Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - What You NEED To Know To Overcome Adversity With Heather! Episode 152
Episode Date: September 29, 2021I believe we have to constantly innovate to succeed so I am trying something new today. My good friend Phillip Stutts had me on his new show The Undefeated Marketing Podcast as a guest and I’m shari...ng our interview with you! We talk about my personal journey building my brand and what really happened to get me where I am today. I give you some of my BEST marketing tips of the week to help you reach the most success in YOUR business. I know it can be so scary when you don’t know what your next step is going to be, however, when you start moving forward it all comes together! Tune in to hear me lay out the 3-step solution to solving your problems and defeating your villains. PLUS I finally pulled the trigger and launched my email program on Linkedin. Don’t wait for it to be perfect, just start. You can join me HERE. I would LOVE to hear your feedback on what you thought of the episode. Finding Phillip Stutts: Website: https://www.phillipstutts.com/podcast-episodes/ Listen to The Undefeated Marketing Podcast Instagram & Twitter: @phillipstutts Facebook: @ceophillipstutts LinkedIn & Medium: Phillip Stutts Review this podcast on Apple Podcast using this LINK and when you DM me the screen shot, I buy you my $299 video course as a thank you!  To pre-order Overcome Your Villains NOW and get the bonus bundle click here: https://overcomeyourvillains.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I'm on this journey with me. Each week when you join me, you're going to chase down our
goals, overcome adversity and set you up for better tomorrow.
I'm ready for my close to.
Hi and welcome back. I'm so glad you're back here with me today.
Okay, a couple of quick things I want to share with you.
And then we are taking a different approach yet again today.
I'm so excited, innovation, in motion.
Okay, so this week, well first of all,
I think you already know, I auditioned for my audio book.
I auditioned to be Heather Monahan and I got it.
Raw! I was so happy. But then be to be Heather Monahan and I got it. Wrong!
So happy.
But then be careful what you wish for because I got it.
And I had to go record my audio book
with my producer for days.
So that was hard.
But then what's harder is you get feedback
from HarperCollins leadership.
They said, there was a few things they wanted,
tweet and change, not a lot, just a few.
But still, you have to go back into this living, breathing thing
and then pull pieces out and then reinsert.
So it's a little different.
It's not a fluid read, right?
You're not there that same day
and going through the chapters,
you have to kind of bring yourself back to
how were you feeling, were you excited,
were you close to the mic, not close to the mic. There's a lot that goes into it to try to make it sound
as great as it possibly can, which takes some time. So it ends up that last week I spent
way more time working on the audiobook than I had planned for. And the problem was I had a big virtual keynote for a massive
company that had been scheduled for months. And what I like to do is the day
before I'm going to deliver a keynote in person or virtual, I just have a routine.
I go through, right? I go through all of my notes. I get up and do my outline. I
just I kind of give myself an easy once over of everything, but I spend a good, at least
hour, you know, going through it and preparing.
Of course, I'd already prepared.
We'd had three meetings with the client.
I had pages of notes, big picture.
I knew what I was going to do, but my routine is the day before, you know, I go through this
process.
Okay.
Well, I end up spending so much time recording my audiobook that I didn't
have time to do it. And I was eating dinner with my son and I said, oh gosh, I'm just so bummed
out. You know, tomorrow I have this huge virtual keynote. It's so important. It's with a new
agent I've never worked with before. And I just, I want it to go extremely well, but I didn't get to practice today. And I'm really disappointed. My son said, mom, I'm a great basketball player. If I miss practice
the day before a game, I'm still going to play great in the game. You're a great
speaker. You miss practice the day before the speech. You're still going to
deliver a great speech. And it was so simplistic yet so profound, right? It was
just kind of that reminder that I needed,
everybody can mispronounce once in a while.
You put the big work in, which is the years
and years of speaking, right?
And the three different meetings I did
with the client ahead of time and the pages of notes.
And, right, it's not just about that last minute practice.
So as long as you're putting the real work in,
it's okay once in a while to miss that last second work because I did deliver the keynote and I got
back amazing feedback from the new agent that I just started working with and from the client. So
it went really, really well and I definitely turned it over to, okay? I've been preparing for my talks for years.
I've got this and my son's message landed really well
with me.
So I hope that lands well with you.
If you're behind on something or didn't put in the extra work,
have faith that all of the years and efforts
that you've put in up until now will pay off.
You can turn it over and have faith
that you are going to be fantastic because I believe
you will be.
Okay, then there's one other thing I wanted to mention.
Accountability is so important.
I had a meeting this week with my point of contact at LinkedIn and he had finally gotten
me the newsletter option, which I had requested.
It's hard to get, not everybody's getting it.
There's all these criteria.
Anyhow, I had requested it and he got it from me
over a week ago, but I still hadn't launched it.
