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Avast and parlay! Still the only adaptation of a theme-park ride to totally work, the first PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN film was an unlikely megahit that rose from "should we just have this be a direct to video thing" to "should we make ten more movies because we're very rich now." But how's it looking with 20 years on the long side of the periscope? Or telescope? Periscopes are submarine things, aren't they? Who cares! This movie has a skeleton monkey! Recommendations: Sean raves about THE PEOPLE'S JOKER, Robin has joined the CHALLENGERS brigade and Kahmeela has gone Dutch for SPEAK NO EVIL.
Clancy Overall, Errol Parker and Wendall Hussey wrap up all the biggest stories from the week - live from the Desert Rock FM studio in downtown Betoota. Subscribe to the Betoota Newsletter HERE Betoota on Instagram Betoota on TikTok Produced by DM PodcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
For Oklahoma educators, the culture wars fanned by the far right are making an already tough job even tougher. Just ask former Norman High School English teacher Summer Boismier, who quit recently after getting in hot water for daring share with her students a QR code to the Brooklyn, NY Public Library – giving them […]
DISCLAIMER: This content is purely educational and does not advocate for violating any laws. Do not violate any laws or regulations. This is not legal advice. Consult with your attorney.If you would like to support us, we're on Patreon!https://www.patreon.com/user?u=30479515Our Reading List!https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/133747963-s2-actualThe War Kitchen Channel!https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYmtpjXT22tAWGIlg_xDDPAOur Website (Requires Tor Browser):http://wx7ssrp5gfuymzmdyng7tfkce7ilzslz5vij7332dv2hmzim26oztvqd.onionIf that link doesn't work for some strange reason, try this one: https://bit.ly/3DymD6qAnd if THAT one doesn't work, here's the full text of the URL, just add "HTTP://" to the beginning:wx7ssrp5gfuymzmdyng7tfkce7ilzslz5vij7332dv2hmzim26oztvqd.onionAnd here's our Linktree page, for even more links: https://linktr.ee/S2_undergroundWhen this video eventually gets taken down, you will be able to find it on our Odysee page! Odysee is a great platform because it has no ads, and no data goes through any sketchy servers because it has no servers. Odysee used to be known as LBRY, but was sold to Odysee. Our content has been automatically ported over to the new site.https://odysee.com/@S2Underground:7Our other podcast episodes are here:https://www.buzzsprout.com/868255And if you'd like to support us, check out our merch store here!https://teespring.com/en-GB/stores/s2-underground-store
Beginning of another big week at Morse Code Studios. First off, HUGE THANKS to Alan Gesek for creating the new podcast cover art you see before you. Check him out on Instagram at @AlanGesek007 to see his phenomenal comic/cartoon/medical illustrations. If you're in need of awesome work done that's also completed in record time, I'd strongly suggest shooting him a message. Second, we got our first sponsorship deal, so I'd pay attention to a great promotion we're running with our new partners. Most importantly however, today we're joined by Kyle Draper of Celtics pre and post game. Actually if you really want to get into specifics, he also does halftime, Periscopes, Twitter videos…you name it, he does it. Guy never sleeps. We chopped it up about his career and how a Celtics-hating Philly native came to cover the Green Team. Also told us some funny and unsurprising stories about covering Kevin Garnett, before touching on his thoughts on the Celtics chances in the bubble. Then we made him prove his allegiance with some rapid fire questions dedicated to his former and current cities - is he still Philly4Lyfe or is he Boston2Death? You'll have to stick around. Check him out on NBC Sports Boston and on Twitter at @KyleDraperTV _________________________ @TheMorseCodePod on Twitter and Instagram @DJMorse126 on Twitter and Instagram @Sopee_ on Twitter and @CambodianPrince_ on Instagram www.aliasconnect.co/morsecodepod
Several months ago I was on my favorite social media platform, Periscope, when a new person popped up and everyone invited me to watch her live streams. I had never heard of her, didn't know her story (because I was living under a rock somewhere that Instagram didn't exist apparently), but I instantly loved her. Who was this beautiful red head with five children, and how on earth did she seem so calm and sweet with FIVE children under the age of five running around? I got to know Emily a lot through watching her Periscopes, and we became "social media friends", which was wonderful. She would come on my periscopes and laugh and leave supportive comments as I tried to show everyone my make-up regimen that consisted of 3 year old lip liners and half broken brushes. I thought, hey, this girl is really sweet and fun, I should have her on the podcast sharing some mom tips since she's clearly got some things figured out to have had so many kids in such a short time! I had no idea, none whatsoever, that she was battling the hardest year of her life.
Ashley was so fun to chat with and I loved getting to know her better! I felt like I already knew her pretty well based on all the Periscopes of hers I have seen, but having an opportunity to have a two way conversation was wonderful! She is so smart, full of ideas and a busy mom of four balancing multiple ventures like a pro! From her fresh recipes to her business and branding advice she is showing moms everyday how to be amazing and marvelous- and that's exactly why I asked her to be on the podcast.
Ever wonder how to build your business with live-streaming? We have expert live-streamer Bonnie L. Frank with us this week to tell you exactly how to do so! This week’s episode of Good Girls Get Rich is brought to you by Uplevel Media CEO and founder and LinkedIn expert, Karen Yankovich. In this episode, Karen interviews Bonnie L. Frank, creator of The Visibility Expert and host of the Business Fabulous podcast on how she built her business with live-streaming! Bonnie L Frank helps female entrepreneurs grow their business through highly effective online visibility, social media and marketing strategies. Bonnie is know for producing over 2,000 livestreams across thirteen different platforms and now brings these actionable tips to her podcast, Business Fabulous. #GoodGirlsGetRich We want to hear your thoughts on this episode! Leave us a message on Speakpipe or email us at info@karenyankovich.com. Click here to access Bonnie’s free download for the Good Girls Get Rich Podcast! Episode Spotlights: Start of the interview with Bonnie Frank (2:20) Bonnie’s background and how she started her business (4:40) Bonnie’s intro into live-streaming (7:27) Her plan to get her first paying client for her new business (8:20) Dealing with not having support as an entrepreneur (12:56) How often Bonnie still Periscopes + information about Periscope (16:33) Tips for those who are thinking about starting to live-stream (18:36) How Bonnie was able to grow her business so quickly (20:03) What every entrepreneur needs to know when they first start their business (20:53) What the purpose of live-streaming truly is (23:27) Background on Bonnie’s visibility and business fabulous podcast (26:22) Benefits of going to conferences (30:17) All about podcasting (34:03) Karen and Bonnie’s favorite source for podcast assistance (38:29) Benefits of having a podcast (42:00) How to find more about Bonnie and her free resourcefor you (45:10) Episode recap (47:13) Resources Mentioned In This Episode: Join my free Facebook Groupto share how you use LinkedIn and get support tips Bonnie’s podcast, Business Fabulous Bonnie’s social platforms Facebook Bonnie’s Instagram The Visibility Expert Instagram LinkedIn Twitter Event’s Karen will be attending and speaking at including the She Podcasts Live conference: kareynkovich.com/events She Podcasts website that Karen and Bonnie use for podcast tips Bonnie’s free resource for this show Visit freelinkedinworkshop.com to check out my top 3 LinkedIn tips for success Follow me on Instagram for more content! Help Us Spread The Word! It would be awesome if you shared the Good Girls Get Rich Podcast with your fellow entrepreneurs on twitter.Click here to tweet some love! If this episode has taught you just one thing, I would love if you could head on over to Apple Podcasts and SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW! And if you’re moved to, kindly leave us a rating and review.Maybe you’ll get a shout out on the show! Ways to Subscribe to Good Girls Get Rich: Click here to subscribe via Apple Podcasts Click here to subscribe via PlayerFM You can also subscribe via Stitcher Good Girls Get Rich is also on Spotify Take a listen on Podcast Addict
File under Extremely Endearing. Joshua, Moses, Bela and Dad. Dad n' I discuss mishearing things at Mum's expense: "Israeli Men"! Honestly! Working at the Karloff. Periscopes and Perry Combover.Joshua's inability to communicate normally is honestly admitted underscored by Space Oddity played on a 107 year old barrel organ for good measure. Featuring the songs "I'm The Lamb". And for the Council of Scoundrels, "My Band's In Jail", "Bird is the Word", "Heard it Through The Grapevine". For Christopher.
On this episode, I speak on Periscopes newest feature where you can add several guests on your live video. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/techandbusiness/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/techandbusiness/support
BOOM Factor CONGRATULATIONS! 3-Nonimations for Internet Radio/TV/Announcer Show of the Year!
OCT 6 Live YouTube, FB , Periscopes between 10AM - 11AM and PRERECORDED sessions 12noon-4pm --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/drdee/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/drdee/support
Some of the things talked about and/or mentioned: Lavoisier Left NGEN Radio (Read his Tweets and watch his Periscopes) https://twitter.com/VoisCornerstone Lecrae and Zaytoven collab on Let The Trap Say Amen https://rapzilla.com/2018-05-lecrae-let-trap-say-amen-release-date/ DJ DMD Life Radio Episode about former 90's Gangster Rapper Ray Jasper Letter about Christian Rappers like Von Won, DJ DMD, LitaRodi, Bizzle, ect. plus the date of his Death Sentence by lethal injection. https://www.mixcloud.com/LifeRadioShow/ray-l-jasper-life-radio-show-tribute/ Check out my website https://www.HotRapMix.com Support BranNuYu & Hot Rap Mix: PayPal http://PayPal.me/BranNuYu Cash App https://cash.app/$BranNuYu Venmo https://venmo.com/brandynnolen --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brannuyu/support
In which Trav does something Macca hasn’t & then dances; Anneliese does lots of running; Melville are clearly intimidated; Peel, however, are up for the challenge; Lou gives her best submarine impression; Courtney discovers her own version of psychological warfare; Renae gets kicked in the head but still sets a new record for doubles; Penny can’t quite reach the fence but Vette can; Vette throws a no-hitter with only 40% strikes; there are lots of spectators in the field; Richelle collapses gracefully in film; Anneliese pays the price for a moment of aggression but this does not stop Amarisa; Britt finds the adjustment hard, however Penny & Renae do not.
I trained myself so I can move like swimming underground. Closed my eyes, they're no use. Navigating by the sound of footsteps overhead. I tell myself that the sunshine's not that great. Sometimes I think I'm lying, but don't confront myself. I'm afraid; what if I have wasted all these lonely years? Now I miss my friends, miss my family and fresh air. Sometimes I have been known to spend whole days staring at the world up there. Flowers are periscopes, peering up through waves of grass.
Today I learned that there's a better way to control a periscope.
Welcome to Episode 351 of Hit the Mic with me, Stacey Harris. All right, guys, so we've been doing the Facebook Live experiment all year. We've had a couple of weeks where we didn't go live, for one reason or another, but mostly, I want to say there's been like three weeks we didn't go live all year, but here we are, five months into the year, it's the end of May now, and I wanted to talk about some of the things I'm doing with the eyeballs that I'm getting. So I've talked a little bit about why I'm using live, and the things I'm doing inside of lives, but I want to talk a little bit about how I'm using that content to support the other parts of my business, whether it's repurposing or driving traffic or promoting things or whatever, so I wanted to talk about what to do after you go live with your live content. One thing to note is, this doesn't have to be Facebook Lives. It can be YouTube. It can be Periscopes. Whatever it is you're using to go live, I don't care the medium. How to Re-Purpose Your Facebook Live I just want to talk about live video content and what you do next. Even Instagram Live now has the option to save, so woo-hoo. But you can reutilize this content over and over again, so first and foremost, I'm using it to drive traffic, not just inside the live, but with the replay. Meaning, when we go live on Facebook, it gets downloaded from Facebook, and it goes up with the keywords and all of that lovely YouTube magic to YouTube. Because guess what, guys? YouTube's totally a search engine, okay? I know you've heard this, but it's like the number two search engine in the world, and it's owned by the number one search engine in the world, so use it. The Instagrams you're doing, the Facebooks you're doing, make sure you're setting those up. Even the YouTube streaming, the YouTube Live stuff, if you're utilizing that, make sure you're going in and put in the keywords, and a cover graphic, and titling it well, and doing the work so that the legs on it, life-wise, are as long as they can be, that that content is still findable. I mean, not even searchable, but findable, because that's really what matters. So use it to drive traffic. Make sure you're including a call to action to get somewhere, whatever the next step is. A free opt-in, subscribing to the channel, liking the page, purchasing something, reading a blog post, listening to a podcast, watching another video. I don't know. Whatever it is that your next steps would be, use the video to drive that traffic, both live and in its afterlife, if you will, as searchable content. I also, we're slowly but surely starting to do this more consistently, but we've been adding those episodes. We are actually embedding the YouTube video on the website, so it's actually more new content on my site as well, so we're kind of back in the format of having two pieces of content every week, because we have the live that goes up along with the podcast each week. So, again, we're driving traffic. We're driving traffic. Number two, we're repurposing the content, so pulling the audio out and making it a podcast, or utilizing a transcript and putting it up on Publisher, or utilizing a transcript and making it a guest post for another blog. I've even had requests to embed the video alongside some content as a guest post, so use that content in as many ways as you can. Be repurposing the live. I have a couple of clients who, they build their whole piece of content straight out of doing a Facebook Live, so they'll do a Facebook Live, and then a transcript is made, the audio is pulled out, and on their website, they actually have a video, an audio, and the written blog post. So no matter how you want to consume the content, you can consume it right there, and again, all they did was broadcast the Facebook Live, so they got those initial social benefits of doing the Facebook Live. They get the content creation done. They get the SEO factor on YouTube, on their website. They're getting all of the magic of iTunes, because the sharing's in a podcast format. They're getting all the pieces, all of the things, to really be making sure that this content is doing all it can, so be using it to drive traffic, and be repurposing it in as many ways as possible. Use Your Facebook Live to Create a Custom Audience The last thing I want to touch on, and this is going to be a short one, because this is one of those things that I want you guys to take action on it, and so I'm going to reference another episode. In case you haven't listened to it, go back and listen to 349, where I talk about custom audiences. I spend a lot of time in that podcast talking about retargeting ads to people who watch your Facebook Lives, and this is a big thing we're starting to do with Backstage specifically. We're actually promoting that community to people who are watching the lives, because we talk about Backstage so often, and we also talk about things where we dive way deeper on the content in structured trainings in the membership library, so it's a no-brainer to be targeting not just ads directly to purchase access into Backstage, but to opt-ins. So, okay, they start with value at the Facebook Live. You want to learn more about X, Y, Z, awesome, here's a freebie. We've drawn that freebie to them. That's the ad we're targeting to people who watch the video, and then that free piece of, whether it's a challenge or a webinar or a checklist, or whatever that freebie is, that email sequence promotes Backstage. We're testing it both ways. We're seeing success both ways, but again, this allows us to find another way to qualify leads for ads, so we're not spending quite as much on our ad spend, because I can actually target a really specific audience of people who are already investing their time in learning what it is I'm talking about. So again, use it as a target base. Use it as a way to qualify leads for ads. Use it as a way to cut your Facebook Ads budget down because you're targeting a smaller section of people who are more qualified, so you're spending less money, and you're seeing a higher conversion. That's where the magic is, people. And so that's sort of the quick and dirty of what we're doing after we have a Facebook Live, after we produce live content. We are using it to drive traffic in as many places as possible. We are repurposing every inch of life we can out of it, so it can serve as many people as possible, no matter how they prefer to consume content, and then of course, we're using it to qualify leads that we want to target ads to, so again, we're targeting ads to people who care. Yay. All right? Again, quick and dirty short one today. Be sure to go back and listen to 349 if you haven't listened to that one yet. It just came out a couple weeks ago. Check that one out, because it's a must-listen with this one. It really, it goes nicely with this one. If you have any questions, private community, hitthemicbackstage.com is the place to go. I will see you next week. Resources Join us inside Hit the Mic Backstage Connect with Me Connect with me on Facebook Tweet with me and include #HittheMic Be sure to leave your review on iTunes or Stitcher for a shoutout on a future show
Yes, there are right ways and wrong ways to plan and reserve your Disney FastPass+ selections at Walt Disney World. The FastPass+ system is VERY different than it is at Disneyland or California Adventure. On this podcast, Rob & Kerri share some of their do's and don't and some extra tips on how to plan your day at the parks and how you may be able to enjoy more and attractions during your Magic Your Way stay. Plus enjoy this week's fun ARE YOU SERIOUS. Thank you for listening. If you have a topic you would like us to cover, please drop us a line over on our Facebook page. To see our list of most popular rides click here. For a FREE Magical Travel Calendar & Disney World Resort Guide, go to DisneyTravelSecrets.com and subscribe. You can follow our live Periscopes from the parks under @AllAboardTV Need help planning your Disney Vacation? Click here to get started.
Mermaid music. Wake up! Have a drink. People are fake. Drugs and llamas. Fangirls don’t act their age. News is sad. Bob is everyone. Squirrels are thieves.
Welcome to episode 341 of Hit the Mic with The Stacey Harris. Facebook Live. I love it. It's fantastic. Last week we talked about how I've been using going live to really improve my social media community, and the engagement, etc, etc. Really, we talked about two reasons you should never go live on social media, or at least the two reasons people give me and why they're just utter BS. It was only a little click baity you guys. It was only a little click baity. Today I want to talk about three tips I have been using to improve my Facebook Lives. As I mentioned last week, I, you and I, we go live together on Facebook once per week, minimum. Generally speaking it's on Thursdays, I've gone live more than once a week a couple of times this year, but the Thursday show is pretty much the standard issue Facebook Live time for you and I to connect. I want to talk about a few things I've done to, again, improve that, not only from a you guys getting a better show, but from a me seeing real results standpoint. Transparency, guys. Seeing results is important. Number one. I started using OBS. OBS allows me to stream from my desktop on my webcam, in fact, to you guys in the Facebook world. It also allows me to do things like smoothly transition from me onscreen to my desktop to, if I'm going to have guests or anything, I can stream more than one person, and flip back between the two of us, and do side by side stuff, and I'm able to do that really seamlessly. I have not done Facebook Lives with a guest yet, although it's something that I might do at some point. I just haven't yet. Also, it allows me to do things like schedule an upcoming stream on Facebook, so I can actually let you guys know in advance, which is particularly helpful considering I don't go live at the same time. I go live around the same time, some time between nine and ten-thirty, usually on Thursdays when there's not a challenge or something happening. Also, when I have the challenges, I'm able to schedule when we're going to be live to do some video stuff, and then share a link to that live and the email before it happens, and say this is where we're going to connect. Just like I would a webinar link. That's been incredibly helpful and I'm able to do that through OBS. One of the first things I would suggest if you're looking at up-leveling your Facebook Lives, you want to move up from just your iPhone or your smartphone or whatever, look at using OBS. That's a really great way to up-level. That's not to say that going live on your iPhone or Samsung or whatever smartphone device you have isn't cool. If that's where you're at to start, do it. Again, pointing to last weeks episode, if you haven't listened to it yet, go listen to it. It doesn't have to be fancy, it just has to get done. If you want to up-level it, and you want to be able to do some cool stuff, check out OBS. That was a big game changer in not only up-leveling the value I was able to give, and up-leveling the environments and the kind of content I'm able to share, but also for me, it has a much more pro feel, and I'm much more likely to do it when I have it scheduled, and I've already told you guys I'm going to be live Thursday at ten am. That's an advantage for me. Again, guys, transparency. When I tell you I'm going to do something, I'm a whole lot more likely to do it than when I tell myself I'm going to do something. It's just the way it is. Number two thing I have done to up-level my Facebook Lives, planning. I have an editorial calendar just like I do for the podcast. I outline what I want to cover in these Facebook Lives just like I do the episode of this show. Yeah, there's a plan here, guys. I know it's not always super clear, but there is a plan. That has been really helpful. It also keeps me from rattling on for 25 minutes about nothing. Not only on Facebook Lives, but again, on this show. I can keep my rattling to five, ten, fifteen minutes, which is much more consumable than getting somebody to hit play and stay live with me for 45 minutes, because I'm great, but woo! that's a long time. So plan. Use an editorial calendar. Get an idea of the structure you want to talk about. Know what the goal is for your show, and that's going to lead us into point three, but I always know exactly what I want to share, exactly why I want to share it, and what it feeds into, meaning is this about getting you to an episode of the show? Is this about getting you into my Backstage? Is it about getting you onto my email list? Is it about getting you into a webinar? Is it about getting you over to a joint venture? Is it about getting you to an affiliate link? What is the purpose? That comes from, again, having a plan. In January and February, you may have noticed that a lot of my content pointed to a singular topic, because that was really a focused marketing effort for the first two months of this year to get you guys to content I knew would be really valuable at this time of year. I knew a lot of you in January were looking at starting podcasts or up-leveling your podcast, and so that's what we talked about in January. We talked about content. We talked about podcasting. In February, I knew a lot of you are going into launch times. Maybe you finally built a program or even maybe you have that podcast, and you want to know how to really rock Facebook ads. That's what we talked about in February. This month we've talked a lot about going live because I'm getting a lot of questions about it. All of my content is centered around a single topic. Again, the podcast and the Facebook Live stuff can really feed off of itself, because we have a larger marketing plan, because we have a larger topic that we have, again, strategized and planned for, and now we're executing on. Look at your marketing plan. Look at your social media plan. Get your content plans, and figure out where Facebook Lives fit in there, and then plan each episode, because again, that has been a huge, huge game changer, and not just getting results from a business standpoint for me, but getting results in a value standpoint for you guys, for the people who watch. Again, take the time, plan, plan, plan, it's all good. All right? Number three, the final thing, and again, this really builds off of number two. Do not forget to make the ask. You're giving value. You are sharing your message. You get off and you're like, "Oh, how come nobody joined my email list, or bought my program, or whatever it is that I hoped would happen?" Did you tell them about it? Did you send them to a link, is there a link in the copy, the written copy above the video or next to the video or depending on what screen you're on, did you make some sort of call to action? If you didn't, that's why they're not going anywhere. That's why they're not taking any next steps because you haven't really told them what next steps to take. Again, when you have a plan, this gets a whole lot easier to do because you know where you want to feed. Going back to what I was talking about earlier, a lot of the content in January was about podcasting. February was about Facebook ads. So it was kind of a no-brainer to say, "Hey guys, we've got this inside of Backstage. Or we've got this happening on the podcast. Or we've got this webinar coming up, or this free challenge coming up", and point them to someplace where I knew they were going to get the next step in value, the next step in, again, taking them, and you hear me saying this, I swear to Bejesus, almost every episode, from problem to solution. The next step to get them a little further down that path toward solution was whatever the call to action was in that Facebook Live. Do not forget to make the ask. This is something that I was really, really crap at when I did Facebook Lives and even Periscopes last year, consistently saying, "Hey guys, here's what's next." I'd even in the past been not so great about it in the podcast. You may have noticed this year, we've really got a close that tells you what the next step is because that's what Hit the Mic Backstage is, it's the next step to this podcast. It is the next step from problem to solution, so guess what? I'm getting better about telling you guys, "Hey, this is what's in there, and this is why you need to pay attention to it." You've got to be doing the same thing in these Facebook Lives, or Periscopes, or Instagram Lives, or YouTube Lives, or wherever it is you're creating this content, and really in every piece of content you're creating. Blog posts, videos, podcasts, I don't care what they are, you've got to be making that ask. You've got to be making that call to action, because again, it's our job to get them further down step by step, sometimes baby step by baby step, from problem to solution. You have to tell them what that next step is. You are their Google maps. All right? All right. Your next step inside of Hit the Mic Backstage, we've got a brand new training on using lives to grow your community, so check that out. We've also got the revamped Facebook guide in there, which does have some videos on Facebook Live, in addition to Facebook ads, and pages, and groups, and events, and strategy, and all that stuff. That is your logical next step if you love this episode, and you want to dive deeper. HittheMicBackstage.com. Of course, I will see you Backstage. See you. Resources Join us inside Hit the Mic Backstage OBS Connect with Me Connect with me on Facebook Tweet with me and include #HittheMic Be sure to leave your review on iTunes or Stitcher for a shoutout on a future show
Welcome to episode 339 of Hit the Mic with The Stacey Harris. Welcome to our first episode of March which means it is a three things you must know episode, and so these are the three things I want you to be paying attention to when it comes to your social media time in March 2017. Now here's the deal. Some of these things will be relevant even outside of March, so if this is not March when you're listening, keep listening, because guys, these are things that I'm seeing questions on, I'm seeing frustration around, and so I really want to get this in front of you get clear. If you want to stay up on the latest and greatest of all things social media anytime, the place to be is of course inside of Hit the Mic Backstage. That's where I make all announcements on sort of network updates, strategy changes, tool updates, things like that. So if you are listening to this because of a intense need to be in the know, head over to to hitthemicbackstage.com because that's the place to be. All right? With that, let's get started. Number one thing I want you to be paying attention to in March is around the tools you're using. We're actually going to review a new tool this month called Viraltag. I'm a big fan of eClincher. I have done countless episodes reviewing tools, and still one of the most common questions I got in February of this year was what tool should I be using to manage my social media? What tool should I be using to schedule? What tool? What tool? it's not about the tools, guys. It's about using it, and the best tool for you to use to manage your social media is the one you're actually going to use. If that's Hootsuite, if that's Buffer, if that's eClincher, if that's Meet Edgar, if that's Viraltag, if that's Post Planner, and I don't care what it is. I care that it fits your needs and that you are going to login and actually use it, because that's where the difference happens. That's where the change happens, and that's where your business and your community is impacted is when you actually use the tool. You know, the same can be said about just about anything. The webinar that's going to make all the difference in your business is the one you attend and then the one you take action on. The course that's going to change your business forever is the one you actually use, so this is one of those things that applies to literally all the things, but I want you to remember, especially when it comes to social media, the tool that is going to work is the one you're going to use. Now there are different tools for different budgets and different needs a different network focuses. Again, I've reviewed a lot of them. I'll actually link to all of the review episodes in the resource section over on the show notes page for this episode, but at the end of the day, if you're not going to use it, it's not going to work. It's not going to make a difference. So make sure you are using it, and that means getting comfortable with it. That means setting aside time to figure it out, to watch the tutorials, to reach out to your social media person get training. Whatever it is that you need to make sure that you are, yes I'm going to say it again, actually using this tool, because again, that's where the difference is made. That's where the change happens. And you know what guys? That's where the results are. I know, it's magic. So yes, the tool that is best for the job is the one you will use. Number two, let's talk about number two. If you're not yet going live, seriously guys, do it. We're actually, we just launched last week on the first, a brand-new training inside of Hit the Mic Backstage about going live, and the power of going live. I actually walked our members through using OBS, which is what I used to go live for Facebook and YouTube. We talked a little bit about a tool that will allow you to go live in multiple places at one time, so if you want to check that out, of course that's all on Backstage, hitthemicbackstage.com. But going live is never been more important than it is right now, so do it. Start figuring out what that looks like for you and then do it with some consistency. One of the biggest things I want you to realize is this doesn't have to be all new content. This doesn't have to be you creating something else. This is a great play for you to be repurposing your content. This is a great way for you to be doing more with what's already there. Maybe you have a blog post the that you wrote or a video series that you did, and you can pull out one small point in that valuable piece of content and say, "I'm going to dive deep into this in five, 10, no more than 15 minutes really, and I'm going to provide the value that way." Or you can be using your Facebook Lives or your Periscopes or your YouTube Lives, whatever you want to use, you can be using those to create your content. Actually record it going live, and then have it transcribed. I use Rev.com for all of my transcriptions for not only my Facebook Lives, but this podcast. So Rev.com, and then take that and edit it into, you guessed it, a blog post. Use the value in lots of ways, because that's how you're going to see it, but you've got to be doing it. You've got to be going live, and later this month, we're actually going to talk about a few ways I have up-leveled my Facebook Lives so that I'm really providing maximum value and really having the best experience from a creator's standpoint, but also my watchers are having from a consumer standpoint. So stay tuned for that. That's going to go live on the 21st, you'll see that episode. And again, if you want to do that right now, of course head into hitthemicbackstage.com when we're talking about Lives, and you can of course ask your questions there about Facebook Lives. And of course, you can join me. I go live once a week, so there you go. Number three, consistency matters. We talked about this at the beginning of February, but here we are going into the final month of this first quarter of the year, and I'm starting to see a lot of people who were really gung ho at the beginning of the year about their social media goals, about tracking their numbers, about looking at what was happening with their numbers and doing something about it, about implementing a strategy, and now here there are in March, and they're feeling maybe overwhelmed. They're feeling like they don't know if it's working. They're feeling like they don't have time. Something else has sparked up in front of them that seems way more fun, and I get that. I totally get that, but consistency is important, and it matters more than it ever has before, because there are more voices than there have ever been before. And so, as much as you can get distracted by the shiny object, so can your audience, and that shiny object might be someone else. So what I want you be doing is really looking back at January, looking back at those goals you set, looking back at those commitments that you made to change something about your social media and do something with it. If that means that you are going to do something, and this is what I really hope it is if you're not doing is already, looking at your numbers regularly, checking those insights, paying attention to those numbers so that you can see if those changes you're making are working. One of the biggest reasons people stop doing something is they're like, "I don't even know if this is working." Well, first of all, look at whether you've given it enough time to work. Two Facebook Lives is not enough time to know whether Facebook Live works for you or not, okay? It's just not. And number two, make sure you looked at the numbers before you started, and make sure you look at the numbers on the regular now, because they're gonna tell you if things are working. I can tell you that going live once a week since the beginning of the year is absolutely working. You know why? Because I'm seeing an increase in traffic to my site. I'm seeing an increase in new members. I'm seeing the impact made on my business from people telling me they're watching live. I'm seeing my view numbers go up. I'm seeing my viewers are staying longer. I'm seeing my engagement sort of fluctuate back and forth, but I'm still seeing the traffic drive and the members join and the sign-ups happen for the free stuff that I'm promoing. So I know it's working, even if I feel like, "Well, nobody actually watched live today," or, "Nobody commented today." Well, guess what? They did take action, though. They did sign up for that training. They did join us backstage. They did listen the podcast, whatever it was that I was talking about on that episode. So if I didn't look at those numbers, I wouldn't see that it really is working. So stay committed to whatever goal you set. Stay committed to taking action, and continually be measuring those results. And guess what, guys? In some cases, it will be that it's not working, and then it's okay to make a change. But making a change doesn't mean throwing everything out, it means "Well, you know what? I've been going live, and it's not clicking in the way I want it to. Maybe I'm going to start going live on Tuesdays instead of Thursdays, or in the evening instead of in the morning, or flip that around, because guess what, guys? That depends on who your audience is. It depends on when they're online, it depends on when they're available, and it depends on how you're executing your Live. Maybe it's not working because you haven't included a single call to action in a Live you've done all year. I'm seeing that and absolutely seeing that mistake made. I'm guilty of it from time to time. I'll get so excited to provide value and share something that just happened that I'll forget to say, "Click the episode. Check out the training. Join us backstage." Whatever the call to action is that episode. So make sure you're doing those things, but make sure most of all that you're being consistent. All right? All right. That's our episode for today. Again, if you want to be in the know of what's happening, not only strategy-wise, but what's happening on the networks, there were some changes that we talked about inside of Hit the Mike Backstage. Instagram is a great example, sort of a bonus thing you need to know, Instagram has now got a slideshow option for your Instagram photos. You can do up to 10 photos in like a little gallery kind of thing. If you want to know about that stuff first, Hit the Mic Backstage knows about it first, so hitthemicbackstage.com to join us. Resources Join us inside Hit the Mic Backstage Hootsuite Review Buffer Review eClincher Review Edgar Review Sedible Review Co-Schedule Review Connect with Me Connect with me on Facebook Tweet with me and include #HittheMic Be sure to leave your review on iTunes or Stitcher for a shoutout on a future show
Más en http://www.Triunfacontublog.com Cómo es mi día a día como Blogger Profesional Puntos clave del episodio: - Trabajo a tiempo completo desde marzo 2016 - 9:30 levanto - escucho podcast al desayunar - lunes y martes grabo lecciones - martes, miercoles grabo podcasts y escribo posts mío e invitados - preparo Periscopes - noche leo libro y escucho podcast... Me apunto ideas en agenda para contaroslo! - no veo casi tv - Gym, futbol - trabajo todos los días - pq no quiero ser una oveja más y lo llevo dentro Sobre Triunfa con tu blog: En el podcast "Triunfa con tu blog" trato de darte consejos, trucos, técnicas y tips para que montes un blog de éxito sin las complicaciones que encuentras en muchos artículos. Voy directo al grano para que no pierdas tiempo. Hablaré de Marketing Online, SEO, Redes Sociales, Periscope e Internet para bloggers. Si quieres ver en vídeo todo para crear un blog de éxito paso a paso he creado la plataforma http://www.Triunfacontublog.com El podcast "Triunfa con tu blog" está creado por Borja Girón y está disponible cada domingo a las 7:00am de Madrid (España). Puedes escuchar mis otros podcasts "SEO para bloggers" y "1 minuto podcast" que también te ayudarán con tus proyectos online.
Más en http://www.Triunfacontublog.com Cómo es mi día a día como Blogger Profesional Puntos clave del episodio: - Trabajo a tiempo completo desde marzo 2016 - 9:30 levanto - escucho podcast al desayunar - lunes y martes grabo lecciones - martes, miercoles grabo podcasts y escribo posts mío e invitados - preparo Periscopes - noche leo libro y escucho podcast... Me apunto ideas en agenda para contaroslo! - no veo casi tv - Gym, futbol - trabajo todos los días - pq no quiero ser una oveja más y lo llevo dentro Sobre Triunfa con tu blog: En el podcast "Triunfa con tu blog" trato de darte consejos, trucos, técnicas y tips para que montes un blog de éxito sin las complicaciones que encuentras en muchos artículos. Voy directo al grano para que no pierdas tiempo. Hablaré de Marketing Online, SEO, Redes Sociales, Periscope e Internet para bloggers. Si quieres ver en vídeo todo para crear un blog de éxito paso a paso he creado la plataforma http://www.Triunfacontublog.com El podcast "Triunfa con tu blog" está creado por Borja Girón y está disponible cada domingo a las 7:00am de Madrid (España). Puedes escuchar mis otros podcasts "SEO para bloggers" y "1 minuto podcast" que también te ayudarán con tus proyectos online.
The Digital Bounds team (Kyle, Sunny, and Leon)are preparing for CES in a little under a week. If you don't know what CES is - it's the largest consumer tech conference where everyone who means anything shows up to walk around the massive event. We're packing our bags, checking our flights, and planning our schedules around the event. We'll have live Periscopes, Snapchat talks, YouTube videos, and dozens of articles published during the event. Follow us on Twitter, Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, and anywhere you're social. We're always @digitalbounds!
Several months ago I was on my favorite social media platform, Periscope, when a new person popped up and everyone invited me to watch her live streams. I had never heard of her, didn't know her story (because I was living under a rock somewhere that Instagram didn't exist apparently), but I instantly loved her. Who was this beautiful red head with five children, and how on earth did she seem so calm and sweet with FIVE children under the age of five running around? I got to know Emily a lot through watching her Periscopes, and we became "social media friends", which was wonderful. She would come on my periscopes and laugh and leave supportive comments as I tried to show everyone my make-up regimen that consisted of 3 year old lip liners and half broken brushes. I thought, hey, this girl is really sweet and fun, I should have her on the podcast sharing some mom tips since she's clearly got some things figured out to have had so many kids in such a short time! I had no idea, none whatsoever, that she was battling the hardest year of her life. Because I had been living under a rock, I had never read her blog, didn't know that her husband Martin was suffering from Stage 4 Melanoma. I didn't know that on top of taking care of five kids, she was taking care of a terminally ill husband, maintaining a blog and keeping a smile on her face. I just thought she was an adorable, carefree mom with the standard life we all seem to live. When I started reading more on her blog, I was devastated for her. I almost felt embarrassed that I had asked her to be on the podcast, not realizing how difficult life was for her. I watched with thousands of other people as her life continued to become weighed down with sorrow, and cried my eyes out when I found out her sweet husband had passed away just days before Father's Day. You never know how to talk to someone when they are in grief, or at least I don't. I prayed for Emily like everyone else, and let her know I was there. Fast forward a few months, and now I can't go a day without talking to her. She's become one of my soul sister friends, the kind that you just know you knew before. I'd always heard Emily was sweet and kind, but until I met her in real life, I didn't realize truly how special she is. And not only is she the most patient, mellow mother, she is HILARIOUS and we keep each other laughing on a daily basis, which I have always thought is the best medicine... Emily came to visit me this past weekend with all five of those amazing kids, and we stole a little time after they were all in bed to finally have this podcast interview. I'm honored to be able to share a little more insight into what the last year and a half were like for Emily, the moments she didn't feel ready to share on her blog, the stories behind the stories. I know it's been overwhelming to share everything in the middle of her turmoil, and she's always striven to keep her blog positive, faith-filled and amazing. So grab some tissues- I promise you will need them, and if you haven't already, prepare to fall head over heels in love with this absolutely Marvelous Mom, Emily Meyers. Make sure you SUBSCRIBE to catch all the new episodes! I love sharing these stories with you, and all of them hold a piece of my heart!
