
Business Growth Architect Show: Founders of the Future
The Business Growth Architect Show: Founders of the Future
The old ways of doing business—bro marketing, manipulative persuasion tactics, and chasing success at any cost—are breaking down. The Business Growth Architect Show is for those who are here to build what comes next.
Hosted by Beate Chelette, this show is for the Founders of the Future—the ones who have heard the call, felt the activation, and know it’s time to lead differently. You’re not just here to make money. You want to use your skill set to make a difference. You’re building a business around your purpose, your experience, and your desire to impact others. You’re a conscious leader who believes that alignment, resonance, and integrity matter just as much as systems, scale, and strategy.
In each episode, we speak with the people who are building the future we actually want to live in—innovators, business architects, thought leaders, and disruptors who share the mindset, methods, frameworks, and tools to build scalable, purpose-driven businesses. You’ll learn how to shape your intellectual property into a clear business model, how to grow without burning out, and how to lead with vision while staying grounded in what really matters.
If you’re done with outdated formulas and ready to build something real, sustainable, and rooted in who you truly are—this is your show.
Business Growth Architect Show: Founders of the Future
Ep #177: Vince Covino: Why Conscious Capitalism Is the Future of Wealth
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We’ve heard ‘the day I lost it all’ before. But this story is extraordinary. What happens when everything crashes at once—your business, your beliefs, your identity? In this powerful episode of overcoming a massive set of obstacles, Vince Covino shares the day his $60M empire collapsed and how that breakdown led to a breakthrough.
This is one of the most emotional, raw, and thought-provoking interviews I’ve had the privilege of hosting. In this episode of the Business Growth Architect Show, I welcome Vince Covino—serial entrepreneur, CEO of Warrior Sage, and the creator of the Impact Accelerator Summit. We’ve heard ‘the day I lost it all’ before. But this story is extraordinary. What happens when everything crashes at once—your business, your beliefs, your identity? In this powerful episode of overcoming a massive set of obstacles.
Vince opens up about losing his $60 million business, filing for multiple bankruptcies, and watching a life he spent years building completely fall apart, right along with his religious beliefs.
The size of the defeat is massive. And so is the story of awakening, alignment, and what it really means to live an epic life.
Vince was the embodiment of the traditional capitalist—obsessed with shareholder value, exponential growth, and profitability. Until everything collapsed. COVID forced his hand, shutting down locations, freezing income, and devastating a company that had once received a $100 million growth capital offer. As I listened to him describe how he laid off 500 people in 48 hours and tried to hold it all together while quietly losing his faith, I felt the weight of what he’d endured.
Fast forward to today. Vince is a powerful voice in shaping conscious capitalism. He’s helping successful founders align with purpose, raise capital from value-driven investors, and build businesses that don’t just scale—they heal. Through his Impact Accelerator Summit, he’s connecting high-impact leaders with investors who want to see your soul and your spreadsheet.
In our conversation, we talk about the massive shift happening in the investment world and why being vulnerable, authentic, and mission-led is no longer a liability—it’s your greatest asset.
If you're a founder ready to go bigger, but you're not willing to sell your soul to get there, this episode is for you. You’ll walk away with a new understanding of multidimensional success and what it means to grow a business that actually feeds your spirit. Tune in now, and then visit VinceCovino.com to learn more about how Vince is leading the charge for a better, more heart-centered way to build wealth.
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This is Vince Covino. I'm the CEO of WarriorSage. And on this episode of Business Growth Architect Show, I'm going to share how to become a multi-dimensional success. We're going to go into the four dimensions of success and identify how you can truly have an epic life through multi dimensional success.
