Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1810: Why Most Trainers Are Broke
Episode Date: May 9, 2022Why is there a HUGE demand and a LOW supply of quality trainers? (2:52) Seven reasons why most trainers are broke. #1 – They suck! (8:24) #2 – Leads vs. sales. (20:37) Not willing to work for... FREE! (28:22) #3 - Retention vs. acquisition. (34:23) #4 - Lifetime customer value. (38:18) #5 - Solopreneur vs. entrepreneur. (44:15) #6 - Transactions vs. system. (50:50) #7 - Lack of patience. (56:14) Related Links/Products Mentioned NCI Certifications x Mind Pump Visit Chili Sleep for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! May Promotion: MAPS Starter Bundle and MAPS Spilt 50% off! **Promo code MAYSPECIAL at checkout** Traffic and Funnels - We Help Freelancers Get Clients Fast Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Jason Phillips (@jasonphillipsisnutrition) Instagram Tony Robbins (@tonyrobbins) Instagram Alex Hormozi (@hormozi) Instagram Drew Canole (@drewcanole) Instagram Taylor Welch (@taylorawelch) Instagram Chris Evans (@traffic.funnels) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
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Alright, we got to special for you today. It's a good time.
Our good friend Jason Phillips on the podcast again.
And this time we're talking about why most trainers are broke and we provide solutions. Like how
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All right, here comes the show.
Jason, welcome back, bro.
It's always good to have you on.
I wanted to talk about something interesting
because there's this interesting situation
with the fitness space, or at least with trainers,
I should say, on the one hand,
you have this fitness space continues to grow.
It's actually quite resilient, right?
We just came out of a pandemic.
And although gyms got hit quite hard, fitness in general did not.
It actually grew in many areas.
And one aspect of the fitness industry continues to grow year over year over year.
As long as I've tracked it for the last two decades,
which is the personal trainer slash coaching segment of this.
So this just continues to grow.
And it's quite consistent.
I don't think there's been a year where we haven't seen growth
in that.
So there's a huge demand.
And there's actually a low supply.
If you look at the demand for good coaches and good trainers,
there's a low supply of people who really do a good job.
However, a lot of trainers and coaches out there are broke.
Like a lot of them out there just aren't able to build
a business or at least sustain themselves
doing something that they enjoy so much.
Even though high demand growing industry,
low supply, like what's going on?
Why are so many trainers broke?
Why are so many coaches who get into the space who want to help people who have a passion
for health and fitness, unable to support themselves to make this into a career?
Yeah, it's interesting, man.
I mean, when I got into it, I struggled and I think probably all of us did.
I think our very first exposure
to health and fitness was not met with a lot of success. And some people just aren't
patient enough to see it through. Some people aren't good enough at what they do. Some
people don't understand business. And I think it all comes down to, I don't know about you
guys. I don't know where your certifications came from. My first one was NSCA. And I
left NSCA and I was like, oh, I'm so smart. I know all these things. And
like, I remember getting on the gym floor and there was like this little imposter syndrome
where I'm like, are all the other trainers looking at me? Like, what the fuck is he doing?
But I also was like, you know, is what I'm programming right? And am I going to create
results? And is this what the client wants? And you don't really have any practical experience
when you come out of a certification. There's no internships, there's no mentorship there.
There's no discussion of business.
There's just like, well, here's your certification
and go get a job.
And I was very fortunate.
My first job at Gold's Gym, my fitness director
at the time, Matthew Davis, like I always shout him out.
Like he gave an anorexic kit of chance., he always taught us that side. He always taught
us the importance and set very clear monthly targets and really helped us achieve those
things. And, you know, I don't, I don't think he taught business per se, but he certainly
had very clear goals around growing that department every single month. And he made that known
to us. And so I think that subconsciously I had this early exposure to the business side is very
important.
Yeah, because when you look at the like, because there are trainers and coaches that are
very successful and it's almost like you're either really good or really successful or
you're just, you can't make it.
There's also really good trainers that are fucking broke.
And I mean, I've seen it all the time.
I mean, I, I worked with the trainer in Virginia
where I live right now and he's amazing.
And I remember asking him, I'm like,
what are you doing a year thinking quarter million
and above like quarter million being the floor?
He's like, oh, you know, like a hundred grand.
And I was like, wait, you're working 10 million hours
and you're only doing a hundred grand.