Steve: Hey, everyone. This is Steve Larsen and welcome to Sales Funnel Radio. Speaker 4: (music starts) Welcome to Sales Funnel Radio, where you'll learn marketing strategies to grow your online business, using today's best internet sales funnels. And now, here's your host, Steve Larsen. (music ends) Steve: All right you guys. Hey, I am super excited. Today I've got two very special, kind of unique guests on the podcast. As you guys know, a lot of times, I record my own thoughts on things that Russell and I are doing to make marketing awesome, but I like to go and interview other people as well. Today I've got on the show with me, it's Dallin Greenberg and Kristian Cotta. These guys have a pretty awesome unique way for building funnels. Anyways, I want to welcome you. Thanks for joining me. Dallin: Appreciate it. Kristian: What up. Steve: Hey. I actually was thinking about it and Dallin, I don't even remember how we actually met. It wasn't that long ago, was it? Dallin: Ah, no, not very. Just a couple weeks. Steve: Just a couple weeks ago. Kristian: I think Dallin met you the way that him and I kind of joke about he's the black box back alley hacker. He does all the ... Dallin: If there's someone I want to meet, I find a way. Kristian: He's the unconventional guy. You won't find his practices in a book or a manual. Steve: Crap, that makes me a little nervous. Dallin: Yeah, don't mess ... I told Kristian the other day ... Kristian: Not black hat, black box. Steve: Yeah. We can call it whatever we want, right? No, just kidding. Kristian: Yeah. Steve: Well, hey thanks for- Dallin: I told Kristian, the other ... Oh, I'm sorry. Steve: No, no, you get a say. Thanks for letting me wake you up at the butt crack of dawn and still being willing to share some cool stuff. Dallin: Yeah. Steve: How did you guys start meeting or working with each other? Kristian: I'll let Dallin take that one. Dallin: Yeah. I was working on a kind of unique project. We had a guy up in Scottsdale that owns a software. He's the developer. It's a software that does algorithmic stock trading and he was stuck with his marketing. He's a big guy. He's got a lot of stuff going, but anyway, we were trying to help him get some plans going. I had actually watched Kristian on Periscope. I'd met a lot of guys on Periscope and one day I noticed Kristian was actually in Chandler, which is only a few miles away from me. Like I said, if I see someone, I'm going to find a way to meet him, so I'll comment in his Periscope a few times and little by little, end up getting his contact info. Day later we're in a Starbucks together talking about a plan that we can do, well I was more impressed with Kristian, what he was doing. My partner that I was working on with this marketing plan for this software developer, we were on kind of different pages. I have a background in sales and Kristian's dynamic was a little more my still, so my partner ended up leaving and I ended up asking Kristian, "Hey, is there anything on the side that you're working on or that I think we can do together?" Steve: Mmm. Dallin: Badda bing badda boom. We've ... I feel like it's the perfect love story. We've been hanging out pretty much ever since. Steve: As long as he says the same thing, I guess that is true, right? Dallin: Yeah. Yeah. Kristian: Yeah, no. The funny thing, Steve, about Dallin is I'd been with ClickFunnels, I was one of the first 50 people that signed up for the beta version of ClickFunnels. Steve: Wow. You're from the dark ages, Man, that's awesome. Kristian: Dude. Yeah. We were just talking yesterday because we literally I mean the crazy part ... I'd been so resistant to start using Actionetics. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: Until I had to transfer from Infusionsoft to AWeber, AWeber to ActiveCampaign and we're trying to do something and it's like, "Dude, why don't we just use Actionetics?" It's all in here." I'm like, "Fine." We're switching everything over and I needed ... I'd been doing funnels and learning about ... like when I first signed up for ClickFunnels, I didn't know what a funnel was. I wasn't even sure what Russell had explained to me. It just sounded so cool and I was like, "Dude, I'm going to figure this thing out because what he's talking about and the numbers, I'm like, "That's what I need to be doing. That's it." I been doing this for two and a half years, which is kind of a long time in funnel years. Steve: Yeah. Yeah, it is. Kristian: It's not really that long of a time in regular terms, but I got on Periscope and started kind of talking about my business. At the time, I was trying to grow this fitness, be an online fitness guy. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: I'd used funnels to grow an email list of 3,500 people and I got on to Periscope and nobody cared about the fitness. They wanted to know how I was growing my email list and how I was doing my, how was I doing this business. Steve: Interesting. Kristian: Then I kind of became one of the funnel guys on Periscope and was a speaker at the Periscope Summit. I got this notoriety on Periscope for, they call me the King of Funnels. I'm like, "No, guys. I know some really big funnel guys on Periscope." They're like, "No, King of Funnels." Steve: Wow. Kristian: It's been like two and a half years of this little journey of learning funnels where it's been ... I'll tell you the three guys I credit everything to are Russell, Todd Brown and [Lo Silva 00:06:09]. Steve: Mmm. Kristian: I actually had just finished the PCP coaching program with Todd Brown and those guys. Dallin, when he came to me was like, "Dude, this stuff you're talking about is awesome." I said, "Well, let's, I need a guy that gets it. That is driven and ... " that was Dallin. Now we've got this little, little agency we're trying to scale. Steve: That's awesome, because good partners are hard to find. I remember I started doing this back in college. My buddy and I were driving traffic for Paul Mitchell and we were doing all this stuff. I ended up firing, going through nine different partners. It's cool that you guys found each other, you know what I mean? That's pretty rare just right there. Kristian: Yeah. If you go back and talk about Dallin's ... there's a couple of key things that I was looking for, because I have an entire course. You love Periscope. I saw some of your Periscopes on YouTube and ... Steve: Dang it. Man, those were the new days for me. Kristian: Yeah. I was a speaker at the Periscope Summit in January. Steve: Cool. Wow. Kristian: Dallin's helped me develop this program and it's something that we've rolled out in beta and we're going to roll out as a digital product. It's called the Live Video Funnel. I've been working with Todd Brown and the guys at MFA on the entire sequence and the packaging and all that kind of stuff. They're calling Kurt [Malley 00:08:00] speaking at Marketing Funnel Automation Live in October and one of the things they're saying is that the biggest opportunity of 2017 is, they call it the Facebook Live Funnel, but I'm going to let you guys in on a little note. Facebook Live and Periscope don't work the same way. Even though they're both live video, they're different, so Dallin ... I needed somebody to help me with that aspect. I couldn't ... to be honest, you know this Steven, Steve: Yeah. Kristian: I couldn't do all that, every single thing, every single aspect of a funnel. Steve: No. Kristian: The script writing, the copy writing, the editing, the videos for the VSL's, the strategy, the email marketing sequences, all the social media. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: What I'm really good, compliments what Dallin's really good at, like I said, his ability to get in on Facebook and recruit people. He has this really strong sense about building a team, which is one of those things that ... we both get along with people, but Dallin's good at that recruitment process. When you want to build and scale something and you need the right people, you need somebody like that. Steve: That's awesome. That's awesome. Yeah, it's hard to find that stuff. Dallin, you and I, we were talking a little bit about some of the trials you guys went through. Obviously individually you do, but you guys met each other, what have you guys been working on and I guess what was the ... What are some of the issues you guys have run on, I guess, getting to where you are. You know what I mean? Unspoken stories, you know that where none of us put in our marketing hardly ever unless it's part of our sales letter. "I was in the dumps, but now I'm flying high." These are like, really what kind of issues did you guys run into what you're doing now? What are you doing now, first of all? Dallin: Well, the majority of our issues actually are from more individual sides. We're actually doing really good with our projects together. Steve: Mmm. Dallin: Your typical issues you run in together are testing. That's what funnels are, right, it's testing, testing, testing, testing. There's always that down side until you ... it's just a numbers game, right, until you find something that works. As far as the personal side, because I believe that this kind of runs, this is the fire that's on the inside, the Y factor from what I call it, right. My background's in sales, so I did door-to-door for years. I think, Steven, you've mentioned that you flirted with that a little bit but, I was really good at it. Steve: Yeah. Yeah. That's like, I'm sorry to interrupt, but that's one of the best educations I've ever had. Dallin: Yeah. Yeah. Steve: I've got a marketing degree and I don't know what I learned from it. You know? Dallin: Well, that's actually just what I was going to say. I was going to school for business and marketing and be honest, my classes were super redundant. I hated them. I was like, "Man, this is for years I've been planning on doing this and ... " Anyway I got into sales and I did pretty good at it. I just kept going. I ended up doing more recruiting and for six, seven years going out on the summers and taking a team out and helping manage and recruit and sell. Steve: Yeah. Dallin: You learn so much from just talking to people, the sale cycle, funnels, a different type of funnel, right? Steve: Yeah. Dallin: Learning how to build value to the point where it doesn't matter what you ask for money, because they love it so much that they're going to buy. It taught me a lot. Well, long story short, I made my transition. I was doing alarms and home automation. I made my transition with this solar boom. Steve: Mmm. Dallin: Solar's on fire and fortunately for us, we live in Arizona, one of the sunniest places in the world. Solar was hot, but a lot of stuff was happening politically. A lot of the utilities are trying to shut down solar here just because of different costs. It's a mess. They succeeded and actually the utility ... There's two main utilities in Arizona. They succeeded shutting down solar where I live. In order for me to get work, I'd have to go an hour a day just to prospect clients, let alone keep my pipelines, my relationships, my contracts, everything going, because they're longer projects. It was really funny because I was really bummed because I was really excited about this transition. It was a huge jump for me because we were so comfortable with what we were doing, making awesome money and it was kind of just this really big leap of faith. Well, last April, fast forward a little bit, last April, our little girl, our daughter, she was four years old. She got diagnosed with leukemia. Steve: Oh man. Dallin: When that happened, we literally were going to leave for another summer, two days after she was diagnosed. It was crazy. Everything was just happening and days and days and days sitting in the hospital. I had always wanted to do something online my whole life, but I didn't want to ... I didn't know exactly what was happening. I didn't know where I wanted to put my foot in. I didn't want to mess with inventory and selling one off things. I wanted to do something on a big level. I just didn't know how to do it. In the hospital you got a lot of time to yourself and so I'd study these things. I'd start looking at different processes. I'd find patterns. I would sign up for everyone's email list, not because I cared about their product. I wanted to see their system. I wanted to study the funnel. I wanted to study the email sequences and I started seeing the patterns. That's when I kind of got into a lot of this other stuff with Periscope and live stream. I was like, "Man, this is the future. I get it." I think every guy that's doing any sort of digital marketing has a day where they, it kind of clicks and they say, "Holy smokes. I can really ... This is powerful. This is how you can reach a lot of people." What everyone wants to do is have a voice and do something. I ended up switching my major, going to school for persuasion and negotiations were my sayings. I was a business communication major and I had that emphasis in persuasion and negotiation. Looking back on everything now, it was just perfect. Everything kind of worked out really, really good. I was kind of like, my little side, so we really hit this kind of rock bottom where it was like ... financially we took a massive hit because I wasn't able to go out, drive an hour and do all this kind of stuff. This last year- Steve: Yeah. You needed to be home. Yeah. Dallin: This last year has really been an investment of my time and I just kind of feel like I went back to school. I feel like I'm getting way more out of this school than four years of collegiate, right? Steve: Easily. Man, how's your daughter now? If you don't mind me asking. Dallin: She's awesome. She's in a maintenance phase right now, got another year left of treatments, but she's ... hair's back and muscles coming back and went back to school. She's in a really, really good spot right now. Appreciate it. Kristian: She's strong too. You should see her. Steve: Really? Dallin: Yeah. Steve: That's amazing. Dallin: It's from everything that she went through. She got down to, had to relearn to walk, lost all her muscles. She was a little skin and bones and now she's this little muscle ball. Kristian: Now she's a beast. Dallin: She's awesome. Steve: I appreciate you guys sharing that kind of stuff. I mean it's ... because most of the ... I've never interviewed anyone on this who hasn't gone through something crazy, you know. It's not like the path is always clear, either. Usually it isn't. Dallin: Yeah. Steve: There's a lot of times I wake up and come here, I'm like, "I don't even know. I know I got to work on something, but I don't know what." It's like going through this hazy fog, so I appreciate that. Then there's all the personal side and all the things going on. Yeah, I first started getting into this stuff, little bit similar with door-to-door sales. I started looking around going, "What the heck?" We're driving out and there's all these billboards everywhere. I was like, "People call these things ready to buy." I'm knocking on people's doors all day long and they're not wanting to buy it when they wake up. I've got to go convince people who weren't planning on spend money. Like, "How do I do this?" I start putting ads everywhere and that's how I started getting phone sales and stuff. I was like, "There's something to this." Anyways, I- Dallin: See, that's funny because I was kind of the same person. All the other managers are, "Dallin, stop trying to reinvent the wheel. It works." Steve: DS, yeah. Dallin: DS, this. I'm like, "No, guys. There is a better way." My motto in everything in life is there is always a better way. I don't care what you say and what's working. Something can be tweaked and something can be done to scale. Steve: Yeah. Yeah, definitely. Kristian: Which is funny, because Russell always says, "You can tell the pioneers because they're lying face down with arrows in their back." Steve: Yeah. Kristian: I guess in this case, it wasn't really pioneering. You were trying to find the people laying face down. Steve: Yeah. Yeah. Dallin: Yeah. Steve: Side stepping all the other people who were already face down because they knocked 400 doors that day, right? Dallin: Yeah, seriously. Steve: What are you guys working on right now though? You guys mentioned that there's some awesome things going on. What's your current funnel, if you don't mind talking about that? [inaudible 00:18:19] sounds like, maybe ... Kristian: Dallin said like perfect timing. I feel like it has been. We joke about being a startup because ultimately we are, to the point that we're even in the process of creating our business plans and our SOP's and all that kind of stuff, so that we can talk to some investors. We have some investors that we're talking to in order to really have the capital that we think we need to be able to scale this thing quickly, instead of Facebook ads tested at $10 a day for 50 weeks. Steve: Yeah. Yeah. Kristian: Yeah. The whole reason I got into learning funnels was, you guys talked about door-to-door sales and I have 15 years of commercial real estate experience. I worked with clients like L.A. Fitness and McDonald's. I represented McDonald's for the state of Arizona and Burger King and Taco Bell, so pretty big name companies. There's a lot of guys that would be happy with that, but the problem I had was that I kept looking at the deal size of what I was doing. It was constantly kind of like this feast or famine situation where you either had a huge check or you had nothing. Literally, nothing. It kind of got to the point where I was like, "Man, there's a better way to do this." Very similar. You guys hear the consistent theme here? There's a better way. That was kind of the first step of me saying, "I'm going to figure out how to streamline this" so that it wasn't even so much ... I just kept seeing all the guys that were buying the properties doing all these big deals. They weren't even in real estate. They had these other businesses that were generating cash flow and here I am putting these deals together that are making, Dallin and I had this exact conversation, making these guys over a million dollars and they're like, "Oh hey, thanks. Here's 40 grand." Steve: Yeah. Yeah. Kristian: What's wrong with this equation? I'm the one that did the whole thing, the financials and all that. I just didn't have the money. That was the start of it. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: Then you add on top of it that we got into a network marketing company and did really well, but we got stuck right under about 10 grand a month for like 18 months. It turned into another full time job where I was 40, 50 hours a week at every Starbucks from east to west meeting people. I'm like, "This is not working." Steve: Yeah. Kristian: Those two combined, I was like, "If I get online, I can figure out how to do both of these. I don't have to pick because I can leverage myself." Steve: That is kind of the funny thing I learned about ... because I got into an MOM. I went and did exactly what my upline was saying. Got 13 people my first move. Kristian: Oh, wait, your [inaudible 00:21:42] not duplicatable. Steve: No. Not at all. Kristian: I don't care. If I find enough of the right people, it won't have to be. Steve: Yeah. Yeah. My first month, I recruited 13 leeches. Man, they wouldn't do a dang thing unless I was like pushing them in the back with a cattle prod. I was like, "Ah. There's got to be a better way to do this." That's why I took it online and did a lot better. I definitely relate with that. Kristian: Yeah. The crazy part about this is, like Dallin was saying, he's, shoot, some of the advanced strategies ... Dallin's has this like ... he understands and can see what the outcome is that we're trying to do. He gets it. He gets the whole flow and process of this, of how funnels work. He's been studying them. I just think for a big part, he just needed to connect certain pieces and be able to see what's going on behind the scenes that you can't see online. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: We talk about ... the hardest part about knowing how to do funnels is focusing because when you understand it and it clicks and you realize what you can do, it's like .... Someone starts talking you're like, "Oh my God. I know how to make money with that. Oh my God." Steve: Yeah. Kristian: It's like entrepreneurial ADD exacerbated. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: Forget entrepreneurial ADD. This is like an entrepreneurial ADD addiction. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: That's the issue, so we've had to get very focused on okay what's the quickest and most pressing thing at the moment that we can make money with, so that we can reach our long term goals. Like I said, Lo Silva is one of the guys that I credit a lot of what I learned from. There's three little things that I take from them and that's think big, start small, scale fast. Steve: Interesting. Think big, start small, scale fast. Kristian: Yeah, that's kind of our little mantra. Dallin: Yeah. That leads into basically what we're doing now. Our whole plan without getting too much into detail is we have a very, very big picture. Just like a funnel, we have our personal value ladder. Our big picture is more in investments, real estate, things like that. Those are our high tickets. Right. Steve: Yeah. Dallin: For the time being, we need to make sure that we couple that with clients, so we have our lead gen system, our agency that's doing multiple things, SCO work and funnels, and social media strategies and management and that way it can help us scale. Our agency essentially fronts the bills and I guess the best way to put it is we want everything that we do to be self-sufficient. If we build something, the entire goal- Steve: Keep it in hands. Dallin: Well, yes and no. The entire thing is for that project to sustain itself, so you understand once you get going with your Facebook marketing and such, it gets to the point where you reinvest X amount back into it. Then it lives, it breaths on it's own kind of. It just needs to be monitored, right. Steve: Yeah. Dallin: If we have this solid balance between us of we have clients coming to us for done-for-you services, that's awesome. That's cash. That keeps us busy. That keeps workers of ours busy. Then in the meantime, if we can couple that with 40, 50% of our other time for in-house projects, because Kristian and I already have entrepreneurial ADD, we're always thinking of ideas. We always have something going on or a lot of times a client that comes in has something that sparks an idea. Steve: Yeah. Dallin: We'll, like you said, we'll keep them in-house and then we funnel them. We get them to the point where they self-sustain and all of a sudden, we have our house projects, our client projects and it's just a very healthy business model. You don't see a lot of very sustainable and scalable models. You know what I mean? Steve: Yeah. Dallin: Especially, because I've been with very, very, very big companies with these companies I've sold for and you find ... one of the things I like to do is study patterns and development. I'm really into the business development side of things. You look at the ones that have made it, that have succeeded and that are scaled to the massive, massive billion dollar companies and that's kind of what they do. They make sure they have kind of that happy medium, that solid balance in all these different areas and factors and that's kind of what we're trying to do. One of the projects we're working on right now is a political campaign funnel. This is just one that's easy to scale and we're just pretty much hacking it and taking advantage events which one of the things coupling social media with funnels is current events, man. That's, they kill. If you can find something trending and good and that has ... that you can milk for a long time, you better believe we're going to find a way to make, pinch money out of it, right. Steve: Yeah. Isn't it the- Dallin: I'll let Kristian talk about that. Steve: The political campaign funnel, is that the one you downloaded I think from Sales Funnel Broker? Kristian: Ah, no. Steve: Maybe that was you, maybe it wasn't. I don't know. There's some guy, he downloaded it and came back and he's like, "This is the coolest thing ever." I was like, "Just the share [funnel 00:27:53] free one I got from someone else. Glad you like it." Kristian: Yeah, no. I got the idea from actually from Funnel ... I got part of the idea from Funnel U. To be honest, as much as we know about funnels, something clicked when I watched Russell's video inside the membership site for the political bridge funnel, where it was like, "I see it." It was that coupled with the, the funnel stacking I got that whole idea of moving them from a front end funnel to a webinar funnel to a high ticket and how you stack those. Steve: Sure. Kristian: Bridging and when all the sudden the bridging made sense to me, I said, "Oh my God." Just like what Dallin was talking about here. Ultimately our goal is to, take the same amount of time to do all this work to go and work with somebody and do a commercial real estate transaction, where we're an investor or we're buying the property and people are investing with us, as it does to sell a t-shirt. Just time is time, it's just the size of the value and how you frame your mind around it. We are in the process of growing our agency. The whole point of it is to, if you think of construction companies, really good construction companies constantly have work that's in place to keep their employees working, so that they have the best team, right. Steve: Mmm. Yeah. Kristian: That's what they're always talking about is we just have to keep work so we can keep these guys busy. It's not about keeping them busy, but we also want to have the team in place because ultimately when we have our ideas, we can get them shipped quicker. Steve: Yeah. I've been approached by a few people lately and they're like, "I got these awesome guys. I absolutely love them." He's like, "What work do you have? I just don't want them to go anywhere else." He's like, "I don't care what it is. I just got to bill." Dallin: That's exactly what it is. Steve: Yeah, interesting. Kristian: Yeah. That's the idea, but to get back to what we're doing right now is I got the idea of how Russell explained the political bridge and my dad had ordered 100 t-shirts from my best friend. My best friend did all the screen printing for the Super Bowl in Santa Clara. Steve: Jeez. Kristian: He's got one of the largest screen printing companies on the west coast, based here in Phoenix. He has a company very similar to what Trey Lewellen started with Teespring. Steve: Interesting. Kristian: He's set in and he came to us and said, "Hey, why don't you partner with me and just handle the marketing on this." He's talked to me about doing some marketing for them for different aspects of their company. Now we're working together and the whole idea came up I said, "Well, you know what? I think I can do it." Before I was hesitant because I was like, "Well, I'm in the digital media space. I'm selling digital products." That was big hangup was I've got to sell to these entrepreneurs. Then when this political bridge funnel that Russell talked about when he talked about how you move people from this list to this list, I went, "Oh my God. I can build a list in anything. I can just bridge them." It was a combination of that video inside of Funnel U and my participation in Todd Brown's PCP, Partnership Coaching Program, where they were really working on educational based marketing, and script and copy writing. The confidence level in my own ability to write copy had shifted to where now MFA is outsourcing some of their done-for-you client work to Dallin and I and having me write copy and script for their video sales letters. Steve: What? Kristian: Yeah. Dallin: That's real, man. Kristian: That tells you the ... Dallin: We scale fast. Remember that third principle. We scale fast. Steve: Yeah. Yeah. I wrote all those down. That's amazing. What's funny is that people don't realize that it literally is the exact same amount of work to do a small company as a big one. My buddy, I mean as far as building a funnel and things like that, my buddy and I were building an [inaudible 00:32:11]. It was the first funnel I ever built with ClickFunnels and it was a smartphone insurance company and we were ... we got out of that for a lot of reasons, but it was interesting though because I was building it. We put it all out. That's actually when I got into ClickFunnels and it was right after ClickFunnels left beta. I was like, "Hey, I'm going to build this whole thing out before my ClickFunnels trial runs out." I'd never built one and I just killed myself for the next little while. We got it out. Then this guy approaches me in Florida. He's like, "I need a funnel for some of my ..." He was selling water ionizers or something. I was like, "Oh man. This is a big company. They're already making a couple million a year." I was blown away. I was like, wait, this is the same exact amount of work as it was for the small little startup. Anyways, I thought that was interesting you said that. Kristian: Yeah. That's what we talk about is that it's easier to work with those bigger companies. They get it. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: You work with the smaller companies and they're worried about how much money it's going to cost them. The reality is that the more we put ourselves in a position to work with guys like you and Russell and guys like Todd and Lou Coselino and David Perriera and all them at MFA, they're saying, "Man, why are you, how come you're not charging double and triple?" Steve: Yeah. Kristian: Dallin and I are sitting here like seriously if they're willing to pay us to write scripts for, to outsource their ad copy to us for some of their client work, what's that say? I mean, we're literally working with, doing work for the guys that are considered the best in the industry. Steve: That's ... Yeah. Yeah. Kristian: It's just a mindset shift is what it is. That has made it a little easier to have a conversation with someone and say, "You know what? We can take on this project. Here's how much it is." Steve: Yeah. Kristian: They're like, sticker shock. Well, sticker shock. You can go and just have someone build the pages for you, but it's not going to convert. I know that for a fact because copy os what converts, right. Steve: You know Tyler Jorgensen? Kristian: You know what, it sounds familiar. I think I- Steve: He said the same thing to me. He's like, "You charge 10 grand to build a custom funnel?" I was like, "Yeah." He's like, "Why not 15?" I was like, "I don't know. I'd never thought about that before." I thought 10 was kind of the mark. He's like, "No, no, no, no. I'd do 15, 20, 25." I was like, "You've got to be kidding." That is is just a mindset shift. You'll get better people to build for anyways, whatever it is. Kristian: The big thing for us- Dallin: True and at the same time ... Kristian: Yeah, I don't know. Dallin: You there? Kristian: Yeah, you cut- Steve: Kind of lost you there. Kristian: The big thing for us is really to build a team, Steve, and to have that team in place and be able to have people that focus on all the different areas of the funnels, so that they get really, really good at that. They don't have to know the whole process because that's what I've spent the last two and a half years doing, right. Steve: Wow. Kristian: They can be part of this and be part of building something and helping these clients and really enjoy what they're doing. Then, like I said, when we have these ideas we can ship them. I know you want to know and your audience probably wants to know what it is that we're doing, which is what got you in. I mentioned my friend, Bryant. He's got this company like Teespring. He's got everything in place to roll this out. We had this idea for how to start doing that. We took advantage of knowing that the campaigns going on right now. I mentioned to you I think my dad bought like 100 Trump t-shirts from him. I was like, "Those are really cool shirts." My dad's like, "Yeah, man You should do this funnel stuff and figure out how to sell these to everyone. Look how crazy everyone is about Trump. Trump's going to kill it." At the time, it was still in the Republican Primaries. I'm like, "Well, I don't want to go build a funnel." Steve: Yeah. Kristian: "Then trump doesn't win the primaries." But as he started pulling away I'm like, "Oh, let's start testing some stuff." We tested one funnel and surprisingly the Facebook campaign got a lot of clicks, but there wasn't a lot of opt-ins and conversions on the funnel. What it did and I think this is one of the biggest skill sets that people who are elite develop versus people that are frustrated and saying this isn't working for me is understanding the information that they're getting and what to do with it. You might not have a winning campaign or a funnel that's making money, but to understand what kind of info you're getting and how to use that to do the next thing is that whole testing process is what separates those that are killing it from those that are getting killed. That first funnel that we did, didn't make money. Not at all. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: I mean it lost $1,200. I went to Dallin and I said, "Dude, this is awesome." He's like, "Huh?" I said, "Look at the retargeting list that we got." Then we went and we tweaked this and I said, "What if we change the front end," and at that time Mike Pence had just been named Trump's VP. I'm like, "Who the hell is Mike Pence? I never heard of this guy before." I started asking people, they're like, "No." Unless you're from Indiana, you don't know who Mike Pence is. I go, "Should Trump have picked Mike Pence? Isn't there someone else." I'm like, "Boom. Is there a vice presidential debate in the Republican Party?" Steve: Yeah. Kristian: We created a little mini survey around is Mike Pence the right one. First of all, you've got all these people that love Trump and they're hardcore republicans and now you're creating an internal debate. Everyone wants to voice their opinion, but they don't want to be judged. Steve: Yeah. People get pretty intense about that for sure. Kristian: Yeah. We created a mini survey. Dallin: Oh yeah. Kristian: We created a mini survey and we had this retargeting list from the first time and we started running ads. I didn't expect and I don't think Dallin either, that it was going to do as well as it did, but I mean, we had in less than 12 hours, we had 500 email opt-ins. Steve: What? Oh my gosh. Kristian: I was like, "Oh my God." I'm like, "Holy crap." I'm like, "What the hell's going on?" Of course the first goal is to try and get the funnel to break even. What we had to do was we were getting so much information so quickly that we really had to be on our toes and make adjustments and modifications. What we figured out through the first week of testing this is there's so much activity on this funnel. Just to give you the stats, after what was Dallin, really 6 days of running the ads, we got 2,600 email subscribers? Dallin: Five and a half, yeah. Kristian: Yeah. Five and a half days, we got 2,600 email subscribers. Steve: Wow. Kristian: K, the funnels not at break even, but here's what I want whoever's listening and whoever wants to take this information understand is the testing process. We figured out between two front end offers- Steve: Which one was the winner. Kristian: Which one's working better. Steve: Yeah. Which one's the awesome one. Yeah. Kristian: It's still not winning. Our free plus shipping is not, it's not helping us break even. The reason for that is because we're getting so many opt-ins. On a normal free plus shipping, you're not getting as many people clicking on the ads, right. Steve: Right. Kristian: Well, we're getting 5, 6 times the amount of people subscribing to the email- Steve: Would you, in that scenario, would you ever try and get even less people. It'd be counter-intuitive maybe, but I would just start tweaking the free plus shipping, I guess. Kristian: No. No. Well, no. We can't- Dallin: The strategy- Kristian: Yeah. We can't really tweak it because it's not like we're going to offer anything cheaper than free plus shipping. When you start looking at all the different things we can offer, there's not a lot of options, but here's what Dallin and I have figured out is that we think we've created a new funnel. It's not really new in the sense of what you and I and Russell and all these other guys think of. Steve: True. Kristian: In terms of Russel and [Daygin Smith 00:41:29] coming up with the black box funnel, right. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: It's just soft offer funnel, a front end soft offer. We think that we've come up with what we call a backdoor funnel. Steve: Interesting. Kristian: You get so many people on your email list. You get as many people to take the first offer and you get as many people to take your upsell as possible to figure out how close to break even you can get. If you look at 2,600 people, we go back and look at the numbers, only about 115 of those 2,600 ever saw the offer. Steve: Huh. Kristian: Now we have an opportunity to present those people with the offer again. Well, how do you do that in a way that's going to get a lot of people to open the e- All right. Want me to ...We cut off here at the point of high dramas. As I was mentioning, we got so many email subscribers and such a lower number based on the email subscribers because we didn't expect to have that many, that we still weren't at break even, but we have a ton of people that we can show an offer to. It's a little different obviously because our price points ... We're doing apparel and things like that. Steve: It's like delaying the offer almost on purpose, right. I mean this is ... awesome. Kristian: Yeah. Remember, we started this whole thing with a survey, right, something that people were very passionate about, so a lot of polarity in there. They want their opinion- They also want to know what everyone else thinks, where they fall in line here. We thought, "Oh my God. Somebody that votes, that voices their opinion, takes the time to put a vote in wants to know what the results are." We created a results page that shows them the results and has a special offer that all those people haven't seen. When we send it in the email and we tell them here's the results of the survey, the open rates are and the click through rates are sky high. Steve: How long are you waiting to actually send them this results page? Kristian: A couple of days, so- Steve: Oh really. Wow. Kristian: Yeah. I mentioned Actionetics. The whole reason that we started doing this is because we wanted to ... since we're having people take a survey and we're offering them this gift, we want to make sure we get as many people that take us up on that gift for taking the time to vote. We have a few of those triggers built in there, "Hey, don't forget to grab your free gift. We noticed you took the time, maybe something happened. Go back here and grab your gift." Then we make sure that everybody sees the results page a couple of days later. Steve: A couple of days. That definitely is a different style for sure. You don't think that hurts conversions at all? Kristian: No, I mean. It's a survey, right? Steve: Sure. Kristian: The point of high drama and the suspense and all that. We're still testing it, again, like I mentioned earlier that the biggest thing I think that separates those that are successful and those that aren't is to understand the type of information that you get. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: We may found out that we need to send the results sooner, but we don't know. We've got to test. Steve: It's interesting positioning too of you saying, "Hey. It look's like. Thanks for taking it. Here's your results. I don't know if missed this, but just jump back and get that." That's interesting. Like they missed it. They missed the gift. Kristian: Yeah. Yeah. "You forgot to grab your gift." That's our first step and then in the email that comes after they've taken the survey, "Hey, we're in the process of tallying up the results. We'll send them to you as they're updated." Steve: Interesting. It keeps the loop open, basically. Kristian: Hmm-hmm(affirmative). Exactly. Exactly. Steve: Man, that's awesome. Well, hey is there a URL that we can go check that out on? I don't want to pollute or dilute any of your stats, so if not that's fine, but ... Kristian: Yeah. We're just running ads to this right now. Steve: Good. Kristian: We're in the process of, like I said, this was just an idea that my dad came up with. I've got to give him credit for the initial idea, but now it's turned into kind of a new business entity, right. Steve: Yeah. Kristian: We're growing this email list and the concepts that Russell talks about the how to bridge funnels and lists and things like that. We're starting to build a list now in that republican, conservative, survivalist category. We're going to take it a step further and build out a home page and start doing some different stuff with it. Steve: That's interesting. You're going to go through and who's going to keep opening all the emails over and over again, looking at all the stats of all the people around. These are the hyper active political caring people. You know what I mean? That's awesome. That's a really clever way to segment out those people. That's fantastic. Kristian: Yeah. Yeah. You never know where your next business entity is going to come from. Steve: Interesting. Gosh, well, hey, I know we've been on quite a while. Thanks for dropping all the bombs of gold you guys did. I don't know what happened to Dallin, but ... Kristian: Yeah. He just texted, said thank you. He's trying to get back on, but I know we've got to take the kids to school and stuff, so- Steve: Awesome. Well, hey man, I appreciate it. Thank you so much and this was awesome. Kristian: Well, thank you so much. I appreciate it, Steve. Love meeting new people that are doing the same thing as us and glad that we can reach more people that are trying to learn how this works and kind of help them understand the process and that if they just stick at it and keep testing. That's really the big thing I think is testing and learning is how you get better at it. Steve: You're kind of a scientist going through this, for sure. Going in an industry you know will make money obviously, but whatever you're doing specifically, you might almost always be the first. The think big, start small and scale fast. That's huge. Kristian: Yeah. If anyone wants to connect with us, Dallin and I are both on Facebook. We mentioned Periscope. I do a lot of broadcasting on there with what I call the Live Stream Marketing Funnel Show. We're rolling, if people are interested in learning how to use live video, we've got that coming out. Yeah. Connect with us on social media. Kristian Cotta and Dallin Greenberg. Steve: Okay, yeah. Then you've got the Health Success Podcast. Guys, go check him out at Health Success Podcast as well as he said Live Stream Marketing? Kristian: Well. Yeah. Just go to KristianCotta.com. It'll take you right there. Steve: Cool. Awesome. Kristian: Kristian with a K. Steve: Kristian with a K. Cotta, right? Dallin: I'm in. Kristian: Kristian with a K. Cotta. Dallin's in here. He just got back in. Dallin: Dude, I don't know what happened. I was getting all excited what Kristian was saying and then just cut off. Kristian: It's the point of high drama, that's what we were talking about. Dallin: I know. It was. That's what I told Amy. Is it over? Steve: It is now. Kristian: Yeah. We're just wrapping it up. Steve: Awesome. Dallin: Sorry. Steve: It's good. Hey, thanks guys so much. Kristian: All right. Take care, Steve. Dallin: See you man. Steve: All right. Bye-bye. Speaker 4: (music starts) Thank for listening to Sales Funnel Radio. Please remember to subscribe and leave feedback. Have a question you want answered on the show? Get your free t-shirt when your question gets answered on the live Hey Steve Show. Visit salesfunnelbroker.com now to submit your question. (music ends)
Brody is amped up, periscoping and not taking any crap.