BEATE CHELETTE:And hello, fabulous person! Beate Chelette, here. I am the host of the Business Growth Architect Show, and I want to welcome you to today's episode where we discuss how to navigate strategy and spirituality to achieve time and financial freedom. Truly successful people have learned how to master both a clear intention and a strategy to execute that in a spiritual practice that will help them to stay in alignment and on purpose. Please enjoy the show and listen to what our guest today has to say about this very topic. Welcome back, everybody. Beate Chelette here today with Vince Covino, and we're talking about his impact accelerator and what it is like to ask for money right now, to get capital and investment, because his background is nothing short of extraordinary when it comes to capital and finding money and money is, In most entrepreneurs eyes, either the answer to everything or something that remains very elusive. Vince, I'm excited to have you on the Thank you so much for being
Vince Covino:here today. It is a pleasure. Thank you. This is a topic I love talking about, so I hope we go to the deep end. We
BEATE CHELETTE:will definitely go to the deep end. So my opening question to you is, so we talking to founders of the future, and for somebody who's never heard about you or is unfamiliar with your work, what do you do and what problem do you solve for your clients?
Vince Covino:Yeah, most business owners want to expand. They see the contribution they're making in the world, and growth capital helps them to expand and turn what could be a 20 or a 30 year into a five or a 10 year. What's a 10 year? What's a 10 year into a three year and get seven years of the life back, accomplish more in such a shorter period of time?
BEATE CHELETTE:Excellent. So you have an interesting background, and I think it's important for us to just touch on this a little bit, on where you come from. Because what about 10 years ago, you and I would have had a completely different conversation about any of this, so tell me, who are you meant? Yeah,
Vince Covino:no, Beate. It's fortuitous that we met when we did, because you probably wouldn't like me when I was a capitalist, a very Die Hard capitalist, I thought profit comes first shareholders. I've had a transition since then, which is why I think we have a good resonance, and why I want you to co facilitating our big growth capital event is I moved from 1P which is
BEATE CHELETTE:profits, to Oh, wow.
Vince Covino:I see why I'm doing it. I see the purpose. I made that connection. I see the people you talk about Conscious Capitalism. I see I have a wake of dead bodies behind me, right? thousands of thousands of employees that I believe that in some capacity great I gave them a paycheck and not a whole lot more for most of them, right? Maybe, maybe ulcers, but now with a higher consciousness of the impact that I can have in their lives, and recognizing that that very impact creates the most epic life for me.
BEATE CHELETTE:How does somebody go from capitalist to conscious capitalism? What's the story here?
Vince Covino:Hugh Jackman was in the show, greatest showman, and his whole factory burned down, if you saw it. And he sitting on those ashes with his, I'm trying to remember the name of his, Zac Efron. And in that setting, they realize there's a song from now on. But he says this, from those ashes, what remains must only be what's true. So his business burns down. He's like, what's left? I had a business that was extremely successful across the country, you know, doing six figures every day, seeing 20,000 guests per day. I scaled the business from startup, I raised 10s of millions of dollars. And like I said, there was a wake of dead bodies. There was a lot of in that process of seeking capital and being obsessed with the shareholder. Me being 70% shareholder, I was driven by that. I believed that for me, God had appointed me to do that so I could use those funds to be able to grow his kingdom. I lost my faith over COVID through an interesting series of events and my business as well, at least seven of my locations, I had to bankrupt, and that was just extremely painful. But it was sitting on those ashes and sitting with the identity crisis of losing my faith that I went very deep inward in that process, I began to realize it isn't shareholders. The stakeholders are the 20 million guests, the 1000s of employees. Yes, the shareholders. There's all of these stakeholders, and how was I serving them? I. Yeah, and I realized that there were some real deficiencies in the way that I was approaching when first Profit First instead of what impact is this on the planet, on the people. And as I recalibrated to be adjusted to purpose, to people, to planet, the profits are so much more delightful, so much sweeter, so much more abundant. And that was my experience. It took about a year, and I shouldn't say took about a year, because I'm still on that path. I still, you know, I think in the last month, I had ahas here and there, through different meditations, and, you know, through coaching and so forth. And everybody I have coach that help, that continue to help me to see why I'm doing it, the impact that it makes, and why that really is the only way to truly succeed. I want to ask
BEATE CHELETTE:a couple of follow up questions, because, you know, when we talk about these transformational journeys in like three minutes, you explained how you changed your entire life. Obviously took more than three minutes and more than three minutes to come to terms with it. Was there a moment? Or what was that moment where you said anything but this that I'll take the pain of changing because I cannot continue like this. What was it?
