Podcasts about Daegan

  • 24PODCASTS
  • 39EPISODES
  • 37mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Oct 5, 2022LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Daegan

Latest podcast episodes about Daegan

Simon Conway
Roast and Ride proceeds will benefit the Corporal Daegan Page Foundation

Simon Conway

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 11:52


Roast and Ride proceeds will benefit the Corporal Daegan Page Foundation

Emergence Magazine Podcast
Of Wandering Angels and Lost Landmarks – Daegan Miller

Emergence Magazine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 35:18


Daegan Miller is the author of This Radical Land: A Natural History of American Dissent. In this essay, Daegan visits the tree that marks the thousandth westward mile of the Transcontinental Railroad and considers how our historical landmarks have shifted in meaning, leaving us adrift and disoriented in the Anthropocene.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

There Will Be Duds
25 - Jack Frost (1998)

There Will Be Duds

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 106:28


Odds and Ends: We're feeling the holiday spirit this week, because T.J. forced everyone to do a secret Santa gift exchange, and an item is added to the display; Daegan rewatched a childhood favorite and didn't like the experience; we dive in to the lost art of tv to tape recording, and various other VHS tales from our youths Feature Film: We talk the very logical Jack Frost from 1998, NOT the equally logical Jack Frost from 1997. In it, Robert Baratheon basically kills Michael Keaton so he can slip in on John Travolta's wife and not care about Charlie Boy. Michael Keaton foils his plans by returning as a snowman so he can teach his son how to snowboard and J-Shot Jack Cheese his way to being kind of okay at hockey, before fucking back off to hell. Next week's movie: Jack Frost (1997) You can join the conversation every Wednesday at 7pm EST on Twitch and Youtube! Available in podcast form on all your favorite podcatchers! Crew: TJ // twitch.tv/JSpotJackCheese Nick // twitch.tv/DrFunkPhD Travis // twitch.tv/TheSuperGeneral Deegs // Flooded Kids Socials: YouTube // There Will Be Duds Twitter // @ThereWillBeDuds Facebook // There Will Be Duds Instagram // ThereWillBeDuds --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/there-will-be-duds/support

There Will Be Duds
15 - Eraserhead (1977)

There Will Be Duds

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2021 144:20


Odds and Ends: Nick's X-Files journey has taken him to the first film based on the series, so, naturally, we end up talking about the Pokemon movies instead; Daegan talks about a show called StartUp, which I guess exists and isn't the Korean Netflix show that comes up whenever I try Googling it; he also watched Birds of Prey even though T.J. told him not to, but we like talking about Ewan McGregor, so it worked out. Feature film: The gang talks David Lynch's seminal (see what I did there) first feature, "Eraserhead," the wacky family comedy about a young dad who's just trying to makes ends meet. And that's it, nothing else really to say about it. Next week's movie: Catwoman (2004) You can join the conversation every Friday on Twitch at 7pm EST over at twitch.tv/ThereWillBeDuds! Also available in podcast form on all your favorite podcatchers! Crew: TJ // twitch.tv/JSpotJackCheese Nick // twitch.tv/DrFunkPhD Tommy // twitch.tv/moosefromthegame Travis // twitch.tv/TheSuperGeneral Socials: YouTube // There Will Be Duds Twitter // @ThereWillBeDuds Facebook // There Will Be Duds Instagram // ThereWillBeDuds --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/there-will-be-duds/support

DonnyFerguson.com
Ernst honors Marine Cpl. Daegan William-Tyeler Page, killed in Kabul attacks

DonnyFerguson.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2021 4:52


This episode is also available as a blog post: http://donnyferguson.com/2021/09/16/ernst-honors-marine-cpl-daegan-william-tyeler-page-killed-in-kabul-attacks/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/donny-ferguson/message

DonnyFerguson.com
Sasse honors Corporal Daegan William-Tyeler Page on Senate floor

DonnyFerguson.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2021 3:19


This episode is also available as a blog post: http://donnyferguson.com/2021/09/16/sasse-honors-corporal-daegan-william-tyeler-page-on-senate-floor/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/donny-ferguson/message

The Breakdown at CCOP
The New Son and the Returning Daughter - David and Megan

The Breakdown at CCOP

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2021 72:19


On this episode of The Breakdown David and his fiancé Megan (the pair also known as Daegan) share their stories of coming to Christ. David shares how the Lord saved him after a battle with alcoholism and how God worked through his life to bring Megan, a prodigal, back into the fold. 

Bless The Refreshments
BTR 020: God's Grace

Bless The Refreshments

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 70:05


This episode is inspired by our friend Daegan. He wrote to us about how God's grace has been something on his mind and how it applies to our gospel journey. We talk about how different denominations understand grace and specifically how it is talked about in LDS culture. We conclude that God's grace is more encompassing and more free than we sometimes think, even though we concede that there is effort required on our part to partake of all the blessings God's grace affords us. We each struggle with our standing before God.

RobSquad Parents
My Most Dramatic Birth Story: DAEGAN!

RobSquad Parents

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 27:35


We are wrapping up all the Birth Stories with our most dramatic labor & delivery. The one that Gentry walked out of ready to make a vasectomy appt, and the one I was sure was my Grand Hurrah! But we all know Kid #5 wasn't the last even after all the drama! Also: A little chat about Mother's Day and our "Meat Wagon." Questions? Comments? Have an idea or request for our next Episode? *We LOVE to hear from our Listeners! Find us on Instagram so we can chat! or email us at robsquadparents@gmail.com @robsquadparents, @robsquadmom, @robsquaddad -For More Parenting Hacks & Laughs: www.KelseyandCo.org Music: For Love - Musician: Jeff Kaale --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/robsquadparents/support

RobSquad Parents
Easter + a 3 yr old that won't stop crashing our Podcast

RobSquad Parents

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2021 11:59


Most days we've got the Podcasting thing down, but this past weekend, Daegan (our 3 yr old) wanted in on the action. Enjoy his cute little voice telling you what he wants to be when he grows up! We're also recapping Easter and updating you on my Gold tooth LOL Questions? Comments? Have an idea or request for our next Episode? *We LOVE to hear from our Listeners! Find us on Instagram so we can chat! or email us at robsquadparents@gmail.com @robsquadparents, @kelseyandco9, @robsquaddad -For More Parenting Hacks & Laughs: www.KelseyandCo.org Music: For Love - Musician: Jeff Kaale --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/robsquadparents/support

Lip Gossip
Renee and Daegan // All things Ritology, women in biz & sustainability

Lip Gossip

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 67:47


Today I am joined by the lovely and inspiring Renee and Daegs, owners of Ritology. Ritology provides premium personal care conveniently delivered on your schedule. I discuss with these ladies what it's like to work as business partners, advice on starting your own brand and women in business. These women are the ultimate entrepreneurs and have so much advice to share. Get your notepads ready for today’s episode! You can find Renee here @reneemayy (instagram.com/reneemay) and Daegen here @daegen_coyne (instagram.com/daegen_coyne) or their sustainable rituals, Ritology here @ritologydaily (instagram.com/ritologydaily). You can find me here @sammyleo  (http://www.instagram.com/sammyleo) You can follow the Lip Gossip Podcast on Instagram here (http://www.instagram.com/lipgossippodcast). You can follow the Breeze Balm on Instagram here (instagram.com/breeze.balm). Check out the Lip Gossip Beauty Box where you save over $120 and Breeze Balm the lip balm that works, here (http://www.breezebalm.com). AD/ Want a lip balm that actually works? Use ‘GOSSIP’ at checkout for 10% off your first order at www.breezebalm.com (http://www.breezebalm.com)

Nostalgia Trap
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 213: Every Story is a Travel Story w/ Daegan Miller

Nostalgia Trap

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020 81:47


Daegan Miller’s first appearance on Nostalgia Trap, in which he discussed both his painful exit from academia and his stunning book This Radical Land: A Natural History of American Dissent, remains one of our most popular episodes. From the outskirts of a tiny town in rural Massachusetts, Miller returns to update us on his life outside the tortured confines of the university. In this conversation, in addition to the prerequisite nostalgia trip through late 20th century Ani DiFranco-style MTV radicalism, we talk about the everyday reality of being a “writer in the woods,” the hyper-nationalist (read: eco-fascist) environmentalism of the Trump era, mixed emotions about the fading relevance of boomer culture, and the weird feeling of watching “the kids” make memes about Karl Marx.   

The Kylie Camps Podcast
Making A Bold Choice For The Whole Family With Deagan Coyne

The Kylie Camps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 62:25


Episode 99 is a conversation about making a bold choice for a young family with Daegan Coyne. Daegan is a lawyer, mum of two, co-owner of Ritology, fitness enthusiast and wife amongst other things! Last year Daegan and her husband were presented with a big opportunity. It involved saying goodbye to their idyllic neighbourhood to move overseas...and then COVID hit! To keep up with Daegan you can find her here; @daegan_coyne Check out her amazing business here Ritology.co and use the code PLASTICFREE at the checkout for 25% Off the range for JULY 2020

RNZ: Standing Room Only
Artist Daegan Wells reminds us of our debt to Wool

RNZ: Standing Room Only

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2020 11:25


Southland artist Daegan Wells aims to remind people about the place of wool in New Zealand's history - social, economic and political. He has a mentor teaching him spinning and weaving skills, which he's put to good use in his upcoming exhibition Bush Coat. There are photographs, rugs and garments in the show that he worked on while Artist In Residence at the Rita Angus Cottage in Wellington earlier this year. Lynn Freeman called Daegan at his Southland home.

The Marketing Secrets Show
The Invisible Funnel... IT'S BACK!

The Marketing Secrets Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 9:48


Let me show you behind the scenes of the new funnel we’re using to sell two comma club live. On this episode Russell talks about using the invisible funnel, which had basically disappeared over the last several years. Here are some of the cool insights to listen for in this episode: Find out what an invisible funnel is and why it’s no longer in the Dotcom Secrets book. Hear the story about how Daegan Smith invented the invisible funnel after an accidental dine and dash. And see how Russell is bringing the funnel back to life after years of not using it. So listen here to find out all you need to know about an invisible funnel and how you can use one in your own business. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to the Marketing Secrets podcast. Today I’m going to be talking about a funnel called the Invisible Funnel. And guess what, it’s back. Alright so if you read the original Dotcom Secrets one of the funnels I talked about was a funnel called the Invisible Funnel. And it’s interesting because I’ve used the invisible funnel for a long time, and then we wrote the book, I put it as a section inside the Dotcom Secrets book, and then the book launched, Clickfunnels launched and everything’s been crazy the last 5 or 6 years and I have not done an invisible funnel since then. And because I hadn’t done one since then, nobody else did one. I haven’t seen an invisible funnel for 5 years. And even though it’s an amazing strategy, I talk about it in the book, I show the strategies. So when I was doing the new version of the Dotcom Secrets book I was like, “It’s a really cool thing, but people don’t use it, so it must not be that valuable, so I’m just going to write it out of history.” So the new version of the Dotcom Secrets book did not talk about the invisible funnel. Anyway, so fast forward and actually, not fast forward, let me rewind. So let me tell you first where the invisible funnel came from, I’ll tell you what it is and how we’re using it right now. So the invisible funnel came from my buddy Daegan Smith. So what happened was, Daegan and I were actually at a Traffic and Conversion event and we were hanging out at lunch time, we were eating a bunch of food, had a good time, and then we got done, we both got up and went inside the event room and we sat down and we started talking. And then he leaned over to me, I can’t remember, I leaned in and said, “Hey man, thanks for paying.” I’m like, “I didn’t  pay.” He’s like, “I didn’t pay either.” We’re like, “Oh crap.” So we both jump up and we run out and we’re like, “Ah, we didn’t pay. We’re so sorry, we didn’t mean to ditch you. Here’s the money. Here’s the money for the food.” And we went back in the room and sat through the rest of the event, and for me, I didn’t think much about it. But Daegan is a genius and the wheels in his head start spinning, start spinning. And he’s like, “Man, did you see what happened, the law of reciprocity? We got this meal, it was amazing, so much so that even though we technically wouldn’t have had to pay, because we got away with it, not knowing. The reciprocity was so strong I needed right then to go back and make sure the person was paid.” So the wheels started spinning in his head and he’s like, “What if we did a webinar that way where, well not a webinar but like a class or course or whatever, where instead of charging someone up front you say, ‘hey, come to the webinar, experience it, and then after it’s over, if you like it, pay me. But if not, then don’t worry about it.” And that was kind of the initial brainchild of the invisible funnel. It was a funnel that was basically backwards like that. So he kind of pioneered that, did the first version where he basically had a funnel and it was like, zero dollars, but you had to put a credit card in to just reserve your spot, come and attend the whole thing and if you love it, don’t do anything and after the webinar is over, I’ll bill you $100. But at the end if you’re like, ‘uh, it’s not for me.’ Let me know and I’ll give you your money back. Or you know, I won’t bill your credit card. So it didn’t cost you anything. So he did the first version of that invisible funnel, and he did it, and it killed it for him. So I remember I saw it and I watched what people do and I was like, ‘That’s genius.” So the next day I was like, “Daegan, I’m going to do one of those.” And he’s like, ‘It’s called the invisible funnel.” I’m like, “Oh, that name is so good.” So I was like, alright, I’m doing the invisible funnel. So we went and created on and it was that same kind of thing. And what’s crazy for me, if you look at a typical webinar, let’s say I get 1000 people to register, I might get 300 to show up, right, 30% show up rate. If I did a paid webinar, like a paid product, if someone pays $30 or $50 for a course, I may have sold, maybe I’d sell 100 of them. This is back then. So that was kind of my thing. If I do a free webinar, I’ll get 30% show up rate, if I do a paid, I think it was $47, a paid $47 webinar, maybe I’ll sell 100 to my list. That’s probably like, if I push hard I might get 100 sells. So I did it, but I did this little flip. It was a webinar, ended up being, it was supposed to be a 4 hour training, 4 hour deep dive on this one topic. And it was free up front, you gotta put a credit card in to reserve your spot. Then you experience the whole thing, then at the end of it, if you decide, at the end of it, I’ll give you an email address, if you don’t love it you can let me know, you can email me and we’ll give you your money back free. But if you do love it, do nothing, and then 2 days later or whatever, we’ll bill you the $50. So we launched it, and I don’t remember the exact numbers, but I feel like when I did that, I sold like, 300 people signed up. I was like, “Wait, what? That’s crazy.” So 300 people, so 3x more than I would have sold if I just sold it as a product. Based on kind of my estimates of what I thought I was going to do. Then I did the webinar and what’s crazy, like 85 or 90% show up rate. People showed up because they were paying for it, they wanted to make sure. I had some people that told me, “I signed up just to prove you wrong. I sat through 4 hours and by the end I was like, man, Russell. You earned my money, definitely bill me.” When all was said and done I think we had 10% of people who canceled and asked for their money back. So there was a little bit there, but even with 10% canceling, it means 90% of the people we actually billed, which is still way more than the 100 people that I would have had, had I sold it up front. So that was the thing, and me and Daegan tested a whole bunch of variations and variables on that and different things. One of the things we tested is basically, you sign up for zero dollars, and you pay afterwards, or if you want to prepay, you get a discount. We tested that and it was like 50% of people put the prepay to save money. I was like, that’s crazy getting money up front too. Anyway, we did all these different tests and eventually, Daegan and I actually did a 2 or 3 daylong event in DC, with a group of about 100 really amazing marketers, and we taught this concept. And it was really, really cool. And fast forward a year later, I include it in the Dotcom Secrets book, and then it disappeared off the face of the earth. So anyway, we were planning to do this new Two Comma Club Live event, some of you guys have seen it. If you go to twocommaclublive.com, as of right now we’re in the middle of it. And when we were kind of preparing this, just a thought in my head came and I was like, “What if we, what if we went invisible funnel on this?” Most of the people on my team were like, “What does that mean?” I’m like, but a couple of people knew from back in the day. They’re like, “We haven’t done that in forever.” I’m like, ‘I know, we should totally invisible funnel this thing.” So that was the concept, so that’s what we’ve been doing. So for the last two weeks now we’ve been promoting it. So basically you come to Twocommaclublive.com, you put your credit card in, we don’t bill you anything and then we’re doing a 3 day live event. I’m going live for 3 days, intense, it’s going to be really, really fun. And then after the event’s over, if you love it, you pay $197, and that’s kind of how it works. And then there was a pre-pay where you can save $50 and get it for a$147, if you pre-paid, plus you got replays for like 5 days at the end, or something like that, whereas you don’t get replays if you do the other way. So that’s kind of what we did, and that’s how we structured it. And right now it has been killing it. We are over 2000 sales so far, it’s like 60% of the people are taking the pre-pay, which is amazing because now we can spend tons of money to buy ads and bring people in. And we still have another week, about a week left before the event actually starts. So my goal is probably 3 to 4 thousand people registered, which is amazing. And we’ll do the presentation and it’s going to be really, really fun. So that’s what’s happening and I just wanted to let you guys know the invisible funnel is back, and if you haven’t done one that’s the structure, that’s the concept, that’s how it works. If you want to see me talk about it in the original Dotcom Secrets books, you gotta find one of the old ones, which I don’t even know where you get those anymore. Maybe Amazon? Or borrow your buddy’s book if he’s got one of the originals. But that’s kind of the concept of what the invisible funnel is and how it works. It’s pretty powerful. So I’m excited to see the stats afterwards, you know, to see if it’s like back in the day, only 10% of the people cancel. Maybe it’s less now? But I’m doing a 3 day event as opposed to a 3 or 4 hour webinar. But it’s pretty cool. Anyway, I just wanted to kind of give you guys that as an idea, another selling tool, another type of funnel you could test. A way to get paid up front to create something, a way to get a massive goodwill to your audience and reciprocity when you have a chance to serve them, and they get to tell you at the end if it was good. Can you imagine going to a movie and be like, “I’m going to go watch the movie and after it’s done I’ll let you know if it’s good. If I like it, I’ll pay you.” You know, or go to a restaurant and be like, ‘I’m going to eat all the food. If it’s good then I’ll pay you. If not, I’m not going to worry about it.” That’s literally what you’re doing to your customers, you’re giving them this opportunity to come and like have a meal on me. If you love it, pay me. If not, don’t worry about it. I don’t really care. Imagine the reciprocity that builds with you and your audience. And for some people, they’re going to take advantage of it, for sure. But the majority of people are good humans and they’re going to love it, and it’s going to give you the ability to serve them when they may have said no ahead of time. They may have, for my people they might not have spent $200 on a ticket to a virtual conference, but now because we did this the other direction,  they’re saying, “I’m going to test it out, just try it, see if Russell’s as cool as he thinks.” And because the barrier is lower, they come in. And then they can experience it. Anyway, that’s what we’re doing and if you want to see one in action go to twocommaclublive.com, it’ll be up for the next couple of days before the event starts, and you can see what it looks like there. So that’s what I wanted to share with you guys. The invisible funnel is back, I hope you use it, I hope you enjoy it. And with that said, I’ll talk to you guys all again later. Bye everybody.

Spa it Girl Talk Show by Yvette Le Blowitz
ep.56 - Sustainable Self Care Rituals with Renee Mets co-founder of RITOLOGY

Spa it Girl Talk Show by Yvette Le Blowitz

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020 40:29


Welcome to episode 56 of the #SPAITGIRL Talk Show with Yvette Le Blowitz and our very special guest: Renee Mets co-founder of RITOLOGY www.ritology.co RITOLOGY was Imagined in 2017 - Founded in 2018 and Launched in 2019. Co-founders Daegan & Renee of RITOLOGY started out as work colleagues which than blossomed into a flourishing friendship as they both loved minimalism, the outdoors, wellness, travel with a touch of wine and coffee. Daegan is Canadian and Renee is Australian after  researching and investigating personal care products they realised the product they wanted wasn't really out so that is when the real co-founder start up #girlboss journey began.  Their first RITOLOGY product is a plastic free razor that facilitates a closer shave with less irritation and ingrown hairs than it alternative. The purpose behind their first launch is to eliminate the 2 billion disposable razors that go to landfill ever year.   They believe that our actions do matter and that we can all make a difference when it comes to our self care rituals.  RITOLOGY is a committed to offering zero plastic effective personal care solutions that fit seamlessly into our daily routines and travel itineraries. Their product is a minimalist design, with quality materials and proudly sustainable. Their purpose was and is to simply your personal care rituals with quality products designed for minimalist sustainable living. RITOLOGY priority is your time, your health, your body along with the environment. RITOLOGY is premium sustainable personal care. When you use RITOLOGY you can feel good and do good at the same time with no compromises to quality, design + our planet. In episode 55 - I catch up with Renee Mets co-founder of RITOLOGY to find out  - more about herself and co-founding start up brand journey - how the whole RITOLOGY product brand idea started and more about the product development phase also - what her own self care #girlboss rituals are  - tips on how to avoid start-up #girlboss burn out - favourite place she has travelled to - give you a little hint it starts with a capital M - why she is so passionate about making a difference  - why she is so passionate about taking care of the environment  Plus like always we talk about so much more all things real life - from business, building a brand, travel, wellness, self care, Covid19 - you name it. Stay in touch with our very special guest Renee Mets co-founder of RITOLOGY on instagram @ritologydaily Find our more about RITOLOGY and shop at www.ritology.co If you get a Smooth Operator and decided to go plastic free when it comes to your shaving take a photo of your RITOLOGY premium personal self care ritual plastic free razor and Tag @ritologydaily and @spaitgirl as I would love to know.  After you Tune into this week's #spaitgirl podcast show I would love for you to  - subscribe to the #spaitgirl talk show with Yvette Le Blowitz on whatever podcast app you are listening to this epiosde through  - leave a rating and review - as I would personally love to know if you found this episode of interest did you know that 2 billion razors go into landfill each year? - tell a friend, family member, work colleague or complete utter stranger about the #spaitgirl talk show with Yvette Le Blowitz and how they need to add it to their Podcast show list. Stay connected with #SPAITGIRL  blog - www.spaitgirl.com  Youtube Channel Spa it Girl Instagram @spaitgirl  Book: It Starts With Me by Yvette Le Blowitz  shares my Go-To Self Care Rituals  plus how you can create your own self care rituals and create the life you want plus it includes - 21 Day Wellness Guide too Search for Spa it Girl - #spaitgirl on any social media app to stay connect.     

TV Writer Podcast - Audio
011 – TV/Feature Writer Daegan Fryklind (mp3)

TV Writer Podcast - Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 70:01


This episode serves as the end of our Women TV Writers series and the beginning of our Canadian TV Market series, which will run through the month of March.Today we meet Daegan Fryklind: a well-established Canadian writer who lives in Vancouver, but often comes to Toronto for writing jobs. In addition to working on well-known series Being Erica, The Listener, and Cold Squad, she has won a Leo Award for Best Dramatic Series Screenwriting (JPod), has been nominated for a Canadian Screenwriter Award (Robson Arms), and co-wrote the animated feature Edison & Leo, which won “Best Animated Feature” at the Bangkok International Animation Film Festival.In our longest interview yet, she touches on many aspects of the Canadian writing market, from why animated shows are an excellent way to develop dialogue writing skills, to how Canadian TV writing fellowships differ from US fellowships, to rewriting scripts to meet Canadian funding guidelines, to the changing landscape for writers in Vancouver vs Toronto.Because the Canadian writing market is in many ways tougher than the US market, writers like Daegan can offer great tips to US writers who are trying to break in… plus, find out what part of the Canadian industry might actually entice US writers to move north!Follow Daegan Fryklind on Twitter: @daeganfBuy Gray’s book for only $4.99! Look for it on Amazon – How To Break In To TV Writing: Insider Interviews.Didn’t get your questions asked? Make sure you follow Gray on Twitter (@GrayJones) so you can get the scoop on who is being interviewed and how to get your questions in. Also check out our TV Writer Twitter Database to find Twitter addresses for over 1,000 TV writers. Find our previous episodes and other resources at www.tvwriterpodcast.com or on Gray’s YouTube channel.First published February 25, 2011.

tv canadian toronto vancouver canadian tv best animated feature feature writer being erica leo award daegan
TV Writer Podcast
011 – TV/Feature Writer Daegan Fryklind (VIDEO)

TV Writer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 70:01


This episode serves as the end of our Women TV Writers series and the beginning of our Canadian TV Market series, which will run through the month of March. Today we meet Daegan Fryklind: a well-established Canadian writer who lives in Vancouver, but often comes to Toronto for writing jobs. In addition to working on well-known series Being Erica, The Listener, and Cold Squad, she has won a Leo Award for Best Dramatic Series Screenwriting (JPod), has been nominated for a Canadian Screenwriter Award (Robson Arms), and co-wrote the animated feature Edison & Leo, which won “Best Animated Feature” at the Bangkok International Animation Film Festival. In our longest interview yet, she touches on many aspects of the Canadian writing market, from why animated shows are an excellent way to develop dialogue writing skills, to how Canadian TV writing fellowships differ from US fellowships, to rewriting scripts to meet Canadian funding guidelines, to the changing landscape for writers in Vancouver vs Toronto. Because the Canadian writing market is in many ways tougher than the US market, writers like Daegan can offer great tips to US writers who are trying to break in… plus, find out what part of the Canadian industry might actually entice US writers to move north! Follow Daegan Fryklind on Twitter: @daeganf Buy Gray's book for only $4.99! Look for it on Amazon – How To Break In To TV Writing: Insider Interviews. Didn't get your questions asked? Make sure you follow Gray on Twitter (@GrayJones) so you can get the scoop on who is being interviewed and how to get your questions in. Also check out our TV Writer Twitter Database to find Twitter addresses for over 1,000 TV writers. Find our previous episodes and other resources at www.tvwriterpodcast.com or on Gray's YouTube channel. First published February 25, 2011.

tv canadian toronto vancouver canadian tv best animated feature feature writer being erica leo award daegan
Life Talks
Daegan Journey on Running Planet Jam Records, Cook Out, and Visions for the Future

Life Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2019 27:21


Daegan Journey comes in for the very first Life Talk! In this episode, Stevie and Daegan go over the 2019 Charlotte music and arts scene, share stories of working together in the studio, and much more! Follow Daegan at @DaeganJourney & @PlanetJamRecords Subscribe to the podcast if you enjoyed and thanks for listening :) @StevieDoesLife

Nostalgia Trap
Nostalgia Trap - Episode 123: When the Bough Breaks w/ Daegan Miller

Nostalgia Trap

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2018 74:11


Daegan Miller is a writer whose recent book, This Radical Land: A Natural History of American Dissent, presents an intellectual history of how different Americans have resisted capitalism’s ravaging of the natural environment. From black antislavery radicals in the Adirondack wilderness of upstate New York to utopian anarchists in California’s sequoias, Miller’s narrative reveals a throughline of alternate visions running underneath the nation’s history. In this conversation, Miller tells how his personal connection to the land influenced his work as an environmental historian, explains how the disappointments of the academic labor market are connected to the wider alienation of 21st century American life, and offers his own eco-socialist vision of a kinder, gentler future.

