In this episode of Behavioral Profit, Debbie Longo speaks with Nicky Billou about entrepreneurship, leadership behavior, emotional control, business partnerships, and how navigating a difficult business separation ultimately strengthened both his company and his long-term success.
Nicky shares how his family escaped Iran after the Islamic Revolution and immigrated to Canada in search of freedom and opportunity. That experience shaped his belief that entrepreneurs and business owners create freedom, growth, and independence for others through business leadership and innovation.
He later co-founded eCircle Academy, a company focused on helping entrepreneurs, coaches, and consultants grow their businesses. While the company initially experienced success, tension eventually developed between Nicky and his business partner due to unequal workloads, communication issues, and growing resentment inside the partnership.
Throughout the conversation, Nicky openly discusses the emotional pressure that came with the conflict and how close he came to reacting emotionally during negotiations. Instead of acting impulsively, he relied on guidance from his business coach, his girlfriend, and a professional mediator to help him remain calm and focused while navigating the separation.
Nicky explains how the partnership eventually dissolved through negotiation and mediation rather than emotional confrontation. Although neither side left fully satisfied financially, the agreement allowed both parties to move forward while preserving the company and protecting clients.
Over time, Nicky rebuilt and expanded the business into a stronger company with healthier leadership dynamics, better communication, and far less negativity. He emphasizes that one of the biggest lessons he learned was the importance of emotional control, seeking professional guidance during high-pressure situations, and never trying to navigate major business problems alone.
Debbie and Nicky also discuss intuition, trust, leadership, accountability, emotional intelligence, negotiation, and how unresolved resentment often damages businesses more than external problems. The conversation reinforces that business success depends heavily on how leaders manage relationships, emotions, and pressure during difficult situations.
This episode explores leadership behavior, entrepreneurship, emotional intelligence, negotiation, resilience, workplace dynamics, conflict resolution, accountability, communication, and the connection between emotional control and long-term business success.
Contact Debbie Longo, Executive Behavioral Coach:
Website: https://www.debbielongo.com/
Email: debbie@lifeinbloomny.net
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/debbie-longo-life-in-bloom-ny/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/debbie.longo.2025
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/debbie.life.in.bloom.ny/?hl=en
Contact Nicky Billou:
Website: Www.eCircleAcademy.com
Email: nicky@ecircle.ca
Hi, I'm Debbie Longo, a transformational coach,
and welcome to the Behavioral Profit Show. This
show is about one thing, why businesses don't
perform the way they should. Most leaders think
they have a strategy problem, but they don't.
It's behavioral. And it's how decisions are made,
how pressure is handled, and how people operate
inside the business day to day. On this show,
we break down what's really driving missing targets,
stalled growth, and poor execution. What shifts
when behavior changes. Because when behavior
changes, performance improves, and that's where
profit comes. from. We have a very special guest
today, Nikki Beloo, and we're going to take a
closer look at what's really going on inside
their business, what's working, what's not, and
where behavior may be impacting performance.
Let's get into it. Good afternoon, Nikki. Welcome
to the show. Thanks for having me, Debbie. It's
a pleasure to be here. And thanks for being here.
I'm going to ask you today to point out a situation
or scenario that you experienced from a business
standpoint where there was an issue and then
what was your process, how you got through that.
and the end result should always be positive.
So basically, we're just going from a negative
to a positive. Now, I'm going to ask to focus
on the process. This is a podcast, obviously.
So you could do whatever as specific as you want,
it's fine. Because the listener is going to focus
on what... the specific issue is. And I'm going
to ask the listener to try to really listen to
what the process is that we went through, how
to get to the other side, okay? How to get through
it, right? And then come out on a positive way.
