YFP 336: Rx Career Forecast: Analyzing Pharmacy Job Trends w/ Alex Barker of The Happy PharmD


Alex Barker, CEO and Founder of The Happy PharmD returns to break down trends in the pharmacy job market.

Episode Summary

In this episode, we welcome back Alex Barker, PharmD, Founder and CEO of The Happy PharmD. Alex shares an update on trends in the pharmacy job market, including his outlook on the trajectory of the profession, projecting into the landscape of 2024 and beyond. He shares his thoughts on the #pharmageddon movement, with recent walkouts and efforts to unionize making headlines. He also breaks down a recent survey he posed on LinkedIn that shows the desire for more remote work opportunities and more pharmaceutical industry roles.

About Today’s Guest

Dr. Alex Barker is the CEO and Founder of The Happy Pharm D, a nationwide coaching firm guiding pharmacists to inspiring careers and more fulfilling lives. Alex is an accomplished public speaker, a published author and teacher. Since 2017, his coaching program and career development seminars have guided over 2,000 pharmacists into new jobs and roles they love. His book Indispensable: A prescription for a fulfilling pharmacy career, has motivated countless pharmacists to love pharmacy again. Alex is a husband and the proud father of two daughters. He loves drinking coffee and eating good guacamole (though not at the same time). When he isn’t working, which happens occasionally, he plays Nintendo, Dungeon & Dragons, and reads comics.

Key Points From the Episode

  • Pharmacy job market trends with Alex Barker. [0:00]
  • Pharmacist shortages and dissatisfaction. [4:32]
  • Pharmacy industry changes and the impact of walkouts. [8:49]
  • The impact of AI on the pharmacy profession. [13:20]
  • Career paths and professional identity in pharmacy. [20:01]
  • Remote work opportunities for pharmacists. [24:57]
  • Industry trends and career shifts in pharmaceuticals. [30:36]
  • Pharmacist career paths and industry perception. [35:32]
  • Pharmacy profession’s future in 10 years. [40:36]
  • Pharmacy industry trends and predictions. [46:19]
  • Pharmacy career development and job opportunities. [52:17]

Episode Highlights

But the future of pharmacy cannot be product-only related anymore. It can’t just be about medicine. Because the opportunity is just not there. So my hope is that for anyone in one of those positions, whether in hospital or in community, you’re thinking ahead and looking to the problems of the business, what they currently have. And hopefully getting super curious about how you can solve these problems.” – Alex Barker [17:11]

“I think it reflects our professional identity, we love A to Z plans, right? We want it all laid out. We want to know what is the right thing to do to be a pharmacist practicing at the height of our license. And once we have that plan, then we know that we just, we just got to stick to it. And we have been trained and programmed through our education system to I mean, just really just do that. From kindergarten to the last day of pharmacy school, we were told exactly what we needed to do. And then we get out into the real world and realize that it never operates this way.” – Alex Barker [20:38]

“And I was like, man, what, what is the message we’re sending to our pharmacists that like, you’ve got such a narrow skill, there’s nothing else that you can do with it. I mean, there’s, there’s so much – from teaching to leading to being a manager. And I mean, practically any sector, because we’re all organizationally minded. I could go on and on about the different jobs that we could do, even outside of pharmacy. But there’s so much opportunity out there. But the narrow-minded nature of looking at what you can do, I think prohibits people from seeing jobs that they could actually have a lot of fun doing.” – Alex Barker [26:07]

“But we need to influence the public much differently about who we are and what we’re capable of. Because until the public gets it, they’re not going to go along with this idea of oh, I need to schedule an appointment with a pharmacist and I need to pay a pharmacist to do something for me. When for decades, if not well over a century or two, it’s been free to talk to us. You can’t just undo that, because we now have a doctorate. It is going to take decades, if not centuries, to get people to see that we’re different.” -Alex Barker [41:06]

Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode

Episode Transcript

[INTRODUCTION]

Tim Ulbrich  00:00

Hey everybody, Tim Ulbrich here and thank you for listening to the YFP Podcast where each week we strive to inspire and encourage you on your path towards achieving financial freedom. This week I welcome back Alex Barker, the founder and CEO of the Happy PharmD to talk all things pharmacy job market, including his outlook for 2024 and beyond. We discussed Alex’s take on Pharmageddeon the recent walkouts and the efforts of pharmacists to unionize, the desire and shift that he seen for pharmacists wanting remote work, the transition that’s happening to pharmaceutical industry roles, and Alex’s vision for the profession of pharmacy 10 plus years into the future. Alright we got a good one for you this week. Let’s jump into my interview with Alex Barker, the founder and CEO of the Happy PharmD. 

[START OF EPISODE]

Tim Ulbrich  00:48

Alex, welcome back to the show.

Alex Barker  00:50

Thanks for having me, Tim. It’s a pleasure.

Tim Ulbrich  00:52

So you’ve been on several times. I suspect most of our listeners know who you are. But just in case, give us a quick background and who is Alex Barker? And what is the Happy PharmD.

Alex Barker  01:03

So I created the Happy PharmD in 2017 to help pharmacists get careers and jobs that they would actually enjoy. I was on that pursuit myself. I was a burned out pharmacist for a few years as a clinical pharmacist. Didn’t enjoy it all what I did spent five years trying to figure out that process of creating a job that I would love. And here I am doing it and now helping now over I want to say it’s like 2400 pharmacists that have gone through at least one of our programs, I’ve taken one of our classes. And we’ve learned a lot about what pharmacists want and what they don’t want. And I’m excited to share some of those insights with you today on the podcast.

Tim Ulbrich  01:47

So fun fact, Alex, I don’t know if we shared this on the podcast before but that was one of your early early clients. 

Alex Barker  01:53

You were!

Tim Ulbrich  01:54

This would have been way, way back when in 2016? 2017? At the time, Tim Church and I were writing the book Seven Figure Pharmacist. 

Alex Barker  02:03

Yep.

Tim Ulbrich  02:03

We were just launching the brand, the community trying to figure out what was the next step of kind of moving that from a hobby to a side hustle to a business. And that was fun, and you provided tremendous value to me, and to hear that you’ve helped over 2000 people, your team has helped over 2000 people, and many more to come. That’s legacy stuff. That’s pretty cool. So congrats to you and the team at the Happy PharmD. That’s really awesome.

Alex Barker  02:28

Thanks. Yeah, it feels good. At first, it was just about helping people and it became more about families and changing the profession. And to me, that’s what’s exciting. You know, a lot of the pharmacists that come to us are from hospital and community typically, that’s where the majority of the jobs are. And that’s where a lot of people are burned out or tired or just have low, you know, job satisfaction. And getting them into stuff that they actually enjoy frees them up, they get to be present with their families more, they get to go to the soccer game, they get to pick them up from school. I mean, you’re doing that now, right in your business, you know that there’s, there’s nothing better than enjoying your work and living the life that you want to live. So it’s a privilege that I get to do it.

Tim Ulbrich  03:20

I love I always share people’s are thinking about starting business or business ideas when you can find that intersection between a business that is solving a problem that people are willing to pay for. And it aligns with something that you’re passionate about. And it’s adding value and is adding transformation. That’s a really sweet spot said it doesn’t mean it’s gonna be easy, but it’s a sweet spot to sit in. So I’m excited. I really wanted to talk about career trends in our profession, maybe for obvious reasons. There’s a lot going on out there. And we’re gonna dabble in several different topics. But this is a topic I’ve been interested in throughout my career. I’ve done career development in previous roles, but you are the expert, your team are the experts when it comes to career development, career transitions, career trends that are happening inside of a profession. And so I wanted to pick your brain on what the heck is going on right now. What’s your take on? You know, some of the hot topics in our profession? Where do you see things going? Not only in 2024, but I’m also gonna ask you to project out a little bit further than that. And you know, where do we see things going with a lot of the disruption and the change that we have come in, but it’s I graduated 2008 And that wasn’t that long ago, but a lot has changed in a very short period of time. 

Alex Barker  03:52

Yeah, back then. It was six figures in a car. Right? That was the thing. It was just about ending around 2008.

Tim Ulbrich  04:39

Uh, it was still there. I mean, there were there was six figures and a car I would say for a couple years. Probably getting towards the end of that I remember the the line that kept going around our class. There were rumors of a million dollar contract out in Alaska for three years with one of the chains. I don’t know if that was true or not. But that was kind of there right. That was a day and age that we were in. And, and that was a day and age when it was a, Hey, don’t worry about your student loan debt, like it’ll just take care of itself. So thankfully, we’ve made some dents in that. But I want to talk about first, you know, the Pharmageddon that has been coined recently, the recent walkouts that I think everyone is realized not only internally through people that have been cheering, but that’s made national news outlets, CNN, NPR, NBC, and so forth, and some recent efforts and announcements around unionizing, which isn’t a new effort, per se, but it’s a rejuvenated one. And from the individual that does this work in and out who follows these trends, who runs your own data and looks at the workforce, what do you make of this? Is it? Is it a new era that we’re heading into? Is it a reaction to something that’s brewing for a long time? And are we actually going to see change that comes out of this? Or is it going to be more of the status quo going forward?

Alex Barker  06:03

All great questions. And I’m, I’m so glad that I get to be recorded, so I can be on the record, because then I can six months from now, I’m gonna I can look back and say where what I was wrong about. So I think you and I know that a lot of these complaints be that were sourced from the walkout. I mean, we’ve known about them for years. Every pharmacist kind of knows that a lot of the sources of a lot of our problems, where they exist, where they are, we don’t need to go into them. But they exist. And I think this was a kind of like a reaction of the straw that broke the camel’s back. Right, we just got through the pandemic. And arguably, the stress then was potentially maybe higher than it is right now. I think we’re seeing a gestalt, which is one of my favorite German words, of a problem that is so complex, and it involves multiple things. The one of the factors that I think is newer is the this new generation of pharmacists. This new generation of pharmacists is different than everyone before it, because they are actively refusing to take the majority of jobs that are being offered right now. And from big business perspectives, that’s they say that there’s a shortage of pharmacists right now. And they they attribute that to the response of like, okay, well, we’re just not able to find pharmacists to fill, like basic positions that we’ve had open for years. But the truth is, is that there are more pharmacists than what the market needs right now, just from looking at labor supply and economics. But they’re not willing to take these jobs that are out there. And we’re also seeing, and I think you’ve heard this rumor as well, that more and more pharmacy residents are just straight up quitting their residency programs. I just spoke to one last week, who just had a gut feeling this wasn’t for her, this isn’t what she wanted. And while I don’t know if ASHP is reporting that data or are talking about the residency, quit rate, everyone is acknowledging that like this is getting higher and higher.