Words With Oz
Daegan Coyne : WWO Podcast - Episode 38

Words With Oz

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2018 73:49


MAKING IT WORK. This week The Essay Question Podcast welcomes to the show Daegan Coyne. Daegan is one of those rare humans who has the discipline and ability to reach the highest of levels in all she does. Business Owner, Mum, Lawyer, Competitive Bikini Model, and the list goes on... Daegan was living it up in the corporate law world until one-day, with the full encouragement and support of her husband, looked around and didn't like what she was becoming - so quit. I asked Daegan on the show to discuss her approach and work ethic when she applies herself to a pursuit. Daegan's specific question was: Determination, focus or balance. Over the years you’ve proven your drive to be at the top of the game no matter the interest you pursue, what is it about your persona that enables you to perform? We discussed her healthy competitiveness, just how hard it was to quit the safe, secure job to become a self employed person, and her opinions on risk & work ethic.   Enjoy the Show.   IG: daegan_coyne   Show Notes 00.00 : 02.19 – Introduction and Adverts 02.20 : 03.29 - WWO Intro 03.30 : 06.44 - Welcome, Banter & Bubs 06.45 : 09.42 - Life in Fitness 09.43 : 13.19 - IFBB 13.20 : 15.04 - Healthy Competitiveness 15.05 : 24.29 - The Discipline Staple 24.30 : 27.19 - Know Your Own Body 27.20 : 30.14 - Moving Downunder 30.15 : 40.09 - Passion. Purpose. 40.10 : 47.05 - Love the Hard Work. 47.06 : 48.34 - Take a risk & Support Risk Takers 48.35 : 53.44 - In this time. In this Place. 53.45 : 58.14 - Filling Daegan's Cup 58.15 : 1.00.39 - Current Challenges 1.00.40 : 1.02.09 - Unusual DC. 1.02.10 : 1.04.26 - Inspiring Daegan 1.04.27 : 1.06.09 - School Morning Mantra 1.06.10 : 1.09.39 - Oz' Takeaways 1.09.40 : 1.12.29 - Daegan Coyne's most ambitious 1.12.30 : 1.13.48 - Thank You & Wrap Up   www: wordswithoz.com IG: @WordsWithOz

Edge Effects
Thoreau, Now More than Ever: A Conversation with Laura Dassow Walls and Daegan Miller

Edge Effects

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2018 54:22


Are there better ethics than hope? Two scholars with new books about the author of Walden reflect on Henry David Thoreau's environmental ethic, flirtations with despair, and anarchist politics. The post Thoreau, Now More than Ever: A Conversation with Laura Dassow Walls and Daegan Miller appeared first on Edge Effects.

Marketing Secrets (2017)
Behind The Scenes Of Funnel Hacking Live 2017 (Part 1)

Marketing Secrets (2017)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2017 18:53


What happened at this year’s event. On this special 2 part episode Russell recaps and summarizes what happened at Funnel Hacking Live. He also reflects on how he felt about different aspects and speakers at the event. Here are some of the cool things you will hear in this 2 part episode: An overview of the schedule during the 3 day event, who spoke, and what they spoke about. How Russell felt about certain speakers and what he thinks went right with his own presentations, and what mistakes he feels he made. What the best part of the event was for Russell (hint – It involves his lovely wife).  And what Russell plans on doing differently at next year’s Funnel Hacking Live. So listen below for the first half of Russell’s thoughts and feelings about Funnel Hacking Live 2017, and don’t forget to tune in tomorrow for the conclusion. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson. I want to welcome you to Marketing In Your Car. But today’s actually a special episode because first off, I’m not in my car, I’m in the conference room and second off, I got this brand new little microphone that plugs into the bottom of my phone. People have been asking me ever since I started this podcast, “What microphone do you use on your phone?” I always just tell them that Iuse the microphone on my phone, which is true until today. There’s this really cool thing, I don’t know what brand or style, I have no idea but I’m testing it out. So if it seems to be good, I’ll let you guys know. It’s so cool, it plugs into the bottom of your iPhone and it’s got this big huge thing on it. I’m excited, I’m trying it out. Hopefully this episode goes well enough and I’ll let you guys know more about this thing, because it’s pretty awesome. So what I wanted to do, I wanted to give a recap of Funnel Hacking Live. I know 1500 of you guys were already there and experienced it and went crazy with us, and for everyone else who wasn’t, I wanted to catch you up on what’s happening and why it was amazing and why you should be at next year’s event. If you missed this one for some insane reason, because there’s no logical reason to have missed it, only insane ones. So if you had an insane reason, I want to give you guys some cool behind the scenes of what was happening. So this year’s event, this is the third year we’ve done it. The first year was in Vegas, we had about 600 people come. The second year, last year was in San Diego and we had 1300 people come and it’s funny because you have to sign a contract for next year’s event before the event, because you have to, because if you’re going to sell tickets for the event you have to know,  here’s the venue and dates, blah, blah, blah. So last year we’re like, let’s make it a little bit bigger, let’s do 1500 people. And then we ended up selling out three months early. We probably should have done bigger. So next year’s event we’ve got a little bit bigger place. Hoping that we’re able to fill it. Just so you guys are fully aware, nothing on Earth stresses me out more than events. Filling events is the hardest sell. You’re not just selling, “Hey, you should come to an event.” Because that’s an easy sell. The hard sells are all the other sells someone has to make in their mind. “I gotta ask for work off, I gotta talk to my spouse, I gotta fly, pay for flights, pay for hotels.” All these other things, so it’s not just a simple sell, I want to….usually when you sell something you create desire and people want it and you sell it. This is harder, even if I create desire for it, you still have to go and close yourself on all the other logistics that are a pain. Event’s are scary. In fact, the last time I did an event before Funnel Hacking Live, which I swore I would never do another event after. I think we sold 3 or 400 tickets, and when we got there only…and it was $100 tickets, so I assumed that $100 commitment was enough to get people to show up. I was wrong. We ended up only having 100 that showed up. It was so embarrassing for me. I remember having all these empty seats. I was like, “I will never do another event again.” Then fast forward a couple of years, about the time this podcast was starting, I probably talked about it. There was this new company we were working on called Rippln, and they did their initial kickoff and there was 1200 people, and we ended up getting 1.5 million people to sign up over the 60 days or so. And then there was an event on the backside of it. So I thought there was going to be 30,000 people at this event, I was all excited for it. But at the time, the company hadn’t launched the actual thing that we’d built the hype for. There was a huge loss of momentum, at the event we had 1000 tickets sold. I showed up and we were getting ready to open the doors and went in the hallway and there was only about 200 people out there. We were like, “oh crap.” The guy, Brian, who ran the company was like, “Oh crap. Let’s pull chairs out.” So we sat there, right before the event and pulled 800 chairs out of the room and then we had this huge empty room and then 200 seats in the front and brought people in and did this event over three days. And it was, for me, I was emotionally scarred. I was like, “I don’t know what’s happening, but this is not a good sign.” And sure enough the company crashed afterwards. A lot of wasted energy, time and money on my side that never materialized, but learned a lot of good lessons. That’s the point, right? So because of those experiences, I had this fear of events. I never wanted to do one. So when the first Funnel Hacking Live, after we launched Clickfunnels, people were saying, people started doing meet ups. I was like, “We should facilitate this.” So we decided to do the first one. We were going to sell 600 seats, and I was so scared, panicking about what if we only sell 100 and we have this room for 600? S o finally we did it. We launched it, and we sold out, I think we sold out 2 weeks early, so it wasn’t huge, but we did. We did the event and I remember even the day of the show I had so much fear and anxiety. What if people don’t show up? And I remember even before the event started hiding in the back and peaking through and I was like, “Oh good, the seats are full. Thank heavens.” And then I was able to, we did the event and it turned out amazing. And then last year, same thing. We had 1300 seats sold and I remember the night before we have pre-registration, we only had 200 people pre-register.  I was like, “Oh my gosh, nobody’s coming. This is it. This is my greatest fear recognized once again.” And I’m freaking out and went out there and the next morning tons of people registered and we ended up having the entire thing filled, all 1300 seats and then we did the event, it was awesome. So this time, I had the same thing. I wasn’t quite as, I had two successful events now, I wasn’t quite as scared, but I still get nervous. So the event happened and this time we, usually the event’s on a weekend, but to get the hotel space we had to do it on a Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, so we all flew in Sunday night, which was nice. We all flew in there and had time to just relax. Then Monday, my wife and I got up and went shopping to go buy clothes, and my team was doing everything, my team is amazing. They’re stuffing binders and getting things ready and all that kind of stuff. So it was kind of nice, they were taking care of that. I was able to go and spend time with Collette, and just get ready for the event and shop. Just kind of mentally get prepared for this thing. And then that night, we had a big VIP dinner for our Inner Circle Members, as well as our certified partners who have actually finished certification. We had a big dinner with them and it was really, really cool. Now a couple things, this will be one of my themes of this podcast. It’s interesting, and I’m going to be vulnerable and let you guys know all my fears and my things in hopes, not that you judge me, “Man, Russell’s a wuss.” I want you to be like, “Wow, if Russell can do it, I can do it.” That’s more of the goal with this. I love being on stage. I feel comfortable in front of 1500 people talking, and I feel really good there. I get really, really scared one on one or even in groups. So even at our Inner Circle dinner, there’s 150 or so people, maybe 200 people, I can’t remember, it was kind of a smaller thing, but tons of anxiety being in that room talking to people. Throughout the event people come talk to you one on one, I really struggle. I feel bad. I had my coaching call with Tara Williams this morning and we were kind of talking about this. I was just like, “Man, it’s funny how comfortable I feel up in front of the stage and how scared and nervous and awkward I feel one on one.” And I feel bad about it. I think a lot of times, for anyone who did have one on one interactions with me. I apologize if I’m super awkward. I don’t know why, I feel nervous. I get really nervous there and I struggle. Which is why I try to hide as much as I can. I try to be out there to take pictures with everyone as well, but it’s really, I struggle with that part of it. Anyway, we did the dinner that night, it was really fun. Bart Miller, who is one of our Inner Circle members who’s transitioning into becoming a fashion coordinator, he designed all my clothes for the week. And he did the same for Alex Harmosian and a bunch of the Inner Circle members.  So he was there and had me dressing up all nice. So I was nervous because I wasn’t comfortable in my clothes, completely. And then in this room with these people that I admire. I wanted to make sure they had such a good experience, it gets you nervous. At least for me. But what’s cool, at the end I had a chance to give a quick speech, it was amazing looking out at that room. And I knew most of the people in that room. All the Inner Circle members I know really intimately. I know their businesses, and often times I know their fears, hopes, desires, dreams, passion, all those things. I’m aware of those things, so it’s kind of cool to look out there and realize and look at those guys like, “Man, the ripple effect” That’s funny, because of Rippln, that was our pitch there, but the ripple effect of these people is amazing. And I kind of talked about that like, how cool it is for me and for us as a company that we get to be a little piece in that journey. For me, it’s such an honor. I get a lot of credit for those things and it’s like, no it’s not me, it’s you guys. We provided a tool, some training, but it’s you guys taking that leap of faith to go and do it. Because the tools and training is out there for everybody, but most people don’t do it, and the reason why is there’s so much fear and anxiety and things that happen. Just seeing this room of people who are taking those leaps, it was awesome. That was the first night. We went to bed that night and I could not sleep. I really needed to because I hadn’t slept much earlier, and I ended up being up until 2 or 2:30 before I passed out. The next day started and it was insane. We got there and people were packed. Devon Brown, who is the best MC on earth was MC-ing it, getting people’s energy, he had everyone dancing and it was so exciting. And then we brought the certified partners on stage so everyone could see, “Here are the people who are certified. Here are the people you could hire if you need help with funnels. And if you want to become certified, you want this to be your career, go ask someone from our team because you could be certified. This could be your new career, just like these guys.” We had most of our Clickfunnels team come on stage, so people could see who was actually behind the event. Then after that, I had a chance to get up and it was cool because these events are always fun for because I get to share what I’m thinking about, I’m geeking out about at the time. And it’s usually stuff I’ve shared in the Inner Circle, I’ve shared some of on the podcast, but it’s never been formally presented. So this is the first time I had a chance to formally present the first section of the new Expert Secrets book, which is creating a mass movement. And it was so much fun to share that and walk through the models and show people that. And I think a lot of, I don’t know, I felt like it was for a lot of people, just such a new, exciting thing to see and realize that we’re not just selling things. You are creating a movement. What’s interesting, one thing that kind of made me sad about the event, I know it frustrated some people, in the initial sales letter we had a little section saying I was going to talk about supplement funnels, and I didn’t because of just how things shift as you start growing the event and speakers and some things have to get cut and some things don’t. And that was one that got cut. Someone came up to me afterwards and was like, “I came all the way from Australia because I wanted to learn about supplement funnels.” I was like, “Well I’m not specifically talking about supplement funnels, but this stuff is the same. It doesn’t matter. We are building the supplement line right now and the difference between the first supplement funnel was all a media based thing where we had a really good funnel and drove traffic. But we didn’t build a culture, we didn’t build a following and that’s why it grew and then it went away. It was kind of over. I was like, “With the new supplement stuff we’re doing, this building a mass movement, is the same. All these principals we’re talking about are the same. It doesn’t matter if you’re selling supplements.” I was trying to explain to her and I don’t think she believed me and she was frustrated and walked away. This is the key to all business. This is the key to everything you’re doing. It doesn’t matter what you’re selling, this is still the foundation of how you position an offer and how you treat your customers and how you get them to buy over and over and over again. So I was excited to finally share that and it was just so cool. Then we had a break and after that Todd Brown came up. And Todd is, I always say if you look who are the two guys out there in the market teaching funnels the most it’s me and Todd. Todd’s a lot smarter than me. A lot more analytical I think at stuff and he has a chance to hang out with some amazing marketers. So I love his perspective, he came in and we were talking about the big idea. How do you create the idea behind the marketing campaign’s to get people to buy your thing? And it was fun just to see how he breaks things down and how he looks at things. He’s definitely different than how I look at things, but I appreciate it so much. The way that he views things, I respect him a lot. And it was awesome having him up there sharing his perspective on that. Because I think a lot of people are getting good at building funnels, but they’re missing my first presentation which is creating a mass movement, and the positioning of things, and that kind of stuff. And then Todd is figuring out the big idea. So that was the next cool thing and people loved that. From there we broke to lunch, which I feel like eating is such a waste at these event. We’ve got two hours we gotta block out for lunch so people can go and eat. But nobody needs that. We need to be sitting in a room talking. We let people eat, because I think people need that. Humans have to eat every once in a while. But yeah, we went to lunch. For most of these meals, we bought lunches and dinners and stuff like that for most of the stuff. Because I didn’t want people to have to leave, it’s just kind of a nice touch I think, to help provide those for people. So we fed a lot of people. I can’t remember if we fed people that lunch or not, but whatever. But then after I came back, this is where I had a chance to go into story, which is the next thing. The epiphany bridge, I shared a lot of pieces of that with you. But another cool thing for me, Daegan Smith, who is one of my favorite people in the world, one of my mentors, peers, friends, whatever you want to say. I actually had him come to the event because I wanted him to see a lot of this stuff that I was talking about, a lot of stuff I initially learned from him and then stuff that we talked about what inspired ideas that made me test things and try things. So I had him there, and it was cool because I had to give this cool presentation on story and I got to give him credit for being there. In fact, the Expert Secrets book, most of it is dedicated to him, because it was the foundation for so much of this cool thing that became. It was fun having him in the room to hear that. I was a little nervous, honestly, I was like, “Daegan, I learned tons of this stuff from you and this is where I’ve kind of taken it.” And it was fun to share that. So I shared the story and epiphany bridges and how all those things work together. We talked about the hero’s two journeys, all the stuff that’s from the Expert Secrets book, which you guys are going to love. Then I got done and I was able to bring up Brandon and Kaylin Polland, who last year, they were at last year’s Funnel Hacking event and I met them in person there. Then they joined the Inner Circle and I’ve had a chance to be around them and experience them and their business over the last year. And I wanted them to be at the event, so they spoke. They talked about social webinars and telling their story, which is super cool. Their whole thing is #dowhateverrussellsays, and I think their end thing was give Russell all your money and he’ll turn it into more money, or something, which I appreciate. But it was cool to hear their whole story. What I think what Brandon and Kaylin, outside of they’re crazy talented as a whole anyway, but showing when they got in a year ago or two years ago when they first got started, they didn’t have a ton of money, and they invested in the Funnel Hacks course, a thousand dollar course a lot of you guys already have. They said, “We went through and pushed play and watched thirty seconds and we paused it and implemented that. And pushed play again….and for three weeks we went through the entire course in thirty second chunks.” They heard it, stopped an implemented it. And what’s funny is he told me afterwards, that a bunch of people came up and were like, “What was the course you went through with Russell. I want to go through the same thing the same way.” And he told them and they were like, “Oh. I’ve owned that for a year and a half.” And he’s like, “Yeah.” The difference is that they implemented. That’s the key, they’re the most amazing implementers in the world. They’re presentation was amazing. Then we had a break and after that, Jim Edwards came up, my co-host with Funnelfridays.com. And he gave a presentation on Copy Blocks, which was amazing. I think that hopefully for most people it was liberating. Showing wow, this is, I don’t have to be a creative writer. I just have to understand how blocks work and copy and how Funnel Scripts works and all that kind of stuff. And Jim made it really fun. He did a great job. He made the whole session really fun and exciting and people loved it. Then when Jim got done, then Stu McLarin came up. Stu is one of the greatest human beings, literally, to be birthed on this earth. I don’t know if I can say it strongly enough. Just an amazing human being. He came and talked about membership funnels, which was awesome. And showing the pre-launch process and how he launched his programs, and it was cool seeing his pre-launch stuff. How he launches, 90% is pre-launch stuff that most people, like me, don’t even think about. It was like, “Here’s a video we launched ahead of time on Facebook and Youtube that got viewed. From here we moved to here…” it showed the whole process which was cool. And From here we launched this funnel and it made 3.3 million dollars and it was cool to show that. Then afterwards I had a chance to come up with Todd and Dylan and we did a special presentation about World Teacher Aide and we talked about coming to Kenya and we showed a video of me in Kenya from last year. And then this time we said, “Look, if you guys want, we’re going, if you guys will pay for a classroom you can actually come to Kenya with us and do a special Mastermind.” We had 11 spots that were open and that night we sold all 11 of those spots and I think we had 7 or 8 people on the waiting list, which is crazy. When all is said and done, by the last day we had raised between the money, it was almost, just shy of a quarter of a million dollars, that we had raised for World Teacher Aide from the event, which was insane. What a quarter of a million dollars will do in Kenya, is the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars here in America. There’s so many people and kids and communities, lives will be effected because of that. I just, everyone was gracious and giving, which is awesome. After that, we ran down and did our round tables. Which had a bunch of people at round tables and anyone could come and ask questions and it went really, really well. We had a big buffet down there and everyone was eating and partying, asking questions. It was good. I think next year we’re going to tweak that a little though. There were pros and cons. The pros were everyone who got at a round table it was really, really powerful. Those who didn’t though, they were kind of like, it was hard. And I don’t know if we need to get microphones or something. Have people rotate from table to table. Some people purchase a table and sit there for the entire two or three hours and other people can get it. We’re going to figure out how to make the round tables a little better. But it was really cool for everyone come out and have a chance to talk directly to the speakers and the Inner Circle members and things like that. It was awesome. That was day number one. I slept really good that night, which was awesome.

Marketing In Your Car
Behind The Scenes Of Funnel Hacking Live 2017 (Part 1)