Well, we were on a call this week and I said,
so give me best practices, give me the tips and tricks.
Tell me how should I launch it, what should I do?
And he looked at me like I was crazy and he said,
just do it.
And I heard him loud and clear and I just did it and just launched it knowing that
having it live is going to be better than not being live. Right? Because I'll be a
massing subscribers and getting feedback and understanding what people like, but doing
nothing is never the answer. And me waiting around for one week after I already had this
newsletter ability sitting in my inbox and I did nothing with it. That was the wrong
answer.
So luckily, I chose the right person to speak to.
He held me accountable.
I pulled the trigger and I have to tell you, this is so crazy.
It took me years to amass the email list that I have at my website,
Heathermonahand.com, years, years, and years, right?
Four years to get my email list up to the level that it's at.
Now that I just, today, just, I think it's about an hour ago, I just launched my email
program on LinkedIn. I already have 8,000 people that subscribed in an hour. So, here's my
takeaway for you. We don't know what the future holds in regards to technology, right? I worked
all these years, which I'm glad I did, for four years to get, I think it's a 30,000
person list. Now it looks like I'm probably going to have six figure person list on my LinkedIn,
which I didn't even know. That wasn't even an option four years ago, right?
I think it's only been around for maybe a year. So sometimes there's things outside of us
that are happening that are going to impact our world that we can't foresee.
So it is important to put the work in, take advantage of the technology that we have currently, but also keep our eyes open and speak to people at different companies,
different industries so that we can access the newest and best technology and find out that there's a way to rapidly accelerate our growth, which is basically
what I found out today. Don't wait, do, hold yourself accountable. Okay, so as I mentioned,
I truly believe we have to constantly innovate and that means sometimes things are going to fail.
People aren't going to like it and we can learn from the experience and grow in a different direction,
right? Take that feedback and translate it into something new.
Today, what I'm going to try, which we've never done before,
and it was actually my good friend, Phillip Stutz idea,
he's been on the show a number of times,
marketing genius, you definitely know him
if you've been listening for a while,
if not go back and listen to any of Phillip's episodes,
his insight and the data that he collects
is just, it's unbelievable. But he just launched his own show, and listen to any of Philips episodes, his insight and the data that he collects
is just, it's unbelievable.
But he just launched his own show,
and he had me as a guest on his show,
and he thought it would be kind of a cool,
new and different approach to share with you
one of the interviews that I do on someone else's show.
So that's what we're gonna share right now.
Whole tight, you're gonna hear,
Philip and I sit down and Philip asked me some questions, and we're going to share right now. Hold tight. You're going to hear Philip and I sit down and Philip
ask me some questions. And I would love to hear your feedback.
Do you like hearing episodes like this? Did it add any value for
you? Or do you want me to scrap it and go back to my regular
solo episode? Can't wait to hear from you. And please sign up,
subscribe for my newsletter on LinkedIn. You know that I'm
live with it now. Hold tight.
Meet a different guest. Each week. Hey, everybody. Welcome back to the undefeated marketing
podcast. Okay. I have my friend Heather Monahan on today. I think Heather is one of the best
people out there to learn from. And the other part of this Heather that I'm
going to jump into your bio in two seconds, but there's so few females in your space that come
in and talk in an authentic way about the things that they're great at, the things they've screwed up
in their past. They kind of lead by example. The thing I love about you,
and I'm saying this selfishly,
because I feel like I'm kind of the same way.
Which is, you actually did something
before you went out and tried to create
sort of a brand around yourself.
You didn't wake up at 25,
hold up a phone, and put a video in front of you, and go,
let me tell you why, you should listen to me.
And there's so few females that came from the business world.
You have such a unique space.
First of all, it's shitty that they're not a lot of
C-suite executives that are more female in this group,
but in the world.
But they're the ones that are out there
are crushing it right now in your space.
And you're one of them, and I was so excited to have you on.
So everybody had their money on. It was a become of them. And I was so excited to have you on. So everybody
had their money on it. It was a comic friend. And I love it a lot. And she's just a great, great human
being. But if you don't know, she is the host of the creating confidence podcast, which she's
had me on a couple of times on now. And I'm very grateful for that. In the last year, she's
launched an executive coaching program. She's been named one of the top 40 female speakers in the United States or maybe even the world and now
She has her second book coming out from Harper Collins
called Overcoming Your Villains and it launches just around the corner on November 9th and
Heather I was telling introduction story so Heather and I had introduced by I think Steve Cohen right who was James
Outichers podcast producer for a while and it's so funny because my first book introduction story. So Heather and I had introduced by I think Steve Cohen, right, who was James Altichard's podcast
producer for a while. And it's so funny
because my first book, Fire Them Now,
literally came out almost the exact
same time your book came out. And I saw
you everywhere when your book came out.
And like I was following you everywhere.