Tim Ulbrich  08:32

So which, which in our day and age, Alex, and we’re dating ourselves a little bit, like that was a hard, you do not do that ever, or, you know, professional consequences. And so that’s an interesting, I don’t know that the data and I don’t know how that is or is not reported. But that doesn’t surprise me. 

Alex Barker  08:52

No. 

Tim Ulbrich  08:52

And it’ll be interesting to watch that trend if it continues.

Alex Barker  08:57

What I’m looking at I know that I’m heavily biased towards like generation and thinking about the next workforce that is coming in. There’s obviously a lot of work environment issues, there’s a lot of reasons why the walkouts have been influenced by the decisions that a lot of these I mean, let’s be honest, it’s it’s just the retail chains that this is being the focus of, you know, the big ones. But generationally, this new generation that’s coming into the workforce is poised to change things. Not to deviate too much on a topic that isn’t related at all to pharmacy. But anthropology has documented research to show that generations follow a pattern. And this new generation that is coming up in into entering into the workforce is the one to change things. We are going through a period of change that is similar to the time period of the Great Depression and World War Two. The greatest generation is what they were called. And they lived in a world of turmoil, of uncertainty, and things that I hope that we’re not going to repeat in today’s age. But that generation is the same generation that’s coming into the workforce. So my one of my predictions is that the health care system is not sustainable. It will change. It has to change. But how it’s going to is, I mean, totally up for debate. But the system has a lot of cracks. And I think the walkouts is just one of those symptoms, right? It’s poised for change and reform. Now, it’s going to be up to whether or not the powers that be listen, to make those changes happen.

Tim Ulbrich  11:05

I think a couple of the trends that I’m watching, and again, just the day and age that we live in, I’ve been in some meetings recently, where there’s been individuals at a fairly high level, at a chain level talking about the you know, the response to this, and what’s involved in this. And one of the “aha” is I had through those conversations is that, you know, if you think about the groups that are walking out, and who are, you know, able to have some of these momentum around the Pharmageddeon, they can mobilize quickly, or they can mobilize quickly in the messaging, they can mobilize quickly and getting the word out there. And for anyone who’s been in a management leadership role, you know, that you can’t necessarily mobilize quickly when it comes to getting press releases out, getting information out in a way that, you know, perhaps reaches people where you want it to reach and is set in a way that you want to be said without a lot of the guardrails around it. And that’s an interesting dynamic to watch right now of like, who’s really controlling the communication streams? And I think that’s gonna be an interesting one to follow. Because, you, Alex, you had a post, you had a poll on LinkedIn recently, where you asked people about the impact of the walkout, you had over 600 votes. 45% responded, that they didn’t think the walkouts were going to have any change on the industry. 40% responded, they thought eventually would change the industry. So depending on if you’re half glass full or not person, you can look at that one way or the other. But my question is, like, Where? Where does this go? Right? Because when you think about the book that always comes to mind is former presidential candidate Andrew Yang wrote a book called The War on Normal People, several years ago, and he talked about the impact or potential impact of autonomous driving on truck drivers. And I remember hearing it at the time and thinking, Wow, what a good example, and this was, you know, five, six years ago, I think I read that what a good example, for us to be thinking about pharmacy. And the picture he paints is, you know, a cohort, a workforce, largely middle aged men. For the most part, some of them may have previous degrees or training, many do not 1520 years into the career. And let’s imagine a scenario where all of a sudden, well, those jobs are replaced by technology. Now, there’s been a lot of developments since then autonomous driving, and you know, what’s, what’s the trajectory? How fast is that going to go? But it’s a really good exercise for us to think about as well in pharmacy. If we think about community retail chain pharmacy, if we fast forward 10, 15, 20 years, the pathway of automation and technology is there. Now, we may not like it or want to hear that outcome. We have state boards of pharmacies and regulatory bodies that I think are potentially going to slow that disruption. But it feels like it’s a matter of it’s going to happen. It’s just a matter of when is it 10 years, eight years, seven years, six years, three years. And so when we’re talking about 50% of the workforce, you know, the work you do and coaching people through career transitions, we potentially have a huge chunk of the workforce that we need to be thinking about redeployment into other fields. And does that come quick? Or is that more of a slow off ramp? Or am I being dramatic?

Alex Barker  14:16

What comes to mind is the entire horse industry, like in 1914, which I think is like the year before the Henry Ford model came out. And then in a matter of two years, an entire industry fell apart. There wasn’t a need for blacksmiths. There weren’t any for stables. There weren’t a need for breeders, as many veterinarians. I mean, tons of people’s lives were impacted in a matter of just a couple of years. Because we innovated on technology and we created something more consumer. Beneficial, right? The car. When I think about technology, innovating. I look back to that 1999 congressional statement talking about the shortage of pharmacists that was going to happen, which never happened. There was never a shortage of pharmacists. And there was no real indication. According to actually one book that analyzed this prediction, there was really no significant signs that indicated that that was ever going to happen. And also, they didn’t equate for the changes in technology that was going to happen in the early, you know, 20s, or 2000s. So, when I think about what’s going to happen, AI, in the huge boom that we’re going through right now, I think it’s really similar to like the dot com boom and bust that happened in the early 2000s. When I think about the core aspects of pharmacy, it’s the human element that has always been present. And for the things that are more mundane, that can be handled technology by technology, I think those will be replaced. How do we redeploy those people? I think it involves learning new skills and building new models. You know, you and I talked a little bit before this that like, what does the future look like in pharmacy, and what do I hope for. My hope is, is that we figure out who we are. My hope is, is that the associations band together instead of vie separately, and really try to create a unified, professional identity about who we are, and what we do, and elevate and showcase those pharmacists that are doing those practices and leading the way forward. Because the dispensing model is done, it’s been done for a while. And there’s really not a lot of innovation happening there. There are some really cool players in the independent space that are doing innovative things with moreso services, clinical services. But the future of pharmacy cannot be product only related anymore. It can’t just be about medicine. Because the opportunity in the states is just not there. So my hope is is that for anyone in one of those positions, whether is hospital or in community, you’re thinking ahead and looking to the problems of the business, what they currently have. And hopefully getting super curious about how you can solve these problems. You don’t have to start a business. You know, Tim and I are just entrepreneur fanatics. We love talking about it. But you can figure out problems in your current organization. And that’s really how to create an indispensable career. It’s just focus on those problems, get super curious about them, try to fix them. And that’s how, that’s how job opportunities happen. Because I mean, just one thing about AI, you know, that created a brand new industry out of thin air. Chat GPT revolutionized everyone’s access to AI, and created so many jobs. And I don’t see a whole lot of people in pharmacy going down that route. It is totally doable. It’s totally possible. In fact, that pharmacist I mentioned earlier, who quit her residency is doing just that she is now going into the AI and startup route and utilizing her pharmacy knowledge. So it’s not impossible, it can create new jobs, but it’s going to eliminate ones that the market really no longer values. 

Tim Ulbrich  18:51

Yeah, and this, you know, what you’re sharing is obviously so deeply connected to the work that we do at YFP, because for someone to have the capacity to go explore other opportunities, even if that’s on the back of them staying with their current employer. Let’s say we know the train, we know where the train’s going. But I’m gonna ride that train and kind of buy myself some time to be curious and go explore these other things. Having the financial plan and the foundation in place to allow yourself to be curious. Right, I often will say is if someone doesn’t have their financial house in order, you will suffocate curiosity. And it doesn’t have to be to your point. It doesn’t have to be a business. And actually, in the vast majority of the cases, if we’re talking about the numbers we’re talking about, we have over 330,000 pharmacists, in our profession, half of them work in the space that is tied in some way to a product, if we’re talking about any percentage of that being redeployed, it’s not going to be a big dent, that’s going to be entrepreneurship. It’s going to be what you’re talking about. It’s going to be people that are identifying opportunities, you know, within organizations that maybe are in the Department of Pharmacy, maybe they’re not and this is like any other profession any their career direct trajectory. For the most part, obviously, there’s some examples where it’s a very linear path. But for many of us that graduated, you know, I graduated at 24 with a 06 doctorate program, I was put on a one way linear path. And we get stuck thinking on that pathway. And when you talk with people that, you know, maybe they graduated with an undergraduate psychology degree or a business degree, and then they took one job, and then it took another job and another job and they skill stack over time. Right. But you can’t say draw a clean line of experiences, like we want to envision in pharmacy. And I think that’s a, that’s a scary thing to think about.

Alex Barker  20:38

I think it reflects our professional identity, we love A to Z plans, right? We want it all laid out. We want to know what is the right thing to do to be a pharmacist practicing at the height of our license. And once we have that plan, then we know that we just, we just got to stick to it. And we have been trained and programmed through our education system to I mean, just really just do that. From kindergarten to last day of pharmacy school, we were told exactly what we need to do. And then we get out into the real world and realize that it never operates this way. Maybe Only in rare circumstances or going into a major corporation, do you see the ladder before you. But in pharmacy, the ladder is really short. Most people do not go up the corporate ladder, save maybe in pharma. But it’s all just about well, get your degree, pass your boards. Go get a job. Yeah. And then that’s it. Yeah. And I think you the other aspect, you know, something you mentioned is getting into that track. I think about it’s who you’re surrounding yourself with.

Tim Ulbrich  21:52

I was just thinking the same thing. 

Alex Barker  21:54

Yeah. I was gonna ask you, you know, once you entered into the workforce, did you kind of feel like you, you came out of school, maybe like really excited, right, I finally have a job, I’m gonna get paid to do this thing. And, like, there’s excitement to both learn and practice. And then you look at everyone around you, and no one else feels that way. Everyone else is like, it’s Monday, you know? What you do this weekend? Like, there’s just no passion there. At least that was my experience. And I think if that’s who you surround yourself with, that’s who you end up becoming? Yeah.