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2017 18:53


What happened at this year's event. On this special 2 part episode Russell recaps and summarizes what happened at Funnel Hacking Live. He also reflects on how he felt about different aspects and speakers at the event. Here are some of the cool things you will hear in this 2 part episode: An overview of the schedule during the 3 day event, who spoke, and what they spoke about. How Russell felt about certain speakers and what he thinks went right with his own presentations, and what mistakes he feels he made. What the best part of the event was for Russell (hint – It involves his lovely wife).  And what Russell plans on doing differently at next year's Funnel Hacking Live. So listen below for the first half of Russell's thoughts and feelings about Funnel Hacking Live 2017, and don't forget to tune in tomorrow for the conclusion. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson. I want to welcome you to Marketing In Your Car. But today's actually a special episode because first off, I'm not in my car, I'm in the conference room and second off, I got this brand new little microphone that plugs into the bottom of my phone. People have been asking me ever since I started this podcast, “What microphone do you use on your phone?” I always just tell them that Iuse the microphone on my phone, which is true until today. There's this really cool thing, I don't know what brand or style, I have no idea but I'm testing it out. So if it seems to be good, I'll let you guys know. It's so cool, it plugs into the bottom of your iPhone and it's got this big huge thing on it. I'm excited, I'm trying it out. Hopefully this episode goes well enough and I'll let you guys know more about this thing, because it's pretty awesome. So what I wanted to do, I wanted to give a recap of Funnel Hacking Live. I know 1500 of you guys were already there and experienced it and went crazy with us, and for everyone else who wasn't, I wanted to catch you up on what's happening and why it was amazing and why you should be at next year's event. If you missed this one for some insane reason, because there's no logical reason to have missed it, only insane ones. So if you had an insane reason, I want to give you guys some cool behind the scenes of what was happening. So this year's event, this is the third year we've done it. The first year was in Vegas, we had about 600 people come. The second year, last year was in San Diego and we had 1300 people come and it's funny because you have to sign a contract for next year's event before the event, because you have to, because if you're going to sell tickets for the event you have to know,  here's the venue and dates, blah, blah, blah. So last year we're like, let's make it a little bit bigger, let's do 1500 people. And then we ended up selling out three months early. We probably should have done bigger. So next year's event we've got a little bit bigger place. Hoping that we're able to fill it. Just so you guys are fully aware, nothing on Earth stresses me out more than events. Filling events is the hardest sell. You're not just selling, “Hey, you should come to an event.” Because that's an easy sell. The hard sells are all the other sells someone has to make in their mind. “I gotta ask for work off, I gotta talk to my spouse, I gotta fly, pay for flights, pay for hotels.” All these other things, so it's not just a simple sell, I want to….usually when you sell something you create desire and people want it and you sell it. This is harder, even if I create desire for it, you still have to go and close yourself on all the other logistics that are a pain. Event's are scary. In fact, the last time I did an event before Funnel Hacking Live, which I swore I would never do another event after. I think we sold 3 or 400 tickets, and when we got there only…and it was $100 tickets, so I assumed that $100 commitment was enough to get people to show up. I was wrong. We ended up only having 100 that showed up. It was so embarrassing for me. I remember having all these empty seats. I was like, “I will never do another event again.” Then fast forward a couple of years, about the time this podcast was starting, I probably talked about it. There was this new company we were working on called Rippln, and they did their initial kickoff and there was 1200 people, and we ended up getting 1.5 million people to sign up over the 60 days or so. And then there was an event on the backside of it. So I thought there was going to be 30,000 people at this event, I was all excited for it. But at the time, the company hadn't launched the actual thing that we'd built the hype for. There was a huge loss of momentum, at the event we had 1000 tickets sold. I showed up and we were getting ready to open the doors and went in the hallway and there was only about 200 people out there. We were like, “oh crap.” The guy, Brian, who ran the company was like, “Oh crap. Let's pull chairs out.” So we sat there, right before the event and pulled 800 chairs out of the room and then we had this huge empty room and then 200 seats in the front and brought people in and did this event over three days. And it was, for me, I was emotionally scarred. I was like, “I don't know what's happening, but this is not a good sign.” And sure enough the company crashed afterwards. A lot of wasted energy, time and money on my side that never materialized, but learned a lot of good lessons. That's the point, right? So because of those experiences, I had this fear of events. I never wanted to do one. So when the first Funnel Hacking Live, after we launched Clickfunnels, people were saying, people started doing meet ups. I was like, “We should facilitate this.” So we decided to do the first one. We were going to sell 600 seats, and I was so scared, panicking about what if we only sell 100 and we have this room for 600? S o finally we did it. We launched it, and we sold out, I think we sold out 2 weeks early, so it wasn't huge, but we did. We did the event and I remember even the day of the show I had so much fear and anxiety. What if people don't show up? And I remember even before the event started hiding in the back and peaking through and I was like, “Oh good, the seats are full. Thank heavens.” And then I was able to, we did the event and it turned out amazing. And then last year, same thing. We had 1300 seats sold and I remember the night before we have pre-registration, we only had 200 people pre-register.  I was like, “Oh my gosh, nobody's coming. This is it. This is my greatest fear recognized once again.” And I'm freaking out and went out there and the next morning tons of people registered and we ended up having the entire thing filled, all 1300 seats and then we did the event, it was awesome. So this time, I had the same thing. I wasn't quite as, I had two successful events now, I wasn't quite as scared, but I still get nervous. So the event happened and this time we, usually the event's on a weekend, but to get the hotel space we had to do it on a Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, so we all flew in Sunday night, which was nice. We all flew in there and had time to just relax. Then Monday, my wife and I got up and went shopping to go buy clothes, and my team was doing everything, my team is amazing. They're stuffing binders and getting things ready and all that kind of stuff. So it was kind of nice, they were taking care of that. I was able to go and spend time with Collette, and just get ready for the event and shop. Just kind of mentally get prepared for this thing. And then that night, we had a big VIP dinner for our Inner Circle Members, as well as our certified partners who have actually finished certification. We had a big dinner with them and it was really, really cool. Now a couple things, this will be one of my themes of this podcast. It's interesting, and I'm going to be vulnerable and let you guys know all my fears and my things in hopes, not that you judge me, “Man, Russell's a wuss.” I want you to be like, “Wow, if Russell can do it, I can do it.” That's more of the goal with this. I love being on stage. I feel comfortable in front of 1500 people talking, and I feel really good there. I get really, really scared one on one or even in groups. So even at our Inner Circle dinner, there's 150 or so people, maybe 200 people, I can't remember, it was kind of a smaller thing, but tons of anxiety being in that room talking to people. Throughout the event people come talk to you one on one, I really struggle. I feel bad. I had my coaching call with Tara Williams this morning and we were kind of talking about this. I was just like, “Man, it's funny how comfortable I feel up in front of the stage and how scared and nervous and awkward I feel one on one.” And I feel bad about it. I think a lot of times, for anyone who did have one on one interactions with me. I apologize if I'm super awkward. I don't know why, I feel nervous. I get really nervous there and I struggle. Which is why I try to hide as much as I can. I try to be out there to take pictures with everyone as well, but it's really, I struggle with that part of it. Anyway, we did the dinner that night, it was really fun. Bart Miller, who is one of our Inner Circle members who's transitioning into becoming a fashion coordinator, he designed all my clothes for the week. And he did the same for Alex Harmosian and a bunch of the Inner Circle members.  So he was there and had me dressing up all nice. So I was nervous because I wasn't comfortable in my clothes, completely. And then in this room with these people that I admire. I wanted to make sure they had such a good experience, it gets you nervous. At least for me. But what's cool, at the end I had a chance to give a quick speech, it was amazing looking out at that room. And I knew most of the people in that room. All the Inner Circle members I know really intimately. I know their businesses, and often times I know their fears, hopes, desires, dreams, passion, all those things. I'm aware of those things, so it's kind of cool to look out there and realize and look at those guys like, “Man, the ripple effect” That's funny, because of Rippln, that was our pitch there, but the ripple effect of these people is amazing. And I kind of talked about that like, how cool it is for me and for us as a company that we get to be a little piece in that journey. For me, it's such an honor. I get a lot of credit for those things and it's like, no it's not me, it's you guys. We provided a tool, some training, but it's you guys taking that leap of faith to go and do it. Because the tools and training is out there for everybody, but most people don't do it, and the reason why is there's so much fear and anxiety and things that happen. Just seeing this room of people who are taking those leaps, it was awesome. That was the first night. We went to bed that night and I could not sleep. I really needed to because I hadn't slept much earlier, and I ended up being up until 2 or 2:30 before I passed out. The next day started and it was insane. We got there and people were packed. Devon Brown, who is the best MC on earth was MC-ing it, getting people's energy, he had everyone dancing and it was so exciting. And then we brought the certified partners on stage so everyone could see, “Here are the people who are certified. Here are the people you could hire if you need help with funnels. And if you want to become certified, you want this to be your career, go ask someone from our team because you could be certified. This could be your new career, just like these guys.” We had most of our Clickfunnels team come on stage, so people could see who was actually behind the event. Then after that, I had a chance to get up and it was cool because these events are always fun for because I get to share what I'm thinking about, I'm geeking out about at the time. And it's usually stuff I've shared in the Inner Circle, I've shared some of on the podcast, but it's never been formally presented. So this is the first time I had a chance to formally present the first section of the new Expert Secrets book, which is creating a mass movement. And it was so much fun to share that and walk through the models and show people that. And I think a lot of, I don't know, I felt like it was for a lot of people, just such a new, exciting thing to see and realize that we're not just selling things. You are creating a movement. What's interesting, one thing that kind of made me sad about the event, I know it frustrated some people, in the initial sales letter we had a little section saying I was going to talk about supplement funnels, and I didn't because of just how things shift as you start growing the event and speakers and some things have to get cut and some things don't. And that was one that got cut. Someone came up to me afterwards and was like, “I came all the way from Australia because I wanted to learn about supplement funnels.” I was like, “Well I'm not specifically talking about supplement funnels, but this stuff is the same. It doesn't matter. We are building the supplement line right now and the difference between the first supplement funnel was all a media based thing where we had a really good funnel and drove traffic. But we didn't build a culture, we didn't build a following and that's why it grew and then it went away. It was kind of over. I was like, “With the new supplement stuff we're doing, this building a mass movement, is the same. All these principals we're talking about are the same. It doesn't matter if you're selling supplements.” I was trying to explain to her and I don't think she believed me and she was frustrated and walked away. This is the key to all business. This is the key to everything you're doing. It doesn't matter what you're selling, this is still the foundation of how you position an offer and how you treat your customers and how you get them to buy over and over and over again. So I was excited to finally share that and it was just so cool. Then we had a break and after that Todd Brown came up. And Todd is, I always say if you look who are the two guys out there in the market teaching funnels the most it's me and Todd. Todd's a lot smarter than me. A lot more analytical I think at stuff and he has a chance to hang out with some amazing marketers. So I love his perspective, he came in and we were talking about the big idea. How do you create the idea behind the marketing campaign's to get people to buy your thing? And it was fun just to see how he breaks things down and how he looks at things. He's definitely different than how I look at things, but I appreciate it so much. The way that he views things, I respect him a lot. And it was awesome having him up there sharing his perspective on that. Because I think a lot of people are getting good at building funnels, but they're missing my first presentation which is creating a mass movement, and the positioning of things, and that kind of stuff. And then Todd is figuring out the big idea. So that was the next cool thing and people loved that. From there we broke to lunch, which I feel like eating is such a waste at these event. We've got two hours we gotta block out for lunch so people can go and eat. But nobody needs that. We need to be sitting in a room talking. We let people eat, because I think people need that. Humans have to eat every once in a while. But yeah, we went to lunch. For most of these meals, we bought lunches and dinners and stuff like that for most of the stuff. Because I didn't want people to have to leave, it's just kind of a nice touch I think, to help provide those for people. So we fed a lot of people. I can't remember if we fed people that lunch or not, but whatever. But then after I came back, this is where I had a chance to go into story, which is the next thing. The epiphany bridge, I shared a lot of pieces of that with you. But another cool thing for me, Daegan Smith, who is one of my favorite people in the world, one of my mentors, peers, friends, whatever you want to say. I actually had him come to the event because I wanted him to see a lot of this stuff that I was talking about, a lot of stuff I initially learned from him and then stuff that we talked about what inspired ideas that made me test things and try things. So I had him there, and it was cool because I had to give this cool presentation on story and I got to give him credit for being there. In fact, the Expert Secrets book, most of it is dedicated to him, because it was the foundation for so much of this cool thing that became. It was fun having him in the room to hear that. I was a little nervous, honestly, I was like, “Daegan, I learned tons of this stuff from you and this is where I've kind of taken it.” And it was fun to share that. So I shared the story and epiphany bridges and how all those things work together. We talked about the hero's two journeys, all the stuff that's from the Expert Secrets book, which you guys are going to love. Then I got done and I was able to bring up Brandon and Kaylin Polland, who last year, they were at last year's Funnel Hacking event and I met them in person there. Then they joined the Inner Circle and I've had a chance to be around them and experience them and their business over the last year. And I wanted them to be at the event, so they spoke. They talked about social webinars and telling their story, which is super cool. Their whole thing is #dowhateverrussellsays, and I think their end thing was give Russell all your money and he'll turn it into more money, or something, which I appreciate. But it was cool to hear their whole story. What I think what Brandon and Kaylin, outside of they're crazy talented as a whole anyway, but showing when they got in a year ago or two years ago when they first got started, they didn't have a ton of money, and they invested in the Funnel Hacks course, a thousand dollar course a lot of you guys already have. They said, “We went through and pushed play and watched thirty seconds and we paused it and implemented that. And pushed play again….and for three weeks we went through the entire course in thirty second chunks.” They heard it, stopped an implemented it. And what's funny is he told me afterwards, that a bunch of people came up and were like, “What was the course you went through with Russell. I want to go through the same thing the same way.” And he told them and they were like, “Oh. I've owned that for a year and a half.” And he's like, “Yeah.” The difference is that they implemented. That's the key, they're the most amazing implementers in the world. They're presentation was amazing. Then we had a break and after that, Jim Edwards came up, my co-host with Funnelfridays.com. And he gave a presentation on Copy Blocks, which was amazing. I think that hopefully for most people it was liberating. Showing wow, this is, I don't have to be a creative writer. I just have to understand how blocks work and copy and how Funnel Scripts works and all that kind of stuff. And Jim made it really fun. He did a great job. He made the whole session really fun and exciting and people loved it. Then when Jim got done, then Stu McLarin came up. Stu is one of the greatest human beings, literally, to be birthed on this earth. I don't know if I can say it strongly enough. Just an amazing human being. He came and talked about membership funnels, which was awesome. And showing the pre-launch process and how he launched his programs, and it was cool seeing his pre-launch stuff. How he launches, 90% is pre-launch stuff that most people, like me, don't even think about. It was like, “Here's a video we launched ahead of time on Facebook and Youtube that got viewed. From here we moved to here…” it showed the whole process which was cool. And From here we launched this funnel and it made 3.3 million dollars and it was cool to show that. Then afterwards I had a chance to come up with Todd and Dylan and we did a special presentation about World Teacher Aide and we talked about coming to Kenya and we showed a video of me in Kenya from last year. And then this time we said, “Look, if you guys want, we're going, if you guys will pay for a classroom you can actually come to Kenya with us and do a special Mastermind.” We had 11 spots that were open and that night we sold all 11 of those spots and I think we had 7 or 8 people on the waiting list, which is crazy. When all is said and done, by the last day we had raised between the money, it was almost, just shy of a quarter of a million dollars, that we had raised for World Teacher Aide from the event, which was insane. What a quarter of a million dollars will do in Kenya, is the equivalent of tens of millions of dollars here in America. There's so many people and kids and communities, lives will be effected because of that. I just, everyone was gracious and giving, which is awesome. After that, we ran down and did our round tables. Which had a bunch of people at round tables and anyone could come and ask questions and it went really, really well. We had a big buffet down there and everyone was eating and partying, asking questions. It was good. I think next year we're going to tweak that a little though. There were pros and cons. The pros were everyone who got at a round table it was really, really powerful. Those who didn't though, they were kind of like, it was hard. And I don't know if we need to get microphones or something. Have people rotate from table to table. Some people purchase a table and sit there for the entire two or three hours and other people can get it. We're going to figure out how to make the round tables a little better. But it was really cool for everyone come out and have a chance to talk directly to the speakers and the Inner Circle members and things like that. It was awesome. That was day number one. I slept really good that night, which was awesome.

Marketing In Your Car
The Power Of Doodles

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2016 10:14


A glimpse behind the scenes of how and why I doodle. On this episode Russell talks about how adding sketches to his books and presentations makes them more understandable. He also explains why adding doodles to your own work will help you teach and inspire in a way that is easier for the average person to comprehend. Here are a few cool thing you can learn from this episode. How Russell came up with the concept of adding doodles to his books. Why the doodles make the written word so much more understandable. Russell's new idea for a series of videos about the sketches he has used over the years. So listen below to hear about the power doodles have to increase the overall understand-ability of concepts you are teaching, whether by the written word or during presentations. ---Transcript--- Good morning everyone, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Alright I had to start that one out a little bit louder than normal because it's a beautiful day and things are amazing. It's Saturday before our live event, I am actually heading to the office really quick to go finish out some slides, so we can send it to the printer, so that the printers can print them and ship them to the event and I'm excited because that means that, what's that 6 of my 7 presentations is finished, no technically 5. I think 5 of my 7 presentations are finished, the other one's just not going to print. This is my deadline, today is my deadline, so I'm hurrying to go get this out the door, so they will be in everyone's binders when they show up, which is gonna be cool. And the last thing I'm waiting on, and this is what I wanted to talk about today with you guys because all of us in our businesses are educators. You're educating your employees, your team, your customers or whatever, even if you're not in an info product type business you still are an educator and a motivator and a leader and all these kind of things. I think one of the biggest things that's helped me over the last few years, and it didn't happen on purpose, but I've been trying to teach a whole bunch of really cool, kind of complex topics for years. The way that was easiest for me to explain is to get someone in a seminar room and we have a white board and I would show them this process and they'd see the process and be like, “Oh, that's what you're saying.” And I'm sure  a lot of you guys are the same way, which is why most of us internet entrepreneurs are obsessed with whiteboards. We have white boards in our office, we're sketching things out, we're showing it to our team that way, we're doing all sorts of stuff.  All of my training videos for years were done on Microsoft paint where I'd just open paint and I'd sketch things because it gets people to understand complex things better. So rewind probably 2 ½ maybe 3 years ago, when we first started to put together the Dotcom Secrets book, initially it didn't have all those cool sketches, it was just a typical book. As I was writing the book what I found was, it was interesting, when I teach a seminar I'm on stage, I can sketch out a concept and people are like, “Oh that makes sense.” In a book you have words and you're trying to explain these concepts and it's harder because they can't hear tonality, they can't see your hand expressions, they don't see sketches, and it really just makes things suffer. So I was trying to figure out, how can I replicate that process? That's kind of where some of these sketches were born. One of my close friends, Daegan Smith he probably a year prior had taught this really cool thing on story selling and he had kind of doodled out this whole concept on a whiteboard and he showed it to me and it was awesome. So as a gift to him I had this guy named Vlad on my team go through and turn it to a nice image and I sent it back, “Here you go, man.” And he was like, “Whoa this is so cool. It makes this concept I made look real.” I remember looking at Daegan's thing that I'd sent him back, and I was like, “This is awesome.” So I started going back through all my doodles and all the whiteboard sketches and all these things in seminars and workshops, and just for my team and things as I'm doodling out concepts trying to grasp them better, and I went back through and had Vlad take all those concepts and turn them into really cool drawings. And that kind of became the foundation for the Dotcom Secrets book. Every one of these chapters have at least one if not a couple of different doodles so that it's not just words. Words are hard to visualize and I wanted to take, here's a bunch of words, but then here's the graphic representation of what we're trying to illustrate, and we did that and then boom all the sudden there it is. So that became how the book was done and I think it was one of the big reasons why people were so successful with it, not just from, “oh this is good book.” But “Wow, this is a book I can actually do something with.” So since that book came out, a lot of other teaching things we do, I've had Vlad come in and sketch things out for me and it's been really cool. So what's been fun, as you guys know I've been working on the Expert Secrets book, so I've been having him kind of sketch these concepts the same way we did before and it's been kind of a slower process. Each chapter I do it and from that chapter there's two or three concepts we need to sketch out so we can understand it visually. And that's been really cool, but since this events coming up it's kind of cranked up. Because as you know the presentations I'm giving at the event are very tied in line with what I'm teaching in the book. So a lot of them I had to get done quick. So yesterday I submitted 17 or 19, a lot, I think it was 17. 17 sketches to Vlad, I needed him to turn into amazing sketches for my slides, and I took my little chicken scratch that I do, basically I sketch it out on a pad of paper, take a picture of it, upload it to Trello, our office management software, and Vlad grabs it from Trello and makes it look awesome. So I have this book where I'm just sketching idea after idea and concept after concept and trying to get them all in really nice format and add them to Trello and then he goes through and sketches them all, so this morning at 7:57 I was going to work out at 8, 3 minutes earlier, and then all the sudden I look at Trello there's nothing in there, and one second later he drops 17 images. And it was so cool. All these concepts that are just beautiful now. They look amazing and they're done and they……I'm excited. What I've done is the last couple of days, I finished my presentations and I just copied and pasted pictures of my hand chicken scratches into these presentations, waiting to replace them with Vlad's amazing designs and today right now I'm driving to the office to go drag and drop all these designs into slides so that everybody during the presentations will see these things and be like, “Oh my gosh this is amazing.” And they'll understand really complex topics and make them really simple and broken down. And then these images will be the same one's that are in the Dotcom Secrets book in the very near future. So I'm excited. I told you that story because it's what I'm excited about right now, but second off, I want you guys to start thinking about that as educators, as leaders, as trainers. Sometimes we try to get up and try to share things with people, try to get them to be motivated and inspired, but I think a big problem is that words either vocal or written, a lot of times it's hard to….typically there's a process behind the words and words are very much like you're moving from left to right, up to down, where a lot of times concepts aren't that way. There's a motion happening. There's forward to backward, and backward to forward, and up to down, all these kind of things and it's hard to capture that a lot of times in words. Where it's really easy to capture in doodles and sketches and things like that. So what I recommend is to look at what you're doing or teaching or giving or trying to explain or whatever those things are and figure out ways you can take those complex things and turn them into a doodle or a sketch or something because it's amazing what that will do. I can't tell you how many people I've seen post on Facebook where they took the Dotcom Secrets books and took all the sketches and they blown up and had them printed out and they're all over their wall and office, which I think is so cool. You look at something and instantly recollect all this stuff that maybe 30 pages of text, and you're trying to remember and you look at one image and boom everything floods back into your conscious mind and you've got it again. You've got that concept and you understand it in a way that's hard from just words. I think that if you start doing that you'll see some interesting things that I saw. First off, people you are teaching and training and educating will understand what you're doing better and you'll see a higher adoption rate, a higher people doing what you're trying to share with them. Doing it from an employee standpoint, people understand your vision better and they'll understand what you want. It's from an employee/employer side. And I think it'll give you a ton of clarity as well. As I sketch things out for me, it makes these complex things very tangible and real. And it's exciting so there you go. I think I got some cool things I'm going to be doing with this. I'm showing a clip from Gary Vaynerchuk in one of my presentations. The clip's really cool, he's sharing one core message, a 30 second video explaining something, and I think I want to start making a video series based on all these little sketches and doodles where I focus on one in each video and just talk about it, give quick impressions on each thing. Anyway, I think that will be born, it's just an idea right now, but I think in the next couple of months that's going to be a real thing. So if and when it happens, you guys heard about it first. So there you go, I'm almost to the office, I'm going to go plug in some doodles. I'm excited for this weekend for everyone who's going to be there. I'm excited to hopefully share, give and inspire and give you guys something that's going to be amazing. With that said, have an amazing weekend and I‘ll talk to you all again soon.

Marketing Secrets (2016)
The Power Of Doodles

Marketing Secrets (2016)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2016 10:14


A glimpse behind the scenes of how and why I doodle. On this episode Russell talks about how adding sketches to his books and presentations makes them more understandable. He also explains why adding doodles to your own work will help you teach and inspire in a way that is easier for the average person to comprehend. Here are a few cool thing you can learn from this episode. How Russell came up with the concept of adding doodles to his books. Why the doodles make the written word so much more understandable. Russell’s new idea for a series of videos about the sketches he has used over the years. So listen below to hear about the power doodles have to increase the overall understand-ability of concepts you are teaching, whether by the written word or during presentations. ---Transcript--- Good morning everyone, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Alright I had to start that one out a little bit louder than normal because it’s a beautiful day and things are amazing. It’s Saturday before our live event, I am actually heading to the office really quick to go finish out some slides, so we can send it to the printer, so that the printers can print them and ship them to the event and I’m excited because that means that, what’s that 6 of my 7 presentations is finished, no technically 5. I think 5 of my 7 presentations are finished, the other one’s just not going to print. This is my deadline, today is my deadline, so I’m hurrying to go get this out the door, so they will be in everyone’s binders when they show up, which is gonna be cool. And the last thing I’m waiting on, and this is what I wanted to talk about today with you guys because all of us in our businesses are educators. You’re educating your employees, your team, your customers or whatever, even if you’re not in an info product type business you still are an educator and a motivator and a leader and all these kind of things. I think one of the biggest things that’s helped me over the last few years, and it didn’t happen on purpose, but I’ve been trying to teach a whole bunch of really cool, kind of complex topics for years. The way that was easiest for me to explain is to get someone in a seminar room and we have a white board and I would show them this process and they’d see the process and be like, “Oh, that’s what you’re saying.” And I’m sure  a lot of you guys are the same way, which is why most of us internet entrepreneurs are obsessed with whiteboards. We have white boards in our office, we’re sketching things out, we’re showing it to our team that way, we’re doing all sorts of stuff.  All of my training videos for years were done on Microsoft paint where I’d just open paint and I’d sketch things because it gets people to understand complex things better. So rewind probably 2 ½ maybe 3 years ago, when we first started to put together the Dotcom Secrets book, initially it didn’t have all those cool sketches, it was just a typical book. As I was writing the book what I found was, it was interesting, when I teach a seminar I’m on stage, I can sketch out a concept and people are like, “Oh that makes sense.” In a book you have words and you’re trying to explain these concepts and it’s harder because they can’t hear tonality, they can’t see your hand expressions, they don’t see sketches, and it really just makes things suffer. So I was trying to figure out, how can I replicate that process? That’s kind of where some of these sketches were born. One of my close friends, Daegan Smith he probably a year prior had taught this really cool thing on story selling and he had kind of doodled out this whole concept on a whiteboard and he showed it to me and it was awesome. So as a gift to him I had this guy named Vlad on my team go through and turn it to a nice image and I sent it back, “Here you go, man.” And he was like, “Whoa this is so cool. It makes this concept I made look real.” I remember looking at Daegan’s thing that I’d sent him back, and I was like, “This is awesome.” So I started going back through all my doodles and all the whiteboard sketches and all these things in seminars and workshops, and just for my team and things as I’m doodling out concepts trying to grasp them better, and I went back through and had Vlad take all those concepts and turn them into really cool drawings. And that kind of became the foundation for the Dotcom Secrets book. Every one of these chapters have at least one if not a couple of different doodles so that it’s not just words. Words are hard to visualize and I wanted to take, here’s a bunch of words, but then here’s the graphic representation of what we’re trying to illustrate, and we did that and then boom all the sudden there it is. So that became how the book was done and I think it was one of the big reasons why people were so successful with it, not just from, “oh this is good book.” But “Wow, this is a book I can actually do something with.” So since that book came out, a lot of other teaching things we do, I’ve had Vlad come in and sketch things out for me and it’s been really cool. So what’s been fun, as you guys know I’ve been working on the Expert Secrets book, so I’ve been having him kind of sketch these concepts the same way we did before and it’s been kind of a slower process. Each chapter I do it and from that chapter there’s two or three concepts we need to sketch out so we can understand it visually. And that’s been really cool, but since this events coming up it’s kind of cranked up. Because as you know the presentations I’m giving at the event are very tied in line with what I’m teaching in the book. So a lot of them I had to get done quick. So yesterday I submitted 17 or 19, a lot, I think it was 17. 17 sketches to Vlad, I needed him to turn into amazing sketches for my slides, and I took my little chicken scratch that I do, basically I sketch it out on a pad of paper, take a picture of it, upload it to Trello, our office management software, and Vlad grabs it from Trello and makes it look awesome. So I have this book where I’m just sketching idea after idea and concept after concept and trying to get them all in really nice format and add them to Trello and then he goes through and sketches them all, so this morning at 7:57 I was going to work out at 8, 3 minutes earlier, and then all the sudden I look at Trello there’s nothing in there, and one second later he drops 17 images. And it was so cool. All these concepts that are just beautiful now. They look amazing and they’re done and they……I’m excited. What I’ve done is the last couple of days, I finished my presentations and I just copied and pasted pictures of my hand chicken scratches into these presentations, waiting to replace them with Vlad’s amazing designs and today right now I’m driving to the office to go drag and drop all these designs into slides so that everybody during the presentations will see these things and be like, “Oh my gosh this is amazing.” And they’ll understand really complex topics and make them really simple and broken down. And then these images will be the same one’s that are in the Dotcom Secrets book in the very near future. So I’m excited. I told you that story because it’s what I’m excited about right now, but second off, I want you guys to start thinking about that as educators, as leaders, as trainers. Sometimes we try to get up and try to share things with people, try to get them to be motivated and inspired, but I think a big problem is that words either vocal or written, a lot of times it’s hard to….typically there’s a process behind the words and words are very much like you’re moving from left to right, up to down, where a lot of times concepts aren’t that way. There’s a motion happening. There’s forward to backward, and backward to forward, and up to down, all these kind of things and it’s hard to capture that a lot of times in words. Where it’s really easy to capture in doodles and sketches and things like that. So what I recommend is to look at what you’re doing or teaching or giving or trying to explain or whatever those things are and figure out ways you can take those complex things and turn them into a doodle or a sketch or something because it’s amazing what that will do. I can’t tell you how many people I’ve seen post on Facebook where they took the Dotcom Secrets books and took all the sketches and they blown up and had them printed out and they’re all over their wall and office, which I think is so cool. You look at something and instantly recollect all this stuff that maybe 30 pages of text, and you’re trying to remember and you look at one image and boom everything floods back into your conscious mind and you’ve got it again. You’ve got that concept and you understand it in a way that’s hard from just words. I think that if you start doing that you’ll see some interesting things that I saw. First off, people you are teaching and training and educating will understand what you’re doing better and you’ll see a higher adoption rate, a higher people doing what you’re trying to share with them. Doing it from an employee standpoint, people understand your vision better and they’ll understand what you want. It’s from an employee/employer side. And I think it’ll give you a ton of clarity as well. As I sketch things out for me, it makes these complex things very tangible and real. And it’s exciting so there you go. I think I got some cool things I’m going to be doing with this. I’m showing a clip from Gary Vaynerchuk in one of my presentations. The clip’s really cool, he’s sharing one core message, a 30 second video explaining something, and I think I want to start making a video series based on all these little sketches and doodles where I focus on one in each video and just talk about it, give quick impressions on each thing. Anyway, I think that will be born, it’s just an idea right now, but I think in the next couple of months that’s going to be a real thing. So if and when it happens, you guys heard about it first. So there you go, I’m almost to the office, I’m going to go plug in some doodles. I’m excited for this weekend for everyone who’s going to be there. I’m excited to hopefully share, give and inspire and give you guys something that’s going to be amazing. With that said, have an amazing weekend and I‘ll talk to you all again soon.

