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In today's episode, we help Wally grow his life and business strategy podcast. FULL TRANSCRIPT Jocelyn Sams: Hey y'all. On today's podcast, we help Wally grow his life and business strategy podcast. Shane Sams: Welcome to the Flipped Lifestyle Podcast, where life always comes before work. We're your hosts, Shane and Jocelyn Sams. Shane Sams: We're a real family that figured out how to make our entire living online, and now we help other families do the same. Are you ready to flip your life? All right, let's get started. Shane Sams: What's going on everybody? Welcome back to the Flipped Lifestyle Podcast. It is great to be back with you again. Today, super excited to talk to another member of the Flip Your Life community and help them take their life and business to the next level. I'm really excited about today's guest because I was once featured on his podcast. It is the host of the Men of Abundance Podcast, Wally Carmichael. Wally, what is going on, my friend? Wally C.: Man, just living a beautiful life, living my best life, brother. So excited to be talking with you. Shane Sams: You are the most positive person in my Facebook newsfeed. I just wanted to tell you that. You make me happy, man. You're like a ray of sunshine beaming into my social media account every morning. Wally C.: I greatly appreciate that. That's the intent. Shane Sams: But you do make me jealous, though, because you refuse to live anywhere but a place with a beach, and you're just always showing those beach pictures. So I'm a little jealous sometimes. I'm jealous, but you know, we need a little envy to drive us forward sometimes. Jocelyn Sams: Hey, I'm looking out at a beautiful bluebird right now, so. Shane Sams: What'd you say, Jocelyn? Jocelyn Sams: I'm looking out at a beautiful bluebird right now, so it's not so bad. Shane Sams: Yeah, there's a bluebird flying around in January, so we're doing good up here in Kentucky too. Wally C.: Wonderful. Yeah, you guys got that beautiful lake up there too. That's just cool. Jocelyn Sams: Well, it's great to have you here today. We're really excited to talk with you. Let's give the audience a little bit of background information. Tell us a little bit about you and what you've been doing for, well, your life, and what you're doing online. Wally C.: Yeah, absolutely. So I grew up in a trailer behind another man's house. We didn't even have the money for a trailer park. Pretty rough lifestyle. I won't get into all of that, but that led to me just realizing I can't live like this my entire life. A lot of bad things, drugs, alcohol, fighting, all kind of stuff, and my uncle came home one year from leave. He was in the army, and I dropped out of college because I run out of money for school, for college. He said, "Join the military. You'll get some education along the way and travel the world." Basically, I said a few words. I said, "That's not happening. That's not my dream." Wally C.: I had no desire to do that. Well, after working two full-time jobs and realized it ain't working. It's just time to do, so I walked into the recruiter's office, signed up as a combat medic, and traveled the world. Did 25 years, retired about, goodness, time is passing so fast. About four years ago now, maybe, and retired in Hawaii. We had been there about ten years, and my entire life, even as a young man, I've always been entrepreneurial. I've always wanted, just like everybody else, I've been that man. I say I've been ungratefully chasing a six and seven figure income for the wrong reason. Wally C.: One day, I'm sitting on the gazebo right there from where you and I were texting that one point Shane. It's Saturday morning. My son's playing in the water, and he said, "Dad, dad, come and play." But I'm sitting there listening to another podcast to learn how to make more money and live this best life that I dream of, and when his face changed from excitement to disappointment, it just hit me like a brick. My wife's voice always telling me, "Wally, what the hell are you chasing?" It was just loud and clear like she was standing right there, but she was still back in the house asleep. Wally C.: I took the headphones off, I set them down, and from that point on, I just decided. Here I was, sitting on the beach in Hawaii in front of my house. Had a six figure income, not a huge six figure income, but living pretty darn comfortable, and I'm wanting more. I was just so ungrateful for what I already had, so I started this whole journey of, so much more. I just decided I'm living a life of abundance. I don't know that I said those words specifically, but it just hit me, and as soon as I started being more grateful for what I had and it was a process, so much more started coming into my life. So then I just had an idea to write a book, Living Your Life of Abundance, but I didn't want it to be about my life. I wanted to do other people's lives in there as well. Wally C.: So I started the Men of Abundance podcast, and then I started getting introduced to people like you who are just living an amazing life and somehow paying it forward to the community. They all got kick in the gut moments, and that's what I'm seeing that you talk about on the show, but in a nutshell, almost 50 years worth. There you have it. That's basically where we're at, kind of where we're at today. Shane Sams: Well, we all hit, we call that the catalyst, your kick in the gut moment, right? What we've realized in almost every person's story that we come in contact with in the Flip Your Life community is there is a catalyst moment that kind of wakes them up. I hate to get into, I'm not saying "woke" like the kids do these days, but it just kind of makes you open your eyes and be like, "What am I doing? What am I really here for?" Shane Sams: Being in the entrepreneurial world, we're surrounded by a lot of really successful people and there's a lot of people that are trying to do really cool, great things. I don't ever want to discount what anyone else is doing, but you can get lost in that ego-driven shuffle of, "Am I important enough? Am I reaching seven figures, eight figures, whatever," right? Then you don't realize, oh my gosh, but then I haven't seen my kids and I missed that recital and I didn't go to that ballgame. What am I doing? I didn't go jump in the water with my kid when he wanted to swim with me because I was too busy trying to make the next dollar. Shane Sams: That's really what we talk about when we say Flipped Lifestyle. Even in entrepreneurship, you gotta be careful not to fall into the world standards of what's successful. You gotta go build your own success, and you gotta build a life that makes your kids and your spouse and your family happy, and you got that balance where you're not trading one rat race for another. Jocelyn Sams: I love what you talked about about truly being thankful and grateful for what you have. I've been doing some reading lately, and that's a big theme in a lot of the books I've been reading is just making sure that you are doing that so that you can continue to grow. I think that maybe I've kind of let that get lost along the way the last few months and I'm trying to be intentional about being in a place of thankfulness more often. So that's really cool that you- Shane Sams: It can all, because you can lose it quickly, you know what I mean? You can just lose that gratefulness and that thankful, like being in the military. You've seen all these places. You remind me of Jocelyn's dad a little bit. He was in the military and he's been to all