Tim Ulbrich  22:38

And to that point it, it can become an echo chamber, you know, you talked about the short ladder, like, you know, this is true in any any part of life, we’re talking professional here, you know, this is true in your financial life and in business and your pursuit of physical wellness, and in your marriage, anything like, you know, are we being stretched and challenged? And are we being curious, right to your point, I love that word, curiosity. And if, if we’re in an echo chamber of, you know, our department, where everyone’s thinking and looking at the same short ladder, well that’s the only ladder we know? And you start to put yourself in situations where you realize, wow, like, she did something really cool. And I’m thinking about your community, Alex, and the Happy PharmD like, so and so you know, had this opportunity. And then they went here, and they did this and this and they realize it’s about the skill stack. And and I always love to give the example of my brother, because he’s such a great example of this, where you’ve got to get yourself out of the mindset of your degree, and the only thing you can do and really focus on your skills and what you can bring. He was an industrial engineer by training, he went on the fast track to investment banking, with one of the large firms, you know, was grinding that out for several years to the to the point where you know, his bonus was bigger than the salary, one of those gigs, doing huge international banking kind of got to this point of like, I see what I see. And I don’t want this to be the path that I’m on for the next, you know, 20 plus years as I raised my family walked away with no plan, moved from London to Buffalo, where we grew up, took nine months to explore, like, what were the things that he liked, didn’t like, what was he interested in? Not what was his degree or where he worked, but what could he bring to an organization? How can he tell that story? And he ended up taking a job as a president of an advanced manufacturing firm. Right? And then he eventually left that and he’s since bought a business and doing something that’s completely different. It’s about the mindset and the skills. And I suspect that a lot of the work that you do with your clients is kind of breaking out some of the shell and the habits that we form.

Alex Barker  24:43

Yeah, in fact, we we have a survey that we’ve been developing and working on, where we assess where pharmacists find the most fulfillment and what careers match that kind of fulfillment. And overwhelmingly, every pharmacist has a very high rating for anything relating to soft skills. So very few people care so much about like the actual hard skills of pharmacy. Right. So whether it’s dealing with software, programming, yeah. Providing patient assessments, like anything that you’ve learned technically probably from from school, consider it a hard skill. But where pharmacists don’t really utilize, I think, very well for career development is just all the soft skills that they build in any job that they’ve ever had. Those skills can follow you to wherever you go. I just did a, I just did a Class CE, this morning about impostor syndrome. And there was a few people on there that were saying, like I was, I was working a pharmacy job, and I quit, I had had enough. And I don’t think my skills lend themselves very well to any other kind of job. And I was like, man, what, what is the message we’re sending to our pharmacists that like, you’ve got such a narrow skill, there’s nothing else that you can do with it. I mean, there’s, there’s so much – from teaching to leading to being a manager. And I mean, practically any sector, because we’re all organizational minded. I could go on and on about the different jobs that we could do, even outside of pharmacy. But there’s so much opportunity out there. But the narrow minded nature of looking at what you can do, I think prohibits people from seeing jobs that they could actually have a lot of fun doing.

Tim Ulbrich  26:47

So as typically goes when you and I get on a conversation, I think I had 10 or 12 questions prepped. And I’m on question two, so. But I want to ask you about a trend that I’ve been following from afar, but I know you’ve been looking at closer. I saw you post on LinkedIn several times, which is a trend and a shift around remote work. He had a post recently on LinkedIn that said, you have been inspired by countless success stories of pharmacists who’ve embraced remote roles, reclaiming precious moments with family and friends exploring the world being present for all the important things in life. The perks of remote work are limitless, but it often comes at the cost of a potential pay cut. So what are you seeing in terms of both the interests, you know, what’s driving that interest around, remote work, and then the opportunities that are available in that space?

Alex Barker  27:35

So let’s start with the opportunities. Practically almost any job can be remote for pharmacists. Now, I say that with some caveats. The most common jobs right now are community and hospital. Most people have heard of remote fill pharmacists for hospitals. But what about in the community setting? Well, like it or not, there are policies being put forth in multiple state legislatures that are allowing pharmacists to remotely manage pharmacies in communities where there’s not a lot of access to pharmacies. I am not a fan of that kind of legislation. But I just pointed out as to say, bills are being passed right now to make pharmacists more available to patients via remote access. But where a lot of people are focusing their remote kind of work is in pharma. Those typically don’t rely on people coming into a physical building. So a lot of pharmacists right now are really interested in that sector. But there’s plenty of remote jobs available for just any. I mean, right? I get alerts for our clients. And I just saw a job come in for ambulatory care pharmacist remote fill. And I was like, oh, no, I’m not remote fill, but just remote job. And I was like, Yep, it’s possible care. Yeah. As far as what I’m seeing, I was actually shocked by that poll. Because, I mean, I didn’t I didn’t look at it this morning. Because I mean, it’s hot off the press. It’s still being filled out now. But I think it was like 88% of people said that they would be willing to take a pay cut to get a remote job. And I was honestly surprised by this response. But when I think about it, when I think about who pharmacists are, I mean, we’re typically remote driven people, technically. We are people that want to be present with our families. We normally have families, or they wanting to start one. This newer generation in particular, is really fascinated by location independence. They’re fans of technology, so they’re willing to adopt it in their lives. They don’t necessarily want to be in a location where there’s other people all the time. There’s definitely hinder. And there’s reasons not to pursue remote work, especially for any relationally minded people that thrive being around other people. But yeah, right now, it’s it’s kind of overwhelming. I made that post and I got a lot of messages to respond to from people saying, Okay, you talked about it, where are they? I’ve been looking for a job. And I want to I want to get one. So it’s, it’s been interesting to see, but I suppose I shouldn’t really be surprised by it.

Tim Ulbrich  30:36

Yeah, I’m glad you brought up industry, because that’s a trend that I’ve been watching as well, that makes sense that connection to remote work. I actually talked with a industry fellow recently, who is thinking about geo hacking, to, you know, technically, like there’s not supposed to work remote, but they only have to come in the office about four times a year. And usually it’s 24 hours notice, she says, like, well, for four flights a year, and I can, you know, have a Boston salary without living in Boston, right. But this is a trend I’ve been watching, you know, the data from the workforce still still shows us as a fairly small percentage of the workforce. But it feels like the dialogue around it is a lot bigger. I’ve talked for several pharmacists in the last year, you know, people that have gone from PGY1, one PGY2 to critical care, hemonk specialty roles, sometimes it was from the pandemic that burned them out, you know, others are just looking for other opportunities. And there’s a shift that’s happening to industry. 

Alex Barker  31:32

Yes.

Tim Ulbrich  31:33

 And I’m curious to hear what are you seeing the same and then to what’s driving that? Is it burnout? Is it you know, typically, industry roles come with higher compensation packages, perhaps more volatility, something we’re probably not talking enough about? But what are you seeing as some of the drivers of this shift? And is that a shift you’re seeing? 

Alex Barker  31:52

Oh, yeah, totally. Pharma is the new sexy career to pursue. I just spoke with a professor. I won’t say which school, but I spoke with them about what are students saying they want for preceptors that was like what, what kind of rotations. And she said, it’s always Pharma. That’s what they want. They don’t want clinical anymore. They don’t want community, they get disappointed when they get in a hospital. They want to see pharma jobs. And I think the truth of the matter is, is that the pharma market isn’t ready for this. There isn’t a demand there. There’s a demand on the pharmacists side, there’s a demand from our profession to get more involved, which I think hasn’t been present for the majority of our profession, when I graduated, and I think you can attest to this. We’re getting old Tim, it just hit me. When I graduated pharmacy school, the the the dogma of the time was that you were a bad guy if you went to pharma. You’re just in it for the money, you’re working for the bad guys. You need to be a pharmacist, you need to be a clinician, because then you’re you’re doing what’s right for the patient. Not what’s right for the company. Well, that is almost completely gone. I haven’t heard that from a student once or anything like it, everyone wants to get into it because of the potential for remote work, the potential for work life balance, the potential to just get away from the public. This is a newer one, that at first, I was a little bit surprised by, but for those that are burned out, it makes a lot of sense. You’re not having to deal with angry customers all the time coming at you with any sort of array of problems or anger issues that you cannot predict. It’s tiring to work with the public. And so they see the potential to work in pharma as a way of escaping I think a lot of those things. But it’s not all, you know, sunshine and rainbows in pharma. You know, there’s less job security that’s there, you’re more likely to be let go due to industry changes, market changes. You are more likely to be there, well, I shouldn’t say that with certainty. But there there’s just as many toxic work environments in pharma. There is more job satisfaction by comparison. If you just look for one for one, like job satisfaction rates between pharma and just typical pharmacy, but burnout is still present. So while I know that the opportunity is there, and frankly, like it’s so easy, from my perspective to just get started in doing side gigs in pharma that you can make some extra cash doing those things. But it’s a whole other thing to transition into the field with a job and expect remote, expect a nine to five, Monday through Friday. There are other pressures there for sure. So you have to be careful about who you I mean, what companies you want to get into. The trends are there. I don’t see it going away anytime soon. 

Tim Ulbrich  35:31

Yeah, yeah. And I’ve come to appreciate, you know, this better than I oxys you guys work in this more, but I’ve got a longitudinal appy student right now on an entrepreneurship rotation with us that’s looking at biopharmaceutical industry fellowship programs, and just hearing about all the different spaces within the pharmaceutical industry, I think, you know, in my mind, not speaking for others, tend to paint this broad brush of, you know, industry just like we do and chain and hospital and ambulatory care and academia. But really, there’s layers and details and segments, and yes, you know, MSL roles versus other, you know, regulatory roles. And so, so much to learn about, you know, it’s probably not just fit with pharma, but what is the fit with the specific areas of interest. And from a career placement standpoint, I would think that’s a really important piece to understand to then determine your path for networking and an opportunity.

Alex Barker  36:24

Right, a lot of people think Pharma is just one path. But we’ve identified I think, like eight different sectors. And within each sector, there’s like, eight to 15 different kinds of jobs that pharmacists can do. Some more popular than others. Obviously, clinical medical affairs is way more popular than things like R&D and biotech. But it’s still possible one of our coaches, went from retail chain manager to getting into biotech and helping out with operations. So like, it’s there’s endless possibilities. But it’s a totally different market. It’s not patient care, which is, like, love it or hate it, it’s our bread and butter as a profession. So it does take a leap to get into it. 

Tim Ulbrich  37:14

Yeah, and I think another side conversation that we can have, and save for another day is, you know, so much of the opportunity for our profession does stem whether we like it or not from the public and other’s perception of who we are and what we do. Yeah. And, you know, I don’t think a pub the, the lay public would necessary associate a pharmacist role with being in the industry. So that this goes back and interesting discussion, we think about, like redeployment of our workforce. You know, there’s some sub discussions in there that are really interesting to me of, well, how does that impact the public’s perception of who we are and other healthcare professionals perception of who we are, because right now, we may or may not necessarily like what the perception is, but people largely associate a pharmacist with doing one or two types of things. And we’re now starting to splice that pie chart a little bit further, which is interesting. I think it’s exciting, but also presents maybe some challenges around communicating who we are and what we do. And then how do we educate this pathway that could go in 30 different directions right now we educated to go really in one or two directions. For the most part.