Vince Covino:Well, the pain of losing money for investors and for friends. Some of my friends invested millions, and I had lost for them, I believe it was in that setting that caused me to go to a place of introspection. It was in that place that wonderful loving guides helped me to go deep enough to have a big flip that switched. It was this switch I went from seeking external validation because of wounds that I had had from my childhood and otherwise, to truly having a deep level of compassion and respect for Vince, all of a sudden, I loved who I was. I was enough. I had always been good enough. I didn't feel I'm just this sinner that's not good enough, and I need this, and I'm always going to fall short no matter what happens, and my worth is going to be measured by for me, at least my programming that I received was or or that I interpreted was, How much money do you have, how big is your business, and what is your position in this church? And when I moved to a place of self love, I realized, no, none of that defines my worth. I define my worth, and it is infinite. It's beautiful. It's magnificent. And my offering, then isn't how much money can you make what you're calling but what is really my true gift? What's the North Star that lights me up, and then finding the way to most broadly expand that and deliver that to the world,
BEATE CHELETTE:I want to just explain on how large this level of pain was, because your business wasn't a $1 million business and it wasn't the $5 million business, this was a gigantic business.
Vince Covino:Yeah, yeah. So when COVID came along and in 2017 I got my first private equity offer at 40 million, and my partners didn't want to take it, because we were going to be giving up 37% of the company. Fast Forward, three years later, we had good growth capital. We had incredible profitability. And I had a $60 million offer plus $100 million of growth capital. I had 46 companies in my M and a pipeline. We were already the biggest in the world. Nobody's ever grown faster in terms of the zoo, aquarium space. You know, I had 50,000 animals in COVID hit, and had to continue to feed those when the government made me shut them all down. Over the course of 18 months, I lost virtually all of that value. I laid off 500 people. In fact, when COVID hit, I laid out, laid off 500 people in 48 hours. It was a big loss, and I don't know that it's any more poignant than the painter who has three employees that has to close that I don't know. I do know that it felt like there was a fridge on my chest, because I had so many people that I let down in so many states, on so many levels, and that felt immense, that felt like a tremendous amount of pressure. I'm a resilient guy by nature, and I have an incredibly supportive support system, and I recognize a lot of entrepreneurs don't have that. But even with that, I still felt like I suffered in silence. I still felt like I'm not going to tell my brother or my friends or this person or my investors how absolutely, you know, distraught I am. I can't let my employees think that that I feel like the weight of the world is on my shoulder, and so I put on a mask. You know, Hey guys, COVID, younger just and people knew it like they could tell. Even if they didn't know up here, they could feel it like, really, we're good. I do believe I'm a sensitive guy. I've had a big heart, but I was driven by profits, because I believe that's what behooved me. I believed it was incumbent upon me for the shareholders that I have. I had a fiduciary responsibility, and that is a thought error in capitalism. I believe the next version of capitalism, the next evolution that's. Is, it's essential and it's inescapable, is that we move as a society, we move beyond that very narrow prism of thinking. And I think that's happening right now.