these countries, and you and him are probably the two people I know that have been to the most places, maybe. You know what I mean? And it's like, but you can lose sight of that, and it almost, when your life becomes routine even when you've got some success, you can become unhappy in the middle of all your success if you're not careful. Wally C.: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I have conversations with guys all the time that are in that very situation, and we'll get into the whole business side of it, but that's how I started the business side of it. A couple of guys about eight months into my podcast started asking me, "Do you coach people in living a life of abundance?" And I was like, "No, that's not even where I planned on this going." But then a spouse contacted me and she's like, "Look, I've been listening to your show. I love the conversations you have. I love your lifestyle. I love your mindset. My husband, we make plenty of money. He makes plenty of money. He's just not here. He comes home every night, but he's just not here. He's disengaged. Will you coach him?" I'm like, oh man. He's gotta want that first, but that really got the ball rolling and my mind kind of spinning. Shane Sams: Well, let me back up for a second then. So you're entrepreneurial, but you had this career in the military. You retired, and you basically just started this podcast to have these conversations with people, and it sounds like the kind of, after you had that little catalyst moment where you saw your son's face get disappointed, it was almost more just to explore this in your own life, it sounds life. Wally C.: Exactly. Shane Sams: You started the podcast, you started talking to people, reaching out to people, and you've kind of fallen into this entrepreneurial stuff of wait a minute, this could be my second career. This could be my second income. My content has kind of moved me toward maybe having an accidental business on my hands. Wally C.: That's exactly what happened. I originally started the podcast to gather more stories for the book that I still haven't written, although I've written a book since then, but I haven't written that book. Now, as it stands at the time of this conversation, I'm 100% working from home, and I have been for a while. I've been teleworking, but now that's a done deal. So I'm focusing on that. Shane Sams: What's interesting is we were talking the other day on Facebook, because after, we've kind of developed a little online friendship since I talked on your podcast. I noticed that you have had some struggles with even turning this into a business, like charging people and is it good? Is it bad? I've seen you post some very interesting poll questions like that too, and I know that a lot of people kind of struggle with that, right? Because sometimes, you have a mission in life, and you're like, but do I charge people for my mission? Is that just going back to those old ways? What do you think about that in your journey right now? Wally C.: Yeah, that's exactly one of my biggest struggles is just that, and it's kind of evolved a little bit because of one of the coaches that I hired, quite frankly. He kind of made some sense in the whole process of, "What are you gonna charge for and should you charge?" I made the decision that quite frankly, I have to charge for much of it, but I still struggle with it. Shane Sams: Yeah, and one thing that we got over that originally was you almost owe it to people to charge people, because if they don't invest in themselves, they will not do things, right? Think about everything you get in life for free. You get a free sample or you get a little toy trinket from an arcade game or that your kids get and they throw it away in five seconds. You get the Happy Meal toy and it's lost in a week. Think about how kids interact with free things, right? Shane Sams: Almost everything like that goes away because there's no investment. People have no reminder. They have no ouch that says, man, I've got to take advantage of this so that I can do something with all this coaching or information or whatever I'm learning. I had a buddy, or Jocelyn had a friend the other day that was selling a course. What was that course about, Jocelyn? Was it about clothes or something? Jocelyn Sams: Yeah, so I bought a course from Kelly Snyder. She's actually a friend of mine, and she does a course that is called Adore Your Wardrobe. It is all about finding the type of clothing that looks the best on your body type. So I actually purchased this and it just started today, so I'm really excited about that. But yeah, I just bought that. Shane Sams: Kelly sent her a message though right after she bought it, and it was like, "Oh, I would've given that to you. Blah blah blah. You're my friend." But it's kind of like no, if she didn't pay for it, she's not gonna use the course, right? It would just be like, oh, someone gave me something for free. I'll check it out later. Jocelyn Sams: You just don't feel the urgency to actually do it. If she were to give it to me, then I'd be like, oh, well. I'll just put it off and do it later, but because I've made the investment, I'm like, okay. I need to get this done. I invested in this and I need to do the coursework. It's the same thing with us. Any time that we've ever given anyone our courses or our community, I don't know of anyone that's actually doing anything with it and actually made it work. Shane Sams: Yeah, it's never been good when we've given stuff away. It wasn't good for them, because they just didn't do it. Your story is really interesting, but I think there's something deeper underneath even that struggle, with that kind of fear. You started creating content, which is the first thing we almost tell everybody to do. Hey, look, we're gonna figure out your idea. We're gonna figure out your avatar. We're gonna figure out your product. We're gonna do those things, but why not just turn the YouTube camera on? Why not just turn the Facebook Live on? Why not start a Facebook page or a blog or something, just start throwing things out there, right? Shane Sams: You did that. You just like, ah, I'm gonna start a podcast. I'm gonna write a book. I don't know what it's gonna end up, and then these opportunities started showing up because you took action and you created things, right? Sometimes, it just takes that doing of the thing to kind of open doors for later to have a business, to have influence, to have impact on the world. Wally C.: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. Once I started doing that, initially because I was gonna have guests on, it was like maybe the first month or two was a little bit of a struggle getting guests and contacting people, then after that, I turn people away. I'm literally booked out into April, almost May. Shane Sams: Isn't that funny how that works out? Wally C.: It's crazy. Shane Sams: When I first started my first podcast, it was a football coaching podcast called The Coach XO Show, and I didn't know how I was gonna start. I didn't know who I was gonna talk to. I was just this little football coach from Kentucky. So I actually reached out to a guy I went to high school with who coached seventh grade defense. He wasn't even the head coach on the middle school team. He was the seventh grade defensive coordinator. He's like fifth in command on the middle school team, right? And I was like, but I need somebody to talk to, and he knew a lot about the 6-2 defense, and we had jammed about it at church before. So I said, "Hey, man, do you wanna be on my podcast?" Shane Sams: So that was my first guest, right? Well, literally within eight weeks, I had talked, my guests went from the seventh grade middle school coach, right? To Hal Mumme, who is one of the legends of college football, one of the greatest offensive coordinators of all time. Then I talked to this guy down in Louisiana who had just went viral because his team never punted. He had just been featured on ESPN, right? I sent him a message and he talked to me on my podcast. Then I talked to this other guy who had been an NFL veteran for 12 years, and he was a weightlifting guy, Crossfit guy. Really famous Crossfit guy. Shane Sams: So within eight weeks, I went from the middle school coach to three really, really super high profile guests that I had no business talking to, but it was just because I took action. It was because I created something, and I kept creating something, and it's just unbelievable, the doors that open when you do the thing, not when you dream the thing, right? Wally C.: Yeah, absolutely. Shane Sams: And I love watching your journey. I kind of feel like I've seen your journey from the beginning, because we kind of crossed paths early when you started doing this, and I said to Jocelyn just the other day, but I think before you'd even scheduled this. "Man, Wally's starting to evolve. Look at this. Look what he's doing. Look at his podcast. Look what's happening here." Right? Like we could see that happening, then when you came into the community and we started talking, I was really excited to do this podcast. Shane Sams: So let's talk a little bit more about the business aspect. So what is Men of Abundance evolving into? So you've had these people wanting you to coach, but that's a real, broad, general term, right? You don't just coach everything. You coach something, right? So where do you see this evolving into a business, like into a coaching business? What exactly are you gonna talk to these men about? And you are gonna, it's men, right? That you're really focused on. Wally C.: Correct, yeah. That's right, yeah. I'm primarily focused on men, and I could niche down even more on specifically veterans because I'm big in the veteran community, of course. I'm part of a couple different organizations involving veterans, but the way it evolved is as I started the process and talking with the other coaches and figuring out how to coach living a life of abundance. As I started getting into it, I was realizing that yeah, a lot of guys want more in their life in family, faith, finances, and fitness, but they don't, one, most of them aren't willing to pay for it because they don't want it that much. They're not willing to put in any real work towards it. Wally C.: So one of the coaches I was talking with, he pointed out that, he said, "Well, who are the people that you talk to that you know that would pay for such a service?" Bottom line, we booked it down to business owners, entrepreneurs, because they're forward movers. They're constantly progressing in life, and they know the benefits of personal development. So I already had some business skills because I've had many different businesses throughout the course of my life, and I knew the basics, a little bit more than the basics of business and marketing than the average guy out there, like your average plumber, chiropractor, dentist, child psychologist, AC type business. They're great at what they do in business, but they really, they're not great at marketing. They're not great at business strategies. So that's where- Shane Sams: Or balancing life, maybe. Wally C.: Exactly, exactly that. All of that, so that's what I decided to do was that's why I called it the business side, abundance and prosperity mastery, because a lot of these guys don't want to get coached in living a life of abundance and the mindset stuff, but I've developed a way that I'm able to give them the strategies and show them the strategies they need to greatly increase the revenue and profits within their business. Oh, by the way, as I'm having conversations with them, I'm changing and I'm enhancing their mindset through the words, because I'm correcting the words that they're using, and I'm giving them a few soft skills that they don't realize I'm actually putting them on. They think it's more strategies, and you and I know all the entrepreneurs we get a chance to talk to, anything that you gonna succeed in life, business, it doesn't matter what it is. It's 80% mindset and 20% strategy. Wally C.: I just give that to them, and I'm seeing that they're having results in that, so now, I've been working with a couple guys kinda just trying them out, guys that I know that are gonna do what I ask them to, we're gonna work together. They're getting benefits. They're getting, their life is improving. They're spending more time with family, more quality time, because what happens with a lot of business owners is when they find that they're not making much money, they want to put more time and money into the business, taking away from their family, faith, and their own health. Shane Sams: So what does abundance mean to you? Because that's important because these definitions matter. Jocelyn and I struggled with this for years with Flipped Lifestyle, not just defining what the Flipped Lifestyle looked like to us, but really being able to tell people what we do, right? We always try to use the words "so that" in everything, at the end of every sentence in our sales copy because it's not enough to say, "We'll help you start an online business." We'll help you start an online business so that you won't have to work for anyone else and you can be your own boss, so that you can control your time and take your kids to school in the morning. So that you can not miss the dance recital and the thing, right? Shane Sams: When you throw out big words like abundance, that can mean a lot of things, right? And you're clearly, from what you've just told me, you're not just saying, "I know everything about business," right? It's more like, you're kind of just using business as the vehicle to insert these mindset shifts. So what is abundance to you and what you're trying to tell these guys? Wally C.: That's a great question. That's actually one of the last question I ask every single one of my guests, is what does abundance mean to them and for me, it means one, having enough resources in my life to live the way that I want to live and where I want to live, but also having enough to be able to pay it forward and contribute to others, whether it's time, treasures or talents. It's not always about money. It's about resources, and resources is not just money. Don't get me wrong. I'm all about making money because it's a tool, and it's a very powerful tool, but too many people just want to, I just had a conversation recently. A guy who said, "I want to be a billionaire." Well, why? Wally C.: When you break it down, it's all because they want what you and I have. Time freedom, live where you want to live, and do the things with your family that you want to do. It doesn't take a billion dollars to do that. Jocelyn Sams: Exactly, yeah. I think that's something that we've realized even in just the last couple years is that there is a limit to how much we want to scale. It's different for all people, but for us, we don't enjoy managing people, and because of that, we don't want a team of a bunch of people. It's just one of those things. You have to make that decision, what do you want to do? I think sometimes, Shane's like, "Well, we need to make $8 billion," and I'm like, well, why? Because I don't- Shane