My thoughts on building your culture every 10 seconds. In this episode Russell talks about his current Inner Circle Mastermind Group and how one of the members convinced him to use Snapchat. He goes over why he no longer thinks Snapchat is stupid and how it will connect him to his customers better. Here are a few fun things you won't want to miss in today's episode: What Inner Circle member was able to convince Russell to use Snapchat and why. Why allowing a customer a glimpse behind the scenes is good for business. And why Russell wants his customers to see Clickfunnels as their business rather than Russell's business. So listen below to find out what changed Russell's mind about Snapchat. ---Transcript--- Good morning everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, I hope you are all doing amazing. I am heading into day number 4 of our Inner Circle Mastermind. Actually, technically it's day number 8. We did 2 groups last month and we had 2 groups this month. And then we will have gone through all 100 people in our Inner Circle, which is pretty cool. We've had a really good time. I'm not going to lie, I'm a little worn out. It's a lot of work when you have back to back mastermind groups, but it's how we roll. It's been fun though, the first group was a little bit bigger, we had a few more people in that one, which was cool. It was just fun, a lot of the people I have been working with through Voxer and stuff like that, remotely for a long time. Had a chance to sit down and actually hang out with them for 2 days. A couple of them, this will be day 4, they kind of hung out for the whole time, which has been so much fun. And it's interesting just watching….I feel like everybody in the room has a superpower. But everybody's superpower is different, so it's so cool when you get everyone in a room like and there's this overlap where it's like, “I'm really good at this, but I'm really bad at these things.” And there's always somebody in the room who's really good at the thing you're bad at, and it's just the coolest, I don't even know how to explain it. I guess it's probably where they get the name Mastermind Group from. I think the story behind that, if I remember right, it was….I can't remember if it was…..it was in Think and Grow Rich, right? I haven't read that book for forever, I think decades. Dang, I'm getting old. Anyway, in that book, I think it was Henry Ford, or was it Napoleon, I don't remember, but it was someone. Telling the story about how they were interviewing, I think it was Henry Ford, I could be completely wrong, don't quote me. But the concept of the story is right. Basically they were saying, I think someone was interviewing them or something and they were kind of mad, because he was this rich dude who wasn't that smart, and they're like, “He's not that good at anything.” And after 4 or 5 times of quizzing him he was like, “I don't know the answer. I don't know. I don't know.” Finally he's like, “You know what, what I have is a mastermind group of people that any question that you asked me, I can get the answer within 1 person, because of the mastermind group of people who I surrounded myself with.” And I think that's where people started calling things mastermind and stuff like that, but it's true. In this group, at least for me, every one of my problems can and will be solved. Because while I'm really good at a few things, everyone else is good at a lot of other things I'm not, so we can leverage that and share the things that I'm good at. And they can share the things they're good at and we can all win together. It's very amazing. I honestly, I feel so, and I've said this probably every time I've done a podcast during Inner Circle, I can't believe I get paid to facilitate this whole thing. It's nuts. I'm learning the coolest things. In fact, finally somebody, Kaylin, she is one of my Inner Circle members, she runs…..anyway, they're crushing it, they've been here the last 3 days and they are coming back in tomorrow, or today I guess. My brain. Anyway, I've been very hesitant to Snapchat because I think it's stupid, and she convinced me that it's not stupid, that it's actually awesome. So now I think it's awesome. So I'm going to start Snapchatting here soon. And I've got a whole process and a method behind it. One of the themes from last Inner Circle and this one that I've been trying to talk to everyone about is how to build your own cult, I mean culture. Cult is the root word of culture. So how to build your own cult, how to build your own culture, how to build your own community, whatever you want to call it. So we're sharing all sorts of things like that, and one of the big things I was talking about was letting your cult in behind the scenes of what you're doing. I think that's part of why Marketing In Your Car has been adopted so well. Because everyday I'm just talking about what we're doing and sharing stuff and just giving it all away and people like that. The Periscopes and Facebook Live and we're doing this new reality show thing we're filming. All these pieces, people just want to see behind the scenes of what's happening. It's like the reality show is cool. We're taking 2 weeks of time and chunking it down to 30 minute episode, so you're seeing pieces of it. Snapchat was cool because, I finally got it. It was like, a reality show behind the scenes every single day of all the little aspects of what's happening, in 10 second increments. So I'm really excited to start focusing on that and growing that. So you'll see me, hopefully next week, start this out, but starting the process of really focusing on the building of a Snapchat following because I was want to bring people into the cult. Brent just passed me. I'm driving to the Inner Circle meeting and Brent just drove by honking. If you listen back a few episodes, Brent was the same one who got into a wreck on his way to one of the Inner Circle meetings. Maybe I shouldn't follow him. Anyway, for everyone, if you haven't been sold on Snapchat yet, it's just a really cool way to get your really hyper-active fans the ability to see a glimpse of everything that's happening throughout your day. I was watching one or two where people snap 800 times a day, which I think is stupid, but I think if you do 10 a day and you're taking people through the progress. “Hey, picking which supplements I want.” Boom. “In the car driving, about to start my podcast.” Boom, “At the office, about to start working on this funnel.” Boom, “Funnel got done.” Boom, “Heading to a meeting.” Just showing little 10 second clips of the process of your day and sharing those with people. Again, it's like the behind the scenes. It's building the culture. One of the things I keep stressing with everyone here in the mastermind is just if your customers perceive you as “Oh, there's this guy and there's his company.” Then that's not the right thing. What we need to be focusing on is getting our people to say, “this is our company.” I want our customers to feel like Clickfunnels is their company. Like they are part of this. They are part of this movement. They're part of this cult. They're part of this culture. Whatever you want to call, we want them to feel like they're part of it. I want them to feel like Clickfunnels is their business. This is their platform. This is their home where they build their company. I don't want this to be Russell's company. I want this to be our company. That's the big thought. So the more you can let people in behind the scenes, the more they feel part of what you're doing and not looking at what you're doing, if that makes sense. Anyway, I think that's kind of my big thing I wanted to share with you guys today, because I think it's interesting and exciting and cool. It's just figuring out more ways to shift it from, this is Russell's company, to this is our company. And I want all of our customers feel like it's theirs. And I'd love for you guys to discuss this. In fact, come over to our Clickfunnels group and let's talk about it. Come hang out and say, “Hey I listened to Russell's episode, and these are things I'm trying to do to build my cult, or culture.” Or whatever you want to call it. But things you're letting in people behind the scenes, how you're doing it. You're talking to people about other things to build that building and language patterns. You're going to see some cool stuff next week in the Clickfunnels group. We're working more on changing it from the Clickfunnels group, first off, to the Funnel Hacker group. People identify themselves in our culture as funnel hackers and they are and you are part of a community. It's not just, “Oh I use Clickfunnels.” No it's, “I'm a funnel hacker. This is my identity. This is who I am, I build funnels.” If you look at the t-shirts we've launched, they're all focused on that, identity based. That's what we're trying to build. So anyway, hope that gets the wheels in your head spinning, because that's what my wheels have been spinning on and it's really fun and I really enjoy it. Alright, well I'm pulling in the parking lot for the mastermind. So I'm out of here. Appreciate you all and we will talk soon.
My thoughts on building your culture every 10 seconds. In this episode Russell talks about his current Inner Circle Mastermind Group and how one of the members convinced him to use Snapchat. He goes over why he no longer thinks Snapchat is stupid and how it will connect him to his customers better. Here are a few fun things you won’t want to miss in today’s episode: What Inner Circle member was able to convince Russell to use Snapchat and why. Why allowing a customer a glimpse behind the scenes is good for business. And why Russell wants his customers to see Clickfunnels as their business rather than Russell’s business. So listen below to find out what changed Russell’s mind about Snapchat. ---Transcript--- Good morning everybody, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, I hope you are all doing amazing. I am heading into day number 4 of our Inner Circle Mastermind. Actually, technically it’s day number 8. We did 2 groups last month and we had 2 groups this month. And then we will have gone through all 100 people in our Inner Circle, which is pretty cool. We’ve had a really good time. I’m not going to lie, I’m a little worn out. It’s a lot of work when you have back to back mastermind groups, but it’s how we roll. It’s been fun though, the first group was a little bit bigger, we had a few more people in that one, which was cool. It was just fun, a lot of the people I have been working with through Voxer and stuff like that, remotely for a long time. Had a chance to sit down and actually hang out with them for 2 days. A couple of them, this will be day 4, they kind of hung out for the whole time, which has been so much fun. And it’s interesting just watching….I feel like everybody in the room has a superpower. But everybody’s superpower is different, so it’s so cool when you get everyone in a room like and there’s this overlap where it’s like, “I’m really good at this, but I’m really bad at these things.” And there’s always somebody in the room who’s really good at the thing you’re bad at, and it’s just the coolest, I don’t even know how to explain it. I guess it’s probably where they get the name Mastermind Group from. I think the story behind that, if I remember right, it was….I can’t remember if it was…..it was in Think and Grow Rich, right? I haven’t read that book for forever, I think decades. Dang, I’m getting old. Anyway, in that book, I think it was Henry Ford, or was it Napoleon, I don’t remember, but it was someone. Telling the story about how they were interviewing, I think it was Henry Ford, I could be completely wrong, don’t quote me. But the concept of the story is right. Basically they were saying, I think someone was interviewing them or something and they were kind of mad, because he was this rich dude who wasn’t that smart, and they’re like, “He’s not that good at anything.” And after 4 or 5 times of quizzing him he was like, “I don’t know the answer. I don’t know. I don’t know.” Finally he’s like, “You know what, what I have is a mastermind group of people that any question that you asked me, I can get the answer within 1 person, because of the mastermind group of people who I surrounded myself with.” And I think that’s where people started calling things mastermind and stuff like that, but it’s true. In this group, at least for me, every one of my problems can and will be solved. Because while I’m really good at a few things, everyone else is good at a lot of other things I’m not, so we can leverage that and share the things that I’m good at. And they can share the things they’re good at and we can all win together. It’s very amazing. I honestly, I feel so, and I’ve said this probably every time I’ve done a podcast during Inner Circle, I can’t believe I get paid to facilitate this whole thing. It’s nuts. I’m learning the coolest things. In fact, finally somebody, Kaylin, she is one of my Inner Circle members, she runs…..anyway, they’re crushing it, they’ve been here the last 3 days and they are coming back in tomorrow, or today I guess. My brain. Anyway, I’ve been very hesitant to Snapchat because I think it’s stupid, and she convinced me that it’s not stupid, that it’s actually awesome. So now I think it’s awesome. So I’m going to start Snapchatting here soon. And I’ve got a whole process and a method behind it. One of the themes from last Inner Circle and this one that I’ve been trying to talk to everyone about is how to build your own cult, I mean culture. Cult is the root word of culture. So how to build your own cult, how to build your own culture, how to build your own community, whatever you want to call it. So we’re sharing all sorts of things like that, and one of the big things I was talking about was letting your cult in behind the scenes of what you’re doing. I think that’s part of why Marketing In Your Car has been adopted so well. Because everyday I’m just talking about what we’re doing and sharing stuff and just giving it all away and people like that. The Periscopes and Facebook Live and we’re doing this new reality show thing we’re filming. All these pieces, people just want to see behind the scenes of what’s happening. It’s like the reality show is cool. We’re taking 2 weeks of time and chunking it down to 30 minute episode, so you’re seeing pieces of it. Snapchat was cool because, I finally got it. It was like, a reality show behind the scenes every single day of all the little aspects of what’s happening, in 10 second increments. So I’m really excited to start focusing on that and growing that. So you’ll see me, hopefully next week, start this out, but starting the process of really focusing on the building of a Snapchat following because I was want to bring people into the cult. Brent just passed me. I’m driving to the Inner Circle meeting and Brent just drove by honking. If you listen back a few episodes, Brent was the same one who got into a wreck on his way to one of the Inner Circle meetings. Maybe I shouldn’t follow him. Anyway, for everyone, if you haven’t been sold on Snapchat yet, it’s just a really cool way to get your really hyper-active fans the ability to see a glimpse of everything that’s happening throughout your day. I was watching one or two where people snap 800 times a day, which I think is stupid, but I think if you do 10 a day and you’re taking people through the progress. “Hey, picking which supplements I want.” Boom. “In the car driving, about to start my podcast.” Boom, “At the office, about to start working on this funnel.” Boom, “Funnel got done.” Boom, “Heading to a meeting.” Just showing little 10 second clips of the process of your day and sharing those with people. Again, it’s like the behind the scenes. It’s building the culture. One of the things I keep stressing with everyone here in the mastermind is just if your customers perceive you as “Oh, there’s this guy and there’s his company.” Then that’s not the right thing. What we need to be focusing on is getting our people to say, “this is our company.” I want our customers to feel like Clickfunnels is their company. Like they are part of this. They are part of this movement. They’re part of this cult. They’re part of this culture. Whatever you want to call, we want them to feel like they’re part of it. I want them to feel like Clickfunnels is their business. This is their platform. This is their home where they build their company. I don’t want this to be Russell’s company. I want this to be our company. That’s the big thought. So the more you can let people in behind the scenes, the more they feel part of what you’re doing and not looking at what you’re doing, if that makes sense. Anyway, I think that’s kind of my big thing I wanted to share with you guys today, because I think it’s interesting and exciting and cool. It’s just figuring out more ways to shift it from, this is Russell’s company, to this is our company. And I want all of our customers feel like it’s theirs. And I’d love for you guys to discuss this. In fact, come over to our Clickfunnels group and let’s talk about it. Come hang out and say, “Hey I listened to Russell’s episode, and these are things I’m trying to do to build my cult, or culture.” Or whatever you want to call it. But things you’re letting in people behind the scenes, how you’re doing it. You’re talking to people about other things to build that building and language patterns. You’re going to see some cool stuff next week in the Clickfunnels group. We’re working more on changing it from the Clickfunnels group, first off, to the Funnel Hacker group. People identify themselves in our culture as funnel hackers and they are and you are part of a community. It’s not just, “Oh I use Clickfunnels.” No it’s, “I’m a funnel hacker. This is my identity. This is who I am, I build funnels.” If you look at the t-shirts we’ve launched, they’re all focused on that, identity based. That’s what we’re trying to build. So anyway, hope that gets the wheels in your head spinning, because that’s what my wheels have been spinning on and it’s really fun and I really enjoy it. Alright, well I’m pulling in the parking lot for the mastermind. So I’m out of here. Appreciate you all and we will talk soon.
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The most ninja thing I learned at this week’s mastermind group. On today’s episode Russell gives a quick history of how his Inner Circle came to be. He also talks about some cool things he’s learned at this week’s Inner Circle groups. Here are some fun things to look forward to in this episode: Hear how Russell’s first attempt at having a mastermind group worked (and didn’t work). How when his mastermind groups started growing he was able to set a limit, and easily fill it. And how this week’s Inner Circle taught him how to be like Sub-Zero from Mortal Kombat. So listen below to find out more about how Russell’s Inner Circle came to be and how to channel your own Sub-Zero. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, I gotta keep making the intro more and more cheesy every single day because that’s the best way to do it. Anywho, I hope you guys are doing awesome, I’m heading into day number 4 of the mastermind meetings. It has been amazing, to say the least. Let me kind of give you a background on the Inner Circle. It’s kind of cool actually. I launched the Inner Circle, probably 3 years ago and I had a mastermind group in the past but the first time it was 7 or 8 years ago. I launched a mastermind group; I think I sold 2 people into it. I was like, “Crap, if they show up there’s only going to be 2 people and it’s going be dumb.” So I invited a bunch of my friends and stuff and tried to make a full group. It was always okay, but I don’t know. It just wasn’t’ amazing. So we ran it for 2 or 3 years and finally I was like, let’s stop running it. So we turned it off and didn’t run it for a long time. Fast forward to a couple of years ago we decided to launch coaching again. It’s funny how your mindset shifts. We had sold coaching at 5 so this time I was like we’re going to sell it at 8. So we sold it at 8. And then I was like, now we’re going to do it at 10 and we bumped it to 10. Then I was like we’re going to do it at 12 and we bumped it to 12. But it wasn’t really a mastermind group, it was more this other thing. Then I met this guy who had sold a $25K mastermind group. He said he was signing up 2 people a week. I was like, I don’t know if that’s even possible. It seemed like too far, too foreign to even be a possibility. But I was like, let’s just add that as a thing and maybe we’ll sell one or two. So we did and then right away we sold one. I was like, “Crap, now we gotta fulfill on it and we gotta sell more.” So we started slowly selling it. I think at our first mastermind group we had 8 people at it. And that was kind of cool. I was like, alright. And then by the second one we had about 20 people at it. And I was like, “Dang this is getting big.” I remember Bill Glazier’s mastermind group I grew up in, he only allowed 18 people in the group. So with 20 we had a full group and we were giving everyone an hour in their sessions. And then it kept growing and growing. Soon we got to the point where we had 35 people in the group. I was like, Dang. So we shrunk it down to where everyone had 30 minutes. It actually ended up being better because people spent a lot less time talking about nothing and a lot more time focused. So I was like, “Okay, cool. We’ll keep it at 35, keep it there.” And then the next meeting we had 45. So we shifted to 3 days and it hit 3 days and it was too much, everyone was fried. I was like, “What do we do.” Finally I was like, “I’m going to break this into 2 groups. We’ll have 2 groups of 20ish.” So we broke into 2 groups, by the time the 2 groups showed up, they both had 30 people in it. We were at 60 people in the group. I’m like, “Oh crap.” So we had 2 groups. 1 one day, and 1 the other day. We had a crossover day, so we had dinner together and it was really fun. We’re like, cool we’ll keep 2 groups and we’ll be fine. Then the next time we had 2 groups and both groups had about 40 in it. And I was like, “We can’t facilitate 40 in a group, it loses the experience.” Excuse me, my throat is dry from a lot of talking. Anyway, I was looking at it, we’re almost 80 people. I can’t believe we have 80 people at our $25K a year program. It didn’t make any sense to me. And this comes back to one of the big things we had over the last 3 days so far. When is enough, enough? So I said, “You know what,” and actually I had years ago, Dan Kennedy asked me, “What’s your number?” I’m like, “What do you mean?” he’s like, “What’s your number? When are you going to be happy?” and I’m like, “I don’t know, a billion.” And he’s like, “All you entrepreneurs, especially the young ones, you just want money, so you just work and work and work. You don’t have a number so you just keep working til forever. You gotta have a number otherwise you are going to burn yourself out. And you will find out that this business you created because you wanted freedom and a lifestyle will rob you of that.” And I was like, “Crap.” So a few months ago, I was looking at Inner Circle and I was like, “What’s my number?” At that time I also said, “From now on we shut down our lower end program.” Which was a $10-12K a year. I said “You know what, we’ll just close that down.” Which was crazy because it was almost a $2 million dollar a year business and I just turned it off. It’s not worth the effort anymore. So I turned it off, which was really scary. Then the only option became $25K which is why so many kept joining it. So a couple of months ago I said, “What’s my number?” We’re at 80, I’m going to have 100. And when there’s 100 we’re going to shut it down.” And so I said that was the number and within two weeks we got to 100, which was crazy. So that became my number. I said, “Look, that’ll be it. A $2.5 million a year business for me coaching and that’s it. We’re not scaling, we’re not growing. It is what it is.” And I said, “With 100 people, how do we do this?” And I looked at some of the other groups out there. One of my friends groups, they run a similar thing and they grew the same thing, about 100 people. They have 100 people all come to one meeting. So I went to that meeting and I didn’t like it. I felt like I didn’t get anything out of it at all. So I was like, I don’t want to make mine big like that. The format that I get the most value out of is the one with 20 to 25 people in the group and everyone got to share. So I said how about this, we’re going to break it into 4 groups of 25 and that’s what we’re going to do. And we will lock it out. So that’s what we did, we capped it out at 100 people, 4 groups of 25. And that is now the Inner Circle. So we had 25 people here Monday and Tuesday. 25 people here Wednesday and Thursday. And then next month we got 2 more groups that will come through and that’ll all 100 people. So that’s kind of how we shifted our Inner Circle and it’s really cool. It’s nice because these groups don’t have 30 or 40 people, we’ve got 25, so it gives us where we have more time and less stress. It’s really cool, just perfect right now. The only thing that’s lame is it’s hard because all these people want to join the Inner Circle and they can’t, which is a good problem to have. So I told these guys, “Look, this is how it works. Your seat is here and you’re locked in forever. The only way someone else can get in is if one of you guys leave.” So we have these guys from Ukraine, and one of them, Vlad was like, “I just thought of a good business opportunity for me.” And I was like, “What’s the business opportunity?” he’s like, “No more seats are available. I will sell my seat for $50K. I will come as the partner and they will come as the person. I will get just as much value at this thing as everybody else.” I was like, “I guess that’s brilliant.” It made me kind of smile. It’s really fun. We’re having a great time, and that’s what’s been happening. So the first…..I wish I could drive with my notebook out, because there have been so many transformational shifts even for myself and I think for everybody else in the group. It’s just been really, really cool. I’m trying to think how deep should I go? And I’m kind of late too because I’ve been dragging my feet a little bit. Not going to lie, I’m a little bit tired. So a couple of the….let’s see. How much do you guys want to know? I should just do a session where we sit down and I share the top 20 things we got from mastermind. One of the cool ones, I’m curious if any of you are…..it’s hard to explain this without being able to visually show it. How many of your prospects struggle with procrastination when you’re trying to get them to buy from you? So there’s my question for you. I want you to think about it. I’m guessing that most of them do right? It’s the reason why urgency and scarcity are such big driving points. If you look, I’ve done a couple of podcasts on this topic. It’s a big thing. Urgency and scarcity is what gets people to buy. In fact, Justin and Tara Williams are in our group, they’re awesome. He was telling me, “We pretty much figured out that the only thing that gets people to buy is urgency and scarcity. So once a month we launch something and then take it away so we can have urgency and scarcity.” It’s pretty awesome. But I was like, “Why does it take urgency and scarcity?” It’s because of procrastination, they procrastinate. So Darrin Stevens, who’s a ninja, a real world ninja. He’s not actually a fighting ninja, but marketing, sales, MLP, hypnosis ninja dude. The guy’s amazing. But what he’s amazing at is so interesting. He runs events and they’ll make $2.5 million over a weekend at an event, which sounds amazing. But when you look at it, his events will have 70 people in the room, which makes it freaking amazing. He’ll close 80%, 90% of the room with a $30K offer. And the events are free for people to come to it. It’s not a buyer event. People come, put the 80 people in the room and he pulls out $2.5 million, it’s insane. I don’t know how he does it. But he was talking about it and showing us a lot of things they do, all about rapport building. It takes them 3 days at an event to get enough rapport to be able to close people at $30K. So they talked a lot about how you build report. His wife Jackie talked about universals and truisms. Universals are things that are universally true like for example, come into the room and trying to get people to say yes subconsciously, over and over. Similar to trial closes I teach, but it’s this subconscious thing. Universals like, “How many of you guys in the room are business owners?” 90% of the room raises their hands. “How many of you guys here, work for business owners.” So now everyone’s said yes, because that got everyone. They’re universal. “How many of you guys in the room are men? How many of you guys are women?” Boom, you just got everyone to say yes, because everyone is a man or woman. Little things that seem dumb, but they’re training the subconscious mind to say yes. That’s universals and truisms are things that are like, “Hey it’s a beautiful sunny day out here in Boise, Idaho.” And people are like, “Yes, it is a beautiful sunny day here in Idaho.” It’s something that’s true in the moment. So it’s like, “Hey, we’re so happy that all of you made it here today.” Did all of them make it there today, yes they did. So that’s a truism. Anyway, they’re using all these universals and truisms to build rapport. They’re using breathing techniques, they’re using all these things to try to build rapport with these people, which is cool. And then this one was the ninja one for me. He talked about procrastination. He’s like, “People procrastinate. The reason why…” He draws a picture of a pirate ship on the board and said, “Here’s a pirate ship, who runs the pirate ship? It’s the captain, right? Who actually takes care of the ship? It’s the crew. You’ve got the captain and the crew. Who’s in charge? Obviously the captain’s in charge. The captain is like your subconscious mind. It’s moving things but then the crew is your subconscious mind that’s actually doing all the stuff to make it all happen. What happens when the crew does not like what the captain is doing? It causes a mutiny. That’s what happens. Consciously you’re selling somebody something that subconsciously it’s something out of alignment, so your subconscious has this mutiny which causes procrastination. So how do you get people to not procrastinate?” He did this technique and I wish I could show it to you, but he did it all with his hand. What he does is he starts speaking to the different parts of the subconscious mind. So you have the right hand, I’ll hold up my hand, “On one hand you guys are really excited and motivated and you really want to be par t of this, but on the other hand,” he holds up the left hand, “On the other hand you’re freaking out. You’re unsure, you’re insecure, you’ve struggled in the past. Blah blah blah.” So he’s holding up both hands like the right brain and the left brain or whatever. Like two different conversations. Oh crap, I just cut somebody off. Sorry dude. I’m such a bad driver. This is why you shouldn’t be podcasting and driving. It’s as bad or worse than drinking and driving. Good thing we’re in Boise, Idaho which means this guy probably doesn’t have a gun, if we were in California I would be scared for my life, not going to lie. Anyway, so now he’s got two hands up. He’s got one hand he’s got you really want to do this, the other hands like, you’re confused and nervous, and those are the two parts. Conscious and subconscious, the two things that cause someone to procrastinate. It’s these two internal conflicts. So he does this left hand, right hand, and says, “These two things can come together.” And he brings his hands together. So subconsciously he’s brought the conscious and subconscious mind together and pushes it out. Similar to, have you guys ever played Mortal Kombat? Sub-Zero shoots out the blue fire ball? It’s kind of like that. Right hand, left hand brings them together, clasps his fingers together and then pushes it out like a fireball to the audience. So he’s taking the two parts of the brain, brings them together and then pushes them out to the people. It does that over and over again throughout the event. Every time they’re talking about something, he’s looking like, “What are the two conflicting parts of the mind that are keeping this from saying yes?” So it’s like, On the one hand, you probably think it’d be awesome to have Clickfunnels. You’re excited, you think this’ll be easy. But on the other hand you’re thinking I don’t have time, I’m not a techie person, but if we can bring these two things together and then he pushes them out, and help you guys to see the value of this. Then it becomes a no-brainer. Boom, he’s just taking this internal conflict that causes procrastination, he’s brought those two pieces together and pushed them back on the audience and now those conflicts are gone. How ninja is that? How freaking amazing and cool is that? It’s been funny because for the last 3 days now everybody’s been doing fireballs at each other during their presentations and stuff, it’s amazing. For me, this is ninja. I’m totally using it on my stage presentations from now on when I speak and everything else. But where else can I use this? So I’m trying to figure out how to do it with my slides. I’m going to add in my slides something like, add a picture of me with my right hand out, a picture with my left hand out, a picture of me putting them together, and a picture of me pushing it out. And I’ll push through these slides as I teach the concept. On the one hand you’re probably excited, on the other hand you’re probably stressing out, but if we put these things together it’ll help you! Boom. Then you will be successful, and you will join and life will become good. Anyway, that was a cool one. I hope it makes sense when I’m explaining it. But watch the marketing I do in the future, you will see me using this in Periscopes, in videos, in hangouts, in webinars. Because it’s the most ninja, amazing, cool thing I’ve learned in a long, long time. So I’m going crazy, I’m excited. That was just one tiny, itsy bitsy, teeny little nugget we got in the Inner Circle, and it’s been 3 days of a waterfall of things like that. Anyway, I am almost to the hotel now, I’m excited. I’m going to go in there and do some subconscious procrastination killing, Sub-Zero fireballs at people, and I think you guys should too. That’s what I got for today you guys. Appreciate you all, have an amazing day. If you want to get on the waiting list to be in the Inner Circle and one of these guys are crazy enough to not re-up, that’s the only way to get in right now. Just go to Russellbrunson.com, apply there and that’s it. Alright guys, I will talk to you all again very, very soon. Bye everybody.
The most ninja thing I learned at this week's mastermind group. On today's episode Russell gives a quick history of how his Inner Circle came to be. He also talks about some cool things he's learned at this week's Inner Circle groups. Here are some fun things to look forward to in this episode: Hear how Russell's first attempt at having a mastermind group worked (and didn't work). How when his mastermind groups started growing he was able to set a limit, and easily fill it. And how this week's Inner Circle taught him how to be like Sub-Zero from Mortal Kombat. So listen below to find out more about how Russell's Inner Circle came to be and how to channel your own Sub-Zero. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone, this is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone, I gotta keep making the intro more and more cheesy every single day because that's the best way to do it. Anywho, I hope you guys are doing awesome, I'm heading into day number 4 of the mastermind meetings. It has been amazing, to say the least. Let me kind of give you a background on the Inner Circle. It's kind of cool actually. I launched the Inner Circle, probably 3 years ago and I had a mastermind group in the past but the first time it was 7 or 8 years ago. I launched a mastermind group; I think I sold 2 people into it. I was like, “Crap, if they show up there's only going to be 2 people and it's going be dumb.” So I invited a bunch of my friends and stuff and tried to make a full group. It was always okay, but I don't know. It just wasn't' amazing. So we ran it for 2 or 3 years and finally I was like, let's stop running it. So we turned it off and didn't run it for a long time. Fast forward to a couple of years ago we decided to launch coaching again. It's funny how your mindset shifts. We had sold coaching at 5 so this time I was like we're going to sell it at 8. So we sold it at 8. And then I was like, now we're going to do it at 10 and we bumped it to 10. Then I was like we're going to do it at 12 and we bumped it to 12. But it wasn't really a mastermind group, it was more this other thing. Then I met this guy who had sold a $25K mastermind group. He said he was signing up 2 people a week. I was like, I don't know if that's even possible. It seemed like too far, too foreign to even be a possibility. But I was like, let's just add that as a thing and maybe we'll sell one or two. So we did and then right away we sold one. I was like, “Crap, now we gotta fulfill on it and we gotta sell more.” So we started slowly selling it. I think at our first mastermind group we had 8 people at it. And that was kind of cool. I was like, alright. And then by the second one we had about 20 people at it. And I was like, “Dang this is getting big.” I remember Bill Glazier's mastermind group I grew up in, he only allowed 18 people in the group. So with 20 we had a full group and we were giving everyone an hour in their sessions. And then it kept growing and growing. Soon we got to the point where we had 35 people in the group. I was like, Dang. So we shrunk it down to where everyone had 30 minutes. It actually ended up being better because people spent a lot less time talking about nothing and a lot more time focused. So I was like, “Okay, cool. We'll keep it at 35, keep it there.” And then the next meeting we had 45. So we shifted to 3 days and it hit 3 days and it was too much, everyone was fried. I was like, “What do we do.” Finally I was like, “I'm going to break this into 2 groups. We'll have 2 groups of 20ish.” So we broke into 2 groups, by the time the 2 groups showed up, they both had 30 people in it. We were at 60 people in the group. I'm like, “Oh crap.” So we had 2 groups. 1 one day, and 1 the other day. We had a crossover day, so we had dinner together and it was really fun. We're like, cool we'll keep 2 groups and we'll be fine. Then the next time we had 2 groups and both groups had about 40 in it. And I was like, “We can't facilitate 40 in a group, it loses the experience.” Excuse me, my throat is dry from a lot of talking. Anyway, I was looking at it, we're almost 80 people. I can't believe we have 80 people at our $25K a year program. It didn't make any sense to me. And this comes back to one of the big things we had over the last 3 days so far. When is enough, enough? So I said, “You know what,” and actually I had years ago, Dan Kennedy asked me, “What's your number?” I'm like, “What do you mean?” he's like, “What's your number? When are you going to be happy?” and I'm like, “I don't know, a billion.” And he's like, “All you entrepreneurs, especially the young ones, you just want money, so you just work and work and work. You don't have a number so you just keep working til forever. You gotta have a number otherwise you are going to burn yourself out. And you will find out that this business you created because you wanted freedom and a lifestyle will rob you of that.” And I was like, “Crap.” So a few months ago, I was looking at Inner Circle and I was like, “What's my number?” At that time I also said, “From now on we shut down our lower end program.” Which was a $10-12K a year. I said “You know what, we'll just close that down.” Which was crazy because it was almost a $2 million dollar a year business and I just turned it off. It's not worth the effort anymore. So I turned it off, which was really scary. Then the only option became $25K which is why so many kept joining it. So a couple of months ago I said, “What's my number?” We're at 80, I'm going to have 100. And when there's 100 we're going to shut it down.” And so I said that was the number and within two weeks we got to 100, which was crazy. So that became my number. I said, “Look, that'll be it. A $2.5 million a year business for me coaching and that's it. We're not scaling, we're not growing. It is what it is.” And I said, “With 100 people, how do we do this?” And I looked at some of the other groups out there. One of my friends groups, they run a similar thing and they grew the same thing, about 100 people. They have 100 people all come to one meeting. So I went to that meeting and I didn't like it. I felt like I didn't get anything out of it at all. So I was like, I don't want to make mine big like that. The format that I get the most value out of is the one with 20 to 25 people in the group and everyone got to share. So I said how about this, we're going to break it into 4 groups of 25 and that's what we're going to do. And we will lock it out. So that's what we did, we capped it out at 100 people, 4 groups of 25. And that is now the Inner Circle. So we had 25 people here Monday and Tuesday. 25 people here Wednesday and Thursday. And then next month we got 2 more groups that will come through and that'll all 100 people. So that's kind of how we shifted our Inner Circle and it's really cool. It's nice because these groups don't have 30 or 40 people, we've got 25, so it gives us where we have more time and less stress. It's really cool, just perfect right now. The only thing that's lame is it's hard because all these people want to join the Inner Circle and they can't, which is a good problem to have. So I told these guys, “Look, this is how it works. Your seat is here and you're locked in forever. The only way someone else can get in is if one of you guys leave.” So we have these guys from Ukraine, and one of them, Vlad was like, “I just thought of a good business opportunity for me.” And I was like, “What's the business opportunity?” he's like, “No more seats are available. I will sell my seat for $50K. I will come as the partner and they will come as the person. I will get just as much value at this thing as everybody else.” I was like, “I guess that's brilliant.” It made me kind of smile. It's really fun. We're having a great time, and that's what's been happening. So the first…..I wish I could drive with my notebook out, because there have been so many transformational shifts even for myself and I think for everybody else in the group. It's just been really, really cool. I'm trying to think how deep should I go? And I'm kind of late too because I've been dragging my feet a little bit. Not going to lie, I'm a little bit tired. So a couple of the….let's see. How much do you guys want to know? I should just do a session where we sit down and I share the top 20 things we got from mastermind. One of the cool ones, I'm curious if any of you are…..it's hard to explain this without being able to visually show it. How many of your prospects struggle with procrastination when you're trying to get them to buy from you? So there's my question for you. I want you to think about it. I'm guessing that most of them do right? It's the reason why urgency and scarcity are such big driving points. If you look, I've done a couple of podcasts on this topic. It's a big thing. Urgency and scarcity is what gets people to buy. In fact, Justin and Tara Williams are in our group, they're awesome. He was telling me, “We pretty much figured out that the only thing that gets people to buy is urgency and scarcity. So once a month we launch something and then take it away so we can have urgency and scarcity.” It's pretty awesome. But I was like, “Why does it take urgency and scarcity?” It's because of procrastination, they procrastinate. So Darrin Stevens, who's a ninja, a real world ninja. He's not actually a fighting ninja, but marketing, sales, MLP, hypnosis ninja dude. The guy's amazing. But what he's amazing at is so interesting. He runs events and they'll make $2.5 million over a weekend at an event, which sounds amazing. But when you look at it, his events will have 70 people in the room, which makes it freaking amazing. He'll close 80%, 90% of the room with a $30K offer. And the events are free for people to come to it. It's not a buyer event. People come, put the 80 people in the room and he pulls out $2.5 million, it's insane. I don't know how he does it. But he was talking about it and showing us a lot of things they do, all about rapport building. It takes them 3 days at an event to get enough rapport to be able to close people at $30K. So they talked a lot about how you build report. His wife Jackie talked about universals and truisms. Universals are things that are universally true like for example, come into the room and trying to get people to say yes subconsciously, over and over. Similar to trial closes I teach, but it's this subconscious thing. Universals like, “How many of you guys in the room are business owners?” 90% of the room raises their hands. “How many of you guys here, work for business owners.” So now everyone's said yes, because that got everyone. They're universal. “How many of you guys in the room are men? How many of you guys are women?” Boom, you just got everyone to say yes, because everyone is a man or woman. Little things that seem dumb, but they're training the subconscious mind to say yes. That's universals and truisms are things that are like, “Hey it's a beautiful sunny day out here in Boise, Idaho.” And people are like, “Yes, it is a beautiful sunny day here in Idaho.” It's something that's true in the moment. So it's like, “Hey, we're so happy that all of you made it here today.” Did all of them make it there today, yes they did. So that's a truism. Anyway, they're using all these universals and truisms to build rapport. They're using breathing techniques, they're using all these things to try to build rapport with these people, which is cool. And then this one was the ninja one for me. He talked about procrastination. He's like, “People procrastinate. The reason why…” He draws a picture of a pirate ship on the board and said, “Here's a pirate ship, who runs the pirate ship? It's the captain, right? Who actually takes care of the ship? It's the crew. You've got the captain and the crew. Who's in charge? Obviously the captain's in charge. The captain is like your subconscious mind. It's moving things but then the crew is your subconscious mind that's actually doing all the stuff to make it all happen. What happens when the crew does not like what the captain is doing? It causes a mutiny. That's what happens. Consciously you're selling somebody something that subconsciously it's something out of alignment, so your subconscious has this mutiny which causes procrastination. So how do you get people to not procrastinate?” He did this technique and I wish I could show it to you, but he did it all with his hand. What he does is he starts speaking to the different parts of the subconscious mind. So you have the right hand, I'll hold up my hand, “On one hand you guys are really excited and motivated and you really want to be par t of this, but on the other hand,” he holds up the left hand, “On the other hand you're freaking out. You're unsure, you're insecure, you've struggled in the past. Blah blah blah.” So he's holding up both hands like the right brain and the left brain or whatever. Like two different conversations. Oh crap, I just cut somebody off. Sorry dude. I'm such a bad driver. This is why you shouldn't be podcasting and driving. It's as bad or worse than drinking and driving. Good thing we're in Boise, Idaho which means this guy probably doesn't have a gun, if we were in California I would be scared for my life, not going to lie. Anyway, so now he's got two hands up. He's got one hand he's got you really want to do this, the other hands like, you're confused and nervous, and those are the two parts. Conscious and subconscious, the two things that cause someone to procrastinate. It's these two internal conflicts. So he does this left hand, right hand, and says, “These two things can come together.” And he brings his hands together. So subconsciously he's brought the conscious and subconscious mind together and pushes it out. Similar to, have you guys ever played Mortal Kombat? Sub-Zero shoots out the blue fire ball? It's kind of like that. Right hand, left hand brings them together, clasps his fingers together and then pushes it out like a fireball to the audience. So he's taking the two parts of the brain, brings them together and then pushes them out to the people. It does that over and over again throughout the event. Every time they're talking about something, he's looking like, “What are the two conflicting parts of the mind that are keeping this from saying yes?” So it's like, On the one hand, you probably think it'd be awesome to have Clickfunnels. You're excited, you think this'll be easy. But on the other hand you're thinking I don't have time, I'm not a techie person, but if we can bring these two things together and then he pushes them out, and help you guys to see the value of this. Then it becomes a no-brainer. Boom, he's just taking this internal conflict that causes procrastination, he's brought those two pieces together and pushed them back on the audience and now those conflicts are gone. How ninja is that? How freaking amazing and cool is that? It's been funny because for the last 3 days now everybody's been doing fireballs at each other during their presentations and stuff, it's amazing. For me, this is ninja. I'm totally using it on my stage presentations from now on when I speak and everything else. But where else can I use this? So I'm trying to figure out how to do it with my slides. I'm going to add in my slides something like, add a picture of me with my right hand out, a picture with my left hand out, a picture of me putting them together, and a picture of me pushing it out. And I'll push through these slides as I teach the concept. On the one hand you're probably excited, on the other hand you're probably stressing out, but if we put these things together it'll help you! Boom. Then you will be successful, and you will join and life will become good. Anyway, that was a cool one. I hope it makes sense when I'm explaining it. But watch the marketing I do in the future, you will see me using this in Periscopes, in videos, in hangouts, in webinars. Because it's the most ninja, amazing, cool thing I've learned in a long, long time. So I'm going crazy, I'm excited. That was just one tiny, itsy bitsy, teeny little nugget we got in the Inner Circle, and it's been 3 days of a waterfall of things like that. Anyway, I am almost to the hotel now, I'm excited. I'm going to go in there and do some subconscious procrastination killing, Sub-Zero fireballs at people, and I think you guys should too. That's what I got for today you guys. Appreciate you all, have an amazing day. If you want to get on the waiting list to be in the Inner Circle and one of these guys are crazy enough to not re-up, that's the only way to get in right now. Just go to Russellbrunson.com, apply there and that's it. Alright guys, I will talk to you all again very, very soon. Bye everybody.