I'm like, that's fucked.
And when you think about it,
the pandemic should only illuminate the importance of trainers. You
know, we not to get into a political discussion, but obviously like health status and improving
health status would have probably been our fastest way to decreasing the effects of the pandemic.
I think we can all agree on that part, right? Whether, you know, shots, blah, blah, blah,
right? Let's let's not talk about that side.
But if everybody was healthier,
we know that being healthier protected you the most
against COVID.
So our jobs are really fucking important.
Not to mention all of the things that come with it.
I mean, I look back in my journey
and being in an anorexic.
Had there been really good answers at that time
and I wasn't anorexic.
Well, I would have avoided suicidal tendencies.
I would have avoided an eating disorder
that has plagued me for 18, 19 years.
I mean, I've overcome it.
I've done a lot of things in my life.
Still at 37 years old, man,
I look in the mirror sometimes
and I still battle body image things.
You know, we were having a conversation
off air about hormone replacement.
I'm still on hormone replacement.
I still have to deal with the effects of that
in the way that I have to manage that, right? And constantly making shirts the right dosages and the way
that affects, you know, future decisions, obviously, I have a child, but what if I want more children,
how does it affect those things? There's a lot of, there's a lot of things that our industry
is responsible for. And I believe trainers and coaches are really the foundation of all future
change. And there's just not enough education and the education that is out there, in my opinion,
is very improper.
It's very short-sighted.
You know, one of the things we've obviously done with our businesses, we've looked at
this as a very longevity-driven, you know, pursuit.
I think that, you know, there's a lot of hype in our industry now.
Like, here's how to make $10,000 in a month.
And I don't think it's that hard as a coach to make $10,000 in a month. But I do think it's very difficult as a coach to how to make $10,000 in a month. And I don't think it's that hard as a coach to make $10,000 in a month.
But I do think it's very difficult as a coach to continue to make $10,000 as a month.
That's the very important.
And to get to $100,000 in a month or a million dollars in a month,
all of which are very feasible, but the game of making $10,000 in a month versus sustaining $10,000,
very different.
And I think that's just overlooked.
I think they're broke because for the most part,
they suck.
I agree.
You either suck either as a trainer
because of your lack of knowledge and experience
or you suck because you don't understand the business side, right?
So you get one side, at least this is my experience
of hiring and training trainers,
which is what I did for most of my career,
is you would have either one would come in and they had like the raw talent, like maybe they had the gift of gab
and they're not afraid to go get leads and go approach people, but then they had like no
knowledge. So if you weren't doing anything correct, right? So you're afraid they're going
to hurt people or their programming was terrible or they had no nutritional knowledge, or you
had to flip, you get the kid who went to college and then got a couple national certifications
and is, you know, has, has all of this information that they've consumed for the flip, you get the kid who went to college and then got a couple national certifications and has all of this information
that they've consumed for the last five years or so
before they got to you, but then just no concept
of how to build a business.
So I really think that we all sucked.
They all sucked.
You all sucked when you first started
and the ones that make it are the ones that kind of accept that
and realize it and then, and I'm like,
okay, I know I suck right now.
Here are the areas that I need to admit.
I want to speak to that because I think there's a misconception
that a lot of people have when they first become coaches and trainers,
which is, hey, I know how to train myself.
I know exercises.
I'm just going to make people sweat, make them sore,
and you know, I'll get people results,
so they're all going to want to hire me.
Right.
And it's not treated with the same respect as other professions, you know, where'll get people results of the wrong one, I want to hire me. And it's not treated with the same respect
as other professions, you know, where you're at.
Oh, I gotta go in, I gotta learn.
I gotta learn all this stuff.
I gotta be really good.
It's like, oh, it's fitness.
Like, I know exercises.
And I was, I don't know how to,
teach someone how to do squat, bench press.
I'm bluff.
Well, yeah, I'll do that.
Did imagine the medical community,
where like imagine if we put a surgeon in college,
and we're like, here's all the student loan debt, and you come out surgeon in college and we're like here, here's
all the student loan debt and you come out of that and we're like, cool, you learned the knowledge
of how to perform surgery. Now here's someone who's going to die and if you fuck up the surgery,
they're going to die and if you somehow get it right, they're going to live. Like we don't do that,
they don't do that in that industry. Yet in the health and fitness industry, we're like, well,
get all your national certifications, get your degree, come out with student loan debt, pay all this money, and well, there's
a client, go sell them number one, and then number two, just go do what you know.
