to refer them that, that was a huge thing to keep the promise to say I need to be good enough for myself as the person that shows up and delivers, that they would be willing to refer me for everything. And that became a nice little family that I dealt with for many years until finally I realized I was not the best for the wedding industry. But I found corporate was kind of more of my space and education. And so, you know, we all find our right place.
But I do have a story that I think you'd probably get a kick out of. I don't know if it, I don't think it's in the book. A guy saw me at a corporate event. It was called the Elton Awards. It was for Juice plus, it's a big multi level company. And he saw me as the MC and I did Elton John because I was like, I don't know why it's called the Elton Awards, but here's Elton John. So I sang as Elton John. He was like, oh my gosh, those awesome, amazing.
He goes, you need to come do my wedding. And I, I hadn't done a wedding for like five years, six years. And I said, oh, dude, I don't do weddings anymore. And he goes, well, it's in Paris. And I go, what time? You know? So he flies me to Paris, France with my wife and they get married in a small town called Sarlat S A R L A T Sarlot, which is like a medieval town in the middle of France. And so flies me there. He wants me to foil the audience. And he introduced me as his wacky roommate from college.
And so I stood up there with My Elton John wig, which is like an old mop top. And I acted like I was drunk at this wedding because he and his bride wanted to fool the whole audience. And so I stood up there and I'm like, hello, everybody. It's great to be from, you know, England and come over here. So I did this just ridiculously bad accent. I pretend I'm drunk. And I said, I want to sing a song to my favorite friend. And I started singing, can you feel the love tonight? And then I sing it perfect, like Elton John, right? And the crowd goes crazy, like, what is happening? And then I go, just kidding.
And I whip off my wig and I go into Ricky Martin and then to the Bee Gees and Staying Alive. The crowd. We just had, like, a party for a half an hour. So that is the last wedding I did. I believe it was over a decade ago, but it was in France. It was worth it. That was so fun to keep a promise like that to that guy. But that's a fun one, right?
Well, again, he saw something. But it also checked all your boxes because there's you and your wife in France, right? You gave it your all. Certainly. And, you know, and I think it's funny, you know, you're pretending to be drunk and you don't drink, but you're pretending to be drunk, Right? Which is. I'm picturing this because I've seen you do Elton John. Right. I've seen you do Elton John, and I'm picturing you in France. And that would have been.
Yeah, it was at a castle at a vineyard and the top of the hills. I mean, it was just. It was unbelievable. It was one of those miracle gigs that you get that aren't every day that you say, I will compromise some of my normal business practice, which is like, I don't do weddings anymore, but, oh, well, this is. This meets something I would like. I haven't been to France, you know.
Right.
And I just appreciate those types of opportunities and that someone would be so creative to think, let's pull one over on the whole audience. And by the end of the night, I'm playing the piano man at the piano. That was in the middle of this castle. I mean, dude, it was so rad to think that, like, all of us have this opportunity to have these types of experiences. If we show up on our best and keep our promise at every event and we kill it every time, we're going to get opportunities we never dreamed being in this business. Yeah, it's like a fantasy world that we can create out of keeping a promise to our client.
I think it's also important to keep your eyes open. But, you know, you've. At different points in your life, you've also said, no, no, because it doesn't keep the promise. And I think that's important as well. I know it's harder when we're new in business and, you know, money's tight and listen, I. I started in a business that I knew nothing about and never done outside sales, cold calling, any of that stuff. Yeah. You know, you ate what you caught.
Right. That was it, you know, and you get to a point where you look at an opportunity and you make the decision, does it check my boxes. And I know for me, I haven't done it a lot, but occasionally where I put the money was like, wow, that's. That's good money. It was disingenuous because I was doing it for the money. I wasn't doing it for the right reasons. And early on, I used to get paid after I spoke or whatever, and now I always get paid in advance because I don't want it to be about, oh, and now you owe me a check. Right.
I got the money. It's done. The. The webinar that I've done with the least amount of people was I had one person on. On the webinar, and it was actually an NSA chapter. It was the Pittsburgh chapter. They recorded it so other people could do it, but I literally had one person on. I always tell people, I always record, like, there's only one person.
Right. But that time I didn't have to pretend because it was only one person. But I've also had people comment to me where I've shown up and there's 20 people in the audience, and afterwards they're like, wow, you just, like, you just like brought it. I was like, that's all I know how to do. I only know how to bring it. That's what it is. And I've had thousands of people in the audience and yes, I'm going to bring it there too. Personally, it's cool to be on stage with thousands of people, but I'd rather see the faces of the 50 and interact with them, you know, to me, I enjoy that.
And I've had times where the money wasn't, you know, what, the money wasn't what it was supposed to be, but something felt right about it. And then you go, and then you met somebody, and then it led to something else or this or, you know, What? You just had a great time. You had a great time, and it was good, and that's okay, too. So. But. All right, so last story. You. You told me a story about what you're doing now, which is you're not doing so much speaking and entertaining.
If you're watching the video, you can see cardio miracle over his shoulder over there underneath, a wonderful family picture. Although. How long ago was that?
That was a good. Well, at least a decade. Man. Those kids are all moving away now. It's crazy.
I was gonna say those are college kids, and. And then somehow those are a little there. But. So you're. You took a shift that you probably five years ago, never thought you would have taken. Right, Right.
Yeah.
