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Speaker BWelcome to another hempisode of Hemp Aware Radio.
Speaker BThis is your hemptrepreneurial host, Tyler Hemp, here to Hemp Power and hempducate your hemposphere as usual and focus on what's most important in life.
Speaker BHemp entrepreneurs and businesses working with hemp are constantly struggling to properly market and brand their products and solutions.
Speaker BAnd so that's exactly why we've created Hemp Aware.
Speaker BIt's a hemp marketing and branding and educational platform to empower and uplift you with the essential tools and resources and strategies to bring your vision to fruition.
Speaker BWith Hemp, you know, our ultimate vision and mission is to create a paradigm shift in consciousness so that we can have healthier, happier, more abundant lives and solve the world's greatest problems around food, shelter, clothing, energy, plastics, medicine and fuel.
Speaker BOne of those ways that we're fulfilling that mission is to introduce you to other amazing hamsters and innovators in this industry to learn from and see how they're doing things and what's worked and what hasn't and help give you some insights and green nuggets that you might need to have your next breakthrough.
Speaker BAnd so on today's show, I'm, you know, very pleased to have a special guest.
Speaker BHis name is Jesse Henry of Alt Labs.
Speaker BHe's started his own hemp company over the years and he's got a really inspiring story.
Speaker BWe actually recently met at a small get together in Miami where he's now based out of, and we had some really awesome conversation around sustainability, corporate responsibility, organic chemistry, supply chains.
Speaker BAnd the reason I wanted to bring Henry on today's show is to introduce you to the role that he's playing in helping companies to develop their own sustainable supply chain initiatives.
Speaker BAnd Jesse, as you'll see, is an energetic, charismatic, intelligent, dynamic guy.
Speaker BAnd he's a visionary.
Speaker BHe's a leader at the intersection of sustainability, innovation, and he's at the forefront of the hemp economy.
Speaker BAs I see it, he's currently serving as the CEO of Alt Labs, where he's advancing sustainable technology and developing solutions that support supply chains and a circular economy, which we'll talk about here.
Speaker BAnd so prior to his leadership at Alt Labs, he built and led Heartland.
Speaker BIt's a material science company focused on engineering, specifically with HEM fiber additives for plastics.
Speaker BAnd that company has since dissolved and he's now doing his own thing with Alt Labs, which we'll talk about as well.
Speaker BBut he's ultimately helping brands to reduce their carbon footprint and find the sustainable Eco friendly materials to help improve their overall carbon footprint, as they say.
Speaker BWithout further ado, I'm super excited to introduce you guys to Jesse and let's kick it off, man.
Speaker BI appreciate you being here and, and.
Speaker AWhat'S happening, Tyler, thanks for having me, man.
Speaker ALove, love the intro, love the enthusiasm for the space.
Speaker AI, Heartland, I don't believe has dissolved.
Speaker AThey're, they're still on, on their journey.
Speaker AAnd I, I believe even since my tenure, they've expanded from plastic additives into textile additives.
Speaker AAnd as we met, for those of you who haven't met Tyler in person, he's wearing hemp clothing, he's got the socks, he's got the shoes, he's hemped out.
Speaker ASo when he gives you his hemp intro, he is through and through, Pure hemp guy.
Speaker BAppreciate that, man.
Speaker BYeah, really cool story.
Speaker BI think we have a lot of similar backgrounds in just the world of self development and consciousness and living a more harmonious lifestyle.
Speaker BSo I'd love to have you share a little bit of your background, like maybe the, you know, two or three minute version of where you come from, what sort of influences you've had and ultimately what kind of led you up to actually working with hemp in the first place.
Speaker AI was born in Boston, grew up in South Florida, worked for Tony Robbins as a speaker, worked for Oren Claf, the author of Pitch Anything for a little over a year, and really found myself at a crossroads in my life where I was like, I don't, I'm not passionate about what I'm doing and really care about what I'm doing.
Speaker ASo I went on a walk one day and said, what do I care about?
Speaker AAnd the theme was sustainable materials.
Speaker AI really genuinely felt that there was a lot of people working on the energy transition, but not a lot of people working on the materials transition.
Speaker ASo I set out with my business partner at the time to go start a company.
Speaker AWe didn't really start in hem fiber.
Speaker AWe actually started in lab testing for cbd.
Speaker ASo we were using a technology called Ion Mobility Spectrometry, which tested infields, molds, pesticides, heavy metals, moisture, yeast, all the things you would want in a COA for CBD or THC.
Speaker AAnd this was 2019.
Speaker AWe were exposed to the booming hemp market.
Speaker AWe kind of sat there and said, man, we're in lab testing, but what else can you do with this plant?
Speaker AThis plant is amazing.
Speaker AAnd as you know, Tyler, you could do 50,000 things with hemp, but you can't enter into a market solving 50,000 problems, right?
Speaker AIf you go and look back at history, some of the best companies go look at, you know, Apple started in the education market, Facebook started in Ivy league colleges, then it was all colleges, then it was high schools and colleges.
Speaker ANow it's 2 billion people a month.
Speaker AAnd so when you're starting a company, you really have to find your go to market and you have to find that product market fit.
Speaker ASo when we started Heartland Industries, we tested everything.
Speaker AWe tested building materials, textiles, animal bedding, and we actually landed on bioplastics.
Speaker AAnd so what happened is we went out to the plastics industry trying to sell bioplastics and we got laughed out of pretty much every room that we started it.
Speaker AYou know, there was cost concerns, there were scalability concerns.
Speaker AAnd you have to remember, Tyler, people are buying petroleum based plastic for 50 cents a pound.
Speaker AAnd so if they're going to swap out a bioplastic, it's got to be at price parity and at scale.
Speaker AIt was just really, really difficult to do with a bioplastic that you could produce kilograms of on a day to day basis.
Speaker AAnd so we quickly pivoted at the beginning of Heartland from hemp based bioplastics into hemp based plastic additives.
Speaker AAnd so we went to market in the plastic additive space, really looking to replace fiberglass, talc, calcium carbonate and other commonly used volume fillers and reinforcement agents.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BSo we'll definitely dive deep into like the biochemistry in that whole world.
Speaker BBut before we do, if we could take a step back and look at your childhood.
Speaker BWas, was there like a pivotal moment or maybe an influential person or you know, from like age 1 to 10, like did something happen in your life or you have some sort of influence that you feel like kind of set the foundation for you to enter into this world of sustainability and organic biomaterials.
Speaker AYou know, as a kid, one of my big struggles was I had a stutter.
Speaker AI was a really, really, really bad communicator.
Speaker AAnd I did speech therapy for a little over a decade.
Speaker AAnd what really got me out of my shell was, was stage acting.
Speaker AAnd I went to the summer camp called Next Stop Broadway.