I followed you. I think I'll put in Dr.
Drew. I followed you on James Altichard.
I followed you on Gary Vee and all of a sudden. I'm like, who is this? And then Steve was like, oh,
you got to meet Heather. And I'm like, I see her everywhere. Yeah, who is she? And he's like,
I'll introduce you. And then we ended up meeting. And I went on your show and you've had me speak
to some of your coaching clients. And we hit it off. And I think it's, I think for me, it's that
you're an authentic really, really, really great person. And I just it's, I think for me, it's that you're an authentic, really, really,
really great person. And I just like being able to hang out with you every once in a
while on these types of platforms. So I'm honored to have you on. Thanks for being on.
Oh, thank you so much. Yeah, I'm so grateful that Steve introduced us. What a couple of
years ago now. And I'm so grateful to have you as a friend. And to your point, Silvan, it's important for people listening right now.
I am so passionate about exactly what you described, which we both feel is important.
You've got to have, in my opinion, and this isn't for everybody, which is fine, but in my opinion,
you have to have some tangible credibility outside of just raising your hand to say,
I'm an authority on whatever it is, you know,
exercise, diet and nutrition, business.
I don't care, but don't just raise your hand
when you're ultimately misleading people
because misleading people in this day and age,
you will be found out, you will be discovered,
and there's nothing worse than ruining a brand
because you ultimately are lying.
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Yeah, I mean, I get asked this a lot of times.
People ask me, you've done 350 plus national TV appearances
on CNN, yes, being Fox News, Fox Business, all that.
And I'm like, yeah, they're like, how'd you do it?
I go, I didn't go do one TV appearance until 2012.
I had done 0.0.
At the time, I was 38 years old.
I was 38.
I'd never done TV. I'd never done TV.
I'd never promoted myself.
I had my head down and I was working and I was building and I was creating.
And then I decided I wanted to be an real entrepreneur and create businesses and do all that.
And I figured I needed a brand out there to get my message out and started doing TV and
did it. I and did it, you
know, I still do it, but not much anymore because it's so toxic.
I just don't want to do anymore.
But yeah, I mean, like no one knew who I was until I was 38 years old because I just had
my head down doing the work.
And I think, you know, good for anybody who's 25 years old and has 10 million followers
and makes $10 million, $20 million a year,
and writes books and all the things that we kind of do.
I mean, if they make it good for them,
it's kind of like, I'm good with anybody.
I'm more libertarian in my thinking,
like, good for you, you go do you.
But I think that there's something substantive
about what you're putting out in the world
that I respect and admire.
Well, I appreciate that.
You know what's funny?
One of the things that I don't know if you're seeing these trends, too, but since the
pandemic hit, before the pandemic hit, a lot of the content that I would create on social
media was around teaching, whether it be teaching how to accelerate the sales process, teaching
how to build the right team, you know, teaching it around leadership lessons from failures
and wins.
A lot around really specific business instances.
However, what I found is since the pandemic hit,
that does not perform as well anymore.
What performs well is more motivational,
inspirational, talking about facing fear
and overcoming adversity.
These kind of big fluffier topics seem to do much better.
And of course, the data doesn't lie.
So I produce less content about real business
strategies and examples because it just doesn't perform as well.
Yeah, you know, I had this conversation with J Abraham because J Abraham is like, I put all
of the 40 years of my work on my website and give it away for free and no one ever downloads it.
And I'm like, yeah, well, people are busy and people go, oh my God, there's work to do.
No, no, no, no, no, give me the get ridge quick pill.
Like give me the easy answer.
And it is what people look for and you have to be able to distill that and say, it's not easy.
But let me give it to you in a summarized manner.
And then you can decide how to take that process forward.
All right.
So your book, overcoming your villains.
Tell me about where it came from.
Obviously you wrote your first book and it was super successful. This may be a therapy session on writing books,
because we both had you had a book come out in like 2018. I had one in 18 right or I said earlier. Now we both had
booked him out in 2021. I'm so glad I don't have a book coming out soon. So tell me about your process
why you came to this book and then what it's all about.
My first book confidence creator, I just, I got fired from corporate America for my C-suite
position and I said, I need a product to sell. I'm going to write a book. This was my
genius idea. So I thought, okay, if I self publish, I can move fast, break things and get
it out there. So in five months, I had written the book, right?
And I went to market, went to Amazon,
one point of distribution, right?
And I was a rookie author.
However, I had been investing in my brands
and my messaging for one year.
So I had a community to, you know,
familiarize the book with and sell the book to.
So the book did pretty well.
However, I thought to myself, okay,
I'm not an expert in this.
I'm a rookie. I'm brand new. And if you're brand new and a rookie, you want to align with people who are experts so you can tap into some of the hacks and tricks to get ahead.