There are a lot of people. in the world today
that are stuck in their business in negative
situations for tons of reasons. And what we're
trying to do is we're trying to explain and show
that they don't have to be stuck in certain situations
where they're losing business, they're losing
sales, profits, they might be going bankrupt,
they're not making enough money to support their
employees. There's a million examples of this
and explanations of this, but it doesn't have
to be that way. And there's really no such thing
as a negative situation or scenario because anything
can be turned into a positive and businesses
that are really successful do this. They don't
sit in their problems and their negativity. They
find a way to get out of it. So if you could
do that for me, I would appreciate it. Let me
start by explaining the, uh, the situation, give
you a bit of a context and backstory. I'm originally
an immigrant from the Middle East. I'm a Christian
from Iran. My family escaped from Iran after
the Islamic Revolution because the moderate and
progressive and really forward -thinking government
of His Late Majesty Muhammad Azza Pallavi was
overthrown by this repressive, theocratic, Nazi
-like government of the mullahs. And they started
arresting people, shooting them, killing them,
and repressing people. The laws were changed.
Under the Shah, women had acquired some rights.
In fact, women in Iran had the right to vote
before they did in Switzerland. I don't know
if you knew that or not, but soon as the mullahs
came over, they stopped with all of that and
they started arresting undesirables including
gay people and they started hanging them from
cranes and it just became a nasty nasty nasty
place to be so my mom and dad decided we got
to get out of here we can't we can't raise our
little kids in this crazy environment and one
day something absolutely nutty happened that
accelerated that process so we're home and our
living room had this big picture window and something
sailed through it, crash. There were glass shards
going everywhere. And this thing landed next
to my feet. I'm 11 at the time. And I don't know
what the heck it is. Looked like a bottle full
of liquid. And there was this cloth rag in it
that was burning. It was a Maratov cocktail.
And my dad knew what it was, and he just grabbed
it, pulled out the burning wicks so the thing
didn't explode, because it was getting close
to burning all the way down and exploding. That's
the only reason I'm still here. And at that point,
mom and dad said, we got to get out of here.
So they left the country. They took us. It took
them a couple of years, first to Europe, to Athens,
Greece, and then from Athens, Greece to Toronto,
Canada, where I now live. Now imagine being a
kid. You've lived in one culture, a Middle Eastern
culture all your life, which I had. And then
you move to the West, which is a completely different
culture. Greece was completely different from
Tehran, but it was closer to Tehran than Canada.
By the time we get to Canada, I'm like, I want
to go back. This is crazy. I want to be with
my home. I want to be around my friends. But
obviously that wasn't going to happen. Then time
goes on and mom and dad, they would tell us at
first we're going to go back, but it became clear
that wasn't going to happen. And as time goes
on, Debbie, I started to see what an unbelievable
sacrifice they made. Imagine these folks were
in their late thirties at the time and they left
behind everything and everyone they knew. and
loved for a chance at a better life. Just think
about if you had to leave everything you knew
and loved in your home right now to go to an
alien culture where you barely speak the language
and things are really different and you don't
understand any of them and you got kids that
are mad at you that you took them away from all
that. But if you hadn't taken them away, they
might be dead. That's how crazy it was. And I
started to see this. I started to see the sacrifice.
I started to understand the sacrifice. And I
started to see what a beautiful free life we
had. And I started to really understand and value
freedom. I started to read books written by all
the ancient scholars and then the American founding
fathers and folks like Rousseau and Iron Man
and whatnot. And I'm like, okay, this freedom
thing, this is great. I'm all into freedom. And
who are the people that are the real kind of
Practitioners of freedom? Well, it's businesses
and business owners and entrepreneurs. These
are the freedom people. I want to help these
people. So I got into a business of serving entrepreneurs
and especially entrepreneurs that were recent
entrepreneurs, didn't have a business background.
So a lot of creators, a lot of coaches, consultants,
those types of people. And I teamed up with a
fellow and we both had a bit of a business background
because my dad was a business. and I studied
business in school, and we started this company
called E -Circle. It stands for entrepreneur
circle. And we started to do these executive
round tables. And then we thought to ourselves,
you know what, let's narrow the niche from just
executive round tables to with coaches and consultants.
