The Power Transformation Podcast

74. Driving Dreams: From Taxi Driver to Tech Innovator with Nelson Nigel

Alethea Felton Season 2 Episode 74

Every journey begins with a single step, and today we're joined by Nelson Nigel whose life's trajectory shifted from the driver's seat of a yellow cab to the helm of a cutting-edge tech enterprise, Moto Nation. Together, we'll unravel how Nelson, whose family emigrated from Guyana to Queens, NY, cultivated resilience when a childhood accident eventually propelled him to innovate and fulfill a niche need for traveling parents through Kidmoto Technologies which offers parents a seamless travel experience to reserve cars equipped with child safety seats.

As we navigate Nelson's entrepreneurial odyssey, we uncover the trials and triumphs of a self-starter in the throes of building a business from the ground up, for his narrative is a testament to casting off the shackles of negativity and marching steadfastly towards one's vision.

So, buckle up and prepare for an episode brimming with inspiration reminding us that with tenacity and a dash of positivity, the road to success - though winding - is always within reach. Let Nelson Nigel's transformative road to success ignite the spark of possibility within you.

Connect with Nelson:


Episode 74's Affirmation:
I continue to climb higher, for there are no limits to what I achieve. 

I'd love to hear from you! Feel free to send a text to let me know where you're tuning in from and share something in this episode that resonated with you.

Click here to connect with Alethea Felton

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Alethea Felton:

Have you ever faced a challenge that seemed hopeless? Yet you think that you have the power to change your life for the better, no matter the obstacles you face? Well, if so, then you're in the right place. I'm your host, alethea Felton, and welcome to the Power Transformation Podcast, where we explore the incredible true stories of people who have overcome adversity and created meaningful lives. So prepare to be inspired, equipped and empowered, for the time is now to create your power transformation.

Alethea Felton:

Hey y'all, welcome back to another episode of the Power Transformation Podcast. And if you are new to this podcast, I welcome you with open arms. I am so excited that you are a part of the Power Transformation podcast community and if you haven't done so yet, go ahead and follow or subscribe. Leave a five-star rating, write a review so that more people can learn about this podcast. It's not for my glory, but it's rather so that people's lives can be transformed. And if you have been with me from the beginning of this podcast, I thank you from its inception, from its earlier episodes. I am so grateful for you.

Alethea Felton:

I want this podcast to rank in the top 1% of all podcasts globally. That's a lofty goal. But, y'all, we were at the top 10% for a while. Then I shared with you that this podcast is in the top 5% and my next goal is to have it in the top 2.5%, then the top 1%. I want the Power Transformation Podcast to be a household name, to be a positive name, to be a light in all parts of the world, and you all are. The key to making that happen is that I think that this world needs more examples of people who are just doing some remarkable things with the lives they've been given. It doesn't matter if you're rich, if you're not so rich, or even if you're poor, if you're famous, if you're not. It doesn't matter, because we are human beings living this experience together.

Alethea Felton:

And our guest today oh my goodness, is he such a powerful example of this. I am so excited to have him on the Power Transformation podcast and we're going to jump right into his interview, but what I'd like to do first is I always start off with a positive affirmation. Why do I do affirmations? Because the more you say affirmations, the more they become a reality, the more that you believe them, and things happen in your life that are just so inexplicably miraculous that they blow your mind. I am a witness to this. I have seen it happen with my own eyes, so I'm going to say this affirmation once and then you repeat it I continue to climb higher, for there are no limits to what I achieve.

Alethea Felton:

I am so happy today to have Nelson Nigel joining us today. Oh, my goodness, this interview is going to be the greatest, because he is so experienced with what he does, but his story behind it is so empowering and so transformative that the world needs to hear it, and I'm going to let him tell us exactly who he is. But he is a CEO, executive, entrepreneur. All of that I will have him to share his actual company. But first of all, I just want to welcome you, nelson, to the Power Transformation podcast.

Nelson Nigel:

Thank you for having me, alethea, and I'm ecstatic to be here with you. Power Transformation podcast. Thank you for having me, alethea, and I'm ecstatic to be here with you. Power Transformation, that's right, you know it.

Alethea Felton:

You know it. So let's just start off with a nice icebreaker question so that we can get to know you better. But this is the question for you. I'm curious, Nelson what was one of your favorite childhood television shows or cartoons that you used to watch as a kid, and why did you like it?