So I googled at the time it was 2019. I googled Rachel Hollis. She was the one of the number one and number two best selling nonfiction female authors of beer.
And I thought if I could get to her agent, I could get the blueprint for success on how you sell millions of
both with hundreds of points of distribution. So I found her agent, I got to her website and I pitched
her, you know, essentially I put myself in her shoes and said, you've got the blueprint.
I'm similar to your author
and you could use the same blueprint.
So it's very little work on your end.
However, she leans very heavy to religion
and being at home cooking and whatnot.
I don't lean that way.
I lean on the business side.
So I'm a compliment not a competitor to her
and it would be a new revenue stream for you.
So she said, I'm interested.
Listen, send us the book proposal. And I didn't know what a book proposal was.
Right. I mean, that's like, I did the same thing. I got yelled at with whatever I wrote.
If I can write 2017 when I started. So I got yelled at. Yeah. Yeah. Because if you're not in
the business, you don't know. Right. So she said, okay, I need the book proposal.
I said, what's that?
She said, our conversation ends here.
I said, before you hang up the phone, if you had a family member that wanted to write a
book proposal, who would you send them to?
And she said, Peter economy.
And I said, okay, you'll hear from me again.
I tracked down Peter economy.
I invested in myself, hired Peter economy.
We wrote a book proposal.
And she said,
no to me, 14 times.
And finally, on the 15th time, I got the yes,
then the pandemic hit and we had to go to market
right when the pandemic hit.
And we went to, I believe it was 15 or 20 publishers,
traditional publishers.
And the first six came back nose
and then the rest came back yes,
and we ended up signing with Harpercon's leadership.
So it's not been an easy journey at all.
It's much more challenging writing
with a traditional publisher.
There's so many people involved.
And it isn't just your choice anymore.
Right.
It's so different.
However, the proof will be in the pudding.
We'll see when it comes out.
Hopefully having 200 points of distribution and experts on your team will make it more valuable than the first.
What has to in a way, but I mean, I've done it the commit opposite. I've bootstrapped
both my books and there's some value to that because of the control, but then there's
a lot of not so much good value because you're the one who has to put it out. You are the
marketing team, which by the way, I have a marketing agency, so it kind of works for me. But that's a hard thing,
you know. And you know, the funny thing Tucker Maxe told me does. He said 99.9999% of all books
sell less than a thousand copies. It's just crazy, if you think about that, right?
Here's what I like about this is my whole career was spent in sales and sales leadership. when I was becoming an author everyone saying you've no business being an author and I thought really
Maybe the authors don't have business being authored because none of them are selling the books
They don't know how to sell I thought I don't know if I can write we're gonna roll the dice and find out
Yeah, but I know I can sell and that's where that mismatch is in this business. I think very often
So tell me about the book so So the book is a powerful,
improved, three-step process to overcome any adversity that you face in business or life.
And it's essentially written from each chapter represents a different time in my business career
or in my life. I write, share a story, what I learned from it, and then we dive into the takeaway
for the reader so they can apply it back to their life. Oh, that's awesome. All right, so I want to hear some stories now.
You got some stories locked and loaded. I'm sure they're really good. Obviously your story is
very public and the way you've told it about losing your job as being a C-suite executive.
So tell me, let's go to that story and then what did you learn from it? Yeah, that's actually the
first chapter of this book, right?
So a lot of people, and this is super interesting, I was on a podcast the other day, and they
said, I think it's so incredible how you never name the woman, you never call her out
in your first book.
And I started laughing.
I said, well, that's because I was scared back then, right?
You start doing something new, talking about something, kind of dip a toe in the water first to say,
am I gonna get sued here or what's gonna happen?
Well, fast forward, I gave my TEDx talk,
I, my book came out and now I'm working on the new book.
I thought, I'm gonna get into a lot more of what really happened
because I think people need to know.
It wasn't just this kind of no big deal high level thing.
So that's my first chapter.
The book is getting into more of the detail
of what went down when I very unexpectedly got fired.
I was named one of the most influential women in radio
in a couple of weeks later.
I was told my position was eliminated
and the company no longer needed me.
And I-
You're gonna find out what the real reason was?
Well, I know I have my opinion, right?
You're never gonna know.
No one's ever going to share that
My opinion is one year before I was fired. I launched a personal brand and I invested heavily in myself
And I had a great marketing team and strategy and social media team and it looked great
And it looks so great that the CFO and GCI worked with threatening me and said you shut that down
You're trying to be bigger than the company and that's not gonna work for us and I spoke into a lawyer so I said I can put whatever bourbage on my site whatever bourbage on my post to say that this is my own entity and separate from my day to day job you know I showed them I'm outsourcing everything don't worry it doesn't take away from work and it became a personal very emotional attack and didn't stop. But luckily,
I really stood strong even though at night I'd go home and cry, but I would stand strong
at work and say, you know what, what I'm creating is an investment in myself to make the world
a better place and share with others. And I'm not doing anything wrong. And I'm not
shutting it down. And the minute that woman became my boss, she fired me.