BEATE CHELETTE:I agree with you on that, yes. So I want to make sure that we really covered this part properly. So here's someone who is super successful, then something terrible happens. You are responsible for all these animals. You have to let people go. You have to do all these, all these different things. What was your emotional state at the time? Because there had to be, you know, and having lost everything in the Palisades fire five months ago, I can certainly relate to this magnitude of a catastrophic loss. How did you emotionally survive
Vince Covino:this? Well, I'll tell you how it felt, and then how I survived it. How it felt is, there was a fire up by Folsom, and the whole city burned down. I was going to my grand opening in Folsom, one of my locations that I built there. This was late, 2019 I believe, and big opening, very successful location, 1000 to 2000 people every single day coming in at 2030 bucks, right? It was pretty good store. When I was there opening, somebody who had had their home and their restaurant burned to the ground was in the hot tub, and I saw tears in his eyes in the hot tub. And I said, Hey, man, you okay? And he said, I've lost everything my kids and his play kids were swimming in the pool. And he said, My Place burned down. I'm one of the guys here from down where the where the city burned. He said, I can't go build a hotel. I can't go build my restaurant back. It's gone. The recipes from my grandmother are burned to the ground. They were on paper. He said it's gone. My kid's identity is this restaurant. They worked at the restaurant with me. Said it's gone, and he sunk below the water level. Wow, man, this, this poor guy. And I did have words for him, right? Like, I'm sorry, dude, that sucks. It wasn't until COVID hit, and I'm like, Oh my gosh, it's burning to the ground. And then, you know, now I see Hugh Jackman and the greatest showman. I'm like, Yep, I know how that feels. It is the greatest gift I've ever received, because you see what remains and you see what's true. I wish I could go back to the hot tub and say, Dude, this is, I wouldn't have said it this way, but in short, this has to be a gift. Wait till you see what grows out of this. Wait till you see your heart's expansion. Yeah.
BEATE CHELETTE:I mean, I that is something that I've consciously made a choice in my particular situation, to say, I know, because of my belief system that there has to be a gift on the other side. But were you at the time, at a point where you knew that there was a gift, or did it just naturally unfold, and did it unfold quickly? The reason why I asked this is because I know we had a lot of people are going through really difficult stuff right now, and they're afraid and they're nervous. They don't know if there's a future for their business. They don't tariffs, economy, recession, yada yada, yada yada. How do you handle it?
Vince Covino:Well, this is mine. Is more complicated because I had deep faith in in an omniscient, omnipotent God, and in that very time when my business was falling apart. So was my faith shelf, not because of it. It wasn't a causation. It's because there were, there were some other things happening that were causing me to do some research that made me sorry I truly couldn't, because of what I had intellectually read and studied. You couldn't force me to believe the things that I had believed for the first 48 years about my faith.
BEATE CHELETTE:And that was a that was an organized religion that you were pushing up against,
Vince Covino:yeah, and, well, it was Mormonism. I was very devout in that space. It was my life. My life revolved around the church. So there was a period of time where I just thought, this is just random. This sucks, just bad luck, luck of the draw, because I had, I don't know that well, I became agnostic for about six months. And then there was, there was another shift after the another shift after that, but in that period of time, it's just pure darkness, pure heavy darkness. What I have since realized, and it's been about two years now, is there is it sure feels to me like there is a benevolent force that is writing a story better than I could have ever imagined it, and it's like any good movie. It's like, you do not want it to just be a win, win, win, win, win. This is amazing. I remember my partner and I sold the business. We founded a separate business in 2013 and we had some struggles. There was one point where his wife said, Vince, you're a real mofo. And you know, I'm not gonna say the words that she said. And I reflected back, and I'm like, You know what? She was, right? But it ended well, we sold the business, and it was successful. It was a multimillion dollar exit. And I remember us talking at the time as this amazing partner with his pure heart, and his wife so incredible and so and I remember thinking, I'm glad it. Wasn't easy, because it was sweet to go through those it was an adventure. It was filled with fears, and we had to exercise courage, and we thought, Oh, we're screwed. It's over. Are we gonna pull out of it this time? And when you when you persevere this the doors just open. And I don't know if I have a full explanation for how, but I've seen it enough times in my life. They open every time,
BEATE CHELETTE:every time. So you see, I think you do. You are one of those rare people that have done the work. So my observation here is that when people do the work right and the work is you become conscious and you examine who you are, your own trauma, the stuff you look at why you do things the way you do, and what meaning you give that story that you've told yourself the entire time about what your mom did, what your dad did, what happened to you. Tony Robbins always refers to it when he says, what people tell me about the dysfunctional families all the time, and cited as a reason, Michelle, it says, Show me one family that's not dysfunctional. They kind of all are. But you have this attitude that this backbone bone, is this something that you coined? Is this something that you've always had? Because I kind of want to also look into this. What does it take to have this attitude that you have in the face of all of this.