Speaker AAnd my friends kind of made, made fun of me at the time.
Speaker AIt wasn't, you know, what the cool kids were doing over their summers.
Speaker ABut when you do stage acting, you do something called improv.
Speaker AAnd improv.
Speaker AThey give you a scene, they give you a character, and they snap their fingers and they say go.
Speaker AAnd all of a sudden you're not you anymore, you're some random person.
Speaker AIn some random setting.
Speaker AAnd it gets you kind of like out of your head and into your heart and into your body.
Speaker AAnd one of the other really fascinating things about stage acting is when you're singing, your brain can't tell the difference between when you're talking and when you're singing, but you can't stutter when you're singing.
Speaker AAnd so one of the really good ways to teach people how to stop stuttering is actually to get them to sing because it trains the brain how to communicate without stammering.
Speaker AMy big roadblock as a kid was my inability to communicate.
Speaker AI think part of the reason why I wanted to go work for Tony Robbins College was I wanted to take my biggest weakness and turn it into my biggest strength.
Speaker AI've worked really hard on my communication skills and continue to work every day.
Speaker AI mean, I've been in intimate connections where I'm challenged, you know, on a day to day basis on how to be a better communicator, as I think we all have, have been at some point.
Speaker AAnd I still, you know, stutter at times, but I roll through it.
Speaker AI'm much more confident in my ability to communicate.
Speaker AAnd I, I wouldn't necessarily say that I had, you know, a role model or a figure that was driving me towards sustainability.
Speaker AI think one of my kind of apathetic thoughts as a kid was, you know, how are all these, you know, oil companies making billions and destroying our planet?
Speaker AHow are all these consumer goods companies making billions and destroying our planet?
Speaker AOr pharma companies making billions and destroying our planet?
Speaker AAnd it kind of left me in this like apathetic state.
Speaker AIt wasn't a very empowering state.
Speaker AIt was kind of like, well, the world is kind of screwed up.
Speaker ALike it's rewarding all of these people who are potentially harming the planet and then not giving that same reward system to people who genuinely care about the planet.
Speaker AAnd so I think, you know, early on that seed was planted.
Speaker AI didn't necessarily know what that looked like.
Speaker AAnd then when I went to college, I studied entrepreneurship and that was my major.
Speaker ASo I was doing the textbook type work.
Speaker ABut you can't really learn entrepreneurship from a textbook.
Speaker AYou know, you gotta get out there in the world.
Speaker AAnd part of the game of entrepreneurship is finding product market fit and getting that customer feedback loop and doing the customer discovery process.
Speaker ASo you can read all the textbooks you want about entrepreneurship, but until you get out there and talk to customers, it's all theory.
Speaker BAin't nothing like the real thing, baby.
Speaker BDemonstration beats conversation Every day.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I demonstrate by doing so.
Speaker BSo that's cool.
Speaker BSo I feel like if there was one skill that every human being could master in life, it's communication.
Speaker BBecause every relationship is founded on understanding how to communicate.
Speaker BEven, you know, if you're in sales, it's all about communication.
Speaker BIt's really cool to hear your background.
Speaker BAnd kind of.
Speaker BYou walked into this and you were out on that walk one day just thinking, like, what.
Speaker BWhat could you do?
Speaker BBecause you had kind of these seeds planted and that it came to the forefront, like, this plant is a miraculous plant that can solve all these problems.
Speaker BAnd then you started working with Heartland, doing the testing, and then that started getting you into the.
Speaker BThe bio, like the fiber aspect of the plant.
Speaker BHow did that, I guess, evolve into ALT Labs?
Speaker BAnd what's the main kind of mission behind ALT Labs?
Speaker BAnd what is it that you provide?
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker ASo Heartland's Heartland's journey was a lot of zigging and zagging.
Speaker AYou know, hemp became legal in the 2018 farm bill.
Speaker ASo we were one of the first people in 2019 to really start this process.
Speaker AThere's some other great companies in the space.
Speaker AHeartland really focused on taking a market position in the plastic additive space.
Speaker ASo, you know, I can't speak for Heartland's market position today, but when I was leading the company, you know, you could go talk to most Fortune 500R&D departments, and they were at least familiar with Heartland and knew what Heartland did.
Speaker AWe had some pretty tumultuous journeys in the beginning of Heartland, you know, starting in the plastic additive market.
Speaker AWe started with a natural fiber powder, and we're going and trying to sell a natural fiber powder to companies that have never used a natural fiber powder before.
Speaker ASo in those early days, we were working with large plastic companies.
Speaker AWe did some.
Speaker ASome early R and D with Ford Motor Company, and man, they.
Speaker AThey came back to us after a round of R and D and they.
Speaker AThey pretty much had every problem you could imagine in an R and D project with a new material.
Speaker AI mean, it was, you know, dust flammability, moisture bonding, bulk density dispersion, thermal stability performance.
Speaker AYou know, every single problem you could ever have with the new material.
Speaker AWe, we.
Speaker AWe had that problem.
Speaker AAnd, you know, although that was a.
Speaker AThat was a hard phone call to get, we were getting similar feedback from other people.
Speaker ASo you're like, okay, like this, we're onto something here.
Speaker ALike, this is.
Speaker AThis is a problem that we're having.
Speaker AAnd in order for us to commercialize this material and Find product, market fit.
Speaker ALike we have to solve this problem.
Speaker AAnd so what Heartland did is we engineered a hemp fiber master batch or a concentrate.
Speaker AAnd this was a hemp fiber pellet.
Speaker AKind of looks like chicken feed or rabbit food or maybe what comes out of the rabbit or goes in the rabbit.
Speaker AAnd, and this was coated with certain materials to help solve those problems.
Speaker AAnd so we sold that, those natural fiber pellets or the hemp fiber pellets into the plastic additive marketplace and we're able to solve a lot of the problems that we had faced in the early days of Heartland.
Speaker AThat was now a couple years ago.
Speaker ANow what I'm doing with Alt Labs is I'm building out different technologies, all that support the same outcomes.
Speaker ASo I'm working on some online training, I'm working on some softwares, I'm working on some fun projects, I'm working on some data assets.
Speaker AAnd really when I left Heartland I told myself there's a big gap in the market for sustainability focused media data, software training.
Speaker AAnd I wanted to really take a market position in those places.
Speaker ASo over the past year or so I've been consulting in sustainable chemistry, mostly on the sales and marketing side, working with a few different companies all over the place.
Speaker ASome venture backed companies, some private equity backed companies.
Speaker AActually did a big project out in Houston with a VC firm in biomanufacturing.
Speaker ASo I got a really good sense of how people market and sell these products into our industry.
Speaker AAnd about halfway through that last consulting project, I'm like, I don't, I don't think I'm built for consulting.
Speaker AI don't think that's my life purpose.