Alex Barker  38:20

You know, I hear a lot of talks about this kind of thing, like within associations, mainly. Maybe a little bit in academia. But I think we have a, we don’t really understand how the market is influencing us. I think the the people in charge of pharmacy, I think for a time they thought, you know, if we just increase our level of education, people will respect us. But hindsight is 2020. And I think it revealed that the market didn’t care. The job market didn’t care. The public didn’t care about this demand. They weren’t telling the powers or regulation, or government bodies, pharmacists need more education. They need to get doctorates in order to do what they can do. And we’re still recoiling from that decision to increase our education, but the job market and the jobs available, don’t demand that higher level of education. So when I think about how we influence the public, I think we put a lot of heavy burdens on ourselves as a profession to try to maintain across the line when we aren’t even looking at the low hanging fruit. So I’ve I’ve publicly said this in a few different places. And there isn’t a whole lot of movement yet because I don’t have the time, but If I was to predict, if everything goes right Tim, and I am able to do this, I would want to create media that positively influences what pharmacists do can do. And I don’t mean cheesy patient stories or pharmacist stories about how they can save person’s life, you know, those are good. They’re good. But like, we need a Hallmark movie about a pharmacist falling in love. We need…

Tim Ulbrich  40:36

Is there a producer of Hallmark that’s listening to the show? We’ll found out.

Alex Barker  40:39

Like maybe, I hope! we need a Breaking Bad story about a pharmacist who, who has a tragic backstory to him and he goes into the pharmacy, does what he can for the community, At night, he’s like a vigilante busting of drug rings. We need video games that showcase what we can do. I don’t know what it is exactly. But we need to influence the public much differently about who we are and what we’re capable of. Because until the public gets it, they’re not going to go along with this idea of oh, I need to schedule an appointment with a pharmacist and I need to pay a pharmacist to do something for me. When for decades, if not well over a century or two, it’s been free to talk to us. You can’t just undo that, because we now have a doctorate. It is going to take decades, if not centuries, to get people to see that we’re different. We can do things we can we can change people’s lives, we can save people’s lives with what we do. But we’re not going to just make it happen if we just make the service. So that’s my Hallmark movie pitch.

Tim Ulbrich  42:09

I love it. Well, speaking of Hallmark movie pitches, maybe we’ll have it in time for the timeframe of my next question, which is 10 years from now. So your vision of our profession in 2033. And let me give you some background statistics that kind of frame where we’ve been starting in 2013 to 2023. And then I’ll ask where you think we may be in 2033. So 2013, we had a little over 60,000  – 62,000 that were enrolled in a PharmD program. The median debt load of a pharmacy graduate was $130,000. And median salary was around $116,000. In 2023, fast forward 10 years actually, some of this is 2022 data, we’re down from 62 to about 47,000 enrolled in a PharmD program. And we know that’s still going down further. Median debt load is $158,000, up from 130. And then finally, we’re seeing the average farmer salary is up from about $116k to $129k. And we know there’s some limitations with with BLS data, but we’ll use that for the sake of the conversation. And then if we draw the pie chart right now, using the workforce survey data we have from 2022. If you combine those that are working in independent pharmacy, mass merchandiser chain, etc, it’s about 50% of our profession, about a quarter, 24%,  or an inpatient/hospital/health system practice. And then the remaining 25% is a spattering of all different types, you know, managed care, fusion, academia, ambulatory care, etc. So when you think about income, when you think about enrollment, when you think about jobs, when you think about types of jobs, like where are we in 10 years? Because I think one of the questions that I think a lot about is where would things be moving with or without the guardrails of the State Boards of Pharmacy? Right, but I think you use this situation we’re in right now that led to a lot of the walkouts and things. The State Board of Pharmacy response has been largely speaking very pro pharmacist. Yeah, obviously, technology, automation for profit companies, all that, perhaps would be moving much faster if it weren’t for that. So I’m just curious where in 10 years, do you see us going as a profession?

Alex Barker  44:34

I can’t wait for 10 years when I listen to this and I go, Oh, Alex. Oh, Alex, if you only knew. So I’ll lay out my biases. I try to be more optimistic than pessimistic. I believe innovation is a great thing. But it’s not without its casualties. Um, and I have a lot of half baked theories. So a lot some of this is going to come across as like, Where’s that coming from? I think in 10 years time, it’s 2023, almost 2020, or I’m sorry, 2020 or 2034? Yeah, I think what will happen, is PBMs are going to get a lot more pressure put on them from lawmakers and the public. I don’t know if they’ll still exist by then. We are the only nation in the world, I believe that uses this model. And it’s a broken, unsustainable model. It’s already starting to get some pressure put on it from a few different places. But these organizations have a lot of money. So they’re not going to go down without kicking and screaming. It’s going to be a fight. And I think there’s going to be some major legislation and court cases to be had over the next couple of years. I think that innovation will continue to drive service delivery within the pharmacy sector. So I think that this is going to drive market demand. I speculate that there will be a new role invented by 10 years from now. I don’t think it will be a pharmacist focus role. I think it will be like a pharmacy advanced technician. I’ve already seen some, like courses and certifications and things in place for that. But I think that the tech check tech programs have been validated enough, both through I mean, we all heard about that Walgreens technician who faked being a pharmacist for 10 years. Right? Do you remember that a few years back, like 2018-2019. That was the biggest tech check tech program ever, with 10s of 1000s of prescriptions that were apparently safely approved by a technician, not a pharmacist. So I believe that there’s going to be almost like a new profession of an advanced pharmacy technician, or call it a downgraded pharmacist. Maybe a pharmacist who only needs- only needs- a bachelor’s. And because that’s what is needed in hospitals and community pharmacy. You do not need a doctorate to practice pharmacy and those settings under current market conditions, current market conditions

Tim Ulbrich  47:47

In a distribution role. 

Alex Barker  47:49

Exactly. So I think Ohio is a great example of this. I think more and more clinical services will be passed through laws and legislation that will create new jobs. However, my fear is that it’s going to be the same story as MTM. I think that we’re based on the things that I’ve read, I don’t know how confident I feel that we are negotiating for all of our worth. And we’re gonna get another bad deal like MTM. So I think that more consultancies, more service oriented pharmacy solutions will be created over the next 10 years that’ll create really interesting and doctorate level positions, to be sure. But you know, everyone, I wasn’t there when MTM was created. But I remember and I’ve read the articles that people thought this is the wave. This is what we can do. And it’s been over 25 years, I think since its implementation. 

Tim Ulbrich  48:56

2006 was the implementation.

Alex Barker  48:59

Oh, was it? Okay, yeah. 

Tim Ulbrich  49:03

I think it was implemented with Medicare. My I’m sure Rob somebody correct me. I think it was Medicare Part D in 2006. 

Alex Barker  49:09

Yeah, I got into college 2006. So I definitely wasn’t paying attention. So it’s been like 20, almost 20 years. And it’s very rare to see a business successfully implementing it. It’s viewed more as a distraction now and so my my wonder is how well are we going to be able to negotiate that into actual payment for services. And I think that innovation will continue in technology and that will replace a lot of what is happening. I optimistically, am hoping for pharmacies to be more like clinics, almost as in a like, a step down from urgent care. But like this is the first place you go to with a problem or a question. And there could be some sort of billing process that could be developed through there. And really how these things can be profitable as both through services, but then also all of the front end stuff, all of stuff that actually makes pharmacies money today, which is not prescriptions. That’s the loss leader and has been now for well over a decade. I think that’s only going to continue unless PBMs power is somehow supplanted. But for what stands in its place, you’re talking, oh, my gosh, think about the amount of time and reform is going to be in place for something like that. In to the final point, which was about students, I really don’t think that pharmacy is going to bounce back in the next five to 10 years in terms of interest. Unless something significant happens from some sort of marketing perspective. Because right now, everyone in forums and online spaces, making it really clear that the money, the salary, the six figure job, which is like the new sexy thing, I don’t know, if you pay attention to that at all, but like, you know, there’s this whole trend right now of people saying like, Oh, they don’t even want to date someone unless they make six figures. Yeah, I’m so glad I’m not dating. But people are making it really clear, like, hey, the salary is great, but it’s not worth it. The debt, the workload, the stress. And this new generation, like we talked about earlier, is just not willing to take that they’re not willing to risk it to get the money, but potentially, like hate their jobs and their lives. So I think interest is going to decrease, which in turn, of course, means increases the salary for us, increases the demand for us from companies. But with innovation, technology, I don’t know how it’s all going to balance out. Those are some of my predictions, some hopeful, some not so hopeful.

Tim Ulbrich  52:17

It’s interesting. I think there’s, as I’ve expressed you before, like, we need more of a space to have these types of conversations and bring in other types of opinions and stakeholders, you know, without, without, you know, feeling like we have to walk on eggshells, you know, and to have those conversations and, you know, you do have to make some assumptions, right. And there’s gonna be some optimistic things, and some that aren’t as optimistic. But one of the things that I’ve always thought is interesting that you alluded to in your comments there is we have a physical footprint that is very unique all across the country. Now misaligned with a business model that is sustainable, and and one that people want to be working in, right, that’s the challenge that we’re in. But we have an interesting physical footprint that was developed. And we’ve run into challenges. You know, I think the maybe the vision 5-10 years ago was a really, pharmacists can fill a gap in the need for primary care of a shortage of which that shortage is getting greater and greater, as less and less physicians want to go into primary care, and they want to go into more specialties. Unfortunately, you know that I don’t really want to say that ship has sailed, but it’s pretty darn close when you look at what PAs and NPs have done in the inroads they’ve made. But we have this physical footprint, which is a very interesting thing to be thinking about. And is it in competition with is a different than primary, you know, what are the different ways we could be thinking about this, but I do think there’s some interesting opportunities here that need a lot more thought and discussion, and you bring up several of those right there. So that’s good stuff. As people are listening, if they’re thinking about making a career transition, maybe it’s a hey, I’m ready right now maybe it’s, this is something I want to be thinking about over the for, you know, future that’s coming up. Where’s the best place, Alex, that they can go to follow you, follow your work and get plugged into the resources that you have available?

