Cole Gordon Podcast

We Spent $5M on Business Gurus, So You Don't Have To

• Cole Gordon • Episode 17

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00:00 $5M Spent on Courses
00:19 Honorable Mentions & Early Lessons
02:33 Copywriting Masters That Built Empires
09:46 Alex Hormozi’s Free Marketing Course
10:31 The Course That Changed Cole’s Life
18:19 Consulting Accelerator 2.0 Breakdown
22:43 Alex Becker’s Mastermind & The $100M Funnel
26:06 Why STA Made the Top 5
28:02 Traffic & Funnels & Sales Mastery
35:45 Sonora Guitar Accelerator & The Future of Learning
40:33 Alex Hormozi Mentorship & Scaling Lessons
49:29 The Agora Black Book Secrets
56:30 The #1 Most Impactful Investment

SPEAKER_02

So I'm here with Nick Fisher today, co-founder of New Reach. They do over $150 million a year. And so between us, we probably invested five million plus into coaches, gurus, courses, etc. And in this podcast, we're gonna get the top five that were most impactful for us in building our eight and nine figure businesses. So Nick, we should start with some honorable mentions.

SPEAKER_00

Dude, I'm super pumped for this. Yeah, we've spent way too much on courses, but in a good way, I think, over the years. Honorable mentions. There's a few that didn't crack my top five that were super impactful for me in my career because they just gave me like one thing or even a mindset shift. The first one I wrote down was the first course that I bought that was over a thousand dollars, which was Derek Halpern's Yes Engines.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, he was a he was a GOAT back in the day.

SPEAKER_00

He was the man.

SPEAKER_02

And he still is, I think, in the e-com space, which just literally it's my fiance's favorite protein powder.

SPEAKER_00

No way. Well, shout out to Derek Calpern.

SPEAKER_02

He actually was one of the few, because it's funny how few uh people from like back then it was info. I don't even really call it info anymore. It's more of like coaching and services. But he was one of the only few people who there's only been a few who actually can break out, you know, like Alex Becker's broken out, say about it. I mean, but he was an OG in terms of going into e-cobb and then I mean they're in retail now doing really well.

SPEAKER_00

You're right, dude. I think there is that perception. There's like a lot of people that say they're gonna get out of info. Man, this sucks. I'm gonna get out of it. You guys are. And then they come right back in. They come right back in.

SPEAKER_02

Come right back in about 18 months later. Yeah, Derek left for good. He's it's been 10 plus.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, 1k course, it might have been 2K. I just remember it was a stretch for me, and I felt like I might refund this. Like, what's his risk reversal at the time? And the thing that actually reassured me that I brought into my business to this day is Derek Halpern himself called me on the welcome call. Wow. And I thought it was, you know, how people are like, is this AI, is this a setter, like whatever else?

SPEAKER_01

It wasn't back then.

SPEAKER_00

It wasn't back then, and I just recently did that myself. I just called a few people that I've sold um in the past, and they said the same thing. And I had that like full circle moment. I'm like, this is me questioning if Derek Halfern is Derek Halfern. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

What's funny about that course too, just to make you feel better, is uh I I looked at that and I think I was too poor to even afford it. I was like 1k. I was like, I got like 300 bucks.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah, we were roughly at that same stage.

SPEAKER_01

Just finishing college. Right. Very poor. Yeah, no, a hundred percent. So what was yours? Let me so you just have one honorable mention. No, no, I have five. Oh my god.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, let's rapid fire through the honorable mentions. So mine I'm gonna give in one big group. Okay. All right. So my honorable mentions are all my copywriting teachers. Because for me, you know, I think um I was obviously really good at sales when I started my company, but the way I thought about it is like, okay, I'm really good at sales. There's a lot of other sales trainers who are really good at sales. I don't necessarily want to out compete these guys on sales, even though I still need to make sure my training and everything is good. I want to be the best marketer and the best business person out of all these people. And that's where I put my focus. And so part of what helped me be a good marketer was these copyrighted people. But that was kind of my blue ocean strategy, in a way, if you want to call it that, when I first started the company. So I'll give you what do I got? I got four. Okay. Okay, you're gonna know all of these. So obviously I gotta get the first. Give me a heck for giving five when you have four. Well, but I'm gonna give you I'm gonna I'm gonna rapid fire them all. I'll rapid fire my two. So one is Frank Kern. So obvious, you know. Yeah. You gotta give him the like mass conversion. But um I bought the thing that was like just buy every single thing I've ever had. Uh and the there's a few like trainings in there that I still use the language and the framework of like some of the stuff that he taught today. So, like the one I used, I still use today, is the here's what I got, here's what'll do for you, here's what to do next. It's just like the most simple direct offer copy of all time. You're right. And so when I first learned that was when I first started the recruiting offer and we started placing setters. And so I did a simple post on Facebook that was in that format for setters. It was like, read if you need setters. Like, here's what it is, here's the benefits, DM me. That was like it. That posted like 171k. It was the first time I ever sold any sales recruiting. About 171,000 from that one post. So Frank Kern, obviously you gotta throw Jason Flagellin in there, he's the webinar goat. Uh he's like just probably the best one-to-many sales. I almost view him more as a salesperson, but he's a little bit I mean, it's both. And uh he's like one of the best one-to-many guys, insane objections. John Benson in his VSL course. So he's the only person, you know, you hear about big ideas. I think he created P90X. I'm not sure, but it was he's created something like that. I might it might not be P90X, it might have been something else. But um he's created one of those things that's like you you would know what it is. But he has have you seen his big idea map?

SPEAKER_00

No, the only thing I bought from Benson is like three accelerator or something like that. It was a long time. I don't know.

SPEAKER_02

I I did I just did the thing with him too. I just bought all the things.

SPEAKER_00

That's smart. I need to start doing that.

SPEAKER_02

He has the only process I've ever seen for like creating big ideas that's like a mechanical type of process. So he was good. Then the last, and I think this is the best teacher of direct response marketing period is Todd Brown. Oh because his uh I think it's called E5. E5. It just goes over like, you know, how to create a marketing thesis, how to create a central marketing argument, and then how to create the sub-beliefs of those arguments, and then the claims and the proof of that argument, and then how to actually really uh put that into marketing and sales um assets, right? So I kind of grouped them all into my honorable mentions.

SPEAKER_00

Well, can I ask a question on those? Because the first time we worked together, it was like in the very early days of STA. I've never had anyone do this because you're right. You were the most copy savvy sales trainer I've ever met in my life.

SPEAKER_02

Well, and I sent you a document that basically I called it the copy platform. Yeah. And it was essentially like the argument, the thesis, the sub-belief, the belief ladder to get it. Yeah, and the empathy map, like the what they think about. Uh-huh. Yeah, it was the um what I do is I I forget what it's called, but it's it's not empathy map, but it's like a visceral pain point thing. So it's uh, you know, when you describe their pain points or their dreams, hopes, and desires or whatever, uh you want to relate it to what do they see, hear, feel, touch, etc. So like a classic one, if you're selling like lead generation, what do they see in terms of a pain point? They see an empty calendar, right? What do they feel? They feel instability of not knowing where the next dollar is gonna come from. But like, that's why like one of the ads that, you know, I don't know if this ad still runs, but it worked for me for a long time, is I would point to like an empty calendar. I'd be like, Does your calendar look like this? And do you want it to look like this? Like a lot of people have done that one. But it's like that's that's coming from that C.

SPEAKER_00

So you're using visual hooks off what do they see? Yeah, and what do you hear?

SPEAKER_02

So, like what you might hear is is you only get unqualified prospects that say, I don't have the money for this, right? But like when you brainstorm all of that stuff, you will like and and and that's why going through that copy platform process, you will come out of that with a hundred ad ideas. Yeah, it's just like it'll flow so well. And now AI can actually help you with it a lot. But that's why when you have that, it makes you're never really starting an ad from a blank page. Like you're start like you the the ad starts in this like ideation process, and you know, if you want to like if I wanted to make a bunch of ads, what I really should do is just go through and fill that out from scratch, even from my existing offer. Because like just by the nature of doing it, you're like, dude, I should have an ad like this, I should have an ad like this, etc.