It's completely fucked.
And so that was actually the impetus behind why we built NCI.
I was in a room, and someone's like, well, you need to help trainers understand what you
understand.
And I was like, I don't even know what I fucking understand, right?
I think that I was creating results at a very high level and what this person was trying
to get me to understand was I needed to help other trainers create results at a high level.
And so I left that room one day and admittedly in the nutrition space, I was like, there's
this other certification, they're the gold standard.
How do I rewrite a book on physiology, biology, metabolism, all the things that go into nutrition?
I'm like, science is science.
You can't skew science, and if you do your a dickhead, right?
And so I was like, how do we do that?
And that's when it hit me, I was like, it's not about more knowledge.
It's about the fact that I've somehow bridged a gap of understanding knowledge and applying it
to a very diverse set of individuals.
I mean, at that time I was working with fighters.
I mean, the very first time I came in here
we talked about weight cuts and we talked about
guys that I've worked with in the UFC, the NFL,
and you know, Mrs. Jones,
mom and pop people that just wanna lose weight.
No matter what, I was known for creating
really high level results continuously, right? And consistently. And so I was no matter what, I was known for creating really high-level results
continuously, right?
And consistently.
And so I was like, what if I could bridge the gap
and explain that side?
And that's when we understood that the game wasn't
about getting more knowledge,
because we all know people that are academic as hell.
They're like, well, I'm gonna go get this certification,
I'm gonna learn this, and I'm gonna learn that.
And, but they couldn't fight their way out of a wet paper bag.
They couldn't help anybody in the space
like when they come in. And we're like, that doesn't serve the population. and but they couldn't fight their way out of a wet paper bag. They couldn't help anybody in the space
like when they come in and we're like,
that doesn't serve the population.
You're not out there truly creating impact.
Sure, you're really smart,
but you're not actually demonstrating success.
You're not showing the fact that you're a good coach.
You're just a smart coach
and that's when we triple down on application over everything.
If you can take your knowledge,
you can apply it, you're going to create results.
And aren't we all graded on our ability to create results as a coach?
That's it. That's 100%.
Yeah, I was thinking about that in terms of a lot of trainers coming in and the biggest thing
that I noticed was this inflated expectation of, I'm going to make money right away with this.
Just like any other job, you got hired, now I a sudden, I'm gonna be able to kind of work my way through this,
make some money, but I mean, there really is this,
internalizing this as your own business,
and you focusing on how can I improve my clients results,
and this is where I need to focus most of my attention
like immediately.
So that way everybody else around me sees what I'm doing,
but also makes it easier for me to get leads,
makes all that other parts of the business
You know start the flourish, but it's like you said it's the application part
I think that's you know the the disconnect there from a lot of the education that you're getting with your
Certifications from your school is like yeah, I have a lot of knowledge but I haven't I haven't figured out the timing and haven't figured out
of knowledge, but I haven't figured out the timing, I haven't figured out all those different variables that like somebody's just coming in, like how do I now put this all into practice?
There's just not enough emphasis on that.
The crazy part without is if you, if all the coaches listen to this right now, right,
if there's trainers out there or even if you're a client and you go through your certification,
I bet if we surveyed all the coaches that are struggling and we were like, why are you struggling?
They're gonna say something along the lines of they can't sell or they don't know how to get leads
But then if we ask a follow-up question and we said well if we flooded you with all the leads of your ICA and
You somehow closed all of them could you create success at a 90% rate or higher?
All of them are gonna be like oh shit. Yeah shit. And that's the real root of the problem,
is subconsciously you will sabotage
your own lead generation, you will sabotage your own sales,
because you're like, well, fuck,
I don't even know if I can deliver results.
And if you can't deliver results,
you should be an ethical human being,
you shouldn't be a sociopath,
you're not gonna take money for something
you can't truly deliver.
And so you're just self-sabotaging the whole way.
You claim you have a marketing problem, you claim you have a sales problem, really you have't truly deliver. And so you're just self-sabotaging the whole way. You claim you have a marketing problem.
You claim you have a sales problem.
Really, you have a fulfillment problem.
You don't even know how you create results.
You don't even know what your key is to success are.
And you fear the fact that if somebody hands you their hard-earned money,
you're not going to deliver on your promises.