Marketing Secrets (2016)
Approaching Burnout…

Marketing Secrets (2016)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2016 23:42


What I do and what you can do as you start to approach ‘burnout’ in your business or in life. On this episode Russell talks about feeling burnout from preparing for Funnel Hacking Live. He also talks about his past experiences with burnout during his life. Here are 3 things you’ll hear in this episode: How Russell dealt with burnout during his wrestling career and how that’s prepared him for similar situations in his life. How a friend of Russell’s helped him get out of a burnout slump and get exciting about marketing again. And what his mind does while he starts to feel burnt out from the stress of work and how he thinks he will get past it this time. So listen below to hear how Russell gets over the stress of burnout and how he knows he’ll get past it by taking time off and relieving some pressure by making work fun. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Is that funny that I crack myself up every time? I gotta try to be louder and more obnoxious each time otherwise it’s going to be boring. So welcome you guys, I hope you’re excited. I’ve got crazy allergies happening. I’m not the kind of guy who gets allergies except for around cats. I’m deathly allergic to cats. But I don’t normally get them, but ever since I got back from New York, the wrestling tournament I’ve been sneezing 50 times a day and my nose is super raw. It’s horrible. So I’m hoping and praying that when we get to San Diego next week for Funnel Hacking Live that I don’t have allergies, cause that would be horrible on stage, sneezing every five seconds. It’d be really embarrassing. I’m sure I could take some kind of antihistamine or whatever, but those things always make me tired and throw me off my game and I gotta be on top of my game. There’s going to be a lot of you guys there. First off, if you’re going to be there, congratulations because you need to be there, it’s going to be amazing. So that’s number one, and number two, if you’re not going to be there, you missed it, we sold out. You can come even if you wanted to. I’ve been warning and begging and pleading for a long time and now you’re one shot is gone. So there you go. So with that said, I want to talk to you about something today that’s kind of serious. For me, right now, and probably for you a lot of times. I’m doing this on my way to my haircut, so my the one podcast when I was getting my haircut, ever since then, every time I post a video online, everyone’s like, “Nice haircut, nice haircut.” So thanks I guess for messing with me. It’s pretty funny actually. So I’m getting a haircut real quick, the last haircut before the big event. So hopefully I will look normal when we get there. Alright, what I wanted to talk to you guys about today…Dang there’s a lot of traffic……is burn out. I’m curious, how many of you guys have ever felt burnt out? I think the first time that I ever got burnt out of something, because typically when you’re a kid you’re just doing a bunch of cool stuff all the time, everyday is like a new adventure. My kids think they get burnt out because they’re tired of doing whatever the activity is. But the first time I ever really felt burnt out was my sophomore year of high school, I was wrestling 130 pounds, and each week I would check my weight on Sunday night, and on average I would be 160. Which meant, I usually had weigh ins on Thursday or Friday, which meant I had 4 or 5 days to get from 160 down to 130. And for any of you guys that have ever tried to go through wrestling practice, it’s not easy, but the only way that it gets harder is you put on plastic suits. My dad used to call them rubber gear back in the day, we called them plastic when I was in it, but it’s basically this plastic suit that goes tight around your neck your wrists, your ankles, and it’s heat impermeable, so heat cannot get out of it. So what you do is put on a pair of sweats and put on a pair of plastic on top of that, and put on another pair on top of that and you walk in the wrestling room and by the time you’re in the wrestling room you’re body is cooking. I could feel my heart beating really…it was just horrible. Then you go through wrestling practice, and the most I ever lost in an hour was, with my plastics on, was 8 pounds. So you can lost a lot of weight, 8 pounds of water is a gallon. A gallon of milk weighs 8 lbs, I think. Does it weigh 8 pounds? Yeah, I think it was 8 pounds. So that’s the equivalent. So I’d wrestle an hour and suck a gallon of water out of my body. So you’d get done with practice, you take your sweats off, you take your plastics off, and you’re sweats would be soaking wet, and you could take them and wring them out, all the water would flush out of them. So every week that was my process. Weigh in Sunday night 160, I’d weigh in Thursday night for the dual meet or the tournament on Friday and I’d be 130. So 30 pounds…it’s not easy. Because the first practice you lose 8 pounds, second practice you lose 5 pounds, third practice you’d lose 3 pounds, next practice you’d lose 2 pounds, because you just don’t have as much water to give and at the end you’re trying to lose the last 2 pounds and it’s a nightmare, and you’re tired and sore and hungry and thirsty. Actually, you’re not hungry, even though you don’t eat, you don’t have hunger pains, you have thirst pains are way worse than hunger pains. So typically I’d stop eating two or three days before the wrestling tournament, which probably isn’t that smart. Knowing what I know now, I’d probably do things a lot different. Nevertheless, that’s what we did. And then I’d stop drinking 24 hours before, and about 3 days before, I’d drink really minimally because the water is the weight right. Food doesn’t actually weigh anything, foods the calories. I’d try to eat really heavy calorie food because that would give me some energy. But then, I hardly drank any water because water weighs the most. So 24 hours before we cut out all water and suck the last bit and it’s painful and it sucks and it’s horrible. But in a weird sadistic way I really enjoyed it. We had to get into it. I think a lot of it, is 5 or 6 of us all cutting weight together. Just the camaraderie. Anyway, I honestly miss those days. In fact, when I go to wrestling tournaments now, even the NCAA tournament, I feel guilty drinking water or eating food, because I think, I’m in a wrestling tournament, I should not be eating, this is weird. I have this weird guilt. Anyway, I would go get mental help, if I was still wrestling, but I’m not so it’s good. So going through an entire season like that, by the time I was at the end of wrestling season, I was burned out.  It showed. I’d beaten the state champ, the kid that ended up taking the state champ that year, I’d beaten him twice during the year, and I ended up taking 5th place in the region tournament, didn’t even qualify for the state tournament that year. I went on to watch this kid I beat twice become a high school state champ which was my goal. It was hard. I remember sitting in the state tournament watching him win, and it was sad, it was frustrating and everything and I was just burned out. I couldn’t do it anymore. I remember sitting there and to get through that burn out, I took a week off and I just did nothing except for eat cereal and watch cartoons, which was awesome. Then I went back to wrestling and we did freestyle and Greco and the way I got out of burnout is I started having fun with wrestling again. So I went to these tournaments, I didn’t cut any weight, I went up by like 5 weight classes, I was at 154 in my freestyle and my Greco weight, didn’t cut any weight, I showed up, weighed in and whatever I weighed, I went against these huge dudes, and it was good. I started lifting and getting strong and eating and getting healthy and I just made it fun again. And that’s how I kind of got through that burnout period. So that was the first time, the next time I really know I had a burnout bad. If you listened to my podcast in the past you know some of the ups and downs. It was after we had 100 employees and everything crashed. We had a year of trying to save our butts and earn money to pay back the government and all these crazy things and at that point I was beyond burned out. I would’ve walked away from this business if I didn’t have so many outstanding debts and liabilities and coaching fulfillments and all these promises we made people. I had to fulfill on those things so I kept coming through, kept pushing it, and I was a burnout. I hated it. I woke up everyday hating what I did. And what got me through that burnout period, it was interesting it was one of my friends Daegan Smith, who was one of my wrestling buddies at NCAA last weekend. But Daegan called me, he actually called me and interviewed me on something. So he interviewed me and then we just sat there and talked for an hour or two telling stories and all these things. And he got me re-excited about marketing and about what we were doing and how we were doing it. Just all the cool things that we can bend and do and learn and discover. He made marketing fun for me again. And on the tails of that came a lot of amazing things for me and probably for you. You know the DotcomSecrets came as a by-product that we went through this testing phase for the next year. We were testing and trying and doing all these things and from that came the DotcomSecrets book, from that came Clickfunnels, from that came all the amazing things we do now. But they came on the backside of burnout, which is…burnout’s hard. So right now, I’m a week away from our event and I’m not going to lie, I’m feeling burned out. You know, we’ve had a big mountain to climb. We had to sell over 1000 tickets, which is a not easy task. I remember my, back in the day we’d do events, we’d get 100 people show up and I remember going to a Dan Kennedy event one time and there was 1000 people in the room and I was thinking, this is incredible. I cannot believe that that is even possible that they have 1000 people in the room and thinking that was an insurmountable task, and we just accomplished this and it’s amazing. But the cost has been burnout. So anyway, it’s 1:00 right on the dot, and my haircut is starting right now, so I’m going to stop this, go get my haircut, then I’ll come back out and we’ll talk about burnout some more. Two reasons, one, I need to talk myself through it to help me get through kind of what I’m feeling right now, and the best way I’ve found to get through some of those things is to share with others. And then number two, I know that some of you guys are probably experiencing that right now, hopefully it’ll give you guys some hope and faith in what you’re doing and keep you moving forward. So I’ll be back for part two of this podcast here in about 30 minutes. Alright, so where were we? We were talking about burnout. I’m sure that most of you, at least I hope so, I hope it’s not just me that goes through that every once in a while, and I’ve had little spouts, but honestly since Daegan kind of came back in and got me re-excited about marketing it’s good, everything’s been moving forward. You know, I think the last two years or so has been more intense than normal and part of it is just because we had this opportunity, Clickfunnels came and so a lot of it is like, strike while the iron’s hot. However you say that thing. Anyway, we did, we went intense. We’ve gone hard and we’ve pushed it and we’ve done amazing things and it’s been so much fun. So because I’ve been working so hard, I just haven’t thought about…You’re focusing on this one mission and you’re pushing things forward. I was reading Gary Vaynerchuck’s new book this weekend and one thing he talks about is the dirt and the clouds. The clouds is your vision and the dirt’s getting your feet dirty, and moving forward and working. That’s how I’ve been. It’s been the clouds hurts the vision, and then boom hit the dirt and pounding it, and focusing on those two things and it’s been good. There’s been so much stuff happening and we’re moving things forward and all of this amazing momentum so we’ve been running with it. But this last week and a half, two weeks or so as we’re moving towards the event, all the things we’re doing to push forward, to fill the event, and we were about to launch Funnel University and Clickfunnels and all this stuff along with new sales page, new one day challenge, new certification program. Man, there’s so much more stuff that I probably haven’t even talked to you guys about that’s happening, that’s all at the point of fruition where everything is going to be rolling live now. And just all this fun momentum over the last little bit, and I’ve had to stop because, first I was trying to finalize, finish up, my goal in this was to finish the new book by the event which didn’t happen. But now it’s like, I just stop everything to get all the presentations done for the event and with that there’s the handouts, and the order forms, and all these little detail things that I just not a details person, but we’re at a part of the game where the details are what matters. I’m in charge of executing a lot of those details because I’m really the one who understands what and why and how and all those kind of things, you know. So that’s kind of where I’m at, and I’m not going to lie. I’m starting to feel that burnout, cause this is the part that I don’t enjoy the most, which is all those kinds of things. So I have to slow back and all these other projects we’ve been trying to push out push out push out before the event, I’ve had to stop and just like, this cannot happen before the event. I’ve had to start cutting things to be able to execute correctly on the event, and make it an amazing experience for everyone’s who’s there. I’m just kind of feeling it. So for the last four days I was supposed to be working on my presentation and day one I didn’t because I was focusing on this and day two there’s something else and each day I keep putting it off, I think it’s probably because I got a lot of pain associated. There’s something about the finality, is that the right word? This thing being final, like writing a book. When you write a book, at least for me it’s stressful, because it becomes so final. It’s concrete, it doesn’t change. When the book’s done, it is what it is. You don’t change it, right. I feel the same with the event. When the presentations are done, next step is me giving them, there’s so much, it’s so final, I think I put a lot of pressure on it, so it kind of stresses me out. Anyway, I’ve been moving forward, moving forward and yesterday I spent probably 2 or 3 hours just outlining all the presentations and I think I have 6 presentations that I’m working on. And I got excited because it’s looking really cool and I know what to deliver, and I know what I’m trying to bring across, but now I know I gotta break those core concepts into slides, and power points and images and things that’ll make this all make sense. In a very streamline format. You know to take really complex thoughts or ideas and make them simple, it’s hard. The Dotcom Secrets book was hard. How do we take this abstract idea that I understand in my gut but then change it into something that I can explain to someone and they can look at it and be like, “Oh that makes perfect sense.” That’s kind of where I’m at now. I’ve got all these amazing things, for the next two days I have to lock myself down and figure out how to explain them in a simple easy way and get doodle drawings to match, and all those kind of things. So it’s a lot of work to do, but the other thing I got is this looming deadline that I have to get them done so we can get them printed so we can have them in people’s books by the time the event starts. All these things that, and I’m not going to lie, I’m feeling that burnout. Last night at about 5:30 at the office I had this pounding headache, I was just like, I gotta stop and go home. I’m going to go home and play with the kids for a little bit, put them to bed then come back. I didn’t’ get them to bed until late, because it’s Spring Break for them. We didn’t get them to bed until 10:30 and I was just like, I don’t have it in me to come back, I’m going to wake up early and come in. Then the morning came and I was like, I don’t want to, I’m not ready. I kind of slept in a little bit, but now I’m feeling really good. I’m still in this phase where I’m kind of, there’s so much pressure and stress and buildup and all this stuff that I think part of your brain, the burnout happens where you just want to relieve that pressure, you want to take the pressure valve off and just ahhhhh. But I can’t yet because the big show’s about to happen. So that’s how I’m feeling. In complete transparency, I’m feeling the pressure and stressed and worried and I want to make a good experience, because there’s things happening and that’s kind of where, and I think a big part for me is because I have to cut all these things, that are important to me, that I want to have done, that I physically cannot get them done anymore before the event, I feel a lot of stress and pressure and guilt because I had to cut these things. I don’t know why, but that’s kind of where it’s at. So there you go. I’m at a point where I’m feeling it, and I’m sure you guys, have ever felt in the past, you’re there right now. So I just wanted to kind of give you some of my thoughts on what I’m trying to do to be able to kind of push through the burnout. Because we still got to execute. We’re seven days away from the event, starting at the time I’m recording this, we can’t stop. But how do we still make it fun and  then when the event’s done, take the pressure valve out so we can keep executing and having fun. Because when you’re having fun, it makes it hard to be creative an deliver the cool stuff. So here’s my game plan. So first off, I have to get through, I talked about this on a recent podcast, I had pain associated with the birthing process of these presentations. So I have to, today and tomorrow, I’ve got two days to really dig in deep into these. A big part of that is because I attach and associate pain with this I have to attach pleasure. How do I? What do I make fun? How do I make these into games? What do I give myself when I finish one? How do I do that? So that’s a big part, is that. Second big part is my mind, I know as I start working, my mind’s going to try to go to pleasure every single time. Let me chat with someone, let me check Facebook, let me do all these kind of things. So for me, what I do, and I talked about this on a different podcast, but when I switch to power point zone, and I’m going to use my treadmill desk, and shut off everything else and just have me walking and focusing on presentations. So that was number one. Number two is, I have to celebrate the little whims along the way, so as I finish one I have to do something to celebrate. Either go out to eat, or eat junk food, or hanging out with friends, go walk, or check Facebook, or whatever it is. Have these big rewards as I get things done, it’ll push me through those pain points. Second off, I’ve got to, you guys can tell I’m creating this as I go, I’m trying to think this through, so that’s a big one for me to get through the day to day. I think when the event is done, I’m not very good at taking time off, it stresses me out, but I think I need to force myself. When I get home from the event, I  need to take one or two days off and just not do anything, because I need to take that pressure valve off. Part of me wants to do a product launch. Tuesday after the event I want to launch Funnel University. IT’s driving me nuts that it’s not live yet. I probably shouldn’t but I still might. But taking that pressure valve off so we can execute right. I would in theory, back when I was wrestling I would have been better in Freestyle if I would have cut weight during the off season, but I didn’t and it was hard because guys were bigger and stronger than me, but I enjoyed it more, I had more fun. So I think it’s, you’re taking some of the internal pressures off. I don’t know about you guys but I give myself a lot of pressure. Probably that’s unneeded, but I don’t know. I was thinking about this a lot, I think it comes from my wrestling background. In wrestling we’re always focused on who could be beating us. I could be the number one kid in the state but I’m thinking about, Man, this guy’s training this guy, this guys training this guy. I have to do more than them because I don’t want them to pass me. I remember Dan Gable, who’s one of our sports legends. He’s like the Michael Jordan of wrestling. Dan Gable, when he was training for the Olympics and he’d work out 7 hours a day, and he’d try to go to bed at night and he couldn’t sleep because he knew that on the other side of the world the Russians were awake training and it made him sick to his stomach knowing the Russians were training while he was sleeping, so he’d get up and run at night. And I kind of feel that for me, and I don’t know if that’s normal, or something I got from wrestling, but I feel like, right now we’re in the number one position in our industry. We’re doing amazing things, but I feel this pressure. Like, “Wow, what’s everyone else doing that we’re not? We got to make sure we’re on top” So I put a lot of pressure on myself which is maybe unnecessary, I don’t know. But it is what it is. So I think I’m going to try to take the week after the event, try to release some pressure on some things like that and set more realistic timelines and goals on things, so that way we can make it fun. Just like Freestyle and Greco was fun  because I took the pressure weight cutting out, and just enjoyed the process. It’s like how when I worked with Daegan again, the process became fun because I had focus on the creativity in the marketing and less on the “We’ve got to launch this, we got to make money.” Things like that I stepped back and because we stepped back and enjoyed the process we were able to create amazing things. I think that that’s really for me the next step, is after the event. Because we can’t…the event’s happening and we’ve got to make an amazing show, but then after that’s done, how do I take some pressure off, so we can execute correctly and have a fun time with it and make it enjoyable. So we don’t burn out. So that’s the thoughts from me. I don’t know if that helps you guys out at all. Make you think Russell’s strange, maybe gives a glimpse inside of my head, I don’t know. But I hope it makes you guys who are going through any kind of burnout to feel understood. Because I’ve been there. I’m going through it now and those are some of the things I’m going to be trying to do to protect myself, so I don’t hit it. Because burnouts, especially this point in my business, it’s tough because I have business partners, I have friends, I have staff, I have teams that rely on me. I can’t let them down. I can’t just disappear and kind of take the foot off the gas because I owe it to them as well. So how do you manage that? How do you protect yourselves so you don’t go through it? If you do go through it a little bit, you manage it in a way that will actually serve you and your team moving forward as opposed to crippling you and hurting you. So there you go, that’s all I got for today. I’m at the office, it’s time for some world domination. I got to get some presentations done. So that’s what I got for you guys. Appreciate you all, have an amazing day and I’ll talk to you guys soon.