Speaker ASo I started really investing into my own projects and hired a team out in Asia who has been very, very helpful in me attaining some of the goals and outcomes that we'll all see here in 2026.
Speaker BAwesome man.
Speaker BThat's, that's really cool.
Speaker BSo yeah, you've been very purpose driven.
Speaker BI mean hanging out with someone like Tony Robbins, I would imagine that had a big influence on your, your consciousness or your focus and, and doing what not only brings you joy, but what makes a difference in the world and can make a dollar.
Speaker BOf course now to focus on the actual processing of the hemp fibers that you guys were using as a composite additive.
Speaker BWhat was that process like if, if you can share.
Speaker BI don't if there's any IP I totally understand but like were you using the whole stock were or a mixture of the bast and the herd?
Speaker BLike what, what did that look like.
Speaker ASo we did a lot of research on equipment, we tested a lot of equipment, we talked to a lot of people.
Speaker AAs you know, Tyler, the standard equipment stack is called decortication.
Speaker AEquipment typically starts with separating the fiber and the herd.
Speaker AIt's very labor intensive and it was an equipment stack that we very early on realized was not the right fit for us.
Speaker AAnd so we actually looked at, if you go back to Elon Musk's energy day back in I believe it was 2020 or maybe 2021, he talks about how to build manufacturing systems and it's low capex, low footprint, high throughput per hour, less moving parts, less energy.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThese are scalable equipment stacks.
Speaker AWe looked at decortication and we said this is the exact opposite of what Elon is talking about here.
Speaker AThis is high capex, high footprint, low throughput per hour.
Speaker AThere's a lot of moving parts that can break and it requires a lot of energy in order to do.
Speaker AAnd so we kind of flipped the model on its head, we used the full stock and we basically had a simple, I'll broadly call it three step process of milling the fiber and herd together, chemically pre treating that product with certain chemistry and then pelletizing that product before it's dried and backed.
Speaker AWe did patent the product or the process.
Speaker AIt's online.
Speaker AIf you just go search Heartland Industries or Jesse Henry, you could go on Google patents and like read the patent.
Speaker AAnd this was a pretty innovative thing at the time.
Speaker ASo we had worked with some pellet mills, some wood pellet mills that make wood pellets.
Speaker AIt took, it took some refinement.
Speaker AIt's not like they were perfect out at the first go around.
Speaker AThere were some, there were some nuances there to them manufacturing the product.
Speaker ABut fortunately for the most part they had the right equipment stack, they had the right labor.
Speaker AThey've been working with natural fibers for decades or generations.
Speaker ASo they knew how to work with a cellulosic feedstock.
Speaker AThe big difference is their input feedstock comes from a forestry and ours comes from agriculture.
Speaker ASo big difference between taking in a tree and taking in a bale of hemp fiber.
Speaker ASo there are some nuances there, but fortunately we were able to forge some really good partnerships and this really helped with scalability in the early days.
Speaker AI think one of the problems that hemp companies face is if you're going to buy a decortication piece of equipment, you're spending millions and millions of dollars, possibly more than $10 million plus in CapEx, depending on the scale that you're looking to do.
Speaker AIt can take years to commission that process.
Speaker AAnd oftentimes, unfortunately, Tyler, the throughput is a lot less than, than the equipment spec'd for.
Speaker AHemp is a very light material and so it's really hard to stuff £10,000 an hour into a processing system.
Speaker AAnd I think a lot of the equipment that's used in the hemp industry is graded for £10,000 an hour.
Speaker AAnd a lot of those £10,000 an hour pieces of equipment, they might get £2,000 an hour.
Speaker ASo all of a sudden your economics and your financial model and your P and L, they don't work the same at £2,000 an hour as they do at £10,000 an hour.
Speaker ASo there's some nuances in the hemp market.
Speaker AI think the hemp industry can win by leveraging other natural fibers as well.
Speaker AThe camp is a great fiber, but there's other fibers out there as well that are produced at commodity scale and price.
Speaker ASo I think the hemp industry has a really great opportunity to penetrate all these different markets.
Speaker AI think what it's going to take is companies that are very, very particular about the market that they're tackling think a company like Hempitecture is a really great example.
Speaker AAnd not to do the marketing for Hempitecture, but you know, they're in the hemp fiber based insulation products industry and they've also expanded into other natural fibers.
Speaker ABut they are best in class at that one thing, natural fiber insulation.
Speaker AI think when hemp companies try to be everything to everyone, they become nothing to no one, because you can't be the best at everything.
Speaker AYou know, Facebook didn't start with 2 billion people.
Speaker AThey started with Ivy League colleges.
Speaker AAnd so hemp company go try to solve a problem with hemp, not 50,000 problems with hemp.
Speaker AThat would be, that would be my little piece of advice for the hemp entrepreneurs out there.
Speaker AYou know, Heartland got a lot of attention from these other markets.
Speaker AConcrete was a big market.
Speaker AWe did a good amount of testing in the rubber market.
Speaker AFoam, obviously, Heartland's in textiles now, so they've expanded from plastic additives.
Speaker ABut there's a lot of attention that hemp gets because it's so versatile.
Speaker AThe problem for these companies and these startups is when you get a new lead that comes into the system and you're a plastic additive company, but you're getting a lead for concrete additives, how much time and attention and energy are you going to give to the concrete additives as opposed to additives?
Speaker AOr as opposed to the plastic additives.
Speaker ASo it can be very difficult to focus.
Speaker AI think fiber companies suffer from that because there's a lot of attention from a lot of places that aren't necessarily your main niche.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BSo on that note of knowing that there's potentially 50,000 different things that hemp could be turned into based on your research, and knowing that hemp is a resource for food, shelter, clothing, energy, plastics, medicine, fuel, what do you feel like has been maybe the most overlooked or underutilized opportunity in the hemp industry?
Speaker BLike, do you think it's plastics or is it possibly something else?
Speaker AI'm going to throw a big curveball at you and show you a little bit of my hand and what, what might potentially be coming in future years.
Speaker ABut I think the most underutilized use of hemp is phytoremediation.
Speaker AI think what's more about that there's.
Speaker AWell, there's a lot of research there and you can go back to Chernobyl and see how different radioactive materials were remediated using hemp fiber.
Speaker AThere's a lot of plants that can do remediation, phytoremedia, radiation, phytomining, which would be sucking up heavy metals as opposed to solvents and hydrocarbons.
Speaker AI think there's a big opportunity on this planet to remediate some of the land that's been abused over many, many years.
Speaker AAnd I'm currently working on something that'll be launching next year that's not necessarily hemp specific, but focuses on phytoremediation.
Speaker AI think this is a really important topic.
Speaker AWe have 900 million acres of arable land here in America, but we also have 50 million acres of oil fields.