You don't want to look at dickhead long-term.
So you're like, well, I suck at marketing a sales.
Well, no, you just suck at your craft.
Yeah. Maybe you need to get better at your craft.
How much social proof do you actually have?
I know we've all talked before, and we're like,
you know, work with people for free in the beginning,
but hone your craft, get really fucking good at what you do.
This podcast, you guys wouldn't be here today
if you weren't really good at what you do.
Obviously, you can all talk and you're fun to be around
and people like to hang out with you.
That's great.
But if you weren't putting out fitness advice
that actually was relevant and that actually helped people,
you wouldn't be selling for them.
We still had to go through this same exact process.
Even with our two decades of experience,
I'll never forget, I remember having this conversation
very vividly with these guys in the very first studio
of what have Joe Rogan has on a show?
Like when we were, no one's listening. I think when I first came, you guys had just talked we got Joe, what if Joe Rogan has on a show, right? Like when we're no one's liberal.
I think when I first came, you guys had just talked to Brendan.
Yeah.
And you guys were actually like, we're going to get to Joe.
Yeah.
It was like around that.
Yeah.
There was this, you know, this thought of, you know, what if, you know, we get in Joe
and then you explode it.
And I remember going like, I don't want that.
And the reason why I didn't want this because exactly what you're talking about right now
is like, what if someone else and just gave us 10,000 leads?
Like you think that would be amazing, but could you really service all those people?
And would they ever come back and buy anything from you ever again?
Sure, you might make a big winfall of money for the next 30 to 60 days and celebrate and high five.
But do those people become lifers?
Do they come back and buy anything else from you?
Do they go tell anybody else about how amazing your service was?
And we just weren't at a place yet
where we didn't have the systems in place,
we didn't have enough stuff in place to support
that amount of leads to come in.
And so when people would ask me,
like, would you want to be on Job?
It's, no, I don't want to be on Job Rogan
because we're not ready for that yet.
We haven't got to a place where we could fulfill that.
We live in the age of information.
Okay, so I remember talking about this years ago,
as an early trainer, like, oh my God,
if we just had access to all recorded information,
we'll solve every problem.
Well, here we are, and there's more flat earthers
than ever before, which I think proves that knowledge
is a part of what's important, which is wisdom,
which is how you apply, right?
It's like, I think what Arthur Brooks said,
he said, you know, knowledge is knowing that
a tomato is a fruit, but wisdom is knowing that to put it in a fruit salad or something like that,
right? So, and it's very true. I should tell trainers this all the time. It's like, you,
if you really look at the knowledge that you applied to 99% of your clients, it's not a lot of
knowledge. It's how you apply it to each individual personality is what will make you successful.
How do you get adherence?
How do you make it stick?
How do you really get somebody to understand what you understand?
It's not the knowledge, it's how you apply it, how you communicate it.
That's what the real value comes from.
If you don't understand that, then you're just glorified Google.
Really.
There's a reason why there's a lot of scientists out there that like know a lot more than we do,
but they don't have a podcast as big as ours.
We communicate the way we learned
how to communicate to clients.
We had to figure it out.
We had to figure out this works and this doesn't work.
Well, dude, on day one of our certification,
I openly say like in the opening remarks,
I am not going to teach you anything today
that you can't find on Google.
And the crazy part is,
I mean, we've made tens of millions of dollars
at this point in our business, all by the fact that almost everything that we teach from a knowledge and science perspective
can be found on Google, can be found in textbooks. Our genius is that we've synthesized that. We've
made it very easy to understand, but more importantly, we've bridged the gap and helped you apply it.
And when you start applying it, I mean, we all understand, I mean, we've all seen lots of success
in our own industries. And we all remember the training day And when you start applying it, I mean, we all understand, I mean, we've all seen lots of success in our own industries.
And we all remember the training day
is when we were helping clients.
Seeing a client succeed,
getting the text message in the morning of,
I lost X number of pounds or,
oh my God, I put on a pair of pants
that I haven't put on in five years.
And we know the gratification we get as a coach,
but we also understand the confidence
that gives us as a practitioner.
Because the more success stories you create,
the more confidence grows, the more confidence grows,
the more willing you are to actually do the work
that creates success in your business.
And so 99% of time in the very beginning anyway,
it's not a knowledge, or I'm sorry,
it's not a marketing issue, it's not a business issue,
it's a practitioner issue,
it's you're not very good at your craft.