Sams: Well, I get caught up in that trap all the time. I've got to constantly, we have calibration in our house. That's something that a lot of people don't have, but when one of us is getting too far one way, we can pull each other back. I do get into that comparison is the thief of joy kind of situation sometimes because we see something else and we think that's the road to get to what we want, but it's not really the road to what we want when we really look at it. Shane Sams: Jocelyn and I wrote down goals, if you listened to our podcast a couple of weeks ago, the good, the bad, and the future is what we called last year. We really said no to a lot of things this year. We've taken some things off of our calendar, we've not pursued some opportunities we had after a conversation very similar to that. We don't need that much money. We don't need that person. We don't need that opportunity. We're happy with our kitchen table business. I dig it. I posted a picture right before we started. I'm sitting in a chair with my feet propped up on a stool. Jocelyn's in her robe and a blanket. Are you wearing your robe or is that a sweater? Jocelyn Sams: No, I'm wearing pajama pants. Shane Sams: She's wearing pajamas. Jocelyn Sams: And a sweatshirt. Shane Sams: And we're looking out a window at this crisp, cool lake. That's our kitchen table business. We don't need a studio. We don't need a producer. We don't need, I emailed you back and forth and told you we're gonna be a minute late today, right? I don't need an assistant doing that for me. That's not the life we want. Jocelyn Sams: If people want that, that's cool. I don't judge them for it, but it's all about figuring out what you want and how you want to run your business and run your life, and as long as what you're doing is in alignment with that, then theoretically, I would call that abundance for that individual. Shane Sams: Here's where people mess this up. You can attest to this, Wally. People mess this up because they figure out what they want, but then they'll take anybody into their business as a customer, and they don't just go find their 500-1000 people that want the same thing, right? If you define abundance that way and a guy comes in and he really does want to be the guy on the high rise and he wants to work 70 hours a week and he gets meaning from the Harley Davidson in his office or the Ferrari in his garage. That's cool. That's his choice, but that's not the abundance or the coaching that you're providing, right? So you gotta be really careful who you're letting into your world too, you know what I mean? Wally C.: Yeah, absolutely. I'm very selective about things that I say yes to, and I get asked to do quite a few things here recently. For instance this morning. I ride my bike to my son's school and I ride over to the little beach area that we have over here, and then I do my little priming stuff and prayers. I do my workout. I come home. If I feel like taking a nap, I take a 15, 20 minute nap as my wife get up. Shane Sams: That's a pretty good day, man. Wally C.: We're going on a dinner cruise, or we had a dinner cruise scheduled for this evening but it got canceled- Shane Sams: And again, it costs nothing to ride your bike. Wally C.: Exactly. Shane Sams: You know what I'm saying? Have you ever heard the story of the business man and the fisherman? You ever heard that story? Wally C.: Oh yeah, absolutely. I love that story. I love that story. Shane Sams: I love that story. So there's this fisherman and he's sitting on the dock, and man, he's just pulling fish in. This entrepreneur guy comes up and goes, "Man, you're a really good fisherman. You should start a business selling fish." He goes, "Why would I do that?" And he goes, "Well, what else are you doing?" The guy goes, "Well, you know, I come out. I fish. I go back home. I take a siesta, take a nap, and I get up and eat lunch and hang out with my wife. I may come back out and fish again in the evening and then I go and light a fire and sit and eat dinner, and I go to sleep and rest and relax." Shane Sams: He goes, "Oh, no, that's a waste of time, man. You need to hire some people and teach them how you fish and get them out there on your boat, and you need to get two or three boats and you need to grow this and get a fishing cannery set up over here. You can run that and do that. You could make millions of dollars. 30 or 40 years of that, you'll be able to retire a rich man." The fisherman looks at him and he goes, "What would I do then?" And he goes, "Well, you get up in the morning. You fish a little bit. You go home, take a nap, hang out with your wife, and do it all again the next day." Shane Sams: And the guy was so blind by the ambition that he didn't see the dude already had that life. Why would he work 30 years to get that life when he already had it, right? And we do all do that, man. Everybody does that. We always want the next big thing and we don't look around and realize, I've got the big thing right in front of me. I love that story. I don't even know if I told it right. Wally C.: I do too. No, I've heard it so many different ways, but the one thing, I told that story one time and somebody pushed back on me and said, "But that doesn't add to the part. My definition of abundance is being able to give to other people, because by that definition, this guy's not giving to other people." I'm like, "Well, is he or isn't he?" Shane Sams: He's giving to his wife. He's given- Wally C.: Exactly. He's probably given to his faith, and other people see his lifestyle. Just by that definition, just by that example, he is giving a lot. Shane Sams: I find that, that's an excuse that people use a lot. Wally C.: Oh, absolutely. Shane Sams: That's an excuse, because the people that say that usually don't give anyway. You know what I mean? We had a good piece of advice given to us one time that said, "You can't help everybody. It's not physically possible and we're only here for a blink of an eye when you look at the whole time of the universe, right? But you should help people. You wish you could help everybody, and if you just did that as many times as you could over your lifetime, think how much better the world would be, because if everybody did that two or three times in their life, then we would all be paying it forward." That's really what everybody's trying to do their business. Shane Sams: We go back to the million dollar thing. I get caught up with money sometimes too. Everybody does, but the big goal that we have for everybody is get to 100 people paying you $50. That's $60,000 a year. I promise you, in most places in the United States, $60-100,000 can give you a really peaceful, calm, good life with a lot of time control, without want, staying warm, dry, and fed, being there for your kids. You don't need millions of dollars to make it, to make the life that you want possible. Shane Sams: Everybody gets caught up with that. We get caught up with it, and you just can't do that if you're gonna make it online. Jocelyn Sams: Well, let's talk a little bit about, okay, so right now, you have your podcast. You are bringing people onto coach them, and I know that you said that your schedule is pretty full, right? Wally C.: Well, actually, the schedule's primarily just for the podcast. I do interviews on Tuesdays and Thursdays and quite frankly, my podcast has been down. There's an itunes issue for the last three weeks, but just on my podcast only. There's several hundred thousand podcasts that are out there, but we got it figured out. But right now is where I'm actually taking