Speaker AAnd a lot of those oil fields have been abused year after year after year.
Speaker ASo I think there's a lot of things we can do to remediate that soil.
Speaker AAnd I think hemp is one of those solutions.
Speaker ASo the hard part about hemp, Tyler, is look, concrete would be a great market.
Speaker AConcrete additive, in order to hit even 1% by weight of concrete, you would need millions and millions of acres of hemp fiber.
Speaker ASo there's a, there's a gap from how do we get, from where we're at as kind of a, unfortunately like a nascent industry to how is hemp fiber the next commodity crop next to corn, wheat and soy?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ACorn is about 90 million acres here in America.
Speaker ASoy is about 90 million acres.
Speaker AI think wheat is somewhere around 40, maybe 45 million acres.
Speaker AYou know, these are, these are produced at Scale, they're in commodity markets.
Speaker AYou can go to exchanges and arbitrage the price of corn today versus the price of corn next month.
Speaker AAnd, you know, and hemp doesn't have that advantage.
Speaker BYeah, like under 100,000 acres.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's faltered, it's gone up and down.
Speaker AI think, you know, CBD has something to do with that.
Speaker AI think has something to do with that.
Speaker AI think the court of public opinion has something to do with that.
Speaker AAnd there's some misguidance on what hemp is.
Speaker AAnd, you know, if it's going to intoxicate your children, I think there's some problems with not having FDA grass certification, generally recognized as safe.
Speaker AOnce hemp gets marked, generally recognize as safe.
Speaker AJust like wood fiber is, or linen or flax or agave or any of these other natural fibers that would be considered competitors.
Speaker ANow, hemp can get into food packaging and you can do food contact.
Speaker AYou can touch that.
Speaker AThat market that's really focused on biodegradability and compostability.
Speaker AAnd so I think there's some, there's some, broadly speaking, some unlock codes that hemp needs to go through.
Speaker AI think some of the building materials codes are also a great opportunity for hemp to make a, make a big imprint.
Speaker ABut we have to talk about, you know, how do we get from, you know, tens of thousands of acres or a hundred thousand acres over to tens of millions of acres.
Speaker ASo we got to work with the big companies.
Speaker AYou know, Heartland was doing some work with Georgia Pacific in the early days.
Speaker AAnd I love Georgia Pacific.
Speaker AThey got a great team.
Speaker AThey got really, really smart people working there.
Speaker ABut the big chasm was man, Tyler, they're the biggest natural fiber producer on the planet, and they're vertically integrated.
Speaker AThere's no company on planet Earth like Georgia Pacific.
Speaker AThey make Dixie cups and they grow trees and they take the trees and turn them into the Dixie cups.
Speaker AAnd by the way, they also have the recycling.
Speaker AThey have the full supply chain.
Speaker AIt is a masterpiece.
Speaker AThe gap with Georgia Pacific is they're in forestry feedstocks and we're in agriculture feedstocks.
Speaker AAnd how do you get a company that spent 100 years in forestry feedstocks to start using agriculture feedstocks?
Speaker AAnd it's not as simple as just flipping a switch.
Speaker AAnd so even for the largest natural fiber producer on the planet is a big switch.
Speaker ASo I think when you look at most of these industries, Tyler, they're used to using petroleum based goods and mined goods.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo they're using minerals and petroleum.
Speaker ASo introducing natural fibers into their supply chain, it causes new problems and new concerns and there's this cognitive dissonance.
Speaker AThey don't know what those concerns are.
Speaker ASo there's a lot of risk there.
Speaker AAnd when there's a lot of risk and you have an R and D person, they rather keep their job than try to swing for the fences and try to be the hero.
Speaker BIs that the problem that you're aiming to solve with your services?
Speaker BKind of sitting down with these companies to integrate and go through that process and be willing to take that risk?
Speaker BIs that kind of what your intention is to oversee?
Speaker BOr how, how like if you sit down with a client, they hire you to come in, help with their supply chain sustainability.
Speaker BLike what does that process look like?
Speaker ASo most of my work has been with smaller companies over the past year and mostly on the marketing and sales side.
Speaker ASo I'm trying to help them scale the their ability to sell sustainable chemistry.
Speaker AWhen I connect with large corporates, I do the song and dance and I promote them to use sustainable chemistry.
Speaker AI introduce them to people that could be helpful in their supply chains.
Speaker ABut I'm trying to get out of the business of consulting, man.
Speaker AI don't think that's my life purpose.
Speaker AThat's not why I was put on this planet.
Speaker AAnd so I've committed to developing some of these projects and software and training and data and media because I believe that those are more scalable in terms of their impact.
Speaker BGotcha.
Speaker BSo like for our listeners that are maybe have a eco friendly company, like are you, are you working more with people that aren't, have, don't, don't have eco friendly and sustainable practices so that they can switch over or would somebody come to you that maybe already has a foundation of sustainability and now you can help optimize and fine tune that and help them share that message or what's kind of like if someone were to come to you and hire you, why would they do that?
Speaker AMost of the companies that I'm working with already have a sustainable solution and they're struggling to get it into market.
Speaker ASo the consulting is obviously a bit more hands on.
Speaker AOne of the products that I'll be launching over the next month or two is, is a CRM and it's called circular CRM.
Speaker AIt's going to be focused specifically on companies in our sector that are moving materials, products, packaging that are promoting more sustainable solutions throughout industry.
Speaker ASo I'm optimizing the CRM specifically for long sales cycles because that's one of the problems in our sector and Supply chain partnerships.
Speaker AAnd most sales cycles, you know, if you click on a Facebook ad, that guy's sales cycle is the time it takes you to click on the ad to the time it takes you to go to the checkout page.
Speaker AMight be, you know, 15 to 30 minutes.
Speaker AIn the sustainable chemistry industry, commercializing new materials could take five to 10 years.
Speaker AAnd also what many people don't realize is that brand owner who makes decisions and you think manufactures goods.
Speaker AThey don't manufacture anything.
Speaker AThey might not even assemble anything.
Speaker AThey're really marketing companies.
Speaker AAnd as a marketing company, they have to manage a whole supply chain.
Speaker ASo they have tiered supplier bases, they have raw material suppliers, they have logistics companies.
Speaker AAnd organizing that can become very, very logistically burdensome.
Speaker AAnd so when you're optimizing a CRM and you're optimizing software for supply chain partnerships, for shortening sales cycles, you're helping, you're helping both the startup and the corporate.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AImagine if you're a corporate and it takes you 10 years to commercialize a new material, and now all of a sudden it takes you five years to commercialize that same new material.
Speaker AHow much money did you save by commercializing the material in 5 years instead of 10 years?
Speaker AYou saved millions of dollars in testing labor, you know, and now you're getting out to market quicker and you're beating your competitors.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSaving a missed opportunity.