Nelson Nigel:

One of my favorites. Oh, I had too many, unfortunately, okay, unfortunately, unfortunately, okay, unfortunately I don't.

Alethea Felton:

You said cartoons yeah, it could be a cartoon.

Nelson Nigel:

Chicken Hawk and I don't know, that's always been my favorite and Longhorn really okay. So, for example, I don't know.

Alethea Felton:

That's always been my favorite and the Longhorn Really Okay Okay. So, for example, when I grew up, saturday morning cartoons were everything you would watch Saturday morning cartoons or just any random cartoon, and I like everything from Captain Planet to Smurfs, to just everybody. So I'm just curious is there any childhood cartoon action figure hero anybody that resonated with you as a kid?

Nelson Nigel:

Michelangelo, I was like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. You did yeah, yeah.

Alethea Felton:

Okay, and what was it about the Mutant Ninja Turtles? That really was like, yeah, they're cool. What was it about them?

Nelson Nigel:

you liked they were just cool. They were just cool.

Alethea Felton:

They were cool, they were just cool.

Nelson Nigel:

Yeah, they were just cool, they were just cool.

Alethea Felton:

Yeah, it was cool, okay. So, ironically, my uh boyfriend likes them too, and so you know what? Yeah, so that's a wild answer that you gave. He loved ninja turtles. So see, okay. So this is the next question for you, nelson, now that we've gotten to know you a little bit. But with those Ninja Turtles, those were action heroes and they saved the day and, honestly, I'm seeing some comparisons even with you and what you do in saving the day and making people's lives better, just as those Ninja Turtles did. So, although you might not have been exactly sure why you like them, I definitely see a connection because they were heroes that helped make people's lives better. So therefore, nelson, share with us exactly who you are, what you do and how your business makes people's lives better.

Nelson Nigel:

Good question. My name is Nelson Nigel. I'm the founder of KidMoto Technologies, which is now Moto Nation. Kidmoto connects it's a mobile app that connects passengers seeking child car seats, pre-installed child car seats, to providers in the ground that actually provide pre-installed child car seats, and only for airport transportation and crews. So think about, you know, being a parent and it's hard and cumbersome to lug around a child car seat. So we are the company that facilitates. You know, ditch the car seats when flying with a baby because no one really wants to go on vacation, lug around car seats and when they get there, forget about it. They don't need it. So that's KidMoto and Modo Nation. Now is our new venture. We are creating more mobile apps for underserved segments of the population, sort of like parents of children, where there's never been a provider out there.

Alethea Felton:

And now we want to move into the cruise industry and to their aviation industry, providing for the elderly and even like miscellaneous logistics, which is there isn't a national provider, but we have it and we can do it so this is a very interesting concept, and so I never considered the fact that it would be something convenient for parents to have be because, you're right, when you're traveling, getting off of planes, you don't want to lug around a lot of things with your kids. Yes, you want your kids with you, but you don't want to have to lug around a means of transportation, car seats, all of this and that. So my question is how in the world do you come up with a concept like that? What's the backstory behind it? How did you say hey, this is a need and I'm going to make this happen.

Nelson Nigel:

Oh, that's a good one. That's a good question. I was a yellow taxi driver in New York City and I learned so much, I saw so much and forget about it. It was like my favorite job ever up to now. And I was an Uber driver and I saw that, you know, drivers would not pick up parents that had car seats or that had children, same with the black car industry. I did not know about, you know, rear-facing child car seats or front-facing or booster seats when I was driving Uber and I saw that niche in the market, the need, and I said, wait, what if we created a mobile app and did something like this, this now, back then? Now everybody wants to create a mobile app.

Nelson Nigel:

They just don't realize if you make a bed, you have to sleep in it, right, and they think that, oh, I can create the mobile app and it's going to be super successful, so forget about it if that's not how it works. Uh. But I did have uh prior business experience that because of that, you know know, having a drive and the experience I just, you know, took it on and now we're 52 cities.

Alethea Felton:

Did you find that your passengers when you were driving Uber and I'm sure that was exciting because you meet a lot of people being a cab driver, uber driver, driver, and New York City at that. Did you find it as a stressful area for parents and so you said you know, I want to help them? Was it a specific incident that happened where it connected with you, or or were you just talking amongst other people or just daydreaming? When did that aha, eureka moment come for you where you said I'm going to actually do this?