on, I'm starting to take on one on one clients, and now I'm kind of considering the whole, I want the member's site for a specific reason. Shane Sams: So what is your question today then? Okay, you're doing the right thing getting a few one on one clients to really have those relationships and learn, but you're wanting to scale your influence with a membership site? Is that what I'm hearing? Wally C.: Right. Right. Well, what I'm finding is with men specifically is one on one coaching's great, but when we get a group of men together in a tribe, so to speak, is one of the common terms these days. But when we get common minds together and we start collaborating, then people will just feed off of each other, and we want to be the best, especially a bunch of usually alpha guys are trying to help each other out and hold each other accountable. So that's kind of where I'm at and what I'm wanting to do because there's groups out there that are doing things like this that are trying to prove, or the leader will go on rants about why this and that about masculinity and how it's under attack, all stuff. Wally C.: That's not what I'm subscribing to. What I'm subscribing to is just taking those men who feel they're doing all the right things in life and in business. They're just not pushing through the, they're just not getting ahead. They just feel that they're not ... They feel they're doing the right thing in life, they're just not taking it to the next level. Shane Sams: They're alone. They feel alone, right? Wally C.: That too. They feel alone. So many guys feel they have to do this stuff alone, and I want to create a community, an abundance and prosperity mastery tribe, if you will, in a group and have all of us feed off of each other and share these amazing strategies that I have access to that will just propel most any brick and mortar style business. Shane Sams: Yeah, I love the commercials of the guy that throws the rich guys onto the beach, like navy SEALS, and he just beats them up for like three days. He's like, "Yeah, now we're men and we're accountable." I've seen a lot of that stuff. Wally C.: I know exactly who you're talking about. Shane Sams: I'm not gonna say names. Wally C.: I'm not either. Shane Sams: But I'm just saying, I'm not scared to say things certainly. Wally C.: And on top of that, never been military. Shane Sams: Yeah, right, and it's just- Wally C.: I know what you're saying. Shane Sams: I saw one thing this guy was talking about, how he wanted to quit smoking, so the dude shoved Vaseline up his nose and kicked sand in his face and was like, 'That's what it's gonna feel like when you're 70." I'm like, someone paid 10 grand for someone to kick sand in their face. Anyway, all right, so- Wally C.: I got paid to do that, so I'm just saying. Shane Sams: Right? Wally C.: Not to be the instructor to be the different kind of abuse. Shane Sams: Yeah, whatever. You don't have to do that to get abundant, guys, if you're listening to this. Anyway, so what you're saying, it's almost what you're making it sound like is you want to create a very similar dynamic to a small group, or like guys that meet at the coffee shop. They talk about their life and they realize they're not alone and they share strategies for life. Your business sounds like it's going to be a facilitator to this accountability group, right? You're the conduit. People go through you but they get everybody else, right? Wally C.: Correct, correct. On top of that, they get access to all of the business strategies that I have. One of the questions that I have in reference to the platform is I have a platform that's an eLearning platform that has literally, just millions and millions of dollars are done for you, templates and strategies and videos and workbooks, and it's all, you go in and you answer a few questions about your business, and then you get a road map on where to start with all of this information. Wally C.: Then you follow that roadmap and then I facilitate that depending on what level of package that you get started with me. Either you do it yourself or you're gonna partially work with me or you're gonna be complete one on one. But- Shane Sams: So right now, your thought is one on one, you can see that one on one won't scale and you just need to scale it. Wally C.: Correct. Because I can only, honestly, I'm capped out. When I do cap out, I will, five one on one at $2,000 a month, and it doesn't matter if it was $5,000 a month. I don't want to do more than that because I enjoy my lifestyle. I like driving to Disney during the middle of the week and hang out with the family or something. Shane Sams: Oh, without question. Yeah, we do the same thing with one on one stuff. There's only so many- Jocelyn Sams: There are some people who are always gonna be willing to pay that premium price to get one on one attention, and that's totally fine. But then there are a lot of other people who want to DIY or maybe they want less interaction with you, but they want some interaction with you. That's exactly the way we set up our community. Shane Sams: Yeah, so let me ask you this. So your struggle is how do I build, what do I make this thing look like, is that correct? Like how do I move from the one on one to the group stuff? Is that what your biggest struggle? Wally C.: Right. Yeah, that's pretty much it. Shane Sams: Yeah. Sometimes it works backwards. You build the smaller tier first, and then you work up and find the people that are willing to pay the premium, and then you balance that against your time. But you're kind of doing it a little backwards. You've got these one on one people and it's working, but you're like, okay, but my impact has capped at five people or whatever. So you gotta move it into the thing. I would suggest probably not going all the way to a digital community yet. There's probably gonna have to be another shift in the middle there where you set some kind of lower tier at like 50 people where you are interacting with them, but it's in a more one to many setting, right? Right now, do your one on one clients have any interaction with each other? Wally C.: No. Shane Sams: Okay. Probably what I would suggest that you do is ask those guys that you're already coaching. "Hey guys, I'm gonna add something to what you're already getting. I'm not changing it. I'm not taking anything away, but I'm gonna add a one hour monthly call with all my clients. You don't have to participate, but I'm gonna go ahead and do this. I'm gonna go ahead and add this on." Maybe two of them do it, three of them do it. Maybe two of them are like, "Nah, man. I'm really cool with this one on one stuff. I don't want to talk to anybody but you, Wally." That's cool. That's fine, right? Some people value the privacy over the impact, you know what I mean? Shane Sams: So that's what I want you to do. First of all, say, "I'm gonna add this," and maybe three of them show up, right? And it's you and three other guys, literally like a Mastermind, okay? You just make it really casual, like introducing each other. "Hey, guys. We're here. What's the biggest win we had last week?" Maybe the next time you do it, it's like, "What's the biggest struggle you had last week?" We all just share it. Tell them, hey, look, you can say a business struggle or something simple. You don't gotta say, you know, you were having an argument with your spouse. It doesn't have to be personal. It's just, what's something you're struggling with, right? Make it real easy and see, and you need to get a feel for that group interaction, okay. Shane Sams: Then what you do