Marketing In Your Car
Approaching Burnout…

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2016 23:42


What I do and what you can do as you start to approach ‘burnout' in your business or in life. On this episode Russell talks about feeling burnout from preparing for Funnel Hacking Live. He also talks about his past experiences with burnout during his life. Here are 3 things you'll hear in this episode: How Russell dealt with burnout during his wrestling career and how that's prepared him for similar situations in his life. How a friend of Russell's helped him get out of a burnout slump and get exciting about marketing again. And what his mind does while he starts to feel burnt out from the stress of work and how he thinks he will get past it this time. So listen below to hear how Russell gets over the stress of burnout and how he knows he'll get past it by taking time off and relieving some pressure by making work fun. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Is that funny that I crack myself up every time? I gotta try to be louder and more obnoxious each time otherwise it's going to be boring. So welcome you guys, I hope you're excited. I've got crazy allergies happening. I'm not the kind of guy who gets allergies except for around cats. I'm deathly allergic to cats. But I don't normally get them, but ever since I got back from New York, the wrestling tournament I've been sneezing 50 times a day and my nose is super raw. It's horrible. So I'm hoping and praying that when we get to San Diego next week for Funnel Hacking Live that I don't have allergies, cause that would be horrible on stage, sneezing every five seconds. It'd be really embarrassing. I'm sure I could take some kind of antihistamine or whatever, but those things always make me tired and throw me off my game and I gotta be on top of my game. There's going to be a lot of you guys there. First off, if you're going to be there, congratulations because you need to be there, it's going to be amazing. So that's number one, and number two, if you're not going to be there, you missed it, we sold out. You can come even if you wanted to. I've been warning and begging and pleading for a long time and now you're one shot is gone. So there you go. So with that said, I want to talk to you about something today that's kind of serious. For me, right now, and probably for you a lot of times. I'm doing this on my way to my haircut, so my the one podcast when I was getting my haircut, ever since then, every time I post a video online, everyone's like, “Nice haircut, nice haircut.” So thanks I guess for messing with me. It's pretty funny actually. So I'm getting a haircut real quick, the last haircut before the big event. So hopefully I will look normal when we get there. Alright, what I wanted to talk to you guys about today…Dang there's a lot of traffic……is burn out. I'm curious, how many of you guys have ever felt burnt out? I think the first time that I ever got burnt out of something, because typically when you're a kid you're just doing a bunch of cool stuff all the time, everyday is like a new adventure. My kids think they get burnt out because they're tired of doing whatever the activity is. But the first time I ever really felt burnt out was my sophomore year of high school, I was wrestling 130 pounds, and each week I would check my weight on Sunday night, and on average I would be 160. Which meant, I usually had weigh ins on Thursday or Friday, which meant I had 4 or 5 days to get from 160 down to 130. And for any of you guys that have ever tried to go through wrestling practice, it's not easy, but the only way that it gets harder is you put on plastic suits. My dad used to call them rubber gear back in the day, we called them plastic when I was in it, but it's basically this plastic suit that goes tight around your neck your wrists, your ankles, and it's heat impermeable, so heat cannot get out of it. So what you do is put on a pair of sweats and put on a pair of plastic on top of that, and put on another pair on top of that and you walk in the wrestling room and by the time you're in the wrestling room you're body is cooking. I could feel my heart beating really…it was just horrible. Then you go through wrestling practice, and the most I ever lost in an hour was, with my plastics on, was 8 pounds. So you can lost a lot of weight, 8 pounds of water is a gallon. A gallon of milk weighs 8 lbs, I think. Does it weigh 8 pounds? Yeah, I think it was 8 pounds. So that's the equivalent. So I'd wrestle an hour and suck a gallon of water out of my body. So you'd get done with practice, you take your sweats off, you take your plastics off, and you're sweats would be soaking wet, and you could take them and wring them out, all the water would flush out of them. So every week that was my process. Weigh in Sunday night 160, I'd weigh in Thursday night for the dual meet or the tournament on Friday and I'd be 130. So 30 pounds…it's not easy. Because the first practice you lose 8 pounds, second practice you lose 5 pounds, third practice you'd lose 3 pounds, next practice you'd lose 2 pounds, because you just don't have as much water to give and at the end you're trying to lose the last 2 pounds and it's a nightmare, and you're tired and sore and hungry and thirsty. Actually, you're not hungry, even though you don't eat, you don't have hunger pains, you have thirst pains are way worse than hunger pains. So typically I'd stop eating two or three days before the wrestling tournament, which probably isn't that smart. Knowing what I know now, I'd probably do things a lot different. Nevertheless, that's what we did. And then I'd stop drinking 24 hours before, and about 3 days before, I'd drink really minimally because the water is the weight right. Food doesn't actually weigh anything, foods the calories. I'd try to eat really heavy calorie food because that would give me some energy. But then, I hardly drank any water because water weighs the most. So 24 hours before we cut out all water and suck the last bit and it's painful and it sucks and it's horrible. But in a weird sadistic way I really enjoyed it. We had to get into it. I think a lot of it, is 5 or 6 of us all cutting weight together. Just the camaraderie. Anyway, I honestly miss those days. In fact, when I go to wrestling tournaments now, even the NCAA tournament, I feel guilty drinking water or eating food, because I think, I'm in a wrestling tournament, I should not be eating, this is weird. I have this weird guilt. Anyway, I would go get mental help, if I was still wrestling, but I'm not so it's good. So going through an entire season like that, by the time I was at the end of wrestling season, I was burned out.  It showed. I'd beaten the state champ, the kid that ended up taking the state champ that year, I'd beaten him twice during the year, and I ended up taking 5th place in the region tournament, didn't even qualify for the state tournament that year. I went on to watch this kid I beat twice become a high school state champ which was my goal. It was hard. I remember sitting in the state tournament watching him win, and it was sad, it was frustrating and everything and I was just burned out. I couldn't do it anymore. I remember sitting there and to get through that burn out, I took a week off and I just did nothing except for eat cereal and watch cartoons, which was awesome. Then I went back to wrestling and we did freestyle and Greco and the way I got out of burnout is I started having fun with wrestling again. So I went to these tournaments, I didn't cut any weight, I went up by like 5 weight classes, I was at 154 in my freestyle and my Greco weight, didn't cut any weight, I showed up, weighed in and whatever I weighed, I went against these huge dudes, and it was good. I started lifting and getting strong and eating and getting healthy and I just made it fun again. And that's how I kind of got through that burnout period. So that was the first time, the next time I really know I had a burnout bad. If you listened to my podcast in the past you know some of the ups and downs. It was after we had 100 employees and everything crashed. We had a year of trying to save our butts and earn money to pay back the government and all these crazy things and at that point I was beyond burned out. I would've walked away from this business if I didn't have so many outstanding debts and liabilities and coaching fulfillments and all these promises we made people. I had to fulfill on those things so I kept coming through, kept pushing it, and I was a burnout. I hated it. I woke up everyday hating what I did. And what got me through that burnout period, it was interesting it was one of my friends Daegan Smith, who was one of my wrestling buddies at NCAA last weekend. But Daegan called me, he actually called me and interviewed me on something. So he interviewed me and then we just sat there and talked for an hour or two telling stories and all these things. And he got me re-excited about marketing and about what we were doing and how we were doing it. Just all the cool things that we can bend and do and learn and discover. He made marketing fun for me again. And on the tails of that came a lot of amazing things for me and probably for you. You know the DotcomSecrets came as a by-product that we went through this testing phase for the next year. We were testing and trying and doing all these things and from that came the DotcomSecrets book, from that came Clickfunnels, from that came all the amazing things we do now. But they came on the backside of burnout, which is…burnout's hard. So right now, I'm a week away from our event and I'm not going to lie, I'm feeling burned out. You know, we've had a big mountain to climb. We had to sell over 1000 tickets, which is a not easy task. I remember my, back in the day we'd do events, we'd get 100 people show up and I remember going to a Dan Kennedy event one time and there was 1000 people in the room and I was thinking, this is incredible. I cannot believe that that is even possible that they have 1000 people in the room and thinking that was an insurmountable task, and we just accomplished this and it's amazing. But the cost has been burnout. So anyway, it's 1:00 right on the dot, and my haircut is starting right now, so I'm going to stop this, go get my haircut, then I'll come back out and we'll talk about burnout some more. Two reasons, one, I need to talk myself through it to help me get through kind of what I'm feeling right now, and the best way I've found to get through some of those things is to share with others. And then number two, I know that some of you guys are probably experiencing that right now, hopefully it'll give you guys some hope and faith in what you're doing and keep you moving forward. So I'll be back for part two of this podcast here in about 30 minutes. Alright, so where were we? We were talking about burnout. I'm sure that most of you, at least I hope so, I hope it's not just me that goes through that every once in a while, and I've had little spouts, but honestly since Daegan kind of came back in and got me re-excited about marketing it's good, everything's been moving forward. You know, I think the last two years or so has been more intense than normal and part of it is just because we had this opportunity, Clickfunnels came and so a lot of it is like, strike while the iron's hot. However you say that thing. Anyway, we did, we went intense. We've gone hard and we've pushed it and we've done amazing things and it's been so much fun. So because I've been working so hard, I just haven't thought about…You're focusing on this one mission and you're pushing things forward. I was reading Gary Vaynerchuck's new book this weekend and one thing he talks about is the dirt and the clouds. The clouds is your vision and the dirt's getting your feet dirty, and moving forward and working. That's how I've been. It's been the clouds hurts the vision, and then boom hit the dirt and pounding it, and focusing on those two things and it's been good. There's been so much stuff happening and we're moving things forward and all of this amazing momentum so we've been running with it. But this last week and a half, two weeks or so as we're moving towards the event, all the things we're doing to push forward, to fill the event, and we were about to launch Funnel University and Clickfunnels and all this stuff along with new sales page, new one day challenge, new certification program. Man, there's so much more stuff that I probably haven't even talked to you guys about that's happening, that's all at the point of fruition where everything is going to be rolling live now. And just all this fun momentum over the last little bit, and I've had to stop because, first I was trying to finalize, finish up, my goal in this was to finish the new book by the event which didn't happen. But now it's like, I just stop everything to get all the presentations done for the event and with that there's the handouts, and the order forms, and all these little detail things that I just not a details person, but we're at a part of the game where the details are what matters. I'm in charge of executing a lot of those details because I'm really the one who understands what and why and how and all those kind of things, you know. So that's kind of where I'm at, and I'm not going to lie. I'm starting to feel that burnout, cause this is the part that I don't enjoy the most, which is all those kinds of things. So I have to slow back and all these other projects we've been trying to push out push out push out before the event, I've had to stop and just like, this cannot happen before the event. I've had to start cutting things to be able to execute correctly on the event, and make it an amazing experience for everyone's who's there. I'm just kind of feeling it. So for the last four days I was supposed to be working on my presentation and day one I didn't because I was focusing on this and day two there's something else and each day I keep putting it off, I think it's probably because I got a lot of pain associated. There's something about the finality, is that the right word? This thing being final, like writing a book. When you write a book, at least for me it's stressful, because it becomes so final. It's concrete, it doesn't change. When the book's done, it is what it is. You don't change it, right. I feel the same with the event. When the presentations are done, next step is me giving them, there's so much, it's so final, I think I put a lot of pressure on it, so it kind of stresses me out. Anyway, I've been moving forward, moving forward and yesterday I spent probably 2 or 3 hours just outlining all the presentations and I think I have 6 presentations that I'm working on. And I got excited because it's looking really cool and I know what to deliver, and I know what I'm trying to bring across, but now I know I gotta break those core concepts into slides, and power points and images and things that'll make this all make sense. In a very streamline format. You know to take really complex thoughts or ideas and make them simple, it's hard. The Dotcom Secrets book was hard. How do we take this abstract idea that I understand in my gut but then change it into something that I can explain to someone and they can look at it and be like, “Oh that makes perfect sense.” That's kind of where I'm at now. I've got all these amazing things, for the next two days I have to lock myself down and figure out how to explain them in a simple easy way and get doodle drawings to match, and all those kind of things. So it's a lot of work to do, but the other thing I got is this looming deadline that I have to get them done so we can get them printed so we can have them in people's books by the time the event starts. All these things that, and I'm not going to lie, I'm feeling that burnout. Last night at about 5:30 at the office I had this pounding headache, I was just like, I gotta stop and go home. I'm going to go home and play with the kids for a little bit, put them to bed then come back. I didn't' get them to bed until late, because it's Spring Break for them. We didn't get them to bed until 10:30 and I was just like, I don't have it in me to come back, I'm going to wake up early and come in. Then the morning came and I was like, I don't want to, I'm not ready. I kind of slept in a little bit, but now I'm feeling really good. I'm still in this phase where I'm kind of, there's so much pressure and stress and buildup and all this stuff that I think part of your brain, the burnout happens where you just want to relieve that pressure, you want to take the pressure valve off and just ahhhhh. But I can't yet because the big show's about to happen. So that's how I'm feeling. In complete transparency, I'm feeling the pressure and stressed and worried and I want to make a good experience, because there's things happening and that's kind of where, and I think a big part for me is because I have to cut all these things, that are important to me, that I want to have done, that I physically cannot get them done anymore before the event, I feel a lot of stress and pressure and guilt because I had to cut these things. I don't know why, but that's kind of where it's at. So there you go. I'm at a point where I'm feeling it, and I'm sure you guys, have ever felt in the past, you're there right now. So I just wanted to kind of give you some of my thoughts on what I'm trying to do to be able to kind of push through the burnout. Because we still got to execute. We're seven days away from the event, starting at the time I'm recording this, we can't stop. But how do we still make it fun and  then when the event's done, take the pressure valve out so we can keep executing and having fun. Because when you're having fun, it makes it hard to be creative an deliver the cool stuff. So here's my game plan. So first off, I have to get through, I talked about this on a recent podcast, I had pain associated with the birthing process of these presentations. So I have to, today and tomorrow, I've got two days to really dig in deep into these. A big part of that is because I attach and associate pain with this I have to attach pleasure. How do I? What do I make fun? How do I make these into games? What do I give myself when I finish one? How do I do that? So that's a big part, is that. Second big part is my mind, I know as I start working, my mind's going to try to go to pleasure every single time. Let me chat with someone, let me check Facebook, let me do all these kind of things. So for me, what I do, and I talked about this on a different podcast, but when I switch to power point zone, and I'm going to use my treadmill desk, and shut off everything else and just have me walking and focusing on presentations. So that was number one. Number two is, I have to celebrate the little whims along the way, so as I finish one I have to do something to celebrate. Either go out to eat, or eat junk food, or hanging out with friends, go walk, or check Facebook, or whatever it is. Have these big rewards as I get things done, it'll push me through those pain points. Second off, I've got to, you guys can tell I'm creating this as I go, I'm trying to think this through, so that's a big one for me to get through the day to day. I think when the event is done, I'm not very good at taking time off, it stresses me out, but I think I need to force myself. When I get home from the event, I  need to take one or two days off and just not do anything, because I need to take that pressure valve off. Part of me wants to do a product launch. Tuesday after the event I want to launch Funnel University. IT's driving me nuts that it's not live yet. I probably shouldn't but I still might. But taking that pressure valve off so we can execute right. I would in theory, back when I was wrestling I would have been better in Freestyle if I would have cut weight during the off season, but I didn't and it was hard because guys were bigger and stronger than me, but I enjoyed it more, I had more fun. So I think it's, you're taking some of the internal pressures off. I don't know about you guys but I give myself a lot of pressure. Probably that's unneeded, but I don't know. I was thinking about this a lot, I think it comes from my wrestling background. In wrestling we're always focused on who could be beating us. I could be the number one kid in the state but I'm thinking about, Man, this guy's training this guy, this guys training this guy. I have to do more than them because I don't want them to pass me. I remember Dan Gable, who's one of our sports legends. He's like the Michael Jordan of wrestling. Dan Gable, when he was training for the Olympics and he'd work out 7 hours a day, and he'd try to go to bed at night and he couldn't sleep because he knew that on the other side of the world the Russians were awake training and it made him sick to his stomach knowing the Russians were training while he was sleeping, so he'd get up and run at night. And I kind of feel that for me, and I don't know if that's normal, or something I got from wrestling, but I feel like, right now we're in the number one position in our industry. We're doing amazing things, but I feel this pressure. Like, “Wow, what's everyone else doing that we're not? We got to make sure we're on top” So I put a lot of pressure on myself which is maybe unnecessary, I don't know. But it is what it is. So I think I'm going to try to take the week after the event, try to release some pressure on some things like that and set more realistic timelines and goals on things, so that way we can make it fun. Just like Freestyle and Greco was fun  because I took the pressure weight cutting out, and just enjoyed the process. It's like how when I worked with Daegan again, the process became fun because I had focus on the creativity in the marketing and less on the “We've got to launch this, we got to make money.” Things like that I stepped back and because we stepped back and enjoyed the process we were able to create amazing things. I think that that's really for me the next step, is after the event. Because we can't…the event's happening and we've got to make an amazing show, but then after that's done, how do I take some pressure off, so we can execute correctly and have a fun time with it and make it enjoyable. So we don't burn out. So that's the thoughts from me. I don't know if that helps you guys out at all. Make you think Russell's strange, maybe gives a glimpse inside of my head, I don't know. But I hope it makes you guys who are going through any kind of burnout to feel understood. Because I've been there. I'm going through it now and those are some of the things I'm going to be trying to do to protect myself, so I don't hit it. Because burnouts, especially this point in my business, it's tough because I have business partners, I have friends, I have staff, I have teams that rely on me. I can't let them down. I can't just disappear and kind of take the foot off the gas because I owe it to them as well. So how do you manage that? How do you protect yourselves so you don't go through it? If you do go through it a little bit, you manage it in a way that will actually serve you and your team moving forward as opposed to crippling you and hurting you. So there you go, that's all I got for today. I'm at the office, it's time for some world domination. I got to get some presentations done. So that's what I got for you guys. Appreciate you all, have an amazing day and I'll talk to you guys soon.

Marketing Secrets (2016)
Two Awesome Lessons From The NCAA Wrestling Tournament

Marketing Secrets (2016)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2016 16:24


#1 – Belief #2 – How to make tiny adjustments so you win the match On this episode Russell talks about being at the NCAA Wrestling Tournament and how if you believe you can win, you can win, and how you can apply that to your business. He also talks about how you can take your mistakes and use them to make adjustments and improvements. Here are 3 other fun things you will hear on today’s episode: How belief is a major force in both wrestling and in business. Why Russell won’t critique someone sales funnel before they actually launch it. And how Clickfunnels wasn’t a winner until 6 or 7 adjustments were made. So listen below to hear how Russell used the lessons he learned from wrestling and applied them to his business and how you can too. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, it’s been a little while. I’ve been out traveling the world, gallivanting. I don’t know if that’s really even the right way to use that word, but it sounded cool today. I was in New York all last week, for the NCAA wrestling tournament with my dad. If you guys listen you probably knew that already, and it was great. I was planning on doing a bunch of podcasts from there, I actually saw one of my favorite marketing people in the world. Daegan Smith was there. We sat by each other for most tournaments. I was going to share some podcasts with you guys and him, but it just never happened. It was too crazy of a week, and too much wrestling, too much New Yorking, too much good stuff happening. Anyway, I’m back now to report and share with you guys some cool stuff. I hope that things are going well. We are a little over a week away from Funnel Hacking Live. We are completely sold out which is a nice feeling to have. So this week I gotta go and work on my presentations, I got some cool stuff I’m going to be sharing with you guys and with our community. I just wanted to make sure that it’s amazing. We were going to launch Funnel University last week, and then this week, and then decided to just kind of put it on hold until after the event and that way we can focus on making the event flawless. Then we will have Funnel University when we get back. So it’s all done and ready and it looks amazing. Our survey software is awesome, just lots of good things. So that is kind of the game plan from here. So I wanted to share with you guys probably what I think is the most important lesson I learned from the wrestling tournament this weekend, which will relate to you guys even if you’re not wrestling people, which you all should be. That’s an argument and a sales pitch for another day. So the NCAA wrestling tournament is amazing. IT’s more like the world championship, in fact, Coach Shultz, if you guys have seen Foxcatcher, Mark Shultz, who is the main character in that movie, was my wrestling coach at BYU, and I actually saw him this weekend which was really fun. But one thing that he said is that the NCAA wrestling tournament, because this style of wrestling is only done in America, he said it’s pretty much like the Olympics, the World Championship, which it is. IT’s kind of a big deal. It’s like the Super Bowl of our style of wrestling, which is cool. The best athletes from all the conferences around the country all come to this tournament and it’s a big deal. And it’s really big for wrestling, it’s on TV, which is the only we get on TV ever. So that’s pretty cool, it was just awesome. We’re in this state, we’re in Madison Square Garden, and the entire stadium is just filled with wrestling fans, which is cool. We had tickets we bought that were on the 12th row, it was right in the middle of Hawkeye fans, which if you know anything about wrestling, you know that Iowa Hawkeyes had a dynasty for the last two decades, three decades. Dan Gable was their coach and built this huge thing and so they’re fans are kind of insane. So we were stuck right  in the middle of all these Hawkeye fans that were just going nuts the whole time, which made it really fun too. What I wanted to share with you guys, at the NCAA wrestling tournament, for whatever reason, there are tons and tons of upsets, which are the fun ones. You get to see on the big monitor up top, “the number 14 seat’s wrestling the number 1 seat and somehow this dude wins.” How does the 14th seat, who’s got like whatever, 20-10 record, come in against an undefeated guy and beat him? How do these things happen? I was thinking about that and talking to Daegan a lot about it. One part of it is interesting is belief. It’s just weird, if you believe you can win, you can win. But it’s all mental, it’s all this belief. Do you believe you can actually do it? We watched this one guy, he was undefeated, hadn’t lost the entire season, or excuse me, he only once the entire season, and he lost to this guy who wasn’t that good, wasn’t ranked that high, and they met in the semi-finals and I was watching it and I was like, I think this guy’s got a shot of winning the underdog. The only reason why is on paper this guy should not even be close to the number one seat. It’s not even close, but because he beat him earlier in the year, which was kind of a fluke, he had this belief that, “I can beat him.” And because he had the belief he could do it, and sure enough he almost beat him, he lost, but it was crazy close. I have had matches in my career where I on paper should have lost to people, but because I had thought I could win, I had this belief for whatever reason, that guy looks weird or whatever, I had this belief that I just knew I could win. I was able to win. It was weird. I remember this one time I was wrestling, there was this guy in my Freestyle Greco club who I beat all the time, didn’t have much respect for him as wrestler. He wasn’t that good. One day I’m at this tournament, and I’m wrestling this other kid from some other state, the kid was good, we’re having a close match, and I’m actually losing going into the third period. My Freestyle Greco coach, I guess there’s not periods in Freestyle Greco, sorry it’s been a while. During one of the injury breaks or injury time or something, my coach came out and tried to tell me some stuff, he’s like, “Hey you need to work on your level change or whatever. By the way, Matt beat this kid  by 8 last match.” And instantly I was like, “Matt beat him by 8.” In my head all the sudden, this kid in my head was no good, and I had a perfect belief that I could beat him, and the last minute and half or whatever it was, I came out there and I tech-falled him. Because all the sudden…..it was the same match. I was struggling this whole match and suddenly my belief switched in my head to this kid should be really easy for me and then he was. There’s this weird thing about belief, it just beats all odds. If you believe you can win, you can win. I remember last year, NCAA tournament there was a kid that was number 4 team seat, and he became a national champ, and I posted on my Facebook wall and I forgot about it until yesterday, because yesterday it popped up saying, “last year here’s a memory you posted.” And the thing I posted was picture of the kid, and they’re interviewing him at the end. They said, “You were the 14th seat, how in the world did you come here and win this?” he said, “When I got here I looked at the brackets and I looked at all these people and I said, this is who I have to beat to be a national champ so I came and beat them.” It was just pure belief. Anyway, I thought that was important for all of you guys because it’s not skill, it’s not talent it’s not a record, it’s not anything, it’s belief. And that same thing is true in your business. I think the reason why I win a lot of times, is I just have such belief that what we’re doing is going to change the world, and it just does. So my first question for you is,  how much belief do you have?n Do have belief you can win. So that’s question number one, the second thing I want to bring up and this is the second half of the equation. Is being able to look at a loss and not looking at this devastating thing, but looking at it and trying to figure out what you need to change to win. Good example, in 174 lbs finals, which you guys should Google this match, it’s amazing. Beau Nichols, from Penn State, undefeated the whole year, was supposed to win the tournament, again this other kid, who is a true freshman from Oklahoma, this true freshman had lost to Beau Nichols three times during the year. In fact, in the big tens he got pinned by him. So he no shot of winning, no way he was going to win. He comes into this finals match and him and Beau Nichols lock up, he launches him, throws him to his back, almost pins him, gets a bunch of near-fall points and then Beau ends up trying to play catch up the entire wrestling match and ends up losing, just huge upset. True freshman wins this thing. Everyone’s going nuts. It was amazing. One of those matches, I stood up and I stood amongst all the Iowa guys who were not standing and I gave him a round of applause. To come back and to lose to this kid, the best kid arguably in the world right, and to have to lose to him three times this season, to come back and win, that’s huge. What is it? What causes that? I remember my junior year in high school, I worked hard all my sophomore that summer long, I had gone Freestyle and Greco and we worked all day long, I just knew my senior year, I would be state champ. Go out there, first match against a kid that had taken 2nd the year before, we go out there to wrestle and I had belief that I could win, but this kid was better than me. And he beat me. It was devastating for me. I knew I wasn’t going to be state champ that year, and I lost my very first match. My dad had recorded the match and then after the match, my dad was rewinding and watching it, rewinding and watching it. My next match happened and he started recording, and he actually recorded over the first match except for about 13 seconds. So we had 13 seconds of footage of this match against this guy named, Nick Fresquez. So my dad, every day for the next four months watched that 13 seconds of film to see what he was doing and how it was working, and he’d do this little funky moves on me. We’d go with my dad and watch this match all weekend long and practice the next week, and we’d drill it, drill it, drill it. And we’d come back and I remember my dad watching this little clip over and over and over again, because it’s all we had. It’s all we had to pick apart what he’d done to beat me. And we focused on that all season land, and I actually wrestled this kid in the state finals. And in the State finals, not only was he not able to do that move on me, but that’s actually the move I used against him to win the state championship, which is kind of a cool turn of events. But what it was all about is, I lost, after I lost I looked at why I lost, and we made adjustments. This is the key, this is why wrestling was such a big important thing for me. There’s some people that are just amazing wrestlers. They come in and they just win all the time, I was never that guy, so I would usually go to a season or whatever, I’d wrestle somebody, and I could beat most people, but against the best people I would lose. So I’d lose and be like, “Wow, why did I lose?” I lost because my elbow’s right, I lost because I was overextended, I lost because I took a bad shot, I lost because of this…and we looked at what the reasons why we lost and then we went back to the room and we practiced and we practiced, and we made adjustments and took away those things that they had the last time they beat me and came back and wrestled again. Sometimes I’d lose to them a second time and it’d be closer, I’d look, “Why’d I lose this time?” make those adjustments, make those tweaks, make those changes and come back and eventually we would win. That’s the kind of wrestler I was. I was not, again an amazing athlete, but I was amazing at looking at why I lost and making adjustments and come back a second time stronger and harder. So what happened in this finals match, this guy had beaten him three times during the year, in fact he pinned him two weeks earlier, and he looked at that. “What mistakes did I make? What adjustments do I need to make?” And he came back and was able to beat him in the national finals. So this is the 2nd lesson. I see this all the time in our business, in fact, I’d say with our Inner Circle members, this is where I spend the majority of my time, they go and they create a sales funnel, they create a sales letter, they create all these things, and they go out and they launch it and it doesn’t work. Then they’re devastated emotionally, “I can’t even handle this, I lost this thing. I spent all this time on it, and it didn’t work.” And they’re shattered, and I get  it, but because they haven’t had, I mean most people don’t have a chance to go through wrestling or sports like that where you get beat on and you don’t have an opportunity to go and just quit, you get beat on and you have to go look at the film and figure out why did you get beat on and you make the tweaks and the changes. Same thing is true for us in marketing. We put out a campaign and we launch it and 90% of the time it doesn’t produce the way I wanted it to at first. We get beat. So I have to come back and make adjustments. I look at the numbers across the whole thing. How much did we spend on ads? Was it high? Was it low? Was it good? How many people opt-in on the landing page? Was it high? Was it low? Was it good? How many people bought off the sales video or the sales letter or the webinar? And we look at every single piece of this process, just like I would in a wrestling match. We break it apart. “What was I doing wrong? Were my elbows out? Was I overextended? Was I shooting far? Is my headline not captivating? Are people not opting in? Are people not buying? Are people not showing up to the webinar?” I’m looking at all the things that went wrong in the process and I’m making little tiny adjustments. I’m not going and reinventing the wheel from the ground up saying “This sucks.” And throw it away and restart.  That’s not how it works. It all comes off of tiny little adjustments. So initially when we created our first sales funnel, we’re trying to make the best possible thing we got, then we launch. People always ask me, “Can you critique this before we launch?” I’m not going to critique it before you launch it, go launch it.  We have no idea what’s going to happen until you’re put in a competition, until you see how you react to the real world, see how people react to you. I think it drives a lot of my inner circle members crazy sometimes. I’m not going to critique it until we drive some traffic, I don’t want to screw things up. It could be perfect, it could be far off, but we need to let traffic tell us. I don’t want people telling us their opinions, who are coming and looking, “Oh, this is my opinion. You should tweak this.” No let people vote with their credit card. The only thing that matters is people voting with their credit card. If they are willing to pull their credit card out and give you those digits, then you’re right. That’s how you win this match. That’s how you win this game. I never give people critiques ahead of time, I have them launch it, we drive traffic, spend a couple of hundred bucks and then we look at what happened, and then we make the adjustments, and then we come back for the second match stronger. The second match we may not win either, that’s okay you look at the numbers again, you look at every step in this funnel, this page, what’s happening. We then make some tweaks and make some adjustments. Then we come back again and make some tweaks and adjustments, then we come back again and we keep doing that until we have a winner. Neuracel, our supplement did not win the first time. In fact, if you look at the numbers, it lost the dual meet, it lost tournament. It lost the conference. It lost the semi’s. But then in the end if it wouldn’t matter. I think Neuracel’s like the seventh or eighth variation of it, that’s the one that took off and won. Same thing with Clicklfunnels, when we launched that, it wasn’t the first, second, third or fourth. It was the fifth, sixth or seventh variation that one. So you guys gotta think about that. IT’s not throwing out the whole thing. IT’s looking at what’s happening. Looking at the process and making tweaks and adjusting until you’re right. That’s how you win at wrestling, that’s how you win at business. So there you go guys. Two things that I hope will help you from my weekend. Number one is belief, number two is getting out there and having the match and making the adjustments you lined to make to win. And if you do those two things in your business, just like in wrestling, just like in anything that’s how you win. Alright you guys, I’m at the office. I’ve been sitting in the parking lot for like 5 minutes because I was so excited about sharing this stuff with you guys. But now, I gotta get back in the game. I got a big match today, got a lot of work to do. Appreciate you guys, have an amazing day and I’ll talk to you all again soon.