And that really took off. And for about two,
three years, it went really well. But there was
an issue in the business. He had another business
that he was doing. So he could only spend a certain
amount of time on our business. And I spent all
my time on our business. This caused resentment.
You're familiar with resentment? Behavioral thing?
Resentment on my part. And he resented me for
resenting him. It was just one of those things.
And when he was there, it was great. But when
he wasn't, I finally went to him one day and
I said, look, I'm putting a lot more time into
this. I'm bringing in almost all our paying customers.
I think I should get paid more. Yeah, I didn't
go over well at all. And so this just went back
and forth and we had this fellow help us this
business mediator. But after about a year of
working with this business mediator, one day
he just called me and he said, I don't want to
discuss this, but I'm leaving the circle and
I just want you to know, and we can talk about
this in a few days. And then he got together
with me and he says, well, I'm assuming you're
going to want to let this go. I says, well, let
me think about it. And I went and I told him,
I said, no, I don't want to let this go. I built
a company and built all these clients. It's not
fair to them. It's frankly not fair to me. I
want to keep it. But if you want to go, you can
go. And he said, that's fine. And then he got
mad at me, really mad and said, well, you need
to buy me out. I don't really want anything at
first. He said, then he wanted something and
then he wanted a lot of money. a lot more money
than it was worth. And if that was the case,
I was just going to say, you know what, I'm just
going to tell our customers that the company
name is changing and whoever wants to come with
me can come with me. And so that was not good.
And he yelled, he screamed, and I said, I think
we need to call back our business mediator about
winding this down. And he brought this guy forward.
And basically what this guy did was he left both
of us vent for a while. And then he said, neither
of you are going to get what you really fully
want. you want this amount of money, he's not
gonna give you that money and you know it. And
you had told him that you were gonna take no
money and he was gonna move forward with that,
but you thought that was selfish and whatnot,
but you offered it to him. So somewhere between
no money and this amount of money that you want
is the real number. Let's talk and figure it
out. And I made him an offer that was a little
more than half of what he'd asked for, which
I thought was extremely generous given that Honestly,
I could have just walked away and given him nothing
and took those people, but I wanted to keep the
name and the goodwill. And he agreed. And one
of the things that he'd said to me was that I
want us to leave the partnership so we can become
friends, stay friends, because our friendship
matters to me. Once I finished paying him, he
stopped talking to me entirely. And I reached
out to him a few times and he didn't talk to
me. He told me, I need time, I need time. But
the truth of the matter was he decided he was
going to end everything, the friendship, end
the business. And he'd hired my girlfriend to
work with us. So she stayed with me, which was
great. And we managed to turn it around. The
year... While I was buying them out, I helped
grow the company. But for two, three years after
the company just kind of dipped. But just over
time, I started to see that it was better that
I was in charge and I didn't have to argue with
anybody about what we were doing. And we started
to grow the company a little bit more and it
became bigger than it was when the two of us
worked it. And right now we have a wonderful
business with some incredible clients and my
girlfriend and I still run it. And we run it
in a way that works for her, works for me, and
works for our clients. And we've just done a
really good job of keeping, for the most part,
keeping negative energy, negative behaviors out
of the company. I mean, there've been a few instances
where we haven't managed to do that, but for
the most part we have. So we're making more money.
The negativity between him and I is gone. He's
gone off on his track. I'm in a place where I
get to serve really good people, get them good
results, help them grow their business. And I
work with someone I'm in a long -term committed
relationship with. So that's the negative to
the positive. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, no, it sounds
very good. So just a few questions and points
here that I was thinking of when you were talking
about this example that you gave. When you found
out that you were doing everything and he wasn't
doing anything, And then I like that. He's OK.
Well, a little right. A little right. Yeah. Less
than you were. And 70. Yeah. He wanted to bail
out. And then he wanted all this money. So what
was that? However, it went exactly. What was
that process? between the time you saw that,
did you think that the business was gonna tank
because of all these issues that were going on?
