Speaker 2
So many marketers have told me that they feel stretched. They feel like they're stretched thin. The algorithms are changing. They're making their lives more difficult. They have to launch campaigns, generate leads, be managing social media. They have to understand SEO. They have to understand CRO. They have to do so many things. They barely have a moment to breathe, let alone do your best work. Well, that's where HubSpot and Breeze, its new built-in AI come in. If you can combine the power of Marketing Hub and Content Hub, you can have your best quarter every quarter. You can essentially have the ability to do more than you ever did before. When you throw in co-pilots and agents to automate your tasks, folks, stop stretching yourself so thin. You have the ability to leverage and start making major moves with HubSpot. Visit HubSpot.com/marketers to learn more. I'm going to go to another tweet that you had that I think does on this as well, because over your course of your life, whether if you're striving for success, you're going to have a lot of people that you encounter. And one of the most important people that you might encounter is your actual partner. And you had this tweet where it said, ambitious people have two options. Marry a supportive partner who knows and understands exactly what they're signing up for, or do not get married at all. Could you tell me a little bit more around the thought process behind this and why you really encourage that concept of supportive partner or just don't do it?
Speaker 1
Yeah. I think that a lot of times people can get married because it's the time to get married. They can get married for a lot of different reasons, right? But the person that you choose is to kind of marry and spend your life with is one of the most important decisions of your life. This person is going to determine not only a lot of your personal happiness, but they're going to determine a lot of your fiscal success, whether or not they often get credit for it. These are people who, when you need to work on something in your business, are either cheering you on or telling you, why do you have to do that tonight? Why can't you do this? So they're going to be people, maybe they don't want to move for an opportunity. So now like that's an issue. So there are little ways in which, you know, you don't think about it now. If that person isn't all in and you share a vision, you're going to really struggle. And it's going to be the little things that you're going to be kind of tempted to give and take on. That's going to be challenging. One of the things that I hope that people think about as they move forward is that dating is not the day to day. And so you want to be sure that you're giving people the honest take about what you want your life to look like. Because sometimes what I find is that people are dating someone and they'll say, oh, you know, he or she wants to build a business. And they assume that this is like two or three years, then life is normal. And what they what they realize is that, hey, like, very quickly, they're not just two or three years, like this is your life. And if you're not all in, you are going to find that there's some real challenges. So being forthright, just kind of being straightforward. And even if the romance begins in a wonderful way, letting them know that, you know, my day to day is really, you know, eight to 12 hours, you know, working on my work, then I do X, then I do Y, and just being upfront about it. So people know what they're engaging in. And I do think that if you are ambitious, it is far better to pair with somebody upfront who wants you to win and wants to support that vision or be a part of it or has their own rather than get yourself in a situation where now, you know, not only do you risk losing half your net worth, but like you do have, you know, longstanding entanglements that then could be challenges on the way forward.