If You Only Watch One Video Today, Make It This One
Emma Grede’s Blueprint: Grit, Vision, and Relentless Execution from Zero to Billionaire
Discover the foundational mindset principles and tactical execution strategies Emma Grede used, rising from a struggling college dropout in East London to co-founding billion-dollar brands, proving that an extraordinary life starts with self-responsibility and relentless effort.
Short Summary
- Take radical responsibility for your life and intentionally manage your circulating thoughts.
- Apply intense excellence to every single task, regardless of how small or menial it seems now.
- Understand that "overnight success" is a misnomer; success is built over decades of consistent hard work.
- Use failures and disliked jobs to clearly define what you do not want, guiding your path forward.
This conversation unveils Emma Grede’s journey from poverty and academic struggle to entrepreneurial dominance in fashion and business. Readers gain insight into shifting blame into action, defining personal excellence separate from external perfectionism, and understanding the multi-decade commitment required for true industry impact.
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Top Comments (10)
I love what she said about being 42 and having her dream job for only 5 years, THAT is something that is not normalized. Thank you Emma <3
“If you have choices, you can pivot, if you don’t have choices, do what’s in front of you”. So good.
A few months ago, I used to feel so embarrassed about my body. I wasn’t even overweight, but I just didn’t feel comfortable in my own skin. No matter what I did, I wasn’t happy with myself. But then I started reading The Silent Feminine Power by Lana Cressel and instead of scrolling my fyp I watched self-love and ‘that girl’ type videos on YouTube. This book truly changed everything for me. I started working out, cut down on sugar, started drinking 3L water daily, and instead of watching useless content on YouTube, I’ve started watching videos like you make. I focused more on myself, and now my acne is gone, my body feels like a new version of me, and most importantly my mindset has changed. Even my hobbies have shifted. I started my own small business, something I never thought I’d have the confidence to do. I used to be super shy, never stood up for myself, and let people say whatever they wanted. But now I’ve learned to speak up, to defend myself, and to be proud of who I am. I’m honestly so grateful for this growth. 💖 ✨
16:25 “if you don’t know what to pursue, then you should pursue yourself”. Gems dropped 💎💎💎
"Be excellent at where your at with whatever you're doing" Emma dropping bars!
I hear too often from millionaires and people society calls ‘successful’ that success is simply about pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. While I'm happy for their success. I'm still thinking about the people in lower-income communities who wake up at 5 a.m., show up to low-paying jobs with relentless work ethic, and still hold big dreams of building something greater—yet never make it out of where they are? The narrative that struggle equals laziness is false. Many in these communities live with determination and resilience, while plenty of high-income earners carry low-vibrational mindsets and weak work ethic. That’s the conversation I want to see because it’s long overdue.
Mel, I cried when you and Emma said, “If you don’t know what your passion is, make yourself the reason… pursue yourself.” 💥 I’m 53 and only recently diagnosed with ADHD. My head has been so loud with constant “shoulds” that I’ve never truly connected with my why or passion. In that moment, it felt like you were speaking directly to me. Thank you for paving the way to finally choose me. ❤️
As someone who went to the same school as Emma I am blown away by her journey and hung onto every word. So inspiring
I’ve done it all, mostly alone. Moved thousands of miles alone, started businesses, raised kids, unschooled, and I’m putting them through college now…❤
It's sad how I'm often forced by my elders to be "friends" with some people. Every time I watch a podcast like this, I'm like THESE are the kind of friends that I want in life. Not ones who'll ridicule things like sincerity and hardwork, but rather inspire and encourage such qualities ✨
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Top Comments (10)
I love what she said about being 42 and having her dream job for only 5 years, THAT is something that is not normalized. Thank you Emma <3
“If you have choices, you can pivot, if you don’t have choices, do what’s in front of you”. So good.
A few months ago, I used to feel so embarrassed about my body. I wasn’t even overweight, but I just didn’t feel comfortable in my own skin. No matter what I did, I wasn’t happy with myself. But then I started reading The Silent Feminine Power by Lana Cressel and instead of scrolling my fyp I watched self-love and ‘that girl’ type videos on YouTube. This book truly changed everything for me. I started working out, cut down on sugar, started drinking 3L water daily, and instead of watching useless content on YouTube, I’ve started watching videos like you make. I focused more on myself, and now my acne is gone, my body feels like a new version of me, and most importantly my mindset has changed. Even my hobbies have shifted. I started my own small business, something I never thought I’d have the confidence to do. I used to be super shy, never stood up for myself, and let people say whatever they wanted. But now I’ve learned to speak up, to defend myself, and to be proud of who I am. I’m honestly so grateful for this growth. 💖 ✨
16:25 “if you don’t know what to pursue, then you should pursue yourself”. Gems dropped 💎💎💎
"Be excellent at where your at with whatever you're doing" Emma dropping bars!
I hear too often from millionaires and people society calls ‘successful’ that success is simply about pulling yourself up by your bootstraps. While I'm happy for their success. I'm still thinking about the people in lower-income communities who wake up at 5 a.m., show up to low-paying jobs with relentless work ethic, and still hold big dreams of building something greater—yet never make it out of where they are? The narrative that struggle equals laziness is false. Many in these communities live with determination and resilience, while plenty of high-income earners carry low-vibrational mindsets and weak work ethic. That’s the conversation I want to see because it’s long overdue.
Mel, I cried when you and Emma said, “If you don’t know what your passion is, make yourself the reason… pursue yourself.” 💥 I’m 53 and only recently diagnosed with ADHD. My head has been so loud with constant “shoulds” that I’ve never truly connected with my why or passion. In that moment, it felt like you were speaking directly to me. Thank you for paving the way to finally choose me. ❤️
As someone who went to the same school as Emma I am blown away by her journey and hung onto every word. So inspiring
I’ve done it all, mostly alone. Moved thousands of miles alone, started businesses, raised kids, unschooled, and I’m putting them through college now…❤
It's sad how I'm often forced by my elders to be "friends" with some people. Every time I watch a podcast like this, I'm like THESE are the kind of friends that I want in life. Not ones who'll ridicule things like sincerity and hardwork, but rather inspire and encourage such qualities ✨