SPEAKER_00

So how do you pull those out? Because a lot of them you could pull from transcript, from like sales call transcripts. Well, there's that.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Right?

SPEAKER_02

Uh well, I mean, honestly, AI can give you good stuff. Okay. There's the transcripts of sales calls. You can look at competitor testimonials or your own testimonials. Um, some of it you can just use common sense. Yeah. Like if they don't have leads, their calendar is empty. Like I just know them, right? Yeah. Um so there's other things. Like, what else? Uh, you know, there's a lot of other things you could probably put in there. But it's oh, it's called dimensionalized pain points, is what I call it.

SPEAKER_00

Dimensionalized pain points.

SPEAKER_02

That's one of the most uh helpful things you can do. It's one of the most powerful things I think. Because the best way to start an ad is you want to try to start it if possible. Like, you know, I don't necessarily follow this because I do a lot of offer guarantee ads, but you know, the best way the best way to start it is if you could call out a pain point that you can touch you like you could finger touch, right? So like a lot of people, they're like, Do you not have leads? Well, that's like an abstract concept. Abstract. So that's taking the vague. If I make that specific, yeah, then what happens is specific and tangible and concrete language is does your calendar look like this?

SPEAKER_00

You see how there's a difference there? I see. It's it's very powerful. Back to the honorable mentions.

SPEAKER_02

We need to finish these up.

SPEAKER_00

All right, sweet. My honorable mentions, all group, I'll just speedrun it real fast. Nathan Lacka, he had some sort of giveaway course, taught me just promotion, and honestly, from how he moved, I learned a lot. Lewis Howes had a live webinar course, which he taught by doing live webinars every day, and that just taught me grit and like discipline of like if you want something, you should just do it every day.

SPEAKER_02

Old school Lewis Howes.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I just remember like really I remember joining multiple times to see if he was actually doing an auto-levey or like live. He was actually live. Yeah. Uh John Loomer, advanced Facebook ads. He taught me kind of like the basics and the guardrails. 100%. Yeah, shout out to John Loomer, Frank Kern, and Ryan Dice, and a few of those OG Facebook targeting options. And then um the perfect webinar by Brunson, I think it was part of a bigger course that he probably did, but that one hour live training on the perfect webinar is like textbook marketing like fundamentals of how you actually run a webinar. It's good.

SPEAKER_02

All right, then you go, let's go into your number five.

SPEAKER_00

All right. My number five, and I put people through this um invariants of this as soon as they start for me in New Reach is Alex Hormozi's free course on acquisition.com. I want to say it's the lead generation course. It's the one that starts with more better new. And it's such an important concept. The lead gen course. And it's such an important concept to me because a lot of times, people, especially in marketing, they come to me and they're like, Oh, I got this new ad idea for pace, and it's day one. I'm like, oh, I'm sure you do. You got a great ad. So like I take them through this process in any beginner. I started there because A, it's free, and it just builds the fundamentals that you need in marketing. You gotta do more before you can refine or do better ads, and you gotta do better ads before you start thinking of new concepts altogether.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I agree. Uh, so that's your number five. That's my number five. My number five. Have you ever heard of cat how?

SPEAKER_00

No.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Whoa. So I gotta get I gotta set the stage here. So basically, when I first started my business, you know, long story short, I was bartanging in college, I started a nutrition blog, and then eventually that kind of over time, maybe like a year, 14 months, 15 months, morphed into a Facebook ads agency. And then when I did the Facebook ads agency, I basically went another full year of just sending 50 cold emails a day with no response. And I that sucks. By the way, as an aside, I now know from back then what had happened was the first day I sent those cold emails, I got myself so pumped up. You know, I'm like post-out of college, right? So I pulled an all-nighter, I sent 400 emails off of my domain. So, like, you know what I did. I blacklisted the domain. Yeah, yeah. The first thing I got a bunch of responses. Yeah, you gotta win. And then after that, I sent 50 a day religious like discipline, 50 a day, nothing. And I did that, I'm not kidding you. I did that for a year. Bro, I love that about it. I was so like, that's so I took a program, I pulled email, this is what you're doing. You're supposed to get this client, you're supposed to send this, and it was like the the program really hammered you too. It was like, don't quit, don't deviate from the process, like volume, whatever. And so I'm like, I'm I'm gonna make the most out of this fucking investment. And so I'm like, 50 emails a day, customized written email for a year. And it morphed to the point where I was like, I gotta make the offer better. So I was like trying to ask people to work for free, and I was getting nothing. And I now know, like I was able to, I didn't know this until like four or five years later when I started doing cold email at scale for my company, and I was like, oh, that's why that didn't work five years ago. Yeah, I blacklisted my domain the first day, and then I spent 11 months and 29 days basically just in the dirt.

SPEAKER_00

You're probably the only example where quantity didn't win.

SPEAKER_02

No, more did not win. That was when I needed to do. I think that's I needed to shift to better. You should better. But anyways, so I'm like in the quality of L 12-month grind, and I'm like, fuck it, like this is you know, what am I gonna what is what is wrong? Like, why is this not working? And so I see an ad, and it's like, grow your Facebook ads agency, yada yada yada, and it's Cahow's ad. And so I was like, okay, I'm gonna click this ad. Because back that was the first ad I saw that was like a specific uh I mean, this is how long ago this is. I mean, this ended up being such a popular offer, right? But it was the first ad I saw that was like how to grow your Facebook ads agency. So I'm like, click. You know, I'm like, this is not what I'm trying to do. What I'm doing is not working. And so I I book this call, I get on a sales call, and the sales the sales guy's really good, he's super nice. He's it's it's um he pitches me four grand, which at that point was like you know, half of my net worth. And so I was like, holy shit. I still bought anyways, and then I get on um in the program and I remember like I'm kind of going through the modules, I'm like doing my thing, I attended a group call, then I attend the second group call, and she's like basically the the client journey in that program was you were supposed to like launch a funnel with ads to get clients, and you know, so I was doing cold email, so that appealed to me, but I was kind of dragging ass. I get on the second group call and she yells at me. And I was like, oh shit. So then I'm like, by uh by the next thing I had my freaking funnel launched, and um what ended up happening was uh dude back then I was getting like fifty dollar calls for agency leads. I mean, in Heinze, all these leads were unqualified, but that didn't keep me from pitching that. So I ended up doing like I think it was 60 grand total of the course of like 10 weeks. Um I know I did 32 or 31 grand in a month, but the problem was, anyways, the problem was I I I was so new and so green, and I was getting business like so fast, I outsourced a lot of the business to contractors, and I spent more on the contractors because like they would have to fire them and hire a new person, and then they wouldn't get results. I spent more in the contractors than I actually like made in revenue, so I ended up losing all my money. But that wasn't her fault, like it was a it was a good program. But here's here's the interesting thing about this, is that and this is the reason it's my top five is when I came in that program, that sales guy who sold me, we just got in a conversation and he was like, Yeah, I'm making like 30,000 a month. And I was like, you know, to me, I was making a dude, I was bartending in uh Appalachian, Ohio, okay? So I was making two grand a month. So thirty grand a month, you know, you you might as well told me you're making a million a month at that at that point in my life. And so I thought, like, I see it into the back of my head, I was like, if this doesn't work out, I'm gonna do this sales thing. I take a sales route. And then also then what happened was the only thing I sucked at funnels. That's why I I contracted it out. I really wasn't that good at ads. And like this program, because she was like a uh divorced lady in her 30s. So all the people in the program naturally are divorced ladies in their 30s. And so I'm like this young 23-year-old dude who's like living in a shack.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, this is funny. I think I was in her free group, actually.

