The UnNoticed Entrepreneur

Joint venture to success in 6 simple steps; with Mac Attram

September 22, 2022 Jim James
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur
Joint venture to success in 6 simple steps; with Mac Attram
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Show Notes Transcript

Over the span of 8 years, our guest for this episode, Mac Attram, founder of MindSpace Coaching, has generated over $25 million through his joint business ventures, which for him is the fastest, most lucrative, least competitive form of marketing he's found. And in this episode, he shares how joint ventures and partnerships can get you noticed and also double or triple your revenue.

Mac also generously shares his six-step process to successfully build a joint venture or partnership relationship to help scale your business, some tips on how you could effectively communicate with your partners, even after the last step of his six-step process, and some case studies and examples of successful joint ventures and partnerships, of even some of the biggest companies worldwide. He also shares some warning signs when a partnership could go wrong or unsuccessful, and how he gets himself and his coaching business #getnoticed.

Post-production, transcript and show notes by XCD Virtual Assistants

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Hello, welcome to this episode of The UnNoticed Entrepreneur with me, Jim James, and Mac Attram, who's joining us from West London today. Mac, welcome to the show. Hey, Jim, thank you very much for inviting me on here. It's a pleasure to be on your show. Alright. It's a pleasure to have you on the show because we're going to talk about how you've helped companies to create partnerships to the value of over 25 million dollars in the last couple of years. Partnerships and ventures are a key way that entrepreneurs can build a business. Now, tell us, Mac, in your experience, how can an entrepreneur use partnerships and joint ventures to get noticed? That's a great question there, Jim. You know, many years ago, I didn't really understand the power of joint ventures, and collaborations, and partnerships, until there was a situation where at someone in my networking organisation said, "Hey Mac, I've got these clients. They need help. Can you help them out?" And I thought, "You've given me all these clients, I'm not marketing, I'm not paying for any Google ads, I'm not paying for any social media. That's fantastic!" And so I started learning about partnerships. And in the last eight years alone, personally, and with my joint venture partners, generated over 25 million dollars. Now, how can people do it? First of all, you need to understand when it comes to joint ventures, you have to have the mindset that it's got to be a win-win process. If it's not a win for you and it's not a win for them, then there is no point, because at some point there will be some elements of resentment. And so the way to look at partnerships and collaborations, what I would say is this, some people, you know, they want to understand what the definition is. And the definition that I say is a joint venture is a win-win strategic partnership between two or more people, or companies, who agree to leverage each other's resources in order to make more money or save money. And for me, it's the fastest, most lucrative, least competitive form of marketing that I've found. Yeah. It's a really great way of explaining that and that, actually, rather than just marketing yourself, in general, if you market yourself to some strategic partners, you can get access to their customer base, to their resources. Now, like I know you've written books on the subject, so can you just take us through, do you have a methodology that you can share with me and my fellow unnoticed entrepreneurs on how you can make a successful joint venture work? Sure. Yeah. When we are teaching our clients on how to really make joint ventures work, there's something we call "The Million Dollar Joint Venture Process." And quickly I can go through that with you, Jim, if you like - it's six steps. So the first step, very quickly, is learning to identify who your ideal joint venture partner is or could be. So it might seem easy, and you think, "Well, which company?" But the way to look at it, especially if you understand that you can use joint ventures for different things, either to make more money, to save money, or use other people's resources, leverage other people's resources. Let's take one element. One element for most small businesses would be, "I want to use joint ventures to grow my sales, to attract more clients." Okay. So let's start with that notion. And that notion says, "Okay, now I've got to identify who that potential joint venture partner is." And the easiest way to do that is ask yourself, "Who are my ideal clients? Who already has my ideal clients, that if in front of my ideal clients and I'm speaking to them, they want to hear more from me." So number one—identify your ideal joint venture partners. Number two is, now you identify who they are and make a list of 10, 20 different potential joint venture partners, companies, that you want to collaborate with. Number two, once you've made that list is to contact them. So you got to you've got to know how to contact them. Whether you're going to contact them on phone, whether you're going to go to their office, whether you're going to go to the same networking organisation they belong to, you've got to have a way. So we... I've got this in our training program, but very quickly, I'm going through it. Once you've contacted them, now all you are going to do is not to sell them anything, but to build rapport with them. So in this case, if I feel Jim James is a right joint venture partner for me, and now I'm in conversation with Jim, I want to really build rapport. I want to understand who Jim James is, his business, what a business does. I've already done my own original research, my initial research, but now I want to get a bit deeper in terms of, "Is there an opportunity here? What are the challenges they have? What is Jim trying to do? How can I support Jim in that?" And you've got to have that win-win mentality. Number four. Sorry, number three, once you build that rapport, understand to create a compelling joint venture proposal—you've got to create a proposal. And I say, put it in writing. And