New changes allow you to save your Periscopes.
Memorial day is right around the corner and the Navigators are discussing summer at Walt Disney World. Sean, Sue, and Keith discuss various summer topics including how hot it really gets, how to stay cool, coolers in the parks and the best places to find shade. They even discuss where the kids can get wet in the parks and it’s more than just Splash Mountain and Kali River Rapids. Sean, Sue and Keith also discuss how touring the parks changes in the summer and see if Sean’s “Commando” approach to touring the Magic Kingdom still works with the summer crowds. This is followed by Susie Q’s Fastpass to the News. The news includes a lengthy discussion about all of the new exciting attractions/shows coming to Walt Disney World this summer. This is followed by speculation on why certain attractions are being refurbished this summer and what changes are being made. Find out if Sean is a big fan of Animal Kingdom and where you can find the chemical formulas for Ketchup, Mustard and Mayonnaise on an attraction while visiting this park. As always, a big thank you to Mickeytravels.com for being our sponsor. We love our listeners and would love to hear from you! Send us an email at wdwnavigators@gmail.com, a tweet on Twitter at @wdwnavigators, or a post on our WDW Navigators Facebook page. Please leave us a review on iTunes and let us know what you think of the show. You never know, you may get mentioned on the air! And be sure to look for our live Periscopes and Facebook Live! events from the Disney parks as well.
You might have noticed that I’m really into livestreaming lately, and because it’s a great way to reach more people become bigger, badder, better real estate investors and entrepreneurs I’m going to keep doing it. For the most part you’ll see me live on Periscope. If you want to follow me there so you know when I’m going live (because the app sends you a quick alert right before I go live), go to www.periscope.tv/cashflowdiary. In this episode of the Cash Flow Diary podcast you’ll get to listen in on one of my first few Periscopes. The topic is value-driven business and how to be successful in business and entrepreneurship. You’ll also realize pretty quickly why I’m doing Periscopes. My reach immediately expanded. There are viewers from all over the globe. That’s pretty cool. The long and short of it is that being in business for yourself is possible if you so decide. But you must make a shift in your mind first. You have to decide that you want to provide value of some shape or form. For me it’s real estate investing; for you it could be something else. But here’s the deal… if you have a passion for something, you aren’t serving your purpose unless you go for your dreams. Life is not a video game, folks. It’s not like you get a bunch of do-overs. While failure with things you try will be a part of your success, stopping short of your goals isn’t going to do anything to change your life… and not taking steps in the first place isn’t going to do much either. In this episode you will hear my story again, because I’m talking to a new audience and they don’t know me. If you notice, your story can become part of your message in business. It helps to humanize you and show people your WHY of doing what you do. You’ll also hear a lot of good information that you can use right now… today… if you choose to use it. That’s why I’m doing my podcast, livestreams and live events; that’s why my team and I continue to build great educational materials and opportunities… to share my information and motivate you to become the entrepreneur you want to be. Learn more. LISTEN NOW.
Step one in our planning for the new FunnelHacker.tv. On today’s episode Russell talks about an idea he has for a new show about Russell and his team doing funnels for businesses. He explains what kinds of things you’d see on the show. Here are 3 cool things on this episode: What the name of this new TV show would be. What companies Russell already has in mind to be on the show. And what kind of behind the scenes stuff you would be able to see on the show. So listen below to hear all about Funnel Hacker TV. ---Transcript--- Hey, hey, hey, I hope you guys are doing amazing, welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Alright, so I did one this morning, a podcast, which was 3 minutes long because I was preparing for our meeting, and I was talking really fast, but hopefully some of you guys got some cool value out of that. But I have something I wanna talk to you guys about, but I’ve been all bottled up because I’ve had 9o’clock meetings, when usually I’m in the car right before 9. Anyway, I’ve just had less time to talk and hang out. So I’m going right now to the store to grab some stuff for my wife, so this gives me a cool opportunity to share some cool stuff for you guys. Hope you don’t mind. So I am crazy excited right now about something that we’re doing that I think is going to be amazing. I don’t know. I’m kind of nervous to tell you guys, not even everyone on my team, not even my partners know this yet. Todd will probably find out about this from this podcast. And maybe Dylan, I don’t know if he listens or not. Kind of what we’re thinking. How has marketing been done up to this point? It’s all about creating cool funnels, driving traffic and that conceptual thing. Or doing Periscopes or hang outs, or cool things. All I’m trying to figure out….I’m trying to be the next level, the bleeding edge, the next cool thing. I was trying to really figure out how do we….I feel like we built a really cool brand and a community and all this kind of stuff. How do we expand that? How do we take that to the next level and make it bigger and better? So that was the question. Last week my wife and I were out visiting our nanny, who just had a baby so we went and saw her and saw the baby and everything. So we were driving around and talking before we went to Jack in the Box. Was it Jack in the Box? Anyway, some horrible fast food restaurant, that tastes way too good, and definitely not on any of the diets on earth, but nevertheless we went there with the kids. And as we’re driving we’re talking about HGTV’s Flip That House, and we’re talking about just some things like that and as we’re driving all the sudden this inspiration I feel it just hit me from above thinking…saying, the cool thing about those shows is that they pick a house, rehab a house, you watch the whole process and in that process they’re telling the back story and all these things. They have this sub-story of things happening. Each week there’s a house that they’re finding, they’re rehabbing it, flipping it or whatever and making it awesome. That was our favorite one, with Chip and Joanne Gains, but all the house shows are similar. I was thinking about it, we’re working on a lot of side projects. Things I’m kind of doing on the side. Funnels I’m building for companies that we’ve traded equity for, stuff like that. And I was like, wouldn’t it be cool if we made our own reality tv show and showed behind the scenes, so people could actually see what happens? And I started thinking of different funnels I’m working on and one of them is Bio-hacking Secrets with my friend Anthony Diclementi. We’ve already recorded so much cool footage of him with his Cryosauna with laser lights, and all these crazy….the visuals are already amazing, because we’ve been filming the whole process and we’re about to launch it. I’m like, you’re building all this stuff behind the scenes and no one gets to see it and it doesn’t really help the Clickfunnels community other than some of them hear about it later. But I’m like, what if that became a thing and each week we pick a funnel that we’re building anyway and we build it out live and everyone gets to see the story? And it’s not just like a boring thing us in the office like, “Blah blah blah.” Make it fun and exciting and have story lines and a whole bunch of things like that. So that’s kind of the idea. So we’ve mapped out the first 12 episodes, 12 funnels and some of them are projects like Bio-hacking secrets, the prove it funnels we’re working on, a couple things like that and some of them….For example, tomorrow I’m actually being interviewed, or he’s interviewing me or something I guess, I don’t even know. Robert Kiyosaki are getting on appear.in meeting and we’re recording it, gonna pre-record this intro for the webinar. Because me and him are doing a big webinar next month. And he can’t show up on them live because he’s going to be out of the country, so we’re filming the intro together and then we’ll show the intro and I’ll do the webinar live to his whole list. And his list is crazy huge, so we could in theory, I don’t know do half a million or million dollar webinar, and wouldn’t that be a cool episode to film that whole thing? Film me tomorrow as I’m driving to the office, freaking out excited and there film behind the scenes of me interviewing Kiyosaki and us being on this thing together. And film the webinar actually happening and showing all the nervousness before and showing people registering and showing up and stats and numbers, and doing the webinar and showing the pitch, the close, the percentages. Just showing the whole thing. Wouldn’t that be awesome? Or with Bio-hacking Secrets, we’re about to launch. It’s a free book funnel, plus a tele-seminar funnel, plus a webinar high ticket funnel. All of that Is 90% done. So we’re going to fly Anthony out and film the story of us launching this thing, and how we buy the ads and how we get the right things and testing the campaign and seeing what’s converting and what’s not converting. Doing all the stuff we do anyway, but showing you guys behind the scenes of it, in a really cool, fun exciting thing. Wouldn’t that be fun? So that’s kind of the first half. Again, I’m trying to think, how do we make this fun and engaging and exciting. Recently one of our fellow funnel hackers started working for me, and he’s in the office, sits right behind my desk. His name is Steven Larsen, some of you guys may know him, so he’s been actually…I’ve been focusing a little more on strategy since he’s been here and he’s been focusing on building out and we’ve been kind of going back and forth until something looks really good. So I thought on the show, instead of me talking about it and building it and being really annoying person who thinks he’s really important, instead wouldn’t it be cool if its like, I’m coaching, which I’m doing anyway, but I’m coaching Steven through building these funnels and doing the whole process. And he gets to ask questions and be in on the strategy meetings and all these kinds of things. And that way you guys get a unique view where it’s not just what in my head what’s happening, it’s me explaining it to him what’s happening. So he’s kind of in proxy for the rest of the audience, learning along as this thing is happening, as we’re building it out and seeing behind the scenes as we do the pages and the funnels. Anyway, I’m so exciting. So we started filming some of them today. We’ve been working on the Prove It funnels. We filmed behind the scenes of us doing the whole strategy session, pre-launch stuff. Next week I’m flying out to actually speak at a network marketing event and a Prove It event. So we’re going to film me in the air flying there, telling the story and those kind of things. And then my next book’s coming out, so we’re going to film that story. And we’re going to show behind the scenes of that book funnel. I’ll show you behind the scenes of the Tony Robbins book funnel. Dave Ashworth book funnel and all the other ones we’ve done and just kind of episode by episode build out different things and show you behind the scenes of what we’re doing and how we’re doing it, and why we’re doing it. And the actual numbers, and the actual stats and having complete transparency. And the other cool thing we thought, if we have an episode that goes live, on the site we’ll have the episode there, you could see each month by month, we could do income reports similar to what John Lee Dumas on Entrepreneur on Fire. Show each month, Bio-hacking Secrets launch. Month one we did this, month two, month three. Show the running stats of what each of these little business, each of these funnels is actually generating for us. And just try to be complete transparency. You guys can look at what we’re doing and then funnel hack it for your own businesses. So that’s the idea. I’m excited, I hope you’re excited. We’ve been so crazy. We have some crazy ones. One of them we’re flying down to Columbia to go drop ship roses. One of them…..anyway, we’ve got some crazy, crazy stuff that you guys are going to love, and you’re going to have the chance to see behind the scenes of everything. So that’s the first part. The second part, I’m not sure if I should even talk about this yet, but we’re trying to figure out how to make, and this idea came to me, I actually did a Periscope tonight, asking our Periscope followers, “What do you guys think about this?” Trying to get them engaged with the idea and get some other feedback, what they’d want to hear and see in the episodes. One thing I kind of talked about was, I don’t know if you guys watch the show the Bachelor or the Bachelorette. You shouldn’t, but if you do you know what I’m talking about where they every night that it’s on, people all around America have these big bachelor parties where they get their friends and family, everyone gets together and they watch the episode together live and they talk about it for the next week waiting for the next one. I was like, what if we build these really cool things like mini hack-a-thons or something where each week when the episode is live; people could run a hack-a-thon in their local area and invite their friends and family members have everyone come over and watch this thing, and watch it streaming, and see the actual ups-ell unfold and see how cool it is. Wouldn’t that be awesome. We were thinking about even having it kind of like a pre level certification. Our certified partners could run bigger versions of these, but having this as like a pre thing where you pay a little bit to get in, and you get in we send you a box, and the box has got like 10 Funnel Hacker t-shirts and it’s got a special gift that’s only for people who are hosting funnel hacking parties. And it’s got…..we’re talking about, Steven had an idea of making a lead pages dart board and having that there. A whole bunch of awesome stuff. But that would be the thing and that would get people all around the country each week as we release these episodes, we release them at the same time, getting everyone on board, getting everyone to watch together, and commenting and sharing and talking. Make it a really cool, interactive community type building thing where we’re all experiencing this together at the same time. That’s my thoughts. So with that said, I would love to hear your guys’ feedback. Hit me up on Facebook or whatever and say “Yay” or “Nay” or “This is stupid” or “this is awesome” or “I would love to watch that and share it with everybody I know”. Because we’re trying to make this a cool thing. It’s gonna be called Funnel Hacker TV. Some of you guys have seen we had two episodes of Funnel Hacker TV in the past, but we’re going to try and make this into a real thing. I think it’s gonna be amazing. So I’m crazy excited. We’ve got, we started filming the first ones today. We’ve got a couple more tomorrow. The fun thing I’m learning is, and I’ve always been pretty good at project management, because that’s what I’ve normally been doing. But now we’re project managing 13 funnels at once because we’re filming different parts and different things with each one. And trying to make sure we have each of the sections for each of the things. It’s gonna be amazing. I just wanted to share it with you guys. Please keep it a secret. Don’t tell anybody else. Hopefully it gets you guys excited and gets you thinking about cool things you can do in your own community to get people more engaged and more excited and I think this is going to be it for us. It’s going to take the marketing to the next level. And just the community and this whole brand we’re trying to build and take it more mainstream and make it more fun and just make it not a software program. We don’t want this to be that. We want this to be a cult, I mean a community. So that’s the game plan. I appreciate you guys. I’m walking in the store to grab my wife’s stuff. I’ll talk to you guys soon. Have a great night, appreciate you all, and that’s about it. Talk to you guys soon. Bye.
Step one in our planning for the new FunnelHacker.tv. On today's episode Russell talks about an idea he has for a new show about Russell and his team doing funnels for businesses. He explains what kinds of things you'd see on the show. Here are 3 cool things on this episode: What the name of this new TV show would be. What companies Russell already has in mind to be on the show. And what kind of behind the scenes stuff you would be able to see on the show. So listen below to hear all about Funnel Hacker TV. ---Transcript--- Hey, hey, hey, I hope you guys are doing amazing, welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Alright, so I did one this morning, a podcast, which was 3 minutes long because I was preparing for our meeting, and I was talking really fast, but hopefully some of you guys got some cool value out of that. But I have something I wanna talk to you guys about, but I've been all bottled up because I've had 9o'clock meetings, when usually I'm in the car right before 9. Anyway, I've just had less time to talk and hang out. So I'm going right now to the store to grab some stuff for my wife, so this gives me a cool opportunity to share some cool stuff for you guys. Hope you don't mind. So I am crazy excited right now about something that we're doing that I think is going to be amazing. I don't know. I'm kind of nervous to tell you guys, not even everyone on my team, not even my partners know this yet. Todd will probably find out about this from this podcast. And maybe Dylan, I don't know if he listens or not. Kind of what we're thinking. How has marketing been done up to this point? It's all about creating cool funnels, driving traffic and that conceptual thing. Or doing Periscopes or hang outs, or cool things. All I'm trying to figure out….I'm trying to be the next level, the bleeding edge, the next cool thing. I was trying to really figure out how do we….I feel like we built a really cool brand and a community and all this kind of stuff. How do we expand that? How do we take that to the next level and make it bigger and better? So that was the question. Last week my wife and I were out visiting our nanny, who just had a baby so we went and saw her and saw the baby and everything. So we were driving around and talking before we went to Jack in the Box. Was it Jack in the Box? Anyway, some horrible fast food restaurant, that tastes way too good, and definitely not on any of the diets on earth, but nevertheless we went there with the kids. And as we're driving we're talking about HGTV's Flip That House, and we're talking about just some things like that and as we're driving all the sudden this inspiration I feel it just hit me from above thinking…saying, the cool thing about those shows is that they pick a house, rehab a house, you watch the whole process and in that process they're telling the back story and all these things. They have this sub-story of things happening. Each week there's a house that they're finding, they're rehabbing it, flipping it or whatever and making it awesome. That was our favorite one, with Chip and Joanne Gains, but all the house shows are similar. I was thinking about it, we're working on a lot of side projects. Things I'm kind of doing on the side. Funnels I'm building for companies that we've traded equity for, stuff like that. And I was like, wouldn't it be cool if we made our own reality tv show and showed behind the scenes, so people could actually see what happens? And I started thinking of different funnels I'm working on and one of them is Bio-hacking Secrets with my friend Anthony Diclementi. We've already recorded so much cool footage of him with his Cryosauna with laser lights, and all these crazy….the visuals are already amazing, because we've been filming the whole process and we're about to launch it. I'm like, you're building all this stuff behind the scenes and no one gets to see it and it doesn't really help the Clickfunnels community other than some of them hear about it later. But I'm like, what if that became a thing and each week we pick a funnel that we're building anyway and we build it out live and everyone gets to see the story? And it's not just like a boring thing us in the office like, “Blah blah blah.” Make it fun and exciting and have story lines and a whole bunch of things like that. So that's kind of the idea. So we've mapped out the first 12 episodes, 12 funnels and some of them are projects like Bio-hacking secrets, the prove it funnels we're working on, a couple things like that and some of them….For example, tomorrow I'm actually being interviewed, or he's interviewing me or something I guess, I don't even know. Robert Kiyosaki are getting on appear.in meeting and we're recording it, gonna pre-record this intro for the webinar. Because me and him are doing a big webinar next month. And he can't show up on them live because he's going to be out of the country, so we're filming the intro together and then we'll show the intro and I'll do the webinar live to his whole list. And his list is crazy huge, so we could in theory, I don't know do half a million or million dollar webinar, and wouldn't that be a cool episode to film that whole thing? Film me tomorrow as I'm driving to the office, freaking out excited and there film behind the scenes of me interviewing Kiyosaki and us being on this thing together. And film the webinar actually happening and showing all the nervousness before and showing people registering and showing up and stats and numbers, and doing the webinar and showing the pitch, the close, the percentages. Just showing the whole thing. Wouldn't that be awesome? Or with Bio-hacking Secrets, we're about to launch. It's a free book funnel, plus a tele-seminar funnel, plus a webinar high ticket funnel. All of that Is 90% done. So we're going to fly Anthony out and film the story of us launching this thing, and how we buy the ads and how we get the right things and testing the campaign and seeing what's converting and what's not converting. Doing all the stuff we do anyway, but showing you guys behind the scenes of it, in a really cool, fun exciting thing. Wouldn't that be fun? So that's kind of the first half. Again, I'm trying to think, how do we make this fun and engaging and exciting. Recently one of our fellow funnel hackers started working for me, and he's in the office, sits right behind my desk. His name is Steven Larsen, some of you guys may know him, so he's been actually…I've been focusing a little more on strategy since he's been here and he's been focusing on building out and we've been kind of going back and forth until something looks really good. So I thought on the show, instead of me talking about it and building it and being really annoying person who thinks he's really important, instead wouldn't it be cool if its like, I'm coaching, which I'm doing anyway, but I'm coaching Steven through building these funnels and doing the whole process. And he gets to ask questions and be in on the strategy meetings and all these kinds of things. And that way you guys get a unique view where it's not just what in my head what's happening, it's me explaining it to him what's happening. So he's kind of in proxy for the rest of the audience, learning along as this thing is happening, as we're building it out and seeing behind the scenes as we do the pages and the funnels. Anyway, I'm so exciting. So we started filming some of them today. We've been working on the Prove It funnels. We filmed behind the scenes of us doing the whole strategy session, pre-launch stuff. Next week I'm flying out to actually speak at a network marketing event and a Prove It event. So we're going to film me in the air flying there, telling the story and those kind of things. And then my next book's coming out, so we're going to film that story. And we're going to show behind the scenes of that book funnel. I'll show you behind the scenes of the Tony Robbins book funnel. Dave Ashworth book funnel and all the other ones we've done and just kind of episode by episode build out different things and show you behind the scenes of what we're doing and how we're doing it, and why we're doing it. And the actual numbers, and the actual stats and having complete transparency. And the other cool thing we thought, if we have an episode that goes live, on the site we'll have the episode there, you could see each month by month, we could do income reports similar to what John Lee Dumas on Entrepreneur on Fire. Show each month, Bio-hacking Secrets launch. Month one we did this, month two, month three. Show the running stats of what each of these little business, each of these funnels is actually generating for us. And just try to be complete transparency. You guys can look at what we're doing and then funnel hack it for your own businesses. So that's the idea. I'm excited, I hope you're excited. We've been so crazy. We have some crazy ones. One of them we're flying down to Columbia to go drop ship roses. One of them…..anyway, we've got some crazy, crazy stuff that you guys are going to love, and you're going to have the chance to see behind the scenes of everything. So that's the first part. The second part, I'm not sure if I should even talk about this yet, but we're trying to figure out how to make, and this idea came to me, I actually did a Periscope tonight, asking our Periscope followers, “What do you guys think about this?” Trying to get them engaged with the idea and get some other feedback, what they'd want to hear and see in the episodes. One thing I kind of talked about was, I don't know if you guys watch the show the Bachelor or the Bachelorette. You shouldn't, but if you do you know what I'm talking about where they every night that it's on, people all around America have these big bachelor parties where they get their friends and family, everyone gets together and they watch the episode together live and they talk about it for the next week waiting for the next one. I was like, what if we build these really cool things like mini hack-a-thons or something where each week when the episode is live; people could run a hack-a-thon in their local area and invite their friends and family members have everyone come over and watch this thing, and watch it streaming, and see the actual ups-ell unfold and see how cool it is. Wouldn't that be awesome. We were thinking about even having it kind of like a pre level certification. Our certified partners could run bigger versions of these, but having this as like a pre thing where you pay a little bit to get in, and you get in we send you a box, and the box has got like 10 Funnel Hacker t-shirts and it's got a special gift that's only for people who are hosting funnel hacking parties. And it's got…..we're talking about, Steven had an idea of making a lead pages dart board and having that there. A whole bunch of awesome stuff. But that would be the thing and that would get people all around the country each week as we release these episodes, we release them at the same time, getting everyone on board, getting everyone to watch together, and commenting and sharing and talking. Make it a really cool, interactive community type building thing where we're all experiencing this together at the same time. That's my thoughts. So with that said, I would love to hear your guys' feedback. Hit me up on Facebook or whatever and say “Yay” or “Nay” or “This is stupid” or “this is awesome” or “I would love to watch that and share it with everybody I know”. Because we're trying to make this a cool thing. It's gonna be called Funnel Hacker TV. Some of you guys have seen we had two episodes of Funnel Hacker TV in the past, but we're going to try and make this into a real thing. I think it's gonna be amazing. So I'm crazy excited. We've got, we started filming the first ones today. We've got a couple more tomorrow. The fun thing I'm learning is, and I've always been pretty good at project management, because that's what I've normally been doing. But now we're project managing 13 funnels at once because we're filming different parts and different things with each one. And trying to make sure we have each of the sections for each of the things. It's gonna be amazing. I just wanted to share it with you guys. Please keep it a secret. Don't tell anybody else. Hopefully it gets you guys excited and gets you thinking about cool things you can do in your own community to get people more engaged and more excited and I think this is going to be it for us. It's going to take the marketing to the next level. And just the community and this whole brand we're trying to build and take it more mainstream and make it more fun and just make it not a software program. We don't want this to be that. We want this to be a cult, I mean a community. So that's the game plan. I appreciate you guys. I'm walking in the store to grab my wife's stuff. I'll talk to you guys soon. Have a great night, appreciate you all, and that's about it. Talk to you guys soon. Bye.
If you have heard me talk on my Periscopes, you will know that one of my favorite places to shop for liquidation online is www.boxfox.co. I love the site so much, that I wanted to bring the CEO Chris Palmer onto the Online Selling Podcast to share his story and to shed some light on the process of BoxFox. Enjoy!
Quiana Murray, the Sponsorship Strategist, served as the guest for the evening. Quiana shares the strategies that business owners need to use to pitch and to gain sponsorship. For a limited time, she will have her free Periscopes about sponsorship available since she will work with the host of the P.R.I.M.E. Show, Cathy E. Smith to monetize her knowledge and skills. Quiana works with clients on everything from the right things to wear to the right language to use to capture sponsor dollars.
The Warrior Life - Overcoming The Mental and Physical Battles of Life
Name of Expert: Holly Boyce Why I Believe This Person Is A Warrior: Many I believe have fought and won cancer, but very few did it in the style that Holly did. She didn't just sulk and cry while she was going through chemo. No, she kicked cancer's ass while laughing and sharing her story the whole time. Now she helps others with their own personal battles with weight loss and inspires the world through her story and laughter. Who They Are & Something Only The People Closest To Them Know: Ex-Family Service Worker and Educator Cancer Survivor Personal Trainer Use to be a cheerleader in high school Their Battle, Mentally Or Physically, They Fought And Came Out A Warrior: Battled and beat breast cancer at 30 Two years of unemployment with her husband She had to go back to work while her husband was unemployed and went to 6 funerals in 6 months Warrior They Look Up To: Me, but I was not expecting it!! Honestly!! Heart Of The Interview: Are you stressed out? Are you overwhelmed? After having gone through an immense amount of stress in her life, Holly has come up with tips and tricks to help you push through and eliminate stress in your own life. Here is the link to Holly's 5 Stress-Busting Tips & More FREE Training Here are 5 ways to eliminate stress on your own: Feel your emotions and not hiding your emotions Give over the fear of failure Stop trying to control everything Start organizing Let it go Additional Resources: -Holly's Free Training on Stress Busting: http://www.familyfitnessgal.com/stressbusters.html -Marie Forleo- Should I Toughen Up?: http://www.marieforleo.com/2015/06/toughen-up/ -Holly's Periscopes and Scope of Getting Over Fear Of Failure: www.katch.me/familyfitnessgal -My Interview with Organizational Expert: It isn't released yet but her name is Jax Sargent and will be coming out soon!! Stay tuned by signing up for my VIP Coaching Calls at www.michellerosefit.com. -Holly's blog throughout cancer: www.thinkpink-holly.blogspot.com What Being A Warrior Means To Them: She believes that being a warrior means that you acknowledge your strengths and gifts and utilizing them to help other people. Their Greatest Life Lesson Learned: Having a positive attitude is vital in life and defines who you are. Where You Can Find Them: www.familyfitnessgal.com
MainTopic: We've got Mouse in the House! COURTNEY COOVER of WWW.MOUSETOYOURHOUSE iswith us to share some laughs! Most of you will know Courtney fromher daily Periscopes inside Walt Disney World but we asked this entrepreneur how she got the inspiration for her Disney related business and the ins and outs of it! Ears the News: Of course wecouldn't be in Spring without one of our topics being about the infamous Epcot Flower & Garden Festival and our guest this weekhas the inside track. She's there daily giving her followersupdates and vids. What episode of Divas would be complete withoutus going on our mini tangents as we topic hop! (That's where you'llfind what's truly on the mind of a Diva!) Magical Merriment: This is our Gamesection where you'll find out which Diva earns her EARS thisweek! Diva's Plot theirrevenge ~ Diva Jenn tries to pick offDivas one by one when she describes a Disney movie but with aterrible plot! See which of your Divas comes outnotorious! Please Subscribe and share for morefascinating Disney guests in each and every episode! Need more Dish on our Guests? WWW.MOUSETOYOURHOUSE.COM or@MouseToYourHouse on Facebook & Periscope ~ Twitter:@Mouse2YourHouse MOUSE CLAPS:Travel Agents ~ Courtney has extendedan awesome deal just for you! Full details in thisepisode! Divas Dish DizSponsors: Upon a Star Travel & Concierge~ Customized Disney travel planning for your family! Let ourteam customize a magical vacation for your family - there is noadditional cost to you when you book a package with our team! Sugar Fox Flowers ~ Customize yourwedding/event cakes with our made to order edible Sugar Flowers.Turn your DIY cakes into ShowStoppers! Upcoming weekly Guests: Pianist Gijs Van Winkelhof ~ @gijsvwinkelhof Disney Pass The Cast host ~ Ms. Lisa Wicks ~@LisaAWicks May, Twinkie & Tootie ~ @365atDisney Scott Parker ~ www.TakingThePlunge.com ~@FloridaPlunge Corinne Anderson ~ www.disneylifesylers.com ~Inside The Magic ~ @CorinneAndersson And many more!!! Need more Dish from our Divas??? You can find themat: JenniferNovotny: Upon A Star Travel & Concierge~ www.disiningmemories.com AshleyBrady: @wdwsthrnbelle ~ Disney SouthernBelle ChristineFox: @ChristineFox @SugarFoxFlowers@Foxmomof4 ~ www.sugarfoxflowers.com KatrinaRios: @katrinarabbit87 KallyLavoie: @Miss_K_Lavoie MeganCorcoran: @MegsMagicTravel~ Megansmagicaltravelblog.wordpress.com
In this episode of the Open for Business podcast it’stime to get serious about video! James Tew, ‘The Aussie Video Guy’ is back inthe house to talk about how video content is king moving forward in 2016 andhis brand new online course, ‘How to create amazing video for less than $200’. The world cannot get enough of video content right nowand we are not talking flash, expensive, high end production. The video thathas the most traction and attention is personal video for YouTube, Snapchats,Periscopes and Facebook Live’s etc. You can create video any time of the daywith nothing more than your smartphone! It’s a broadcast and filming studioright in your hand! If you want to take your footage to the next level and useit to explode the growth of your brand then listen in because we have thesolution for you! Let’s jump straight into the show! It’s time to become…Open for Business! TOPLEARNINGS FROM THIS EPISODE: 1. Video isthe content type with the most attentionright now and that isn’t going to change! 2. You don’tneed to spend a thousand dollars in order get started…less than $200 will do the trick! 3. Tell yourstory through video, provide value,include a call to action and see the results for yourself! RESOURCESAND LINKS FROM THIS EPISODE: James Tew’s online course! How to create amazing video for lessthan $200! – Click to buy the course righthere! (This is an affiliate link, whichmeans James will give me a bit of pocket money if you purchase the course via this link!) JamesTew.me – Visit James’s blog, lots of value to be found James Tew’s YouTube Channel – Make sure you hit subscribe to never miss anotherof his videos again! Facebook page – Where James posts his good stuff…. Twitter – Hit James up on Twitter and tell him you heard himon the show! Snapchat –add James with his username - tewdawg88 WASTHIS EPISODE SUBSCRIBE WORTHY? If so, justclick here to subscribe and never miss another episode! YOURTHOUGHTS? Please letme know in the comments section below! If you didn’t like it, let me know thattoo! Constructive feedback and suggestions are always welcome! I’d love to knowyour thoughts! After all, Open for Business is about helping you, so I want youget the most out each episode that you can! LET’SMAKE THIS GROW! If you enjoyed this episode, thebiggest complement you can give is to leave a rating and review in iTunes forOpen for Business! Reviews are extremely helpful to boostour ranking and help this show get noticed! Plus, I read each and every one ofthem. P.S. Here’s a ‘how-to’ if your note sure? IT’SMADE POSSIBLE BECAUSE OF YOU! Thank you again for joining meagain this week. There are so many other podcasts and experts that you could belistening to instead, but you have shared some of your precious time to listento this episode and I truly appreciate that! Without you as a listener, the podcast goes nowhere That’s it for this episode! Thankyou again and remember you can get in touch with me anytime on Twitter @anthonygmurphy orvia email anthony(at)openforbusiness(dot)net(dot)au!
Gift Biz Unwrapped | Women Entrepreneurs | Bakers, Crafters, Makers | StartUp
Vicki is the owner of Adrian’s boutique, a retail store in Buhler, Kansas that has been in business for 33 years. Their current product mix is 50% fashion, 25% gift and 25% kitchen and gourmet. But Vicki will tell you they are really in the People Business. Their number one priority is to earn customers’ business through exceptional customer service, a well chosen product mix, and a team that is committed to excellence. Additionally, Vicki is passionate about helping other entrepreneurs reach the next level in creating a successful business using relationship marketing, email marketing and social media marketing. This is all bundled under a business called Remarkable Retailer which focuses on B2B relationships through a podcast, weekday Periscopes and individual coaching. Motivational Quote Business InspirationIdentifying the love of retail life [5:08] The opening of Adrian’s Boutique [5:59] Business Building InsightsAdvice when opening a brick and mortar shop [7:01] Store setup [9:22] Move It Monday – Displays and more [11:59] Most valuable retail asset [14:14] Current advertising plan [14:40] Promo Idea #1 [18:03] Promo Idea #2 [18:46] In Store video creates sales [23:15] The Remarkable RetailerIndustry specific Mastermind described in detail [27:22] Remarkable Retailer [33:20] Success TraitVicki is a life-long learner and loves to talk with people. As she says, getting in her 20,000 words a day! Productivity/Lifestyle Tool Flipagram (http://www.flipagram.com) -Create, share and discover fun photo-video stories set to music you love! Wunderlist (http://www.wunderlist.com) -The easiest way to get stuff done. Whether you’re planning a holiday, sharing a shopping list with a partner or managing multiple work projects, Wunderlist is here to help you tick off all your personal and professional to-dos. Valuable Book The E-Myth (http://amzn.to/1PwP6vd) by Michael Gerber The Customer Rules (http://amzn.to/1VdNpnV) by Lee Cockerell Contact Links Adrians Boutique Website (http://www.adriansboutique.com) Remarkable Retailer Website (http://www.remarkableretailer.com) B2B Video Training for Entrepreneurs (http://vimeo.com/vickiadrian) Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/remarkableretailer) Twitter (http://twitter.com/remarkablretail) Email – vicki@remarkableretailer.com Phone – 620-543-6488 If you found value in this podcast, make sure to subscribe and leave a review in (http://www.giftbizunwrapped.com/GooglePodcasts) . That helps us spread the word to more makers just like you. Thanks! Sue
This episode contains: We’re still having episode confusion, naming numbers with names, voting with your ears, we have a strong twitter core, shout out to @NjoyMyTeaBag our new #1 fan and Amish truck driver, there are beards and there are jew-fro beards, we love Tea-Bag Garrett’s Batman pedophile shirt, Julia’s sneezes sound like crying, cartoon sized TVs and video games on floors, Iotaman sends Ben trifling Periscopes, can you put weed smoke in your butt and get high?, pulling back the meat curtains, Ben might have personally enjoyed some of the trifling periscope videos, Reverse Docking, Matt Damon might be CG, little bodies and big heads, Captain America and Chris Evans, if there is a dick on screen then Steven will look at the dick, the reason why we’re recording on a Thursday, a kind and genuine person passed away and Dorst reminisces, raise a glass of Grey Goose in his honor, re-connecting with family, phone calls and texts and drinking and AA, restarting your life, periscope screw ups, playing favorites and not being the favorite, the “when Bubba was born” story, when we should start having regrets, come for the dicks jokes and stay for the fatherly advice, Gmail and the spam and junk folder, Steven’s dumb pube beard, Steven gets an email from a lovely lady, periods and spacing, reading this email almost gave Steven a friggin’ aneurism, Dorst almost nails how this woman looks, Ben and Steven craft an email back to Sala live on the air, this email seems like scam but Steven hopes it wasn’t an accidental email, Dorst gives Steven the “most difficult Star Wars quiz ever,” spoilers: he gets 18/20 correct, this quiz makes Steven fully erect, this episode was almost called “The Galactic Jizz Wailers,” and finally we can’t remember how this episode began. Sorry Tea-Bag Garrett. Also, Thanks Jerry.
By now you've probably heard about Periscope, the live streaming social media platform that lets you talk to your fans in real time. It's the fastest growing social media platform of all time! Since Periscope launched in March 2015, it already has 15 million users. And get this: those users upload three years' worth of video content every day. I dabbled with Periscope for a while in 2015, and to be honest, I couldn't figure out if I loved it or hated it. Mostly, I just didn't really understand how to use it to its fullest potential. That's why I was so glad to talk with today's podcast guest. Zack Spuckler is a genuine Periscope ninja, and he has used the platform to do amazing things with his email list. Whether you're an early adopter who is already using Periscope on a daily basis, or a skeptic who wonders if this medium is really going to last long enough to be worth the time it takes to learn it, this episode is one you just can't miss. I'll be the first to admit that my biggest obstacle in using Periscope is the whole "live stream" nature of it. Frankly, it makes me nervous--I like to have a plan, a script, and a lot of chances to correct my mistakes. At the same time, I recognize the real power of livestreaming to break the barriers between you and your audience. They get to come inside your world, and you get to be more personal and engaging with them. It lets your audience see a side of you that really no other social media platform offers. Having said that, there are some do's and don'ts that go a long way toward making Periscope truly effective as a marketing tool. That's where Zach's expertise comes in! In addition to offering tons of pro tips and insider tricks on how to use Periscope to best advantage (and a good estimate on how long it takes to really hit your stride) Zach has created a freebie just for you. It's a worksheet with five simple steps to guide you through your first Periscope broadcast. Click here to get it now! EPISODE FREEBIE Get the Simple Broadcast System Worksheet FREE DOWNLOAD The Numbers In Zach's first 30 days on Periscope, he did $10k in sales. (Listen to the podcast if you want to hear my reaction to this unbelievable number.) It's even more amazing when you find out that previous to this, Zach's all-time revenue high had been $1700 in a month. So he started plugging all his channels into Periscope, to see what kind of results he got. Would people convert on a webinar from Periscope? They would. Would they convert from a funnel on Periscope? Sure enough. Would they sign up for a lead magnet? Yup. Would they like him on Facebook? Even that. Would they buy $1500 product packages in the midst of a live stream? Yes, indeed, they would. After a few weeks of this, people were noticing! They were asking Zach how he got these amazing results...so, naturally, he created a Periscope training course and sold it via Periscope. I'll let Zach tell you what happened: "I sold about $1,200 of the course at a $97 intro price. Then I did it again the next day. We ended up doing about $2,200 in sales with about an hour and a half of Periscopes. We hadn’t sent emails. We didn’t even have a sales page. "Then I launched my Periscope course and really drove people there from Periscope. This will really tell you the power of it: I didn’t have a freebie ready for Periscope. I threw together a lead page that said, “I’m going to make a really cool Periscope freebie. I have no idea what it’s going to be, I just know that you should sign up for it.” We had over 200 people opt in for that and when all was said and done, in the course of the first 30 days and a little beyond that because we had launch, we had sold 60 copies of the course." The Real Power Behind Periscope Zach has tons of tips and tools that will help you create results like these on Periscope. But the real key to Zach's success isn't just the platform--it's the ability it gave him to really hear what his audience wanted. Prior to using Periscope, Zach was facing that constant frustration of creating products that he thought his audience wanted from him, only to have nobody click the "Buy" button when he finally released it. But by engaging with his audience on live video, he could literally count the number of times people asked about something, and know exactly what it was they wanted. "It’s just crazy, the engagement and conversion that you can get with live video. You don’t have to think anymore, you just have to listen. That's what I like about it." If you're ready to really dive into Periscope and find out how to use it, click here to listen to the podcast now. And make sure to download the worksheet created especially for you by Zach himself.