SPEAKER_02

You probably have a free group? Yeah, yeah. So I'm like living in a shack, my my computer screen barely even works. And I don't know how to run ads, I don't know how to do funnels, I'm just like whatever. But I'm making freaking sales. And so the thing was, is I I think because they were like, how's this fucking kid? Like some I was beating like some of these people who are way better than I was. And they were just like, Oh, you know, he's just so good at sales. And so when I heard that, I was like, Oh, like I'm good at sales. And so then I kind of identified with okay, I'm good at sales. Like I grabbed onto that because like when you suck at everything, the first thing you kind of do is you're trying to figure out like what am I good at? Who am I in this like new career world I'm in? So like I latched on to that as an identity. Realistically, I wasn't that good, but I latched on to that, and then that's kind of also fed into that. Okay, if this doesn't work out, I'm gonna get into sales. So when I lost all my money, that's what I got into sales. So the reason that was so important to me, and it's number five, is not necessarily because I made a bajillion dollars. I mean, I actually lost all my money, which wasn't again her not her fault at all. But that sort of what I did after that is I was like, okay, I'm getting in the sales, and then I got my first sales job right after that.

SPEAKER_00

Dude, I would challenge the idea that you probably weren't that good at sales too, because if you ran like 60 grand, dude I suck. Well, what was your redeeming quality? Did you follow script to a T or did you do volume? Volume.

SPEAKER_02

So like I would take 10 calls a day, and dude, my close rate was like four percent. Cool. You know, so but when I applied to the sales job, I just didn't tell them that. I was like, oh yeah, in 10 weeks, I just like ripped, you know, 62 gram. I'm the shit. No, my my sales, my my close rate was literally four or five percent. And I was just burning leads, dude. Like, and I sucked. I sucked so bad, actually. But I thought I was good, which is what matters. That is what matters. Some belish self-belief and convention. You want to move on to number four? Let's do it. If you're enjoying this conversation and you want to be in a room of people who are just like the people I have on this podcast, so you can ultimately network with the highest level people in the industry and up-level your business, you should fly out to meet us in Scotland at the end of July. So this is a one-time opportunity where you can get a ticket to actually be able to come if you qualify to network and get content and ultimately work with me and my team and so many other high-level speakers in the industry in Scotland at the end of July. So you have to be doing at least $100,000 a month in your business to qualify. If not, don't bother with it. But if that's you and you're trying to scale to $10 million or even 20 million or $100 million a year, there's other people in the room who have done that. And the speakers I'm gonna have in Scotland have done that too. So check out the link in the description and see if you qualify. And if you do, book a call with my team. We'll talk about the ticket price to be able to come. This is the only time you're gonna be able to do this, so take advantage of it. Now, back to the podcast.

SPEAKER_00

Dude, number four, this is the only one. I tried not to do ones that I had direct involvement in for, but it's Consulting Accelerator 2.0.

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

And it's maybe not for the reason that some people think. Like I worked on that course, I didn't end up buying it, so I was comped it, let's call it. But I've probably been through it six times just because of how much work I had to put into it. Um, rewrote it, did transcripts of it, made the workbooks, the whole gamut if you guys know that era. And it teaches people how to get clients.

SPEAKER_02

Right.

SPEAKER_00

It never did that for me, but what it really taught me was how to make a great course, which was super impactful. So, anyone watching this and like growth operating too, is the story goes when I got there to work with Sam Evans, I was on a base plus a Rev share. The first day I audited our addicts account, and I told him it was shit, basically, or like we can do a lot better than this. Um, and at the time he was just samovins.com. And he was like, Okay, we're gonna shut it down then and work on um a new product, and it ended up being accelerator. Oh wow, yeah. And I didn't know how it was a 2K webinar. It was a 2K webinar, but we were nine months from that point at that point, and he was like, We're just gonna shut it down and make no money. And I was like, bro, I kind of like took less salary than I had before to come out here thinking the Rev share was gonna kick in. So for three months, we made zero money, and I was sitting there in New York in an apartment that Sam told me to live in in midtown, uh, just burning through cash. So I was like, this has to work. But it taught me uh the lesson that I got out of it was the discipline to work on a product every day. So like Sam had outlined and done all the curriculum, and then I was doing all of the customer calls and testimonial reviews. If you remember, we watched- If you remember that, yes. And that's like the lesson I learned out is if you can really, if you can afford to put yourself in a point where you can shut off, or not at least you don't have to shut it off. We just didn't have a team, it was me and Sam at the time. So it was either like you know, he knew ads would be a distraction, he's a big preacher of focus. So I just did, he made me do over 800 customer interviews and get those like first testimonials, and then Nick Hauser and a bunch of people took it from there, and we had 3,000 to launch. But I just remember being like, holy crap, if I have to do another user interview, I'm going to call so a couple things.

SPEAKER_02

Uh so give people a little context. So you Sam was doing up level, and he was probably doing, you know.

SPEAKER_00

He was actually doing something called consulting blueprint at the time, if you remember at that time. It was up level 1.0, but he wasn't even selling that anymore.

SPEAKER_02

But it was like a high-ticket 5k thing, right? It was a high ticket 5. He was doing that, uh-huh, and he was probably doing like 400 to 800 grand a month or something like that. He was. And then you came on, okay, you guys shut it all down. Then you launched the 2K auto webinar. 2K auto. Right? Which that's what scaled him to like at the time it was like 30 million-ish a year, which at that stage in our industry was like, you know, 100 million a year. It was like 100 million today. Nobody was doing that.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it was like publishing.com, like today.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and when you first launched it, it was just ads or uh it was just ads, or was the JV the initial launch?

SPEAKER_00

Did I have to show you?

SPEAKER_02

The J V was the initial launch.

SPEAKER_00

I've never shown you the full pre-launch war map. I'll send it to you. Not not for this uh this room to see, but it was ads, JV.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

One and two. And he had come off a year 2016 when we met where he had Ty Lopez, he had met Ty Lopez and Sean Bossard hooked them up and he had printed money in JV space, so he knew how to do that and he had that relationship. I didn't grease that at all. I just came in from like the ads, and I was like, whatever we're doing in J V, I was like, I can definitely double.