Marketing In Your Car
Two Awesome Lessons From The NCAA Wrestling Tournament

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2016 16:24


#1 – Belief #2 – How to make tiny adjustments so you win the match On this episode Russell talks about being at the NCAA Wrestling Tournament and how if you believe you can win, you can win, and how you can apply that to your business. He also talks about how you can take your mistakes and use them to make adjustments and improvements. Here are 3 other fun things you will hear on today's episode: How belief is a major force in both wrestling and in business. Why Russell won't critique someone sales funnel before they actually launch it. And how Clickfunnels wasn't a winner until 6 or 7 adjustments were made. So listen below to hear how Russell used the lessons he learned from wrestling and applied them to his business and how you can too. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, it's been a little while. I've been out traveling the world, gallivanting. I don't know if that's really even the right way to use that word, but it sounded cool today. I was in New York all last week, for the NCAA wrestling tournament with my dad. If you guys listen you probably knew that already, and it was great. I was planning on doing a bunch of podcasts from there, I actually saw one of my favorite marketing people in the world. Daegan Smith was there. We sat by each other for most tournaments. I was going to share some podcasts with you guys and him, but it just never happened. It was too crazy of a week, and too much wrestling, too much New Yorking, too much good stuff happening. Anyway, I'm back now to report and share with you guys some cool stuff. I hope that things are going well. We are a little over a week away from Funnel Hacking Live. We are completely sold out which is a nice feeling to have. So this week I gotta go and work on my presentations, I got some cool stuff I'm going to be sharing with you guys and with our community. I just wanted to make sure that it's amazing. We were going to launch Funnel University last week, and then this week, and then decided to just kind of put it on hold until after the event and that way we can focus on making the event flawless. Then we will have Funnel University when we get back. So it's all done and ready and it looks amazing. Our survey software is awesome, just lots of good things. So that is kind of the game plan from here. So I wanted to share with you guys probably what I think is the most important lesson I learned from the wrestling tournament this weekend, which will relate to you guys even if you're not wrestling people, which you all should be. That's an argument and a sales pitch for another day. So the NCAA wrestling tournament is amazing. IT's more like the world championship, in fact, Coach Shultz, if you guys have seen Foxcatcher, Mark Shultz, who is the main character in that movie, was my wrestling coach at BYU, and I actually saw him this weekend which was really fun. But one thing that he said is that the NCAA wrestling tournament, because this style of wrestling is only done in America, he said it's pretty much like the Olympics, the World Championship, which it is. IT's kind of a big deal. It's like the Super Bowl of our style of wrestling, which is cool. The best athletes from all the conferences around the country all come to this tournament and it's a big deal. And it's really big for wrestling, it's on TV, which is the only we get on TV ever. So that's pretty cool, it was just awesome. We're in this state, we're in Madison Square Garden, and the entire stadium is just filled with wrestling fans, which is cool. We had tickets we bought that were on the 12th row, it was right in the middle of Hawkeye fans, which if you know anything about wrestling, you know that Iowa Hawkeyes had a dynasty for the last two decades, three decades. Dan Gable was their coach and built this huge thing and so they're fans are kind of insane. So we were stuck right  in the middle of all these Hawkeye fans that were just going nuts the whole time, which made it really fun too. What I wanted to share with you guys, at the NCAA wrestling tournament, for whatever reason, there are tons and tons of upsets, which are the fun ones. You get to see on the big monitor up top, “the number 14 seat's wrestling the number 1 seat and somehow this dude wins.” How does the 14th seat, who's got like whatever, 20-10 record, come in against an undefeated guy and beat him? How do these things happen? I was thinking about that and talking to Daegan a lot about it. One part of it is interesting is belief. It's just weird, if you believe you can win, you can win. But it's all mental, it's all this belief. Do you believe you can actually do it? We watched this one guy, he was undefeated, hadn't lost the entire season, or excuse me, he only once the entire season, and he lost to this guy who wasn't that good, wasn't ranked that high, and they met in the semi-finals and I was watching it and I was like, I think this guy's got a shot of winning the underdog. The only reason why is on paper this guy should not even be close to the number one seat. It's not even close, but because he beat him earlier in the year, which was kind of a fluke, he had this belief that, “I can beat him.” And because he had the belief he could do it, and sure enough he almost beat him, he lost, but it was crazy close. I have had matches in my career where I on paper should have lost to people, but because I had thought I could win, I had this belief for whatever reason, that guy looks weird or whatever, I had this belief that I just knew I could win. I was able to win. It was weird. I remember this one time I was wrestling, there was this guy in my Freestyle Greco club who I beat all the time, didn't have much respect for him as wrestler. He wasn't that good. One day I'm at this tournament, and I'm wrestling this other kid from some other state, the kid was good, we're having a close match, and I'm actually losing going into the third period. My Freestyle Greco coach, I guess there's not periods in Freestyle Greco, sorry it's been a while. During one of the injury breaks or injury time or something, my coach came out and tried to tell me some stuff, he's like, “Hey you need to work on your level change or whatever. By the way, Matt beat this kid  by 8 last match.” And instantly I was like, “Matt beat him by 8.” In my head all the sudden, this kid in my head was no good, and I had a perfect belief that I could beat him, and the last minute and half or whatever it was, I came out there and I tech-falled him. Because all the sudden…..it was the same match. I was struggling this whole match and suddenly my belief switched in my head to this kid should be really easy for me and then he was. There's this weird thing about belief, it just beats all odds. If you believe you can win, you can win. I remember last year, NCAA tournament there was a kid that was number 4 team seat, and he became a national champ, and I posted on my Facebook wall and I forgot about it until yesterday, because yesterday it popped up saying, “last year here's a memory you posted.” And the thing I posted was picture of the kid, and they're interviewing him at the end. They said, “You were the 14th seat, how in the world did you come here and win this?” he said, “When I got here I looked at the brackets and I looked at all these people and I said, this is who I have to beat to be a national champ so I came and beat them.” It was just pure belief. Anyway, I thought that was important for all of you guys because it's not skill, it's not talent it's not a record, it's not anything, it's belief. And that same thing is true in your business. I think the reason why I win a lot of times, is I just have such belief that what we're doing is going to change the world, and it just does. So my first question for you is,  how much belief do you have?n Do have belief you can win. So that's question number one, the second thing I want to bring up and this is the second half of the equation. Is being able to look at a loss and not looking at this devastating thing, but looking at it and trying to figure out what you need to change to win. Good example, in 174 lbs finals, which you guys should Google this match, it's amazing. Beau Nichols, from Penn State, undefeated the whole year, was supposed to win the tournament, again this other kid, who is a true freshman from Oklahoma, this true freshman had lost to Beau Nichols three times during the year. In fact, in the big tens he got pinned by him. So he no shot of winning, no way he was going to win. He comes into this finals match and him and Beau Nichols lock up, he launches him, throws him to his back, almost pins him, gets a bunch of near-fall points and then Beau ends up trying to play catch up the entire wrestling match and ends up losing, just huge upset. True freshman wins this thing. Everyone's going nuts. It was amazing. One of those matches, I stood up and I stood amongst all the Iowa guys who were not standing and I gave him a round of applause. To come back and to lose to this kid, the best kid arguably in the world right, and to have to lose to him three times this season, to come back and win, that's huge. What is it? What causes that? I remember my junior year in high school, I worked hard all my sophomore that summer long, I had gone Freestyle and Greco and we worked all day long, I just knew my senior year, I would be state champ. Go out there, first match against a kid that had taken 2nd the year before, we go out there to wrestle and I had belief that I could win, but this kid was better than me. And he beat me. It was devastating for me. I knew I wasn't going to be state champ that year, and I lost my very first match. My dad had recorded the match and then after the match, my dad was rewinding and watching it, rewinding and watching it. My next match happened and he started recording, and he actually recorded over the first match except for about 13 seconds. So we had 13 seconds of footage of this match against this guy named, Nick Fresquez. So my dad, every day for the next four months watched that 13 seconds of film to see what he was doing and how it was working, and he'd do this little funky moves on me. We'd go with my dad and watch this match all weekend long and practice the next week, and we'd drill it, drill it, drill it. And we'd come back and I remember my dad watching this little clip over and over and over again, because it's all we had. It's all we had to pick apart what he'd done to beat me. And we focused on that all season land, and I actually wrestled this kid in the state finals. And in the State finals, not only was he not able to do that move on me, but that's actually the move I used against him to win the state championship, which is kind of a cool turn of events. But what it was all about is, I lost, after I lost I looked at why I lost, and we made adjustments. This is the key, this is why wrestling was such a big important thing for me. There's some people that are just amazing wrestlers. They come in and they just win all the time, I was never that guy, so I would usually go to a season or whatever, I'd wrestle somebody, and I could beat most people, but against the best people I would lose. So I'd lose and be like, “Wow, why did I lose?” I lost because my elbow's right, I lost because I was overextended, I lost because I took a bad shot, I lost because of this…and we looked at what the reasons why we lost and then we went back to the room and we practiced and we practiced, and we made adjustments and took away those things that they had the last time they beat me and came back and wrestled again. Sometimes I'd lose to them a second time and it'd be closer, I'd look, “Why'd I lose this time?” make those adjustments, make those tweaks, make those changes and come back and eventually we would win. That's the kind of wrestler I was. I was not, again an amazing athlete, but I was amazing at looking at why I lost and making adjustments and come back a second time stronger and harder. So what happened in this finals match, this guy had beaten him three times during the year, in fact he pinned him two weeks earlier, and he looked at that. “What mistakes did I make? What adjustments do I need to make?” And he came back and was able to beat him in the national finals. So this is the 2nd lesson. I see this all the time in our business, in fact, I'd say with our Inner Circle members, this is where I spend the majority of my time, they go and they create a sales funnel, they create a sales letter, they create all these things, and they go out and they launch it and it doesn't work. Then they're devastated emotionally, “I can't even handle this, I lost this thing. I spent all this time on it, and it didn't work.” And they're shattered, and I get  it, but because they haven't had, I mean most people don't have a chance to go through wrestling or sports like that where you get beat on and you don't have an opportunity to go and just quit, you get beat on and you have to go look at the film and figure out why did you get beat on and you make the tweaks and the changes. Same thing is true for us in marketing. We put out a campaign and we launch it and 90% of the time it doesn't produce the way I wanted it to at first. We get beat. So I have to come back and make adjustments. I look at the numbers across the whole thing. How much did we spend on ads? Was it high? Was it low? Was it good? How many people opt-in on the landing page? Was it high? Was it low? Was it good? How many people bought off the sales video or the sales letter or the webinar? And we look at every single piece of this process, just like I would in a wrestling match. We break it apart. “What was I doing wrong? Were my elbows out? Was I overextended? Was I shooting far? Is my headline not captivating? Are people not opting in? Are people not buying? Are people not showing up to the webinar?” I'm looking at all the things that went wrong in the process and I'm making little tiny adjustments. I'm not going and reinventing the wheel from the ground up saying “This sucks.” And throw it away and restart.  That's not how it works. It all comes off of tiny little adjustments. So initially when we created our first sales funnel, we're trying to make the best possible thing we got, then we launch. People always ask me, “Can you critique this before we launch?” I'm not going to critique it before you launch it, go launch it.  We have no idea what's going to happen until you're put in a competition, until you see how you react to the real world, see how people react to you. I think it drives a lot of my inner circle members crazy sometimes. I'm not going to critique it until we drive some traffic, I don't want to screw things up. It could be perfect, it could be far off, but we need to let traffic tell us. I don't want people telling us their opinions, who are coming and looking, “Oh, this is my opinion. You should tweak this.” No let people vote with their credit card. The only thing that matters is people voting with their credit card. If they are willing to pull their credit card out and give you those digits, then you're right. That's how you win this match. That's how you win this game. I never give people critiques ahead of time, I have them launch it, we drive traffic, spend a couple of hundred bucks and then we look at what happened, and then we make the adjustments, and then we come back for the second match stronger. The second match we may not win either, that's okay you look at the numbers again, you look at every step in this funnel, this page, what's happening. We then make some tweaks and make some adjustments. Then we come back again and make some tweaks and adjustments, then we come back again and we keep doing that until we have a winner. Neuracel, our supplement did not win the first time. In fact, if you look at the numbers, it lost the dual meet, it lost tournament. It lost the conference. It lost the semi's. But then in the end if it wouldn't matter. I think Neuracel's like the seventh or eighth variation of it, that's the one that took off and won. Same thing with Clicklfunnels, when we launched that, it wasn't the first, second, third or fourth. It was the fifth, sixth or seventh variation that one. So you guys gotta think about that. IT's not throwing out the whole thing. IT's looking at what's happening. Looking at the process and making tweaks and adjusting until you're right. That's how you win at wrestling, that's how you win at business. So there you go guys. Two things that I hope will help you from my weekend. Number one is belief, number two is getting out there and having the match and making the adjustments you lined to make to win. And if you do those two things in your business, just like in wrestling, just like in anything that's how you win. Alright you guys, I'm at the office. I've been sitting in the parking lot for like 5 minutes because I was so excited about sharing this stuff with you guys. But now, I gotta get back in the game. I got a big match today, got a lot of work to do. Appreciate you guys, have an amazing day and I'll talk to you all again soon.

Marketing Secrets (2013-2014)
Converting Buyers Into Clients

Marketing Secrets (2013-2014)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2014 14:16


Russell shares his hypothesis for the best way to convert his buyers into actual coaching clients. Listen in to see if this will work for your business as well. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell Brunson. I want to welcome you to an amazing day and another fun episode of Marking in Your Car. I just got back from a two-day mastermind event in Washington, D.C. It was amazing. We had such a good time. One of the guys in the mastermind group is one of my favorite people. He is super high energy and awesome and he is a mastermind junky. I think he is in seven or eight groups. After two days, he pulled me aside and said that it was the best mastermind meeting he had ever been to which meant a lot. We started early; we went late; and we did some awesome stuff for everybody. It was very cool. I had a lot of big breakthroughs, as well. The mastermind group is one we initially sold at an event called The Invisible Funnel. Some of you may know this concept and some of you may not. It is a cool way to sell things without selling. A lot of the attendees are doing Invisible Funnels, so we spent a lot of time talking about them, dissecting them, and figuring out ways to make it better. On my flight home yesterday, I was working on a book I am putting together called The Black Box. One of the steps in the Black Box is the Invisible Funnel, so I was writing out that whole process again. All of a sudden, I think a light bulb came on for me. A light bulb definitely did click. I have yet to see if it is a good light bulb or a bad one, but I think it is very good. Here is the concept behind it. We are selling a ton of our printed products. This is back in our coaching business, so I want to preface that. Our goal, obviously, is to convert people from a front end customer into a coaching client. That is the entire goal, right? We were trying to figure out how to convert those leads from people into someone who has applied and is kind of raising their hand for coaching. We have been getting a lot of coaching application leads, but not in the volume we want. I do not want to say they are not the quality of people we want, but half of the people applying really are not ready for it. They are not at a point in their life where they can afford it; they are just not ready for it. I want more of the qualified people, right? When I was writing the section of the book yesterday about the Invisible Funnel, I was thinking about how it came about. There is a story behind it. I was working with Tony Robbins and Chet Holmes on their company called Business Breakthroughs, International. Chet mapped out their business model for me. It was really cool. They would drive radio ads into a call center which they had built. The person would answer the phone and say, “Welcome to Chet Holmes, International,” and they would give the caller the report for which they had called in. Then they would say, “Hey, by the way, Tony and Chet are doing this event. It usually costs a thousand bucks to come to Vegas plus your hotel and your flight. Now they have a version where you can do it from home. It is really, really awesome and you need to be part of it. “Because of this, we are going to let you get on this Webinar. It is a $300 Webinar, but we want to make sure it is something you believe in, so we are not going to charge you anything for it right now. You can come for free. All you have to do is put your credit card in and we will bill you after the Webinar if you love it. If you do not love it, then do not worry about it.” That was their pitch and their hook. I thought it was really, really cool. When you look at their model, it just crushed it with that. People would come in, register for the Webinar. They would get on the Webinar and stay on there for three hours. If they loved it, they would pay the $297. If they did not love it, they would not be billed for anything. This is how they ran this business. This is how they built this company. I do not know how much volume they are doing, but it grew into a very, very big company. This is where the Invisible Funnel concept came from initially. I could never figure out how to turn it into an online process, but Daegan Smith figured it out. He started creating Webinars where you would register by putting your credit card in and they would bill you $97 after the Webinar was over. He made a ton of money with it. We modeled it and we made a ton of money with it. It worked. This is a quick explanation of the Invisible Funnel. I could go on. We literally did an event earlier this year. It was a three-day event talking about the Invisible Funnel, so there is a lot more to it. This is the core, quick concept, though. It is a premium Webinar. Someone puts their credit card in ahead of time, but you do not bill them until after the Webinar is over if they loved it. At the end you can offer them your high ticket products, services, or things like that. I have been thinking about this as a tool to convert our buyers from buyers into applications. I was thinking that most of the products we sell now are tied to either traffic conversions or sales. I thought, “What if every single week every Friday I did an actual live Webinar?” This is what scares me, honestly. It is my biggest scary part. It would not be an automated Webinar, but an actual live Webinar. It would be three or four hours long and I would teach my entire process for doubling traffic conversions and sales. “What if I started doing this?” This was my thought. I am kind of nervous about it, but I am going to do it. I will have people come on and try it for free. It would not cost them anything. They would put in their credit card for no charge and then, after the Webinar, if they loved it they would pay $97. That is the process I am going to go through. I will teach them all of our best stuff for three hours. Then, at the end, I would use it as a tool to get them to apply to be part of our coaching program. This is what I am going to test out and I am very excited about it. We have done Invisible Funnels on the front end before, but I want to use it as a backend tool for all of our traffic sources. If you look at my business model, I envision someone buying DotComSecretsLabs and DotComSecrets X or purchasing anything we have. They come in there and then the immediate sequence is, “Hey, Russell is doing a live Webinar! You need to get on it! Come here to register.” This would be the core thing we are focusing on, pushing, and promoting. We would use this as our conversion piece. It would convert people from buyers into clients, I guess. Maybe that is the process. The first step is to get traffic to convert to buyers. This is the conversion. The second step is to convert buyers into clients, into people with whom I am actually working. Invisible Funnel is that conversion piece. This is an interesting way to look at it. I am learning this stuff with you guys as we are going. You always learn stuff when you start a fleshing it out like this. Anyway, I am very interested in trying this. It is my goal. Next week we have another Webinar and the week after I am going to test this process out and see if it works. If it does work, I think it is going to be very, very cool. It will be Operation Converting Buyers into Clients. Should we call them “clients” or “students?” It should be “clients.” That is the game plan! I want to issue you the same challenge. If you are listening to this right now, you have buyers that are buying stuff. Hopefully you have mastered Operation Traffic into Buyers, right? This is the first focus for us. The second is Buyers into Clients and we do this through Invisible Funnel. I think it is the perfect mechanism to get people to switch over. Anyway, I am excited! I am fired up to try it out! I will report back to you what happens after we do it. You guys can look out for it. You will see me promoting it here probably a week from now. I am going to test it out quickly to see if it works half as well as I think it will. If it does, it will be an exciting thing for us. That is the game plan for this week for me. It feels weird. It is Friday and this is actually my first day of working. I had a parent-teacher conference for my three-year-old this morning and I am getting my hair cut right now. I will get to the office about noon today to work for three hours and then I am kind of done for the day and done for the week. This is tough for me because I am a workaholic and I love this stuff! Hopefully my wife will not mind if I sneak away and work a little bit this weekend, but you never know. All right, guys, that’s it. I am heading in to get my hair cut, so I will be a little bit lighter, hopefully. Oh, there is one last thing I want to tell you. It has nothing to do with marketing; it just has to do with what is happening today. I am typically a very healthy eater. I am pretty strict and I try to do stuff, but this year has been a travel year so far. We had a lot of stuff happening. We went to D.C. with Daegan and with Daegan, man, we had the best Indian food I have ever had. We had these crab cakes. I ate so much stuff that was not right for me to eat and I felt like garbage. I got back yesterday and I wanted to cleanse myself and start over. I think many times I say, “I’m going to start over on Monday,” and it never actually happens. I really wanted to flush and reset. Some of you have probably seen this lemonade diet before. It is horrible. You make lemonade with cayenne pepper and you do salt water flushes. It is a horrible process. Last night I said, “You know what? I am just going to do it.” I always talk about doing it and I needed a hard reset now that I am back. I am home for two or three months before I have my next thing. I want to start these next two or three months going on the right path as opposed to just continuing to eat out everywhere. This is my goal, to do a hard reset and boom! Start over. I am doing a three-day cleanse with this cayenne pepper and lemonade and salt water flush just to get all the toxins out of my body. I am basically not eating for three days while just doing this cleanse just to reset my body. From there I will move forward in a healthy manner again. I am not recommending that all of you do a diet, but I am recommending this: When you decide to take a step towards something like in business or relationships or health or whatever it is, most of us say, “I’m going to do that!” and we start doing it. Then we slip back into our old ways. You have to do a hard reset; otherwise it is very difficult to stick with it, to keep going on. I recommend that whatever big thing you are moving towards in your life—a relationship thing, weight loss, business, or whatever—do a hard reset. If it is business and you are starting a new business, do a 30-day no-TV reset. You get no TV for 30 days maybe. One of the resets I am thinking about is one a couple of guys in the mastermind are doing. Daegan just did it, too. They are resetting their productivity. Before, they had Skype, Facebook,      cell phones, text, and all of these things. They said they wanted to reboot. Daegan changed the password on his email. He does not know it; he just gave it to his wife. He changed his Facebook password; he got rid of his cell phone. He got rid of any way for anybody to communicate with him. He just turned it off completely and he is hard resetting right now. He is going to do it for a month or something like that. I don’t know how long he is doing it, but he is cutting off all internal communication to himself to allow him to only focus on doing proactive things. When he wanted to reach out, he will talk to his wife to log into his email and send an email. It will be much harder to do this. This is his process to completely reset. He did that and he has a couple of other people in the mastermind to do it. I am kind of tempted to do it, as well. I am nervous (I’m not going to lie). He will do the reset and then start reintroducing things back into what he is doing. If you say, “I am just going to take Twitter away for a day and then Facebook,” it will never happen. It is like pulling off a BandAid, right? It is too slow. You just have to rip it off, go through the pain, and then slowly reintroduce things which you think are necessary. I promise you that during the reboot you will find out how many of the things you are doing are not necessary. It is kind of interesting, so I wanted to throw it out there for you. Think about the big changes you want to make and figure out how you can do a big reboot just to flush everything out. Then when you are focusing in that thing, you do not have lingering stuff that is keeping you from accomplishing your real goals. That is what I have. I went a bit longer today because I am driving to the hair cut. I am here now, so I am going to end for now. I appreciate you guys. Look for my Webinar over the next couple of weeks. We have two Webinars coming up. Next week we are going to talk about how we do our high-ticket selling. That will be fun. The next week I am going to test this Invisible Funnel to convert buyers into clients. I am excited and I will let you know how it goes. Thanks again, everybody, and we will talk to you soon.