So I'm very fascinated by a topic right now,
and it plays into that, which is the labor market has been massively
disrupted because of COVID, but actually it just accelerated
what probably was already going to happen, which is that the
team that works for your companies, they don't really want to work in
the same office 50 hours a week for your companies, they don't really want to work in the same office, 50 hours a week for your
crappy company. They just don't. Like even my company, they really don't want to be in the office.
They don't want to sit here and be next to the boss all day long and like feel that energy and
all that. And we're seeing this everywhere right now. And not only that, they want a diverse
portfolio where they're doing many things,
not one thing. And I'm trying to get my head around this because I think the companies that
innovate in this space are going to be the ones that explode over the next 10 years. I really
think it's understanding and innovating the labor market is going to be the key to everything.
And the first thing when you tell me this story is, do you know how dumb it
is to tell a team member that is doing a great job? You can't have your own brand or you can't
do something that gives you juice and energy. What did they think? Is it one of those things
where, hey, where the boss is we get to control you? Or what do you think it was that made
them go, you know, I mean, like my thing
is this, if I had an employee that wanted to do something like this and the first thing
I'd say is, okay, well, is you can do your job? You're good. I don't care. Because if I'm
like, no, you can't do that. They're going to leave. It's a hundred percent chance that
they will absolutely walk out the door. So the question is how can I keep serving that person?
As long as they do their job, go do what you get to do.
And that's what we've all got to adapt to.
Did these people not see the fact that by just that,
I understand you lost your job,
but there was a timetable in that anyway.
If they were going to cut off you
after you spent all that money and invested all of that,
and you represented this company through your brand.
So does this make sense at all?
It does, and that's why I think
this was a highly emotional decision.
Because if this had been a business decision,
it would have been handled very differently, right there.
There was that down with me and said, okay,
what can, let's come to the table,
all parties involved were threatened by this.
We think that you're gonna leave,
and we don't want you to leave.
How can we together work this out? But that wasn't it. It was a highly emotional decision.
My opinion is that woman saw me as a threat. She saw me as a competitor as someone who might
take that CEO position and she thought she was protecting herself by getting rid of me. And
it definitely was an emotional decision that I don't regret.
I'm so grateful for today. I was in an industry and decline and now I'm in an industry that's in a growth phase.
So I feel very lucky now, but it was definitely a hard transition.
There's silver linings and everything. And I always say when you're in the most painful moment of whatever you're experiencing,
there's a breakthrough that's about to happen. And obviously you look back on that and say,
greatest thing that ever happened to me. But I'm glad that the last couple of years have passed. I wouldn't want to have to go through trying to figure out
You know, it's really it's scariest at that moment when you don't know what you're gonna do
You don't see what that next step is you don't see what that future is and you feel like you had everything taken away from you
However, as you start to take small steps and start moving forward, it all comes together, but it does take some time.
So overcoming your villains, like, what are some of the solutions that you lay out in
the book? And how did you experience those?
So it's a three step process, which is around beliefs, actions, and knowledge. And ultimately,
I sat down and was thinking about, how do I keep overcoming adversity, whether it was
leading through 0809 recession
or getting divorced and being a single mom, you know, running a major company or whether it be
when I was sexually harassed and I was younger or getting fired. Whatever it was, I've always found
ways to overcome adversity and people would always point that out to me. So I thought, well,
there's got to be some recipe I have here. I've got to sit down and be thoughtful about what are
the steps that I put in place. And it came to me that it's this very simple three step process and
it does not fail you. And number one, you have to get really clear on the belief that you're
holding, right? So let's use the getting fired. The belief I held when I walked out of there
was that my life was over, that there was what what is next? What if I can't get another
job? Well, here's the thing you want to break that belief down to what is fat. And when you break it down,
there was no fat there. What what fat says that I can't get another job or that I can't reinvent my
self? That was just a negative thought, right? So I had to go to the belief. The belief is I'm
currently out of work. However, that does not mean anything for tomorrow or the next day, right? So
okay, I had to debunk that myth that I was telling myself in that negative story.
Because it wasn't real.
Next, I have to take massive action.
I look back across my life.
This is always step two.
I take massive action.
The massive action I took in this instance was I put a post up on social media that said,
I've just been fired.
If I've ever done anything to help you, I need to hear from you today.
Oh, you did?
I did.
And that post went viral.
I had so many people reach out to me wanting to help me.
It was crazy.
Oh, that was brilliant.
That could be the marketing tip of the week.
Holy cow, I love that.
Good for you.
Well, that does a couple different things.
One, it shines a light on shame.