Alex Barker  54:11

I think the biggest question people have is, What can I do? Will the next place be any better than what I currently have? Yeah. Are there other career paths for me? And those are all great questions that you don’t have to figure out by yourself. I spent five years trying to figure that out. When when Tim hired me as a coach, that that was a point in my life where I still wasn’t even really solidified in, hey, do I want to go into academia? Or do I want to create a business? And that takes a lot of time and effort on your part. One of the things that can really benefit you is talking to someone who is an expert on career development, and getting a perspective that is outside of you, with someone who knows and understands pharmacy. What I would encourage you to do is to go to our website, thehappypharmd.com, I’m sure we’ll have a link in the show notes, and talk with one of our career advisors. We have two of them on staff with us, Eric and Samar. And they’ve talked with literally hundreds and hundreds of pharmacists. And really, the first step that a lot of people take is like looking at, what can I do, and deciding on a path that makes the most sense for you, and then creating the strategy to transition, and not wasting a whole lot of time doing things like applying to countless jobs, that you may or may not even like, wasting time, not having productive conversations with people. But instead, I would encourage you, talk with us, have a conversation, it’s free to do so just like talking with a pharmacist. It’s free to hang out with us. And in that, you’ll get a little bit of a clearer vision of what you can do, and some next action steps to take. And if you do want to work with a coach, we can talk to you about what that is like, what it’s like working with a coach, and how right now what we do with our clients is we work with them until they get a job. So I’m really excited about the future of pharmacy because we’re helping people get all sorts of cool and awesome jobs, like just last week, talked to someone getting an MSL role. So it’s happening, there are opportunities out there. But I think there’s a smart way of going about it. One that is faster, takes a little bit less effort on your part. That’s with us.

Tim Ulbrich  56:41

Well, great, we will link to that in the show notes happy thehappypharmd.com. I’ll also link to Alex’s LinkedIn profile. If you’re not already following him on LinkedIn, I would highly encourage it. I enjoy the insights you share on the career market that we have going on, I really look at you as an expert in the space. So I’m sure we’ll have you on once if not twice in 2024. But for now, appreciate the recap, you’ve given us where we’re at and potentially where we’re heading. So thanks so much for coming on the show.

Alex Barker  57:08

Thanks for having me, Tim.

[DISCLAIMER]

Tim Ulbrich  57:12

As we conclude this week’s podcast and important reminder that the content on this show is provided to you for informational purposes only and is not intended to provide and should not be relied on for investment or any other advice. information in the podcast and corresponding materials should not be construed as a solicitation or offer to buy or sell any investment or related financial products. We urge listeners to consult with a financial advisor with respect to any investment. Furthermore, the information contained in our archived newsletters, blog posts and podcasts is not updated and may not be accurate at the time you listen to it on the podcast. Opinions and analyses expressed herein are solely those of Your Financial Pharmacist unless otherwise noted, and constitute judgments as of the dates published. Such information may contain forward looking statements which are not intended to be guarantees of future events. Actual results could differ materially from those anticipated in the forward looking statements. For more information, please visit yourfinancialpharmacist.com/disclaimer. Thank you again for your support of the Your Financial Pharmacist Podcast. Have a great rest of your week.

[END]

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YFP Bonus Episode: How A Couple Left Their Careers to Travel the World


 

YFP Bonus Episode: How A Couple Left Their Careers to Travel the World

On this Bonus Episode of the Your Financial Pharmacist Podcast, Tim Ulbrich, founder of Your Financial Pharmacist, interviews Matt and Nikki Javit from Passport Joy about their journey of walking away from their successful careers to travel the world full-time. Matt and Nikki talk about what inspired their journey, how they are managing to do this financially and travel tips and hacks they have learned along the way.

Summary of Episode

Matt and Nikki knew that they wanted to travel full-time before retirement and had been dreaming about the day they could do so. They took several exotic international trips together through Matt’s career as a technology services sales professional and met so many others traveling the world. This inspiration eventually sparked Matt to purchase a one-way ticket to Santiago, Chile turning their dreams into a reality.

Prior to their departure 18 months ago, Nikki worked as a clinical pharmacist for a number of years. She realized that she was solely identifying herself by her pharmacy career and came to the understanding that there was more to life than her job. Although she invested hundreds of thousands of dollars into her pharmacy career, she knows she will be able to step back into it if and when she feels ready. She hasn’t stopped reading and learning even though she isn’t practicing. Matt also left behind a successful sales career and is confident of an easy transition when he’s ready to return to the workforce.

Matt and Nikki worked diligently to pay off their student loan debt, as well as other debt they had accumulated, and saved so they could travel without thinking about any financial burdens. They travel with a set budget which allows them to explore places all around the world while connecting with different cultures, volunteering their time and, of course, making forever memories.

About Today’s Guests

Matt and Nikki Javit are currently traveling the world full-time with just a single backpack each after leaving the US in February 2017. They have been to places like Machu Picchu, the Galapagos Islands, and The Taj Mahal and amazing cities like Hong Kong, Venice, and Cape Town. During their travels, they find creative ways to keep down their costs, get involved in the communities, and network with locals while having a great time.

Before they left to travel full-time, they loved their careers in Indianapolis Indiana where Nikki was a clinical pharmacist and Matt was a Technology Services Sales Professional. They enjoyed hanging out with friends, spending quality time with family, and volunteering in the community but they loved to travel. So after dreaming about it for a while, they decided to take the leap of faith. They document all of their adventures and share travel tips to save time & money on their podcast and blog at PassportJoy.com.

Mentioned on the Show

Episode Transcript

Tim Ulbrich: Matt and Nikki, welcome to the Your Financial Pharmacist podcast, excited to have you and thank you for joining me while you’re in and traveling in Osaka, Japan. So thanks for coming on.

Nikki Javit: Thanks for having us.

Matt Javit: Thanks so much.

Tim Ulbrich: Well, I am so excited. And as I shared with you all before we jumped on the call today, I am inspired by your journey, following your podcast and your blog. And when I heard a little about your journey, what you’re doing, and I found out Nikki is a pharmacist, I said, ‘We have got to have them on the show to learn a little bit more about their journey.’ And also, shoutout to Tony Guerra who interviewed you recently who brought your journey to my attention. So as we get started here, I’m going to read a brief bio of who you are, your journey and what you’ve been doing. And then I’m going to have you introduce yourselves, and we’ll kick off the conversation from there. So Matt and Nikki Javit had stress-free lives in Indianapolis. They love hanging out with their friends, spending quality time with their family and making new connections in their vast network. They were both considered very successful in their careers, and they loved their bosses and coworkers. But the desire to travel full-time was already on their mind, and they knew the window would be soon closing to turn a dream into reality. So on February 21, 2017, with a single backpack each, they flew to Santiago, Chile with a one-way ticket that would start their journey around the world, checking off the bucket list locations like Machu Picchu and the Galapagos Islands, the Sistine Chapel and the Taj Majal, creating new and exciting lists every week on where they want to explore next. So again, thanks for joining. And Nikki, I just have to know — as I listened to your first episode and I heard you launch that background to tell the story, coming downstairs and you found out Matt had booked that one-way ticket, which became the fulfillment of a dream you had been talking about for a long period of time. What were your thoughts and your emotions when that day happened?

Nikki Javit: Well, the first time he came down, I thought to myself, we can reverse this situation. We had talked about this, and it was — I mean, it’s always been a dream of ours. We probably, prior to him purchasing that one-way ticket, had talked about it for at least 3-5 years. But it was always just a dream. It was something that was like, we would meet someone on vacation or meet someone well younger than us, and they were doing something like that, traveling the world, they’d left everything behind. And you know, for me, it was, wow, that would be so fun and amazing to be able to do something like that. And so Matt and I, while we were out amongst each other over dinner or at home in the privacy of our home, we had these conversations and say, ‘Oh my gosh, how cool would that be to travel around the world?’ Like get our affairs in order, figure out what we need to figure out at home, and then go travel for an extended period of time. And then when he told me that he purchased that one-way ticket, I kind of — it all just became like a reality for me, but I still in the back of my mind was like, holy crap. I’m working, we haven’t really laid out any solid plans for this. We’ve just been talking about it for so long. And not that I didn’t think he was serious, but I was just like, wow, now is the time. So yeah, it was kind of scary.

Tim Ulbrich: So Matt, I have to give you credit. That’s a bold husband move. I mean, I feel like in my household, I probably would get kicked out the door if I did that. So props to you. Obviously, you guys had been talking about, and we’ll get to that a little later. What I want to start with is for the audience and our community here, a little bit more about your background. Because I think for both of you, your background is very interesting in terms of your careers and the success that you had and obviously leaning to the decision to pick up and travel for several years. So Matt, share a little bit about your background, you know, I heard on the podcast, growing up in a military family and then some of the positions you’ve had since then. Share with our audience a little bit more about you.

Matt Javit: Yeah, thank you. So at a high level, moved around a bunch as a kid, went to three high schools. But I played basketball throughout that, so it was great and easy to get friends and meet new people. And it was a lot of fun. Played Division I basketball, so I had a Division I basketball scholarship out of high school but then ended up bouncing around, just because of playing time and situational stuff. Ended up going to four different undergrad colleges and finished at University of North Carolina Greensboro where I’m proud to say that I did graduate on time, though, and went to a fifth university to get my MBA and coached junior college basketball for two years. And then from there, started a clothing line, moved from Texas back to Indianapolis to do that with my brother. And at that time, I bartended at night and hustled during the day. And towards the end of that bartending, kind of running that bar for three years, met Nikki, and that changed the course of my life, obviously. Decided to get what was deemed a ‘real job’ in the mortgage industry and then did that for three years when I got a promotion to go out to Las Vegas to run an office for about a year of that while Nikki was finishing up her doctorate degree at Butler. And then I ended up coming back home because that’s when the recession hit. Came back home to Las Vegas after we’d lived apart for about a year. And was very fortunate and blessed to get hired by a technology company, a technology services, international technology services company, to do sales in that field, which was all brand new for me. I didn’t know anything about technology, but I did know how to sell at some level and then just cut my teeth, grinded really hard for two years, put in a ton of time and effort, and then finally hit my stride probably two and a half years in, and turned that into a wonderful run of nine years at that company, ending in five straight international sales achievement awards, which also fueled our love for travel because at the time, that took us to different parts of the world because those incentive trips were in exotic places like Chiang Mai, Thailand; Goa, India; Cape Town, South Africa; and Istanbul, Turkey.