Nelson Nigel:

That eureka moment was when I lost the contract. So I was also involved in public procurement and I had my side businesses right. Well, actually prior to Kid Moto, I had other businesses right, so not really side businesses. So I lost the contract and I said you know what, let me do this. So there wasn't a Eureka moment in terms of, oh, let's do child car seats. I've always noticed that that need in the market. It's something that I had in my back pocket and I said you know what, let me do that because other ventures did not work out.

Alethea Felton:

Okay, and so I want to come back to this journey of you being a yellow cab driver, uber driver all the way to a tech entrepreneur. But let's go back a little bit farther and there's a part of your story that is quite incredible and transformative. The entire story is but Nelson, you mentioned you were a driver in New York City, so let us know, is that where you're from? And then also something happened to you when you were growing up directly in New York City, where, frankly, a lot of people don't survive. So take us on that journey as to what happened to you.

Nelson Nigel:

OK, so I was born in Guyana, South America, and we immigrated to Queens, New York, and when I was about 13, I was hit by a train an express train in Queens and boy, oh boy, that was rough on my family. I was in a coma for about three weeks and it was rough. It was rough Hold on it was rough.

Alethea Felton:

Wait a minute, y'all. He is saying this so casually, like, yeah, I caught a cold. This man just said he got hit by a train, an express train. Nelson, this is so incredible. Were you standing too close to the platform? Did you slip and fall? What in the world? How do you get hit by an express train?

Nelson Nigel:

uh, I, I don't. I don't remember, but I was not. It was that it did not roll over me so I had to, uh, stick my head out at some point. Uh, or I was pushed or something. But yeah, uh I, I did, no, no, fall back onto the platform. But yeah, I didn't really think about it for a long time.

Alethea Felton:

Is it something where you look back on it now, although you were young, but still at 13, you remember things from the age of 13. How did that accident change your life, or did it cause you to view things differently? Or did you not think of a lot of things? Looking at it where you are now and then, how has that accident shaped who you are today?

Nelson Nigel:

all I can say is that I I maybe I had it in me, but I don't give up. So and I and I live to be myself. I don't know if that's part of the accident, but I can't give up and you can't use excuses that it. That might be an excuse for many people. It's never been an excuse in my mind until, and it still isn't an excuse as to anything. It's just an experience.

Alethea Felton:

So it sounds that at that young age well, first of all, even prior to that coming from another country, moving into a totally different country, a big city, a new lifestyle, culture and everything, that's one shift where you had to almost morph into a new version of yourself. Then to have this accident where, yet again, you are changing into another version of yourself. When you were in that three-week coma, once you came out of it, how did you have to get back to full health? Were you just able to be discharged from the hospital and head straight home? Did you have rehab? Tell us about that, how you got back your strength after such a serious accident and the fact that with your mental cognition that really could have caused a serious traumatic brain injury. That really could have halted a lot in your life. So during that time, as a teenager, preteen, how did you build resilience during that time'll?

Nelson Nigel:

tell you what. I can't remember before that or much after that, right, but I I was in the hospital for a while, uh rehabbing, uh trying to remember because I couldn't remember before that, and uh going back to school at the start, back slow, taking slow classes.

Alethea Felton:

Right.

Nelson Nigel:

And, but I did manage to graduate, I think on time, right, yeah, and um, uh, afterward, it's, it's all it's, I don't know it's, it's all it's, I don't know, it's just something that never really I just put on the side and I never really think about it because I'm just moving forward educator, as I shared with you.

Alethea Felton:

You mean that you had some learning differences where you had to be placed in some classes to give you extra support to have gotten you to where you are. So almost like special education programming, correct? So I just correct that because I, too, had what's called an IEP. I had some learning challenges in school and I still graduated with honors and I came out wonderfully. So, those of us who have had certain learning differences, I view them as not necessarily disabilities, but they're really our superpowers and really awesome sauce for what we need to be who we are today.

Alethea Felton:

So I'm glad you actually brought it up, but I just want to, especially for our listeners that may have experienced that themselves in terms of having some learning challenges or learning differences, or even if they have children or grandchildren or just know people like that. I always try to say those can really empower us if we don't use them as a crutch. And obviously, Nelson, you chose to take everything that was thrown in your life and really transform it into something for your good, which leads me to this whole perspective of you going from yellow cab driver, Uber driver to this tech entrepreneur and how, instead of you shrinking yourself back. You chose to stand totally in the front line to say no, I'm going to lead, so share with us what are some of the biggest lessons. Let's say two of the biggest lessons you learned on your leadership journey and how you still apply those lessons to your life today.