And that's a harsh reality for a lot of people
to hear right now. I mean, I can tell you you I've worked with businesses that are trying to scale doing 50 and 60 grand a month
Where I look at like what they're doing in fact I could tell you there's a business that's that we've recently come across
That's doing a hundred thousand dollars a month and I looked at the results and I'm like
Getting the 200 and 300 is only a function of you guys creating better results
Hundred thousand dollars a month 1.2 million dollars a year.
And I'm like, all you got to do is get better at what you do.
It's not a marketing or sales issue.
It's not even a scaler system.
It's better.
Just be better.
My shirt says be better.
Like that is a rallying cry of what we tell coaches to do.
By the way, the litmus test of this, if you're a coach and you're questioning,
whether or not you're good enough at what you do, ask yourself one simple question. If we took away all marketing channels, if we
took away social media, if we took away paid advertising, and all you could do to grow
was rely on your clients to talk about how great you were. Would you succeed? Would your business
survive? And most people are like, shit. Right?
Like, I've asked that in a room before.
And they're like, fuck.
Yeah.
And the truth is, if the answer is no, get better.
Because the virality of your product
is the fastest way to ensure that you grow.
I mean, our company, we have a money-back guarantee.
If we don't deliver on our promise,
at the lowest level, if we don't make,
if we don't double your $10,000 investment, at the don't make if we don't double your $10,000 investment at the highest level
If we don't double your $35,000 investment, I give you your money back
I'm so confident in what we do that if I can't deliver on that promise and give you your money back
Yeah, it's it's funny. You say that because I know all three of us
Experiences like we didn't mark it. I didn't mark it at all
No, at some point it was all it was all word
You're just good at what you do Imagine that I was totally booked and if I needed an extra if I needed a client
I would tell my clients have no space open and literally within a few days
I get a referral and it wasn't even a question. It's crazy
You know we mentioned sales and leads and we took some notes before the episode started because you listed a few things that you noticed being
Really?
challenges and one of them was leads versus sales.
So explain what that means, what you mean by that,
and why that is, why some trainers are broke
as a result of not understanding the difference
between the two.
Yeah, I think that oftentimes we think about
our inability to close.
And people are like, I don't know how to sell,
or I feel sleazy selling,
or I'm looking for something to friend you selling them training.
Actually, being, you know, for a digital coach, being on a sales call for an in person
trainer, having that in person consultation, right? And they're like, I just, I don't know
how to close. I feel bad asking for money. I don't know how to price my service as well.
It's all about the product and the ability to get the product across the finish line
and actually collect the cash. But the reality is collecting the cash
is the fifth stage of any kind of conversion.
And the very beginning of that is getting leads.
And so I'll ask the same question,
well, if you suck at sales, cool,
how many sales conversations you're having per week?
Two things happen, one, they don't know,
which is the problem in and of itself.
But second is, if they do know, the numbers very low.
And so if you're O for two in a week,
well, you're O for 2 in a week,
well you're 0 for 8 in a month.
Chances are even if you have a 10% conversion,
what if we got you to 10 sales conversations a week?
Well, now you're converting 4 a month.
That's still sucks, but at least it's 4 instead of 0.
I mean, that's a terrible conversion rate,
but at least it's something.
And the very first thing I think people need to understand
is lead generation matters more than sales initially.
Right? You have to be able to produce leads. And I think so many people are so focused in our industry is so focused on sales.
I can't tell you how many people come to our business all the time. Well, do you have a sales script? Yeah, I got a sales script.
But do you have leads? Well, no, but I just need a sales script. No motherfucker. You need leads.
There's a part of this I want to touch on.
I've brought this up before and I've talked to other people who come from our space and
other spaces and they all agree.
So obviously coming from the gym business, I've known a lot of membership sales counselors,
trainers, fitness managers, general managers.
And we're talking now well over two decades.
I started as a young kid and Adam and Justin same thing. And I know a lot of these top membership sales people
back in the day, or general managers or trainers,
today, a lot of them not in the fitness space,
some of them are, but a lot of them are not,
but they're millionaires in other industries,
whether it's real estate or home care services,
or tech or banking.