Speaker ATotally.
Speaker ASo I'm, I'm trying to help both the supply side and the demand side with the software and the data.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker ATraining that I'm building.
Speaker AI've been out of the training industry for 10 years now, since my time with Tony Robbins.
Speaker ASo I'm very excited to get back in.
Speaker AAnd a lot of the projects I'm working on, I've been thinking, thinking about, for, for a long time, and I'm finally at a place in my life where I can invest the time, money and energy into actually building them.
Speaker BVery cool.
Speaker BSo on, on the topic of entrepreneurship and hemp, there's a lot of ideas popping around in people's minds, some of them taking action, some of them not.
Speaker BBut for the people that are taking the risk or moving into the hemp industry, what do you see other than focusing on too many things and not doing the one thing?
Speaker BWhat do you feel like are some of the biggest mistakes that people are making moving into the hemp industry and kind of like challenges that they're going to face?
Speaker BHow could they kind of better prepare their entry into this world?
Speaker BAnd, and what do you see as some of the Biggest mistakes that people make that you could help them prevent.
Speaker AThat is a billion dollar question right there.
Speaker AAnd I can share some opinions.
Speaker AI don't know if they're right or wrong, but I think everyone, and I'll kind of zoom out from hemp and just talk about sustainable chemistry as a whole.
Speaker AEveryone wants to build a molecule factory of the future.
Speaker AThey want to build that, you know, billion dollar exit which requires this innovative processing technology with this unique market application and customer demand pull through and all the investors to finance that molecule factory where you are producing sustainable chemistry at scale.
Speaker AAnd I absolutely love that vision.
Speaker AWith that said, that is a very long journey and most people who try that journey fail.
Speaker AAnd so the much more sustainable path is find a contract manufacturer that already has processing technology that you can leverage today, create really strong partnerships with that processing partner.
Speaker AAnd your job as an entrepreneur is to go secure demand.
Speaker AYou are in the marketing and sales business.
Speaker AAnd so yes, your supply chain is important, yes, your team is important.
Speaker ABut without the demand mechanisms, you're just a guy with a great idea that's talking to investors about the next big thing.
Speaker AAnd investors, that next big thing is really risky if they're putting all their money into equipment.
Speaker AAnd on the other side of that equipment, there's no demand driver.
Speaker AThey're like, why am I going to put $10 million into your equipment stack when you don't have a bunch of customers sitting there waiting for the outputs?
Speaker AVery hard for an investor to put money into that.
Speaker AIf you were to go to an investor and say, hey, I'm going to take your million, 2 million bucks and I'm going to invest it in inputs for the contract manufacturer that I'm working with and sales and marketing.
Speaker AWell, scaling sales and marketing is a lot more efficient than scaling, you know, an 18 month build out for a new molecule factory, that's, that's a, that's a tall order.
Speaker ASo I think people should be thinking more in terms of efficiency and how they can efficiently spend their time, money and energy to commercialize these new materials.
Speaker ABut I think most people in our industry want to be the hero they want to be.
Speaker AYou know, we came up with this new innovative molecule, this new innovative patent, this new innovative process, and we want to go raise billions of dollars to do it.
Speaker AI mean, Tyler, even the companies that have raised billions of dollars are struggling.
Speaker ASo raising money doesn't actually solve the problem.
Speaker AWhat solves the problem is finding a bunch of customers to raise their hand and say, me, pick me, choose me.
Speaker AI want to work with this material, I want to work with this team.
Speaker AI believe in your mission and your vision and your value and that is what's going to help hemp succeed.
Speaker ABut there's a lot of companies in our space specifically that have raised tens of millions of dollars that have struggled.
Speaker AThere's a lot of companies in sustainable chemistry that have raised hundreds of millions or billions of dollars who are either currently struggling or are on the verge of struggling.
Speaker ASo there's going to be a whole graveyard, not just in our industry, but in sustainable materials and chemicals as a whole, of companies that just don't make it.
Speaker AAnd they're not going to make it because they run out of money.
Speaker AThey're going to run out of money because they didn't get the demand drivers and the demand mechanisms moving quick enough in order to create the pull through mechanisms to get the investment capital to bring the material to market.
Speaker BSo to dive deeper into those mechanisms of demand and conversion, what would you recommend are, because you could ask a million people, hey, would you want to buy this?
Speaker BAnd you know, 90% of them might say yes.
Speaker BBut then when it comes to actually buying the thing to put up their money or make that switch, oftentimes after doing the market research, you find what people say isn't what they would actually do.
Speaker BWhat are some ways that you can ensure that the market research is valid and you can actually put those demand mechanisms in place?
Speaker BLike, what does that actually look like?
Speaker BWhat could businesses do?
Speaker BIs it an loi, Is it a proposal?
Speaker BIs it a purchase order?
Speaker BLike, what are the actual things that you would need to have to go and get that capital to, you know, to prove that you have the demand?
Speaker ATotally.
Speaker ASo, yeah, investors want to see an loi, an mou.
Speaker AIt doesn't need to be a joint venture, but a joint development agreement.
Speaker AIf you can get a purchase order, that's great.
Speaker ABut if you can't get a purchase order, just getting any piece of paper with their signature on it, on their company letterhead that says, we want this material and if you can produce it at this price, we'll buy it.
Speaker AEven if it's non binding to an investor, that's, that's a great demand signal.
Speaker AThere's a lot of companies that Heartland worked with over many years that they tested the material in labs, they did all the performance testing and we passed the specs and then they take our material and they put it up on a shelf and they say, well, you pass all the specs, but no one's currently asking us for hemp Fiber plastic additives.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AWho's asking for that?
Speaker ASo we're gonna put it on the shelf and then when someone asks for it, we have you guys, you're, you're the guys.
Speaker AWell, that's great.
Speaker ABut people aren't asking for hemp fiber plastic additives.
Speaker AThey're asking to reduce the CO2 of their plastic.
Speaker AThey're asking for more bio based content.
Speaker AThey're asking to lightweight their plastic, they're asking to replace their fiberglass or talc or calcium carbonate.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo they're, they're, they're not directly asking for hemp, they're asking for these solutions.
Speaker AAnd hemp fiber is a vehicle to get to that solution.
Speaker AIt does take some pretty innovative marketing and sales skills in order to make this happen.
Speaker ABecause it's not just successfully testing your material.
Speaker AThat's the easy part.
Speaker AIt's creating the demand mechanisms in order for that company to get it into market.
Speaker AAnd what I try to do at Heartland was help these big plastic companies with sales training.
Speaker AHey, here's how to sell natural fiber plastic additives or natural fiber filled plastic, because they don't know how to sell it.
Speaker APetroleum based plastic for 30 years, it's an arbitrage game.