SPEAKER_02

What happened was the J V went nuclear, but then as that audience started fatigue, you had to place replace it with ads. Correct. Yeah, okay. Yep. So and then and then just to help the audience understand, because I know what you're talking about, I still think today. That 2.0 course is the best course. I mean, it's not really as relevant the tactically as it is today. Yeah. But for its time, I do think it is the best course that has ever been made. Thank you. I think it is the best course that has ever been made because of how like he does such a good job of it's all like the high-level concepts, but then it chunks down to the littlest detail and catches all of the limiting beliefs, etc. And then it chunks back up. And every every single module course, every anything I have ever made, I always try to like think about that framework of when I took that course. Ooh. Yeah. So, anyways, let's move on to number my number four. That's cool. So uh Alex Becker's SAS mastermind. Oh, I was never in that one. So have you ever done an Alex Becker? You've probably done uh Iron. Yeah. Okay. Have you never done anything else? No. So, okay. So what's funny about this is I didn't even have a SAS. But when he launched it, it was 30k. I was like, I don't I just like you know, and Hyros was like exploding. It was like, you know, the the big thing in the industry at the time. Like, I'm just fucking going. I don't care. I'm just gonna say I'm gonna start a SAS. And so I go, I did ROI actually, just from the networking, because I got a lot of clients for the salespeople. And you know, a lot of the SaaS stuff was just kind of like way over my head. But the cool part about that, number one, is that is it yeah, yeah. I mean, I just was like, this is not really relevant to me right now, but I just sat there. Because the thing is, if you've never done like an in-person Becker event, and Spencer, who's my CMO, he's done multiple, so he said this is like always how it is, is it's not like you get there and there's coffee and tea, and there's a breakfast, and then there's like an intro, like applause. He just like doesn't say anything, gets up there, and then he opens up his laptop and just runs through a Google Doc for eight hours straight, just fire hosing information. Like, I mean, you almost like he was like, Hey guys, all right, we're just gonna go through this. And we were all sitting in air Airbnb, and we're just like, fuck. You know, just like fire hosing information. You know, no breaks, no nothing. You know, it just was that's all it was. Shout out to it. And apparently that's just like how he how he does it. So I actually uh it I enjoyed it. I mean, I just want the information, so I enjoyed it. But here's the deal. So at the very end, he was doing how to do marketing for SaaS. And he was breaking down uh what I call now today like the direct VSL funnel. And he was breaking down essentially like his funnel that was like this, you know, what was it, like this hard drive or whatever will decrease your uh cost per book call and increase your ROAS and do X, Y, and Z, or you don't pay for it. And then he would hammer you with the social proof, so it was offer guarantee, hammer with the social proof, uh-huh, and then it was a C CTA, and then it was like, So if that's all you need to hear, go ahead and book. But if you want to know more about why this works so well, keep watching and I'll tell you why. And then he would go into essentially like a demo of the product, so to speak, of like kind of a little bit more detail of why it worked to essentially sell more higher information buyers. And I saw that, and he had actually said that you know he evolved that from Hormosy's gym launch funnel. That's what he said. And so they were really the only two kind of doing it at the time. Uh Joel Irway also with his power offer thing, he was doing it, and and he hit what his system was really good as well. Yeah, and I I thought about it, and I'm like, so I'm thinking about like Joel's stuff, and I was thinking about what he did, and I'm like, I had like a done for you recruiting offer, like this has gotta work for my business. Because at that time, I was just doing like 500 grand a month off referrals and organic. Yeah, right? So I went back and wrote that funnel, and that funnel has produced, I think, alone, it's had to have been over a hundred million. You know, because that's been the main funnel for my B2B side of the company for years. It's it's had to have done at least over a hundred, it might be like 120. I don't know.

SPEAKER_00

It still runs. That makes so much sense. Yeah. You Becker and Homozy and Joel all come from that. You have such strong direct leads.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. I mean, it worked. So it works. That's my number four. Number three.

SPEAKER_00

Number three for me is Cole didn't pay me to say this, is STA.

SPEAKER_02

And the reason glaze me up right now. I will glaze you up.

SPEAKER_00

Glaze me up. I will glaze you up. You guys should click the link below. I'm gonna include it in my description. And if Cole doesn't, but STA, so uh going back like let's call it four years ago, it was about 2021 or 2022. Um we had kind of maxed what I would call like the relative scale of the VSL call funnel inbound, one call direct close that I was kind of getting known for at the time. And we had all these leads. In fact, like I want to say the first time I looked, it was like over 60,000 leads that we had a phone number that hadn't been called. And around this time, call starting to blow up, and he's made modifications, refinements, and a bunch of other things. I was like, okay, maybe the game has changed here. There needs to be does there need to be a set close model? And I remember I was like, I was against it at first. I was like, no, you don't need to do that. It's just like delaying the sales motion. We want to liquidate cash faster. And then I don't know what caused me to look into it, do one more time, and I was like, okay, maybe it was a conversation we had, and you told me your average, like basically time to liquidate ad spent, and it was less than mine, and I'm pretty fast, and I remember being like, maybe SetClothes is actually better and faster. So that was the aha, and then I ended up buying it for our sales managers. Chad went through it first. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then I made everyone, so like our whole sales team, they still train on it to this day. Someone asked me for the login last month.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, nice.

SPEAKER_00

Joel on our team. So legitimately, um STA like I don't know how much improvements and refinements you've made over the years since then, but it's still relevant to our team to this day. Yeah, they train on it.

SPEAKER_02

I've done multiple versions, but I appre I appreciate it. Yeah, we'll leave it at that. We'll we'll we'll leave the link in the link in the description. It'll link in my description. Alright, I'm gonna give you number three. And so this is my I cheated on this one a little bit because it's not something I invested in, but they were technically a coach, but I was working for them, which was TNF and particularly Taylor Welch, because he was my manager when I was a salesperson at uh at uh Traffic and Funnels. And so that was by far my life, the most transformative year in terms of personal development in my life. And so there's a couple reasons why. And the first thing is is I was able to work, and you probably had this a lot with Sam, is I was able to work in person in an office with a company that went from at the time. I started, they were kind of rebuilding, they they had kind of peaked and then they went back down. They were like three, four hundred grand a month, and I got to be all the way up to a million to a million five a month, which again, you know, now that's like great, you you did a good job. Back then it was like we did that, and it was like Sam, that was it. It was like just us two in the industry that were the only ones to do that. So I was able to see how we scaled through that journey, and because we were in an office, and I just am naturally you know a pretty social person, like I would talk to Ashton Shanks, who was the CMO, and I'd be like, Oh, you know, how do you do this? How do you set the budgets? Oh, you gotta spend you know 400 grand this. Well, we would spend probably more because we would do a liquidating funnel. So, like, he'd be like, Yeah, we're spending like 600 grand. I'd be like, Okay, like how does that work? How are we doing that? How are you doing the budgets? So I I would learn so much about how the marketing department worked and how they would have you know copywriters and media buyers and this and that, and people on low ticket and people on the email and all this stuff. And I also learned, like, okay, here's the ops people, here's what they do, here's HR, here's what they do. Um, obviously, you know, our sales team scaled and all that stuff. That's where really also um I don't want to say we invented it because clearly calling your leads has been around for a long time. You gotta realize in our industry at that moment, there was you know, high ticket was more of a thing where it's like, oh, you know, it's all about you reaching out to me and you booking a call with me and me being the authority. Why should we work with you? Yeah, it's like, and that was really pioneered by Kevin Nations. Kevin Nations, yeah, which is Frank Earns. And he's a legend, right? He's a beast. Uh, but at the time, like the idea of calling your leads was like beta in a way. And I remember Taylor being like, you know, dude, every business calls our leads, we need to call our leads, and he's like, I want you to figure it out. So, like one day, I literally this is when I first started at the company. I I had like never done outbound, you know. I had I had done high ticket before, I had several other sales positions, but like all we did was inbound. And if we did outbound, we just like followed up, you know. Right. And so I remember sitting down with the woofful, what was it called? The straight line selling book, and I'm like, there's gotta be something in here, you know. I can I was like, I don't even know what to say to these people. And do you remember the memos? No, like there was a newsletter that he sent out every month. He had this 79 uh Taylors. It was $79 a month. Yeah, I do remember Taylor's name. So we had all these like we had 1200 memo buyers. So I just pull up that list in the CRM and I'm just like, I'm gonna just call these people. And you know, newsletter people who read a print newsletter are probably the warmest leads of all time. So like I'm calling these people, and it's so easy. And I just kind of create the script on the fly, calling them, and like my first set of a hundred calls, I got several sets and like got several closes out of it. And then I refine that over time, and then eventually helped train the entire setter team that we had at TF with that scripting, and then we shifted from webinar to low ticket, and then obviously everything was setter driven. And that was we were really the first company at that time who was doing any. I mean, no, no company was setter-driven. I mean, there might be like maybe some old school heavy direct response companies or something like that. Like, I'm not saying we created it by any means, but the online uh Russ Rafino, Sam Evans, uh Scaldalford at the time, us, like we nobody else was doing it. So obviously, I learned all of that kind of on the fly. A lot of it I kind of just like figured out just because he told me I should figure it out. I was like, all right, I'm just gonna sit down and call a bunch of leads. So there was that. Um, the other thing, and you probably got this at consulting as well, is what was so transformative about that experience is I got to see, because we were a coaching company for companies in the industry, right? So I got to see like all these clients come in and then like you you pick up a pattern recognition. So you're like, okay, the clients who hit 500 grand a month to a million a month, they do you they usually have this type of offer, they usually have this type of funnel. They're all pretty good at sales, they run good sales, like you just pick up like these basics and pattern recognition, and so that combined with knowing how to run, like seeing how an eight-figure company operated, and then also being good at sales, was part of the reason like when I went to start my own company, I basically did 70, like I launched the company and then did 71k in 48 hours. Yeah, is because like I had those skills that I learned sort of from um Osmosis. And so there was that, and then I would say the other two things is like the standards of that company and the culture was so intense and so high that like I had a lot of sales mechanics coming in, and a lot of people asked me, like, what did Taylor teach you about sales? And he, you know, I learned some stuff about sales from him, no doubt. But it we really didn't train on sales a lot, like he didn't review my calls a lot. What it was was like a massive demand of performance and a super high standard, and we would just have to like figure it the fuck out. So like I was investing in sales trainers and coaching and this and that. I was reviewing my calls, and I just had this so such a tight feedback loop to where I got so good just under that culture. Like I got good because of the culture, not necessarily because of the training, but still that's like really important. And so I grew a lot that way, and then you know, I you know, me and Taylor have made up since, but when we left, yeah, I remember when you didn't have the best uh departure, and so uh, you know, he even told me at the time, and like you know, I I love Taylor now and everything, but he told me at the time he was like, You're never gonna make more money than you make here, right? And I was like, fuck you, and so I swear, from like zero to like probably beyond a million a month. I mean, I was like determined to just prove him wrong, and I'm kind of glad he did it because it gave me a lot of like dark energy fuel, you know? And so that's my number three, number two for you.