Tim Ulbrich: Yeah, I love that part of your story and the success you had at work and incentive trips that helped fuel your passion for travel. These weren’t Disney World trips, right? These were obviously seeing different parts of the world, which helped fuel that passion, which is cool. And Nikki, your background as a pharmacist and, you know, doing undergrad and then making that decision to go into pharmacy school — lay that background for us because I think that’s going to be important for our listeners to hear as we talk a little bit more about your decision to pick up and leave the profession of pharmacy. So how did you get into pharmacy? And then tell us a little bit about the work you did after graduating from Butler.

Nikki Javit: Yeah, so I grew up in Chicago. And then I went to undergraduate school at Indiana University Bloomington. And I studied biology. And I wasn’t sure if I was going to go to medical school or not, so I kind of just took a limbo year, so to speak, off. And in that limbo year, after I had graduated from undergrad, I moved from Bloomington to Indianapolis with a girlfriend I had lived with in school. And she was going to nursing school at IPUI, and I had to get a job to pay the bills. So I applied at a pharmacy, and I started working at a long-term care pharmacy with my biology degree, and I helped manage a long-term care pharmacy. And I knew at the time that I wasn’t done with school, and I had met a really wonderful mentor who I still talk to to this day, who was the pharmacist in charge of that long-term care pharmacy. And he really had great conversations with my about just my career path and what I wanted to do. He noticed that I really took an interest in my current situation, and he was the one that suggested to me that I apply to pharmacy school. I honestly had never even thought about it before. And my biggest concern was is that I had moved from Chicago to Bloomington then to Indianapolis, and I was like, I really don’t want to move to Lafayette and not know anyone. And he was like, why don’t you just apply to Butler? So I didn’t know that Butler had a pharmacy school, so I applied to Butler Pharmacy School, and I was accepted in as a transfer student. So that’s where, essentially, my journey began as a pharmacy student. During school, I worked, I got a job. I switched from the long-term care pharmacy and a lot of my friends that I met at Butler were working in retail pharmacy settings, and I just felt like I could learn a lot more that way. And so I got an intern job at CVS. So I interned throughout pharmacy school at CVS and then upon graduating Butler, I was a staff pharmacist for about a year and then transitioned into a pharmacy manager role for about two years before moving onto a hospital pharmacy position. I was just a little burnt out, I had a couple things happen to me during my time at my retail pharmacy, and I just felt that it was time for me to move on. So I started working at Indiana University, and I started at just basically a staff pharmacist, verifying orders, etc. And their program there is awesome and unique in the fact that it’s a teaching university. And they pair you up with clinical pharmacists and you can specialize in basically a patient population that you like. So they have ICU, they have organ transplant and then they’re associated with the Simon Cancer Center. And I really liked working with oncology patients, so I worked with oncology patients for two years solely. And then I was presented with an opportunity where IU Health was opening up a startup company. And they were having a brand-new specialty pharmacy. And I was asked if I would want to try to apply for the position because there was several other people that were interested in it. And so I interviewed for that, and I got that role. And I helped manage these specialty pharmacy and oncology patients, MS patients, and CF patients and a couple other subsets of patients, but essentially, prior to me living on this journey, my last role as a pharmacist was in an outpatient setting as a specialty pharmacist.

Tim Ulbrich: Got it. So you’ve got a successful career, you’ve got your doctorate degree, you’ve worked in community practice, you’ve worked in obviously you mentioned the long-term care connection initially, you end up in the specialty world. So I think the one thing our listeners are going to want to know that I want to know was you spend all this time, money, invest in the doctorate degree — and we’ll obviously talk a little bit more about your journey of traveling and what you’re doing now — but tell us about that decision, when you made that decision that I’m willing to pick up and leave this career, how hard was that decision? And what fears were you facing, if any, when you made that decision?

Nikki Javit: The decision, for me, was actually a very difficult one. I think it was more difficult for me than it was for Matt. I think I defined myself by my profession, and you know, for awhile, I think that I let that get the best of me. I remember having conversations with Matt and saying, you know, ‘I really do want to travel. I want to go around the world, and I know that now is the time. But I just fear if I walk away from my profession right now after everything that I’ve worked so hard, this is the ideal position that I want to be in, you know, that it’s just not a good thing.’ And you know, the conversations between Matt and I were, well, what makes you happy? It’s just like, does your job make you happy? Well yeah, it makes me happy. But what would make me happier would be is to travel the world with someone who also wants to travel the world with me. And the more I thought about it was is that no matter how long I step away from my profession, I’m always going to have my degree. Like no one can take that away from me. No one can take away from me that I went to school, that I have my doctorate in pharmacy. And yeah, there’s going to be people that are going to say, ‘You haven’t practiced pharmacy for x amount of years.’ But I still think that they can’t take away the fact that I’ve had, you know, 10 years of experience prior to that or I still do continuing education. And it’s not like I’m done reading. It’s not that the knowledge just goes away. And of course when I go back, I’ll be rusty if I choose to go back to that profession, but I think what happened was that I just let my career solely define who I was as a person when I don’t think that’s necessarily a healthy thing to do. There’s so much more to life than just what you do for a job. And once I got to that point and I was OK with that and letting go of that and realizing I can always come back, and I can always be a pharmacist or do something in healthcare, then I was OK with leaving.

Tim Ulbrich: That’s great, and that was part of what inspired me as I was listening and following your journey is seeing you be able to make that decision and obviously not that you don’t value what you’ve done education-wise because obviously, you do, but what I heard through the podcast is that your desire to enter pharmacy was a passion out of helping people. And as I was listening to the journey and what you’ve done, you’re finding a way to fill that bucket of helping people as you’re on this journey of traveling the world, right?

Nikki Javit: Exactly.

Tim Ulbrich: So Matt, talk me through — one thing that stuck out to me on the first episode of the Passport Joy podcast, which I’d highly recommend our audience and listeners check out, you talked about a trip to Cape Town where you met a couple from the Netherlands that were engaged in some long-term travel and that that interaction and that conversation had a profound impact on both of you in terms of the impact that it had on the journey that you’re taking today. So tell us a little bit more about that story and impact that it had for you and Nikki in deciding to take this journey of traveling the world for several years.

Matt Javit: Yeah, so we were in Cape Town, South Africa for one of the incentive trips, my final incentive trip. This would have been March of 2016. And there was a couple there — so essentially, there’s about 15 different executives, about 30 different sales professionals from around the world go to these incentive trips with our spouses. And part of that time is you get a great chance to interact with the people. And one of the couples there were from the Netherlands, and he was actually 30-31 years old. And we ended up hooking up one night and just having conversations over drinks, and they were telling us an amazing story of how they had traveled from — they actually did it a different way. They got a Land Cruiser, put a bed in the back, and drove from the Netherlands to I believe it was South Korea and then shipped the truck from South Korea to Vancouver, Canada and drove down to Patagonia, Chile. And over three or four hours listening to this guy tell the story and all the amazing tales along the way of these two years of traveling, it was just, it was so inspiring and it just moved me in a certain way. And prior to this, Nikki and I, we actually had written down goals of traveling the world. I’m a big goal-setter, I believe if you write things down, they become real and they can become achievable. So we had actually written down the goal of traveling the world probably for the last, I don’t know, 3.5-4 years as a far-reaching, in-the-future goal. But we were — at that point, we were getting closer and closer of financially being able to achieve it. So we come back from just having those drinks that night with that couple, and we got back to that room, and it was just one of those situations where we just looked at each other like, what else, what other signs do we need that this is possible and this is something that we should do? And then I took that and on the flight home, we probably had another week in Cape Town, and we enjoyed our time. And the flights home were always the hardest for me. Every time that we’d fly home from a week or two-week vacation that we were taking, or during these incentive trips from exotic places where the flights are anywhere from 8-12 hours long, that’s when I’m always grabbing the back of the seat where they have the map of all the locations around the world, and I’m just looking at that thing, thinking, OK, where are we going next? And this trip was just different. I just, I was just so moved by what I had heard, and I’m looking at that map, and I’m just saying like, let’s do this. Let’s see if we can pull this thing off. And like Nikki said, within six or eight weeks, that’s when I came down and told her I had booked that first trip because in my mind and looking at all our financial stuff, that we could do it. If we had a lot of things line up over the next 10 months, we could pull it off and feel confident when we left that we could do the journey right. So it was amazing, it felt really good that we could pull it off. And that was — I have since had a chance to circle back with him and tell him that he was the motivation of it. And it’s really cool to know that it was that one deciding thing that put us over the edge.

Tim Ulbrich: That’s awesome. And let’s go there and talk about your financial house and how getting that in order prior to your departure — you mentioned having a runway of time when you were making that decision before you actually left, and I think it’s important because I know as I was listening to your journey, in my mind, questions were swirling about student loans and just practically saving up for the move and how you’re making it work month-to-month and what about retirement and all the questions that I think sometimes are the barriers that can get in the way to us taking bold moves. So let’s talk through some of those, and let’s first talk about student loans. So Nikki, I heard you got through undergrad debt-free, but obviously I’m assuming a PharmD brought some student loans into the equation, so talk us through for both of you where student loans played a role and how you were able to manage those and get those to a point where you felt comfortable that they weren’t going to impede your ability to take this journey that you wanted to take.

Matt Javit: Yeah, so — I’m sorry, Tim, I’ll jump in on this — but it was a situation where it was an early — so where we got engaged, Nikki started school, and within our first year, she was in school, of marriage. And she had done four years in front of that.

Nikki Javit: Five.

Matt Javit: Five years in front of that. And I tell you what, man. It was one of those things where the financial loan system in America is just flawed. It’s so flawed.

Tim Ulbrich: Yes.

Matt Javit: We would just look at these bills coming in, and this was a time where I had gone from making money and then the recession hit, housing crisis is what it is, so I wasn’t making any money. Then I started a new field where I was making severely underpaid. And Nikki was doing her part-time gig, she was amazing in that where she was going to school full-time and working 30 hours a week, which was unbelievable. So we really struggled for probably 2.5 years. We really haven’t talked about that at all to anybody. But it was a very difficult time for us. We stayed extremely minimal, we had a condo that we continue to live in for 15 years now. And at the time, we were paying her father rent on the condo. And we lived extremely, an extremely minimal lifestyle. So much that Nikki drove the same Toyota Corolla for 10 years. I drove a Ford Escape for at least 9 or 10 years.