is you start turning these into a bimonthly thing. Every two weeks, they get together. Every two weeks, they get together. What happens next is, you add a tier that's more like, "Hey guys on the podcast. Listen, I know one on one coach is not great for you guys, everybody, but I do have a little meetup that we do every week, right? This is x dollars a month. You get to come to the meetup," and maybe you expand that to 20 people. "I only have 20 spots. Here's a nice little group thing." And you start doing these meetups, like you do them in cohorts, like ten of them meet on one week, ten of them meet on the other. That'll give you about three to six months of feeling what it's like to manage a group, and also create these, a better revenue stream where it is more, not passive, but it's spread out more. You see what I'm saying? Shane Sams: Because if you go straight into the group dynamic of a huge membership community with all these digital resources, it's so different than what you're doing now, it's gonna be hard. You're gonna be managing two businesses. You need to move that way first, because then you can take all those people and say, "Hey guys. I'm gonna add another thing for you guys." You're adding to the people you've got now, not taking away or moving away from them, right? Then you can add it into more of a group dynamic, like a Facebook group or a forum or whatever, and then it's just off to the races at that point, right? Shane Sams: So you could tell this next cohort, "Hey, we meet twice a month. I'm gonna do a little training, take two or three questions." It's kind of like our group calls, like our members call that we do, but you're kind of moving opposite direction from us. You're going from one on one to doing some group calls with maybe 10-20 people to then opening more of a bigger membership type thing, right? Shane Sams: It's just, I've seen a lot of people fail going straight from one on one coaching to a membership community, and I don't want you to do that without kind of learning how to manage it. Does that make sense? Wally C.: Makes perfect sense. That's exactly why I wanted to have this conversation, because I know you guys have the experience in this area. Jocelyn Sams: Okay, so as you're thinking about starting to go into that method or that mode of business, what other questions do you have about that? Wally C.: Well, at this point, really just kind of what type of platform would I use, because the unfortunate part about the eLearning platform that I have is there's no chat capability in there, no way for members to communicate or even for me to communicate with the members. So I do have access to another members platform that I would be able to set up similar to what you have already within the Flipped Lifestyle, but is there a specific platform or anything specific that you would recommend that I use as I start transitioning into that? Or would I just use Zoom calls or something like that? Shane Sams: Yeah, keep it simple. If you'll notice, on our group calls, we use YouTube Live. We just embed it in the forum, right? And the reason we do that is because we know it's simple. When we do Flip Your Life Live, three months before the event, we have three, what we call icebreaker sessions where we bring attendees onto a Zoom call, and there's literally 50 people on the call, right? We go through each person for like two minutes each, you know what I'm saying? Over like a couple hours, and we're all just having a good time and we ask them icebreaker questions. Shane Sams: We just do it on Zoom. We don't do it on some big fancy membership platform or anything we've got to invest in. It's just, let's just use a Zoom, Zoom's the easiest. YouTube Live's the easiest. Don't make it overcomplicated because then you'll just confuse your user. Everybody knows about YouTube Live, right? Everybody knows about YouTube, so if you're like, "Hey guys. I'm doing a YouTube Live. There's a chat box. Go to this link. I'll see you there." Or Zoom, same thing. Go to a link and I'll see you there. Jocelyn Sams: Ultimately, do what makes sense to you, what you like to use and- Shane Sams: Or you know how to use. Jocelyn Sams: Yeah, exactly. Just keep it simple. I think people put too much stock in this. Oh, I don't know which is better, Zoom or Facebook Live or whatever and they sit there in this basically vortex of indecision for six months, and they don't get anything done. Shane Sams: That's a great quote. Jocelyn Sams: Yeah. Shane Sams: A vortex of indecision. Dun dun. Jocelyn Sams: It's really true, because you want to make sure you're doing the quote, "right thing." Well, there is no right thing. Just make a decision and move on it. Shane Sams: We just spent about three weeks. I looked down at our business last year, and I said to Jocelyn in the car one day. It was like, "Man, look at all the third party apps and things that we're paying monthly for that have wormed their tentacles into our business and are hanging on for dear life, right?" And it kind of reminded me of barnacles on a ship. You gotta get all the stuff that grows on the ship off of it. Shane Sams: It took me like two or three weeks, and I just went straight back to nothing but WordPress and Infusionsoft and now that I'm looking at it, I'm like, why did I allow that to happen? It was the same mentality of, oh, that's a fun tool. That makes my life easier. They said so right on their sales page, right? Wally C.: And the next guru is using it. Shane Sams: Yeah, right, exactly. The main thing is just do the easiest thing that works and gets the job done. We're talking on $60 Amazon microphones and they're plugged into a $100 mixer, and somebody told me once that that if we didn't get a Heil microphone that was $600, no one would ever be able to listen to our podcast. The audio would be garbage, and I'm like, bro. This Audio-Technica's 60 bucks. I'm going with it. Shane Sams: It was hilarious, one time we did, I can't remember who it was. Someone was like, I can't remember if it was Mixergy. I don't remember what it was. They said, "Man, your audio. You have the best audio that any I've heard in months on my podcast." And this person interviews big people, right? And we were like Audio-Technica 2100s baby. Had them since 2014, going strong. Jocelyn Sams: We did have to replace one. Shane Sams: Yeah, one of them broke, but we got another one. Wally C.: When you and I had our conversation, Shane, I was overlooking the ocean sitting in the cabin of my Toyota Tacoma with a $50 microphone plugged into my Macbook. Shane Sams: Hey, there are great acoustics inside of a car, I'm telling you. If you're having trouble, if you don't have a microphone out there and you just want to record with your laptop, just go out in the garage. I did that all the time for our first courses, because the kids would be going crazy and it was a detached garage. I would go out in the garage, get in the car and shut the door to record, because I didn't have a good microphone then. It sounded fine. Everything worked good. Jocelyn Sams: All right, let's jump into our action step. We want to know based on what we talked about here today, what is something that you are planning to take action on? Wally C.: Well, I'm gonna start getting with the, doing exactly what Shane said. I ask questions because I want the answers and I'm gonna take action on the suggestions, so it's exactly that. I'm just gonna get with these guys and find out who would like to participate in just a monthly call, see how that works out, and then start transitioning that just