And not just to leave the money part aside, which
you pretty much said that you were comfortable,
then you were uncomfortable with giving him the
money. But what was your process, your mental
process while you were going through all this?
How did you feel? And did you get like advice
from somebody? Did you get professional advice?
Did you get like, did you have a mentor or something
like that? How did you get through this whole
thing? This is what we're trying to get to. I
had a business coach that was actually our business
coach, and he told me he didn't want us to keep
working with him. And I said, no, I want to keep
him. And I brought this to my business coach.
I was angry. I was angry he was leaving at first.
Then I was angry that he said he didn't want
any money and then wanted money. My first instincts
were to punch and push and fight. But my girlfriend
said, look, if you do that, this is going to
blow up. It'll be bad for the clients and you're
going to get hurt. So don't do that. My coach
said the same thing. My coach advised me to negotiate
a lot harder than I did. And she was there as...
support from a relationship point of view. She
was very, very great in that respect. And she
also gave me advice because he'd hired her and
they liked each other and respected each other.
And my coach helped me stay on an even keel because
my emotions were near boiling point. I was ready
to scream at him and call them names and all
that stuff. But what held me back was that I
had people advising me and telling me that that
is not gonna be helpful to you. So every time
my emotions came to a boiling point, I'd either
call her or call him. And then when we got the
mediator involved, I called the mediator. I said,
look, I wanna tear this guy's head off. I'm calling
you so that this doesn't show up in our meetings,
but that's how I feel. So instead of acting on
your behavior, your instinct, your initial thought,
You took a step back and evaluated the situation
and talked to all of these people that were mentioning.
And then what happened? Did you go back to what
your initial thing was that you were going to
do? Did you yell at him and scream, scream at
him? No, I didn't. Exactly. Well, he yelled and
screamed at me, but I didn't yell and scream
at him. I told him, stop doing that. If we get
into a yelling match, I'll overpower you. You
don't want that. And I told him that. I said,
you need to calm down. We need to talk this out.
That's why we have this mediator here. So calm
down. And he did. To his credit, he did. He didn't
like it, but he did. And I also told him that
he's the one who asked for this, not me. And
he offered to walk away with nothing. And now
he's asking for all this money. So from my point
of view, Nothing was the right thing to give
you because that's what you asked for now. You've
changed your mind and I'm like, okay to be fair
We'll do something for you, but it's not gonna
be what you're asking for That's if you want
that money tell you what you pay me that money
and I'll walk away You know the shotgun clause.
That's what I told him you pay me that money
and I'll walk away I bet you half of these clients
will walk away with me because I won't sign an
NDA with you if you do that I mean and so he
calmed down and with the help of the mediator
we came up with some numbers that we thought
were fair And it wasn't one big payout. I paid
them out over the course of a year. I paid them
once a quarter and it wasn't nothing. The money,
what I paid them today would be worth about six
figures. So I'd be giving them, if it was today,
I'd be giving them roughly 27 ,000 to 30 ,000
a quarter for four quarters. What felt good to
me is I felt that I was being honorable and I
felt that I was doing the right thing. Even though
He's the one who initiated all this. In some
respects, he'd acted like an angry, petulant
child. And I was probably paying him way more
than he deserved. But then again, he felt he
was getting a lot less than he deserved. So neither
one of us was entirely happy with the financial
end of things, which tells me that it was a good
deal. Because if one person felt they got everything
they wanted, the other person will feel completely
taken advantage of. Yeah, that makes sense. But
you got past the boiling point. And that's the
most important thing. You did. That's fine. We
all need help. You know what I mean? We don't
do anything by ourselves. I just want to convey
to you and your listener, if you're in a situation
like this and you think you're going to handle
it on your own, you're a fool because you won't.
Your emotions will get the better of you and
you're going to do some things that you're going
to later regret and it's going to cost you. When
you're in a situation that really matters, get
professional advice, get professional help, and
have the people in your life that love you stand
with you because that's important. Worst thing
you can do is try to do things like this alone.