And I was talking to a buddy of mine,
I said, you know what I,
the reason why I think all these membership sales people
are so good at sales, no matter what they did,
was because in a gym,
if you're in a busy gym, in a busy club,
you're going to, if you do a good job,
you're gonna do at least 10 presentations a day.
So 10 new people a day, you're gonna try and sell them
a membership or training or both.
It's a lot of practice.
You practice constantly and it's a short sales cycle.
So if you are selling memberships for two years,
you've practiced so much, you've gotten so good at sales,
that you're as good as like a real estate agent
who's been doing it for 10 years
because the sales process is much longer. So that's the other aspect of it. Your sales
For your closing percentage is 10% you're only seeing eight people a month
It's gonna take you a long time to get good at sales like what if you can see eight people in a day
You're gonna within a short period of time
Just through that practice process and people don't like that because they hate to they hate to fail
But I tell you what man you put someone in front of people all day long,
within a month, they're experts at it.
Well, dude, let's just play out the scenario.
Let's snap our fingers right now.
And let's say we impart Tony Robbins, NLP and sales ability in you, right?
Yeah.
You're one of the best sales people in the world.
And you guys talk to Tony clearly, dude, it's powerful.
Right.
I mean, I remember I was texting with you.
You were like unreal experience.
Yeah. And it's like, let's give that to you.
Now, let's put you in a lecture hall
that seats 5,000 people.
And you present just like Tony.
You're like, you just fucking crushed it.
How many sales are you gonna make?
You think like 5,000, right?
Here's the caveat, nobody was in attendance.
How many sales are you gonna make?
Zero.
Zero.
The problem isn't your ability to present your shit, right?
You got a really good product.
You know how to present your shit, but no one's listening to you.
Nobody's paying attention to you.
And today's crowded marketplace, that's a problem.
I mean, let's be honest, I run NCI.
We certify over 1,000 coaches a year.
We're adding to the competitive nature of the marketplace.
And it's only going to become more competitive
because people are starting to see health and fitness
as a bizzah.
The pandemic moved people online.
We saw people leave these micro gyms.
We know the stats has 30 to 40% of micro gyms shut down
during the pandemic.
So that left people with three options.
Go to a big box gym, eh, not that exciting,
right? Go online or quit the industry altogether. So you saw some people quit, get new jobs,
but you saw the majority people go online. And so the digital space is now extremely competitive.
So what are we doing? Well, we're all going online and again, knowledge is a fucking commodity.
So now it's like, well, who knows the most? Everybody fucking knows the most, right?
Again, we're putting out a commodity that lives on Google.
So the question becomes, how do you stand out?
How do you generate leads?
And when we understand there's really only six
sources of leads anyway, right?
Earned media, owned media, paid media, referrals,
partners, and affiliates and outbound.
Well, it's like which one do you choose?
How do we know how to create that?
Well, we've done a lot of research,
and we understand, and I have a very big prediction
that I think direct response marketing
in the fitness industry is actually dying.
And I think that connection-based marketing
is actually what's going on.
Just going the difference?
Yes, the direct response marketing
is more like I put an offer out you buy, right?
And so for the longest time,
the easiest illustration is paid ads, right?
And so if we put out a paid ad that says,
hey, I'm a coach, you should work with me. And obviously, there's nuance to that, right? Like, Hey,
I'm a coach. Here's how I could help you watch this 60 minute webinar. At the end of it,
I make you this offer. That's still direct response marketing. I send you an email blast.
I give you value. I'm like, Hey, you should work with me. That's direct response. However,
I believe that the gap today, because of the competitive nature, the gap that's direct response. However, I believe that the gap today because of the competitive
nature, the gap that's being overlooked is the connection. And what you have to illustrate
as a coach in today's economy is that people can trust you and that you know your shit.
And so if we do that via connection, you're going to win. So I think all coaches out there
should be using their marketing efforts to build community. I think if you go out there
and you run your paid traffic or your earned traffic or you get your partners and affiliates or your referrals to simply get the community or your prospects
to become aware of you.
And to showcase the fact that you actually know what you're doing, people will start wanting
to spend money with you.
Because let's be honest, the average person has tried five or six things in health and
fitness and failed.
No coach should be naive enough to think that they're the first solution someone's trying unless you're peddling like a $9 service because
people value shop in the beginning. So why should people trust you? Who the fuck are you?