Nelson Nigel:

One of my, I guess, slogans is the path to greatness is along with others. That's number one. That's always teamwork, that's Baltasar right. The path to greatness is along with others. That's very important. And secondly, you cannot quit.

Alethea Felton:

Cannot quit. Okay, so elaborate on that. What causes you to not quit?

Nelson Nigel:

me personally, I'm not quitting, I'm not kidding, um, but. But many people make their you know, make their bed, but they don't want to sleep in it. Right, they. You can. You can't just choose something and say, hey, I'm going to go do this, and then all of a sudden you fall down and you're like, oh, I don't want to do that again. Think about it like this Lithium Babies are born every day. Babies fall down, babies creep, they crawl, they stand up. Then they start walking, right. Babies just don't start walking overnight, right. And how many times do they try to stand up?

Alethea Felton:

Plenty of times, yeah.

Nelson Nigel:

How many times do they fall down? Thousands, thousands. But a grown man starts a business and fails once, and that's all, that's it. He's going to tell his kids. Never, tell everybody, never, never do it again. Is that practical? Definitely not but that's what happens. Yeah, so that's just. You know. If baby skin keeps trying and standing up, why can't, like you know, grown adults, when they're starting something, or when they're starting a business, and let's just say businesses if they fail once or twice, why do they give up?

Alethea Felton:

That is something to think about, and when I think of leadership specifically and this question transitions into that is when you have these slogans and these models, or just your philosophy of leadership. How does that translate with your team? In other words, how do you empower your employees and your team members? How do you empower them to keep the mission and vision alive at what you set out to do for your company? And what is that team spirit almost like in your company? What's your leadership style?

Nelson Nigel:

I'm not a micromanager, okay, so that's one. Always keep it simple, sweet, don't overthink it. Many people really overthink things. Okay, yeah, and it's not good. It's just wasting time, wasting time, yeah.

Alethea Felton:

So, with you being this global entrepreneur, walk us through and I'm sure every day is different, but do you have any type of morning routines that you do personally to kind of get your mindset in place for your day? And, if so, take us through what that looks like, your morning routines?

Nelson Nigel:

Actually I don't have, I don't think I have any. I just walk down the street grab a cup of coffee, come back, uh uh, checking my emails on the phone and just, and then I'll just get get to work. Um uh, just focused, just focused, just focus.

Alethea Felton:

Okay, yeah, and so, in terms of your business mindset, how do you, how does your of being driven and being refused to be limited by challenges? Is it something that you saw in your upbringing where you saw that, okay, you came here at a young age, your family came. Is that where it sparked from? Is that you just keep going and you don't let challenges limit you? Where was the conception of that?

Nelson Nigel:

I was like an athlete, right. So athletics is everything in my life and I haven't done much in years. But yeah, at one point I wanted to go to the Olympics, Like seriously, and when you're training on that level and to get to that level, it's a mindset. You've probably heard this 99% is in the mind and 1% is physical and that's 100% true, 100% true. It's all up here.

Alethea Felton:

And what was your sport, if I may ask, since you were into athletics? Boxing, boxing, boxing oh, wow, okay. Ask, since you were into athletics, what was this? Boxing, boxing? Oh, wow, okay, so, okay. So you literally rolled with the punches and you made sure that, hey, I'm going to bounce back every time. So, wow, now that type of sport I can.

Alethea Felton:

I can definitely see the correlation, even with your entrepreneurial journey in terms of the concept of boxing. See, now I know why Ninja Turtles was your favorite cartoon, because you have all of these comparisons here and you acting like you don't know. And I see it just as clear and plain as day as to how everything does align within your life, and plain as day as to how everything does align within your life. And so when I think about the concept of boxing and I don't know all the technical terms, but I do like watching the sport but in terms of thinking about boxing and you as that leader of your company and showing people how to lead and follow by example, it definitely does show your personal commitment to your vision, but also the people who make it possible. So your work ethic. Nelson, how do you inspire your team members to even pursue their dreams. What do you do to just keep them to be resilient as well?

