Barbara Corcoran Feels 'More Powerful' With Her Latest Venture Than on 'Shark Tank' (Exclusive)

11/20/2019 01:59 pm EST

For self-made millionaire and Shark Tank veteran Barbara Corcoran, helping people achieve their true potential is the real power move. In honor of Women's Entrepreneurship Day, the businesswoman opened up to PopCulture.com about the new project that has her feeling even "more powerful" than she does sitting alongside her fellow Sharks, as well as helping women with an entrepreneurial spirit just like hers get off the ground with the Real Relief for Visionary
Women program.

Corcoran is known for her words of wisdom both on Shark Tank and on Twitter, so launching her 888-Barbara podcast, where she gives one-on-one advice for her callers, has been "a dream come true," she gushed to PopCulture.com.

"Life advice is really my sweet spot," she said. "I've lived a lot of life, and I've found I can really pinpoint what's bothering people on the podcast. ... People are often off on what's bothering them, like 50 degrees off. ...I can see so clearly the endgame."

Tapping into the intuition that comes from her experience as a mother, friend, wife, businesswoman and "poor student," Corcoran quipped, "I must have been around so long and lived so long that I can address everything."

"I feel more powerful [on the podcast] than I do on Shark Tank," she admitted, adding that the problem she sees most frequently at the root of her callers is a focus on what is wrong with them instead of what's right.

"Then they seem to see that reflected in the universe and think that is the universe," she explained, telling PopCulture.com that's how she finds people end up in a life path that doesn't fit their true selves. It's this kind of authenticity and passion she found in Deepti Sharma, the grand winner of the Real Relief for Visionary Women program from SYSTANE.

Sharma, who founded FoodtoEat, a catering concierge service that "identifies, qualifies and connects small, ethnic, food vendors to NYC businesses for unique meal experiences," walks away not only with $5,000 to invest in her business, but with one-on-one time from Corcoran to discuss the business' future.

Not only is FoodtoEat a "rock solid concept," in the Shark's opinion, it rings true to Sharma herself.

"That's why she's going to do well — she's building a business on her very essence," Corcoran told PopCulture. "How can you miss the mark when you're the mark?"

Below is the full list of winners, who also win $5,000 for their business:

Photo credit: Andrew Eccles/ABC via Getty Images

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