And you're working with your dad.
Yeah. So a couple of years ago, my bonus mom, my dad's wife came to me and said, hey, would you mind looking at our company? Because I've been teaching the promise at corporate events as a keynote speaker now for a decade, wrote this book. It's been killing it. Everybody has a great time because I mix in music and comedy impressions into a leadership keynote message to help people discover their signature moves, essentially, and say, how do you keep the promise with what your signature moves uniquely are for you? So it's fun because I'm sharing musical voices that they all know. You know, it's like, what's your voice? You know, And. And so then they're. They're laughing, but they're also learning. And I teach the ICM process, which is identify, clarify, magnify your gifts and skills.
And if you don't, then you're breaking the promise. So I bring that into a corporate setting. I bring that into consulting as well, through companies. My bonus mom asked, have you looked at your dad's company lately? And I said, I take the product every day. It's Cardiomiracle. It's the best health supplement product you can take in terms of nitric oxide, which is a miracle molecule that helps relax your blood vessels, and it helps with cardiovascular disease. And so I looked at the company, and I was like, this. This is an amazing product.
But let's look at the operations, let's look at the marketing, let's look at the sales. And my dad's a masterful salesman. He's the formulator of this. He does not have a background in health and science and these types of things, but he's a smart guy. He almost was killed on the operating table in the midst of an appendectomy gone bad. And they were Telling him he needed to have a quadruple bypass, he decides to crawl out of the hospital and create a product that could help him therapeutically naturally save himself. And so, I mean, it's a crazy story, but it's now saved millions of lives, which is an amazing thing. It's a multimillion dollar health supplement company, not an MLM or direct sales.
But what's fun about it is that now I get to help people to not only feel happier when I'm on stage and make them feel joyful about their purpose and their promise, but also I can, on top of that, with my dad's company, help to help people with their health. I mean, when we're not healthy, we're not happy. Pretty darn hard to delineate between the two. And when we can find a way for whether it's a genetic issue that we, you know, may just have inherited, or if we've brought it upon ourselves to eat too unhealthy or just have challenges in that way. Maybe you had a surgery recently, you do need blood flow to that area. You do need to continue to fix the internal pipes as best as we naturally can. We know that medicine has its place in time, and I'm grateful for that too. But then there's also like, what can we do for ourselves? And I believe that there is a promise within saying I'm going to do everything I possibly can to have the healthiest life, not only for myself, but for my family, for my legacy, for what I want to leave on this planet.
And so Cardio Miracle, that's become part of our mission. As I jumped into that world with my dad, it also was like a juggernaut for me because I'm a speaker for corporate, I'm an entertainer, and I go do all those things. But then now I'm also consulting and helping his whole team, which has become mine. I'm now the president of the company and I'm grateful for that, man. I'm just excited about being a part of this and doing something with my dad where we were a little estranged for a while with some of the decisions he made, some of the things that I responded to it as a 20 and 30 year old now in my 40s and he's in his 70s. It's a miracle that we have come together in Cardio Miracle as a father son duo, and we can go out to the world and spread joy through health and wellness. It's a wonderful promise for our family.
But to me, the beautiful part was you were estranged for A while. And now you're working with him and your brother, all kind of rowing in the same direction. And, you know, that's what happens in life. You know, it happened to me 30 something years ago when, when my wife was pregnant and I shouldn't have. You know, on paper, it's like you're doing what you're taking a job in an industry you know nothing about and cold calling or whatever, but when it feels right, it feels right because it's checking those boxes there. So that think that's, that's the wonderful part to me is that it brought you closer together. And then I didn't know about your brother. That's even better.
Yeah, it brought us together and we get to work together every single day. There's nothing better than working with family if it works.
Yeah. My wife and I published two wedding magazines out of the house for five years. And I used to say it worked really well because I left every day to go make sales and she stayed there and ran the operation, so that, that worked there. So. But Jason, thank you so much again. The book is the promise to the 1. You can see it in the show notes. You can see how to connect with Jason over there.
I don't think he gave me any links there about Cardio Miracle, but since we spoke about it, why don't you send me those? I'll add those to the show notes as well if somebody wants to find out some more. That wasn't what this was supposed to.
Be about, but, yeah, I appreciate even asking, man, but it is a family story and I appreciate it. It's one of reconciliation and promise and. Yeah. So Cardi Miracles.
Cool.
Cardi Miracle.com. but I just really appreciate your good work. You're a good man. You're. You're. You raised the bar for all of us because of the way that you live within this, you know, the wedding portion of life. But also, like, it's not solely the wedding thing. Like, you're like a masterful businessman.
You're a great musician. You're somebody. We all look up to you. You care about what you present to the world. You're. You're always so authentic and giving. I just really appreciate the man that you are. And you, you level up everybody that gets to interact with you.
So thanks for being a. One of my favorite follows on social media anyway. Right?
Thank you, Jason. I appreciate that. Thanks, everybody for listening. Be sure to hit the subscribe button. Catch you on the next episode.
I’m Alan Berg. Thanks for listening. If you have any questions about this or if you’d like to suggest other topics for “The Wedding Business Solutions Podcast” please let me know. My email is Alan@WeddingBusinessSolutions.com or you can text, use the short form on this page, or call +1.732.422.6362, international 001 732 422 6362. I look forward to seeing you on the next episode. Thanks.
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