Nelson Nigel:

That's a very good question and I can't really answer that question in terms of how do I help them pursue their dreams? First, people have to come to a point where they can realize that, hey, I have a dream Right, and very few people can figure out that they have a dream. Think about you, like hello, like so, uh, I, I. I find that many people don't have dreams interesting.

Alethea Felton:

Huh, interesting because because I now it goes to show our experiences vary because I find the opposite. I find more people who do have dreams, but maybe it's because I'm a dreamer too, so I almost, in a way, seek it out of people. Maybe that's why interesting, though, but yeah, I think it's based on our experiences. So say, if a person comes to you and they really don't have a dream that has been pulled out of them, what do you do in the culture of your environment to almost keep people energized and going for the work at hand?

Nelson Nigel:

Well, now you have to motivate others around you. You have to empower them and show them that it is possible. So, slowly and gradually, you know they'll work, they'll work themselves up and then they can say well, you know what I have a, you know I think that I can do this. But but dreaming of going to the moon is not, is not? You know that that's a dream dream, you know. Now bringing it to action to get there is a different story now, yeah, yeah, does that make?

Nelson Nigel:

sense, yeah, everyone could dream of, dream of like, yeah, I can you know, I can have you know, whatever Right, I could walk on water. I don't know.

Alethea Felton:

Well, I always say you know, when it comes to our viewpoints on things, it doesn't necessarily have to make sense to me or to anyone else. As long as it makes sense to the person who says it and they're confident with it, then hey, that's really what matters, because we have to make sure that what we're saying makes sense to us so that then it can resonate throughout what we say, who we are, how we hold ourselves, the example that we lead, so that actually transitions into this kind of backtracking a little bit. Kid Moto, when you started it and I'm sure it wasn't necessarily a quick, easy process, but what was that like starting your company for Kid Moto? What were a couple of the victories and what were some challenges in that that you really had to overcome in getting it to where it is now as this really huge multimillion dollar industry? How did you get there?

Nelson Nigel:

Back then it was super hard and when you're starting out in any business, it's always going to be very, very hard to many people. I had a background. I was an entrepreneur, I am an entrepreneur and so that kind of gave me the leverage and in order to build out a national you know company instead of just a local company. But I had that vision and I stuck to it and I stuck to it and there has been tons of challenges, tons. It's like every day there's a challenge right. Uh, we're a bootstrap company, so we're not funded, right, which is like insane, right, so we've built out a national organization being bootstrapped right.

Nelson Nigel:

I started with probably about six hundred dollars for my name. Literally, I could not. I was a driver myself. I could not afford three car seats, three, I had to start with two. That's how hard it was. I couldn't afford lunch many, many days. I could not afford my car payments. It was rough. You just can't give up. You make your bed. You have to sleep in it. If you really step into the plate, you have to swing.

Alethea Felton:

When you say it was tough. This piques my curiosity. I'm big on support systems and people to really, even if they can't give something financially, just really encouraging me to keep going. But then again there are a lot of people that don't have real support networks and support systems, where they do a lot on their own, through their own grit, will, determination and networking. What was it like for you? Did you have a support system pouring into you? Who were some of those key people and how did they help you? Or was it the opposite, where you really didn't have a lot of people encouraging you to keep going? And if not, how did you still choose to stay on that path?

Nelson Nigel:

I'll go with the latter young lady. So the busier I got, the less people I kept around me. The busier I got, the less people are kept around me, and generally, when you're speaking to folks and you have your dreams and you're working on things, people are trying to throw a spike at you, trying to bring you down and get rid of dead weight. You want to unpack dead weight off your back and all of that negative energy from friends and family, which is very common. Those things you have to get rid of. You know. Chip off your back, chip it off. Chip it off Right. So now you have time to focus on what's most important Now what is what's next next best step, the next best step, and so, um, most of all, you know what is what's next next best step, the next best step, and so, um, I didn't have a support system. I'm my support system.

Alethea Felton:

just keep moving forward and did you have any mentors that kind of helped you along the way, who were also entrepreneurs, and when I mean mentors just some people that you could go to or a person who gave you some even firmer business advice? You don't have to name them, but was there anybody who you view even now as a mentor or somebody that you partner with or learn from even more within this world of entrepreneurship?