Speaker AIt's a buy and sell, it's a commodity.
Speaker AAnd then when you're using a new material, it's a little less commoditized.
Speaker ASo it takes a little more narrative and you have to know what questions to ask and how to figure out if hemp fiber could potentially solve that solution.
Speaker BWhat's one or two nuggets that you, you could share with our audience?
Speaker BObviously if someone hires you, it could take weeks and months and years to develop a sales force to go out there and represent sustainable material.
Speaker BBut what, what was like maybe one or two golden nuggets that you could share to help them be armed with the languaging or the right questions, like what's something you could share with us that would be helpful.
Speaker ASo the right questions, you could probably take this transcript and upload it to ChatGPT and ask the 10 questions.
Speaker ASo I won't go through the questions.
Speaker AOne of the strategies that I used at Heartland was something I called land and expand.
Speaker ASo the really cool part, Tyler, about working in the industrial sector is you want to go to a big chemical company, there's 100,000 employees.
Speaker AYou could get a call with any chemical company that you want.
Speaker AThat's a fact.
Speaker AAnd if you can't, now we got to have a conversation about why you can't get a call with one out of 100,000 people, right?
Speaker ASo if you just go take a big chemical company, you get on the phone with them.
Speaker AThe trick is, how do you get to call?
Speaker ATwo call.
Speaker AOne goes, great.
Speaker AEvery hemp company on the planet can have a great first call because the narrative is perfect.
Speaker AIt's beautiful.
Speaker AThis plant does everything for the planet.
Speaker AIt performs well, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker AHow do you get called to?
Speaker AAnd it's not just how he gets called to, but who's on call to.
Speaker ASo I call the strategy land and expand.
Speaker ATypically, my first call is with someone in the R and D department.
Speaker AThey focus on material science, polymer chemistry, mechanical engineering, or they're like the R and D manager who might have less technical skills, but manages the whole R and D department.
Speaker AAnd at the end of the first call, I'm like, hey, this went great.
Speaker AReally looking forward to a second call with you.
Speaker AWho else from your team should be on that call?
Speaker AAnyone from procurement, Anyone from your sustainability team, maybe your marketing and sales team.
Speaker AAnd you start recommending other potential people who could be valuable in the process.
Speaker AYou want to loop in those people as quickly as possible, because what happens is these big companies have turnover.
Speaker ASo you could be working with the best R and D guy on the planet and they might love your product, but in three months, they might not be working there.
Speaker AThey might be working at the competitor, which can be another great thing for you, because now you have another entry point in.
Speaker ABut if you don't land and expand, you don't have anchors and hooks into that company that transcend that one person.
Speaker AAnd so your first goal when you get into a company is to go from we have one champion in the company to now we have a little cohort of champions inside the company.
Speaker ANow this cohort is moving our initiatives forward in all of these different markets.
Speaker ASo the way I kind of look at it is in a triangle, you have price, Performance and CO2.
Speaker AAnd the whole game of the hemp industry and the sustainable chemistry industry as a whole Is to lower CO2 without compromising price and performance.
Speaker AThat is the whole game, that is the sales game that you're playing.
Speaker AThat is the R and D game that you're playing.
Speaker AThat is product market fit.
Speaker AIf you can reduce CO2 without compromising price and performance, you have now stumbled upon greatness.
Speaker BThat's the trifecta.
Speaker AThat is the trifecta is this little triangle.
Speaker AAnd so if you look at the talent at a large institution that supports price, performance and CO2 at the price point, you have the Procurement team performance part, you have the R and D team and the CO2 part, you have the sustainability team.
Speaker ASo you always are going to need the trifecta dynamic between R and D, sustainability and procurement.
Speaker AYou gotta get those three people to talk and work together.
Speaker AAnd oftentimes that R and D person is not working super closely with their sustainability team.
Speaker AThey might be working with the procurement team on a fairly consistent basis, but the sustainability team they might not be.
Speaker AAnd so it's your duty and responsibility by the end of that first call to really get them not just vested in your product and your company and your mission and your vision and where you're going, but in looping in other members of their team who could help advance this initiative internally.
Speaker AAs much as you want to be the champion and go push this at 100,000 person company, you're just the hemp guy.
Speaker ASo you got to go find the champions internally who really believe in what you're doing.
Speaker AAnd given that you can do that and give them all the sales collateral that you have that can help them internally, you can move the product development initiatives forward faster.
Speaker BThat's really great advice.
Speaker BYeah, I have not heard that approach from any of the 140 guests I've had on the show, so that's really valuable.
Speaker BI appreciate you sharing that.
Speaker BBased on our conversations previously, you have a very sustainable, eco friendly, healthy lifestyle and the things that you put on and in your body.
Speaker BOf all of the hemp products that you've experienced since you've been introduced to this plant, what is your favorite hemp product on the market that you've experienced and why?
Speaker AMan unbiased.
Speaker AYou know, Heartland's product to me is still, you know, if Heartland gets it, gets it in market and like scales it, that is, it's a game changer because it transcends plastic.
Speaker AIt's rubber foam, asphalt, concrete, cement, paper.
Speaker AI mean, we really stumbled on the holy grail at Heartland, honestly.
Speaker AIn full transparency, I don't have any hemp textiles.
Speaker AI think probably in 2026 I need a nice.
Speaker BWe'll change that hemp clothing.
Speaker AWould love to get there.
Speaker AI think, you know, hemp hearts was something that I used for many, many years.
Speaker AHeartland's done some work in that space as well.
Speaker ASo we had our own hemp hearts and hemp grain.
Speaker AI think in the protein market, hemp has a big opportunity to positively impact the vegan protein market specifically.
Speaker AThere's a lot of people who prefer vegan protein over whey protein, even though they aren't Vegan, the way the body processes it, the, the amino acid profile of the, of the hemp protein, I think is a bit different than a lot of the other proteins out there.
Speaker ASo I think hemp is a really big opportunity in that market.
Speaker AIt's tough, man.
Speaker AI mean, it's, again, it gets back to hemp can solve the 50,000 problems.
Speaker AWhat is it actually going to do the best?
Speaker ALook, you know, I would love to see biofuels be a big play for hemp long term.
Speaker AAnd, you know, we're.
Speaker AIf you look at the sustainable chemistry market, what is the largest produced sustainable chemical?
Speaker AIt's ethanol.
Speaker AThat's the ball.
Speaker AThat is, that is the one.
Speaker AThat is what we produce at volume, right?
Speaker AMassive volume.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker A15% or 10% in every single person's car, given that it's not an ev.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo there's already a huge market for it.
Speaker ANow.
Speaker AIt takes getting to scale and price points in order to make it happen.
Speaker ASo it still comes back to, you know, CO2 price and performance, unfortunately.
Speaker BSo would that be basically fermenting the biomass?
