Talking Twenty is a new blood testing service that allows users to test various health markers from a small blood sample collected at home via a finger prick. Key features include testing for vitamins, hormones, cholesterol and more from dried blood spots mailed in. This enables tracking changes over time from activities, meals and other lifestyle factors at an unprecedented granular level compared to traditional lab tests. Tests are available now at an affordable subscription price and aim to empower individuals with more knowledge about their health and bodies through convenient self-testing.
Incumbent innovation methods differ from substitute innovation methods, which can lead to radically different results. Learn more at http://www.managing-creativity.com
Incumbent innovation methods differ from substitute innovation methods, which can lead to radically different results. Learn more at http://www.managing-creativity.com
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This is my project for the #scichallenge2017. It's a quicker diagnosis method for poverty stricken countries using hepatitis to demonstrate how my method works. Blaise Cloran
Irritable Bowel Syndrome with Constipation: Patient POV CME Program TranscriptDevi Seal
This transcript is for an accredited CME program on IBS-C presented by Brian Lacy, MD.
Patient POV: Incorporating Shared Decision Making in IBS-C Management
How to Optimize, Automate, and Outsource Everything in Your BusinessAri Meisel
Too much to do and not enough time to do it! This is a common problem for many entrepreneurs. In this presentation, Ari Meisel, Founder of Less Doing, shares three methods you can use to work more efficiently and effectively.
Topics include:
- clear the clutter in your brain and organize your ideas with an automated method of idea capture
- how to delegate and outsource successful by considering the 6 Levels of Delegation
- how to create a content plan that will help you create focused content that converts consistently.
For more information on productivity programs that can help your business reach its full potential, visit our website at https://go.lessdoing.com or join our Facebook Group, the Less Doing Labs.
You can also view this webinar on our YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/VbkQU3kra98
Quicker, more efficient diagnosis method, using hepatitis #scichallenge2017Blaise Cloran
This is my project for the #scichallenge2017. It's a quicker diagnosis method for poverty stricken countries using hepatitis to demonstrate how my method works. Blaise Cloran
Irritable Bowel Syndrome with Constipation: Patient POV CME Program TranscriptDevi Seal
This transcript is for an accredited CME program on IBS-C presented by Brian Lacy, MD.
Patient POV: Incorporating Shared Decision Making in IBS-C Management
How to Optimize, Automate, and Outsource Everything in Your BusinessAri Meisel
Too much to do and not enough time to do it! This is a common problem for many entrepreneurs. In this presentation, Ari Meisel, Founder of Less Doing, shares three methods you can use to work more efficiently and effectively.
Topics include:
- clear the clutter in your brain and organize your ideas with an automated method of idea capture
- how to delegate and outsource successful by considering the 6 Levels of Delegation
- how to create a content plan that will help you create focused content that converts consistently.
For more information on productivity programs that can help your business reach its full potential, visit our website at https://go.lessdoing.com or join our Facebook Group, the Less Doing Labs.
You can also view this webinar on our YouTube channel here: https://youtu.be/VbkQU3kra98
1. Recording begins
Ari: Hi and welcome to the podcast. Today we’re talking with HeatherHeine of Talking
Twenty. Hi, Heather.
Heather: Hi, Ari. How’s it going?
Ari: Good. Thank you for making the time. So first of all, let everyone know what Talking
Twenty is.
Heather: Sure, Talking Twenty is basically a new type blood test service. We are bringing as much
of your personal information, essentially to the tip of your fingers. You put a couple drops
of your blood on one of our filter cards, let it dry and then mail it in to us. We run, initially,
a few dozen blood tests off of that drop and we’re basically working out to run hundreds of
tests off that drop with our technology. It’s pretty exciting.
Ari: Well, that’s amazing. Getting your blood tested is usually an unpleasant process for
people so if you can kind of do it at your convenience, when you’re ready to do it, and doing
it at home, that’s really nice. What kinds of things are you able to test for right now?