SPEAKER_00

That's so funny. I had a similar experience with uh Cody Sperber, though. Like that culture he's gonna be.

SPEAKER_02

A lot of people have had that experience like that.

SPEAKER_00

Uh-huh. 100%. I agree. And I love Taylor. I need to check out his new podcast. Have you listened to it? Dude, he's ripping right now. I need to listen to him.

SPEAKER_02

He gets like 400 to 600,000 views a video. It's some sort of Christian niche. I don't really understand that. It's not my um particularly like uh, yeah, I just don't consume that level of content. But I I don't even know what his monetization is, but if you're getting four to 100 to 600,000 views of video, he's figured it out. There's somewhere up there. I mean, it's a lot, like multiple hundreds of thousands. I'm sure you're making money somehow. Yeah. So good for him. 100%. Hey, if the way you sell your product or service is through phone sales, you need to stop using booking systems like OneSub Cowley, iClose, and other booking systems that aren't designed specifically for a phone sales approach or a phone sales team. So we at SalesCick just launched a new calendar and booking system that'll decrease your cost per book call because it's conversion rate optimized specifically for call funnels, whereas most other calendar systems are meant for corporate all-purpose booking and it'll increase your show rate. So we've had clients see 30 to 100% increases in their show rate because our calendar system is specifically designed for call funnels and other funnels that are high volume sales call booking funnels. And the software does so much more. It's really the only product designed specifically for sales teams with inbound booking systems. So if you're interested, go to saleskick.com, check it out. Now back to the video.

SPEAKER_00

Number two. This one I thought about for a while. And this one is for people who specifically have a course and are thinking about the future of operations. I'm like, which one has inspired me in looking forward of how education is going to be consumed, with especially with AI being so prevalent. And it is Spencer Hanley's Sonora Guitar Accelerator. And you guys, like, it's it's it's the deepest cut I have for you guys. And if you don't want to play guitar, I would still recommend going through it because for the operations. For the operations of operations genius. Because the dude's mind is so He's an operational genius. Yeah, he was the first dev at Patreon. So he has experience in like coding LMS. And his LMS was the first one that I ever went into that wasn't just a Kajabi go high-level like click funnels back end. The thing was custom built, and because it's a practice skill, if any of you guys sell a practice skill where you need to continue the practice in order to maintain the skill, which is like guitar, imagine going through his course and it has an algorithmic LMS backend where instead of just going through a linear course process, it's like, oh, you did you play the guitar at like 80 beats per minute. Now we want you to do it at 100, the same structure, just go faster. And then so it's unlocking or thinking, like thinking through of how you actually get good at a skill. Um, and I told him eventually it'd be super cool if you like put the camera on, it analyzed, like, think of where AI could go, and you could just it could just be a life like teacher with you in real time. Um, for linear-based outcome courses where you're getting the knowledge and then just going practicing it, it doesn't really change much, not so relevant, but about half the people are in the industry are teaching a practice skill. Yeah so that was a huge unlock for me, and I haven't done it to the effect that he has, but I've thought about that concept in other courses where people get rusty. In certain courses, I'm like, okay, instead of having them watch a new video, have them do this thing again, have them just re-watch the same video in a slight variation. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

So you know I'm his ideal market because I told him I was like, yeah, you know, I can play pentatonic scales, I can like play pretty much anything you hear on the radio, unless it's like some crazy John Mayer solo or something like that. But you know, what I can't do is I can't like listen to something and then kind of know what key it's in, and then riff like a solo or whatever to the key. And I can't pick up and like just jam with somebody. Or I can't like if somebody lays on a drum beat, I can like do something with guitar. Like I can't do that. I'm like, I gotta do the tabs and listen to it on the radio and then like figure it out. But I can like like my coordination is decent, right? But I don't have that like ear and that and he was like, Yeah, dude, you like you're literally. That's the intro of every single discovery call that we have as a sales call. And so I was like, it's then he tried to sell me, and I was like, ah, and and honestly, you might make me buy because I would go through it and and relearn like a lot of the guitar stuff I've dropped off. And it sounds like it would help me with, you know, even like fulfillment stuff too. But I'll tell you this. So, Spencer Hanley, uh, who was a client of mine, and it might even still be in our mastermind, I'm not sure, but you know, he was he's been in our stuff, you know, for years and yeah. But he's a great guy. Uh huh. Um he is one of the most it's a great example of an extremely advanced operator, in my opinion, and like not the best opportunity vehicle, probably. Yeah. Which he still got to probably think 10 million a year is. I hadn't I didn't think he would. And and you know, he had to really squeeze everything out of that business he could to probably get it there. Now, that doesn't mean necessarily that I think he should do something else, because I know also he likes guitar, he likes to travel, he likes to like go to South America and like learn this crazy type of guitar and jam with these random people. So maybe it's a business that, you know, I mean, dude, if you could make a lot of money, which he's certainly making, and also do, you know, everything that you love and lifestyle and all that stuff, I mean, that's probably better than just making a lot of money. So I'm not saying it should change. But like if he was in a different like if he had a SaaS company with like a high like a high ticket type of SAS, I mean, he could you know, sell a company for nine figures. I think that's it. I mean he's very, he's very impressive. Very like he would show us some stuff and I'd be like, I'd be like, okay, like do our setters do that? My team would be like my team would be like, yeah, what he's doing is pretty good, like we do it. But he would I will say this, he was probably, especially with setter operations, setter operations, probably the most advanced clients we've ever had.

SPEAKER_00

I would agree. Yeah, he he showed me, and we had to course correct it sub two. His setters were um there's a bunch of different metrics you could evaluate it on, but let's call it two times more active in just discipline. Active time.

SPEAKER_02

Active time, which Dialer now has built in. But he was really the first one to do that.

SPEAKER_00

And we talked about that with Ryder, yeah. So like he was. He was the first one to show me, and I was like, shoot, maybe my my people are just like lazy. Yeah. Or maybe I'm lazy as a manager, I just didn't know.