And why should your product be the next thing that they buy? You can't showcase that purely in your
marketing, right? And so people are completely destroying lead generation. They're forgetting that leads are
simply a function of movement into traffic sources that you own. In the business coaching institute,
we talk about leads. We identify leads purely as traffic that you own. Now, that's a little bit like
an over generalization, completely transparently. But as a coach, if you understand the more media you own, the more money you can print, I mean, I can tell you today we own, I don't know, 50,000 contacts collectively.
If I really needed to make $20,000 today, I could do it because we own that attention.
We own the leads and we're able to go out there, create offers that we know will help people
and it will win.
You know, one of the biggest hurdles, why I think coaches and trainers have such a hard time
with that, and I don't know if it's a generational thing
or just in general, is there not willing to work for free
or they're not willing to put themselves in, bro.
It's like, I hear, I talk to you.
You gotta say though, it's not just for free,
it's for experience, for learning.
Well, you have to think free means nothing.
Well, I was explaining this on one,
actually I think it was explaining this on one
of the last calls with Jason, it's like,. Well, you have to be free means nothing. Well, I was explaining this someone, actually I think it was explaining this on one of the last calls with Jason.
It's like, you don't need, you may think
you have this great business idea and model
or this great thing to deliver to people.
And you actually could be way off basis
and you may figure this out by doing free shit
to get to track people.
For example, like let's say you're a trainer and coach
and you're like, I've got great training programs.
I'm gonna sell digital programs like Mind Pump does.
And I'm good at writing programs
and that's how I'm gonna make all this money.
That's my plan.
And you're like, I have no leads and Jason tells me,
hey, get out there and fucking hit the pavement
and work for free and figure it out.
So, okay, I started offering these free classes
where people come in on Saturdays, come with me
and I'm gonna teach them some mobility stuff
and then why I'm there.
Hopefully I'll have an opportunity to maybe pitch my stuff
for figure things and what you find out is,
wow, these people want this class from you
or they're really interested in what your knowledge
around mobility and don't give a shit
about your weight loss program that you think
you're gonna sell to them.
And you didn't even know that that's maybe not
what people want from you, but you wouldn't have figured
that out, had you not put yourself out there and just started doing
things for free to get that feedback.
And that's why I also always tell people like to love your
ideas, but not to marry them.
It's important to have passion when we are driving towards
these things.
But I don't know how many times that I thought I had this
brilliant business idea.
And then I mean, we're sitting in that.
Yeah. I mean, this was something that started nine,
eight, nine years ago when Sal and Doug got together
and started writing something just tonight,
turned on our social media and said,
we're gonna build this e-commerce business.
But I tell you what, it did not,
none of us thought it would look like this.
None of us thought it would be like this.
How long did you guys podcast before you saw this?
Over a year.
Over a year.
And we had stuff to sell.
A year. So basically what you did. And we had stuff to sell.
A year.
So basically what you did is you demonstrated value to your potential advertisers.
Correct.
You said, and then I bet you what you charged today is significantly more than what you
charged them.
Oh, yeah.
Of course.
Because back then, it was like, we still have shit to prove.
Yeah.
And I think I've told this story on the podcast.
What I love about you and the reason that I've always had immense amount of respect for
you is the very, I don't know a men's and men's respect for you is the very,
I don't know if you remember this or very first conversation,
you actually said to me, there was an advertiser that the advertiser with you for a year and did not create the expected ROI.
And you said, I don't have to do this, but I'm gonna write him a check out of my pocket to basically refund some of what he paid to match up to
effectively like a net zero, right?
Like so he did not lose money because we always want to deliver.
And I remember being like, man, that's, that's fucking dope.
You're betting on yourself.
You're delivering value.
And I was like, you know, at the time, man, like, I think this was like November 2019.
I was not in the position I'm in today.
And I think that, you know, what I paid you was 60 grand a year.
And it was like, I didn't know if I could afford it,
but I was like, I have to do this.
And you telling me that made me realize like,
I have to do this.
He has the trust and belief in what he's doing.
And there was so much value in it
that no matter what happened,
you were gonna make it right.
I was like, man, like, that's fucking gold.
How many people out there show that
on a day-to-day basis?
They don't, you can marry the,
you're overarching idea of like helping people.
Like, I wanna help people
and my expertise is health and fitness.
How I do that, the market's gonna tell me.
Well, the people are gonna tell me,
they want mobility classes like Adam said,
or they want digital programs,
or they want more podcasts or more blogs,
but that's the part you gotta be flexible with.