Marketing In Your Car
Converting Buyers Into Clients

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2014 14:16


Russell shares his hypothesis for the best way to convert his buyers into actual coaching clients. Listen in to see if this will work for your business as well. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell Brunson. I want to welcome you to an amazing day and another fun episode of Marking in Your Car. I just got back from a two-day mastermind event in Washington, D.C. It was amazing. We had such a good time. One of the guys in the mastermind group is one of my favorite people. He is super high energy and awesome and he is a mastermind junky. I think he is in seven or eight groups. After two days, he pulled me aside and said that it was the best mastermind meeting he had ever been to which meant a lot. We started early; we went late; and we did some awesome stuff for everybody. It was very cool. I had a lot of big breakthroughs, as well. The mastermind group is one we initially sold at an event called The Invisible Funnel. Some of you may know this concept and some of you may not. It is a cool way to sell things without selling. A lot of the attendees are doing Invisible Funnels, so we spent a lot of time talking about them, dissecting them, and figuring out ways to make it better. On my flight home yesterday, I was working on a book I am putting together called The Black Box. One of the steps in the Black Box is the Invisible Funnel, so I was writing out that whole process again. All of a sudden, I think a light bulb came on for me. A light bulb definitely did click. I have yet to see if it is a good light bulb or a bad one, but I think it is very good. Here is the concept behind it. We are selling a ton of our printed products. This is back in our coaching business, so I want to preface that. Our goal, obviously, is to convert people from a front end customer into a coaching client. That is the entire goal, right? We were trying to figure out how to convert those leads from people into someone who has applied and is kind of raising their hand for coaching. We have been getting a lot of coaching application leads, but not in the volume we want. I do not want to say they are not the quality of people we want, but half of the people applying really are not ready for it. They are not at a point in their life where they can afford it; they are just not ready for it. I want more of the qualified people, right? When I was writing the section of the book yesterday about the Invisible Funnel, I was thinking about how it came about. There is a story behind it. I was working with Tony Robbins and Chet Holmes on their company called Business Breakthroughs, International. Chet mapped out their business model for me. It was really cool. They would drive radio ads into a call center which they had built. The person would answer the phone and say, “Welcome to Chet Holmes, International,” and they would give the caller the report for which they had called in. Then they would say, “Hey, by the way, Tony and Chet are doing this event. It usually costs a thousand bucks to come to Vegas plus your hotel and your flight. Now they have a version where you can do it from home. It is really, really awesome and you need to be part of it. “Because of this, we are going to let you get on this Webinar. It is a $300 Webinar, but we want to make sure it is something you believe in, so we are not going to charge you anything for it right now. You can come for free. All you have to do is put your credit card in and we will bill you after the Webinar if you love it. If you do not love it, then do not worry about it.” That was their pitch and their hook. I thought it was really, really cool. When you look at their model, it just crushed it with that. People would come in, register for the Webinar. They would get on the Webinar and stay on there for three hours. If they loved it, they would pay the $297. If they did not love it, they would not be billed for anything. This is how they ran this business. This is how they built this company. I do not know how much volume they are doing, but it grew into a very, very big company. This is where the Invisible Funnel concept came from initially. I could never figure out how to turn it into an online process, but Daegan Smith figured it out. He started creating Webinars where you would register by putting your credit card in and they would bill you $97 after the Webinar was over. He made a ton of money with it. We modeled it and we made a ton of money with it. It worked. This is a quick explanation of the Invisible Funnel. I could go on. We literally did an event earlier this year. It was a three-day event talking about the Invisible Funnel, so there is a lot more to it. This is the core, quick concept, though. It is a premium Webinar. Someone puts their credit card in ahead of time, but you do not bill them until after the Webinar is over if they loved it. At the end you can offer them your high ticket products, services, or things like that. I have been thinking about this as a tool to convert our buyers from buyers into applications. I was thinking that most of the products we sell now are tied to either traffic conversions or sales. I thought, “What if every single week every Friday I did an actual live Webinar?” This is what scares me, honestly. It is my biggest scary part. It would not be an automated Webinar, but an actual live Webinar. It would be three or four hours long and I would teach my entire process for doubling traffic conversions and sales. “What if I started doing this?” This was my thought. I am kind of nervous about it, but I am going to do it. I will have people come on and try it for free. It would not cost them anything. They would put in their credit card for no charge and then, after the Webinar, if they loved it they would pay $97. That is the process I am going to go through. I will teach them all of our best stuff for three hours. Then, at the end, I would use it as a tool to get them to apply to be part of our coaching program. This is what I am going to test out and I am very excited about it. We have done Invisible Funnels on the front end before, but I want to use it as a backend tool for all of our traffic sources. If you look at my business model, I envision someone buying DotComSecretsLabs and DotComSecrets X or purchasing anything we have. They come in there and then the immediate sequence is, “Hey, Russell is doing a live Webinar! You need to get on it! Come here to register.” This would be the core thing we are focusing on, pushing, and promoting. We would use this as our conversion piece. It would convert people from buyers into clients, I guess. Maybe that is the process. The first step is to get traffic to convert to buyers. This is the conversion. The second step is to convert buyers into clients, into people with whom I am actually working. Invisible Funnel is that conversion piece. This is an interesting way to look at it. I am learning this stuff with you guys as we are going. You always learn stuff when you start a fleshing it out like this. Anyway, I am very interested in trying this. It is my goal. Next week we have another Webinar and the week after I am going to test this process out and see if it works. If it does work, I think it is going to be very, very cool. It will be Operation Converting Buyers into Clients. Should we call them “clients” or “students?” It should be “clients.” That is the game plan! I want to issue you the same challenge. If you are listening to this right now, you have buyers that are buying stuff. Hopefully you have mastered Operation Traffic into Buyers, right? This is the first focus for us. The second is Buyers into Clients and we do this through Invisible Funnel. I think it is the perfect mechanism to get people to switch over. Anyway, I am excited! I am fired up to try it out! I will report back to you what happens after we do it. You guys can look out for it. You will see me promoting it here probably a week from now. I am going to test it out quickly to see if it works half as well as I think it will. If it does, it will be an exciting thing for us. That is the game plan for this week for me. It feels weird. It is Friday and this is actually my first day of working. I had a parent-teacher conference for my three-year-old this morning and I am getting my hair cut right now. I will get to the office about noon today to work for three hours and then I am kind of done for the day and done for the week. This is tough for me because I am a workaholic and I love this stuff! Hopefully my wife will not mind if I sneak away and work a little bit this weekend, but you never know. All right, guys, that's it. I am heading in to get my hair cut, so I will be a little bit lighter, hopefully. Oh, there is one last thing I want to tell you. It has nothing to do with marketing; it just has to do with what is happening today. I am typically a very healthy eater. I am pretty strict and I try to do stuff, but this year has been a travel year so far. We had a lot of stuff happening. We went to D.C. with Daegan and with Daegan, man, we had the best Indian food I have ever had. We had these crab cakes. I ate so much stuff that was not right for me to eat and I felt like garbage. I got back yesterday and I wanted to cleanse myself and start over. I think many times I say, “I'm going to start over on Monday,” and it never actually happens. I really wanted to flush and reset. Some of you have probably seen this lemonade diet before. It is horrible. You make lemonade with cayenne pepper and you do salt water flushes. It is a horrible process. Last night I said, “You know what? I am just going to do it.” I always talk about doing it and I needed a hard reset now that I am back. I am home for two or three months before I have my next thing. I want to start these next two or three months going on the right path as opposed to just continuing to eat out everywhere. This is my goal, to do a hard reset and boom! Start over. I am doing a three-day cleanse with this cayenne pepper and lemonade and salt water flush just to get all the toxins out of my body. I am basically not eating for three days while just doing this cleanse just to reset my body. From there I will move forward in a healthy manner again. I am not recommending that all of you do a diet, but I am recommending this: When you decide to take a step towards something like in business or relationships or health or whatever it is, most of us say, “I'm going to do that!” and we start doing it. Then we slip back into our old ways. You have to do a hard reset; otherwise it is very difficult to stick with it, to keep going on. I recommend that whatever big thing you are moving towards in your life—a relationship thing, weight loss, business, or whatever—do a hard reset. If it is business and you are starting a new business, do a 30-day no-TV reset. You get no TV for 30 days maybe. One of the resets I am thinking about is one a couple of guys in the mastermind are doing. Daegan just did it, too. They are resetting their productivity. Before, they had Skype, Facebook,      cell phones, text, and all of these things. They said they wanted to reboot. Daegan changed the password on his email. He does not know it; he just gave it to his wife. He changed his Facebook password; he got rid of his cell phone. He got rid of any way for anybody to communicate with him. He just turned it off completely and he is hard resetting right now. He is going to do it for a month or something like that. I don't know how long he is doing it, but he is cutting off all internal communication to himself to allow him to only focus on doing proactive things. When he wanted to reach out, he will talk to his wife to log into his email and send an email. It will be much harder to do this. This is his process to completely reset. He did that and he has a couple of other people in the mastermind to do it. I am kind of tempted to do it, as well. I am nervous (I'm not going to lie). He will do the reset and then start reintroducing things back into what he is doing. If you say, “I am just going to take Twitter away for a day and then Facebook,” it will never happen. It is like pulling off a BandAid, right? It is too slow. You just have to rip it off, go through the pain, and then slowly reintroduce things which you think are necessary. I promise you that during the reboot you will find out how many of the things you are doing are not necessary. It is kind of interesting, so I wanted to throw it out there for you. Think about the big changes you want to make and figure out how you can do a big reboot just to flush everything out. Then when you are focusing in that thing, you do not have lingering stuff that is keeping you from accomplishing your real goals. That is what I have. I went a bit longer today because I am driving to the hair cut. I am here now, so I am going to end for now. I appreciate you guys. Look for my Webinar over the next couple of weeks. We have two Webinars coming up. Next week we are going to talk about how we do our high-ticket selling. That will be fun. The next week I am going to test this Invisible Funnel to convert buyers into clients. I am excited and I will let you know how it goes. Thanks again, everybody, and we will talk to you soon.

Marketing In Your Car - The Archives
Episode #63 – The One Thing

Marketing In Your Car - The Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2014 14:30


The post Episode #63 – The One Thing appeared first on DotComSecrets.com Blog - Weird Marketing Experiments That Increase Traffic, Conversions and Sales.... How to increase your conversions by un-muddying your offers, and a whole bunch more... --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hey everyone, this is Russell and this is a special late night edition of Marketing in your Car. I hope you guys are doing awesome. I am actually driving home from the airport right now. I had a really fun weekend. Some of you know if you follow me on Facebook, you probably saw we just launched or created a brand new supplement for the MMA called MMA Ignite. I was actually in Dallas, Thursday flew to Dallas to go film us actually making the product because we also, sometime in the future, I'm going to be creating a product called SupplementSecrets.com. I just wanted to be able to have that footage of them actually making our first batch of MMA Ignite so I flew down there, brought a camera, and filmed the whole process. It was cool, you see them. We made our own formula. They go and buy all the raw materials. They have boxes and barrels of all these powders and stuff. Then they take them all, mix them in this huge mixer, and take them into the other room and put them in the machine that puts them into the bottles, and then the label machine puts the labels on, and the thing seals the top. It was a really cool process. We filmed the whole thing. I'm sure you guys in the next few months will see that when we come out with that product. It's a fun thing. I was just planning on doing that, then I realized that this weekend was the NCA Wrestling Tournament in Oklahoma and Daegan Smith was going to go. My birthday was two weeks ago, so Daegan was like, “Hey, I just bought you a birthday present. You're coming to NCAs.” I flew from Dallas to Oklahoma and had a chance to go watch the NCAs yesterday which was really fun. Daegan came through. He got us front row seats so we were front row, right in the section where the wrestlers run out in the mats. It was pretty sweet. My wife and my kids were watching the tournament from home. Because we got such good seats, I guess they saw me on TV every couple of minutes so it was kind of fun. My little son Bowen texted and he was like, “Hey dad, you're on TV. You're famous,” so that was fun. It was just a really fun weekend. It was cool on the flight home, I had some delays. It was probably ten hours I've been in airports. I had a chance to work on this new product we're putting out, another one of our free plus shipping products, just finishing up the front-end book for it. It got me excited and thinking a lot more about marketing and things like that. I want to share with you guys a concept that over the last four or five days, I've been thinking about this. I shared the concept with Daegan. I might have mentioned it on a podcast but I've just been thinking a lot about it. I have another probably 15 minute drive to get back home so I thought I would just dump it on you guys a little bit, and hopefully give you guys some ideas because I think I'm going to talk about this a little bit, the Dot Com Secrets Lab Funnel. I rebuilt it three different times. I think the next, I haven't seen the stats yet but I think the one we built right before I left out of town, I'm hoping that it converts a lot better. I think that the psychology behind what I was trying to do, I explained this whole concept with Daegan. I think that too often, we try to sell things, we're trying to sell stuff. When I first got into this business, people always talked about you create an offer and you create bonuses, and the more bonuses you have the better.

Marketing In Your Car
The One Thing

Marketing In Your Car

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2014 14:30


How to increase your conversions by un-muddying your offers, and a whole bunch more… ---Transcript--- Hey everyone, this is Russell and this is a special late night edition of Marketing in your Car. I hope you guys are doing awesome. I am actually driving home from the airport right now. I had a really fun weekend. Some of you know if you follow me on Facebook, you probably saw we just launched or created a brand new supplement for the MMA called MMA Ignite. I was actually in Dallas, Thursday flew to Dallas to go film us actually making the product because we also, sometime in the future, I'm going to be creating a product called SupplementSecrets.com. I just wanted to be able to have that footage of them actually making our first batch of MMA Ignite so I flew down there, brought a camera, and filmed the whole process. It was cool, you see them. We made our own formula. They go and buy all the raw materials. They have boxes and barrels of all these powders and stuff. Then they take them all, mix them in this huge mixer, and take them into the other room and put them in the machine that puts them into the bottles, and then the label machine puts the labels on, and the thing seals the top. It was a really cool process. We filmed the whole thing. I'm sure you guys in the next few months will see that when we come out with that product. It's a fun thing. I was just planning on doing that, then I realized that this weekend was the NCA Wrestling Tournament in Oklahoma and Daegan Smith was going to go. My birthday was two weeks ago, so Daegan was like, “Hey, I just bought you a birthday present. You're coming to NCAs.” I flew from Dallas to Oklahoma and had a chance to go watch the NCAs yesterday which was really fun. Daegan came through. He got us front row seats so we were front row, right in the section where the wrestlers run out in the mats. It was pretty sweet. My wife and my kids were watching the tournament from home. Because we got such good seats, I guess they saw me on TV every couple of minutes so it was kind of fun. My little son Bowen texted and he was like, “Hey dad, you're on TV. You're famous,” so that was fun. It was just a really fun weekend. It was cool on the flight home, I had some delays. It was probably ten hours I've been in airports. I had a chance to work on this new product we're putting out, another one of our free plus shipping products, just finishing up the front-end book for it. It got me excited and thinking a lot more about marketing and things like that. I want to share with you guys a concept that over the last four or five days, I've been thinking about this. I shared the concept with Daegan. I might have mentioned it on a podcast but I've just been thinking a lot about it. I have another probably 15 minute drive to get back home so I thought I would just dump it on you guys a little bit, and hopefully give you guys some ideas because I think I'm going to talk about this a little bit, the Dot Com Secrets Lab Funnel. I rebuilt it three different times. I think the next, I haven't seen the stats yet but I think the one we built right before I left out of town, I'm hoping that it converts a lot better. I think that the psychology behind what I was trying to do, I explained this whole concept with Daegan. I think that too often, we try to sell things, we're trying to sell stuff. When I first got into this business, people always talked about you create an offer and you create bonuses, and the more bonuses you have the better. Then you get your features and your benefits. You're trying to explain all the amazing stuff about this product. The theory is that if you drop 1000 different bullet points, that one of those little bullet points is going to speak to somebody and they're going to want to buy. Because you're not speaking face-to-face, when you try to sell somebody face-to-face, you have an advantage because you can see what their concerns are and things like that whereas in print and video and stuff, you don't so the theory is you're just giving everything you can think of and throw it out there. One of them hopefully will be the one that closes them. I've been thinking a lot about that. I don't necessarily think I agree with that concept. One of the big things I was just writing about in my book that we're going to be launching, talking about the different free plus shipping offers we've been doing and why they've been working so well, one of the things I've been writing about is the fact that the free plus shipping offers that do the best aren't the ones that are this free course or something big like that. The ones that do the best are the ones that are very singular focused, one concept, one idea, one thing that you're selling. I was thinking about if you look at, talking about concepts you guys probably don't know yet because you haven't read the book, but this funnel that we take people through, this free plus shipping, we put them through an invisible funnel. At the end of it, we sell them your coaching program. Your coaching program is the end-all, be-all, right? It's all the stuff you have, teaching them how to do everything. That's hard to sell because it's so big that it's hard for people to grasp that. Then you take your entire coaching program or whatever and pull one piece of that out, the one most sexy part of that. That becomes what you train on during your invisible funnel training. Then from your invisible funnel training, you pick the sexiest thing and pull that piece out. That becomes the free plus shipping thing, very much one focus. The new upsells that I did for Dot Com Secrets Labs, I kind of did the same thing. One of the upsells is a new traffic upsell. In there, there's a whole bunch of videos and things like that about different ways to get traffic. It's a good product. It's a great product. When I was writing the copy for it, starting the traditional way, talking about you're going to learn this traffic system and this, you dump on all these different systems, I was like, “Man, I don't think people really want that. What people want is the one thing. What's the one thing that the product is going to give me if I buy it? That's what I want. How is it going to solve this one thing?” I took all the, I think it was seven different traffic systems in there, and I just focused on one. I talked about one and made it so mysterious, exciting, intriguing, and cool. I talked about that and was like, “There's a bunch of other ones too but I don't have time to talk about this. This one alone is worth more than the price. You're getting that plus seven more.” I just talked about that one thing, that one bullet point. I just went deep into that and made that the bait, the thing to get them to have the desire to come in, instead of throwing out every feature and benefit, a bunch of bonuses. I just picked the one thing that I think is going to be the best bait. That becomes the entire focus of the sales message, the same thing with the second upsell inside Dot Com Secrets Labs. The traffic one is a new upsell that I hadn't done before whereas this one is one that has been in every version of the upsell flow. We're selling the Seven Figure Shortcut, which is our automated webinar and sales training. I thought, “I'm going to do the same thing on this. I'm going to figure out what's the one thing in this entire course.” This course is big. I think it's six or seven days worth of videos. It's two different workshops and a whole bunch of other stuff, probably one of the best products I've ever created. The problem is when I try to sell it, people don't want to buy seven days worth of videos. There's just so much stuff, they get overwhelmed and it seems like a lot of work. Of all the seven days worth of content, what's the best thing? What's the one most intriguing or sexy, the one thing that had the biggest impact on me, the reason why I put that in the course? What was the one thing that had the biggest impact on me? I was thinking back. The one thing that had the biggest impact on me was when this guy named Armand Morin taught me a thing he called the stack. It's the way he did his close when he sold from stage. He taught me this way to close. I did it and I've always struggled to sell from stage or on webinars. I learned it and the very first time I did it, I closed 40% of the audience. Then I took that and added it to every presentation I've ever done. I think I counted 23 or 24 different webinars and presentations I've created that all use that. Every single one that I've used that has been successful. It was this one thing. I talk about that. I say, “Look, I did this whole course that taught everything else I've learned about how to script a webinar and how to sell things. There's some amazing stuff that I don't have time to go through it all, but just this one thing alone, the stack, that one thing has made me millions of dollars. That's something that's inside of this course. I don't know anywhere else in the world you can get it, but you can get it in this course. For $297, you get the course. You're going to learn about that one thing but you're also going to get all this other stuff I'm not even going to talk about, a bunch of other things that can help you get traffic. That one thing is by far worth the price of admission.” That's the way I pitched it. I'm not sure how sales have done over the weekend since we launched it. I've been out of communication with all the wrestling stuff and the supplements but it logically makes a lot of sense to me. I think us as product designers and developers, we get so into all of the stuff that we create and the packages that we create that have so many elements as things, whereas I think sometimes the power is just figuring out the one thing they desire the most and really focusing on that. If it's what they want, not what they need but what they want, that's going to be what drives them to buy. I think the other things will muddy the waters too much. I think all the other stuff, the bonuses and all that crap that we normally throw in just muddy the waters. It takes the focus off of the core desire they have. That's my thought process right now. It gets me excited because it changes the way that I present things and I pitch things. I was also thinking a lot about upsell flows, the right way to do them. I used to for years, I would just go and have my front end product. What's the upsell? I would pick a random product, and just do random different products in the sales process. For some reason, it used to work alright back in the day but today, it doesn't. Thinks have to be very congruent. That's the other thing I've been thinking a lot about. What is your front end offer? What are your upsells and things like that? This black box is turning into some of our high end clients. We're having everyone create a free plus shipping offer. The upsell is the invisible funnel that they're doing. As of a week ago, I would have thought that the best way to do it was have your free plus shipping be teaching this process, and then the invisible funnel is you going deeper into that process. What I've found from our testing with Dot Com Secrets Labs, I did that. We set it up where a free book was the front end product and the first upsell was invisible funnel style training where they got to be on this webinar where we went deeper into testing and all that kind of stuff. The take rate was horrible. It was really bad. I think it's because if your upsell is more of the same thing, it's not what people want. They want the next piece of the process. The new upsell flow, by the way, if you look at the Dot Com Secrets Labs one, if you look at Dot Com Secrets as a whole of my company, we have three missions we try to help people do, help them with traffic, conversions, and sales, those three things. Dot Com Secrets Labs is the conversion product. The upsell is the traffic product. Hey, we just helped you double your conversions. Now I want to help you double your traffic. The second upsell is the third pillar of our company which is sales. Hey, we just helped you double your conversions. If you took the first upsell, we helped you double your traffic. Now we want to help you double your sales. It's taking that path of logical next thing they need. By buying your product, what's the gap that they're missing? Not so much the gap but what's the next thing they're going to need after that. If you can figure those things out, it just makes your upsell flow work a lot better. Thanks for allowing me to brain dump. I've been thinking about it but it always helps me to put it out in words. I'm now at my home. It's late at night. I'm excited to get to my wife and give my kids a kiss. I appreciate you guys and hope you enjoyed this podcast. I hope you're enjoying the stuff we're doing now. We're putting out a lot of fun stuff and having a good time. Watch what we're doing. We're making more money than we ever have. Model what we're doing. That's the best way to make more money. Thanks you guys. I'll talk to you all soon.

Marketing Secrets (2013-2014)

How to increase your conversions by un-muddying your offers, and a whole bunch more… ---Transcript--- Hey everyone, this is Russell and this is a special late night edition of Marketing in your Car. I hope you guys are doing awesome. I am actually driving home from the airport right now. I had a really fun weekend. Some of you know if you follow me on Facebook, you probably saw we just launched or created a brand new supplement for the MMA called MMA Ignite. I was actually in Dallas, Thursday flew to Dallas to go film us actually making the product because we also, sometime in the future, I’m going to be creating a product called SupplementSecrets.com. I just wanted to be able to have that footage of them actually making our first batch of MMA Ignite so I flew down there, brought a camera, and filmed the whole process. It was cool, you see them. We made our own formula. They go and buy all the raw materials. They have boxes and barrels of all these powders and stuff. Then they take them all, mix them in this huge mixer, and take them into the other room and put them in the machine that puts them into the bottles, and then the label machine puts the labels on, and the thing seals the top. It was a really cool process. We filmed the whole thing. I’m sure you guys in the next few months will see that when we come out with that product. It’s a fun thing. I was just planning on doing that, then I realized that this weekend was the NCA Wrestling Tournament in Oklahoma and Daegan Smith was going to go. My birthday was two weeks ago, so Daegan was like, “Hey, I just bought you a birthday present. You’re coming to NCAs.” I flew from Dallas to Oklahoma and had a chance to go watch the NCAs yesterday which was really fun. Daegan came through. He got us front row seats so we were front row, right in the section where the wrestlers run out in the mats. It was pretty sweet. My wife and my kids were watching the tournament from home. Because we got such good seats, I guess they saw me on TV every couple of minutes so it was kind of fun. My little son Bowen texted and he was like, “Hey dad, you’re on TV. You’re famous,” so that was fun. It was just a really fun weekend. It was cool on the flight home, I had some delays. It was probably ten hours I’ve been in airports. I had a chance to work on this new product we’re putting out, another one of our free plus shipping products, just finishing up the front-end book for it. It got me excited and thinking a lot more about marketing and things like that. I want to share with you guys a concept that over the last four or five days, I’ve been thinking about this. I shared the concept with Daegan. I might have mentioned it on a podcast but I’ve just been thinking a lot about it. I have another probably 15 minute drive to get back home so I thought I would just dump it on you guys a little bit, and hopefully give you guys some ideas because I think I’m going to talk about this a little bit, the Dot Com Secrets Lab Funnel. I rebuilt it three different times. I think the next, I haven’t seen the stats yet but I think the one we built right before I left out of town, I’m hoping that it converts a lot better. I think that the psychology behind what I was trying to do, I explained this whole concept with Daegan. I think that too often, we try to sell things, we’re trying to sell stuff. When I first got into this business, people always talked about you create an offer and you create bonuses, and the more bonuses you have the better. Then you get your features and your benefits. You’re trying to explain all the amazing stuff about this product. The theory is that if you drop 1000 different bullet points, that one of those little bullet points is going to speak to somebody and they’re going to want to buy. Because you’re not speaking face-to-face, when you try to sell somebody face-to-face, you have an advantage because you can see what their concerns are and things like that whereas in print and video and stuff, you don’t so the theory is you’re just giving everything you can think of and throw it out there. One of them hopefully will be the one that closes them. I’ve been thinking a lot about that. I don’t necessarily think I agree with that concept. One of the big things I was just writing about in my book that we’re going to be launching, talking about the different free plus shipping offers we’ve been doing and why they’ve been working so well, one of the things I’ve been writing about is the fact that the free plus shipping offers that do the best aren’t the ones that are this free course or something big like that. The ones that do the best are the ones that are very singular focused, one concept, one idea, one thing that you’re selling. I was thinking about if you look at, talking about concepts you guys probably don’t know yet because you haven’t read the book, but this funnel that we take people through, this free plus shipping, we put them through an invisible funnel. At the end of it, we sell them your coaching program. Your coaching program is the end-all, be-all, right? It’s all the stuff you have, teaching them how to do everything. That’s hard to sell because it’s so big that it’s hard for people to grasp that. Then you take your entire coaching program or whatever and pull one piece of that out, the one most sexy part of that. That becomes what you train on during your invisible funnel training. Then from your invisible funnel training, you pick the sexiest thing and pull that piece out. That becomes the free plus shipping thing, very much one focus. The new upsells that I did for Dot Com Secrets Labs, I kind of did the same thing. One of the upsells is a new traffic upsell. In there, there’s a whole bunch of videos and things like that about different ways to get traffic. It’s a good product. It’s a great product. When I was writing the copy for it, starting the traditional way, talking about you’re going to learn this traffic system and this, you dump on all these different systems, I was like, “Man, I don’t think people really want that. What people want is the one thing. What’s the one thing that the product is going to give me if I buy it? That’s what I want. How is it going to solve this one thing?” I took all the, I think it was seven different traffic systems in there, and I just focused on one. I talked about one and made it so mysterious, exciting, intriguing, and cool. I talked about that and was like, “There’s a bunch of other ones too but I don’t have time to talk about this. This one alone is worth more than the price. You’re getting that plus seven more.” I just talked about that one thing, that one bullet point. I just went deep into that and made that the bait, the thing to get them to have the desire to come in, instead of throwing out every feature and benefit, a bunch of bonuses. I just picked the one thing that I think is going to be the best bait. That becomes the entire focus of the sales message, the same thing with the second upsell inside Dot Com Secrets Labs. The traffic one is a new upsell that I hadn’t done before whereas this one is one that has been in every version of the upsell flow. We’re selling the Seven Figure Shortcut, which is our automated webinar and sales training. I thought, “I’m going to do the same thing on this. I’m going to figure out what’s the one thing in this entire course.” This course is big. I think it’s six or seven days worth of videos. It’s two different workshops and a whole bunch of other stuff, probably one of the best products I’ve ever created. The problem is when I try to sell it, people don’t want to buy seven days worth of videos. There’s just so much stuff, they get overwhelmed and it seems like a lot of work. Of all the seven days worth of content, what’s the best thing? What’s the one most intriguing or sexy, the one thing that had the biggest impact on me, the reason why I put that in the course? What was the one thing that had the biggest impact on me? I was thinking back. The one thing that had the biggest impact on me was when this guy named Armand Morin taught me a thing he called the stack. It’s the way he did his close when he sold from stage. He taught me this way to close. I did it and I’ve always struggled to sell from stage or on webinars. I learned it and the very first time I did it, I closed 40% of the audience. Then I took that and added it to every presentation I’ve ever done. I think I counted 23 or 24 different webinars and presentations I’ve created that all use that. Every single one that I’ve used that has been successful. It was this one thing. I talk about that. I say, “Look, I did this whole course that taught everything else I’ve learned about how to script a webinar and how to sell things. There’s some amazing stuff that I don’t have time to go through it all, but just this one thing alone, the stack, that one thing has made me millions of dollars. That’s something that’s inside of this course. I don’t know anywhere else in the world you can get it, but you can get it in this course. For $297, you get the course. You’re going to learn about that one thing but you’re also going to get all this other stuff I’m not even going to talk about, a bunch of other things that can help you get traffic. That one thing is by far worth the price of admission.” That’s the way I pitched it. I’m not sure how sales have done over the weekend since we launched it. I’ve been out of communication with all the wrestling stuff and the supplements but it logically makes a lot of sense to me. I think us as product designers and developers, we get so into all of the stuff that we create and the packages that we create that have so many elements as things, whereas I think sometimes the power is just figuring out the one thing they desire the most and really focusing on that. If it’s what they want, not what they need but what they want, that’s going to be what drives them to buy. I think the other things will muddy the waters too much. I think all the other stuff, the bonuses and all that crap that we normally throw in just muddy the waters. It takes the focus off of the core desire they have. That’s my thought process right now. It gets me excited because it changes the way that I present things and I pitch things. I was also thinking a lot about upsell flows, the right way to do them. I used to for years, I would just go and have my front end product. What’s the upsell? I would pick a random product, and just do random different products in the sales process. For some reason, it used to work alright back in the day but today, it doesn’t. Thinks have to be very congruent. That’s the other thing I’ve been thinking a lot about. What is your front end offer? What are your upsells and things like that? This black box is turning into some of our high end clients. We’re having everyone create a free plus shipping offer. The upsell is the invisible funnel that they’re doing. As of a week ago, I would have thought that the best way to do it was have your free plus shipping be teaching this process, and then the invisible funnel is you going deeper into that process. What I’ve found from our testing with Dot Com Secrets Labs, I did that. We set it up where a free book was the front end product and the first upsell was invisible funnel style training where they got to be on this webinar where we went deeper into testing and all that kind of stuff. The take rate was horrible. It was really bad. I think it’s because if your upsell is more of the same thing, it’s not what people want. They want the next piece of the process. The new upsell flow, by the way, if you look at the Dot Com Secrets Labs one, if you look at Dot Com Secrets as a whole of my company, we have three missions we try to help people do, help them with traffic, conversions, and sales, those three things. Dot Com Secrets Labs is the conversion product. The upsell is the traffic product. Hey, we just helped you double your conversions. Now I want to help you double your traffic. The second upsell is the third pillar of our company which is sales. Hey, we just helped you double your conversions. If you took the first upsell, we helped you double your traffic. Now we want to help you double your sales. It’s taking that path of logical next thing they need. By buying your product, what’s the gap that they’re missing? Not so much the gap but what’s the next thing they’re going to need after that. If you can figure those things out, it just makes your upsell flow work a lot better. Thanks for allowing me to brain dump. I’ve been thinking about it but it always helps me to put it out in words. I’m now at my home. It’s late at night. I’m excited to get to my wife and give my kids a kiss. I appreciate you guys and hope you enjoyed this podcast. I hope you’re enjoying the stuff we’re doing now. We’re putting out a lot of fun stuff and having a good time. Watch what we’re doing. We’re making more money than we ever have. Model what we’re doing. That’s the best way to make more money. Thanks you guys. I’ll talk to you all soon.