SPEAKER_02

Is he still doing that business? What is he doing now?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, he's still he's still running. I should hit him up. You should.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, so that was your number two. That was my number two. Okay, my number two is my series of hormose investments. Cool. So I gotta tell you a few stories. So the best hormosey training I ever went through was one of my clients. Well, so I'll tell you a little backstory. I I knew who Hermozy was because Taylor had told me, who again was my old boss, he was like, Yeah, dude, he's like, the real dude who's fucking crushing it in this industry is this Hermosy guy who sells gyms. And I was like, What do you what do you mean? He's like, Yeah, dude, he's doing like 40 bill. I was like, what the fuck? Like, what is this? So I had no idea. This was 2018, 2019 or something. And so I'm like, I kind of knew who this guy was, but I'm like, okay, he's like a gym guy, right? Yeah. And then I had these clients. So I'm like, okay, cool, whatever. And then he had I had these clients that were agency owners, and kind of, you know, Hormosy sort of like is agency adjacent. Gym Launch was agency adjacent. So they're they were telling me, and particularly this one person, like one guy was like, dude, I funnel hack their sales process, it's like the greatest thing I've ever seen. I was like, okay. And then this other person told me, they were like, dude, you should listen to the Gym Launch Secrets podcast. I was like, what do you mean? I don't have a gym. And they were like, no, it's just really good business stuff. So I started binging the podcast. This was in 20, early, early uh 2020, during COVID. And so I started binging the podcast. I was like, this is fucking good. Then I had uh I don't I don't know, I don't want to get him in trouble. So I had a different client who was like, yeah, dude, I spent 50k to get a consulting day with Hermosy. And he was telling me a little bit about it, and I was like, dude, you gotta send me these recordings. And he's like, I'm not gonna. I was like, I'll buy them from you. And he was like, he was like, look, he's like, if you give me a sales rep, I'll give you the recordings. So I bartered a sales rep for the one-on-one full day uh consulting day recording that they got with Hermosy, and that was probably at that time the best content I have ever been through in my entire life. Because like he hadn't he didn't publish a lot of like business stuff on YouTube yet, right? I mean it was like business stuff adjacent for gyms. So this was the first time like you know, more better new, right? Like, yeah, I was like, more better new, that's pretty fucking cool. Like I had heard that before it was like public, and there was a bunch of other of these frameworks, like you know how he has the other one that's like beliefs, character traits, and skills or whatever it is, like like there was there was that, which like he still says now, but like I I had that back before he was even like a YouTuber, right? And so I go through this one-on-one day and I'm like, dude, this is amazing. So then I have another client who's like, yeah, dude, we also just invested in a one-day coaching for moments. Like, I'll give you two sales reps for the recordings. I borrowed the sales reps again to get the recording. So I'm going through these recordings, and I'm like, dude, this is like the shit. So then they were like, you know, when he launched Alan. No, that's like the lead nurture software that he had. No, I missed that era. That you know, so he was reselling it for agencies as like a white label, that's what he was doing. So he would like bring an agency in, you'd pay money or whatever, then you would like use the software, he would obviously make money from you using the software, and then you would charge the client or whatever. But when he would bring them in as like affiliates or what have you, um, you would get all this course material about how to like scale your agency. And that was like the OG, like all the hormose frameworks. So, like the profit genie, like all this stuff was in there. You didn't tell me about it. I bartered sales, I bartered sales reps for that too. Because I could I was like, I don't have an agency.

unknown

So

SPEAKER_02

I was like, yo, dude. I I had this one guy in my program. I was like, I'll give you some more sales reps if you get if you give me the logins. And I would have bought it. To be clear, I wasn't trying to be cheap. I just wasn't like I was like, I don't have an A. I've done that too. Yeah. So I was like, trying to get in. So then, you know, I'm already like well versed in the Herbose stuff because I'm like, I kind of got the underground content, which by the way, underground content's sometimes the best content. I would agree. Um then, you know, he he gets big on YouTube, right? And like the the 2020 and 2021 Hermosey era of YouTube, like any advanced person will tell you is like the OG Herbose videos were like the best videos. Like now, like, you know, it they're just broader, you know. And I've heard a lot of the same concepts like again and again and again. So um those were good, but then I did the 250k thing, right? Which I made a video about. I don't know if you saw it. So did you which 250k thing? Uh well, I don't know if it's a thing, but basically when he did that money models launch, uh, one of my sales reps who was a top sales rep for me at the time, Hermozzi poshed him. And but I, you know, I was like, Yeah, I get it. I was like, Yeah, I was like, I get it, dude. Like, you know, he got this really good offer, and I was like, you should just take it, dude. It's don't even worry about it. We're good. And so we're still friends. And he called me like during the launch, and he's like, hey, dude, there's this like special offer. It's like 250k, you know, it's like a consulting with Hermozzi, and then it's also this like event you get to go to with 10 people who also pay 250k. So I was like, yeah, fuck it, I'll just do it. See, bother bot sales rep. I bought the 250k for my old sales rep. And you know, I want to support the other thing is too, is like I want to support my old sales reputation. Like you're gonna I'm not gonna be able to do it. I'm like you're gonna get commissions from this, yeah. So I bought it. Um the thing is it's hard to like, I always get roasted when I talk about it online. Why? Um because well, people will I'll be like, oh, I spent 250k with Hermosy, then I'll be like, here's what I learned, and then all the comments are like, You could have learned that in ChatGPT, you know, I could have told you that. I'm like, dude, you're fucking broke. Like it's a bunch of broke people being like, well, I could have told you that. I'm like, well, if you could have told me that, why are you broke? Yeah. You know, first of all. But anyways, so his time is worth what it's time for. But it's hard to like encapsulate everything you learned because you're you're there for so long, and a lot of the stuff is like a little nugget here, a little nugget there, a little nugget there, a little nugget there. They all like do culminate, but they're not it's not like I can't make content about it because it's I have to give you so much context on like my whole business, and then okay, I had this relationship with this one. Now you're turtled. Now I restructured that and blah blah blah. Yeah, it's like it's very difficult. Yeah, I can't really it's not doesn't make for good content. Right. So, you know, when I try to summarize it into like my takeaways, I always get roasted because it does make for good content. It seems like that headline. Yeah, it seems like I didn't get any good things from it. But I'll give you a few, I'll give you a few. All right. So he gave, you know, I wanna I've been trying forever to move the business into a different industry or and or upmarket. Sure. And so we talked a lot a lot about that, got a lot of great strategies.

SPEAKER_00

Um is that for valuation multiple or for a different thing?

SPEAKER_02

No, just because I think um we could scale further into the high-ticket online services market. I think we'll have better LTB to CAC in a different industry.

SPEAKER_00

So it's really just uh hit home.

SPEAKER_02

And also diversification, just in case you know, something happens to our industry, which I don't foresee happening like in the next couple of years, but you never know, just AI and stuff. So expansion of the target market. You know, small business all the way up to private equity rollouts. I agree. Yeah. Whereas like coaching, like, you know, I mean, you get an extreme level of topping out at like 10 million. Uh-huh. There's just not that many people who whereas, like, you know, there's a there's a wider segment of, let's say, bigger businesses and home service than others. So that makes sense. Yeah, so I want to do that. So we talked a lot about that. Uh we mapped out like a lot of content strategy, and so I got to see like how all their whole content team, content department works, how that's all working, etc. And uh, I mean, obviously, I've basically we get more views probably in 15 to 30 days now than we did all in 2025. In in two weeks. Two to two to three weeks, we probably get more views in that time frame across all platforms than all in 2025. So I think that worked.

SPEAKER_00

I would say so.

SPEAKER_02

And then uh got some good leadership and management stuff. But I would say like the biggest thing, and again, a lot of that leadership and management stuff is just stuff that's like it it's not sexy to talk about in content. But um the biggest thing is like it was just overall such a sick experience. And so you go in, like his office is sick, right? His team is really fucking good. And then also like a lot of the value I got was I was just interested in what he was doing and why he was doing it, and you know, and and and how big he was thinking, and okay, what what's like Sharon doing, what's Sharon over, what's Layla doing, what's she all of that stuff. Yeah, and obviously, again, I can't say that on social media because like I would feel like it's a little bit of like, you know, I don't know, I don't know if some stuff was told to me in confidence or not. So I'm not gonna like be like, oh, they told me this. So, but like seeing how big their vision is, how good their team is, how sick their you leave and you're like inspired fuck, like I'm playing like so small. Yeah, you know, and like okay, and look, if all I got from it was a absolutely like belief-breaking ideal of what's possible, to me, when you're running a $30 million company, $250k is worth it. Yeah, right. And so there was that as well. But um, overall, I would put like all of those experiences as my number two. All right, sweet. All right, number one.