Heather: Right, so what we’re doing is we’re offering a couple of different panels. We’re testing for
almost all the vitamins so many of the d vitamins; vitamin d3. We’re also running
hormones so estradiol, progesterone and testosterone, CRP, a couple inflammatory
markers – we’re just getting started right now. As well as cholesterol and sort of
cardiovascular health mixture. And markers that everyone’s interested in and obviously
several folks have just discovered that they need to be watching those things on a regular
basis. Our hope is that you can begin to find out what your baseline is for a number of
these molecules in your blood. As you try things, whether it’s taking vitamins or different
supplements to adjust your PMS or what have you. You can watch how things change
inside you and literally do this any time you want. To give you an example, we did
anin-house test where I ate hamburgers and chicken mcnuggets and I tested my blood on
ours cards by putting a couple drops on the card every hour, for ten hours. I watched my
cholesterol actually double from baseline in an hour and a half after the meal. We saw
that to be consistent with eating these high cholesterol foods and I’ve got now, this
cholesterol going into my intestine and being absorbed into my blood and then now I am
measuring it. And we did the same thing actually with multivitamins. We took a couple of
those and we saw b vitamins go up within the hour that I took it. It’s pretty exciting to
consider what might be possible when you start getting feedback from your own body with
what you’re doing. Every meal you take and you have everything you eat, stress that
you’re under, if you’re under, cortisol is a measurer of stress. Moment to moment if you're
driving in traffic and you’re stressed or have a rough meeting a work, you’re going to see
changes in cortisol. These are some of the examples of what we are trying to make
available to the public in a way that no one has ever been able to do before.
Ari: Yes and you brought up a really, really fascinating thing that I hadn’t even thought of.
Dealing with the most accessible blood testing services out there, it’s very 2010 internet
style where you would post something and wait for a response. So with a lot of the blood
testing, you’re getting your blood taken and then you wait and maybe it takes a few days or
a week and then you deal with those results. But what you’re talking about is literally
taking a test, having a meal, and then doing another test because it’s a small amount of
blood obviously. That enables you to detect really interesting things as far as you can go
test your sleep, you could test sexual activity, testosterone levels. You can test all sorts of
things on a very, very granulated level. That is amazing.
Heather: What’s kind of a breakthrough here is ordinarily to get that information with the current way
2. that the medical system has setup, you have to go into a lab and sit there with a big needle
in your arm and give blood every couple of hours or however often you wanted. So, I think
we’re just kind of making this much more accessible and my plan actually, I just finished a
medical degree I did also a PHD, and I saw that the system I was training in are doing their
best. There are a lot of really hardworking people trying to figure out our problems and
share them with everybody and they’re a little overwhelmed. In medicine I'm sure we can
all agree that there is the sense that there are so many people to treat and research takes
a really long time to get after. So what we’re, I'm hoping to contribute here is getting
everyone involved and participating. Even in just ways that are how to reduce stress.
Frankly, somebody figured out that doing 30 days of yoga was better for their cortisol levels
than doing running every other day. They told me about that online. I would be like I'm
gonna go do that yoga right now. I think like harnessing the interest and the curiosity of
the crowd, what we’ll start seeing is the discovery happening at an unprecedented rate.
That’s what I hope we can do here by just giving everyone access to their own information,
any time they want. Just let it go and just empower everybody and just let the thing go and
when the sharing starts, I think it’s going to get really interesting.
Ari: I'm thinking further on that. Like C-reactive protein, like CRP you had mentioned and for
those that don’t know C-reactive protein is kind of a generalized inflammatory marker that
is particularly prevalent with endurance athletes and people with chronic inflammatory
illnesses like myself with Chron’s where I was testing my CRP levels every 5 weeks
because when they do a blood test in the lab, their taking quite a bit of blood so you really
can’t do that very often. It would have been amazing for me to say Oh, is my CRP
elevated today because I ran 13 miles or is it because my Chron’s is acting up?That’s a
really scaffolding level of granularity. Most people obviously are used to going to a lab
and having an IV stuck in their arm and having several vials taken, and then solution, and
then sent off to the lab. So, is it as accurate and as accessible? I assume you send little
lancets with the card they have?
Heather: We send the little lancet, that’s right. Just like a diabetic would have. You prick the front
of your finger, it’s like a little bee sting, and the blood drops on the card and we caught 5
drops on the card on we only actually need one. But for our quality control purposes it’s
better for us to take, we take little punches of that drop and we basically run this through
our system with the same quality control that they do in a clinical setting. Something that’s
not widely known is that most of the people that are listening here actually had this done to
them when they were born. These cards and this technology have been around for
decades actually. You get a little heel prick when you’re born and we put some of that
blood on a card to make sure you don’t have certain metabolite disorders that can be quite
dangerous. That’s legally required right now. This technology is quite established, there
have been some improvements in the last couple of years that have helped us to recognize
we need to bring this to the general public. And also we’ve committed that we’re going to
be publishing all of our quality control and explain to everybody how we do that in-house
and make this very clear like what the accuracy of every test is and how we are doing it.