Speaker BLike, would you take the whole plant?
Speaker BWould it be the stocks, the leaves, the seeds?
Speaker BLike, what would.
Speaker ABut I think there's, there's a huge opportunity.
Speaker AOne of the trends that Heartland didn't hit on like, nail on the head, but I see is, is waste.
Speaker AAnd the waste narrative inside of companies and upcycling and valorizing waste is becoming more important.
Speaker AAnd there is a, you know, I'll call it a misconception in large, large companies where they have a fear that by using productive agriculture land for industrial crops instead of food crops, that they're now taking food out of the mouths of hungry children in nations that are impoverished.
Speaker AThis is a very tough narrative to overcome for hemp.
Speaker AFortunately, given that you're dual cropping, you're getting a protein product and you're getting a fiber product, and that's.
Speaker APortland did very, very well.
Speaker ASo we could overcome that narrative because we were actually getting more protein per acre than corn or soy as well as producing a fiber.
Speaker ASo we were able to overcome that.
Speaker AA lot of the industrial crops have a problem overcoming that narrative.
Speaker ABut if you go and look at like what industrial crop can hit tens of millions of acres and overcome that problem?
Speaker AHemp and flax would be the two big ones because flax does produce a seed which is pretty widely used.
Speaker AI think flax is an interesting market, but most of the flax fiber market goes, goes towards linens.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd it, you know, it goes towards bed sheets.
Speaker AAnd clothing.
Speaker AAnd so there's less market availability for a product like that because it's.
Speaker AIt's already accounted for.
Speaker AI think hemp really is a blue ocean.
Speaker AIt is about getting the farmers on board, though.
Speaker AAnd farmers have been screwed over for many years, both in hemp and out of hemp.
Speaker AThe situation didn't help the hemp brand in terms of farmers appeal towards it.
Speaker AAnd so that, you know, there's.
Speaker AThe hemp industry is interesting because it has to straddle agriculture.
Speaker AChemicals and manufacturing straddle the whole breadth of.
Speaker AAnd when you lead with CO2 as a core part of your narrative, you're really opening the door to miss.
Speaker AMiss the mark.
Speaker ABecause look at these sectors, man.
Speaker AThey are the most conservative sectors on the planet.
Speaker AAgriculture, chemicals, manufacturing, these are concern people.
Speaker AWhen you try to use words, words like climate change, global warming, climate crisis, CO2, that's not, you know, the farmer's not sitting there talking about, you know, parts per million of CO2.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ABut, you know, there are creative and nuanced ways to get around this problem for farmers.
Speaker AYou go ask a farmer, you know, hey, when did you.
Speaker AWhen did you.
Speaker AWhen did you plant, you know, 10 years ago?
Speaker AWhen was your plant date?
Speaker AThey might say, oh, we, you know, used to plant in, you know, mid May.
Speaker AOh, interesting.
Speaker AWhen's your.
Speaker AWhen's your plant date this past year?
Speaker AOh, well, you know, it's, you know, mid April.
Speaker AOh, interesting.
Speaker ASo it moved forward a month.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhy to move forward?
Speaker AOh, well, it's.
Speaker AIt's getting warmer earlier.
Speaker AYou don't need to say global warming.
Speaker AYeah, you just ask them the question so that they arrive at the solution.
Speaker ASo I think the hemp industry does have a natural proclivity to want to tell people what the answer is and try to shove hemp down people's throats.
Speaker AAnd I think the opportunity that we miss in that is asking questions so that people arrive at their own assumptions.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BThat's a big part of sales, is getting them to answer the questions.
Speaker BLast couple of questions here.
Speaker BSo going into these boardrooms, speaking to these major corporations, did you find the biggest challenges were more related to the integration and supply chain, you know, shifts, or did you ever encounter the stigma?
Speaker BLike, is there still a very large perception around hemp as being this drug and the association with cannabis or medical marijuana and that side of the plan?
Speaker BLike, did you encounter sort of being made fun of or just that, you know, stigma still?
Speaker AI think there's definitely still a stigma.
Speaker AHeartland for many years tried to brand itself like the Only articles that we put on our website that had to do anything outside of fiber were like the difference between hemp fiber and CBD so that we could educate the market and also educate Google, because Google was still, and this is pre AI days, Google was still a little confused about what hem fiber is versus what CBD is.
Speaker AThe stigma is a problem.
Speaker AThere's also this unspoken battle of preconceived notions by people in large industries.
Speaker ASo it's not just the stigma of hemp.
Speaker AIt's, you know, the guy in the R D department that did a study on wood fiber filled PVC in 1980 and is now talking to you and says, I know this isn't going to work because I tried this 45 years ago and it didn't work 45 years ago, so I damn sure know it's not going to work today.
Speaker AAnd so breaking down these limiting beliefs is kind of similar to the Tony Robbins thing.
Speaker AIt's all connected, man.
Speaker ABreaking down these belief systems from people who have tried and failed on getting them either to double down on what you're doing or getting them as far away from your product development initiative as humanly possible.
Speaker AThat guy or that person can kill your product development initiative.
Speaker AWithin the company, their bad energy is pervasive, and you need to either learn how to transition that person's mind or get them very far away from your product development initiative.
Speaker AThere's creative ways to do that, but notably, if you have a champion in the company confiding in them and just saying, hey, I'm noticing on our calls there's a lot of pushback between this individual and us.
Speaker AAnd I'm getting the sense that if this individual is involved in this product development, that it's just we're all just wasting our time and energy and money here.
Speaker ASo, like, you kind of draw out the two paths for them and let them be the delineator of what that path is.
Speaker ABut yeah, I think the stigma is one part of it, but also the limiting belief systems about what this plant is and what it can do.
Speaker ACan it be produced at scale?
Speaker AAnd then there's other random problems and it's all market specific.
Speaker ASo, you know, Heartland was working not just in commodity plastics, we were working in engineered plastics like nylon.
Speaker AYou know, getting over smell concerns, not just performance.
Speaker APerformance is one thing.
Speaker AGetting through smell concerns, because in automotive, there are strict smell requirements.
Speaker ASmell testing like that is a big problem.
Speaker AGetting over moisture problems, that is a big barrier to overcome.
Speaker AYou know, some people are concerned with molds and it's a natural product.
Speaker AAnd so they're concerned about some of these things that only natural products would have a problem with as opposed to or mineral based products.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASo depending on what market you're in, you need to understand what are the preconceived notions of that industry and of that individual.
Speaker AAnd it's really your responsibility on that first call to ask really good questions.
Speaker AHey, have you ever worked with this plant before?
Speaker AHave you ever worked with natural fibers before?
Speaker AWhat's for experience been, what did you do?
Speaker AWhat were the processing conditions?