SPEAKER_00

Number one, number one, I thought about a lot, and I wanted it kind of fits in that same category as your hormose like experience of like what has impacted me the most at like the CEO founder level in this industry, and it's the Agora Black Book, and I can finally talk about it because I'm gonna go. It's an underground training, but it's 600 pages, and I had the same experience, dude. I tried to buy it off people that Michael Masterson had mentored like directly, and I was like, I finally found someone who's like, Yeah, I would just send it to you for free. And I go, could you do that right now? Yeah. And then I made a ball of his email and he sent me the PDF version of the black book. I've read it over six times, and it's at the source, it sits on my desk, and like if there's ever just a publishing problem, because if you guys don't know Agora, they're the only one, the only one I know in our pocket in the industry that's over a billion. Been over a billion.

SPEAKER_02

And they're like not necessarily a coaching company, they're an investment newsletter, they're an investment newsletter, which is an info product basically with high-ticket stuff on the back end. Yeah, and you know, they've they've had controversy because like I think some of their mark I think even they would say like some of their marketing at certain points got pretty out of control.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, they use heavy fear-based marketing. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

But obviously, you can learn a lot from how they how they operated as a company.

SPEAKER_00

And same thing as you go into acquisition.com. I actually I had Agora as a client um for AGEXA. We didn't have equity in it. Um if you guys don't know, we have two different models. Like one, partner with people, take equity, um, and only get paid if the business goes well. B, for a little bit, we had a marketing agency for cash flow. Yeah. So Agora was a cash flow client, and they were the first ones that were like, hey, could you just could we just prepay you for ad spend and you could put it on your card? And I was like, sick, I get points, and you're gonna give me 100k up front to just blow. Yeah. Hell yeah. So uh I got invited to the office. It was right around the launch they did with Tim Sykes, but then I learned they had 40 or 50 other brands and newsletters too, and like sub-affiliates. So it kind of opened my eyes to what my business model could be if I played it right. Um, just this house of brands, and you have all these experts that are going well, and then behind the scenes they cross-promote each other. That's like ish how they got to a billion. Okay. Um, there's more nuance to it than that. But this 600-page book I didn't know about at the time, but I was chasing, people kept telling me there's like this internal SOP book and like series of letters from the founders, it's everything you need to know about how to like launch a publishing company. I was gonna bring a dude and I totally forgot. I didn't have enough time to swing by the office. I've read it, and I should also be read it. I have physicals.

SPEAKER_02

It's funny, is like it's an underground thing, but like when I I had dinner with Hermozzi uh right as he was starting to get big, and I remember I was like, dude, have you read the black book? And he was like, dude, have I read the black book? And like it's so funny that like really good operators, they all know about like that secret piece of content. There's also one that is uh I think just a Stansbury one. There's a I I there's like three actually. I didn't know about that, and I've read all of them. Um the Stansbury one has a lot of carryover from the black book, so I think if you read the black book, it is um Yeah, it's like the main thing.

SPEAKER_00

And if you've read Ready Fire Aim, that's basically one-sixth of the black book.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah, which is really phenomenal. Yeah. Um that book, because I was gonna bring it up, is the best book in business I've probably ever read. And I was actually thinking recently I need to reread it. I've probably read it four times. No way. And because when I'll say this, a lot of I think um, you know, not to just keep like bringing up Ramosy, but a lot of his early content you could tell was very inspired from Ready Fire Aim. You know, like and I think it's a lot evolved since then, but you could tell that like was a big influence in some of his thinking, in my opinion at least. And it was in mine as well. And if you're running a publishing company, it makes perfect sense. Yeah because there's different phases, right? And like the phase one from zero to a million is really good. I think most people should read that because a lot of like when you read books out there and it's like, oh, how to go from zero to a million or whatever, it's so general and broad based, or it's like a lot of business writing is really built for like software companies, because that's kind of like the you know, that's really yeah, it starts with product market fit. I mean, look, that's like most of the American stock market is software companies, right? So a lot of like business writing is software based, which doesn't mean you can't learn from it. But if I'm like a beginner, you know, that book, the zero to one million phase, which is really more about like how to properly market and sell to get product market fit, is really good. Then there's a the million to ten million phase, right? Which I believe is like uh essentially kind of scaling it and um getting a good front end it getting a good front end to back end system, right? And then the ten to fifty is more operational. It is, I believe. Gosh, I need to reread it. I'm I'm a little rusty.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

But it's more operational and like bringing in proper management, yada yada. And then the fifty to a hundred, and really I think a hundred to a billion, is essentially the proliferation of different front ends for the same core product, or even like essentially kind of like different product lines and just repeating the process, which they did with Agora because essentially they were a publishing company, so they were just always trying to find and produce the next hit. Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, uh dude, you nailed it. Like that actually is at least how I remember it too, the exact four different phases of scale that they walk through. And I have found myself like guardrailing against it as we've gone over a hundred million. You start to want to start non-standardizing things. I'm like, no, like if we don't standardize our funnel model, our acquisition model, and start printing and going off and be like, this one can do this, this one can be a low-ticket funnel, this one can be a low-ticket ascension, this one can be a fifty, four hundred dollar mid-ticket with a one-call close. All of a sudden, you have no synergies across the whole business, and you're sitting there wondering why things are so complex and confusing. Yeah. So yeah, I 100% agree.

SPEAKER_02

I think we got to move on to mine number one. Let's do it. Do you want to guess what it is?

SPEAKER_00

Up level 2.0?

SPEAKER_02

Close. It's consulting accelerator 2.0. Ooh, sick. Yeah, so this was funny. So you know how I said earlier that I was sending the cold emails because like I was trying to be so disciplined from the program? It was consulting accelerator that I was trying to be disciplined from. So what happened was is again, you know, for people who don't know, I've said this story a million times. I started, you know, now I have a 30 million company. I've also got two SaaS companies that so the two SaaS companies actually are together doing like almost 800 grand a month. Pretty cool. This is pretty cool. And then I've obviously had RCA, and that did, you know, 20 million a year, and then if you count the medical company that did th 30 million years, uh yeah, 30-ish million a year. So three eight-figure companies and two seven-figure, soon to be eight-figure SaaS companies. But, anyways, before any of that, I started, you know, I was gonna be a doctor, and then I was like, okay, that's I basically read a book. It was How to Git Rich by Felix Dennis. Have you ever read that? I remember you telling me this story, but no, I didn't know. So I read this book, you know, I was bartending, I read this book when it was over the winter break, all the students were gone, nobody was there, it was just me and a hobo in the bar, and the hobo was drinking this beer called Little Kings. And so I'm giving him these little kings, and then I'll you know, he's just sitting there being a hobo, and then I'm just okay, I'm gonna read this book. So I finished this whole book on my shift because not a single person came in the bar. And that book, what it really helped me realize was I was trying to be a doctor because I thought that's how you make money, and the book literally was like, if you want to make money, you should basically be in the business. Yeah, like that's like just start a business, that's how you make money. So I'm like, okay, I'm gonna start a business. Like entrepreneurship wasn't like a trendy like it is now. So I was like, oh, entrepreneur, I'm gonna start a business. Okay, cool. And so I'm like, what business am I gonna start? Well, I was a nutrition major, right? Who was kind of gonna do pre-med. Um so I was like, okay, I'm gonna start a nutrition nutrition blog. Because I had seen like uh Muscle for Life, Mike Matthews, and some some of these other bloggers out there. And I'm like, okay, you know, they're making money somehow, I guess. So I'm gonna start a blog. Well, obviously that didn't work out because I basically started publishing blog posts, and I'm like, I'm so proud of these blogs, I'm sending it to like my friends, and my view count was like three. And so I was like, okay, well, so how do I get traffic? And that's when I saw the ad that was like how a 26-year-old punk yeah, and so I saw that ad and I'm like, who's this guy? Okay, whatever. Then I'm also like any 23-year-old who wants to make money does, I'm following Ty Lopez on Snapchat. And I see the JV.