End Credits - The Behind the Scenes in Entertainment Podcast

She's back! Daegan returns to chat about the sexy werewolves of Bitten.  It's another great chat with Bitten series Co-Exec Producer / Show Runner Daegan Fryklind. As always a great chat about her work and her series that's grabbing viewers by the scruff!

bitten daegan
Marketing In Your Car

How to use controversy to create a fan-base and to sell more of your stuff. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, welcome to the Marketing in Your Car podcast. This is Russell Brunson and I'm excited for today's podcast. I hope you all had an awesome weekend. I had a chance to go on a family trip down to a wedding, which was always fun. While I was driving, my thoughts were upon marketing. I wanted to give you guys an eight hour podcast. That's how long I was in the car but I was dealing with a bunch of crazy kids and a beautiful wife, so was not able to do one but I was thinking a lot about it. I got some good topics for this week coming up. I want to go through a bunch of them. Right now is the one that I was most excited about, and it's the topic of polarity. This is one of the keys in your marketing. If you learn how to master this, it will mean more traffic, more sales, and a lot more repeat sales and raving fans. The back story behind where this concept came from today, I got a Skype from one of my close marketing buddies who makes a lot of money but is very conservative, very neutral type personality. He Skyped me and said, “Man, I can't believe how much drama you've been involved with in the last month.” At first, I was trying to remember, “What drama was he talking about?” Then I remembered all the drama we've been involved with in the last month. It's been really interesting. One thing in the drama, some of you guys remember I was competing for a Ferrari which I won. I thrashed the guy who took number two, and the number two guy did not take that very happily. The last four days of the contest, he went out there and started this whole hate smear campaign against me which was kind of funny. It was like a two year old girl crying after getting beat up by a bigger kid. That's kind of what it reminded me of. He was doing all this stuff, and there was all this controversy was caused, and there were people that were really upset at him, and people upset at me but what was interesting is the last day of the contest, I didn't really say much. He was the one out there ranting and raving, and posting stuff all over Facebook and trying to trash me, and tell everyone he was a better person than me. We had three times the sales the last day than we had the entire prior last week combined, so it worked in our favor tremendously. In fact, I had a bunch of JV partners who were so annoyed at what he was doing, they actually went out there and were promoting, without me even asking, were promoting my bonus package just so that he wouldn't win which was kind of funny. It all kind of comes around. Then we were in the middle of this launch of Rippln which I'm sure some of you guys have had a chance to see that. I was brought under to write the whole sales and marketing part of the company launch, help orchestrate all that stuff. It's been going amazing. We've gotten over half a million people to sign up in the first 30 days. It's been fun, but with that, there's been a lot of controversy written about it. We had Tech Crunch, this big huge tech blog, go and write. They don't really write anti articles but they wrote a huge anti article about my video, the pre-launch video which made me proud. Then we got Salty Droid did a write-up on it, and some other guys who think they're cool wrote big write-ups about how we're scam artists, and all this stuff. It kind of made me smile because all this fuel has just been great for our business, for our brand, for everything that we're doing. The controversy behind things has been awesome. Now, what I want to talk about today is the concept of polarity. Polarity is the opposite of neutrality. A lot of people in their marketing want to be very neutral. They don't want to offend anybody. They are very careful not to step on anybody's toes but the problem with being neutral is when you're neutral, you're boring. Nobody listens to you. Nobody pays attention. As much fun as it is to make everybody happy, that's not the way to make money. I don't know about you guys, but I'm not in this business to make everybody happy. I'm in this business to make money. The neutrality behind most people's marketing is what keeps them from really succeeding. It makes them irrelevant. It makes them so that people don't really talk about you. You may have some people that are interested but nobody talks about you. That's what causes your business and your brand to grow. It was interesting, I was talking to Mike Filson about this awhile ago, and Mike said one of his biggest things he's always trying to do is figure out how can I stay relevant. He said, “You know, guys like me and him have been in this market for 10 years and so, and you look at how many people and personalities have come and gone in that time,” and he said, “most of them just aren't relevant anymore. What are we doing to stay relevant, to stay top of mind, to stay on people's radar?” Because literally, in the internet world, if you're quiet for a week, you're pretty much gone. You've disappeared off the radar, which is a whole other story in of itself, why it's important to contact your audience more often, email at least daily. Daegan, one of my close buddies, he preaches emailing twice a day. Staying relevant is a big thing. Back to the neutrality part of it, I was reading this thing awhile ago. This is a couple of years ago so I'm sure I don't know the stats but the concept, I remember. It was talking about Howard Stern and about people that watch his show. They did surveys. They found the average person who liked his show listened for 35 or 40 minutes at a time, and the average person who hated his show listened for over an hour at a time. When they surveyed both audiences to find out why they listened, the reason was the same in both cases. It was, “We wanted to hear what he was going to say next.” That's really a key here. You look at the great figureheads, you look at the people that have the big brands, just in the celebrity world. We just watched the finale of Celebrity Apprentice last night. Look at Donald Trump. When he was doing this whole campaign against Obama when he was going to run for president, this whole thing about Obama, trying to bring out his birth certificate, that for me, I don't care which side you're on or anything like that, but it was interesting. It got people talking and noise, and all this stuff. People hated Donald Trump for it, people loved him because of it but he caused polarity. What happens when you cause polarity is there will be a group of people who despise you and who hate you. Most people don't do that in their marketing because they're scared of that. They don't want that. That was always really, really tough for me. It was really tough for me to see people talk bad about me. In fact, it's still hard for my employees when they see stuff like that. For me, it doesn't bother me anymore. It's been happening long enough, I get it. There are going to be people that don't like me. I'm okay with that. The other interesting fact about polarity is when you create a group of people and make them dislike you, it also takes another group of people and makes them love you 10 times more. That's the power of polarity. When you switch from being in a neutral state where you're trying to please everybody to a polar state where you pick the things you want to do and not want to do, stuff like that, again, you get people who despise you and you'll get people who love you. Those people who love you will spend so much more money with you because of that. They're attracted to that polarity. I look at all the people that I spend money with. I buy things in a lot of different niches. The people I buy from are always the kind of crazy people a little bit. I always joke the crazy people have the best ideas. I always like to subscribe to what they're doing and they're talking about. That's what I spend my money on because me and everybody, even if they won't admit it, you like the people on the fringes. You like the heretics. You like the people that are kind of pushing the envelope because it's more interesting. It's a more interesting conversation to talk about, to think about, to participate in, and people are attracted to that. At the same time, like I said, there are going to be people who are not attracted to that but if that's happening, that's a good thing. Dan Kennedy, one of my mentors, he said, “If you haven't offended somebody by noon each day, then you're not marketing hard enough.” I know that's going to be hard for a lot of you guys but it's the key. One thing I want to mention about polarity is there's a right and a wrong way to do this. The right way, at least the way that I subscribe to is I don't go out there trying to pick fights. I just do what I'm going to do, and then I stand behind it. For example, the whole Rippln thing, we did it and I stood behind it. The launch for Pure Leverage that we won, we did our thing, I stood behind it but I wasn't going out there picking fights. I look at the guy who we thrashed in the contest, and I look at the way that he was trying to create polarity. I think it backfired on him. He went out there and started a hate smear campaign against me and made videos, and posted on Facebook every 30 seconds for two days about how much he hated me, and how he was going to steal my Ferrari, and all this stuff. It was really distasteful, and maybe he got some audience from that. He probably did but all I know is that he was polar so far to the other opposite, to the other extreme, that the people in our market, our peers were so turned off by what he was doing that they started promoting my stuff without me even ever asking. I think there's a level where you can go way too far and you outcast so many people that they don't want to become part of what you're doing. There's kind of a fine line there. With the two campaigns this month that caused all of our controversy, I wasn't doing anything really. I was just doing my thing. Because we were doing it and we were doing it aggressively and we were doing it well, it caused people to become upset and it caused people to become huge fans. That's what I want to say about polarity. Don't go out there. You're not trying to be a thug. You're not trying to go cause fights and that kind of thing. People can see through that. It's not the right way to do it. It's just coming out there and being yourself, not being nervous about who you are, and just doing it. It was interesting, two days ago, I was in our garage. I rented a power washer and power washed our whole driveway. It was super fun. If anyone hasn't done that, it's a fun project. I power washed the whole driveway. Then I found these boxes that got wet. In some of the boxes, there was this tube. I pulled the tube out. I remember seeing when I was a kid. I pulled it out and there was a picture of my ninth grade graduating class inside of it. I opened it up and saw all of my friends, all these people that meant so much to me. I looked at it, and there wasn't a single person in that picture that I've kept in contact with over the last, I guess ninth grade was probably 13 or 14 years ago now. There wasn't a single person that I kept in contact with. I remember sitting there looking. I remember being the shy, awkward ninth grader who was so concerned about what everybody else in that picture thought. It's all I could think about, “What if they don't like me? What if they make fun of me? What if whatever?” Because of that, I didn't thrive in that environment. I was an awkward, shy teenager. For me, I didn't start thriving until I started wrestling in high school. That's when I found my thing. I just stopped caring about everybody else and focused on that thing. I think that so many of us in our business, we're like that shy, awkward ninth grader in the picture who wants everybody to like them and because of that, they stop bringing their own personality into the game. They're so concerned about nobody making fun of them that they're just neutral and just sitting there. Because of that, nobody knows who they are. I was so neutral and I was so boring in ninth grade, that I guarantee you if I showed that picture to everyone in that graduating class, most of them would have no idea who I was because I was that shy, awkward, neutral person who didn't want to offend or talk about anybody. You look at the high school graduation, it was different because I had picked my thing. Wrestling was my thing. I focused on that, and people knew who I was because of that. It's the same way in your business, you guys. Quit worrying about what the haters, what the people who don't like you are thinking. Quit worrying about everything else. Just be yourself. Who are you at your core? Just go out there and do that. Whatever it is that gets you excited in the morning, go and do that kind of stuff. The way you talk to your audience, listen, this podcast was me talking in my car. It makes me laugh because I did a news segment the other day on Huffington Post. It was really cool. Our PR person afterwards messaged me and said, “Russell, you really need to learn how to clean up your ums and your ahs.” I thought, “You know what? Yeah, I could do that but then I'd be losing who I am.” I want to connect with you guys at a personal level because that's where you're coming to me. You're coming to me with personal issues. You want your business to grow. I could give you the textbook answer or I could give you what actually works. That's my goal is to be real with you guys. I want you guys to do the same thing, to be real with yourself and not be scared of polarity. It is a good thing that's going to help you win this game. Step off your neutral line. Quit trying to please everybody, and just be yourself. If you do that, like I said, you'll find a group of people that don't like you and they're going to be mean to you, and there are going to be hate blogs about you. Who knows how extreme it will get. The more aggressive you get, the more exciting you are, the more people will come out of the wood works to write hate blogs about you. It makes me laugh nowadays when I see the ones that people write about me but at the same time, because of that polarity, just by the nature of how polar opposites work, while one group will move away from you, another bigger, larger group that's more passionate and more willing to spend money will move towards you. That is the key, you guys. That is the key to this whole attraction marketing game. That's what I had for you guys today. I hope you enjoyed it. I'm at the office now. I have a fun day. I'm going to try to ruffle some feathers, do some fun marketing, and hopefully it makes people angry and in the interim, makes some people really, really happy. If I can do that, I've succeeded. If you can do that, you've succeeded as well. Thanks you guys. Again, if you had any good experiences with this podcast so far, please go to ITunes.com, go to the comment section, leave your comments, leave your feedback. I love it. Right now, it's my most exciting thing everyday to go look at the comments. Please leave comments, love to hear from you guys, and we'll talk to you all soon.

Marketing Secrets (2013-2014)

How to use controversy to create a fan-base and to sell more of your stuff. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody, welcome to the Marketing in Your Car podcast. This is Russell Brunson and I’m excited for today’s podcast. I hope you all had an awesome weekend. I had a chance to go on a family trip down to a wedding, which was always fun. While I was driving, my thoughts were upon marketing. I wanted to give you guys an eight hour podcast. That’s how long I was in the car but I was dealing with a bunch of crazy kids and a beautiful wife, so was not able to do one but I was thinking a lot about it. I got some good topics for this week coming up. I want to go through a bunch of them. Right now is the one that I was most excited about, and it’s the topic of polarity. This is one of the keys in your marketing. If you learn how to master this, it will mean more traffic, more sales, and a lot more repeat sales and raving fans. The back story behind where this concept came from today, I got a Skype from one of my close marketing buddies who makes a lot of money but is very conservative, very neutral type personality. He Skyped me and said, “Man, I can’t believe how much drama you’ve been involved with in the last month.” At first, I was trying to remember, “What drama was he talking about?” Then I remembered all the drama we’ve been involved with in the last month. It’s been really interesting. One thing in the drama, some of you guys remember I was competing for a Ferrari which I won. I thrashed the guy who took number two, and the number two guy did not take that very happily. The last four days of the contest, he went out there and started this whole hate smear campaign against me which was kind of funny. It was like a two year old girl crying after getting beat up by a bigger kid. That’s kind of what it reminded me of. He was doing all this stuff, and there was all this controversy was caused, and there were people that were really upset at him, and people upset at me but what was interesting is the last day of the contest, I didn’t really say much. He was the one out there ranting and raving, and posting stuff all over Facebook and trying to trash me, and tell everyone he was a better person than me. We had three times the sales the last day than we had the entire prior last week combined, so it worked in our favor tremendously. In fact, I had a bunch of JV partners who were so annoyed at what he was doing, they actually went out there and were promoting, without me even asking, were promoting my bonus package just so that he wouldn’t win which was kind of funny. It all kind of comes around. Then we were in the middle of this launch of Rippln which I’m sure some of you guys have had a chance to see that. I was brought under to write the whole sales and marketing part of the company launch, help orchestrate all that stuff. It’s been going amazing. We’ve gotten over half a million people to sign up in the first 30 days. It’s been fun, but with that, there’s been a lot of controversy written about it. We had Tech Crunch, this big huge tech blog, go and write. They don’t really write anti articles but they wrote a huge anti article about my video, the pre-launch video which made me proud. Then we got Salty Droid did a write-up on it, and some other guys who think they’re cool wrote big write-ups about how we’re scam artists, and all this stuff. It kind of made me smile because all this fuel has just been great for our business, for our brand, for everything that we’re doing. The controversy behind things has been awesome. Now, what I want to talk about today is the concept of polarity. Polarity is the opposite of neutrality. A lot of people in their marketing want to be very neutral. They don’t want to offend anybody. They are very careful not to step on anybody’s toes but the problem with being neutral is when you’re neutral, you’re boring. Nobody listens to you. Nobody pays attention. As much fun as it is to make everybody happy, that’s not the way to make money. I don’t know about you guys, but I’m not in this business to make everybody happy. I’m in this business to make money. The neutrality behind most people’s marketing is what keeps them from really succeeding. It makes them irrelevant. It makes them so that people don’t really talk about you. You may have some people that are interested but nobody talks about you. That’s what causes your business and your brand to grow. It was interesting, I was talking to Mike Filson about this awhile ago, and Mike said one of his biggest things he’s always trying to do is figure out how can I stay relevant. He said, “You know, guys like me and him have been in this market for 10 years and so, and you look at how many people and personalities have come and gone in that time,” and he said, “most of them just aren’t relevant anymore. What are we doing to stay relevant, to stay top of mind, to stay on people’s radar?” Because literally, in the internet world, if you’re quiet for a week, you’re pretty much gone. You’ve disappeared off the radar, which is a whole other story in of itself, why it’s important to contact your audience more often, email at least daily. Daegan, one of my close buddies, he preaches emailing twice a day. Staying relevant is a big thing. Back to the neutrality part of it, I was reading this thing awhile ago. This is a couple of years ago so I’m sure I don’t know the stats but the concept, I remember. It was talking about Howard Stern and about people that watch his show. They did surveys. They found the average person who liked his show listened for 35 or 40 minutes at a time, and the average person who hated his show listened for over an hour at a time. When they surveyed both audiences to find out why they listened, the reason was the same in both cases. It was, “We wanted to hear what he was going to say next.” That’s really a key here. You look at the great figureheads, you look at the people that have the big brands, just in the celebrity world. We just watched the finale of Celebrity Apprentice last night. Look at Donald Trump. When he was doing this whole campaign against Obama when he was going to run for president, this whole thing about Obama, trying to bring out his birth certificate, that for me, I don’t care which side you’re on or anything like that, but it was interesting. It got people talking and noise, and all this stuff. People hated Donald Trump for it, people loved him because of it but he caused polarity. What happens when you cause polarity is there will be a group of people who despise you and who hate you. Most people don’t do that in their marketing because they’re scared of that. They don’t want that. That was always really, really tough for me. It was really tough for me to see people talk bad about me. In fact, it’s still hard for my employees when they see stuff like that. For me, it doesn’t bother me anymore. It’s been happening long enough, I get it. There are going to be people that don’t like me. I’m okay with that. The other interesting fact about polarity is when you create a group of people and make them dislike you, it also takes another group of people and makes them love you 10 times more. That’s the power of polarity. When you switch from being in a neutral state where you’re trying to please everybody to a polar state where you pick the things you want to do and not want to do, stuff like that, again, you get people who despise you and you’ll get people who love you. Those people who love you will spend so much more money with you because of that. They’re attracted to that polarity. I look at all the people that I spend money with. I buy things in a lot of different niches. The people I buy from are always the kind of crazy people a little bit. I always joke the crazy people have the best ideas. I always like to subscribe to what they’re doing and they’re talking about. That’s what I spend my money on because me and everybody, even if they won’t admit it, you like the people on the fringes. You like the heretics. You like the people that are kind of pushing the envelope because it’s more interesting. It’s a more interesting conversation to talk about, to think about, to participate in, and people are attracted to that. At the same time, like I said, there are going to be people who are not attracted to that but if that’s happening, that’s a good thing. Dan Kennedy, one of my mentors, he said, “If you haven’t offended somebody by noon each day, then you’re not marketing hard enough.” I know that’s going to be hard for a lot of you guys but it’s the key. One thing I want to mention about polarity is there’s a right and a wrong way to do this. The right way, at least the way that I subscribe to is I don’t go out there trying to pick fights. I just do what I’m going to do, and then I stand behind it. For example, the whole Rippln thing, we did it and I stood behind it. The launch for Pure Leverage that we won, we did our thing, I stood behind it but I wasn’t going out there picking fights. I look at the guy who we thrashed in the contest, and I look at the way that he was trying to create polarity. I think it backfired on him. He went out there and started a hate smear campaign against me and made videos, and posted on Facebook every 30 seconds for two days about how much he hated me, and how he was going to steal my Ferrari, and all this stuff. It was really distasteful, and maybe he got some audience from that. He probably did but all I know is that he was polar so far to the other opposite, to the other extreme, that the people in our market, our peers were so turned off by what he was doing that they started promoting my stuff without me even ever asking. I think there’s a level where you can go way too far and you outcast so many people that they don’t want to become part of what you’re doing. There’s kind of a fine line there. With the two campaigns this month that caused all of our controversy, I wasn’t doing anything really. I was just doing my thing. Because we were doing it and we were doing it aggressively and we were doing it well, it caused people to become upset and it caused people to become huge fans. That’s what I want to say about polarity. Don’t go out there. You’re not trying to be a thug. You’re not trying to go cause fights and that kind of thing. People can see through that. It’s not the right way to do it. It’s just coming out there and being yourself, not being nervous about who you are, and just doing it. It was interesting, two days ago, I was in our garage. I rented a power washer and power washed our whole driveway. It was super fun. If anyone hasn’t done that, it’s a fun project. I power washed the whole driveway. Then I found these boxes that got wet. In some of the boxes, there was this tube. I pulled the tube out. I remember seeing when I was a kid. I pulled it out and there was a picture of my ninth grade graduating class inside of it. I opened it up and saw all of my friends, all these people that meant so much to me. I looked at it, and there wasn’t a single person in that picture that I’ve kept in contact with over the last, I guess ninth grade was probably 13 or 14 years ago now. There wasn’t a single person that I kept in contact with. I remember sitting there looking. I remember being the shy, awkward ninth grader who was so concerned about what everybody else in that picture thought. It’s all I could think about, “What if they don’t like me? What if they make fun of me? What if whatever?” Because of that, I didn’t thrive in that environment. I was an awkward, shy teenager. For me, I didn’t start thriving until I started wrestling in high school. That’s when I found my thing. I just stopped caring about everybody else and focused on that thing. I think that so many of us in our business, we’re like that shy, awkward ninth grader in the picture who wants everybody to like them and because of that, they stop bringing their own personality into the game. They’re so concerned about nobody making fun of them that they’re just neutral and just sitting there. Because of that, nobody knows who they are. I was so neutral and I was so boring in ninth grade, that I guarantee you if I showed that picture to everyone in that graduating class, most of them would have no idea who I was because I was that shy, awkward, neutral person who didn’t want to offend or talk about anybody. You look at the high school graduation, it was different because I had picked my thing. Wrestling was my thing. I focused on that, and people knew who I was because of that. It’s the same way in your business, you guys. Quit worrying about what the haters, what the people who don’t like you are thinking. Quit worrying about everything else. Just be yourself. Who are you at your core? Just go out there and do that. Whatever it is that gets you excited in the morning, go and do that kind of stuff. The way you talk to your audience, listen, this podcast was me talking in my car. It makes me laugh because I did a news segment the other day on Huffington Post. It was really cool. Our PR person afterwards messaged me and said, “Russell, you really need to learn how to clean up your ums and your ahs.” I thought, “You know what? Yeah, I could do that but then I’d be losing who I am.” I want to connect with you guys at a personal level because that’s where you’re coming to me. You’re coming to me with personal issues. You want your business to grow. I could give you the textbook answer or I could give you what actually works. That’s my goal is to be real with you guys. I want you guys to do the same thing, to be real with yourself and not be scared of polarity. It is a good thing that’s going to help you win this game. Step off your neutral line. Quit trying to please everybody, and just be yourself. If you do that, like I said, you’ll find a group of people that don’t like you and they’re going to be mean to you, and there are going to be hate blogs about you. Who knows how extreme it will get. The more aggressive you get, the more exciting you are, the more people will come out of the wood works to write hate blogs about you. It makes me laugh nowadays when I see the ones that people write about me but at the same time, because of that polarity, just by the nature of how polar opposites work, while one group will move away from you, another bigger, larger group that’s more passionate and more willing to spend money will move towards you. That is the key, you guys. That is the key to this whole attraction marketing game. That’s what I had for you guys today. I hope you enjoyed it. I’m at the office now. I have a fun day. I’m going to try to ruffle some feathers, do some fun marketing, and hopefully it makes people angry and in the interim, makes some people really, really happy. If I can do that, I’ve succeeded. If you can do that, you’ve succeeded as well. Thanks you guys. Again, if you had any good experiences with this podcast so far, please go to ITunes.com, go to the comment section, leave your comments, leave your feedback. I love it. Right now, it’s my most exciting thing everyday to go look at the comments. Please leave comments, love to hear from you guys, and we’ll talk to you all soon.