Vince Covino:I look at who I've been surrounded by. I've just been so lucky to have
BEATE CHELETTE:community. Yeah,
Vince Covino:community just, it's just critical. It's one of the reasons I'm in this mastermind is I look at, you know, I hired a CEO coach when the shit really hit the fan in my business. And you know, that extended community my friends, and the more I was able to be vulnerable with them so they could truly see what was going on my life, the more they loved me. And so really, for the first time in my life, aside from my mom, who just was love, she was just pure love, and I had such a deep relationship with her just beautiful is when I let every mask down, or at least to my best of my knowledge, I felt like I did. I thought, oh my goodness, they see all of the ugly pieces and all those stupid things that I've done. That's that feel foolish in hindsight, when they love me anyway, and I'm like, oh my goodness, that's love. They love me. And I felt what it was like to feel loved, to have a community around you where they truly see you. You can be authentic. You can just be yourself with them and be authentic with them. And real and vulnerable is is beautiful. So I think that's perhaps a big part of it.
BEATE CHELETTE:I think there's a perfect bridge for us on what talking about, what you're building and what you have built and continue to build. So now, today, you are in service of conscious capitalism. Why does that mean
Vince Covino:there are a lot of business owners out there that have been on the same path you and I have they've had successes, far greater success than I've ever dreamed of, and they realize that their success isn't how many zeros, how many bank accounts, how many any of that? They realize that it is impact, contribution, like that's what truly creates value in their life. That's the legacy. That's what they want to live for. It's how they want to be remembered. They don't want people at the funeral talking about how big their stock portfolio was. They want people at the funeral, they want to be remembered for their heart. And so in this circle of friends, and between our Mastermind and my friend group, there are a few dozen people who are just looking for heart centered leaders truly making an impact, that are out there saying, I can do more. I'm passionate about this, and if I had five or $20 million I could really blow this thing up in remarkable ways, like supernova. And these business owners are saying, I'm aligned with you. I see your heart. I see your vision. You need a little business mastery over here. You need be out there helping you with your messaging, because it's a little bit here or there, but I see what you're doing. We're going to dial you up. Let's get your board. Let's get you $10 million let's have a growth strategy and your 15 year plan. I want you to do it in four Let's go.
BEATE CHELETTE:So the business model right now is the impact accelerator summit that you have created that comes from this idea of conscious capitalism. So this event is designed to bring investors together with founders. Now, one of the things I want to mention, as I was just at the Web Summit in Vancouver, I think it's very difficult to find good investment these days, being an investor myself, certainly in the private equity market, because it is the wild west out there. What are you seeing on the investor side of things? Because they got to park this money somewhere. They got to be investing this in something. So what is their problem that they're or did anything shift in that market that you want the audience to know about? Well.
Vince Covino:There's absolutely a shift. It is a trend. Wayne Gretzky would say, look where the puck's going, and that's that's where you are, not where it is. There is an emerging tidal wave of people who are saying, I'm going to invest in people who have heart and contribution, who are looking at the stakeholders, not the shareholders. They're looking for purpose. They're looking for Planet. They're looking out for the people as you're creating jobs, or the people that you employ going home successful and seen like they feel like they're making a contribution. They're truly recognized for the immense impact that they're making. Most are not and it's sad. We don't need that anymore. Yeah, I have six kids, and a big part of my drive is I want them working for leaders, who lead with heart, who recognize who see them. The thought of my kids, if my kids were to go to work for me 10 years ago, which they did, incidentally, I was just breaking all the child labor laws, but I want them to work for somebody who truly cares about them, and that becomes a beautiful life, instead of them going home tired and unappreciated and seen overworked, underpaid. Business owners want that now. People have been very successful. So I would say, here's what's changing right now, is if you want to raise capital, make connection with your heart, make connection with your purpose, you'll make more money. The shareholders will be happier. Sure your culture will be better, and culture eats strategy for breakfast. And by the way, here's the best part, your life's going to be epic. It's just going to be epic your relationships. When you say doing the work, that's what it is, right? Well, guess what? That's great for your business. It's great for your spouse. It's great for your relationship with your kids, instead of dying super wealthy with your kids estranged,
BEATE CHELETTE:yeah, and on your stone in the cemetery, it says invested successfully in Amazon,
Vince Covino:right? Yeah, yeah, right, exactly right. You see how trite is.