Don't do anything alone. Inside my business,
when I look to market and talk to potential clients,
I say, hashtag don't do it alone. Don't do 2026
alone. So if you do 2026 alone, you're likely
going to get what you're getting. But if you
do 2026 with my help, we can 2X, 5X, 10X, 100X
your success. And the same is true really in
any arena, especially if you're in an arena similar
to the one that I'm describing where You're going
through a business divorce. And that's a great
message to send because this is the type of stuff
that we need in order to be successful in business.
Something happens. Of course, we need somebody.
But if I really think about it, things happen
all the time in business. They happen every single
day. Negative stuff always happens. And this
is almost like an extreme situation. But the
point is that the more help I get, And the more
I'm willing to go out of my comfort zone and
the more that things happen that are negative
that I know can be turned into a positive, that's
how I'm going to see real results. Because if
I don't do that, OK, I'm going to just wind up
sitting in. My employees are controlling me.
Everybody's walking out. People are quitting
all the time. I don't know why I'm losing sales
and profits in my company. I could go on and
on. And this all has to do with the business
owner and the executive's behavior. This is all
stuff that I teach and I explain and everything.
And this is not a promotion podcast. You know,
I'm not trying to sell myself. This is not the
point to this. What it is is it's just... offering
some different ways to help the business owner
to be a little bit more successful in their business
than what they are now. And that's basically
so this story that you're talking about. And
this example, like I said, is very, very good
because not only is this going to help a business
owner, it can help anybody right in any situation,
because I always need help if I have an issue
with anything. not only business, but we talk
about business here because it's behavioral profit,
which is fine. But this will always improve anything
that happens in my business. And that's really
the bottom line. So now I have to think, do I
want things to help my business? Do I want to
increase sales and profits, which is the ultimate
goal, or do I not? Do I want to put? constraints
on my business and be just the way that it is
now and run day to day and do the minimal work.
And that's something that the individual really
needs to evaluate for themselves. And also the
business owner or the executive needs to be a
little bit open and willing to say if my business
is literally falling apart, to say maybe something's
happening here. Maybe there are things that I
need to look at. And that just means that they
just are a little willing to have some type of
open mind to ask somebody, a professional or
somebody, what's going on and just have somebody
help them. Even if they evaluate them, it really
could be anybody. I would say a professional,
obviously, but it really could be anybody. And
sometimes that helps them to realize that maybe
there's things that I need to do to change in
order for my business to be a lot more successful
than what it is now. And these are all different
situations that business owners run into. And
there's all different things that ways that we
could change and everything right now, your story
worked out. because now you have a great business,
you have it with your girlfriend and a few other
people, and it all worked out. Why did it work
out? To me, my interpretation is it worked out
because you wound up doing the right thing. You
didn't want to do the right thing from the beginning,
right, at the beginning, but that doesn't matter
because you didn't do that. You just had a thought,
but you didn't act on it. So you wound up in
the end doing the right thing. And what goes
around comes around. So if I do the right thing
and I make an agreement with somebody and agreement
means that both sides agree. That's what it means.
If one side doesn't agree and they want something
else and you want something, you know, that's
not an agreement to me. That's not doing the
right thing. That's just fighting, fighting,
fighting. But you didn't do that. In the end,
what you thought before and what you wanted to
do is different because I'm talking about only
what you did. So I want to pay attention to,
I want to pay attention to what the person is
saying, but I don't want those thoughts to turn
into actions if they're negative. So wound up
what you did was an agreement and a positive
thing and you got positive results in your business.
because you did that. That is my interpretation
based on my experience and everything I teach
and blah, blah, blah. And this is just, maybe
it's different, you have a different thinking,
but the point is that if I always do something
good, right, a good thing is gonna happen in
return. And if I fight, then it becomes this.