exactly the way Shane said to do it. Just follow the steps. Shane Sams: Do the first two with just your one on one guys even if only two of them want to do it, okay? Be like, "Hey, I'm adding something to what I'm giving you. It's included in your cost. I'm gonna start doing a meetup of my coaching clients. You don't have to come if you don't want to." My guess is they all will, right? Because they probably are craving something like that in their life with just a group of guys on a call. Then roll it out on your podcast with a nice, simple price tag. We can talk about that in the forums what the price will be, and see if maybe 10 other guys want to join this call. See if you can turn it into something. Then three months, six months down the road, we start saying, okay, how can I add 500 men to this and change their lives too? Wally C.: Yeah, I like that, and one other thing I'm gonna do is based off of the members call that you had the other day is I've sent in the request I guess to start doing YouTube Live, because I've done many YouTube videos. I just post them or they automatically post from my Facebook Live onto YouTube, but I'm just finding my clients or anybody that wants to work with me in this arena are not on Facebook. My wife quite frankly pointed that out. She said, "What are you doing? You're gonna get no response off of that." But I know they're on YouTube. I know guys are going on YouTube looking for business strategies and stuff. Shane Sams: I think 72% of people that use YouTube are men or something like that. It's some kind of weird, it's really skewed, the audience on YouTube toward men. Wally C.: Yeah, that's pretty much right. I was just with Chris Krimitsos. Being here in Florida, he runs the Podfest, and we have a members, a meetup group out here. He's been talking a lot about YouTube and having experts come on of the YouTube. So that's the other thing. Once you guys were talking about- Shane Sams: You can search easier, too. It's a lot easier- Wally C.: Yeah, absolutely. Shane Sams: To search out your information. Wally C.: Yeah, right. Jocelyn Sams: All right, well it has been awesome having you here today. I see here on this list of questions that we had sent to you that you do have a bible verse that you would like to share, so we would love for you to read that for us. Wally C.: Absolutely. So this is Jeremiah 29:11, and quite frankly I got this because my son bought me a journal and this is the verse that's right on front of the journal. "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you. Plans to give you hope and a future." Shane Sams: Love that bible verse man. Well, listen Wally, thank you so much for sharing with everything today. People don't realize when they come on our podcast, they get help, but they help so many other people just by being open and transparent and vulnerable and asking questions. We learn stuff from every single one of our guests just like hopefully they learn from us. So man, appreciate you coming on the show, and tell everybody real quick again where they find you online and your podcast. Wally C.: Right, absolutely. The podcast is at menofabundance.com, and the business side, the eLearning platform and everything else related to that is at apmasterycoach.com. Shane Sams: All right guys, that wraps up another awesome interview with one of our Flip Your Life community members. Maybe you're a coach, maybe you're creating digital products, maybe you're selling physical products online, maybe you're doing a service based business. Maybe you just need a little help getting started. We would love to help you get started inside of the Flip Your Life community. Come join us, come join Wally inside the Flip Your Life community. We have a brand new level of membership that we would love for you to take advantage of. It's only $19 a month. You get complete access to all of our community forums, and you get access to every single training course inside of the Flip Your Life blueprint. Shane Sams: All you have to do is go to flippedlifestyle.com/flipyourlife, and you can join the Flip Your Life community now for as little as $19 a month. Flippedlifestyle.com/flipyourlife. We cannot wait to see you inside. Shane Sams: All right guys, that is all the time we have for this week. Until next time, get out there, take action, do whatever it takes to flip your life. Jocelyn Sams: Bye. Links and resources mentioned on today's show: Wally's website Flip Your Life LIVE 2019 Tickets & Registration Information Flip Your Life community Enjoy the podcast; we hope it inspires you to explore what's possible for your family! Join the Flip Your Life Community NOW for as little as $19 per month! – https://flippedlifestyle.com/flipyourlife
We're talking fashion tips today, ladies! Kelly Snyder  is the founder of Adore your Wardrobe, an online course to learn how to confidently dress your unique body and style based around the principles found in math and Science.  Kelly shares the how and why she pivoted from the corporate world to what she she now calls life as a “Redefined Mom”, as she runs her successful online business.  She took her love of fashion and women and created a unique business which could be tailored to her lifestyle. Kelly, admits she had to push through her fears when putting herself out there as an expert in fashion. “I wasn’t a model and don’t have a degree in fashion, but I didn't want to look back in the end and have regrets because I didn’t try.”  Kelly explains the curriculum and philosophy behind the business, “It’s interesting how women come into the the course thinking they are going to get a few tips about clothes and changing up their closet, but in reality, it is really much more about accepting who they are and their bodies the way they are today. When you look good, you feel good.” We talk about… The Principles Behind the Golden Spiral The Rule of 4 for Accessorizing What Undertones are You? Visual Weight Proper Bra Fitting Vanity Sizing Mentioned in the Show: Dr. Dennis Gross peel pads You can find Kelly Snyder here: www.adoreyourwardrobe.com Go here to sign up for her Style Class: Subscribe & Review in iTunes Are you subscribed to the podcast? If you’re not, we want to encourage you to do that today! It will help ensure that we can keep giving women a platform to share and inspire all of us! Click here to subscribe in iTunes! If you’re feeling extra loving, we would be infinitely grateful if you left a review over on iTunes, too. Those reviews help other women find the podcast, not to mention all your kind words give us goosebumps and make us smile! Just click here to review.  First select any show and push the, “view” iTunes (on the right). At the top of the iTunes page select “Ratings and Reviews” and “Write a Review” and let us know your favorite part of the podcast is or how it’s helped you. Thank you, oodles!  Ready to get started manifesting your dreams and desires? Check out the My Roadmap Journal  https://www.ladiesroadmap.com/ladies-roadmap-journal/  Bonus: Click this link, to receive your FREE tips sheet, 7 Tips to Journaling Your Best Life! Would you like to get a reminder of our upcoming shows? It’s easy, just sign up for our weekly newsletter, HERE:   www.ladiesroadmap.com We’d love if you could please follow us and leave a comment here: Facebook Twitter Instagram Write us at: info@ladiesroadmap.com We are part of the Fashion Flash Influencer community of women over 40  who share beauty and fashion tips! Check out this weeks tips,  here! Thank you to Cam Tyler from LitLoops for our awesome theme music and editing!