BEATE CHELETTE:Yeah, I've always, I always say this, you know, to my clients, is that, you know, what's it say on these, on these stones, it says beloved father, husband, wife, sister, brother. It truly is. It truly is what we, you know, we live on through the memories of others of what we have done for them. So this shift in the investor community. Is this new? Is this something you've predicted? Is this something that you see happening? Is it getting stronger and stronger
Vince Covino:and stronger? This is so fascinating, because just in the last month, as I've been talking to the some of the biggest players in private equity, multi 10s of billions of dollars that they're managing and and in family offices, they are getting so excited about the idea of, instead of, Okay, here's another deal from the investment bank, here's a spreadsheet, and here's how they're doing it. They are moving now, yes, the multiples and valuations and enterprise value, all those things still play a role, but it's not the leading role. The leading role is, what is the impact? Who is the leader? They're investing in a person specifically they're saying, show me your heart. Do you have miles and miles of heart? I don't care if you have miles and miles of strategy. So does everyone else. And it leads to a lot of toxicity, and people getting to a place where they have burnout, and they lose their creativity, they lose their focus, they become corruptible, they embezzle money, they rip people off, they make deals, they manipulate and that always backfires. I've seen it backfire in my life. These investors are like, I don't want the next investment deal, and they're just excited. So the way that we do it is that we spend three days with the business owners, digging deep into their leadership, their strategy, their culture and their KPIs, their AI integration, which is critical, their speed. And the investors are there with them, seeing them, being with them, seeing their hearts, seeing them in the most vulnerable, breaking them down, seeing what's inside, crack 'em wide open. And now the investors say, I see all of you, and I'm gonna help you. Let's go. And you have alignment. You have deep, heart centered alignment.
BEATE CHELETTE:I'm so happy to hear that, because I do think that we had seen in the past this profit, profit, profit conversation. And to hear this from your side, that in the investor world, also, there is a sense of responsibility, social consciousness, responsibility to each other, to the world that our kids and their kids are going to live in, that really coming at the forefront. Because when we turn on the television, that's not what we're seeing at all. We still seeing the holding on to this old, old matrix we talk about on the show all the time. But I want to talk to you now about the entrepreneur, the founder. So who should be going to this impact accelerator Summit? What are they going to learn? What are they going to get
Vince Covino:out of it? Yeah, well, so first of all, people that are family offices, which are probably a billion or billions in private equity companies, which are billions or 10s of billions, it's hard. For them to deploy 300 grand here, 800 grand there, and really do much in the small venture capital or in the angel investor world, that's a little more on the individual side the institutional investors, who are now really moving towards conscious capitalism, they're looking for people who are already successful. They're already seven or eight figures in revenue, in business value, and they're seeking seven or eight figures. They're seeking 3 million, or maybe 30 million. We already have several businesses that are lined up. Some are seeking 5,000,001 is seeking 100 million. That'll probably be the peak, and I'll be a part of that presentation, because I'm a tiny little partner on one of the businesses that's doing it. It is a very valuable business. It's a very successful business. It does maybe eight or 9 million per year in EBITDA, but the opportunity for development is tremendous, and they're probably going to pick up a big check at that because of what they want to do. It's sort of in the hospitality longevity space, which is such a hot trend right now. So it's people who are successful who say, I have the vision to expand this at the at the largest scales. And if I had 10 million bucks or 20 million bucks, I could do this. It wouldn't take me 10 years. It wouldn't take me 15 years. You know, they're 35 they're 45 saying, I don't want to be 65 when I finally hang this up and exit. How can I do this in four years instead of 12. So it's those people who believe that it's time to really grow and expand the business to the highest potential. Yeah.