Right, people want you to feel shame that you were fired.
I chose to reframe it and say,
in good company, Oprah's been fired, Steve Jobs has been fired,
JK Rowling, and now Heather Monane, let's go.
I'm with the right crew.
I'm running with the right people now.
And so I also ask for help.
And then another tip that I'll give is when you ask for help
and someone offers it, convert in the moment
because people get so busy, but two weeks later,
they're gonna forget and say, I don't have time.
So, Froggy from the Elvis Durant Show tweeted at me,
hey, if I can help in any way, let me know.
I tweeted right back, get on the Elvis Durant Show.
And he did.
And that really changed the trajectory of my business career because Elvis is the one
who halfway through the interview said, well, obviously, you're writing a book
header. And I said, obviously, but I really wasn't.
So I'm taking notes because the, uh, you said some stuff that I want to write down.
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What was it like in that transitionary period
from when you left to going all in on your brand and then building had a lot of people that I could have for anything. I knew where to go for any, right?
I had been in that business for 20 years and done a really great job.
And suddenly I lost that and I was starting over at zero.
I didn't even know what to call myself at first, right?
Just unemployed.
I didn't know it was such a new experience.
I was like, I'm not going to be a good person.
I was like, I'm not going to be a good person.
I was like, I'm not going to be a good person.
I was like, I'm not going to be a good person. I was like, I'm not going to be a good person. I was like, I'm that and I was starting over zero. I didn't even know what to call myself at first, right? Just unemployed. I didn't know. It was such a new experience
that it felt really scary at first. It was really hard.
So let me get off of the book for one second. I want to hear about you've taught at Harvard
University, was it Harvard Business School? Harvard Extension School. And it's all, it's all graduate, the college who are out working
in big companies coming back looking to get a certificate.
Tell me how you came about.
I think there's such a prestige to that.
And it's so cool.
And I mean, again, I went through a bit like, again,
from being fired to writing two books,
to being signed by Harper Collins,
to being one of the top female speakers
in the world to teaching at Harvard.
Tell me about your Harvard experience.
So this was yet again, another example of taking action, right?
I have been very committed to LinkedIn specifically
for social media.
I show every day.
They've done a great job there, right?
I'm there all the time.
And so I've created a video about some sales tips I was sharing, right?
This is two years ago.
And a Harvard professor saw the video and sent me a DM and said, I think you'd be a great
guest professor for a day.
Would you entertain the idea of teaching my class?
We jumped on a call.
He explained why he saw value in me.
I'm not a white old man.
He said, listen, the majority of professors
here are white old men. You actually were in the C-suite. You're a single mom. You're different
than what my students hear from every day. I think your real life's been on. Class would be really
beneficial to them. And it went great. And then fast forward a year later, he got a call from the
school saying, we're going to give you additional budget. You can bring a second teacher on for your first semester in 2021 for professional sales sales leadership. And so he
called me and he said, you did such a great job on the guest appearance. Would you like to apply
to the school to see if they'll consider you? And I did. And they gave me the green light. And we
taught in 2021 together. It was crazy. That's amazing. So you've worked with a lot of business owners, right?
One of the most business owners getting wrong right now.
People get in the weeds.
I think when there's so much adversity out there,
there's so much change.
Do I force people to get the vaccine and come back to work
with a lot of people are doing that?
A lot of employees are getting pissed, right?
Or do I stay focused on trying to keep people happy?
Or should we be looking at new product launches?
How are we going to innovate? They get so in the weeds and so focused on trying to keep people happy or should we be looking at new product launches? How are we gonna innovate?
They get so in the weeds and so focused on minutia
that they're not picking their head up
at a bigger scale and saying,
where are the trends happening right now?
Who's doing well and who can I learn from
in different industries and really trying to be
more of a visionary versus just,
let's put a fire out, let's just get through this moment.
I see a lot of people reacting to things right now.
How are you handling like with your own business coaches?
What are you focused on more than anything right now?
I mean, the biggest issue that we're hearing
is lack of motivation with sales teams,
lack of motivation and lack of state-of-the-laborism, right?
Yes, definitely is.
Yeah, there's a shortage on talent out there.
How are these business owners adapting
and with the way you're working with them,
and how are they kind of seeing it all height?
Well, I feel like everybody responds very differently.
As I mentioned, I have some clients that forced employees
to get vaccines to come back to work
or they're losing their job.
And so you're seeing some of these things,
you can advise people on what you think is right or wrong.
I don't think, you know, as an employee,
that I'm gonna wanna run through walls
if people tell me I have to do certain things like that, right?
So you're gonna lose people.
I can tell them that over and over again,
but they're not gonna believe it until they see it.