Nelson Nigel:

That's a very good question, very, very good question. And I did not have mentors, but I do surround myself with people that bring value to my life, filled with immigrants, and I I find so much value in in these folks from you know, from all over the world. Uh, different, I see different things. I mean, yeah, and that's one of my models different, I see different things and different people come from different backgrounds and different parts of the world. Everyone sees things differently and whenever they're speaking about something, they're bringing value to my life because I didn't see it from that perspective. Or this guy is from, you know, afghanistan, or that person is from Kalamazoo, or that person is from La Paz, bolivia. Everyone sees things differently and there's value to that, because perspective is everything. You know. Somebody can see a football game from the top, from the first proceeding, from the third, seating, from TV. So perspective is a lot and it's always good to hear different perspectives on different things.

Alethea Felton:

Yeah, what do you say to? I don't even want to say what you say to them, because it gets. So the original question was going to be what do you say to the haters? But I'm of the mindset that after a while, after you get to a certain place in life, you don't even worry about the haters, because it's going to always be somebody who's going to say something. So I guess my question is when you were growing up, was there anybody or group of people in your life and again you don't have to say specifically who but was there anybody who ever said that you weren't gonna amount to anything, that you couldn't do anything, that you weren't this and that? And my question is how did that? In terms of the negativity that a person or people could have been giving you, how did you not let that thwart to your plans, but rather you chose to keep going?

Alethea Felton:

I can't recall um if anyone like that, saying things like that, I can't oh, oh good, okay, because sometimes yeah, because sometimes on these leadership journeys it doesn't even have to be from your own family, but it could be a person who says you're not going to do this or that. I know I've had that in my life, not from my own family, but I have had specks of people here and there who have said I wasn't going to do X, y and Z and I've done it, but I haven't done it for them, I've done it for me. And so sometimes on these journeys, with the challenges, also comes the naysayers or the haters or the people who don't want to see you achieve. And again, it hasn't been like that from my inner circle or my loved ones, but I've had specks of people throughout my life. So I was just curious as to if that ever happened to you. Now, nelson, yeah, go ahead.

Nelson Nigel:

Let me respond to that one. There was someone like that. Now the person was was not saying you can't do this, or was not talking directly, but this is one of those people that they can only see, ye, so much, and when you're around that it permeates to you. When you're around, you don't see it as negative energy, but someone who's limited, now, limited, uh, limited views or, uh, limited dreams, uh, so there was someone like that in my life that I grow with my one of my best friends, one of my family members, so, um, so eventually I found out way later, of course, right that you know that he's the reason why you know I didn't make these different choices. Someone is saying that you know, talking to you directly or this and that, or telling you directly their actions permeate to you, so they it's like, okay, whatever they keep saying day in and day out, you know you start to feel it, even though you don't feel it.

Alethea Felton:

Yeah, yeah, I understand that.

Nelson Nigel:

Does that?

Alethea Felton:

make sense. Yes, I do understand your perspective on that and also this question. We have a few minutes left. But say a parent is listening or somebody that wants to use your actual services. Walk us through the process of what your company provides, but more so how a parent can go about getting it. So say that they're traveling, saying, wow, I love this concept. I've never used KidMoto. How can I be a part of this? Take us through that.

Nelson Nigel:

The KidMoto app is available on Google Play, Apple, iOS. It's free to use. A parent can use it. Get picked up in 52 cities across America.

Nelson Nigel:

Okay to cities across America. Okay, so you can literally leave Detroit and get picked up in Palm Beach, or get picked up in, you know, st Petersburg, florida, get taken to the hotel, and you don't have to, you know, carry car seats with you and our drivers provide pre-installed child car seats, whether it's for a five-pound infant or a 55-pound older young child, or in a booster seat, our drivers will provide those car seats and it's pre-installed and pre-harnessed, which wasn't heard before until I came onto the scene. And now we're a national organization and we're providing for consumers from all over the globe coming to America. It's fantastic.

Alethea Felton:

That is so convenient and if I had children I would use your service. I don't have them, but if I ever have kids, even now in my 40s, I would definitely use them as much as I travel. So it's really a convenient program and app and just service that you can use. And I still have a couple of more questions. But while we're on it, nelson, how can people I know that they have the app, but how could people learn more about you in terms of are you on social media? And then also does your company? And of course it does, but what is your company's website? If you could share that, and of course I'll have it in the show notes, but just in case somebody doesn't look at the actual show notes, how can people connect with your company?