then, number four, is to present that proposal to Jim. In other words, having a follow-up call or a follow-up meet-up to say, "Hey Jim, remember the last time we talked? And I mentioned something about how we could work and collaborate together." Jim's going to say, "Yes.""Well, I've gone away and I've created this thing, and I think here's a possibility for you to make more money or save more money. And this is how we can work together." You've got to know how to present that very succinctly, so that person understands it and they want to work with you. Number five is to close the deal. If Jim is an agreement. It's a sales process. You're going to close the deal. In other words, put things in writing, get it signed. And so that everyone understands how the joint venture is going to work and how both parties are going to win. And number six is the most interesting because if it works once, number six is just, now maximise what you've already done. How can you do it again, and again, and again, and again? So, for a lot of my joint venture partners, every single year, we may do two or three joint venture collaboration thing, and we both win because that relationship has already been built. I hope that makes sense, Jim. Yeah, absolutely. So, Mac, I love that you've got six stages. In there are a number of opportunities to communicate with a potential partner. Any guidance on things like formats of materials, or are you using particular language, for example, because the language of communication around your ventures is also very sensitive, isn't it? Because for a start, you have to overcome maybe some distrust or some inertia between the two partners. What guidance do you have on what works, Mac, from a communications perspective? Right. Very, very good. That's a great question there, Jim. And yes, you know, initially there is distrust because they don't know you and you really don't know them apart from some initial research you've done. And so the communication has to be in the way that they need to understand that you are coming with an opportunity where they can win and you can win. So this is why I mentioned about building rapport. And then, building rapport, as most entrepreneurs will know, is really about asking more questions, listening a lot more, and talking less. So it's a sales process where I'm going to ask questions, I'm going to identify opportunities, and I'm going to listen to see where that potential partner may have some challenges, how I can support them in that, what can we do together in order to create a win-win situation. So from a communication point of view, it's all listening more, asking questions, and identifying a need. Oh, that's really interesting, as you say. So it's less talking and selling and more listening and responding. And Mac, once you've done that process with the other side and you've got agreement, what's your experience in terms of communicating to partners and customers and internal staff about the joint venture, because it creates organisational change, it creates new possibilities? So what's your experience and guidance in terms of communicating after your stage six? Awesome. That's great question as well. So what we teach our clients and in a, in our own organisation is this: once we have created a new joint venture, then I communicate that to our sales people, our marketing people, and to our operational people, then they know exactly what's going to happen going forward. So they may be contacted by the companies or the companies' clients or the companies' operational staff, and we have processes to deal with that. And so this is critical, because this is where things can fall apart. Because if joint venture partner clients are calling the office or emailing the office, and nobody knows where this lead or potential businesses come from, then we can't really service them. So that communication is clear. The communication between the joint venture partner and yourself has to be clear. Who's the contact point? Who are the people who are going to be talking in order to make sure this is smooth and delivered in the way that we intended? So communication internally and externally is paramount. Yeah, I'm so glad you said that because I was a part of a, an organisation that did a merger and there was no communication except for at a trade show about the merger and it created absolute chaos. So starting it earlier, make it comprehensive seems to be really important. Mac, when you've done all these joint ventures, you mentioned, you know, over $25 million worth of revenue generated over the last eight years. Can you give us some case studies of maybe a couple of really successful case studies? And then maybe we could talk about some perfect ones that you say can be some danger points for people in joint ventures. So let's start with the positive case studies, Mac, of good joint ventures. I think a good start in... but I'm going to give you some case studies of our own clients in the moment. But I want to paint a picture for those people who are thinking really big. Now, joint ventures for most large corporations are nothing new—they do it all the time. If you look at some of large corporations in the airline business, they do it. So take British Airways. Why are they in One World Alliance—which is a strategic partnership of airlines, including SriLankan Airlines, Qatar Airways, Qantas, many more. Because they can utilise each other's resources - coach fairs, logistics, etc. There was not too long ago, I think it was in 2015, Uber and Volvo came together in a strategic partnership. And what they wanted to do, Jim, was to create "Driverless Cars." Now they got together, within two years, that business, that joint venture itself, was worth over 350 million dollars. Two companies who the concept was "Driverless Cars". They couldn't do it alone, but together, they could make it work. So when we think about anytime Pixar or Disney launch a new animation, you'll notice that Coca-Cola, McDonald's, come up with packaging, communication that,"Hey, this is a joint adventure where both are going to win because of this new animation movie that's been launched." In the personal development space—the personal growth space, which I am in— some of the thought leaders are people like Anthony Robbins and Dean Graziosi. Two years ago, they launched, they did a joint venture called"Knowledge