We want to encourage everyone who’s doing blood tests in the traditional way to actually
runtheir test on the same day that they get other blood work done and share that with us
too. I think it’s interesting to just sort of get everything out in the open and talk about how
accurate tests are. I wanted to mention, you did mention CRP and I think there’s an
interesting point I want to make on that. Inflammation, as you know quite well, it’s the
immune system that acting sometimes against our own bodies, inappropriately. There’s
different news that we are really familiar with. We’ve done a lot of research on it. We
know how the system reacts to bacterial infections to viral infections, fungal infections, to
auto-immune cases. We know actually the signaling molecules like CRP, these types of
molecules involved in each of those processes we can actually tell the difference between
those types of infections. This is something that we want to build. We haven’t got it
running but we’ve been asked about it a lot. So now that you can get a blood that tells you
you’ve got, like when you’re fighting the flu but you’re in the ten days before you can feel
you have the flu, your immune system has been fighting this thing. You have like 50% of
the flu but you can’t feel it. We can actually test things in you that will tell us that you’re
fighting that or if you’re living in a home that has fungal or fungus in the basement and
3. you’re sort of constantly getting this slight immune reaction to that you can’t feel. There’s
a lot going on in there that you are not aware of. Your system is actually trying it’s hardest
actually to keep you from noticing but you’re probably feeling a bit tired all the time. This is
something that we are hoping to kind of crack the door on is actually types of infection and
inflammation and what we call in hospitals like subclinical infections when you don’t have
the symptom that you can see. If you’re coughing or your nose is running that is a
symptomatic infection. Your system is screaming out that there is something wrong.
You actually feel it and see it. But there is so much more happening that you can’t. I
think when we begin to look at all that stuff and find out what it is, I think we can do a lot for
health that we haven’t realized like why am I always tired? There’s a lot of things you kind
of wonder What the hell’s going, pardon my French, What the heck is going on?I'm really
interested to see what that starts to show. In your case as well, I think it could have been
very helpful years before you really notice it.
Ari: Oh, 100 percent. Now, what are these tests gonna cost? Are they available now and
what do they cost?
Heather: They are available now; we’re in the pre-shelf phase right now. We run a campaign so we
have folks in line. The testing is available at TalkingTwenty.com and anything that is
ordered right now, we have what we are calling a gold subscription that’s really popular.
You basically get 36 or 24 of what we call gold cards and they will allow you to get every
test that we develop in the next three years. Those are 12.99 and 9.95 right now.
Basically, we’re shooting for this summer and we’ll have 17 tests up and running. We’re
just going to be adding tens of tests on each week, each month – we’re basically
developing those. Those are available now. I'm going to give you guys listening a
discount. Anyone who types in LESS DOING, all caps, will get 15% off for the next two
weeks. I think it ends March 20
th
or so. We’re gonna put 100 up there but if you guys
want to basically go on for that discount, we’re happy to do that. This offer, actually if you
compare it to conventional testing, this isn’t like 50 to $60,000 worth of tests over the
lifetime of this subscription so you avoid to go into a lab and order each one. We’re doing
it on a limited goal. Go ahead.
Ari: That is a really generous and amazing offer. And an amazing price to begin with for what
you are offering. Thank you in advance for that. The last question that I like to ask in
these interviews always is what are your top three personal productivity tips? The things
that keep you on task and keep you being effective.
Heather: Right, right. Really good question. My answer is kind of interesting. I use my phone
calendar and Google Docs and everything that everyone else uses. I think, to be honest,
the productivity things for me have always been like doing what I actually love to do. It
sounds very weird but when I left my career to do this company, suddenly I'm up at like 7,
automatically every day. I'm in a good mood and I'm doing what I love and I think that
combined with not commuting as much as I used to has really improved my productivity. I
think I am happier and I'm thinking clearer. I think just doing what I really want to do is
been my thing. I'm not working anymore. I just feel really good about what I'm doing.
Most of the stuff that I'm up to is just easy. It’s kind of strange to say but I hope that’s okay
Ari. I can give you the Google documents, not commuting, and just sort of doing what you
love.
Ari: Wow. I think those were great. Those were absolutely great. If it’s working for you then
I like to hear about it. I really appreciate those. Well, thank you so much for your time.
I'm so excited to try these out myself, honestly, and I know that there’s lots of people who
are listening and reading who will be trying them out as well. Heather, thank you again
and I hope to talk to you soon.
Heather: No problem, thanks for your interest Ari.
Recording ends