It's our Season 5 premiere! Ben and Courtney are back together in person for the first time since the U.S. Open, and they're ready to tackle the 2016 season. But are any of the top WTA players? With injuries to three of the top-five already, it sure doesn't seem like it. But one player who does seem ready is Victoria Azarenka (9min40sec), who you'll hear from at her first Brisbane press conference.After a reflection on the demise of BerdycH&M (17min), we're delighted to be joined by one of our favorite Aussies, Linda Pearce of The Age in Melbourne (21 min), who shares some of her adventures in Australian tennis. We try to hide our jealousy over the incredibly colorful tapestry of characters she has to work with. We fail. With less than two weeks to go in our Kickstarter campaign, we're over 500% of our initial base goal, which is astoundingly awesome. We've rolled out a few new rewards, and a stretch goal for $17,000 (live Periscopes every day of the Australian Open!) so if you want to get in on it before it's too late you can do so here.As always, thanks for liking us on Facebook, following us on Twitter, and subscribing/reviewing on iTunes or whatever your podcasting platform of choice may be!
I welcome Lawton Swann from Clemson Sports Talk and Jason Jarvi from Detroit Sports 105.1 to talk about the College Football Playoff. I also give you my own take on Oklahoma and Alabama and give you my predictions for who will win these games and head into the championship game in Arizona in a few weeks. To listen to Lawton visit: http://clemsonsportstalk.com/. To listen to Jason visit http://detroitsports1051.com/ Don't miss my daily Periscopes! https://katch.me/SportsGalPal
This Week.. Follow up on our Wherigo adventure UK have idiot muggles too Did we cause a bomb scare? Doctor Who beer Funny street names Last Week.. 1:08 On episode 80 (www.ohbeep.com/80) you will have heard us out and about doing a Wherigo (Tempus Fugit), which we didn’t find due to the app crashing. We checked the previous logs and it seems that we weren’t the only ones who it crashed for. Seems it happened in the same stage for a number of people, using different devices on the hunt. Shout out to Sarah Murphy (aka The Geocaching Junkie) who has a very good Geocaching related blog. As requested by Moan-A-Lot. Cache On Wheels has also joined the Periscopes. Expect some deep dive information filled scopes. Ask Dr D.. 7:09 I have a question for Dr D if he doesn't log his finds, how does he keep track of which caches he has already found? Keep up the great work guys :) Look forward to the next podcast, Bye Damian There may be a competitor for Ask Doctor D...in the form of Dear Geocache Guy https://youtu.be/eb1LofWmt4w Dumb Stuff Geocachers Do.. 13:14 From Geolumpiz 2016 When you realise you walked straight past a possible FTF on a #geocache while doing a series GeoPauls Video Of The Week.. 14:43 Geocaching | T5 compilation #5 by tehjimos https://youtu.be/-ljoTDP5IFo GGH Tips.. 15:56 A bit different this week. DarrylW4, co-host of GeoGearHeads, has been playing with the Apple Watch and a couple of Geocaching apps. https://youtu.be/MR8JKi7XIQE Ey Up Me Duck Challenge/#blamemoanalot.. 16:57 November Challenge: To Find either 1 cache in another country or 2 caches in 2 counties Entries from Eric Beal and Lucie Melen From Eric.. We are entering the eye up me duck challenge this month with two caches in two different county. The first is -GC65JZT- Stockton Springs 8 that is in Waldo County, Maine. The second is -GC1M8P1- Glover's wig that is in Cumberland County, Maine. Glover's wig cache was out last cache to get for completing the Fizzy Challenge which I sled down the hill and ripped open my finger nail, while my wife was rapping it up I wish MoanALot was there so I could blame him. Thanks for a great podcast, Eric Beal Decembers Challenge For those in Notts, they have to find 2 of the new Christmas caches that are going out daily. For others, 2 caches with Christmas related words in title. News.. 26:25 Geocaching.com making reviewers reveal themselves? This was discuss on episode 427 of The Geocaching Podcast. Our view: How will this be enforced? Why just new reviewers? Why not give existing reviewers a period of time to decide if they want to carry on under the new rules or step down? Why make them reveal themselves anyway? Seems like trouble waiting to happen. Police confused by 'concerning' item in 'worrying location' - turns out to be a geocache (From www.falmouthpacket.co.uk). Oh the shame, its in the UK. "For geocache enthusiasts out there, please continue to enjoy yourselves but do think about the item your are leaving and make sure it is marked as a geocache, the contents can be seen and be sure it cannot be mistaken for something harmful. "Finally think about where you are placing it and who might need to know it is there." Speculation about the "worrying location" included a rabbit hole or a water drainage system, possibly in Penrose woods, while one commenter said the "device" looked like " three tins of beans in some fishnet stockings." There has been a bit of a bomb scare on one of the GWW Series caches, we did a couple of weeks ago (check www.ohbeep.com/79 to hear our adventures from that series). The cache in question is No Re-Morse GC5VQ7E. Note from the CO: An update: Notts police have this cache in their possession and will be returning it to us sometime this week, this cache will be moved as it was muggled in it's recent location and reported as a bomb *sigh* please hang in there while we try and rectify this and find a new place to hide it Feedback.. 37:30 From StridentUK From Moan-A-Lot Also from StridentUK Residence of Butthole Lane Dump Their Street Name Where we’ve been/Where we’ll be.. 41:27 BananaSource appeared on a special Caching In The North West episode (LANMonkeys Geocaching Summit 2015) https://youtu.be/oQ2g2ytb_AU BananaSource will also be on a special Cache and Release podcast on 13th December. On December 24th (US time) BananaSource will also be on GeoGearHeads, joining Darryl, The Bad Cop and Scott Berks to discuss Live Streaming Dr D’s Facts of the Uselessness.. 45:30 Turn your Xbox 360 in to an X Box One The Obligatory Doctor Who Bit.. 46:35 Capaldi to stay on for another year as the Doctor (From mirror.co.uk) "Peter is keen to complete three years playing the Doctor to round off his storylines. That will take us until the end of next year. After that, who knows?” However, the new series might be made up of several feature-length episodes rather than 13 shows. Full size Lego Tardis www.radiotimes.com Ask Dr D or share your feedback Comment on the shownotes Email feedback@ohbeep.com (audio files welcome) Please connect with us Subscribe, rate, and review in iTunes Join the Facebook Page Follow us on Twitter
ProBlogger Podcast: Blog Tips to Help You Make Money Blogging
Note: you can listen to this episode above or load it up in iTunes. Tips to Help You Make the Best Decisions For Your Blog's Success Today's episode is about how you can learn to make decisions for your blog more quickly and with confidence, freeing you up to focus your time on what really matters most. One of the most common questions I'm asked is how I manage to fit everything in - blogging, social media, speaking appearances, product development and family life. The truth is, I don't get to do everything I would like. But I have learned skills and developed habits that make me feel less overwhelmed and stressed about making decisions about how to spend my time. If you're feeling like you don't have enough time to fit everything in, this episode is for you. I share tips that will help you get more focused about how to choose to spend your time to make your blog a success. In This Episode You can listen to today's episode above or in iTunes or Stitcher (where we'd also LOVE to get your reviews on those platforms if you have a moment). In today's episode: How I juggle blogging, social media, speaking appearances, product development and family life without going crazy Tips you can use to help you decide what opportunities you say 'yes' to Why learning how to say 'no' can free up your time and energy and make you more productive 10 questions you can ask yourself to help you make decisions about what tasks you will focus on and what to let go Further Reading and Resources for How to Make the Best Decisions For Your Blog's Success Episode 40: 7 Productivity Tips For Bloggers (it includes my ideal schedule and my workflow for creating this podcast series) Time Management for Ridiculously Busy Bloggers The Curse of the ProBlogger – Time Management and Scaling Yourself Up Time Management for Travel Bloggers … and Others Do You Know These Time Saving Blogging Tips? 9 Habits of Bloggers Who Have Huge Audiences How Batch Processing Made Me 10 Times More Productive Full Transcript Expand to view full transcript Compress to smaller transcript view Hi there and welcome to episode 65 of the ProBlogger podcast. My name is Darren Rowse and today, I want to talk about answering a question I get all the time, "How do you work out what to focus your time upon as a blogger?" You can find today's show notes at problogger.com/podcast/65. Do you ever feel like you don't have enough time to fit everything in? Like there's some opportunity staring you in the face to start something new, but to take it on would mean everything else you are already doing would suffer. You know that feeling I'm sure. You’re working away on your blog, creating content, updating your Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, LinkedIn accounts everyday, responding to comments and emails from readers, then you got to read other people's blogs and comment on those, watch other people's Periscopes and create the occasional product for your blog and update your advertising page. The list goes on and on and on. The things that we all do as bloggers everyday, but then comes along an opportunity. Sometimes the opportunities are real ones. Someone asks you to do something, “Would you like to guest post on my blog?” or, “Can I interview you on my podcast?” or, “Would you like to come on my Blab?” “Would you like to speak at my events or work with us as a brand?” Then some of the opportunities that come along are more perceived opportunities. Everyone else seems to be doing something, so maybe you should be doing it too. Maybe it's a new social network like Periscope, MiChat, or Blab, or maybe everyone else seems to be podcasting and you wonder if you should be doing that too, or this other blogger has a second blog and maybe you should start a second blog as well. Invitations, whether they are real opportunities or perceived ones,
mike, travis, nappier and drunk discuss the following topics....periscopes.......travis has a hair person (and mike is a grump)nappier does a weeknd song at the break. that's fun, i guess.the teal pumpkin houses.....matt from the lotuscast calls in to be the contestant on america's favorite game show, "what's in drunk's mouth?" the 3 items are: a 45 record, an audio cassette and a small bell.drunk's shtick........matt tells a joke.........well.......bye.
All the cool stuff I learned on my journey. In this episode Russell talks about some of the highlights of his trip to New Zealand and Australia, including meeting Liz Benney and her family and being able to sell a huge percentage of a room where everyone already has Clickfunnels. Here are some fun highlights to look for in this episode: How Liz Benney found success with the help of Russell and Clickfunnels. How Russell was able to sell to a room full of people who already had Clickfunnels. And how Russell got Sean Stephenson to come speak at the upcoming event. So listen below to hear those and some other cool things that happened to Russell on his trip. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone. I hope you guys have been doing well. It's been a little while since you've heard from me. Actually you did hear from me once in Australia. I was ranting about that sushi place, so you have heard a little bit from me, but anyway it's like 6:00 in the morning, we are driving to go get passports done for the kids before school, and I just wanted to jump on and say hey. It's been a little bit. Last week has been a crazy whirlwind. We flew last Monday, we flew from Boise and we flew over to New Zealand to go see Liz Benny and her family, and we had a super, just an awesome time. A chance to go see her. Liz joined our coaching program about a year ago and we had a chance to work with her for the last year and she's gone from being a successful social media manager for people and helping a ton of businesses, to taking her skills and expertise and teaching it to other people. She's helped thousands of people now become social media managers. She's put them in business and she's got success stories from people making 40 to 50 grand contracts and just so cool. So cool to see how her and her personality have been able to go out there and literally change the world in her way, and she's just getting started. You guys will hear more from her. It just keeps growing. It was really cool. Actually the last part of the trip I had a dinner with some people, and they're all people that make tens of millions of dollars, and we were talking about just the impact we've had over the last year, and I just kind of shared the story. I said, “You know, I went to New Zealand and I was sitting in the house that Liz was in, and she was in the process of packing up this house because she's moving to their beautiful new home they just purchased.” She showed me, she was like, “This is the chair I was sitting in, this is the computer I was looking at when I saw the ad with your face on it, and I clicked on it and then this is where I filled out the application.” She's like, “I spent hours going over the application because I was so nervous and all these different things.” She was like, “I put my heart and my soul into it. This is where I applied and then this is where you guys asked me for $25,000”, and she's like, “We were driving around here and I was saying, “No, we can't do it. It's too much money and we had saved that money for our future home and all these things.” Finally she was like, “We were in this room when we decided to do it, and then we had our first call, and this is where I was sitting, and this is where Kristy and I were sitting when we had our first Skype call, and she's now a year later and done almost a million dollars in sales. We just purchased our dream house and all this good that's come from it”, and it was just I don't know. We get in this business and we think about the dollars, the numbers, and the conversion, and all those kind of things. That trip just gave me a chance to make it more real and to see the end result of what we're doing, why we're really doing it. It was emotional for me, and it was exciting, and it was awesome to see her, and see them, and meet her little kids. They're super cute. Anyway, it was just great. We were only there for like 24 hours and we went and cruised around, made some videos, we went to the place where the filmed Chronicles of Narnia, and we had a quad copter and filmed Liz out in the middle of this huge field where the war was at and the quad copter flying over the top of her. There's going to be some cool videos that come from that I'm sure. Anyway, that was pretty awesome. Yeah, it was just overall it was just a great little trip. From there we flew to Australia. In Australia, we met with a guy named Ian Marsh. He was business partners with a guy named Mal Emory and then he actually bought Mal's business from him. Mal is always called the Dan Kennedy of Australia which is kind of cool. I've known Mal for probably six or seven years now. He interviewed me back in the day for his CD of the month club, and that's how I got to know him. I went and spoke four or five years ago for them. Flew out to the Gold Coast and spoke for him and then this time, so we went out there to that event. They had a smaller group. It was just a really neat group, and I had the chance to share Funnel Hacks and Click Funnels with everybody. It's kind of funny. It's awkward when you're in a room and you're about to sell Click Funnels and you ask, “Who in here has click funnels?” Everybody's hand goes up, and then you're like, “Who in here's ever seen this presentation?” Half the hands go up. You're like, “Man, how am I going to convert this audience?” How am I going to make some money selling? But I ended up selling over 25% of the room. Yeah, over 25% of the room. Which, when you consider who already had click funnels, it was like 150% of the room that I closed, so that's pretty cool. Then later on they wanted me to sell our higher end coaching program, but I felt bad the audience had been sold a lot over the week and I was like, “You know what? I'm just going to serve and give and just help”, so I did a really cool session. It's the very first session we do inside of our ignite program, and I did that with everybody. I think it turned out really cool. It was awesome. We did that, and then hung out there, jumped in the water, it was freezing cold, and went and saw Sydney, the big, huge bridge, and the opera house, and did that. I got to hang out with one of the coolest people I know. His name's Darren Stevens. He joined our mastermind group this last year, and so he's come to Boise three or four times and had a chance to hang out with him there, which was awesome. If you read the book, Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, he's the dude that did all the marketing behind that. It sold like 40 million copies of the book. One of the smartest people I've ever met, so I had an awesome time hanging out with him and getting to know him better, and just really cool, just a great experience. One of the things in my mind I kept thinking about while I was there, I was thinking about a book. I'm like, “I want to write a book that I can use to target small business owners to get them into click funnels”, right? That was kind of my thought process. The whole time I'm in Australia, I'm trying to think through that and I couldn't get the right angle, the right hook, so I kind of just that uneasy feeling when you're trying to create something, but you're not sure what it is and you're not sure of the right angle or direction, things like that. Anyway, that was kind of happening. Then the next day after we finished hanging out with Ian and Darren and all those guys, then … Oh and it was funny. We were out filming on the back patio in Australia, the hotel, filming some testimonials and all of a sudden this guy comes out and he's like, “Are you Russell Brunson?” I'm like, “Yeah, who are you?” He's like, “Dude, I'm a Click Funnels member. We have a dog training business”, and he's like, “I love Click Funnels.” He's like, “This is so random. I was here at my buddy's wedding. I look out on the back porch and Russell freaking Brunson's sitting there.” Which was pretty cool. Anyway that was cool. Then we flew to Phoenix for Joe Polish's 25K group, which was really cool. It's interesting, I almost joined his group four years ago and I went to the initial meeting, and I'm like, I'm not super good at networking. I always kind of struggle with that. I usually go to events more for the content. Honestly, and if Joe hears this, I'll feel bad, but the content wasn't ground, earth-shattering. That's what I remember four years ago, and so I didn't join back then. This is now four years later, I decided let's join again. I went to the event. It was kind of similar. The content was good. There was nothing amazing, but the network of people he put in the room was amazing. Again, I'm not a very good networker, so I don't think I really benefited from it last time, but this time I brought one of my friends, Dave Woodward. He's on our team. He's a really good networker, so he came with me and we kind of used that together to tag team and to network. That turned out awesome. I probably will from this point forward be a genius network member. Just the people in the room were amazing. So many cool people. People that in different markets, I would have only have dreams about getting to know that I became friends with and it was awesome. He's done a good job there. I did hear a couple presentations that were inspiring, and got one and maybe two speakers from there that are going to come speak at funnel hacking live, which is exciting. Some of you guys may know Shawn Stevenson, he's this little short guy. If you search Shawn Stevenson in Google, it's someone who I've looked up to for a long time, and I had a chance to hear him speak. Then afterwards his wife came up to me. She's like, “Russell”, she's like, “We love click funnels.” I'm like, “You do?” I'm like, “I love you guys”, and I was so excited, and so I'm like, “What would it take to get Shawn to come speak at our event?” She's like, “A little bit of money.” I'm like, “Done, let's do it”, so that's going to be awesome. I'm going to pause this because I'm driving the car behind my kids and they just voxed me, so give me second to check out what they just said. All right. I'm back from listening to my kids. They were singing me songs on Voxer. So stinking cute, I love them. I hope it recorded that because I came back and that clip was closed, so crossing my fingers you guys didn't lose the first half of my message. Anyway, so Shawn Stevenson, who is the man, is going to come speaking at the event for sure. This other dude that, it was really cool, he gave a cool talk on us entrepreneurs, and about how weird we are, and how it's normal, and how we're not alone, and it's cool. I think I'm going to ask him if he wants to kind of come speak. I'm not real quite sure the tangibles from his presentation yet, but I got chills like five times. As an entrepreneur, I was just like, “Oh, this guy gets me.” Anyway it was cool. Anyway, there was some really good things. I just, those of you guys who know me and how I teach at my events, everything is very tangible and you leave with like 80 pages of notes, where this one I really didn't leave with any notes at all, but I left with feelings. I guess that's more, that was probably more so feelings of how do I change things, how do I focus more on family, focus more on, the one thing Joe said that was cool was like, “Multiplication through subtraction.” How to do more by cutting things out. I think it was more of a week, two days of reflection for me of like what I can do different as opposed to here's cool stuff I could do. Which I guess is good. It's backwards from what I'm used to, and kind of what I typically like, but anyway. There you go. It was good though. I appreciated it and Joe's a class act. I like him a lot, so yeah. There you go on that. I did that for two days and then last night flew home, and I'm in the airport, we're hanging out eating dinner, me and Dave, and all the sudden this guy comes up to me, he's like, “Excuse me, are you Russell Brunson?” I'm like, “Yeah.” He's like, “I've got your book in my backpack. I'm flying home right now.” I was like, “Were you at the genius network?” He's like, “No, what's that?” I'm like, “So you're just randomly flying through the airport and you just saw me?” He's like, “Yeah, I got your book.” He's like, “I'm improving. I'm drinking my keytones.” We were literally drinking keytones right when he was there. It was just awesome, so did that, jumped on my plane, flew home, get in an Uber on the way home and on the drive home the Uber dude was like, he was like, “I'm just driving Uber while I build my business.” I'm like, “Oh yeah? What's your business?” He's like, “Oh, I'm creating an online membership site teaching people how to whatever.” I was like, “Are you serious?” I was like, “Dude, that is my world. That's all I know, and that's the only thing I know how to do.” He's like, “What?” It was just, so I totally sold Uber dude some Click Funnels, which was pretty awesome and he was so excited, so anyway it was a great week. A lot of just cool things came from it. I did a couple Periscopes on the road. If you guys missed them, I did one with Liz in the coffee shop where she kind of built her business, which was cool. I did one, where was the other one I did? Oh, I did one with Darren Stevens which was awesome. He told the strategy how he sells usually on average, about $80,000 worth of sales from his book before he even starts printing his book. Which was like the coolest ninja strategy on earth, so that was cool. Then I did a Periscope from Phoenix talking about all the cool things that Tony Robbins taught. Tony Robbins spoke at the event, which was cool. Tony Robbins spoke and it was awesome, and so I kind of shared all the highlights from Tony's presentation, and also John Paul Mitchell. I guess his name's Austin, it's not Mitchell. John Paul Dejoria or whatever, he spoke too, which is kind of cool how he became a billionaire. That was pretty sweet. Anyway, if you missed any of those Periscopes, go check them out. Go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and those periscopes should be listed in there probably about the same spot that this podcast is, but go watch those, they were awesome. If you're not on my Periscopes, you need to get on them. Cool stuff's happening everyday I'm doing Periscopes, dropping some bombs, dropping some gold, and I promise I will make it worth your while for you guys to come and hang out on those. There you go. I'm almost to the passport place, still pitch black outside, totally tired and jet-lagged, and my body doesn't know what time of day it is, or night time, or anything, but that's okay because I'm home, and I'm with my kids and my wife, and this morning it was just so fun. At the airport I found these little minion tic tacs, so I brought them all home minion tic tacs. I woke them up this morning and gave them minion tic tacs. Every single one of them were all drowsy and they look up and they see the minions and they say, “Oh cool dad.” It was just the best $2.00 I ever spent. Anyway I'm rambling. I'm out of here. Appreciate you guys. Have an amazing day, and we'll talk soon. Bye.
All the cool stuff I learned on my journey. In this episode Russell talks about some of the highlights of his trip to New Zealand and Australia, including meeting Liz Benney and her family and being able to sell a huge percentage of a room where everyone already has Clickfunnels. Here are some fun highlights to look for in this episode: How Liz Benney found success with the help of Russell and Clickfunnels. How Russell was able to sell to a room full of people who already had Clickfunnels. And how Russell got Sean Stephenson to come speak at the upcoming event. So listen below to hear those and some other cool things that happened to Russell on his trip. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing In Your Car. Hey everyone. I hope you guys have been doing well. It’s been a little while since you’ve heard from me. Actually you did hear from me once in Australia. I was ranting about that sushi place, so you have heard a little bit from me, but anyway it’s like 6:00 in the morning, we are driving to go get passports done for the kids before school, and I just wanted to jump on and say hey. It’s been a little bit. Last week has been a crazy whirlwind. We flew last Monday, we flew from Boise and we flew over to New Zealand to go see Liz Benny and her family, and we had a super, just an awesome time. A chance to go see her. Liz joined our coaching program about a year ago and we had a chance to work with her for the last year and she’s gone from being a successful social media manager for people and helping a ton of businesses, to taking her skills and expertise and teaching it to other people. She’s helped thousands of people now become social media managers. She’s put them in business and she’s got success stories from people making 40 to 50 grand contracts and just so cool. So cool to see how her and her personality have been able to go out there and literally change the world in her way, and she’s just getting started. You guys will hear more from her. It just keeps growing. It was really cool. Actually the last part of the trip I had a dinner with some people, and they’re all people that make tens of millions of dollars, and we were talking about just the impact we’ve had over the last year, and I just kind of shared the story. I said, “You know, I went to New Zealand and I was sitting in the house that Liz was in, and she was in the process of packing up this house because she’s moving to their beautiful new home they just purchased.” She showed me, she was like, “This is the chair I was sitting in, this is the computer I was looking at when I saw the ad with your face on it, and I clicked on it and then this is where I filled out the application.” She’s like, “I spent hours going over the application because I was so nervous and all these different things.” She was like, “I put my heart and my soul into it. This is where I applied and then this is where you guys asked me for $25,000”, and she’s like, “We were driving around here and I was saying, “No, we can’t do it. It’s too much money and we had saved that money for our future home and all these things.” Finally she was like, “We were in this room when we decided to do it, and then we had our first call, and this is where I was sitting, and this is where Kristy and I were sitting when we had our first Skype call, and she’s now a year later and done almost a million dollars in sales. We just purchased our dream house and all this good that’s come from it”, and it was just I don’t know. We get in this business and we think about the dollars, the numbers, and the conversion, and all those kind of things. That trip just gave me a chance to make it more real and to see the end result of what we’re doing, why we’re really doing it. It was emotional for me, and it was exciting, and it was awesome to see her, and see them, and meet her little kids. They’re super cute. Anyway, it was just great. We were only there for like 24 hours and we went and cruised around, made some videos, we went to the place where the filmed Chronicles of Narnia, and we had a quad copter and filmed Liz out in the middle of this huge field where the war was at and the quad copter flying over the top of her. There’s going to be some cool videos that come from that I’m sure. Anyway, that was pretty awesome. Yeah, it was just overall it was just a great little trip. From there we flew to Australia. In Australia, we met with a guy named Ian Marsh. He was business partners with a guy named Mal Emory and then he actually bought Mal’s business from him. Mal is always called the Dan Kennedy of Australia which is kind of cool. I’ve known Mal for probably six or seven years now. He interviewed me back in the day for his CD of the month club, and that’s how I got to know him. I went and spoke four or five years ago for them. Flew out to the Gold Coast and spoke for him and then this time, so we went out there to that event. They had a smaller group. It was just a really neat group, and I had the chance to share Funnel Hacks and Click Funnels with everybody. It’s kind of funny. It’s awkward when you’re in a room and you’re about to sell Click Funnels and you ask, “Who in here has click funnels?” Everybody’s hand goes up, and then you’re like, “Who in here’s ever seen this presentation?” Half the hands go up. You’re like, “Man, how am I going to convert this audience?” How am I going to make some money selling? But I ended up selling over 25% of the room. Yeah, over 25% of the room. Which, when you consider who already had click funnels, it was like 150% of the room that I closed, so that’s pretty cool. Then later on they wanted me to sell our higher end coaching program, but I felt bad the audience had been sold a lot over the week and I was like, “You know what? I’m just going to serve and give and just help”, so I did a really cool session. It’s the very first session we do inside of our ignite program, and I did that with everybody. I think it turned out really cool. It was awesome. We did that, and then hung out there, jumped in the water, it was freezing cold, and went and saw Sydney, the big, huge bridge, and the opera house, and did that. I got to hang out with one of the coolest people I know. His name’s Darren Stevens. He joined our mastermind group this last year, and so he’s come to Boise three or four times and had a chance to hang out with him there, which was awesome. If you read the book, Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, he’s the dude that did all the marketing behind that. It sold like 40 million copies of the book. One of the smartest people I’ve ever met, so I had an awesome time hanging out with him and getting to know him better, and just really cool, just a great experience. One of the things in my mind I kept thinking about while I was there, I was thinking about a book. I’m like, “I want to write a book that I can use to target small business owners to get them into click funnels”, right? That was kind of my thought process. The whole time I’m in Australia, I’m trying to think through that and I couldn’t get the right angle, the right hook, so I kind of just that uneasy feeling when you’re trying to create something, but you’re not sure what it is and you’re not sure of the right angle or direction, things like that. Anyway, that was kind of happening. Then the next day after we finished hanging out with Ian and Darren and all those guys, then … Oh and it was funny. We were out filming on the back patio in Australia, the hotel, filming some testimonials and all of a sudden this guy comes out and he’s like, “Are you Russell Brunson?” I’m like, “Yeah, who are you?” He’s like, “Dude, I’m a Click Funnels member. We have a dog training business”, and he’s like, “I love Click Funnels.” He’s like, “This is so random. I was here at my buddy’s wedding. I look out on the back porch and Russell freaking Brunson’s sitting there.” Which was pretty cool. Anyway that was cool. Then we flew to Phoenix for Joe Polish’s 25K group, which was really cool. It’s interesting, I almost joined his group four years ago and I went to the initial meeting, and I’m like, I’m not super good at networking. I always kind of struggle with that. I usually go to events more for the content. Honestly, and if Joe hears this, I’ll feel bad, but the content wasn’t ground, earth-shattering. That’s what I remember four years ago, and so I didn’t join back then. This is now four years later, I decided let’s join again. I went to the event. It was kind of similar. The content was good. There was nothing amazing, but the network of people he put in the room was amazing. Again, I’m not a very good networker, so I don’t think I really benefited from it last time, but this time I brought one of my friends, Dave Woodward. He’s on our team. He’s a really good networker, so he came with me and we kind of used that together to tag team and to network. That turned out awesome. I probably will from this point forward be a genius network member. Just the people in the room were amazing. So many cool people. People that in different markets, I would have only have dreams about getting to know that I became friends with and it was awesome. He’s done a good job there. I did hear a couple presentations that were inspiring, and got one and maybe two speakers from there that are going to come speak at funnel hacking live, which is exciting. Some of you guys may know Shawn Stevenson, he’s this little short guy. If you search Shawn Stevenson in Google, it’s someone who I’ve looked up to for a long time, and I had a chance to hear him speak. Then afterwards his wife came up to me. She’s like, “Russell”, she’s like, “We love click funnels.” I’m like, “You do?” I’m like, “I love you guys”, and I was so excited, and so I’m like, “What would it take to get Shawn to come speak at our event?” She’s like, “A little bit of money.” I’m like, “Done, let’s do it”, so that’s going to be awesome. I’m going to pause this because I’m driving the car behind my kids and they just voxed me, so give me second to check out what they just said. All right. I’m back from listening to my kids. They were singing me songs on Voxer. So stinking cute, I love them. I hope it recorded that because I came back and that clip was closed, so crossing my fingers you guys didn’t lose the first half of my message. Anyway, so Shawn Stevenson, who is the man, is going to come speaking at the event for sure. This other dude that, it was really cool, he gave a cool talk on us entrepreneurs, and about how weird we are, and how it’s normal, and how we’re not alone, and it’s cool. I think I’m going to ask him if he wants to kind of come speak. I’m not real quite sure the tangibles from his presentation yet, but I got chills like five times. As an entrepreneur, I was just like, “Oh, this guy gets me.” Anyway it was cool. Anyway, there was some really good things. I just, those of you guys who know me and how I teach at my events, everything is very tangible and you leave with like 80 pages of notes, where this one I really didn’t leave with any notes at all, but I left with feelings. I guess that’s more, that was probably more so feelings of how do I change things, how do I focus more on family, focus more on, the one thing Joe said that was cool was like, “Multiplication through subtraction.” How to do more by cutting things out. I think it was more of a week, two days of reflection for me of like what I can do different as opposed to here’s cool stuff I could do. Which I guess is good. It’s backwards from what I’m used to, and kind of what I typically like, but anyway. There you go. It was good though. I appreciated it and Joe’s a class act. I like him a lot, so yeah. There you go on that. I did that for two days and then last night flew home, and I’m in the airport, we’re hanging out eating dinner, me and Dave, and all the sudden this guy comes up to me, he’s like, “Excuse me, are you Russell Brunson?” I’m like, “Yeah.” He’s like, “I’ve got your book in my backpack. I’m flying home right now.” I was like, “Were you at the genius network?” He’s like, “No, what’s that?” I’m like, “So you’re just randomly flying through the airport and you just saw me?” He’s like, “Yeah, I got your book.” He’s like, “I’m improving. I’m drinking my keytones.” We were literally drinking keytones right when he was there. It was just awesome, so did that, jumped on my plane, flew home, get in an Uber on the way home and on the drive home the Uber dude was like, he was like, “I’m just driving Uber while I build my business.” I’m like, “Oh yeah? What’s your business?” He’s like, “Oh, I’m creating an online membership site teaching people how to whatever.” I was like, “Are you serious?” I was like, “Dude, that is my world. That’s all I know, and that’s the only thing I know how to do.” He’s like, “What?” It was just, so I totally sold Uber dude some Click Funnels, which was pretty awesome and he was so excited, so anyway it was a great week. A lot of just cool things came from it. I did a couple Periscopes on the road. If you guys missed them, I did one with Liz in the coffee shop where she kind of built her business, which was cool. I did one, where was the other one I did? Oh, I did one with Darren Stevens which was awesome. He told the strategy how he sells usually on average, about $80,000 worth of sales from his book before he even starts printing his book. Which was like the coolest ninja strategy on earth, so that was cool. Then I did a Periscope from Phoenix talking about all the cool things that Tony Robbins taught. Tony Robbins spoke at the event, which was cool. Tony Robbins spoke and it was awesome, and so I kind of shared all the highlights from Tony’s presentation, and also John Paul Mitchell. I guess his name’s Austin, it’s not Mitchell. John Paul Dejoria or whatever, he spoke too, which is kind of cool how he became a billionaire. That was pretty sweet. Anyway, if you missed any of those Periscopes, go check them out. Go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and those periscopes should be listed in there probably about the same spot that this podcast is, but go watch those, they were awesome. If you’re not on my Periscopes, you need to get on them. Cool stuff’s happening everyday I’m doing Periscopes, dropping some bombs, dropping some gold, and I promise I will make it worth your while for you guys to come and hang out on those. There you go. I’m almost to the passport place, still pitch black outside, totally tired and jet-lagged, and my body doesn’t know what time of day it is, or night time, or anything, but that’s okay because I’m home, and I’m with my kids and my wife, and this morning it was just so fun. At the airport I found these little minion tic tacs, so I brought them all home minion tic tacs. I woke them up this morning and gave them minion tic tacs. Every single one of them were all drowsy and they look up and they see the minions and they say, “Oh cool dad.” It was just the best $2.00 I ever spent. Anyway I’m rambling. I’m out of here. Appreciate you guys. Have an amazing day, and we’ll talk soon. Bye.
Total Duration 42:11 Download episode 137 Aspire to be Time Wealthy Can you relate to the feeling of being overwhelmed, with more commitments at work and home than you have time to handle? Many project managers tell me that's a rather normal existence for them. Elizabeth Grace Saunders calls that being time impoverished. We are spending more than we've earned. It's part of her analogy in her new book How to Invest Your Time Like Money To learn more about Elizabeth and the work of her organization, visit http://reallifee.com/. Join My Periscopes This Month! Join me for our series of Project Management Periscopes during the month of October 2015. Each Friday I'm broadcasting a periscope from 12:15pm Central in the US (GMT-5). Just download the mobile app at https://www.Periscope.tv. Then go to my Periscope home page at https://www.Periscope.tv/andy_kaufman. Join me for these 15-minute Periscopes this month! Let Me Hear From You! I love hearing from listeners! Please leave a message to let me know what you think about The People and Projects Podcast! Here's how you can contact us: Leave a message on our Listener Feedback Line at 847-550-3747 Call me directly at 847-579-9174 Contact me by email at show [AT] PeopleAndProjectsPodcast [DOT] com Thank you for joining me for this episode of The People and Projects Podcast! Have a great week! I WANNA BE RICH by Calloway, available here on Amazon.com. Learn more about MAD MONEY and JIM CRAMER at CNBC WONDER CYCLE by Chris Zabriskie Licensed under Creative Commons: Attribution License. HAPPY ALLEY by Kevin Macleod Licensed under Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0 License.