The BizChix Podcast: Female Entrepreneurs | Women Small Business | Biz Chix
A question clients ask me all the time is: Should I launch an online course? How do I go about doing it? Online courses can be a great part of your business, but only if its done right. Join me on this round table discussion with two experts, Kate Ahl of Simple Pin Media and Kelly Snyder of Adore Your Wardrobe. We talk about what is working now in online courses, what you need in your business to have a successful online course, and how to replicate that success. Learn about everything that goes into creating a successful course and selling it online (including the hard work behind the scenes!), and the potential for it if you have the audience, the reach and the great content. Here are some tips when it comes to online courses: Stop playing to the "shoulds" of the online world. Focus on your micro-niches and really think about what your community is asking you for. And bite-sized is better! Join the BizChix Community Connect With Kate Ahl: Kate Ahl, Simple Pin Media Simple Pin Media Podcast Instagram Facebook Pinterest Connect with Kelly Snyder: Kelly Snyder, Adore Your Wardrobe Facebook Books or Tools or Events Mentioned: Rocket Fuel, by Marc C. Winters & Gino Wickman MailChimp ONTRAPORT Infusionsoft Asana Blue Ocean Strategy, by Renée Mauborgne and W. Chan Kim Teachable Other Links Mentioned: Dave Ramsey, Financial Peace University BizChix Episodes Mentioned: 281: [High Performing Women] Training Your Team and Stepping into Thought Leadership with Kate Ahl 222: The 6 Lies of Six Figure Launches Stacking Your Team (SYT) Episodes Mentioned: SYT 19: Leading a Large Virtual Team with Kate Ahl Work With Natalie: One Day Mastermind CEOCHIX Mastermind ProfitChix Mastermind Strategy Session Work with Shelli: One Day Mastermind EliteChix Mastermind Strategy Session This episode was first published at BizChix.com/325. Subscribe to our sister podcast, Stacking Your Team, on your podcast app or listen at http://bizchix.com/category/team/.
"I teach women how to get dressed in the morning." That's how Kelly Snyder from AdoreYourWardrobe.com introduced herself to me at FinCon. (The more "official" tagline is that Adore Your Wardrobe teaches women how to confidently dress their unique bodies through the principles found in math and science.) There's a niche for everything, right! It’s a really cool business idea that sits firmly outside of the usual internet marketing space and has helped thousands of women be less frustrated and a lot happier with their wardrobe. Kelly has used an interesting strategy of challenge marketing to grow her business to multiple 6-figures in under two years. Note: Click here to download Kelly’s top challenge marketing tips from this episode. But the 14 Day from Frustration to Functional Closet Challenge is just one piece of the puzzle, or one piece of the "customer success path," as she put it. As the challenge wraps up, she invites participants to join her flagship course, and she's added a couple more upsells beyond that as well in response to customer feedback. So how about results? Each time she runs a challenge she adds another $100k in revenue to her business! There are some interesting and unusual techniques to her challenge marketing strategies, and definitely some scope to apply these techniques to your own business if you sell courses or any other service. Tune in to hear how Kelly structures her challenges, how she gets people in the door, and how she converts free participants into paying customers.
Kelly Snyder is the founder of the website and brand, Adore Your Wardrobe. Kelly’s mission is to give women the tools to overcome the problem of having a closet full of clothes, but nothing you want to wear. She isn’t about the latest and greatest trends, but rather focuses on finding clothes that make women feel confident, regardless of age. Now of course Kelly didn’t come on the show to share her fashion trends with a 34-your man who wears gym clothes everyday! I asked Kelly to come on the show to share how she started her business from an idea about fashion, to become a high-level earner inside this online business in the first two years. On the show we discuss: • What she recommends everyone does first before they actually start • Why even the people who test her products still have to pay to play • How she creates challenges to generate buzz about her idea • Why her services are only offered a few times per year • How she has built a team to drive the overall mission vs just working for dollars • A special GIFT for the Money Peach listeners - HINT: Think big discount
  All the show notes, links, and anything Kelly and I mentioned can be found at https://moneypeach.com/session74
Kelly Snyder joins Toni and Liz to discuss wardrobes, clothes and the dos and don'ts of how we dress. Kelly Snyder is the author and founder of AdoreYourWardrobe.com. Adore Your Wardrobe helps women solve the dilemma of having a closet full of clothes, but feeling like they have nothing to wear. Through principles based on math and science, Kelly teaches how women how to dress their individual bodies the best way possible. She holds in-depth course four times a year in January, March, May and August.
I loved talking to Kelly Snyder, who shared great tips on what basic pieces you need, how to find the RIGHT basic pieces, and gave great perspective on letting go of clothes that don’t look good on us. I appreciate so much that Kelly is amazingly practical and objective about fashion, a topic that usually […] The post 122-Frustrated with Your Wardrobe? Tips from Kelly Snyder of Adore Your Wardrobe appeared first on A Slob Comes Clean.