Speaker AIt's not the material that's wrong, it's just the processing conditions.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ASame temperature that they're heating up the mineral based additives and you know, it might be a drop in replacement, but if you're processing it in the same processing conditions that you're using minerals or petroleum based goods at, it's not going to process the same.
Speaker ASo you need processing conditions.
Speaker AThese are all just kind of like tricks of the trade that you pick up on over the years.
Speaker AI'd say like really dial in on that first call, really get clear on the questions that you should be asking.
Speaker AAnd you want to qualify people.
Speaker AYou want to figure out on a first call if someone's not a fit to work with you.
Speaker AAnd I think there's a natural inclination in the hemp industry to just figure out we want to bring everyone in, we want to bring everyone together.
Speaker AAnd what happens when you do that without really consciously delineating if someone is a good fit for your company or not, is you end up bringing people into the fold who aren't a good fit.
Speaker BThe bad apples, so to speak.
Speaker AYou're focused on some product development initiative that's never going to materialize that distracts from your company resources.
Speaker ANow you're working on formulations and processing conditions and markets that you're never really going to tackle.
Speaker AJust because it feels good that someone's reached out to you and has some demand mechanism for your product.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BYeah, man, this has been really fun.
Speaker BI have one last question that I always like to ask that's more on the philosophical side.
Speaker BIf you are on the world stage and you can share a message with every single human being on the planet, whisper some message into their ear, what would you want them to know?
Speaker BIt could be related to hemp or anything at all.
Speaker AIt's a good question.
Speaker ATyler.
Speaker AI.
Speaker AThere's.
Speaker AThere's two statements that I've been reminding myself of over the past year.
Speaker AIt's been a pretty interesting past.
Speaker ALike 18 months for me and a lot of ups and downs.
Speaker AAnd I think like the, the, the two statements that I, that keep coming back to me are, you don't know how strong you are until you have to be.
Speaker AAnd you can't lose if you don't give up.
Speaker BBeautiful.
Speaker AAnd for many, many years, it was not easy at Heartland.
Speaker AYou know, we were building not just a new market with hemp, we were building a whole industry.
Speaker AYou know, natural fiber master batches and concentrates were not a thing.
Speaker AThey didn't exist before Heartland came along.
Speaker ASo we weren't just, you know, trying to grow the hemp industry.
Speaker AWe were trying to grow in the chemical sector, this new product category.
Speaker AAnd there's a lot of backlash.
Speaker AYou know, it took going to a lot of conferences and doing a lot of speeches and changing a lot of minds in order to get the court of public opinion to believe that this was possible.
Speaker ABut, you know, for how up and down the Heartland journey was, we survived a lot, man.
Speaker AWe were very resilient.
Speaker AWe went through a lot together as a team, and we, we went through some crazy moments that we were able to get to the other side of, and we, we didn't give up.
Speaker AAnd so in the, in the, the year plus, since I've left Heartland, I've had more of those up and down moments.
Speaker AAnd I keep reminding myself that, you know, there are some really dark days there, man.
Speaker AAnd I think, you know, on a, on a philosophical level, I, I think part of me at times I felt broken.
Speaker AYou know, I'm 34 and I hadn't hit my stride yet, and I wasn't where I wanted to be.
Speaker AAnd in these really weird, seemingly dark moments, it was that broken version of me that fixed me, that healed me, that picked me up off the ground and like, wiped the dust off my shoulders and said, hey, bud, you're gonna be okay.
Speaker AYou know, you just need a nice meal and someone to rub your head and give you a hug and tell you everything's gonna be okay and you need a good night's sleep and maybe a smoothie, like, give yourself a little treat and everything's gonna be okay, buddy.
Speaker AYou know, getting through all those moments was not only empowering, but showed me, like, not.
Speaker AI, I didn't realize how strong I was.
Speaker AAnd because I'm not giving up, I'm going to make it.
Speaker AAnd so I think in, in the hemp industry specifically, there's a lot of that energy.
Speaker ALike, you feel like you're fighting a good fight and no one's paying attention.
Speaker ATo you or no one's listening or people are just kind of shooing you off and, you know, it's, it, it feels like, you know, we're in an industry of people wearing tinfoil hats saying, one day you'll get it, one day you'll understand.
Speaker AAnd there's a silver lining of truth to that.
Speaker AAnd you also need to take that feedback loop and understand, hey, based on this feedback that I'm getting from industry, how do I need to change how I'm communicating?
Speaker AHow do I need to change the questions that I'm asking?
Speaker AHow do I need to change how I'm managing my team?
Speaker AHow do I need to change how I show up every day?
Speaker AAnd so in the early days of Heartland, I'll quickly share.
Speaker AWe had an advisor, Eric Osterman, who was really promoting me to think outside the scope of CO2, and he was, you know, at the time we were trying to scale carbon negative raw material supply chains and build this replication model where we could print these carbon negative raw material supply chains across the planet.
Speaker AAnd Eric kind of stopped and said, jess, like, you're reducing the problem down to CO2, and sustainability is much more than CO2.
Speaker AHow do you show up in your relationships?
Speaker AWhat's the food that you're eating?
Speaker AWhat is the chemistry that you're using on your body?
Speaker AHow do you think?
Speaker AHow do you lead?
Speaker AIf you're leading from a place of sustainability, you're becoming a sustainable leader.
Speaker ACO2 is just one part of it.
Speaker AAnd unfortunately, as a society, we have chosen the one pollutant that no one can agree on.
Speaker AWhen there's hundreds or thousands of pollutants that we all can't agree on.
Speaker AAnd that's a whole different topic for a different day, a different podcast, maybe.
Speaker AYeah, but, you know, unfortunately, you know, CO2 has become the devil in the room and the hemp industry has to talk about it because there's a lot of advantages, not just in the biogenic carbon, but what hemp does in the soil to using hemp fiber.
Speaker ASo we have to talk about CO2, but CO2 is just the surface level problem here, man.
Speaker AThere's, you know, extraction and pollution are creating hundreds of pollutants that are destroying our land, air, water, plants and animals.
Speaker AIf we don't solve those pollutants, you know, CO2 is not going to be relevant if there's too much arsenic in our air and water.
Speaker ASo maybe we can solve some of those pollutants that 100% of the population agrees on.
Speaker APollutant that maybe no one will ever agree on.
Speaker BWell, there you have it, hamsters.
Speaker BYou've been listening to Jesse Henry and this is your hempstrepreneurial host, Tyler Hemp.
Speaker BIt's been a pleasure my friend.
Speaker BI look forward to having you on the show again and seeing how we can empower the Hemp is here together.
Speaker BSend us your Messages support@Hempaware.com Let us know what you want to hear next.
Speaker BAnd thanks so much Jesse.
Speaker BReally appreciate having you on the show.
Speaker AThanks for having me, Tyler.