Nikki Javit: At least 9, yeah.

Matt Javit: And I was in this new profession, and the student loans kept growing and growing and growing. And those things are unbelievable because the interest is what kills you.

Tim Ulbrich: Yes.

Matt Javit: And what was (inaudible) was because I come from a financial background, I understand all this stuff, and I could break it all down, so I would work with Sallie Mae, and I would say, split all these loans up. I want them itemized, I want them split up, and I want to know where I should attack. And when you do that and you see that some of the loans are like 14% and 12%, it’s just unbelievable. So for any of your listeners, when it comes to financial freedom, that is — and I know you guys have spoken about this on your podcast — that’s the main thing is you’ve got to itemize those things. I’m not sure if they do it that way today, but you’ve got to understand where your biggest pains are coming from. And so that’s what we did. So we itemized those things. And I’m talking to an audience that understands all this. We walked out of that with I think it was $289,000.

Nikki Javit: Yeah, so I think it was $287,000 was the total. But we started paying back on my loans about two years into —

Matt Javit: We were doing the bare minimum.

Nikki Javit: The minimum, the bare minimum, just to make a dent.

Matt Javit: Yeah, because we got all of our other stuff out of the way as far as — like I said, the car payments were gone, we were living minimal. Like I said, we did travel much early in that phase. We were doing mostly like U.S.-based vacation trips until I hit my stride in my job. And then —

Nikki Javit: But we don’t, we never lived on credit cards. And I think that’s really important. Like if we went on a vacation, we had that money, and we paid that vacation off then, at the time that we did it. So if we were going to go to let’s say — I’m just going to pick a random place — San Diego, California, for a week, we would go to San Diego, and if it cost us $5,000 to take that, that $5,000 was already saved up. So we never, we never purchased things on credit cards ever. And if we did, we paid that off at the end of the month. And it was just to get travel points, it wasn’t because we needed to use credit cards, it was strictly just to get travel points. So when he says we lived minimal, it was really, we were only paying our bills. I was working to pay bills, and him the same way.

Matt Javit: Yeah, so we went through this cycle where, like I said, I was with that job for nine years. The first two years was extremely difficult, but everything began to line up for us because I hit my stride so I started making money. And my job, in full transparency, was a base commission and bonus. So I’m very much in the sales world where there’s not a ceiling when you’re doing technology service sales, so I could make nice pay. And then Nikki got a chance, she hit the workforce full-time, so then she was making great money at CVS. And then we just went about it, and we attacked it. And like I said, the breaking down, the itemizing of the loans, I think that because we did that the way we did, we could get rid of those the fastest way we could because if we kept them clumped up, those things are going to stick around forever. So we would just break these all down, and we would just attack them. When we paid off a loan, we would celebrate together. And it would be a big thing because I think at one point, there was maybe 14 different —

Nikki Javit: I had 14 different loans.

Matt Javit: 14 loans, so we would pay off the high one, and then we would celebrate, and we would just zone in on that next loan and we’d just keep going, keep going, keep going. And finally, we got them paid off, and then we could start working on our other things to help us get financially free. And then at that point obviously, Nikki was deeper in her career, I was in a situation where I was deep with my clients and making great money doing what I was doing. And it continued to just, we continued to accelerate and set bigger goals and work on skills. I’m real big on you build skills for yourself and not for your job. Just continue to get better as a human, whether it’s personally, spiritually or for whatever profession you’re focused on. So that’s how we spent a lot of time doing that stuff. And we just continued to grow and get better, and the compensation followed.

Tim Ulbrich: I don’t know if either of you have read “The Compound Effect” by Darren Hardy, but what you were just saying, Matt and Nikki there, you know, your discipline but your cumulative hard effort and work and goal-setting and, you know, even the steps of itemizing loans. You know, I hate to throw Sallie Mae under the bus, but I’m going to since they inflicted a lot of pain on my life is that they, you know — I think that business, obviously there’s that effect where when everything is in one lump thing, and you can’t necessarily see all the details, it’s hard to get the motivation behind having a plan to take care of them. When you itemize them and you see how that interest is accruing, you see the different interest rates, like you all did, you then start to say, ‘OK, let’s put a plan together to pay off this $287,000 of debt. Let’s pay off one of these, let’s celebrate. Let’s pay off another, let’s celebrate it. And let’s keep moving on.’ And I think that, to me, is the essence of “The Compound Effect,” that it’s easy to look at a number like $287,000 and say, forget about it. It’s so big, I can’t even do anything about it. Whereas what I heard you did and your journey is say, let’s break this down. Let’s work together, let’s celebrate. And let’s get after this. And obviously, be appreciative of the income that you have and the ability to do that along the way. And so the question I have to ask here is that if you would have had that debt hanging around, if you would have not been able to live a minimalist lifestyle, if you would have chosen to buy a half a million dollar home, if you would have taken a different route, how would that have impacted your decision in terms of making this bold move to go on this journey to travel the world?

Matt Javit: It would have delayed it. We would have never left if we wouldn’t have gotten in a situation. Because the reality is is I was probably ready almost a year before.

Nikki Javit: Yeah.

Matt Javit: But Nikki wanted a number. She wanted a certain number that we had to have in our assets and our savings in order for us to go. Nikki’s a lot more conservative than I am. Because I’m in a mindset where I worked for — when I did the mortgages, I had zero-based payment. I was 100% commission. I’ve lived in a world where there’s nothing guaranteed. And so I’m comfortable with that. I’m comfortable with that mindset of, hey, if we don’t have any money in the bank, I’m alright with that. We can figure this thing out. Where she’s a lot more conservative and she gets really nervous about money and things like that. So we have a lot of these conversations, and we just got to a point where I got her to commit to a number, and I showed her how we could get to that number and put it all on paper so she could understand it, so she could be comfortable with us leaving. And then that’s when we made the decision. Without that, there was no way. We would have never left with loans and debt hanging over our head because it wouldn’t have been enjoyable. It would just be a different situation. So for me, I’m 42 now. And for us, I felt like it was my window was closing on the opportunity, but I still think we had room. If it would have took two or three more years to make it happen, we still would have been OK because this is definitely a dream and a goal of ours. We would have made it happen, but luckily we made it happen at the time where we’re enjoying it now, and I can get back into the workforce when I’m 44, 45. And I think that I’ll still have that value when I reenter out of the market for three years or so.

Tim Ulbrich: So month-to-month for you guys — I think you’re 18 months into this journey, correct?

Matt Javit: Yes.

Tim Ulbrich: OK. So month-to-month, what is your strategy for month-to-month, just making it, covering your expenses? Obviously, you’re living a minimalist lifestyle. I’m sure it sounds like you’ve got some good budgeting behaviors and practices, but are you finding, you know, work? I heard you reference workaways on the podcast. Are you purely living off savings? Are you getting creative with how you’re funding things? What does that look like month-to-month in terms of paying the expenses as you’re on the road?

Matt Javit: So yeah, we’re absolutely budgeting month-to-month. We’ve done a lot of creative things from Workaway that you described — that’s essentially volunteering our services to places — Workaway’s a website that has hosted certain places that you can stay at by volunteering your services, and they’ll give you a free place to stay and sometimes food as well. We’ve done house-sits with a website called Trusted Housesitters where we watched two cats in Zurich, Switzerland. They gave us, the owners of the home gave us a free place to stay. It ended up being a gorgeous house for three weeks while we just watched their cats.

Tim Ulbrich: That’s awesome.

Matt Javit: We’ve done extremely cheap Airbnb’s, hostels.

Nikki Javit: We have a budget when it comes to the places that we stay. And we know what we should be spending per month. And then when we search for Airbnb, we typically only stay in an Airbnb. In Asia, you can find budget hotels and not have to stay in a hostel. But we know what our budget is for an Airbnb, so we don’t really want to spend more than $50 a night. So when we scroll on the Airbnb website, we just look for places like that. And it’s funny because you can actually, when you’re in Asia, like if you go to Vietnam or Indonesia or, you know, other places in southeast Asia, there’s places that are $10 a night, and they’re absolutely amazing, like gorgeous, places that you wouldn’t even think would be that nice. But they are that price point, so we’ve saved by going to even just different areas of the world, by traveling —

Matt Javit: I mean, we were Paracas, Peru. We stayed there near the coastal place. But we stayed in a campsite. It was like a little cabin for like $12 a night. And we did that consciously, knowing that we’ve got to save money, we’ve got to — there’s going to be peaks and valleys. We knew Europe would be really expensive. So that was the whole mindset is, OK, some months we’re going to spend more, other months we’re not. And then be as smart as we can with the flights because those can really hit into the budget. And then dips and valleys when we’re thinking about going out certain nights. Like we’re in Japan, we’ve been eating at 7-11. You’d be surprised how amazing 7-11 is in Japan. It’s so good.

Nikki Javit: Yeah, that sounds absolutely disgusting.

Matt Javit: LIke nobody would think 7-11, but the good thing is I’ve watched enough foodie shows that they talk about the 7-11 all the time in Japan, that coming here, we were very open-minded. And now that we’re here, we’re like, OK, I get it now. It’s the whole culture, it’s amazing.

Nikki Javit: They make fresh sushi and fresh fruit salads and stuff. They have edamame in 7-11’s. It’s not like a 7-11.

Tim Ulbrich: Is it the same brand we know, 7-11? Or is it a different company?

Matt Javit: It’s the same brand, but I think it’s treated a little bit differently here. It is amazing. So doing things like that when we know that Japan is really expensive. But there’s things you have to cut back on in order for us not to crush our budget. But at the same time, getting a chance to get involved with the culture and see things, experience it, experience the realness of it and have a great time. And that’s the thing is when you do some of these alternative housing situations like a shared space on Airbnb, like where the host is there, and you’re just basically living in one of their rooms, but that also gives you the chance to talk to somebody, understand their culture a little bit better, see how they’re going about their day. And you come away with a different experience than staying in a hotel. And that’s what we set out to do. We didn’t want to travel for two years and just say, yeah, we went to hotels around the world, and it was great, we saw these sights and we saw the Taj Mahal. We wanted to come back changed, in a way. Like we loved who we were in our life in America, but it’s like, it’s an opportunity to put a chapter in our life that maybe changes the next chapter. And that’s what we were hoping to get out of it by all these different experiences and different cultures and get to know people and how they interact on the subway and just all the different things. I mean, I went to a baseball game this weekend in Osaka, and my mind was blown. I mean, I grew up an athlete, and just being around those people at a baseball game is — it just changed how I looked at their culture. So yeah, that’s our hope and that’s when it comes to budget, all of that plays together because it’s hard to month-by-month because now we just set out our plans for the next three months. So we had to book stuff in advance, we had to book a ton of little flights. And so it’s going to hit our budget in September, but then hopefully October and November are easier on the budget if that makes sense.