What I'm doing to get more crap done everyday. On this episode Russell talks about how he manages projects and is able to get so much stuff done. He also talks a little bit about his Periscope show and how you can get involved with that. Here are some fun things in today's episode: How Russell manages projects and how the process works to get funnels out. Why the project managing software Trello helps Russell to get stuff done. And find out how you can watch Russell's Periscope show and why it's cool. So listen below to hear about Russell's project management skills and to find out a little more about the Periscope show. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody. Good morning. This is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. What's up? What's up, everybody? I hope you guys are having an awesome time today. I am … I was at the office late last night. I've been pulling a lot of late nighters lately. I've got some magic stuff happening. Anyway, building out some really cool things inside of ClickFunnels and I was trying to get it all done before I head on my worldwide sprint over the next thirty days. Trying to get some stuff done last night and now I'm up and I'm heading to the office and just excited about some cool things. We've got five new funnels should be rolling live today which means this week we have rolled out I think eight funnels this week so far, which is exciting. Some guys are thinking, “Russell, how in the world are you able to roll out eight funnels in a week?” A couple of things. First off, I have a lot of stuff that's we did in the past that's still amazing that I want to sell but we just haven't because I haven't just finished the process. I'm sure a lot of you guys get this way. You get a bunch of projects and they're all get 75% done and they never all get all the way done. Right? I'm guilty of that. I hate to admit that but I have that problem. My entrepreneurial ADD just slows things down to a screeching halt sometimes. With that, I am trying to always focus but then get a process to still get these things done because there's value in them and I don't want to think a lot through them so I'm trying to get things placed out there. Stuff like that. That's been kind of my process. Over the last two weeks or so, I've been trying to figure out how do I systemize this so that we can move things through this funnel fast. I did a funnelhacker.tv episode with Trey Lewellen and he was talking about how his team, they're trying to launch a funnel a week. I'm like, “Sweet.” We need to be doing at least a funnel a week if not more than that. Like different front-end funnels to get people into your programs, right? I was like if I do that, that's me building a funnel a week and I'm like, “That's a lot, right?” I started figuring out how do I create a system to make this possible. First thing I did, I started looking at the funnel process. What part do I like the best? There's one piece that I love that gets me fired up that I just want to spend all day on it. Then there's like eight out of ten pieces that I don't love, that I don't want to be doing. For my first thought was that I need to hire a funnel assistant. Someone who knows ClickFunnels and does funnels and who can do things that I don't like to do and can finish projects … I can be a starter and he can be a finisher on things. I hired my first funnel assistant. He came, flew out to Boise the last three days and we sat next to each other and it was awesome. We were able to work super fast. I got things to the point that I like to get them to and then I could hand them off to him and he was able to run through and finalize them which was awesome. That was really, really super cool. Next was actually building out a process. I used a project management software called Trello. I actually did a Periscope the other day on it. I think I called it … If you go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com you can go look at all the archives of our Periscopes. What the Periscope was called something like my project management funnel and so it kind of showed what I built out in a space like a funnel or a first steps idea phase. I drop all my crazy ideas there. They can just live there. They don't have to progress. I can just put them there so they're out of my mind and they're somewhere. Excuse me. That's step number one. When I'm ready to start moving forward with an idea, then I move it from project, from the idea block, over to the branding. I got this guy named Rob who is the best designer I have ever seen. He does all branding. Logo packs, design, all that kind of stuff which I love so he gets that finished. Then from there bumps over to the next thing in Trello, the next part of the funnel, which is what I like to do. Taking the logo and building out the initial page structure, design, layout, et cetera. I go build out the initial structure and when I'm done then in each funnel, there's like a dozen other pages you have to do that I hate doing those parts. I move over and Jimmy grabs it. He's my funnel assistant. He runs the next piece. From there, it gets moved over to somebody who does the mobile optimization. From there, it goes over to somebody who does testing and then it goes live. It's this really cool process now. This week was all about systemizing it, testing it, just beating on it. I've been doing that, running people through this. We ran eight funnels through it in like four days. It's working and it's exciting and now I've got a framework that I can move very, very quickly on. That's really exciting. The next phase I'm going to start building out, hopefully while I'm on my trips, is the traffic. Now the funnel is done, now what happens to it? It all goes into a new Trello board, a new funnel. This is our traffic funnel. Here's the process and here's what we got to do and here's all the pieces to execute on that and start driving traffic into the front of these funnels. Building a funnel is cool but if no one is coming to it or seeing it then it sucks. Right? There's no purpose so we're trying to do both sides of that. That will be my next big project. It's kind of fun. It's exciting. I wanted to kind of just let you guys know behind the scenes of what I'm doing and how I'm doing and some of the reasoning and hopefully that kind of helps you guys a little bit. That's kind of the process that I'm doing and it's working. So far it's working really, really good. It's funny. People are always saying, “Russell, how do you get so much stuff done?” Now I'm thinking like, “Man, you guys haven't seen anything yet. Now imagine when I've got this process in place what we'll be able to get done.” It's going to be exciting and inspiring and cool. That is kind of what's happening. Also, I wanted to give you guys an update on Periscope. For those who haven't been following, you should go follow my Periscope show. If you just go to the blog, blog … Oh, crap. I just killed the car. Darn stick shift. I'm at a green arrow and I just killed the car. I'm sure the people behind me are so mad like, “Why is this dude talking on his phone and then he kills his car and now we're all going to miss …” Oh, good. The guy made the light. I thought I was going to make him miss the light. That would've made me feel like a real jerk. All right. Okay. Back. Off my shiny object. If you go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and see any of our Periscopes, I think there is info on how to subscribe. You should be getting on those for a couple of reason. One is they're fun. Number two, I'm learning so much in the process and you guys are kind of seeing it. I'm seeing how to engage the audience by figuring out what topics, what headlines get people to respond, get them to show up. Which ones don't. I'm finding out which thoughts and ideas are share worthy, where people are actually sharing the videos afterwards. It's been fascinating all the cool stuff I'm learning from it. One thing we started doing is … Facebook has got a platform that's kind of like Periscope called Mentions. I know there's another one call Blab. We haven't started using Blab yet but we started with Mentions so Mentions I think you have to have 30,000 followers and then you can apply to get a verified account where now you're an official celebrity. I got that done. Now I'm an official celebrity. They gave me in Mentions thing, so now when I do my Periscope, I've got two phones. I've got my Mention phone and my Periscope phone and I kind of have them play with each other and talk to each other. It's kind of fun. What's interesting is I get way more engagement live on Periscope. More people are engaging, talking, commenting. All that kind of stuff. When it ends, it kind of just ends there. It doesn't move forward whereas the Mentions one, I get way less engagement live but then when it's done, it posts on your Facebook page and from there, even the ones that we haven't… most of them now we've been boosting them. You spend ten or fifteen bucks to push them out there but a lot of them we didn't and if my message is right on, people are sharing them. I think the last one had forty shares. I never had anyone share anything of mine on Facebook which was awesome. People were sharing it, liking it, commenting. It's causing tons of engagement so the Mentions side on that, it's the long tail is way better. The blend of those two has been really, really, really cool. Really exciting. Anywho. Just some updates on what's happening. I got to the office. I'm going to go in and have some fun today. Appreciate you guys. Have an amazing day. Get some work done and we'll talk to you soon.
What I’m doing to get more crap done everyday. On this episode Russell talks about how he manages projects and is able to get so much stuff done. He also talks a little bit about his Periscope show and how you can get involved with that. Here are some fun things in today’s episode: How Russell manages projects and how the process works to get funnels out. Why the project managing software Trello helps Russell to get stuff done. And find out how you can watch Russell’s Periscope show and why it’s cool. So listen below to hear about Russell’s project management skills and to find out a little more about the Periscope show. ---Transcript--- Hey everybody. Good morning. This is Russell Brunson and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. What’s up? What’s up, everybody? I hope you guys are having an awesome time today. I am … I was at the office late last night. I’ve been pulling a lot of late nighters lately. I’ve got some magic stuff happening. Anyway, building out some really cool things inside of ClickFunnels and I was trying to get it all done before I head on my worldwide sprint over the next thirty days. Trying to get some stuff done last night and now I’m up and I’m heading to the office and just excited about some cool things. We’ve got five new funnels should be rolling live today which means this week we have rolled out I think eight funnels this week so far, which is exciting. Some guys are thinking, “Russell, how in the world are you able to roll out eight funnels in a week?” A couple of things. First off, I have a lot of stuff that’s we did in the past that’s still amazing that I want to sell but we just haven’t because I haven’t just finished the process. I’m sure a lot of you guys get this way. You get a bunch of projects and they’re all get 75% done and they never all get all the way done. Right? I’m guilty of that. I hate to admit that but I have that problem. My entrepreneurial ADD just slows things down to a screeching halt sometimes. With that, I am trying to always focus but then get a process to still get these things done because there’s value in them and I don’t want to think a lot through them so I’m trying to get things placed out there. Stuff like that. That’s been kind of my process. Over the last two weeks or so, I’ve been trying to figure out how do I systemize this so that we can move things through this funnel fast. I did a funnelhacker.tv episode with Trey Lewellen and he was talking about how his team, they’re trying to launch a funnel a week. I’m like, “Sweet.” We need to be doing at least a funnel a week if not more than that. Like different front-end funnels to get people into your programs, right? I was like if I do that, that’s me building a funnel a week and I’m like, “That’s a lot, right?” I started figuring out how do I create a system to make this possible. First thing I did, I started looking at the funnel process. What part do I like the best? There’s one piece that I love that gets me fired up that I just want to spend all day on it. Then there’s like eight out of ten pieces that I don’t love, that I don’t want to be doing. For my first thought was that I need to hire a funnel assistant. Someone who knows ClickFunnels and does funnels and who can do things that I don’t like to do and can finish projects … I can be a starter and he can be a finisher on things. I hired my first funnel assistant. He came, flew out to Boise the last three days and we sat next to each other and it was awesome. We were able to work super fast. I got things to the point that I like to get them to and then I could hand them off to him and he was able to run through and finalize them which was awesome. That was really, really super cool. Next was actually building out a process. I used a project management software called Trello. I actually did a Periscope the other day on it. I think I called it … If you go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com you can go look at all the archives of our Periscopes. What the Periscope was called something like my project management funnel and so it kind of showed what I built out in a space like a funnel or a first steps idea phase. I drop all my crazy ideas there. They can just live there. They don’t have to progress. I can just put them there so they’re out of my mind and they’re somewhere. Excuse me. That’s step number one. When I’m ready to start moving forward with an idea, then I move it from project, from the idea block, over to the branding. I got this guy named Rob who is the best designer I have ever seen. He does all branding. Logo packs, design, all that kind of stuff which I love so he gets that finished. Then from there bumps over to the next thing in Trello, the next part of the funnel, which is what I like to do. Taking the logo and building out the initial page structure, design, layout, et cetera. I go build out the initial structure and when I’m done then in each funnel, there’s like a dozen other pages you have to do that I hate doing those parts. I move over and Jimmy grabs it. He’s my funnel assistant. He runs the next piece. From there, it gets moved over to somebody who does the mobile optimization. From there, it goes over to somebody who does testing and then it goes live. It’s this really cool process now. This week was all about systemizing it, testing it, just beating on it. I’ve been doing that, running people through this. We ran eight funnels through it in like four days. It’s working and it’s exciting and now I’ve got a framework that I can move very, very quickly on. That’s really exciting. The next phase I’m going to start building out, hopefully while I’m on my trips, is the traffic. Now the funnel is done, now what happens to it? It all goes into a new Trello board, a new funnel. This is our traffic funnel. Here’s the process and here’s what we got to do and here’s all the pieces to execute on that and start driving traffic into the front of these funnels. Building a funnel is cool but if no one is coming to it or seeing it then it sucks. Right? There’s no purpose so we’re trying to do both sides of that. That will be my next big project. It’s kind of fun. It’s exciting. I wanted to kind of just let you guys know behind the scenes of what I’m doing and how I’m doing and some of the reasoning and hopefully that kind of helps you guys a little bit. That’s kind of the process that I’m doing and it’s working. So far it’s working really, really good. It’s funny. People are always saying, “Russell, how do you get so much stuff done?” Now I’m thinking like, “Man, you guys haven’t seen anything yet. Now imagine when I’ve got this process in place what we’ll be able to get done.” It’s going to be exciting and inspiring and cool. That is kind of what’s happening. Also, I wanted to give you guys an update on Periscope. For those who haven’t been following, you should go follow my Periscope show. If you just go to the blog, blog … Oh, crap. I just killed the car. Darn stick shift. I’m at a green arrow and I just killed the car. I’m sure the people behind me are so mad like, “Why is this dude talking on his phone and then he kills his car and now we’re all going to miss …” Oh, good. The guy made the light. I thought I was going to make him miss the light. That would’ve made me feel like a real jerk. All right. Okay. Back. Off my shiny object. If you go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and see any of our Periscopes, I think there is info on how to subscribe. You should be getting on those for a couple of reason. One is they’re fun. Number two, I’m learning so much in the process and you guys are kind of seeing it. I’m seeing how to engage the audience by figuring out what topics, what headlines get people to respond, get them to show up. Which ones don’t. I’m finding out which thoughts and ideas are share worthy, where people are actually sharing the videos afterwards. It’s been fascinating all the cool stuff I’m learning from it. One thing we started doing is … Facebook has got a platform that’s kind of like Periscope called Mentions. I know there’s another one call Blab. We haven’t started using Blab yet but we started with Mentions so Mentions I think you have to have 30,000 followers and then you can apply to get a verified account where now you’re an official celebrity. I got that done. Now I’m an official celebrity. They gave me in Mentions thing, so now when I do my Periscope, I’ve got two phones. I’ve got my Mention phone and my Periscope phone and I kind of have them play with each other and talk to each other. It’s kind of fun. What’s interesting is I get way more engagement live on Periscope. More people are engaging, talking, commenting. All that kind of stuff. When it ends, it kind of just ends there. It doesn’t move forward whereas the Mentions one, I get way less engagement live but then when it’s done, it posts on your Facebook page and from there, even the ones that we haven’t… most of them now we’ve been boosting them. You spend ten or fifteen bucks to push them out there but a lot of them we didn’t and if my message is right on, people are sharing them. I think the last one had forty shares. I never had anyone share anything of mine on Facebook which was awesome. People were sharing it, liking it, commenting. It’s causing tons of engagement so the Mentions side on that, it’s the long tail is way better. The blend of those two has been really, really, really cool. Really exciting. Anywho. Just some updates on what’s happening. I got to the office. I’m going to go in and have some fun today. Appreciate you guys. Have an amazing day. Get some work done and we’ll talk to you soon.
T.I. went on to say some pretty sexist comments about Hilary Clinton and her capability of being a president since she is a woman. Hoppe rants about the fact that we shouldn't care what a rapper says. A girl from Lakeland, Florida ( Whitney Beall) was periscoping herself while driving drunk home, Hoppe rants about it. Then Hoppe rants about a mother who was on Meth while giving birth to her son, and she had her 20 year prison sentence dropped!
T.I. went on to say some pretty sexist comments about Hilary Clinton and her capability of being a president since she is a woman. Hoppe rants about the fact that we shouldn't care what a rapper says. A girl from Lakeland, Florida ( Whitney Beall) was periscoping herself while driving drunk home, Hoppe rants about it. Then Hoppe rants about a mother who was on Meth while giving birth to her son, and she had her 20 year prison sentence dropped!
1 - Congressman Tom McClintock comes on to talk about why he left the Freedom Caucus. 2 - Woman who fervently questioned Mister Thrump is a Jeb Staffer. 3 - The News with Marshall Phillips. 4 - Woman periscopes her drunk driving; Texts on stuff; Mexican food is now offensive to college students.
Do you ever wonder how successful entrepreneurs streamline their businesses? In this wonderful interview, Natalie Sisson shares with us her magic formula for creating freedom and success through streamlining everything about her business. It takes most entrepreneurs a long time to get this right, if they ever get it and Natalie openly admits, took her awhile to figure out, too. Save yourself time and frustration – join us for some great business advice: -Top 3 Stages For Building A “Freedom Lifestyle” Business- How One Entrepreneur Can Live Out Of A Suitcase And Still Be Successful - Natalie’s Magic Formula For Success - Timeless Business Advice From An Entrepreneur Who’s “Been There” - How To Leave Your Legacy Intact Natalie Sisson is No #1 bestselling author, podcaster, speaker and adventurer who believes everybody has the right to choose freedom in business and adventure in life. Shes on a mission to ensure 100,000+ entrepreneurs do just that by 2020 over at the SuitcaseEntrepreneur.com Born in New Zealand Natalies built her multiple six figure business from her laptop over the last 5 years while living out of her suitcase, traveling to 70 countries and showing others how to build a profitable online freedom business that supports their ideal lifestyle through her definitive Freedom Plan program. A Mission Of Freedom And Adventure… Natalie is on a mission. Her mission is to ensure that 1,00000+ entrepreneurs will have their well-deserved freedom with their businesses and an adventure in their life by Year 2020.She provides some terrific resources at suitcaseentrepreneur.com. Natalie's Magic Formula For Success Do you ever wonder how successful entrepreneurs streamline their business? In this interview Natalie shares with us the magic formula for creating freedom and success, which she admits, took her awhile to figure out. What is that magic formula? The answer isn’t as simple as just one thing BUT if there was one very important element that stands above all others, it is DISCIPLINE. She tells us that the more disciplined you are around your team, the more disciplined and organized your team is. Just watch. As you become more disciplined, you’ll see your team change in the way they take care of your business. Natalie’s “Sexy Operating Procedures” Natalie further said, because she and her team work with discipline and strictly follow her protocol (named “The Sexy Operating Procedures”) she can take as much time off as she wants (within reason) and still be confident that her business will still make money. Even without her being physically there, her business still operates just fine. If You’ve Ever Wondered How To Do It, Then Just Ask Some One Who Already Has... Natalie has found what she absolutely loves. She is able to travel around the world, taking on new coaching clients and leisurely write new blog entries... all because of her supreme confidence in having built a tremendous business. Success Isn’t Always Easy Knowing she wanted an awesome lifestyle, Natalie committed herself with incredible discipline, to building her community, portfolio of products & programs. Natalie’s Timeless Business Advice Her one piece of advice, live and breath what you preach. If you focus and discipline yourself into just one thing that you truly love, the rewards will be wonderful. Don’t forget to put a lot of effort and fun into it. Make sure you make an effort to build a business around people who appreciate what you offer, your work and share the same vision. Find people who want to have the same adventure and share the same definition of freedom as you do. Why Would YOU Want To Live A Suitcase Life Natalie describes herself as an entrepreneur who is Rich and Homeless. She is living a “suitcase life”. Natalie does indeed own a house and she doesn’t care about what other people think of, her property and belongings. All Natalie cares about is that her place is enjoyable, where her guests can feel comfortable and welcome. She believes that material things really don’t matter. Even if you have the fanciest car, the most incredible sofa, the most amazing artwork hanging on your wall, none of this stuff matters. How To Leave Your Legacy Intact Natalie shares with us, that there is so much more beyond having possessions. Let’s just say that you were to leave this planet tomorrow. Nobody will remember you for the car or the expensive artwork that you had. You have to aim and hope that people will remember you for the legacy that you’ve left through the amazing work you’ve done and from the people, whose lives you’ve touched. That is much more important than material things. Invest in experiences and in memories that can never be taken away. In the end, those things are really your priceless possessions...and no amount of money can buy them. Three Stages Of Building A Freedom Lifestyle Business Natalie quickly turned her attention to building an online business that helps others escape the confines of an office, work remotely, still be productive and earn good money. Below, Natalie shares with us her time-tested, three stages of building a “Freedom Lifestyle” for any business. The Freedom Mindset - This is the stage that is the hardest for people to really understand. It’s the freedom mindset. She explains that once you have a business or a career that affords you to have a little bit of more flexibility, a lot of people start to struggle. Their mindset changes to “I don’t necessarily have to work a normal working week nine to five”, “I can take more time off”, “I can take a mid week weekend”, “I don’t have to be based in an office”. “I don’t need to have clients that are in the same location as mine”.Despite the flexibility, you should not lose your vision and still be clear about it. Having great friends and family who keep you reminded about your vision is also a good idea and will also help you stay on track. The Financial Freedom - The second stage “Financial Freedom” which really comes down to how we setup our business or career. Do you have enough revenue and income to afford a great lifestyle, that will not tie you down at the same time?Natalie’s goal for financial freedom is having a revenue stream or a stable cash flow that will allow flexibility in whatever you’re doing and lets you be involved either actively or passively in your business. These are the nuts and bolts of building an online business.If you want Financial freedom in your business, you should carefully consider your business model. As an example, what are your plans for social media, sales strategies, sales funnels and outsourcing? What are the systems you’ll used to create your business? The Lifestyle Freedom - And the final part is lifestyle freedom. This is asking yourself, “What sort of a lifestyle do I want?” “How am I going to live it?”, “How often do I want to travel, how much time do I want to spend at home?”, “How will I travel?”, “how do I pack lightly?”. It’s really thinking about minimalism and how do you get rid of unnecessary possessions that are weighing you down to be more free. Natalie Talks About The Transparency Of Living A Suitcase Life While she says that she “really enjoys the constant change” her travel brings, it also gives her a few downsides. For instance, it can often be difficult for her to forge long-lasting, meaningful relationships with people. Structuring days can also pose a challenge for her. She hoped that her businesses will get over the fact that she doesn’t need to be present to reach out and connect with people and still add value. As a result of this, she plans on slowing things down. Natalie is looking forward to spending a little longer in the places she visits. She looks forward to finding somebody who’s up for an adventure to share and for moving around as well. The Ultimate Goal Natalie hopes that more people will be able to live her way in the future. She wants more entrepreneurs to build and design their businesses based on what they love doing and around their lifestyle needs. She hoped also that everyone will aim on having a lifestyle business that will give all the freedom to take a time off at any time. This means especially for that time you might need to drop everything to take care of yourself, relationships and family. In that circumstance, she wants you to still have the confidence that your business will be stable and will still generate income even when you’re not around. [content_toggle style="1" label="Please%20Click%20Here%20to%20View%20the%20Entire%20Transcript%20of%20the%20Show" hide_label="Hide"] Natalie: Hi. I’m Natalie Sisson, the suitcase entrepreneur and I once was almost arrested in Sydney airport for being a little bit silly with one of the security officers and telling him that he wouldn’t find explosives in my suitcase. That he’d actually in fact find them strapped to my chest. I thought it was really funny at the time. He didn’t think it was funny at all. If I’d been in America I probably would’ve been arrested. Not my smartest move on my travels. Woman: In business and know the way forward most include social media. Perhaps you find it a bit confusing. Even frustrating. Well, you have no idea how to make it work for your business. Fear not. We interview some of the best social media experts in business who will share their experiences, ideas and knowledge. Plus offer tips and tricks to make using social media a breeze. Leverage the power of social media and grow your business now. Welcome to social media business hour with your host Nile Nickel. Jordan: Hello and thank you again for joining us. This is Nile’s trusty sidekick and co-host Jordan and I’d like to take a moment to share with you how you can benefit from Nile’s incredible experience using social media for real business success. If you’re an entrepreneur or thinking about starting your own business then using social media might be the most cost effective and time effective way to get your business real results. That’s not to mention much of what you can do to get those terrific results on social media is even free. Take Linked In for example. Nile always says it’s the best social media platform for business today. And that’s why I recommend you go to linkedinfocus.com and start your social media education today. Sign up for Nile’s free tips, tricks and strategies. Once again, it’s free and it only takes a few seconds. Go to linkedinfocus.com today. You’ll be glad you did. Nile: Hey, welcome back. And after our funny news story there -- obviously you heard the tease at the beginning of the show with Natalie Sisson and by the way with the tease that Natalie gave us at the beginning of the show -- if you take a picture of Natalie I think if I was on the other side of that I would be laughing but let me tell you a little bit about Natalie. Maybe together with her. But Natalie Sisson is a number one bestselling author, podcaster, speaker and adventurer. Definitely an adventurer. Who believes everybody has the right to choose freedom in business and adventure in life. She’s on a mission and I love this mission. In fact, Natalie I’m going to ask you about this as soon as I tell everybody what your mission is. Your mission is to ensure 100000 plus entrepreneurs have freedom in their business and adventure in their life by 2020 over at suitcaseentrepreneur.com how did you come up with that and how do you go about helping people do that? Natalie: Actually I just changed it recently to a million because somebody told me I was playing too small and when I started my business around five years ago that seemed like a pretty big number for me to reach either directly or indirectly through spreading the word in my books and my podcast and my blog and my programs and my retreats and my workshops around the world so now it’s a million people. So I’ve got a lot of work to do. But how I help people doing that is really showing them what’s possible and I think a lot of people are able to build a business that supports their ideal lifestyle. They just have to get really clear on what their ideal lifestyle looks like. And freedom means a lot of different things to a lot of different people and so for me it’s just getting them really clear about if you could wake up tomorrow and do whatever you wanted, spend time with the right people, be in a location that you wanted, what would your life look like and what would you be doing and how would you be spending your time? And it’s a great place for people to start and from there I can then get them to look at how they’re going to monetize themselves, build a business that’s mobile and really make revenue and make enough money to support their lifestyle and have an amazing life. That’s not the specifics of how I help them do it but that’s essentially the overall division of what I’m trying to help them with. Nile: One of the things that I find fascinating is people might detect you have a little bit of a different accent. Natalie: I have a different accent. Awesome accent. Nile: Might even say a southern accent. I think it’s awesome too. Sounds very romantic I might add but that’s just me. But you come from New Zealand and you came up with this big bold thing. You’ve been living it, you’ve been doing it so by the way, this isn't a -- just a vain promise. You’ve been out there doing it. But New Zealand’s a fairly small country, not heavily populated. What brought all this on? I’m just really curious. Natalie: That’s a great question. Well, it is paradise here in New Zealand. I’m actually just back here visiting family and it is a beautiful place but it’s also as I like to say on top of the world so there’s a whole lot more world out there to explore. And ever since I was a kid I’ve been traveling, my parents have been amazing. They’re both from Europe. They took my sister and I on tons of boat travels and so I just have this massive curiosity about the rest of the world and the countries and the cultures that I wanted to explore but what lead me to this point of living out of a suitcase and running a business and teaching other people how to travel the world and create a business that they love is really I think just kind of partly by accident and partly because I really wanted to not be stuck in an office working for other people so when I did finally go out on my own and become an entrepreneur and start my business and run some workshops I took everything that I did online and thought if I can make money from anywhere online from my laptop then I don’t need to be in one place to do it. So that’s what started the adventure and freedom quest. Nile: So you’ve mentioned that your parents took you as a younger adult, a child on a number of trips. Is that where the inspiration really came from? Natalie: I don’t know. I mean, I love that they’ve always encouraged us to travel. But as I said the inspirations probably come from a myriad of things that happen in my life. I recently found a photo of myself in a suitcase when I was a kid. I’m like literally poking out of a suitcase. And if I look back on my university studies, all my corporate jobs that I used to host, the cofounding and technology company, everything’s always been around technology, information management, communications, presenting, magazine style work and travel combined so I really just pulled together marketing, brand management from my corporate jobs, the technology side and social media from the company I cofounded and then my love for being able to teach, learn, teach and learn and just really be able to do that from anywhere. So it was -- like I think an accident or genius really on my behalf to be able to do it and probably a very strong longing from the get go to still be able to incorporate travel into anything that I do. Nile: How many miles would you say that you travel in a given year? Natalie: Oh, I don’t know because I work in kilometers. But a lot. For example, just coming back -- Nile: Well, we could go to kilometers. That’s fine. Natalie: Do you know what? I’ve never really actually taken the time to look at that because probably it would scare me. But just for example coming back to New Zealand I -- it was a 37 hour journey because I had a flight from Lisbon to Dubai. Then I had a nine hour wait in an airport which was actually not as bad as it sounded. Then I had a 13 hour flight to Melbourne, a four hour wait there and then a three and a half hour to New Zealand and I think I was looking and there were at least 10 -- or was it 12 and a half thousand kilometers on one of those legs alone so I’ve taken a lot of trips already this year and more to come so I don’t even know. Probably more like you with your 100000 miles I’m used to do in a year. Nile: Yeah, well, one of the things that I found and I’m going to get a little personal with you if it’s okay. I know that -- I had a family at the time and it was really hard on my family life to do that. I’ve got to believe for family or dating or whatever it may be that’s a pretty difficult thing to do. Have you found that or does it matter? Natalie: Yeah. I mean, obviously if I had family independence which by the way is not something that I do want so that’s the reason that I can't be even more free. I’m sure it would be even more complex or challenging but I’ve actually interviewed and profiled a lot of people in my community. I have lots of customers and clients who have families and they do make it happen. It’s awesome to see how they do it. They go off in RVs around the world and they go off to Guatemala and get their kids involved in nonprofits or working on the land or home schooling so there’s always ways to do what you want even with families. But for me personally I enjoy being single and I enjoy traveling the world. I enjoy having romances on some of my trips but for sure it makes it having a relationship a lot harder and that’s probably my next stage is how do I make that happen and make it more appealing to a person that I meet that oh, look. I’m heading off in a week here. Why don’t you come with me? Or being a bit more stable and sticking around in a few places which is my aim right now is to have a few more bases around the world and actually spend my time in fewer places, more time in the communities that I want to be in getting to know people, developing better relationships with friends and people and settling a little bit more so I think that time is coming up. Nile: Well, that makes sense and I could see that being the next book that will be coming out. Natalie: Maybe. Nile: I mean, I’m planning seeds here. Natalie: Well, I did touch on it in my Suitcase entrepreneur book. I did touch on how to manage relationships with family and friends while you’re traveling and also as a single person or as a couple but I didn’t go deeply into how do you find love on the road because frankly I don’t have the answers for that and I know a lot of people do struggle with it so I think when the times comes you put your mind to what you want to do. You’ll make things happen and you’ll put the effort in priority into that but this -- it is always challenges whether you’re single or married or whatever so it’s really up to you to kind of figure out what you’re wanting out of that. Nile: It absolutely is. One of the things that I have been really fascinated with -- clearly people go to your website which we’ll have in the show notes so we’ll make it easy for everybody but they go to your website, they look at your book, they see any of that. Clearly you’ve had a lot of success in what you’re doing. Now, that requires promotion and branding and all sorts of things like that. That being the case, how have you found the magic formula to do that as you’re on the road all the time? Natalie: The magic formula ironically to have all this freedom is discipline and it took me a while to figure that out. so the more disciplined I am around having assistants and a team and processes and what I call sexy operating procedures but most people call it standard operating procedures has really helped me to streamline my business so that I don’t have to spend much time on it. I can take as much time off as I want within reason. The things will still operate without me that I’ll still make money without it and that’s from all the years and hard work and hustle of building community and building up my portfolio of products and programs and committing everything that I have really to this and living the lifestyle as well. Living and breathing what I preach. So I think it’s taken focus and discipline and now I get to reap the rewards which is wonderful. But I still love what I do so I put a lot of effort into it but it’s fun and it’s wonderful because I built it around what I wanted it to be and I really appreciate getting to help people all the time with choosing their own adventure and their version of freedom. Nile: Well, I could clearly see that. I mean, your book the Suitcase entrepreneur -- if you look on Amazon at that it’s a five star review which isn't easy to get and reading through the comments that people have left I would say the majority of them are positive. Some of them are not so positive. But what I see and what I find about you through this process is through everything it appears that you’re very real, down to earth and transparent. Natalie: Absolutely. 