And I'm battling with myself, the other person,
all the energies, and then the result of that
will never ever be good. And these are all issues
that we do every single day, but the business
owner just doesn't get it. A lot of times they
don't put two and two together and they just
go with, oh, you know, I have a lot of sales
and profit and now I'm trying to control all
my employees because I want to increase sales
and profits and now they're all quitting and
I don't know why. There's like tons of examples
I could think about for this. But you did, again,
you did the right thing and that gave you a positive
result. And that's the most important thing.
And there's tons of examples of this, but we're
focusing on this one, obviously. So the last
question is that how do you feel now, right now,
a second, based on everything we said in this
podcast and based on everything that's happened
to you and how do you feel right now? I feel
great. I feel terrific. I want to tell you a
story, and I may tell you two stories, but I'm
going to tell you this one story because it's
very fresh. A little over a dozen years ago,
I was introduced to this fellow. I live in Toronto,
Canada, and there's this fellow who also lives
in Toronto who built himself quite the following.
At the time he was early on in his career, some
mutual friends connected us. He lives not too
far from where I live and I booked a meeting
with him at a very unique coffee shop called
Balzac's after the French writer in his neighborhood,
which is a bit of an avant -garde type neighborhood
here in the city. And I drove to him because
it was near his place. I got there. He didn't
show up. I waited 20 minutes and I pulled out
my phone. No call from him, no email, no text.
And then finally I checked my email. There was
an email from him. 10 minutes before I was due
to arrive saying that he wasn't gonna be able
to make it. I drove 20 minutes to see him, waited
20 minutes, so wasted an hour of my time. I was
a little ticked off. Reached out to him, he said,
gave me some mealy -mouth excuse and said, I'm
sorry, you can rebook. I said, okay, things happen,
whatever. Rebooked, same meeting, same location,
me driving, show up, didn't show up. Checked
my phone, showed up, there was another one of
those emails, 10 minutes before I was due to
get there, Debbie saying he wasn't gonna make
it. Well, two times the trend, and it just left
a bad taste in my mouth. I said, this guy's an
a -hole, and I'm done. I'm not, I'm not, I just
said second time, really, and left. Anyways,
this guy grew, his business grew, his brand grew,
and a lot of people I knew and liked started
doing his programs. I'm like, oh my God, oh,
not this guy. Anyways. Three days ago one of
the people that I know who loves this guy that
worked with him put an email on a post on Facebook
saying that this guy there was an event that
was supposed to take place and a particular individual
without naming him decided to cancel the event
says closing his business's doors forever and
it was obvious it was this guy and My instincts
about him were proven correct and I felt bad
for my friend because you spent money on the
event on a flight blah blah blah Wasn't any of
it back Apparently this guy had, right up until
the moment he sent out the email closing doors,
been soliciting money from sponsors. A couple
people paid him 20 grand the day before he made
the announcement. That was a really crappy thing
that he did. Really, really like first class
crappy thing. But what I saw was, my instincts,
I'm a good human being, I'm a good man, and I
seek to do well by people, and I'll seek to screw
people. And when my instincts tell me something's
off with somebody, my instincts are usually wrong.
I'm glad I paid attention to my instincts and
not what all these people were telling me. Yeah,
and that's another great example. Because again,
I want to make sure that what I'm doing is correct.
And what I'm doing is I'm doing, quote unquote,
the right thing. And I'm putting out positive
energy and that's what I'm receiving back. And
that was, we don't have any more time left. So
that was a very good way to close. So before
we wrap up, I want to leave you with this. That's
what behavioral profit is all about. Understanding
what's really driving performance inside a business.
If something isn't working, it's easy to assume
it's strategy, the market, or external factors.
But more often than not, it's how the business
is operating day to day. Once that shifts, everything
else follows. If your business isn't performing
the way it should, there's a reason. And it's
not random. If you want to identify what's driving
your results and fix it, connect with me directly.
Thank you for listening, and thank you. for being
on the show. I really appreciate it. Thanks for
having me, Debbie.