Also, people don't realize if they haven't been recruiting
or they don't have a recruiting plan and process
and a pipeline full of people, that they've been pulling towards them,
they don't realize how difficult that market place is until they're thrust
into it when people start walking out. So I assume that the book book is
overcoming your villains. Is it focused mainly for the entrepreneur or the
C-suite executive? Who's your ideal audience for the book? I hate that.
Harper Cons has that all the time. I like this
book is for anyone that wants to overcome adversity, anyone
that's faced with adversity and business or life will benefit
immensely from this book. That is a guarantee. This could be
read for an entrepreneur could be read for someone in corporate
America, right? Because I've walked both of those sides now, you
know, in corporate America for 20 years and an entrepreneur now
for four, I have really good perspective and can relate to both sides,
as well as I've learned great things from both sides. And I think there's there
are great companies out there in the world in corporate America you can work for
and be happy and I'm not suggesting everyone be in entrepreneur, but I also want
to show that you have choices. There are options out there, and there's knowledge that you can access.
It's going to show you which path is probably
the right one for you.
Hmm. So this is a marketing podcast.
So let's get to some marketing.
How do you market your brand?
How have you figured that out over the years?
I'd love to know like tell me something like,
oh my god, I did this and I totally screwed it up.
I always like to talk about where we screw up our marketing.
You've figured it out over time that LinkedIn is what crushed for you.
You do a great job on Instagram as well, but it feels like for you, LinkedIn is the place
where you've built a lot of your marketing and your brand down of it.
Everybody's different.
So tell me how you built it and then what kind of lessons
you learn along the way. You know, when I first started with this, I would overthink things.
Oh, I should trademark this or I shouldn't use that hashtag. If I didn't research it,
that's the wrong answer. What I've learned is test try, messy test try, messy test try, keep
showing up and look at the data. And it's going to keep changing, right? As I mentioned earlier,
everything changed from the pandemic hit in regards to marketing.
So don't get so consumed with,
I have to have this perfect strategy in place
and this is how it's going to work.
It won't work that way.
But what you will find is taking action
and showing up with consistency will give you
the information to allow you to make better informed decisions
and adjust your marketing moving forward.
A year ago, these DM campaigns were really working
and friendly.
Well, now they're not.
People hate getting the generic.
Now, if you can personalize it or if you actually
want to do it by hand, then it does work well.
That's a completely different campaign.
A lot more time and effort goes into it.
So there's short windows where things can work.
You want to capitalize on them. But then you have to be willing to let it go and say,
I'm not going to just keep trying to do this when my audience is telling me it no longer works.
But for your brand, where are you seeing the most ROI right now? And how do you play in that game?
How do you play into the platforms? What is your routine?
So I have a monthly content calendar and then each
week I get a week in advance. My team submits a plan to me and then I go through and I make changes.
One of the things that I do before I go into my content calendar, I have a photo album on my phone.
If I'm scrolling through something and I see a post that's you know going viral, I take a screenshot
of that. I put it in my folder like I want to know what's happening. I'm on BuzzZuma looking at what's trending.
I'm on Twitter. See what's trending.
And so I take all those things into consideration.
It doesn't mean that, you know, if Afghanistan's trending,
I'm going to post about Afghanistan.
But it does mean that maybe I open up the Wall Street Journal that morning,
and there's an article about how that's impacting the US and business.
And I can give my perspective on that.
So it's not like a, you have to do it this way, but it's going to open your mind to, is
there a way I could add value to this?
If this is a trending topic, there's something I could probably suggest or offer that might
be helpful to others.
So I do a lot of that.
I reinvent the wheel, right?
So if I see a post is trending on Instagram around, I don't even know, like not apologizing,
that's easy. I say to myself, okay, let's test it on LinkedIn and I'll put my own spin on it or
I'll do a video on it that's a little different, but same topic because if it's doing well,
there's something out there that tells me it might do really well on my feed too.
You having fun? I mean, some days are more fun than others. As we were discussing, you know,
it's been challenging because a lot of the live events that I have are canceling now and I didn't anticipate that. In my mind last year,
I said, okay, come Q4 of 2021, we're going to be back, we're going to be everywhere. And I kept
telling myself that and now that it's not happening, it's, you know, it's a little disappointing,
because I am anxious to get out of the whole zoom world. Right. What are you most anxious about with the book? Oh gosh, I
reveal a really the most personal secret or personal moment that I've kept my
entire life, you know, people in my inner circle know about this, but I've never
gone public about it. So that's anytime you offer up something really emotional
like that, if there's just you know haters are going to come, I have haters that come at me
every day online.
And that doesn't bother me.
But when you really open yourself up to that vulnerability, it's like you're kind of
just waiting like, oh, let's get this over when.
Okay, I'm ready.
I get it.
Well, I'm super excited for the book.
It's called overcoming your villains.
Here's what we're going to do now.
You are now in the undefeated marketing podcast.
And we are about to do the undefeated marking tip
of the week.