Business Blueprint.". And Knowledge Business Blueprint by the time they created everything, and presented it, and launched it, generated 33 million dollars in just a two-week window. Two parties who are great at what they do. Dean Graziosi, amazing what he does. Anthony Robbins, the same. But together they launched this product that serve thousands of people around the world. I have a client in Indonesia who use our joint venture process and use our systems that we teach through our business, including joint ventures. And in 2020, sorry, from 2019 to 2021, tripled her business from 15 million dollars to 45 million dollars. She's in real estate but did the right joint venture process and collaborations and sold the right way, the way we teach. And so I have some clients who don't do as much as that, but they do grow exponentially. I'll give you an example of one of our clients. Anna, who's a coach. Now, Anna, she wanted to speak internationally, but she wasn't pulling the trigger. She wasn't going for it because she didn't know how to build partnerships internationally, so we showed her. And in a 10-minute phone call using our process, was able to do a joint venture deal worth $40,000 in that agreement. So, yes, you can. You know, there are traditional ways of marketing, but there are also faster, more effective ways to reach your clients and make a lot more money. So I hope this gives a flavour of It does, Mac. So let's just look at that. So if you were a company and you've mentioned, for example, Volvo and Uber, what would be some of the pitfall because, you know, it sounds all great, but like marriages, many of them don't last, right? So there's the initial flush and then the reality of living together may not be quite so fantastic. Can you give us some warning signs? Yeah. I'll get you a few warning signs, because, hence, and the reason why I want to give you that is when anyone's working with us, we say, "Look, here are all the templates. Here are all the agreements. Here are all the contracts we have created. Make sure you use them because, otherwise, you could succumb to this." Now, one of the dangers is that, let me keep it clean, non-payments. So, joint venture has been successful. Payments have come in, whether from clients or otherwise, but you are not getting the commission that you are due because the other party is keeping all the money. So that's one danger. We don't want that. That's why we create these legal agreements. Number two, to be skipping agreements so that if you've only done a joint venture and it's only been through verbal—you've only verbally agreed. Then there is no comeback because then someone can say,"Oh no, I didn't say that Mac. I said this." And so they skipped the agreement that you created. And so now you lose out. It's not a win, it's not a win-win any longer. Number three is you could do a joint venture launch. And then, after a period of time, there becomes two different agendas. You know, you have an agenda which you set out the beginning. Now the other party now has a totally different agenda. Maybe they've got what they wanted initially, now they're retracting because now they can see the power of that and they've set their agenda differently then you lose out. The other thing we found is you could end up, unfortunately, with the wrong joint venture partner. Okay. In the sense that initially you thought it was the right joint venture partner, everything proceeded well, and realised that, after a period of time, actually it's not the right joint venture partner. What they promised or what they said they have, it's not the reality. So number four, wrong joint venture partner. And there'll be another one as well, which could be just growing apart. You know, the two joint venture partners have decided that, actually, initially, everything was good, now they've decided to go their separate ways. And so you've got to watch out for that. So you don't, you're not tied in to something that you can't get out of. Right, Mac. And you've got, as you say, over 20 odd years of being an entrepreneur in your own right. And creating a time limit to these relationships could be really nice way to safeguard, for both parties, a responsible exit. Now, Mac, as an entrepreneur in your own right, how have you been getting your own business noticed,"The Mac Attram Coaching Business"? How have you been doing that? Right. Good. My, my business mind space coaching for the past 17 years, I've had the privilege to train and coach hundreds of thousands of people in over 50 countries. Now, when people say how have I been noticed? Yes. We do the social media—people find me on social media and Google—but the biggest thing has been through joint ventures where I've been invited to come and speak on some major platforms around the world where my ideal clients are in the business development and personal development space. I've had the absolute pleasure to speak on the same stages as Anthony Robbins, Brian Tracy, if you've ever heard of Brian Tracy, Les brown, Roberts Kiyosaki from the "Rich Dad, Poor Dad." series. And so that's where a lot of people find me or see me. And podcasts like this and various other places just by speaking and adding value is where I've been noticed most. Mac, that's fantastic. You've added a lot of value today, even in, as you know, we try and get such a huge topic into such a short amount of time. If they wanted to find out more about you, Mac, where can they find you? I think the easiest way is, macattram.com. M-A-C-A-T-T-R-A-M.com (macattram.com). Go there, and that's my website, you can find me there. So yeah, I look forward to helping anyone I can. Thank you, Jim. Mac, thank you for sharing all of well, what's 20 odd years worth of multimillion dollar experience with The UnNoticed Entrepreneur and myself in this podcast today. We've been listening to Mac Attram who's based in England, in the West of London, and me, Jim James, your host on The UnNoticed Entrepreneur show today. So thank you so much for listening. And if you like it, please do share it with a fellow entrepreneur, and review it and rate it on your player. So until we meet again, I wish you all the best and think about some partnerships, and look out Mac Attram's website to get the very latest in how you can benefit most from joint ventures and partnerships.

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