The Ty Brady Way
On this episode of The Ty Brady Way, Ty sits down with JB Glossinger, the man behind Morning Coach, one of the longest-running daily coaching podcasts on the planet. JB has published five books with Hay House, spoken to crowds of 5,000 people, beaten Oprah and Ellen in the podcast charts, and has shown up every single day for 21 years to deliver 15 minutes of coaching to help people start their mornings right. He's done over 6,000 episodes. And he started in a world where nobody even knew what a podcast was. But the origin story is what makes this one worth your time. JB grew up in Indiana with a blue-collar mom who raised him alone until he was ten, while his father, a famous pro football player, didn't pay child support. In third grade, he got held back, labeled special needs, and pulled out of class to work on his speech while the other kids stayed behind and learned. He never talked about that publicly until recently. Now it's the first word in his new book, Get It Done Now. He wanted people to know that none of what he's built came from a golden spoon or a Harvard degree. He had to find a different way. That different way started with a letter so bad that the CEO of an aerospace company called his sales manager over just to read it out loud and ask if JB had even gone to college. They hired him anyway. He spent the next decade in aerospace, moved through sales into running companies, and eventually burned out so badly working 67-hour weeks that he ended up in the emergency room. That's when he walked away and built something on his own terms. Ty and JB get into the concept of Zone Two, which JB borrowed from endurance running and applied to business and life. The idea is simple: most people are sprinting all the time, running at a four or five, burning out and crashing. The people who actually build something lasting are the ones doing the boring, consistent work every single day at a sustainable pace. JB qualified for the Boston Marathon not by training harder, but by running 40 miles a week at a controlled heart rate. He built a business not by going viral, but by showing up 6,000 times. They talk about what separates coaches who make it from the 90% who don't. JB's answer is direct: most people skip the one-on-one work and go straight to trying to build an internet business. That's backwards. You have to understand what problems people actually have before you can build anything worth selling. He also makes the case that the people who pay you the least are almost always the hardest to work with, and that having a barrier to entry isn't about being exclusive. It's about attracting people who actually value what you do. One of the most memorable parts of this conversation is JB's story about the Israeli special forces trainer he found in an old warehouse in 2005 when things weren't going well. The guy tested him with a question JB still won't repeat on air, then told him to show up at five in the morning. JB trained with him for 16 years. Three-day workouts, no sleep, no food, swimming through black water in the middle of the night. He says it changed everything about how he thinks about being pushed. The key, he says, is finding someone who will take you to the edge but won't break you. That's what a real coach does. JB's legacy has nothing to do with personal development rankings or podcast charts. He wants a statue next to St. Francis at an animal shelter. He and his wife are giving everything they can to saving animals, and that's the real reason he's still building. He's also building a place in Palomino, Colombia, in the middle of the jungle, because when it's time to go, he wants to go out having actually lived. His closing message is the simplest one: don't give up. Find one person who believes in your crazy ideas. Borrow their belief when yours runs out. And then go build something. 🔗 Connect with JB: MorningCoach.com 🎙️ Follow along: @thetybradyway with @MorningCoach As always, we'd love to hear from you! Email us at thetybradyway@gmail.com Or DM us on Instagram @thetybradyway
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