Are you ready, Heather?
Ready.
All right, I'm going to start out.
And then if you've got one, but by the way,
you've dropped like six bombs on this already
that could be the tip of the week.
So I think you've served your purpose,
but if you've got another one awesome,
I'll come to you on a done.
Okay, so Heather knows how much I appreciate customer and consumer data.
She has had me speak on it.
She's actually undergone her own customer insights report.
And the power of that data, well, one of the things that we are now seeing
and all the data reports for almost every single business out there is the power of Pinterest,
especially when targeting females with their
its with a product or even a service. But why is that? Well, because what we're saying
today, so we're talking about 2021, but what we're seeing in today is that Facebook has gradually
deteriorated in effectiveness. Not only is there the iOS update, which has allowed Facebook to not
be able to target like they used to be. So the targeting capabilities have gone down. But the other
is two other factors. One, I think there were like three million advertisers on Facebook and like
2015, now they're 10 million advertisers on Facebook. Plus there are 200 million businesses
that are using their free tools. So you're just competing against a massive market
and by the way, they really haven't grown that many more new
people in Facebook. So you're talking about a massive and then with all of the cancellations and the politics and everything people just go,
you know, if I buy this product on Facebook, I feel like I make it canceled. And so people have just stopped buying
on Facebook for the most part. There's always differences, but we just see that trend across the
board. And we are seeing the trend move over to Pinterest, especially with females. And so if you
have a female demographic in your database, then I would consider trying to figure out having
your marketing agency look into Pinterest and building out a Pinterest platform strategy. I think it could be really effective. So that's my
marketing tip of the week. I hope you can use it. It's free. Heather, do you have anything?
Yeah, I'll say to your Pinterest example two months ago, I had a pin go viral and I'm not active
on there, but I put content up there. So I'm not on there multiple times a day. And I think you can
have a presence there, have some success, create some reach and expose your brand to the
audience you're going after just by showing up, even if it's just a few times a week. I think
it's worthwhile. So that's a great point. For me, I want to share that, you know, I'm always
learning and learning from different people. Harper Collins felt really strongly that to promote
the book, they felt a quiz would be the right strategy.
I knew nothing about quizzes.
I don't take, I personally don't take quizzes, right?
I don't know, I guess people do,
but the more that they expose me to it
and why they want to invest in that for my book,
apparently a lot of people on social media share quizzes.
So you can actually have content go viral
and the content is the quiz
when what the quiz is doing is it's either
Converting the potential customer into a paid client or you're getting your e or you're getting the email address, right?
So either and that's oh my gosh
It's in another great tip whether you have an audience on Pinterest linkedin or I don't care where get their email address
Because you never know tomorrow you can get kicked off your account. Happens to everybody.
Don't lose that point of, you know, communication, get their tax number, get their email, get
something so you own it and LinkedIn doesn't own it.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm a big preacher of this, by the way.
Like I told this story before I'll tell it again to you, but there was a guy selling
baby toys on Amazon, built it to about a $10 million business.
So he was doing about $900,000 in sales a month.
And his cheaper competitors ganged up
and started one-starring reviewing him on Amazon.
And then they started up voting the one-star reviews.
So they started voting helpful on all the one-star reviews.
And his sales went from about $900,000 a month
to $80,000 a month.
And he came to me and was like, I need help.
And I'm like, well, how much are you selling on your website?
And he said, I'm not selling anything on my website.
And I go, when you rent your customers from a platform,
ultimately, you're going to be in deep trouble
if that's the only place that you're getting your money from.
And I'm not saying you ignore Amazon or you ignore Facebook or any of these platforms.
You can't, you gotta play.
But you have to be a diversified,
just like your financial portfolio
should be diversified.
It's the same thing here.
And you gotta try to own the data.
And you really do have to own your own data.
So I appreciate that.
Those are awesome.
Heather, where can people find you?
So I'm at Heather Monahan on all social media, my website's HeatherMonahan.com.
If you want to check out the book, go to OvercomeYourBillens.com on offering major bonus bundles for
anyone that buys the book and enters your order number there. You can get a bunch of free downloads.
Cool. I guess I'm going to do that now. Now you have a great brand and your podcast is amazing.
It is an amazing podcast.
Really, I listen to it all the time and then I text you and say,
great guests, all right?
I like this one.
Well, thank you for coming on because we always
get great people to do that.
Well, I'm not the great guest, but like Zach Madler, who's been on
this podcast has been a great guest too.
So I appreciate that.
Also, for everybody out there, I would really appreciate a five-story view of this podcast. And also if you want to learn more
about my stuff, you can also go to filipestuts.com and subscribe to my biweekly blog.
With that, we are out of here. If Heather, thanks for showing up today.
Thanks so much for having me.
All right. I hope you're enjoying this episode so far.
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