Nelson Nigel:

The company is Kidmoto K-I-D-M-O-T-O. It's kidmototaxi. Viewers can contact me on Twitter, on LinkedIn. Twitter and LinkedIn are usually the best. Okay, yeah, perfect, and uh, uh, modal nation is coming, so that's super exciting because now you know, we're going to bring new, new products, uh for underserved communities in america, which is, you know, which is right up my alley. Right, we want to provide a solution for uh where there's need yeah, and so those are really exciting things that are happening.

Alethea Felton:

I'm going to definitely put all of the links in the show notes, but just a couple of more questions as we wrap up things. Nelson, when you take a look at your entire life, this is a loaded question. You can answer it any way that you want to, but if I were to ask you, what are you passionate about in your life? How would you respond?

Nelson Nigel:

Wow, passionate about people, yeah, people. I love to meet people, learn where they're from who they are, their history, like that, yeah, I do.

Alethea Felton:

What has this entrepreneurial journey taught you most about yourself?

Nelson Nigel:

It's taught me that I'm a fighter. I'm a fighter, no matter how many times you get knocked down, you gotta get back up. You better, you better, you get back up. You get knocked down, get back up, that's it. Yeah, and uh, that's uh. That's the journey of life. How's that?

Alethea Felton:

and again it's those parallels, even from the boxing ring to real life. You can't stay down if you're knocked out. You got to keep on going or they're just going to walk all over you. So yeah, nelson, when you're an old man in your 90s, 100s, something like that, and then you make your transition into the supernatural, what do you want to be most remembered for here on earth?

Nelson Nigel:

That's a good question, um, I love people.

Alethea Felton:

Hey, doesn't have to be deep, doesn't have to be anything, but you want to be remembered as a man who loved people. And I would dare add that you want to be remembered as someone who enhanced the lives of others, who came up with this concept to really think about the well-being of parents, their children and their safety, and that speaks volumes, especially when you had an experience in your life through that subway accident that really put your entire safety at risk, and for you to be so resilient and to bounce back and all these years later, create a concept that's really about safety and convenience. So there are a lot of parallels and I would even just challenge you this is totally just from the far left, but I would just even challenge you to just be more aware and receptive of all of the connections in your life, because even from a question, I'm always intentional about the opening question and sometimes guests are like huh, why are you asking? It's a random question. But even from, like I said, your answer being Ninja Turtles as your favorite cartoon, they were some fighters and they were heroes and they were literally about helping the lives of others, and then from you boxing all the way up until now.

Alethea Felton:

So I just want to thank you, nelson, for just being a guest today and I encourage you to just keep fighting, staying in the ring, helping out people, knocking out barriers and obstacles, because what you do truly affects the lives of so many, and I hope and pray continue prosperity for your business, abundance for your life, constant connections and, yeah, this is definitely only the beginning and the tip of the iceberg of where you're gonna go. It was an honor having you today. Thank you so much for joining the Power Train podcast.

Nelson Nigel:

Thank you, Alisa. Thank you Appreciate it.

Alethea Felton:

Y'all, I told you that Nelson was powerful, that his life story is absolutely. It could really be a made for TV movie or even on the big screen Either way. Maybe somebody from Netflix is listening or somebody from a big production company. Honestly, all of my guests. Their lives could be movies.

Alethea Felton:

But I'm serious about this is that Nelson is doing some wonderful, wonderful things out there. Please, please, please, please, patronize his business. We all know somebody with kids, even if we don't have them ourselves. We know somebody that has a child and this is definitely worth it. So, again, I thank Nelson for his time and I invite you to tune in every Wednesday for a new episode of the Power Transformation Podcast. Share it, share it, share it Again.

Alethea Felton:

We want this podcast to rank so high globally because it's for you all and I'm not monetized right now, so I don't want you to think it's oh, she's just trying to get rich. I'm not monetized yet, so I seriously just want this podcast to be a household name. I want people who have never heard podcasts to listen to the Power Transformation podcast because I'm telling you, people's lives are just remarkable and, who knows, you might be a guest on the Power Transformation Podcast as well, let's go ahead and close out with our affirmation. I will say it once and you repeat it I continue to climb higher, for there are no limits to what I achieve. If you enjoyed today's show, then you don't want to miss an episode. So follow the Power Transformation Podcast on Apple Podcasts, spotify or wherever you usually listen, and remember to rate and review. I also invite you to connect with me on social media at Alethea Felton, that's at A-L-E-T-H-E-A-F-E-L-T-O-N. Until next time, remember to be good to yourself and to others.