100 percent. And I don’t want to be anything else. That’s funny that you say that about Amazon though because I think the very first one that comes up is a one star review saying living -- selling the dream or something. And the lady is really complementary about me. She’s like I’m sure Natalie would be a great person to hang out with. She seems really fun and cool but can't help but think that she’s selling a dream here and it’s such an interesting thing that you come up against because even just being back in New Zealand so many people look at this and they’re like well, how does somebody do that? How do you run a business from a laptop? How do you make really, really great money and be able to make an impact by selling how to make a business or how to run a business, how to live this lifestyle. So I get it. And it’s something that people have really taken a while to _____22:39 onto. How do you become a digital nomad. Use software and tools and technology and outsourcing to run any type of business actually from the road. And I think the biggest thing that’s been my success as you’ve mentioned Nile is just being really open and transparent about everything. My screw ups, my failures, the good times, the bad times. I recently ran a webinar and I totally forgot to plug in the Wi-Fi router and I was right at that critical moment of talking about my program that people could join and it cut out and I was like oh my god. This is ridiculous. And I just laughed out loud and then I shared it in a podcast. Like how not to run a webinar or how to -- things to avoid based on what I just did and people really appreciate that. It’s not all perfect. I don’t think there is this magic formula, I don’t try and put on a front and I think people appreciate that it’s just real and you show them the good, the bad and the ugly of being an entrepreneur and traveling the world. Nile: Now, so the next thing that I’m really curious about and I’m going to come back to the social media and the promotion and all of that in a bit but you mentioned a 100000 people that you really want to -- if you will transform their lives. And that wasn’t big enough. Now that it’s a million how are you going about that and how are people enrolling in this process because I assume that that’s where they say yeah. That’s what I want. How do I get it? So tell me a little bit about that. Natalie: Yeah. It’s a great question. Well, what’s coming out this year that I’ve been really excited about is social enterprise that I’ve been considering in my head for way to long which is why I need to take action and it’s still based around freedom. It’s called the Right to freedom and to answer your question I feel that’s the movement, that’s the initiative that’s going to spike hopefully up to a million people to join. So it’s still very much based on my Suitcase entrepreneur business and what I’ve been doing there but I’ve always had this long held belief that underneath the soul there’s a greater desire for me to understand what freedom really is because in the US it’s completely different to other parts of the world and I’m just fascinated by it now and I still see people getting blocked in my community that I’m working with and I think it’s because we have this real disparate idea around can I have an amazing lifestyle and a really successful career or business, family and all the freedom that I want or is that being too greedy, is it even possible and so Right to freedom is this movement that I’m going to be beginning actually later this month to start working on social enterprise and the first hopefully global study on freedom and from there I’m going to be expanding out into a whole bunch of things. Hopefully a documentary and a book and a whole assessment type profile where people can understand and learn more about how they can have more freedom. So that to me is the -- what I’ve been working to for the last five years with my business has gotten me this place where I’m like great. Now I can work on an even bigger initiative with a nonprofit aspect that has a huge amount of potential to be one of the most scary but exciting things I’ve embarked on but also make a huge impact on the world. So that’s why I’ve stepped it up to a million people this year because I finally feel I’m ready for the next five to seven years to go on this journey. Nile: One of the things I’m interested in is -- and the US is sort of a unique place if people haven’t traveled outside the US. The majority of my listeners are US based but that’s not true of all of the listeners. We’ve got people listening all throughout Europe and Asia and so on and so forth. But that being the case, you mentioned the difference in the US and how sometimes their idea of their right to freedom or that freedom view that they have is different. Talk to me a bit about that. Natalie: Oh, sure. I mean, I’m probably insulting people right now because I have a lot of American friends and I love them and I love visiting and being in America but it always blows my mind that people there are like having to be busy and working all the time and if they’re not seen to be doing that then something’s wrong. Like having time off, taking time out, enjoying half a day off from your business seems like you’re not doing the right thing or that something’s going wrong if that’s what you’re doing. And there’s a huge inherent nature there to be just hustling all the time, to be ambitious, to be making money, to be working as hard as you can, to be setting up that American dream and I think you’ve got it all wrong. Completely the wrong way around. And what you end up doing is working so hard to earn as much money as you can to buy things and more things and more materials that you don’t need that ultimately make you unhappy and you see so many people over there who’ve done really well for themselves, super wealthy and they’re miserable. So I’m not saying that’s indicative of all of the US but there is this -- very much this nature there that you have to push hard, work all the time and everything is a priority and a commitment in that respect and I’m like why are you doing all this work and why are you working so hard when your life is sitting there waiting for you to live it and go on adventures and really enjoy it and spread happiness and cherish every single moment and live like there is no tomorrow. Nile: That’s an interesting observation. We’ve got the phrase in the States and you’ve probably heard it as much as you’ve been here. Keeping up with the Joneses. Do you think what you observe with a lot of people in the US is a bit of that keeping up with the Joneses syndrome? Natalie: Yeah. And I don’t think it’s just limited to the US but for sure it’s there. I mean, you see it in other cultures as well. And I get it but I just don’t agree with it. Like I mean, here’s a person speaking -- it’s easy for me to say. I live out of a suitcase but if I eventually buy and live in a house I frankly don’t care what other people think of my house, of the goods and the things that I have inside it. I want it to be my place, I want to enjoy it, I want people to feel comfortable and welcome there. It’s not about that I have the fanciest car or the most incredible sofa or the most amazing artwork on the walls. None of that stuff matters. If you were to leave this planet tomorrow nobody is going to remember you for the car that you had or the artwork that you had. I hope. I hope they’re going to remember you for the legacy that you’ve left through the work you’ve done or the people’s lives that you’ve touched. So all of that stuff just seems so unimportant in the scheme of things. Nile: I’m curious because I think in my own life apart from my family there are very few material possessions that I really, really enjoy and most of them are relatively small. I'm curious if you have any of those material possessions that find their way in the suitcase and travel around with you. Natalie: Short answer is no. Nile: Okay. Natalie: I mean, obviously if I lost my new Macbook tomorrow or my iPhone six I’d be a little bit frustrated but it’s -- all of it is replaceable. And even to the point that my mom bought me a beautiful ring for Christmas, the Christmas we just had and I love it and it’s the only thing that I wear every single day but even if I lost that it’s -- I’ve still got the memory. It’s more important that mom’s here than the ring that she gave me so I would say there’s pretty much nothing. Sometimes when I get a bit sick of my suitcase I’m kind of excited that if it got lost by the airlines because I’d have to go out and buy something new and refresh my wardrobe and start it fresh and just keep it interesting. Nile: Well, there you go. Well, no. I think of that. As I said, there’s very few things. I have for example a silver dollar money clip and that’s what I carry every -- the physical currency that I carry around is in that money clip. But I’ve now had that money clip probably for 25 years and is it materially worth a whole lot? No. it’s just worth something to me. But I -- little things like that that I enjoy. I was curious if you had any of those little things like that. you mentioned the ring but that’s interesting because it’s really -- if you get down to it and there’s a big fire or a big flood and you’re going to lose everything or virtually everything other than what you can carry in the palm of your hand; I always like to ask people what would that be because it really sort of defines a lot of things about you. Natalie: It does. And you know what? the things that nobody can ever take away from you or be lost is memories, experiences and the people and the relationships that you have so that’s the most valuable thing in my life right now and the reason I’m even back home in New Zealand right now is my dad was in the hospital and it was incredible to just see how I dropped everything. I finally had plans to stay in Portugal for a few months which is quite a long time for me and I was really loving it. I’d actually bought a scooter for the first time, I was doing Portuguese lessons. I was actually trying to integrate into society a little and enjoying it and I just dropped everything to come back here because family, friends are just so much more important than anything else that you could ever own. So experiences as I said and memories that can never be taken away from you and they’re worth millions of dollars in my mind. Nile: Yeah. No. I would agree with you. Other than the fact that I’m getting a little bit older and some of those memories fade. I’m not sure you can -- Natalie: Yeah. That’s true. You need to write a book maybe. You need to write a book. Nile: Yeah. That might be it. I’ll have to read it to remind myself. That’s all. Natalie: Yeah. Nile: Well, again, I want to go back to the promotion and I want to go back to the promotion because when -- you typically promote to a community and you typically build that community from people that you know, like and trust or people that know, like and trust you. so as you’re traveling around the world obviously you’re meeting a lot of people but that marketing gets to be challenging and I think you have an interesting take on it which is I guess why I wanted to get there. It’s certainly not what I want people to focus on with the interview with Natalie here but I think you’ve got some interesting takes on it so what -- how do people get to know you? Natalie: That’s a great question. I mean, I think you touched on it earlier. It was a really lovely compliment. I’m pretty open, I’m very transparent and recently I was in Berlin and I held a meet up there with my community and one of the guys from Netherlands said oh, you’re just like you sound like on your podcast and you look like in your videos and you’re just you. And he’s like we thought you’d look like a celebrity when you walk in and we’re all -- but no. but you came straight over and talked to us. And I was like well, what did you expect me to do? So I think people get to know the real me if they ask the right questions for sure. As you said, I meet people all the time every single day and it can be overwhelming to remember every single person you’ve met but some people you just really connect with and those ones that usually share a curiosity and love for life. They ask intelligent, smart questions. You have discussions over all sorts of topics and from there you forge friendships and you actually make an effort to keep in touch and I’ve met up with several people around the world in two or three different countries. It’s kind of becoming a theme with some of my good friends is to see how many places we can meet up with around the world and share more experiences and good times so people just have to ask and get in touch. Nile: Well, one of the things I guess I was going on was you do an awful lot of your business on social media and social media I think has become a little bit of cornerstone in your business. But it’s social at the same time. So I -- at least from what I could see a lot of people that get to know you and a lot of your marketing for that matter is social media based. Natalie: Absolutely. Yeah. Precisely. So I’m anywhere and everywhere on social media because I love it and it’s how I built my business so very, very important and has allowed me to just have my unique voice and be who I am and people really connect that way. I think they feel they can reach out on Twitter, through Facebook messages and Periscope which I’ve started using and through my blog and podcast and all of it has just helped to build an engaged audience and community of -- I call freedom fighters who get what journey I’m on and want to be on a similar journey but on their own unique path. Nile: Do you find that there are people that engage with you and you mentioned that engagement. That’s one of the things that we talk about quite a bit because you could do a lot of things and a lot of big marketing programs that people do but unless you engage it just doesn’t matter. But do you find that there are a lot of people that engage with you and that initial part of the engagement is following you to really build their belief that this could really be done? I mean, are they -- do they question that can she really do this and this is the way she lives her life and they follow you and find out that maybe it is? Natalie: I think that people have told me a lot in the past that they live through me vicariously until they can take their own leap of faith and build their own freedom plan. So yeah. I think that’s a huge part of it and why I like to live and breathe my brand and I do show it. I mean, obviously it is possible. There are some people who may be cut out to be entrepreneurs perfectly but it doesn’t mean that they can live the lifestyle that has more freedom or they couldn’t incorporate more of those things into their daily life so I love to -- I’m all about taking action and showing what’s practical and implementing so people who like that and actually want to get something done, not just talk about it generally are the type of people who -- I'm in their lives and they're in mine if that makes any sense. And you do start to attract a certain kind of person. I’ve seen that with big brands online how often men will attract men of a similar age or women will attract women who were into that particular topic or thing that they’re talking about. So I’m pretty sure I attract some weird ass awesome people who want to achieve all sorts of different things and travel the world or even just stay at home but experience more adventure. Yeah. Nile: Before I transition to sort of the heavy question I have to ask one of the light questions. Whenever you travel a lot you come up with some different strange stories. And you and I were talking a little bit before the interview about some of the strange stories and you said well, so many things happen to me I don’t even know where to go. And I have to give you an example because -- and just like me I’m sure that you have hundreds if not thousands of these stories but I got stuck in an airport and they gave us meal vouchers. Not an uncommon thing. And so the only thing that was open was a little sundry shop and you could go in and get cookies, crackers, potato chips and drinks or whatever. That was going to be dinner so I went in and I got a box of cookies and I knew that I didn’t need the whole box of cookies and if anybody looks at my social media profile you’ll know I didn’t need the box of cookies either but nevertheless I got a box of cookies and something to drink and I was reading the paper and I opened up -- reach in my bag and I open up the box of cookies and I pull out a cookie and I have one and there’s a little boy playing there and he’s probably four or five years old. And he comes over and he reaches in and gets one of the cookies and I go well, that’s sort of interesting. He didn’t ask or anything and his mom just looks up and smiles at me and so at this point in time I’m reaching in and getting a cookie and he’s reaching in and getting a cookie. And we go on like this until the last cookie of the box comes out. And I pull out that last cookie and his bottom lip comes out and starts that quiver. And I’m going what? I’m just eating my cookies here. And his mom doesn’t say one word to me. She reaches over and she takes the cookie from me and she breaks it in two and she gives him half and me half. And I’m going wow. I’m a little bit blown away by this but I really don’t need the whole box of cookies but I was just looking at it from -- there was no discussion and it was my box of cookies and all of that. And so we get ready to load the plane finally and we get on the plane and I go in and sit down and I open up my briefcase and in my briefcase was my box of cookies. And so I realize I’d been eating his box of cookies the whole time. Gives you a little bit of a paradigm shift there. I reached across the aisle and the mom and the kid were there and I gave her my box of cookies back -- or my box of cookies and we just both laughed because both of us were like well, this is interesting. But that’s just -- hey, I’ve got hundreds of stories like that. But I bet you’ve got even more. So I’m going to put you on the spot. I need some of your stories. Natalie: Well, I’d say -- I mean, I’ve got some pretty funny ones. I tend not to attract too much drama into my life so I’m sure what other people would tell a tantalizing tale about -- I just kind of take in my stripe but probably one of the most significant and it was pretty scary at the time and ridiculous afterwards. In Vietnam a year and a half ago and I’d actually just been -- I’d won over the role of being an editor for a book for startups in Asia and I’ve been editing this book about Vietnam for entrepreneurs so I’ve been learning tons about the culture and the way in which they do business but also the safety of the country, the communication, the political setup and I remember writing about this particular area of Ho Chi Minh City where you shouldn’t really stand as a tourist and it’s notorious for theft and you have to be careful and you should catch taxis and I’ve just come back on a six and a half hour bus ride from Mui Ne. I’ve been on the coast and I’ve been enjoying some beach time and relaxation and a digital sabbatical. Time offline. And I got back into the capital and got off the bus and I knew that my hotel was only a five minute walk away because I’ve been there before and the taxi driver’s like you want a life? And I was like no. no, I’m good. I’m going to walk because I’ve just been on a bus for six and a half hours and I’m walking along with my suitcase in my hand. Obviously rolling it along. And I had my laptop bag with every single thing in it tied around the handle of the suitcase and I’m looking at my phone which I’m holding pretty firmly in my hand but I’m looking at the map to go yeah. I think it’s this way and not that way. And out of nowhere comes this scooter like a sort of a very, very quiet scooter motorbike, two guys on it and then they suddenly speed up and I’m like totally off in my own world. I’m tired and I’m jetlagged and I’m looking at this phone. And they just came by and they grabbed my laptop strap out of my -- like off my shoulder. And just sped on and I just remember spinning around and shouting out no and watching my entire life like speed off down this street and I started running after -- I wouldn’t have had any chance in hell of catching them but all I could see was my purple suitcase and my laptop bag and everything just gone and I start running towards them like yelling going darn you. And they dropped it. they dropped the whole thing because what had happened as I -- one thing that I did as a safety move was I attached as I said my laptop loosely, the strap around the suitcase handle and so by grabbing a laptop bags that also hooked to my suitcase and it was just too heavy and they couldn’t get away with it. So then some respects I was -- I just stood there and went oh my god. My suitcase just saved my life because I had my passport in there, all my money, my hard drive, my computer, everything. I hadn’t even split anything out onto myself. Normally I will hide like another card somewhere else or I just won't have everything in one place and also it was the only time that I put a jumper in my laptop bag. I don’t know why. Sort of a jacket which padded the fall when it fell down so my laptop didn’t smash. Nothing got broken. It was incredible. And I just remember standing there going you are an idiot. Like you wrote about this in a book and here you are standing in the exact place. I’d even crossed over the road to be on the quiet side so there wasn’t anybody around for once which is pretty not common in Vietnam and yeah. It was incredible. So that was my story that I got everything back and I felt ridiculously lucky and fortunate to have all my stuff back and be alive. Nile: Well, it’s always interesting when we get those reminders like that too. Now, you teased everybody with a story about coming back into Australia and making a joke that maybe wasn’t a good joke so we can't let that story go either. Natalie: Oh, yeah. That was just another wonderful moment where sometimes my sense of humor which we talked about before doesn't go down so well. So I was waiting for a flight out of Sydney. This was back when I was in the corporate world and I was waiting in line to actually just check in on the flight and this guy came up to me, a security guy and he’s like ma’am do you mind if I check your bags? And I was like no. That’s fine. Go ahead. But can I ask you what you’re checking for. And I knew what he was checking for but I just wanted to make conversation because frankly I’ve been on the airport for a while and it was a bit boring. He’s like I’m checking for any explosives. And I was like well, you’re not going to find them there. I’ve got them strapped right here and I pointed at my chest. And I was wearing quite a fitted top so it was clearly obvious that I didn’t have anything strapped under there and I thought it was hilarious and he just -- that’s a federal offense ma’am. I could have you arrested right here on the spot. I’m not going to but that was stupid. Don’t do it again. And I was like okay. The more people that I told about that -- they were just like Natalie what were you thinking? Like what an idiotic move. So every so often even as a frequent traveler you do do some pretty stupid things. Nile: See what lack of sleep could do to a person. Well listen, we don’t have a huge amount of time yet but one of the things that I’d love to talk about if it’s okay -- in your book you talk about the three stages of building a freedom lifestyle business and I found that fascinating and I don’t know if I could indulge you but would you mind sharing those with us? Natalie: Absolutely. So _____45:01 is not surprising. The first stage is the -- I think the hardest one for people to get their head around. It’s the freedom mindset so once you do have a business or a career that affords you a little bit more flexibility a lot of people really struggle with oh, that means I don’t necessarily have to work a normal working week nine to five. I can take more time off, I can take a mid week weekend. I don’t have to be based in an office. I don’t have to have clients that are in the same location as me so it’s that -- there’s a lot more to it. There’s also dealing with friends and family which we’ve talked about here and really getting clear on your vision for how you would like to live so that freedom mindset is the first stage that I take people through. the second stage is financial freedom which really comes down to how you’re setting up a business or a career so that you have enough revenue and enough income to afford you a great lifestyle but also not tie you down; your revenue streams that you have allowing you to be flexible in what you do; how active or passively do you want to be involved in the work that you do as well. so that’s all the nuts and bolts of building an online business, the business model, the social media aspect and strategy, your sales funnel, outsourcing, systems etcetera. And the final part is lifestyle freedom. So what sort of a lifestyle do you want? how are you going to live, how often do you want to travel, how much time do you want to be spending at home, what does that look like to you, how do you travel, how do you pack lightly. Really talking about minimalism as well and how do you get rid of a lot of those possessions that are weighing you down to be more free. Nile: I like that travel hack. I noticed you’ve got a few interesting terms like travel hack and digital nomad and things like that. Natalie: Yeah. I don’t make them up but they’re quite common in my world. But for people who’ve just heard them for the first time they’re like oh, digital nomad. I like that. And I’m like yeah. I didn’t make it up. Nile: Well, that is quite alright. I know that you’ve got an awful lot to share with people. We will have the links up on our website and it will be on social media business hour. Episode 119. But can you tell a little bit of -- the listeners -- share with us what you have and what you do and how people could engage with you? Natalie: Yeah. So a little bit more about kind of how I run my business or what I have on offer? Nile: What do you have that you offer people so that they could learn to do what you do and sort of roam around the world and be fun and fancy free. Natalie: Well, most of what I do actually is free for people which is great. So I do have a blog at the suitcaseentrepreneur.com and I have a twice weekly podcast which is also free on iTunes. And the Suitcase entrepreneur all within the branding. The book which is really, really affordable on Amazon and just a ton of stuff that I put out there free. I do webinars, I do -- I’m starting to do more Periscopes and I just love teaching people and sharing how they can do this for themselves. And then I have digital products that I sell on my site that are all related to building an online business and also using crowd funding to sort of kick start your business if you need. And my most definitive program that I’m really excited about launched last year which is my main stand. Every single piece of advice and experience and learning has gone into it. It’s the Freedom plan and you touched on the three stages. There’s what basically makes up the Freedom plan so it’s 12 modules. There’s a lot more to it than that but essentially I take people through those three stages with 12 modules of online learning, support and community involved and that’s my baby that I’m really wanting to get more and more people through because I’m starting to see incredible results that people are getting. And as I said, I think it’s like everything that I’ve accumulated over my entire lifetime but also five years in business to help people do this for themselves. Nile: Well, I can't recommend highly enough. As I said, you’ve got a five star rated book. When you look at all of the ratings on Amazon. The Suitcase entrepreneur. I recommend that. We’ve got that available as a link on the show notes as well for episode 119. And I have to say I’ve got the privilege -- I like all of the pictures on your website and everything like that but one of the pictures that just says freedom to me is your Skype picture and I’m not sure that everybody gets to see your Skype picture. Natalie: Oh, does it? I should look at it. Oh, that one. Nile: Yeah. Well, you’re up high. I don’t know if it’s a mountain top. I’ll call it a hill top. But beautiful scenery behind you. There you are with a great smile and two thumbs up and to me that just says freedom in a really great way so I love it. Natalie: That’s true. I should probably put that one out. That was actually a panorama looking across the _____49:51 it reminded me of the hobbit’s land and Middle Earth because it’s just so beautiful so maybe I’ll incorporate that into my blog. Nile: It needs to be because it really is a great picture that says freedom in a big way. But Natalie I would like to thank you so much for joining all of us today on the social media business hour. And for our listeners, I want to thank you too. Hopefully you learned a few new ideas or concepts. Maybe a dream got started. Maybe you were just reminded of a few things that you already know but you haven’t been doing to improve or grow your business or your life. Our desire is you take just one of the things that you learned or were reminded of today and you apply it this week to your life or business. We know that a small change can make a big difference and I’m committed to bringing you at least one new idea each week that you could implement so go back and identify just one small change that you could make to your business or your life this week and see what a big difference it will make for you. So until next week, this is Nile Nickel. Now, go make it happen. Woman: Social media business hour is powered by linkedinfocus.com. For show notes, updates and to pick up the latest tips and tricks head over to socialmediabusinesshour.com. Until next time. Thanks for listening. [/content_toggle] Weblinks: Facebook: http://facebook.com/suitcaseentrepreneurTwitter: @nataliesisson Related Books:
This week, we discussed the recent controversy of Megadeth playing in China and played back some of Mustaine's hilarious Periscopes. We also discussed a party Rob went to that involved a convo about worm vulvas. We also discussed more stories about homeless people and weird things on the train. We got some great voice mails from Max and Israeli Guy and explain some of our interview techniques. Here's this week's playlist: Dethklok – I Ejaculate Fire The Dillinger Escape Plan – When Good Dogs Do Bad Things Mantar – Cult Witness Listen to the Metal Injection Livecast on Stitcher or on iTunes (please leave a rating/review as well). Also, make sure to follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Youtube. Join us live next week starting at 6pm Eastern (3PM Pacific Time) and going until 8PM eastern time for an all new edition of the Livecast. Our question of the week: "If you were a wrestler, what would your character be?" Leave a voicemail below with your answer and we may air it on next week's show:
Total Duration 41:34 Download episode 136 The Happy Project Manager Most people who know me would say I'm generally a happy guy--rather optimistic by nature. By I've always been a bit skeptical about books on the subject of happiness. My concern is that they would be filled with shallow platitudes, assuming that the ultimate goal for ourselves is self-focused pleasure. Thankfully, that bias didn't keep me from agreeing to read Michelle Gielan's new book Broadcasting Happiness: The Science of Igniting and Sustaining Positive Change. To learn more about Michelle and the work of her organization, visit http://BroadcastingHappiness.com/. Join My Periscopes This Month! As part of our ongoing experimentation here at the People and Projects Podcast, we're going to be conducting some Periscopes during the month of October 2015. Each Friday, starting October 9, 2015, for 4 Friday's, I'll be broadcasting a periscope from 12:15pm Central in the US (GMT-5). If you haven't downloaded the app, please do so and then join me for these brief, 15-minute discussions. You can find my Periscope home page at https://www.Periscope.tv/andy_kaufman. I would love to have the opportunity to connect with you in this way so join me in October! 15 PDU's for Podcast Listeners Check out our Essentials of Project Management e-learning workshop! Use a coupon code of ESSENTIALS-50 to save USD $150. Go to http://courses.i-leadonline.com/courses/essentials-of-pm to learn more. Let Me Hear From You! I love hearing from listeners! Please leave a message to let me know what you think about The People and Projects Podcast! Here's how you can contact us: Leave a message on our Listener Feedback Line at 847-550-3747 Call me directly at 847-579-9174 Contact me by email at show [AT] PeopleAndProjectsPodcast [DOT] com Thank you for joining me for this episode of The People and Projects Podcast! Have a great week! SUNFLOWER DANCE PARTY and EARLY RISER by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 YOU HAPPY? by BJ Block and Dawn Pemberton is licensed under Attribution-NoDerivatives 3.0 International License Clips from The LEGO Movie Honestly, this movie cracks me up. I couldn't help but put Unikitty in this episode. Who's your favorite character in the movie? {youtube}81QMiGhIymU{/youtube}
Nicomi Turner joins me via skype from her studio in Oakland. We talk Making Mistakes, Flojos, Namesake, Periscopes, Digitial Reality, Missed Experience, Emily the Strange Connections To Nature, Baddass Ranch Girls, Drawing, Mythologies, The Female Experience in Arts, All Female Mountain Gang, and The Four Percenters
Twitter Smarter Podcast with Madalyn Sklar - The Best Twitter Tips from the Pros
Ryan Steinolfson, Periscope Ryan as he is also known, is the president of Accelerate Marketing, Inc. Based in San Diego, CA, this digital marketing agency specializes in accelerating clients’ brand recognition to help ensure maximum potential for increased sales and exponential growth. In fact, the company is currently on a mission to assist 1,000 organizations in just such a manner over the next five years. Given Ryan’s live streaming expertise, we’re going to take a slight departure on today’s #TwitterSmarter podcast episode. Instead of his best Twitter tips, Ryan will help us understand how to leverage Periscope (which is owned by Twitter) for business. Episode Highlights: Periscope amassed 10 million users in its first four months. By comparison it took Facebook nearly 10 months to garner 1 million users. In part, Periscope’s quick rise was because of its direct connection with Twitter. Therefore, it makes sense that Twitter is the perfect place to search for target audience pain points and hashtags that will resonate during your Periscopes. The reason Ryan and others have been so successful is because they understood right away that it’s not about being perfect. When it comes to live streaming, you just have to jump in. Ryan shares a number of great business successes – Applebee’s, Hootsuite, T-Mobile – with applicable lessons for businesses of all sizes. Having a place to send people immediately after your ‘scopes will enable to them to get to know you even better through the consumption of your content. Through the power of Periscope, Ryan attained 650 email sign ups for his “gadgets list” in just two months. Tweetables: We’re the media today. We are the camera crew and the host at the same time. Live streaming is the perfect medium to show the culture behind the brand – get personal. Links to tools and resources mentioned in this episode: Periscope – explore the world through someone else’s eyes (tagline on website) Zoom – video and web conferencing services How To Reach Ryan: You can reach Ryan on Periscope and Twitter @RyanSteinolfson, or via his website www.PeriscopeRyan.com. Your Call To Action: Your call-to-action for this episode is to download the Periscope app (it’s available for iOS and Android) and start scoping like a maniac! Be sure to tag me @MadalynSklar and let me know what you think. Share The Love: Want an easy “one-click” way to Share The Love for this podcast? Go here: www.madalynsklar.com/love to tweet out your love. Thanks for the listen! I appreciate you listening to this podcast, and would be extremely grateful if you would take a moment to rate & review it on iTunes. By doing this, my rankings will increase and more people will be able to benefit from the tips and tools shared in this #TwitterSmarter podcast series. Please also subscribe to this podcast while you’re there. It will ensure you don’t miss an episode! I read every review that comes in, so please know that you have my sincere thanks! Show notes at www.madalynsklar.com/twittersmarter22
How to change your sales process that’ll allow you to 10x your prices with half the effort. On today’s episode Russell talks about getting quotes on construction projects and the frustration that comes with waiting. He shares how those contractors could do things better and how that relates to his business. Here are some interesting things to listen for in this episode: Why Russell doesn’t believe in doing quotes and why that turns into comparison shopping. Why Russell is not trying to be the cheapest option in the business. And why positioning yourself in the right place and setting your own rules gives you the control over your customers. So listen below to hear how to take control in your business and make your own rules. ---Transcript--- Good morning everybody. This is Russell Brunson, and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. Hey everyone, I just finished a near flawless morning routine, it was exciting. I woke up on time, I studied my scriptures, which, for me, is a big thing. Then, I did my supplements. I’m trying to process how to stack them to make me feel the best. When I just down a million supplements at once, I don’t feel like I’m taking over the world. I tried something where first thing in the morning, I get apple cider vinegar lemon shot, which is horrible, it’s really painful. Then, do my keto OS right then, along with my On It supplements. Then, do my study, then doing my morning workout. It was super dark this morning, it’s crazy. A week ago, when I was running, it was light. Now, it’s dark, so I did this stuff inside my wrestling room, which was fun. Did a killer workout for an hour, did cardio really hard for 20 minutes or so, then switched over to weights, body weight stuff and heavyweight stuff, which was really fun. Then, came back in and did bone broth, this green drink thing, and my bulletproof hot chocolate stuff, along with the rest of my vitamins. Anyway, feeling good like that, breaking them up like that and then doing the stack that way. Anyway, feeling really, really good. Liking that, so I’m going to keep tweaking and testing that and try to keep perfecting this thing, which will be fun. Now, I am heading into the office. I had a thought today, as I was looking at vendors and how people have been working with me on different project in the home and things like that. I wanted to hopefully save some of you guys from yourself, that’s my goal for today’s message. This is what’s been happening. I call a contractor or whatever, have them come out here. I’m like, “This is what I want to have happen.” I’m all excited, I have all this energy, and I’m showing them everything. They’re like, “Oh, cool, cool, cool. All right, we’re going to go home and build out a quote for you, and we’ll get back to you.” My excitement level drops a little bit, like, “Okay.” Then, they go home. Honestly, like a week, two weeks, three weeks later, they come back with a quote for me. They email me the quote in a state where I’m not longer pumped up, excited, and fired up. They email it to me, and it sits in my inbox. I look at it just really devoid of emotion, it’s got a whole bunch of things that mean a lot to them, but means zero to me. I’m looking over these things, and it’s so uninspiring. So far, three or four people that have sent me these quotes back, I haven’t even responded back to them. What’s funny is that when I don’t respond back to them, none of them ever follow up again. They just don’t, that’s the end of it, and they lose my business. It’s crazy to me because some of these projects are really big projects that could make or break a company sometimes, I would think. A couple things I want to do is first off, I want to walk you guys through the process of if you are doing quotes, how do them right. Then, I’m going to walk through the process of how to actually do them better. Here’s how to do them right. When I am in the peak excitement level and I am going crazy, that’s the time you want to get me to commit. You don’t want to get me to commit three weeks later when I’m out of state, right? The biggest thing about sales is 90 percent of it’s creating the emotions so that when you ask them for money, they say yes. When someone has you over to their home, they’re excited, and they’re going crazy, that’s the time you want them to commit. That’s step number one. Again, most times, you’re not going to know what it is right now, but man I would lock them in right now. I’d say, “Look, this project’s going to be pretty big, it’s going to be 20, 30,000 or whatever, could be potentially. I’m going to go find those things out for you, but I want to lock this in today. I know you’re excited, I’m excited. How soon would you like us to come out?” For me, I kept telling the guy, the most recent guy, I kept telling him, “My biggest concern in life is urgency, I want this done yesterday. I don’t really care how much it costs, I just want it done.” With that, it took him three weeks to get me a quote back, which is ridiculous. I wanted it done in three weeks, so right then, he should’ve said, “Hey, how about this? Let’s lock this in, and say it’s going to be a lot. Let’s just say the first $10,000, because you know it’s going to be more than that, right?” I’m like, “Yeah.” “Okay, let’s lock this in while you’re excited and I’m excited. First $10,000, that means my guys will come out next Wednesday, and we’re going to start this process. It’s going to take me a while to figure out exactly what it’s going to cost, but it’s at least 10 grand. Let’s lock down 10 grand, you pay ten grand right now. We’ll get started, and I’ll have the rest of the quote for you later on. I guarantee it won’t go over 50,000, or 40,000.” Or, ask me what’s my max budget, and I can say, “I’m looking probably 40, 50 grand.” “Okay, cool. We’ll make sure we don’t go over that. Let’s lock in 10 grand right now and let’s get started.” Now, you’ve got me as a client. Now, you sold me and got my credit card at the peak of emotional impact. I’m pumped up, I’m excited, I’m fired up, right? Not three weeks later after I’m annoyed that I still haven’t heard back from you. That’s step number one, step number two is getting money now, it’s way better than getting money later. Lock in, get some money now, and figure out the rest of it later. You don’t have to have 100 percent perfect quote, you just find out what their max budget is and tell them you guarantee it’ll come in underneath that. Then, go back to work and spent your week, two weeks, or three weeks, whatever it takes, figuring that out, but get the process started. The biggest things that can cause people to cancel, refund, or whatever is that the process never gets started. They’re sitting around waiting forever. We had someone come in and do blinds, it took them eight weeks to get the blinds installed, just ridiculous. We didn’t hear back from the once. During that eight week period of time when I’m nervous, I’m waiting, I’m excited, I’m losing this, I’m getting frustrated, you should be calling telling me the status. That gap is when you go to be really treating them right. Those are some things if you’re doing quotes that I would really think about. Now, I want to shift it around and tell you guys a better way to do it. The better way to do it is don’t do quotes. When doing quotes, suddenly, you are in a business now of comparison shopping. In fact, the guy that sent me the most recent quote, on the top of it, it had this big disclaimer, like, “If you send this quote to other people, we will bill you $250” or something stupid like that. You know what happens is you get a bill, I forward it to three other people, and they try to beat it. As soon as you give them a quote, they’re going to go comparison shop. It’s the dumbest thing in the world, you don’t want people comparison shopping, you want to flip it around and you want to position and posture the right way. The way we do it is we position ourselves as the best, the most expensive, the hands-down best alternative on earth. One of my mentors, Dan Kennedy, said, “If you can’t be the cheapest option, there’s no strategic advantage in being the second cheapest.” Which is a huge, important thing. I’m dropping a piece of gold for you guys right now when you understand this. If you can’t be the cheapest option, there’s no strategic advantage in being the second cheapest. If you can’t be the cheapest, you need to be the most expensive. Position yourself as the most expensive, like we are the most expensive shop in town, but we do it the best. Go after the premium market, because again, either go after the cheapest, or the premium, but don’t be in the middle. Pick the premium, then strategically position yourself in a spot where you are not easy to work with. It’s hard to get to you, they have to apply, and you change the whole process. That’s why my coaching program is application only. We don’t go out there and beg people to buy from us, we make them apply, we put them through a process to position and posture ourselves at the top of it. The top of the market, not the low price leader, or the second-to-low-price leader. If you can’t be the lowest, then you got to be the most expensive. We position ourselves that way, we make people apply. When they apply, now it changes the whole thing. No longer am I coming out and giving you a quote, you got the control in your hands, they’re applying and asking to work with you. Now, that control is magically in your hands. You can increase prices, you can demand things, you change how the playing field is. A funny example, we had someone apply to join my Inner Circle program. They were talking to one of my sales guys, and they asked the sales guy, “Hey, can you send me a proposal for what this is going to look like?” My sales guy started laughing out loud, and that guy’s like, “What?” He said, “We don’t do proposals here, Russell doesn’t wear shoes at the office. If you’re looking for a proposal, you’re not the right fit for this program.” The guy apologized, “Oh, I’m so sorry. No, no, no, here’s my credit card number.” Completely just changed the thing. You have to understand that if you position yourself right and you posture the sell right, it puts all the power back in your hands, not in their hands, which is the the key. If you put it in their hands, where you’re sending them a quote and then you’re waiting to hear back from them, you lost everything. You lost all your strategic advantage; you lost your ability to price things the way that makes sense. You lost everything, and it just changes everything. I hope that gives you guys some ideas, and this is going for any kind of business. I see way too often people that are sending out quotes, they’re putting out bid sheets and all sorts of stuff like that. I think it’s the dumbest way on earth to do business, all you’re doing is asking yourself … You’re doing all the work, putting in all the effort, then have someone go and price shop you. Unless you do it correctly, which is really hard to do the right way, and most of you guys won’t do it the right way, I kind of mentioned earlier, then don’t do it. Flip it around, make it where you are the high end leader. You’re the most expensive, you’re so busy that you cannot and will not take on everyone. They have to apply and jump through hoops and they have to prove to you why they should work with you. When you do it that way, everything else changes. Now, you’re in the driver’s seat, and now you can run your business the way that you want to do it, as opposed to doing the way your customers want to, which is a big key that I want to instill upon you. Obviously, we love our customers. We want to serve them at the highest way possible, but we also do it on our terms, not on their terms, which is key. As soon as you do it on their terms, your customers will eat you alive if you allow them to. It’s funny because some of the support guys on our team, what they always wanted to do is, “Hey, let’s go ask our customers what they want in a software program.” There’s a, I think it’s a Henry Ford or someone, quote, he said, “I didn’t ask my customers what they wanted because they would’ve told me they wanted a faster horse. We went out and built a car.” Same thing with us, we always say, “No. If we asked our customers what they wanted, they would’ve told us they wanted a cheaper version of lead pages.” That’s not what we’re doing, we’re trying to change the world here. We are the innovators, we’re the thinkers, we’re the ones that are thinking outside the box. We love feedback, and we appreciate it, but at the same time, we’re building what we know is right. We’ve got the foresight, and we know where we want to go. It’s the same thing for you. Love, respect, and treat your customers the best you can, but you’ve got the set the policies, you’ve got to set the ground rules for how someone works with you. If you don’t set those rules, they will set them, and I promise it won’t be favorable for you, in the long run. It won’t make for a business relationship for you or for them, honestly. You’re going to resent them, and you’re not going to be able to serve them at the level that they need to be served at. Whereas, if you do it the right way, it’ll change everything. Hopefully, this helps some of you guys. I remember when I first got started in this business, one of the first guys I got turned on to is a guy named Dan Kennedy, who I’ve mentioned a couple times. I went through all his training, which has probably skewed my thoughts a lot. I went through his time management courses, everything. He’s way worse than me, but he was very strict about those kind of things. If you want to message Dan Kennedy, you can’t call him, you can’t email him, you fax him. Actually, you don’t even fax him, you fax his assistant. Once a week, his assistant collects his faxes, puts them in a FedEx box, FedEx’s them to him. He then gets those FedEx’s, once a week opens them up and hand writes the responses to them. Then, puts them back in a FedEx box and then back to his assistant, who then gets them, then faxes them back to you. It’s two to three week long process to get a response from Dan Kennedy. Some of you guys are like, “That’s ridiculous! Why should I do that? It’s so annoying!” Then, you’re like, “Man, Dan Kennedy’s the man. Look how are it is to get to him, I got to pay a lot more.” It’s just interesting. I don’t go as far as Dan, but I definitely do set my own rules, as should you guys as well. Anyway, hope that helps a little bit. Thanks for letting me vent, share, and hopefully inspire you guys and give you some ideas on how you can run your business and how you can protect your own time as well. I’m going to be doing Periscope later on today on time management, some of the things I do. If you are on my Periscope, then come check it out. If you’re not, come follow me on Periscope. If you just go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com, you’ll get all the info there on all the past Periscopes, plus all the old Marketing in Your Cars, we archive them as well. All the Marketing in Your Cars, all the Periscopes, all the cool stuff’s being archived at blog.dotcomsecrets.com. Thanks everybody, have an amazing day and we’ll talk to you soon!