SPEAKER_01

I forgot that was the thing.

SPEAKER_02

So then like I saw the ad, then I'm like, oh, that's the guy from the ad. I see him in the JV, and I'm like, okay, I'm gonna register for the webinar. And so this was my first real like direct response experience as a consumer. And I get into the funnel, right? And I'm like watching the webinar. I had no desire to become a consultant, I didn't know what a consultant was. I didn't even know what I wanted to. I mean, I was I didn't even know what I would do. Like, am I gonna consult? What am I gonna consult on? What am I gonna coach on? I don't know. It's just almost like I got put in a hypnotic state and I just bought. And then immediately after, I was like, I got a refund. So I like email and I'm like, can I get a refund? And I think they were like, Well, you can get a refund, but you have to go through the course. So I was like, It was action-based. I was like, okay, I'll go through the course. Then I started going through this course and I'm like, holy shit, this is like the best thing. Like it blew my socks off. I went through it like three times. Dude. And it blew my freaking socks off. And so again, like part of it, it was a really well-structured course, but um the best part for me, obviously being super young at the time, was the mindset training.

SPEAKER_00

Week two.

SPEAKER_02

Like, you remember the uh week two, and it was like he's talking about like uh what is it called? Quantum physics and monk-like discipline, and all this stuff, right? And I'm like, okay, so now I'm like so dialed in productivity-wise, to where it's like, you know, like even if you get up to P, you're like, oh, this is messing with my productivity, you know. So I'm like, you know how like that phase people go through and like Sam Subins. They went through that phase where it was like you just have to be like such a relentless, like focused obsession machine.

SPEAKER_00

You made me like that too. I've never worked 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. consistently like I did under Stan Bobbins.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I was like dialed down to the 15 minutes. I didn't even have a business. I'm just like, I'm just so focused. And but I also learned, you know, some bare bone sales stuff. I learned what Facebook ads was and didn't know what Facebook ads was. Then obviously, like most people in the program who had no idea what the fuck was going on, which is like me. What did we all do? We were like, he's like, don't start a Facebook ad agency. He's like, you can do it if you want, here's how to do it, but like try to do something unique.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And I'm like, I'm starting a Facebook ad agency. So I started the agency, and then you know, how do they teach you how to get your first clients? Cold email.

SPEAKER_00

Dude, I did not know.

SPEAKER_02

So that is that spurted my whole year of essentially sending 50 emails a day with no response. Dude, good. Because I burned my thing the first. I mean, I I was so and then I got into the Cajal program. So that rip, but that the reason it's the most impactful for me is it is it started my journey because like it blew it literally blew my mind. Like I remember doing the consulting math spreadsheet.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And it was my first uh ever encounter with uh you know uh being spreadsheet rich, is what they call it, where you're like, oh, if I get this clients and this and this price, start future, and then you're like, oh my god, I could make a hundred thousand a month, and then you're like, but if I increase the price to this, you're like two hundred thousand a month, you're like, oh my god, you know? And so uh yeah, and I think, you know, genuinely too, like obviously Sam is probably, I think, the best entrepreneur to ever come out of our industry. I think so too. You know, I think even more so than Harmozy. Um I don't he's never publicly said this or wouldn't say this, but there's a reason why we're working together. He's technically, I think, a billionaire right now. I think on paper. On paper, yeah. And I think he's gonna be a lot more than that. And you know, especially when you think about he basically, when people saw him go from making a ton of money to starting a Facebook group competitor, I will even call you out. Even you and some other people too were like, I don't know why the fuck he's doing this. It's stupid. I know. You're like, this makes no fucking sense. And now that company's worth, I think, you know, I don't know, I'm just speculating, but probably well over a billion dollars. Yeah, and so it's it's absolutely crushing it. So I think you gotta give him props. Like he I think he's the goat of our of our industry.

SPEAKER_00

I know, and I'm so proud of school too, and what it became. Like, it's cool. I was there the day we bought school, and I just remember him saying, Yo, I bought school.com and like without consulting me, and we were working on this together, and I was like, What do you mean, school.com? How much does that cost? It was a lot less than I thought, and then he was like, It's S-K-O-O-L. And I was like, shoot, what are we doing here? Yeah, we're like, we're really all in on this, and yeah, he just had that belief, man. And like I always tell people, I'm like, Sam, I would never bet against Sam Evans. Yeah, he's a he's an animal. He's an animal.

SPEAKER_02

What do you think? I mean, you worked with him. What do you think are the things that make him, you know, unique, different, just really good.

SPEAKER_00

Dude, I the first thing that came to mind that I experienced with him that I've never seen to that level with anyone else, is he just does not, he's hardened himself to the point where he really doesn't care what people think. Like, yeah, a lot of people will say that on camera and I'll see science.

SPEAKER_02

Is Jensen Huang or Elon Musk would put it? You know, Jensen, this is Jensen Huang's quote, is he tortures himself into greatness.

SPEAKER_00

That's exactly what Sam did. Yeah. And I learned just from our discovery calls, like I could I have my theories. Like, he got bullied as a kid, he doesn't talk about that a lot, too. He had like bad acne. Like, there's a lot of things that if people think Sam's a robot, there's a lot of empathy I've pulled out of him, like behind the scenes doing things that we just didn't tell certain stories. Like, I dep I did parent interviews with him before because he wouldn't even tell me on some of the stuff. So, like, he I feel a lot of empathy just towards his come-up story and how like how he was treated as a kid. And me to me and him, like, once I got that story, like I'm willing to go to war with someone. So me and Sam kind of like at our worst, we bullied people back during that era. We just like did not care, both me and him. I was like, shoot, uh, you'll let me write whatever I want. It was ghostwriting stuff for Ty Lopez, and he was like, screw it, Ty Lop, we'll we'll launch it, we'll do it. I'm like, sick, I'll just write the most crazy stuff I can. So that era of copy, I felt I felt maybe invincible, and I don't know what Sam felt, but he gave me that feeling of invincibility, which is super cool. It's very rare for an entrepreneur to give you that much control, freedom, autonomy where you feel invincible in your craft.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah. What do you think consulting would have become if he just went all in on just info and coaching and stuff?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, I think he would have done what I'll send you the original Sam Ovin's job offer letter that he sent me. I've showed it to people and people are like, dude, it's bad shit, crazy. Uh and it said we're going to grow consulting in three years to a hundred million dollar company and sell on the NASDAQ. And I believed it. Like, that's what got me to come to New York. And I I remember thinking it was crazy too, as I read it, by the way.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, what would have been the purpose of going public though? I don't even know. Just because it's cool.

SPEAKER_03

Just because it's cool.

SPEAKER_02

Because I mean the only reason to go public is obviously to raise money. To raise money. Yeah. So we like I mean, not necessarily, I guess you could just get a huge cash out. But it's really the expand because obviously if your stock price goes up, you could issue more stock, you can expand. Uh also the initial liquidity of the IPO gives you a lot of capital to be able to expand. I mean, that's why most companies go public. Right, like and also because of you know the venture and PE cycle of they gotta get liquidity at some point.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, phase two, like LMS wasn't even a thought. That came in about a year after we started thinking about LMS, and I started doing research on teachables come up, kajabis come up, circles come up, and that became the uh market research for school. But before that, we just thought we could get with three products, we could get to a hundred million. We would IPO because that's like definition of success is you look cool, and Nasdaq because it had a tech leaning to it. Yeah. And Sam liked that. Um, and then we thought we were gonna buy something like entrepreneur.com and just content distribution network. Interesting. Yeah, that was the original plan. Interesting.

SPEAKER_02

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