BEATE CHELETTE:So I definitely think that there's a lot of food for thought here, because what I find absolutely astonishing is that on the investor side, things are changing, because that's not something that's widely being talked about. I know out of my own personal experience and with people that I'm around, is that investors are looking to invest, and people always invest, as you said, in the person and the character of the person. So your idea that the character of the person has to be well defined and clearly identified what they stand for is probably more important than it's ever been. And now you said that there's going to be also workshops. So when somebody signs up for this, because I'm obviously interested in this, and you and I talked about me participating, which I'll be extremely honored to do, because this is something I very much believe in. What are the people going to get when they're there? So some let's say I'm running a million dollar business, or $2 million business. I'm right there at that sweet spot. I need capital to scale it to 10, 15, 20 million. What am I going to get? I
Vince Covino:spent maybe a third of my time as CEO raising capital. Fly to this city, give a pitch. Fly to that city. Give a pitch. It's not what they're looking for. It's the wrong audience, negotiations, back and forth, otherwise, 200 hours of due diligence. So if you are heart centered, and there's no faking it, if you connect with your heart and your purpose, and you've got good business mastery, with a good track record, you're probably going to get an alignment of people, board of advisors and capital that will amplify you like no nobody ever has system upgrade across the board, people like you coming in and helping them just with their articulation of what they truly do at the core. 10 seconds. Here it is. So for me, real simple, I help leaders collect to their heart, lead from their heart, expand their gifts. Easy,
BEATE CHELETTE:easy enough. All right, so in closing out this interview, so is there anything else you want the entrepreneur or even the investor, to know that you have figured out that would be good for them to take away from this. Stephen
Vince Covino:Covey was so brilliant. He said, begin with the end in mind. And as I think about the end, what do I want? I want to have an epic Life. And here's an epic life. It's epic relationships and epic freedom through financial where I'm taking my means to expand my meaning, which is the whole point of growth capital. It's epic health. I'm in the best health of my life, except for maybe when I was 18. I'm about where I was when I was 18. Essentially, it is. It's epic spirituality, where, if you feel so connected to your to your gifts and to whatever source is for you, and that's an epic life. It's not really amazing success in one area, it's mastery, and all of them becoming truly multi dimensional. In my mind, that's the meta guru that's truly successful in each dimension is the person that is a whole multi dimensional human, and that's an epic life. I
BEATE CHELETTE:love this word. I've not not heard this idea of the multi dimensional success, but I think that's what coins your vision, is that we know that the myth of being successful financially and then. Waiting until the point comes where you then can be happy with the family and the kids. Really, in reality, means you blow and burn every bridge on the way there, and then you have nobody to celebrate the success with you. But the multi dimensional aspect is something that we know Gen Z wants. We know that nobody wants to certainly live like, like, what we were taught. You know, my generation was taught. And it's not all bad. I think it's really good that this is happening and that the systems are being dismantled and this emergence is actually happening. So this event is happening in October in Austin, and we will link, obviously, the summit to the show notes, anything else about the event, or anything else that they should check out, other than the link for the event,
Vince Covino:just over three days, they're going to get the most incredible, transformational experience in life, not just for their business, but their whole life. And I'm so convinced to that, that if they don't have 10x the return, we give them 100% of their money back. It's gonna happen.
BEATE CHELETTE:I was there for a promise. All right, wins. Well, thank you so much for being here. It's been absolutely amazing to have you on the show. I loved having a monetary conversation about money and investments that wasn't really about money
Vince Covino:at all. Beautiful. Is my honor,
BEATE CHELETTE:and with that, we say goodbye for today. If you know anybody who is looking for capital actively, or is thinking about maybe evaluating if finding capital is appropriate for them, send them to the show and show them the link and see if this resonates and makes sense for your friend or even for you, and with that, we say goodbye for today. So appreciate you being here. Thank you so much for listening to the entire episode. Please subscribe to the podcast, give us a five star review, a comment and share this episode with one more person so that you can help us help more people. Thank you again, until next time. Goodbye.