Tim Ulbrich: Right. Absolutely. So you’re 18 months into this journey, and as I was following along on the podcast, it seems like you’ve seen some of the most beautiful and incredible places in the world. So I want to know from both of you, what’s been your favorite stop so far, I guess if you had to choose one?

Nikki Javit: It’s so hard. So many people ask me this question, and I hate like just saying one. But my go-to is San Pedro de Atacama in Chile. So it’s in the middle of the dryest desert of the world, the Atacama Desert. And it’s like no other place I’ve ever been. The landscape changes just from a couple miles away. You can see geysers that are shooting out steam from the earth, you can see mountains and snow-capped volcanoes, there’s hot springs that you can swim in. I mean, it’s just neverending. There’s red rocks and lagoons and all types of things. It’s like an outdoor — like if you’re an outdoor person, and you just love nature in general, it is paradise. There’s salt flats that you can walk on that look like you’re walking on clear glass. It’s just, it’s phenomenal. They have some of the best stargazing — it’s actually the best stargazing in the entire world. And we were just able to do so many different things in four days. Like we were hiking, we were swimming in hot springs, we were climbing up mountains, we were spelunking in caves. I guess it was the first time I’d ever been to a place like that. I’ve been to California before and Colorado where you see the mountains, and you’re like, OK, I can go on a hike. But you can’t go on a hike and then take a half an hour car ride away and go swim in a hot spring and then drive an hour away from that and then go climb in some caves and walk on salt flats. So for me, it was just like mind-blowing. I just had never seen anything like it before.

Tim Ulbrich: What about for you, Matt?

Matt Javit: For me, it’s tough. So man, I loved Lisbon, Portugal. It might just be because of the people there and the time — we’ve gone now twice in the middle of June, and I just loved Lisbon. But India is just — India is just a different place on this planet. And it’s just, it’s so raw. And 1.3, 1.4 billion, it’s crazy, it’s chaotic, it’s definitely third-world in parts. But the love and just the kindness of the people and how amazing they are. It’s just like nothing else on the planet. And I’m just so intrigued by how people act and how they interact and how they view us and their thoughts and just the chances you get to really look at a part of the world that is so different. So that probably stands out the most to me is when it comes to travel and getting into a different culture, India really, it hits me because I had a lot of fun there. Vietnam is also one of those things that we talk about all the time that we just love. And we’re excited to get a chance to go back there. We’ve got some friends that are going to visit us there. So that’s, Vietnam is an absolute highlight. But it’s hard. Tim, it’s such a hard question because everything is just, has its own uniqueness. Now we’re in Japan. And oh my God, this is amazing. It is just so amazing. And we’ve got four more weeks here, and I could just see it turning into a place that we love. The language barrier is massive, but I think that with some studying or whatnot, you could figure out the phrases to get through the daily life. But yeah, it’s a hard question. But those are probably my highlights.

Tim Ulbrich: So I just have to know, you know, how is being together, traveling the world, sharing this journey — No. 1, do you guys ever get sick of each other and No. 2, how has this strengthened your marriage? Because obviously, I’m assuming it has, being on this journey together.

Nikki Javit: Yeah, so in the beginning, I think it was difficult for us just to figure out like a flow to our day because, you know, prior to us leaving, I had worked my job, I was gone during the day. And Matt was similar, I mean, he had a different schedule. He’d work during the day, and at night, sometimes he’d have to take out clients or he had conference calls. And we pretty much lived separate lives during the week. And on the weekends was our together time, time that we would spend to hang out and do whatever. And you know, I guess our extracurricular time was spent with me, if I wasn’t doing something with Matt, you know, hanging out doing girl stuff with my girlfriends or, you know, working out at my gym that we had at our home or just doing things that I guess kept me busy. And then now, all of a sudden you are with this person 24/7 365, and you’re in tight quarters in an unfamiliar space. And you heavily rely on each other because, you know, it’s like, I don’t know anyone here. So it’s not like I could call up a friend and be like, OK, I’m going to go hang out with this person tonight and go to dinner. But at the same time, you don’t always want to make your significant other think that, well, I need to hang out with you 24/7. So I don’t know. At first, it was hard. And we did, we fought — I mean, full disclosure, we would get in just like tiffs over dumb things. But I think it really stemmed from being frustrated I think from having to be in a tiny, tiny space. And by no means do we live in some huge mansion back at home, but at least we had separate quarters that we could go to. Like I could retreat to the living room and go watch Netflix. And Matt could go to his office and do his own thing. But now, it’s like sometimes, we are legit in something that just one room, and then there’s the bathroom. And so where do you go? So we found ways to, you know, kind of zen out, even if we have to be in the same room. So I’ll throw some headphones in, and I’ll listen to music or I’ll read a book. And even if I’m sitting in a different corner of a room and he’s still there, I’ll try just to get in my own little world. And sometimes I’ll go out and walk around and go for a walk or just go to the grocery store or just have that be my alone time. And then other times, you know, Matt, he’s real big on going on hikes by himself. And he likes to find a gym membership wherever we go or some sort of park where he can work out and do — he does this thing called Foundation training for his back, and so he’ll go and do that just to have some sort of alone time because I don’t really think that it’s healthy to be with someone 24/7, so that has definitely helped us. And I think it’s gotten a lot, it’s just gotten a lot better.

Matt Javit: Yeah, no, it is. It’s a long time, and most people don’t, most married couples — so we’re 13 years married now — don’t get to do what we’re doing until a later stage in life.

Tim Ulbrich: Right.

Matt Javit: And so then they don’t spend that much time together until they’re in their 60s or 70s. But so we’re definitely doing something that’s not, it’s pretty unique in the fact that we’re around each other 24/7. And I would be, Tim, back in my former life in Indianapolis, I would probably be considered a guy’s guy. So I had a lot of my buddies that I would hang around with, I’m a big sports nut, I like drinking bourbons with my buddies and just talking about stuff. But I definitely miss that. But I still text my buddies, call them, and I get a chance to interact with them. It’s not always easy, but it’s been amazing. To be able to see the world with somebody that I love and to be able to share those moments together and knowing that we’re going to be able to reflect on this at some point and understand how lucky and fortunate we are to be able to live this life, that all the positives outweigh any negatives. Yeah, it’s been a blast.

Tim Ulbrich: So what does the future hold? I mean, what’s the plan? You probably hate this question, maybe, but what’s the plan for, you know, I heard kind of a multi-year travel plan, you’re 18 months in, so I interpreted that to mean there’s a desired end date where you may come back stateside, reenter the workforce, you both alluded to that. But is there a chance that may not happen? Or have you kind of set a definitive end date? What’s the game plan going forward?

Matt Javit: As of now, May 2020 is the end date on paper as far as budget goes. What that means is we’re still working through some things. We both have some creative things we’re working on. We’re doing the podcast, we’re doing the blog site. If any of those outlets can turn into revenue streams, could that make the journey longer? Not sure. Are there things that could take us off the road personally? Probably, but we don’t like to think about those things.

Nikki Javit: Yeah.

Matt Javit: Because they’d be extremely negative. But so as of now, yeah, we’re 18 months in, we’re going to come back to the United States in May of 2019 and spend the summer visiting with friends and family and get a chance to explore the U.S. a little bit like we’ve been doing on the road and get a chance to hang out with different people in the States and accelerate some important milestones in some of our family’s lives and stuff like that. And then the hope is to go back out in September of 2019, see more of the world, explore some places that we thought we’d get a chance to see on our first trip out, but we didn’t. And then come back in May of 2020. And at that point, obviously we’re not going to get back to the States and decide what we’re going to do. We’ll understand. A lot of this will happen organically over the next 12 months or so that we’ll know that, OK, we’re going to reenter the workforce. And then we’ll start to line things up the four, five, six months prior to because that’s who we are. I mean, we’re both very career-focused, we love — and I’ll tell you something, that’s why we’re doing the podcast. That’s why we’re doing the blog. There’s something that’s built into humans that makes us want to give back. Either give back in a positive way either to inspire people or just the knowledge and hopefully to help people in some capacity or just give back to other humankind, you know what I mean? We’re just built that way. You can’t just cruise around the world and sit on beaches in Bali and hang out and drink cocktails all day and think that you’re going to improve as a human. It’s just not who we are. And I think Nikki and I are even at a — we didn’t grow up that way to do that. So even when we’re trying to relax, we always have massive “To Do” lists.

Nikki Javit: Yeah.

Matt Javit: The “To Do” lists are growing and growing. But the coolest part about it is is these creative projects we’re working on, we’re excited about them. It’s one of those things where we wake up every day, and we’re like, hey we’re going to do this and hey, let’s make sure we document that. Let’s go walk through the market and check out all these things. So it’s an amazing journey, and it’s a fun phase or a fun chapter. And we’re not really sure what that next chapter is yet. But no matter what, I think we’re going to really prepared for it, mentally, spiritually, physically. I think we’re going to be ready for that next chapter.

Tim Ulbrich: Well, you guys have done an awesome job with the podcast. So first of all, congratulations. I think the content that you’re bringing is awesome. I’ve enjoyed it. And I would just urge our community, check out PassportJoy.com to follow their journey on the blog, listen to the podcasts on whatever podcast subscription service that you use. And I think one of the things, Matt and Nikki, that I really enjoyed about the podcast is obviously, I’m not somebody who’s going to necessarily pick up for a year or two or three and travel, but what you’re talking about is applicable for long weekend getaways, a week vacation, you have an episode around financial security when you’re traveling that I really found interesting. And so I think for all of our audience, make sure you check out PassportJoy.com, listen to the podcast, check out the blog. You’ll hear their latest travel stories, tips to have amazing trips on a budget, hot locations you may not have heard of and how you can get involved and volunteer on the road. And I really appreciate, I would love to meet both of you when you get back stateside in Indianapolis, I’ll be in Columbus. So we’re not that far away. And you’ve inspire me personally and my wife to be thinking about, you know, traveling and how that can impact us as individuals and our family. So thank you for taking time to come on the show and to share your journey with the YFP community. We really appreciate it.

Nikki Javit: Thanks for having us so much.

Matt Javit: Thank you so much.

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