How to change your sales process that'll allow you to 10x your prices with half the effort. On today's episode Russell talks about getting quotes on construction projects and the frustration that comes with waiting. He shares how those contractors could do things better and how that relates to his business. Here are some interesting things to listen for in this episode: Why Russell doesn't believe in doing quotes and why that turns into comparison shopping. Why Russell is not trying to be the cheapest option in the business. And why positioning yourself in the right place and setting your own rules gives you the control over your customers. So listen below to hear how to take control in your business and make your own rules. ---Transcript--- Good morning everybody. This is Russell Brunson, and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. Hey everyone, I just finished a near flawless morning routine, it was exciting. I woke up on time, I studied my scriptures, which, for me, is a big thing. Then, I did my supplements. I'm trying to process how to stack them to make me feel the best. When I just down a million supplements at once, I don't feel like I'm taking over the world. I tried something where first thing in the morning, I get apple cider vinegar lemon shot, which is horrible, it's really painful. Then, do my keto OS right then, along with my On It supplements. Then, do my study, then doing my morning workout. It was super dark this morning, it's crazy. A week ago, when I was running, it was light. Now, it's dark, so I did this stuff inside my wrestling room, which was fun. Did a killer workout for an hour, did cardio really hard for 20 minutes or so, then switched over to weights, body weight stuff and heavyweight stuff, which was really fun. Then, came back in and did bone broth, this green drink thing, and my bulletproof hot chocolate stuff, along with the rest of my vitamins. Anyway, feeling good like that, breaking them up like that and then doing the stack that way. Anyway, feeling really, really good. Liking that, so I'm going to keep tweaking and testing that and try to keep perfecting this thing, which will be fun. Now, I am heading into the office. I had a thought today, as I was looking at vendors and how people have been working with me on different project in the home and things like that. I wanted to hopefully save some of you guys from yourself, that's my goal for today's message. This is what's been happening. I call a contractor or whatever, have them come out here. I'm like, “This is what I want to have happen.” I'm all excited, I have all this energy, and I'm showing them everything. They're like, “Oh, cool, cool, cool. All right, we're going to go home and build out a quote for you, and we'll get back to you.” My excitement level drops a little bit, like, “Okay.” Then, they go home. Honestly, like a week, two weeks, three weeks later, they come back with a quote for me. They email me the quote in a state where I'm not longer pumped up, excited, and fired up. They email it to me, and it sits in my inbox. I look at it just really devoid of emotion, it's got a whole bunch of things that mean a lot to them, but means zero to me. I'm looking over these things, and it's so uninspiring. So far, three or four people that have sent me these quotes back, I haven't even responded back to them. What's funny is that when I don't respond back to them, none of them ever follow up again. They just don't, that's the end of it, and they lose my business. It's crazy to me because some of these projects are really big projects that could make or break a company sometimes, I would think. A couple things I want to do is first off, I want to walk you guys through the process of if you are doing quotes, how do them right. Then, I'm going to walk through the process of how to actually do them better. Here's how to do them right. When I am in the peak excitement level and I am going crazy, that's the time you want to get me to commit. You don't want to get me to commit three weeks later when I'm out of state, right? The biggest thing about sales is 90 percent of it's creating the emotions so that when you ask them for money, they say yes. When someone has you over to their home, they're excited, and they're going crazy, that's the time you want them to commit. That's step number one. Again, most times, you're not going to know what it is right now, but man I would lock them in right now. I'd say, “Look, this project's going to be pretty big, it's going to be 20, 30,000 or whatever, could be potentially. I'm going to go find those things out for you, but I want to lock this in today. I know you're excited, I'm excited. How soon would you like us to come out?” For me, I kept telling the guy, the most recent guy, I kept telling him, “My biggest concern in life is urgency, I want this done yesterday. I don't really care how much it costs, I just want it done.” With that, it took him three weeks to get me a quote back, which is ridiculous. I wanted it done in three weeks, so right then, he should've said, “Hey, how about this? Let's lock this in, and say it's going to be a lot. Let's just say the first $10,000, because you know it's going to be more than that, right?” I'm like, “Yeah.” “Okay, let's lock this in while you're excited and I'm excited. First $10,000, that means my guys will come out next Wednesday, and we're going to start this process. It's going to take me a while to figure out exactly what it's going to cost, but it's at least 10 grand. Let's lock down 10 grand, you pay ten grand right now. We'll get started, and I'll have the rest of the quote for you later on. I guarantee it won't go over 50,000, or 40,000.” Or, ask me what's my max budget, and I can say, “I'm looking probably 40, 50 grand.” “Okay, cool. We'll make sure we don't go over that. Let's lock in 10 grand right now and let's get started.” Now, you've got me as a client. Now, you sold me and got my credit card at the peak of emotional impact. I'm pumped up, I'm excited, I'm fired up, right? Not three weeks later after I'm annoyed that I still haven't heard back from you. That's step number one, step number two is getting money now, it's way better than getting money later. Lock in, get some money now, and figure out the rest of it later. You don't have to have 100 percent perfect quote, you just find out what their max budget is and tell them you guarantee it'll come in underneath that. Then, go back to work and spent your week, two weeks, or three weeks, whatever it takes, figuring that out, but get the process started. The biggest things that can cause people to cancel, refund, or whatever is that the process never gets started. They're sitting around waiting forever. We had someone come in and do blinds, it took them eight weeks to get the blinds installed, just ridiculous. We didn't hear back from the once. During that eight week period of time when I'm nervous, I'm waiting, I'm excited, I'm losing this, I'm getting frustrated, you should be calling telling me the status. That gap is when you go to be really treating them right. Those are some things if you're doing quotes that I would really think about. Now, I want to shift it around and tell you guys a better way to do it. The better way to do it is don't do quotes. When doing quotes, suddenly, you are in a business now of comparison shopping. In fact, the guy that sent me the most recent quote, on the top of it, it had this big disclaimer, like, “If you send this quote to other people, we will bill you $250” or something stupid like that. You know what happens is you get a bill, I forward it to three other people, and they try to beat it. As soon as you give them a quote, they're going to go comparison shop. It's the dumbest thing in the world, you don't want people comparison shopping, you want to flip it around and you want to position and posture the right way. The way we do it is we position ourselves as the best, the most expensive, the hands-down best alternative on earth. One of my mentors, Dan Kennedy, said, “If you can't be the cheapest option, there's no strategic advantage in being the second cheapest.” Which is a huge, important thing. I'm dropping a piece of gold for you guys right now when you understand this. If you can't be the cheapest option, there's no strategic advantage in being the second cheapest. If you can't be the cheapest, you need to be the most expensive. Position yourself as the most expensive, like we are the most expensive shop in town, but we do it the best. Go after the premium market, because again, either go after the cheapest, or the premium, but don't be in the middle. Pick the premium, then strategically position yourself in a spot where you are not easy to work with. It's hard to get to you, they have to apply, and you change the whole process. That's why my coaching program is application only. We don't go out there and beg people to buy from us, we make them apply, we put them through a process to position and posture ourselves at the top of it. The top of the market, not the low price leader, or the second-to-low-price leader. If you can't be the lowest, then you got to be the most expensive. We position ourselves that way, we make people apply. When they apply, now it changes the whole thing. No longer am I coming out and giving you a quote, you got the control in your hands, they're applying and asking to work with you. Now, that control is magically in your hands. You can increase prices, you can demand things, you change how the playing field is. A funny example, we had someone apply to join my Inner Circle program. They were talking to one of my sales guys, and they asked the sales guy, “Hey, can you send me a proposal for what this is going to look like?” My sales guy started laughing out loud, and that guy's like, “What?” He said, “We don't do proposals here, Russell doesn't wear shoes at the office. If you're looking for a proposal, you're not the right fit for this program.” The guy apologized, “Oh, I'm so sorry. No, no, no, here's my credit card number.” Completely just changed the thing. You have to understand that if you position yourself right and you posture the sell right, it puts all the power back in your hands, not in their hands, which is the the key. If you put it in their hands, where you're sending them a quote and then you're waiting to hear back from them, you lost everything. You lost all your strategic advantage; you lost your ability to price things the way that makes sense. You lost everything, and it just changes everything. I hope that gives you guys some ideas, and this is going for any kind of business. I see way too often people that are sending out quotes, they're putting out bid sheets and all sorts of stuff like that. I think it's the dumbest way on earth to do business, all you're doing is asking yourself … You're doing all the work, putting in all the effort, then have someone go and price shop you. Unless you do it correctly, which is really hard to do the right way, and most of you guys won't do it the right way, I kind of mentioned earlier, then don't do it. Flip it around, make it where you are the high end leader. You're the most expensive, you're so busy that you cannot and will not take on everyone. They have to apply and jump through hoops and they have to prove to you why they should work with you. When you do it that way, everything else changes. Now, you're in the driver's seat, and now you can run your business the way that you want to do it, as opposed to doing the way your customers want to, which is a big key that I want to instill upon you. Obviously, we love our customers. We want to serve them at the highest way possible, but we also do it on our terms, not on their terms, which is key. As soon as you do it on their terms, your customers will eat you alive if you allow them to. It's funny because some of the support guys on our team, what they always wanted to do is, “Hey, let's go ask our customers what they want in a software program.” There's a, I think it's a Henry Ford or someone, quote, he said, “I didn't ask my customers what they wanted because they would've told me they wanted a faster horse. We went out and built a car.” Same thing with us, we always say, “No. If we asked our customers what they wanted, they would've told us they wanted a cheaper version of lead pages.” That's not what we're doing, we're trying to change the world here. We are the innovators, we're the thinkers, we're the ones that are thinking outside the box. We love feedback, and we appreciate it, but at the same time, we're building what we know is right. We've got the foresight, and we know where we want to go. It's the same thing for you. Love, respect, and treat your customers the best you can, but you've got the set the policies, you've got to set the ground rules for how someone works with you. If you don't set those rules, they will set them, and I promise it won't be favorable for you, in the long run. It won't make for a business relationship for you or for them, honestly. You're going to resent them, and you're not going to be able to serve them at the level that they need to be served at. Whereas, if you do it the right way, it'll change everything. Hopefully, this helps some of you guys. I remember when I first got started in this business, one of the first guys I got turned on to is a guy named Dan Kennedy, who I've mentioned a couple times. I went through all his training, which has probably skewed my thoughts a lot. I went through his time management courses, everything. He's way worse than me, but he was very strict about those kind of things. If you want to message Dan Kennedy, you can't call him, you can't email him, you fax him. Actually, you don't even fax him, you fax his assistant. Once a week, his assistant collects his faxes, puts them in a FedEx box, FedEx's them to him. He then gets those FedEx's, once a week opens them up and hand writes the responses to them. Then, puts them back in a FedEx box and then back to his assistant, who then gets them, then faxes them back to you. It's two to three week long process to get a response from Dan Kennedy. Some of you guys are like, “That's ridiculous! Why should I do that? It's so annoying!” Then, you're like, “Man, Dan Kennedy's the man. Look how are it is to get to him, I got to pay a lot more.” It's just interesting. I don't go as far as Dan, but I definitely do set my own rules, as should you guys as well. Anyway, hope that helps a little bit. Thanks for letting me vent, share, and hopefully inspire you guys and give you some ideas on how you can run your business and how you can protect your own time as well. I'm going to be doing Periscope later on today on time management, some of the things I do. If you are on my Periscope, then come check it out. If you're not, come follow me on Periscope. If you just go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com, you'll get all the info there on all the past Periscopes, plus all the old Marketing in Your Cars, we archive them as well. All the Marketing in Your Cars, all the Periscopes, all the cool stuff's being archived at blog.dotcomsecrets.com. Thanks everybody, have an amazing day and we'll talk to you soon!
In today's Episode of the Online Learning Podcast, I am delighted to welcome Vickie Maris who has created on of the most unique courses on Udemy - a real living history course. She has interviewed her mother about life as the wife of a US Airforce Aviator during World War II. We also have an interesting discussion about Periscope - the new live streaming App from Twitter. In this Week's Episode: Vickie Maris In this Episode Vickie and I discuss: How Vickie came to put her course together How she first created a DVD set and the complexities of that set up How Vickie came to pull all this information together How Vickie came to learn about Udemy and create her own course Vickie's use of the great new live streaming App Periscope How to save your periscopes to your iphone How to reuse your Periscope broadcasts in your courses How Margueritte Beaty creates a template to backdrop your Periscopes to create a 16:9 presentation Why Vickie thinks Chris Ducker's Periscopes are inspirational Some of the stories shared by Vickie's mother in her course Find out More About Kristen's Courses Check out Kristen on Udemy at https://www.udemy.com/u/kristenpalana/ Get Vickie's courses for just $15 with Coupon Code OLP15 - or just click on the link below. Aviator's Wife Tells of Home Front Life During World War 2 - Get his course for just $15 by clicking on this link. Find out More about Vickie You can find out all about Vickie on her website at www.vickiemaris.com Mentioned in this Episode Check out Periscope TV here - https://www.periscope.tv Chris Ducker can be found at http://www.chrisducker.com Margueritte Beaty's Periscope Template video can be found here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AsM2YR74wUo New Media Europe - Manchester, England - 12-13 September 2015 Follow this Link to find out all about how you can get your Tickets to New Media Europe 2015 Ready To Be Heard! This unique conference is aimed at podcasters, bloggers, social media visionaries, content creators, entrepreneurs, marketing professionals and new media enthusiasts who are looking to up their game through the effective use of new media tools ‒ such as podcasting, blogging and social media ‒ in their endeavours. During this two-day event, you will have the choice to attend over 24 sessions prepared by some of the best speakers in the world. From general ‘know-how' sessions and technical workshops to inspiring keynote speeches ‒ you are going to be equipped with the new media knowledge, ideas and inspiration that will make you stand out from others in your niche! Networking events throughout the whole weekend will enable you to connect with other like-minded individuals. Top 3 Reasons to Attend: 1. Education. Only the best speakers have been selected to help you stay abreast of the top trends in new media. 2. Networking. You will have the chance to connect with others in your field during scheduled breaks, parties and meet-ups. 3. Inspiration. By collecting ideas and meeting individuals from your area(s) of specialisation, you will be inspired to take action and follow the steps to success. Who Is Going To Be There? Rub shoulders with like-minded individuals and experts. During the New Media Europe Conference in September 2015, you are going to meet other podcasters, bloggers, social media visionaries, content creators, entrepreneurs and new media enthusiasts! This is the most outstanding new media conference to hit Europe in 2015. Why Should You Attend? We have seen how new media can help entrepreneurs and businesses to thrive. This event is your chance to connect with the latest trends, practical tools and most of all, successful individuals from around the globe. By attending New Media Europe, you will find out why paying attention to new media is the single most important thing you can do this year! How to Apply for Tickets Follow this Link to find out all about how you can get your Tickets to New Media Europe 2015 - Don't forget to use Coupon Code "Podcast" to get 20% of the price of your ticket! (Affiliate Link) Other Places Mentioned in this Podcast Discover New Media Creative and all their amazing Audio Talents at http://www.musicradiocreative.com Subscribe to the New Media Europe Show Podcast on iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/new-media-europe-show/id998535275 Subscribe to Nick Loper's Side Hustle Show Podcast on iTunes here Subscribe to Pat Flynn's Smart Passive Income Podcast on iTunes here Subscribe to Jaime Tardy's Eventual Millionaire Podcast on iTunes here Subscribe to Amy Porterfield's Online Marketing Made Easy Podcast on iTunes here Check out my New Audio Book From Passion to Profits with Online Courses - Liberate Your Inner Expert, Teach the World and Get Paid for It! Follow this Link to Access and Download the rest of this Audio Book for Free Join the Online Learning Club - my Facebook Group for Online Learners This is my Facebook Group for the Online Learning Community and you are most welcome to join us. Just click on this link to go to the Page and ask to join the Group. [spp-reviews] Full Disclosure: these are affiliate links. If you click on this link, you will not pay any more (you still get the full discount) but I will earn a Commission. If you do buy a course, please email me at john[at]jbdcolley[dot]com and tell me about it. I would love to thank you personnally for supporting The Online Learning Podcast! Don't forget you can still access the Course and the discount without going through the Affiliate Scheme by simply searching for the Course on Udemy and using the Coupon Code at Checkout in the normal way. If you do this, Udemy will receive their normal commission and the Course Creator will get the whole of the balance. It is entirely up to you.
EntreProgrammers Episode 80 "2 Man Show" 3:05 And we’re live! John is still in London and is headed to Iceland in a few mintues. The EntreProgrammers discuss the debt repayment, bankruptcy, and land ownership of several countries and states? 10:15 Chuck talks about how he got lucky not getting audited. Chuck shares information and risk involved in tax laws and running a business. 14:45 John talks about how he is in-the-know, just as much as his CPA. Also, how he like to hire a second professional to give a second option. 17:45 Derick shares that his CPA was referred to him by his lawyer. 20:00 John talks about the caps on self-employment tax. 23:45 Chuck shares that early bird sales for Angular Remote Conf. is done! Chuck brought in over 10k in ticket sales. Ruby Rogues has an open spot for sponsorship. Chuck shares that he was a chair member at Toastmasters. Chuck mention that Toastmasters help with is public speaking and podcast production. 25:00 Chuck ask if John did any more Periscopes. 32:45 Derick disclosed more information about his son’s condition. Derick shares more information about is subscribers and the RabbitMQ projects, and having to spent time taking care of his family. 38:00 Derick and Chuck talk about how some of the content they create, is wanted free and how organizations like Plural Sight is the 8000 pound gorilla in the room. 40:00 Chuck thinks that there is more of a need for Derick’s Watch Me Code over the Rabbit MQ. Chuck is convinced that if Derick did more focus on marketing Watch Me Code, his subscribers should go up. Derick mention that is exactly what he was doing, but he needs step-by-step guidance on what to do. 45:45 Derick is going to talk to Mark about the subscription of his content. 47:00 Chuck gives Derick a handful of strategies to help the marketing of his business and finding something to get traction and a pay off. 50:00 Chuck shares the strategy he uses to get guess on his podcast. This is a great way to find out about the general public, who are the followers, and what the listeners are doing. Chuck gives a rundown of all the questions he has ask to get great content. 1:02:15 Chuck is hoping to point out some road signs to help Derick. Derick is trying to find some focus and direction. Maybe re focus on old and current projects, or start something new? 1:08:15 Chuck makes a good point to not operate from a place of fear to get through tough decisions or a crisis. 1:12:00 Derick thinks that he does not have any kind of consistent and constant message that is driving traffic to his product. 1:15:00 Derick mentions that the beginner’s market changes quickly and keeping them as customers is always changing. Derick says he doesn’t want to stay with the beginner class. 1:21:00 Chuck talks about how Derick might want to think about creating some sort of free content as a lead magnet, for some of his material. Chuck thinks that Derick has a traffic problem instead of a content issue. 1:27:00 Derick says he needs tracking, because Hotjar was not working for him. 1:30:00 Chuck talks about how Derick could gain subscribers, first by building rapport and meeting in person. Chuck say its is not going to happen off the website, but only by in person meet and greets and relationship building. Thoughts for the Week Chuck - Don’t spend to long evaluating! There are lots of power in focus. Derick - Make sure you take care of yourself and your family first.
My thoughts on how we have to drive traffic in the very near future. On today's episode Russell talks about what platforms he is now putting content on and why he is doing it that way. He also mentions what he believes the future of the internet means. Here are some things to listen for in this episode: Why Russell thinks that Google will change the way you can put up content within a year. Why he thinks now is the time to change, rather than wait until you are forced to. And find out some of the things he's doing differently now, and how you can do it too. So listen below to find out how to change how you can get content online, and why it's a good idea to be there first. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone! This is Russell Brunson and I want to welcome you to Marketing in Your Car. Hey, everyone. I hope you have been having an amazing time. We've been pumping a lot of content and having fun with it. I hope you guys have been enjoying it. If you haven't seen it and you're like, “What are you talking about, Russell? All I know about is your podcast,” go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and you will start seeing all this stuff. We got Periscopes happening during the days. We got Marketing in Your Car in the morning. We got cool blog posts. We got a whole bunch of value we're giving out to the world because we want to change your life, your company, your business and help you touch more people. So that's kind of our game plan and we're having fun doing it. And today, I want to talk about, “Russell, why are you doing all this content? What is the point? What's the purpose? Why in the world are you doing this?” And I had a conversation with one of my friends last night. He was over wrestling in the wrestling room. So as you know, I just built my own wrestling room at my house. So we were wrestling. We're having a good time. And we've been talking about stuff afterwards. And he runs an Amazon business and he just got the Amazon slap. And I was kind of joking about the slaps that I had gone through since I got started 12 years ago. The initial Google slap crumbled almost everyone I knew. Then you got like 18 different SEO Google slaps, Facebook slaps, merchant account slaps. I've been through quite a few slaps in my day. So now when they happen, I'm just like, “Yeah, all right. What's the next thing?” So this year, like we were killing it with Facebook stuff and then boom! We got the Facebook slap. And we are still doing well with Facebook but it's not like it was pre January. So, it's just kind of those things that most people, it happens and they freak out and they run away because it's like the whole world is coming to an end. But for me, because I've been on the cycle enough times, it's kind of like sitting in the ocean, the waves go up and down and up and down and there's the ups and the downs and you're just going to ride the wave and not give up and keep your eyes open for like what's the next trend. What's the next thing happening? Where do we need to be focusing our time, energy, and all that kind of stuff? And I really think, and I've kind of mentioned this before but, I think that the future of marketing online is… and I hate saying this because my friend, Justin Brook has been telling me this years and I keep telling him, I just keep teasing him. But unfortunately, he is right. I look at what the advertising platforms want. That's what we're going to look at because we want to be leveraging their audiences and we look at what they want. Now what we want is we want to drive people to registration pages and opt-in pages and things like that, right? That's our goal. Their goal is not to allow us to do that. Their goal is to deliver an amazing experience to their audience. They want us paying to show their people amazing content, which is funny. Anyway, it's just kind of funny. So right now with Facebook, we've seen that. We've seen that with other networks like Google, like – and you see the kind of the more native advertising networks nowadays which are all like you're driving to content, to articles, and things like that. And I believe that within a year from now, not everywhere but for most places, it would be very, very difficult to drive directly to a registration page. I don't think that's going to be the model anymore. I think what the model would be is we have to find our voice. This comes back to everything I talked about in the DotComSecrets book, creating your attractive character, figuring out your voice, learning how to communicate with your audience, and putting those messages out there and finding kind of your style and then becoming a prolific content writer or if you're not a writer, it can be videos, it can be Periscope, it could be audio, it could podcasts. You do whatever you want. And I don't think that most people should do like 50 different platforms. I'm just doing a lot because I've got a big team so I'm able to do more than most people. But for most of you guys, like you should pick a platform and say, “I'm a video guy. I'm an audio guy.” Whatever you are, pick that thing and start producing consistent amazing content and then use that content as a tool to wrap people back to your core offer. So push people to your registration pages, you push people to your opt-in forms, your applications, whatever it may be because that's where they will allow you to buy ads. I believe that – my guess is that within a year from now, it will be next to impossible to get anything approved in Google unless it's you promoting a blog post. That's it. I think that's the future. And so knowing that now, man, like why in the world would I wait until that happens? Now is the time to jump on that. And so, that's why we're doing it. And so my goal on my side is I'm trying to do three blog posts a week and three podcasts and then a Periscope five days a week. And it has given me the ability to create stuff and touch people in different ways. But the cool thing is, not only am I just doing that to put it out there… like I'm adding content to the blog which is one thing, but now I've got the ability to take that content and promote it out through a lot of places. If you look at the way we structure our blog, when I do my blog posts I have this really cool sketches, similar to these sketches that were inside the DotComSecrets book. Now, I can leverage these sketches on Facebook, I can put them on Instagram, Twitter, all these things like that. Now, I'm finding each of the platforms like how they want to accept content and then I'm using the content I'm putting out there in that way, if that makes sense. I read about kind of this concept a little bit in Gary Vaynerchuk's book, I think it's Punch, Punch, Jab or Jab, Jab, Punch or I don't know, something like that. But he talked about looking at – what does Facebook want? What does Instagram want? What do all these different networks want? You got to figure out what they want and you got to tweak your content to match that and then put it out there. And then when the content is in that native platform and you're able to promote it and drive traffic and all those kinds of things and you get people to then raise their hand and click and listen and participate and then eventually come and push them to what you really want them to do. And so for me, I'm looking at – I think in the future is I will never be able to promote a webinar registration page. But I will promote amazing content which will drive people to opt in and then my entire opt-in sequence where we push people to the webinar registration. Like in my mind, that's the future. That's where everything is going. And so now, not tomorrow, not six months from now, now is the time to start that path. And we have started it. We're moving forward and that's where our focus, our energy, and our money and our time is going into. So, it's interesting. If you listen to some of the past podcasts, I talked about funnel stacking. If you look at my business, I've got my book funnel which then leads to my webinar funnel which leads to my high ticket funnel. I'm stacking multiple funnels together. But I look this content thing as like a pre-funnel. In fact, I have this little diagram, I'll probably have a blog post about it soon, but it looks like… I have my little value ladder but then it drops one step down from the value ladder and it's like one rung lower then where most people normally start, and that's the content site. That's putting those things out there to then get people in and then start sending them up through your value ladder. So, that's kind of cool. A good cast study of it is, yesterday I did a Periscope during the middle of the day… talking about the new coaching application funnel I just built out and how I'm kind of excited it was done and how we are giving away $25,000 to somebody for building out their breakeven funnel, and I kind of just talked about that… In Periscope, I clicked the button. I've never put it on a Periscope. I didn't even know how people find out about my thing. I think it's Twitter-based but I'm not positive. Yeah, probably. So anyway, so I had a hundred people show up on Periscope which was awesome. And then I started talking and I just showed the application form on my phone. Next thing we knew, we got about ten applications almost instantly, which for me we average about between $1,300 and $1,400 per application. So I just made $13,000 with me doing a really quick Periscope post. But then I took that video and we then put it on Facebook and then started promoting it. And then this morning, we got another around 10, 15, 20 applications from that and it was me promoting a Periscope, which then led back to my other offerings. So it was kind of interesting I think. And again, that's where we're going. So create cool content. Inside the content, you push people back to the front of your value ladders into the, whatever you want to call them, the welcome gates, entry gates, the step one into entering your world. And that's kind of how it works. So anyway, that's what I'm doing. That's what I think you guys should be doing. And hopefully, that will help give you guys a glimpse into what I believe the future is and where we're putting our time, our energy, and our money and our effort because I've been doing this rollercoaster ride for a long time and I think that's where the shift will be for the next two or three years. And so, I want to be there first and I want you guys to be there first as well. So that's what I got. Hope you guys had an amazing time. By the way, if you would like to be one of our – if you like to have the chance to win the $25,000 with our funnel build out contest, go to DotComSecretsIgnite.com. You can see a video of me talking about a breakeven funnel. I'll be talking about how we're going to be doing a 10-week program helping you build out a funnel. And the winner is going to win $25,000 cash prize. It's going to be awesome. So, that's it. Check it out. And I will talk to you guys all again tomorrow.
My thoughts on how we have to drive traffic in the very near future. On today’s episode Russell talks about what platforms he is now putting content on and why he is doing it that way. He also mentions what he believes the future of the internet means. Here are some things to listen for in this episode: Why Russell thinks that Google will change the way you can put up content within a year. Why he thinks now is the time to change, rather than wait until you are forced to. And find out some of the things he’s doing differently now, and how you can do it too. So listen below to find out how to change how you can get content online, and why it’s a good idea to be there first. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone! This is Russell Brunson and I want to welcome you to Marketing in Your Car. Hey, everyone. I hope you have been having an amazing time. We’ve been pumping a lot of content and having fun with it. I hope you guys have been enjoying it. If you haven’t seen it and you’re like, “What are you talking about, Russell? All I know about is your podcast,” go to blog.dotcomsecrets.com and you will start seeing all this stuff. We got Periscopes happening during the days. We got Marketing in Your Car in the morning. We got cool blog posts. We got a whole bunch of value we’re giving out to the world because we want to change your life, your company, your business and help you touch more people. So that’s kind of our game plan and we’re having fun doing it. And today, I want to talk about, “Russell, why are you doing all this content? What is the point? What’s the purpose? Why in the world are you doing this?” And I had a conversation with one of my friends last night. He was over wrestling in the wrestling room. So as you know, I just built my own wrestling room at my house. So we were wrestling. We’re having a good time. And we’ve been talking about stuff afterwards. And he runs an Amazon business and he just got the Amazon slap. And I was kind of joking about the slaps that I had gone through since I got started 12 years ago. The initial Google slap crumbled almost everyone I knew. Then you got like 18 different SEO Google slaps, Facebook slaps, merchant account slaps. I’ve been through quite a few slaps in my day. So now when they happen, I’m just like, “Yeah, all right. What’s the next thing?” So this year, like we were killing it with Facebook stuff and then boom! We got the Facebook slap. And we are still doing well with Facebook but it’s not like it was pre January. So, it’s just kind of those things that most people, it happens and they freak out and they run away because it’s like the whole world is coming to an end. But for me, because I’ve been on the cycle enough times, it’s kind of like sitting in the ocean, the waves go up and down and up and down and there’s the ups and the downs and you’re just going to ride the wave and not give up and keep your eyes open for like what’s the next trend. What’s the next thing happening? Where do we need to be focusing our time, energy, and all that kind of stuff? And I really think, and I’ve kind of mentioned this before but, I think that the future of marketing online is… and I hate saying this because my friend, Justin Brook has been telling me this years and I keep telling him, I just keep teasing him. But unfortunately, he is right. I look at what the advertising platforms want. That’s what we’re going to look at because we want to be leveraging their audiences and we look at what they want. Now what we want is we want to drive people to registration pages and opt-in pages and things like that, right? That’s our goal. Their goal is not to allow us to do that. Their goal is to deliver an amazing experience to their audience. They want us paying to show their people amazing content, which is funny. Anyway, it’s just kind of funny. So right now with Facebook, we’ve seen that. We’ve seen that with other networks like Google, like – and you see the kind of the more native advertising networks nowadays which are all like you’re driving to content, to articles, and things like that. And I believe that within a year from now, not everywhere but for most places, it would be very, very difficult to drive directly to a registration page. I don’t think that’s going to be the model anymore. I think what the model would be is we have to find our voice. This comes back to everything I talked about in the DotComSecrets book, creating your attractive character, figuring out your voice, learning how to communicate with your audience, and putting those messages out there and finding kind of your style and then becoming a prolific content writer or if you’re not a writer, it can be videos, it can be Periscope, it could be audio, it could podcasts. You do whatever you want. And I don’t think that most people should do like 50 different platforms. I’m just doing a lot because I’ve got a big team so I’m able to do more than most people. But for most of you guys, like you should pick a platform and say, “I’m a video guy. I’m an audio guy.” Whatever you are, pick that thing and start producing consistent amazing content and then use that content as a tool to wrap people back to your core offer. So push people to your registration pages, you push people to your opt-in forms, your applications, whatever it may be because that’s where they will allow you to buy ads. I believe that – my guess is that within a year from now, it will be next to impossible to get anything approved in Google unless it’s you promoting a blog post. That’s it. I think that’s the future. And so knowing that now, man, like why in the world would I wait until that happens? Now is the time to jump on that. And so, that’s why we’re doing it. And so my goal on my side is I’m trying to do three blog posts a week and three podcasts and then a Periscope five days a week. And it has given me the ability to create stuff and touch people in different ways. But the cool thing is, not only am I just doing that to put it out there… like I’m adding content to the blog which is one thing, but now I’ve got the ability to take that content and promote it out through a lot of places. If you look at the way we structure our blog, when I do my blog posts I have this really cool sketches, similar to these sketches that were inside the DotComSecrets book. Now, I can leverage these sketches on Facebook, I can put them on Instagram, Twitter, all these things like that. Now, I’m finding each of the platforms like how they want to accept content and then I’m using the content I’m putting out there in that way, if that makes sense. I read about kind of this concept a little bit in Gary Vaynerchuk’s book, I think it’s Punch, Punch, Jab or Jab, Jab, Punch or I don’t know, something like that. But he talked about looking at – what does Facebook want? What does Instagram want? What do all these different networks want? You got to figure out what they want and you got to tweak your content to match that and then put it out there. And then when the content is in that native platform and you’re able to promote it and drive traffic and all those kinds of things and you get people to then raise their hand and click and listen and participate and then eventually come and push them to what you really want them to do. And so for me, I’m looking at – I think in the future is I will never be able to promote a webinar registration page. But I will promote amazing content which will drive people to opt in and then my entire opt-in sequence where we push people to the webinar registration. Like in my mind, that’s the future. That’s where everything is going. And so now, not tomorrow, not six months from now, now is the time to start that path. And we have started it. We’re moving forward and that’s where our focus, our energy, and our money and our time is going into. So, it’s interesting. If you listen to some of the past podcasts, I talked about funnel stacking. If you look at my business, I’ve got my book funnel which then leads to my webinar funnel which leads to my high ticket funnel. I’m stacking multiple funnels together. But I look this content thing as like a pre-funnel. In fact, I have this little diagram, I’ll probably have a blog post about it soon, but it looks like… I have my little value ladder but then it drops one step down from the value ladder and it’s like one rung lower then where most people normally start, and that’s the content site. That’s putting those things out there to then get people in and then start sending them up through your value ladder. So, that’s kind of cool. A good cast study of it is, yesterday I did a Periscope during the middle of the day… talking about the new coaching application funnel I just built out and how I’m kind of excited it was done and how we are giving away $25,000 to somebody for building out their breakeven funnel, and I kind of just talked about that… In Periscope, I clicked the button. I’ve never put it on a Periscope. I didn’t even know how people find out about my thing. I think it’s Twitter-based but I’m not positive. Yeah, probably. So anyway, so I had a hundred people show up on Periscope which was awesome. And then I started talking and I just showed the application form on my phone. Next thing we knew, we got about ten applications almost instantly, which for me we average about between $1,300 and $1,400 per application. So I just made $13,000 with me doing a really quick Periscope post. But then I took that video and we then put it on Facebook and then started promoting it. And then this morning, we got another around 10, 15, 20 applications from that and it was me promoting a Periscope, which then led back to my other offerings. So it was kind of interesting I think. And again, that’s where we’re going. So create cool content. Inside the content, you push people back to the front of your value ladders into the, whatever you want to call them, the welcome gates, entry gates, the step one into entering your world. And that’s kind of how it works. So anyway, that’s what I’m doing. That’s what I think you guys should be doing. And hopefully, that will help give you guys a glimpse into what I believe the future is and where we’re putting our time, our energy, and our money and our effort because I’ve been doing this rollercoaster ride for a long time and I think that’s where the shift will be for the next two or three years. And so, I want to be there first and I want you guys to be there first as well. So that’s what I got. Hope you guys had an amazing time. By the way, if you would like to be one of our – if you like to have the chance to win the $25,000 with our funnel build out contest, go to DotComSecretsIgnite.com. You can see a video of me talking about a breakeven funnel. I’ll be talking about how we’re going to be doing a 10-week program helping you build out a funnel. And the winner is going to win $25,000 cash prize. It’s going to be awesome. So, that’s it. Check it out. And I will talk to you guys all again tomorrow.
One of the most powerful ways for you to learn about anything is to have the opportunity to ask a “nothing off limits” question from somebody who’s already doing what you are trying to do for the first time. That’s what this episode of The Amazing Seller is for - it’s an “Ask Scott” episode where you get to Ask Scott Voelker your own question about selling on Amazon, either through Retail Arbitrage, Wholesaling, or Private Label sales. In this episode you’ll hear questions about tax issues, private websites, and sending email to customers. Pull up a chair and get ready to learn as you hear from an experienced Amazon seller about the practical parts of building and running a successful FBA business. What percentage of sales profits should an Amazon seller set aside each month? That’s a very important question, and it’s one asked by a listener on today’s episode of “Ask Scott.” Naturally, there are variables to consider for each situation including your state of residence and personal tax bracket. But most importantly, you want to base your decision off professional advice from a qualified accountant or tax attorney. Having said that, Scott tells what he does, including how he reinvests profits into his Amazon business so he can get additional tax write offs. It’s practical stuff you won’t want to miss… and you’ll only hear it on this episode of The Amazing Seller. Should you set up a website for your Amazon products? Many Amazon sellers do set up a website for the products they sell on Amazon to give a greater sense of legitimacy to their business. But Scott’s not sure that the investment in a website is really all that important, especially as you first get your business rolling. He’d rather invest that time and money in things that will get his product more reviews and greater exposure in the Amazon system. Find out why he recommends that and how he goes about doing it on this episode of The Amazing Seller. Getting reviews on your products is vital. How can you do it most effectively? There are many 3rd party software programs that enable you to track your Amazon sales and solicit feedback from your customers. But is there a way to use those programs to solicit feedback on particular products rather than on your seller account in general? Yes, there is, and in this episode of “Ask Scott,” Scott Voelker walks you through how to do so in a couple of different software programs so that you can make the most out of those Amazon sales reviews and get your product ranking higher in the Amazon search algorithm. Every State in the U.S. has its own sales tax rate? How can Amazon sellers make sure they’re paying the tax that is due? Even experienced Amazon sellers will tell you that sales tax is one of the most confusing, frustrating parts of running a successful Amazon Business. A listener asks Scott a question about collecting and paying State sales tax in this episode, and as always, Scott gives practical, common sense advice about how to play by the rules when it comes to sales tax, and how to make sure you’re not taking those payments from your profits. Listen in to find out how you can ensure that your business is dealing with this important issue wisely. OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE AMAZING SELLER [0:05] Welcome to this “Ask Scott” episode! [0:47] Scott’s having fun on www.Persicope.tv - join him - @ScottVoelker - or recorded at www.TheAmazingSeller.com/scope [3:07] How you can ask Scott a question - www.TheAmazingSeller.com/ask [3:50] QUESTION #1: A tax question - what is the percentage you set aside for income tax each month? [11:12] QUESTION #2: What is the value of having a private website for my products? Do you have one? If so, when did you decide to make that part of your business? [16:30] QUESTION #3: Is there any way to filter out who gets emails through Feedback Genius so I can focus on particular products within my brand? [23:06] QUESTION #4: How do you go about collecting sales tax for the various states? [28:35] Figure out your inventory for the upcoming holiday rush! [30:35] Your invite to one of Scott’s live workshops. LINKS MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Scott’s recorded Periscopes - www.TheAmazingSeller.com/scope www.TaxJar.com - One of Scott’s recommended resources for dealing with sales tax. Scott’s free workshop - http://www.TheAmazingSeller.com/workshop
New Releases. A new “Need for Speed” has been teased. Capcom announces “Resident Evil 0 Remaster” for early 2016. “Until Dawn” gets a release date. PlayStation Experience E3 2015 back to theaters. What we’re playing and watching. Review of Ultra Street Fighter IV. Review of ‘Rouge’ Season 2. Review of the Thrustmaster VG T300 RS racing wheel. Emails. E3. Comedian is Patrice O’Neal. http://psnation.com 1:45 - Tetris Ultimate 15:14 - Need for Speed 18:20 - Resident Evil 0 Remaster 23:55 - Until Dawn 40:30 - Destiny 41:45 - Ori and the Blind Forest 42:44 - Ultratron 47:05 - Guns Up! 59:45 - Badland 1:03:46 - MLB 15 The Show 1:10:50 - Disney Infinity Break music from Tetris 2:11:17 - Ultra Street Fighter IV 2:16:40 - Crazy Climber Comedian is Patrice O’Neal
With all the Snapchats, Vines, and Periscopes cropping up, maybe it's time to attack some of these to see what works for you. Try Snapchat for a day and engage in it. Then another. Then another. One a day for a week. What do you find? Do you have a new favorite creation tool? MP3 Download Follow Basic Sorganomics on Youtube, Spreaker, iTunes, Stitcher or TalkShoe, or subscribe to the Sorgatron Media Master FeedonStitcher and iTunes.
An excerpt of unused material taken from Episode 11: Bouncing Baby Abomination, in which we design hammock tracks for apartments, sing the praises of periscopes, and reboot Gordie's Christmases. If you like our show, find us online to help spread the word! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, and Youtube. Support us on Patreon to help the show grow at www.patreon.com/wtfolklore. You can find merchandise and information about the show at www.wtfolklorepodcast.com.
This week: Apple Watch apps are hitting the store, we discuss some of the most popular ones; if you want an Apple Watch you’ll need to pre-order—we’ll tell you why and how. Plus: we love selfie sticks; Leander's special way of “bookmarking” webpages; and… Periscope! We’ll tell you all about it and why it’s way better than Meerkat. And stay tuned till the end for Sh*t We’re Into for the non-Apple stuff we’re all really loving so sweetly. Our thanks to FreshBooks for supporting this episode. Freshbooks is the easy-to-use invoicing software designed to help small business owners get organized, save time invoicing and get paid faster. And I can vouch for this from experience, it also makes tax time a cinch. Get started with a free trial at Freshbooks.com/cultcast, and please enter “CultCast” in the “How did you hear about us?” section! Aaaaaaand lynda. Are you an aspiring designer? lynda.com has 562 video courses on design, color, best practices, typography—and so much more to help you hone your craft and even build your own great brand. Get full access to Lynda’s entire library, and learn all you want with a free 10-day trial at lynda.com/cultcast We also want to give Kevin MacLeod at incompetech.com a huge thanks for all the great music you hear in today's show. This week’s links Come gawk at our incredible Periscopes @erfon / @bst3r / @alexeheath Apple is officially ready to accept your Watch app Read more at http://www.cultofmac.com/317676/apple-is-officially-ready-to-look-at-your-watch-app/#pbul8XjCTcmS3cqZ.99 A big ol’ list of Apple Watch apps hitting the store http://www.macrumors.com/2015/03/26/apple-watch-apps-app-store/ Apple Watch for Sale in Retail Stores by Reservation Only, No Walk-In Sales http://www.macrumors.com/2015/03/29/apple-watch-reservation-only/ iPad selfie sticks have officially become a thing Read more at http://www.cultofmac.com/317539/ipad-selfie-sticks-have-officially-become-a-thing/#bRhJFXOS0VRGvlvQ.99 Watch Aaron Draplin make an awesome logo right before your eyes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zOPA0NaeTBk Shite we’re into Leander likes this awesome Stromer ST2 electric bike http://www.stromerbike.com/en/us/e-bikes Alex thinks this Cm4 Q Card iPhone case is the hottness http://www.cm4.com/shop/p-29-iphone-6-plus-wallet-case-q-card-case-for-iphone-6-plus.aspx Buster is loving Sufjan Stevens' Carry and Loeol album and Wale’s The Album About Nothing featuring… Jerry Seinfeld https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-album-about-nothing/id972747051 Erfon keeps rewatching Interstellar on Bluray cause it’s one of the best SciFi movies of all time http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0816692/