And the only way you're gonna know
is you go out there and you test it.
Otherwise, you're guessing.
Well, dude, I'll give you two examples
of how I've used this strategy to create massive success.
The first was, I took a business zero to $1 million
in less than 12 months on this specific strategy.
And basically what I did is I called Jim owners
across the gyms at the time, and I said,
listen, I will come and I'll deliver a seminar
completely for free.
I will pay my own hotel, I'll pay my own travel,
I'll pay all my own food.
All I want you to do is guarantee me
that you'll have 60 to 70 people in attendance.
You pack your gym, I will come in, I'll give a free seminar.
On the back end, we'll run a challenge together, we'll split the profit 50-50, so I want to
give you money for letting me come to your gym.
As long as on the back end of that, if people want to keep working with me, I can keep
working with them.
Gym owners look, that's amazing.
We know gym owners want money, right?
And we know we want their clients to look good.
I did that 37 times in 52 weeks, right?
Mind you, I hustle my ass off.
37 trips in a year is a shit ton.
But by the end of that year, I had a million dollar business.
Purely because it was value driven.
I wasn't going and saying,
Hey, man, can I pitch to your people?
Like, no, I want to come and fucking answer questions.
Well, by the way, that's why Google booked me, right?
They're like, I heard you do these talks.
I heard they're really good.
That's why I've been on some of these stages.
Now, some of the business clients that we coach,
there's a girl that she came to us.
She had no attention.
She had no leads.
And I was like, well, do you know people
that want free coaching?
Well, yeah, I'm sure I could find a few dope.
Why don't you go offer 10 people coaching for free
for four weeks and see who takes it.
She had like a waiting list.
And so each month, we would take on 10 new people.
And I said at week number three,
I want you to have a real sit down with them
and say, how is this going?
Are you enjoying it?
Are you seeing success?
What successes do we still need to create?
Because we know a month is not enough
to actually create results.
And people are like, I can't stop this.
I need to keep working with you.
And magically these people are throwing money at her.
At week number three, why?
Because she demonstrated value.
She showed people that like this shit actually works.
And that's a way of generating leads
is putting your service in front of people.
Everyone just expects like money to flow in
cause you're smart or whatever, right?
Like if you haven't demonstrated value
to the marketplace, who the fuck are you?
Yeah, sure.
And now the next one that you had written down,
which I think is perfect and connected to
this is the difference between acquisition and retention, right?
Like acquisition meaning getting new people into my business and my system versus the ones
that are already in here, how do I increase my value?
How do I make myself even more indispensable, even more valuable to this individual?
Like there's a difference between the two and you said that people focus too much on one and not the other.
So explain that.
Well, did what if you guys lost a thousand listeners every month and you were focused on gaining two thousand listeners every month?
Like, that's just hard, right?
I mean, obviously you guys do more than that, but it's like just to put it in perspective.
Right.
Like, what if you only had to focus on getting a thousand new listeners every month, and
you just did what you did and what you did was really, really good?
Like so many people, they think the game is new customer acquisition and you always have
to have new acquisition.
Don't get me wrong, but if that's all you're focused on and the backend of your product
sucks, two things happen, right?
You're literally just getting acquisition to fill in the gap.
There's a lot of pressure on acquisition because that's how you maintain your revenue. But let's be honest, if people are leaving your business every single moment, you're literally just getting acquisition to fill in the gap. There's a lot of pressure on acquisition,
because that's how you maintain your revenue.
But let's be honest, if people are leaving your business
every single month, it's probably because you suck.
And now the word of mouth that's out there
is that your product sucks.
And people are like, well, yeah, I went there,
but I didn't stick around very long.
Well, is that really good for referrals?
Probably not.
And so you have negative word of mouth.
Instead, if we put on the back end
a really big emphasis on retention, not only are we creating better results, not only are
we creating better word of mouth, we're also making more money. The longer somebody stays
with you, the higher the LTV is, the more money you can spend to acquire them, but be the
less you have to focus on the front end. So if I have a customer that comes in and they
stay, you know, we charge $500 a month and they stay for three months. That's $1,500.
You know, acquisition costs, maybe you'll pay 30% of that. If we go out, I can only spend
$500 or the amount of energy and effort equated to $500. But if that person comes in and
they're expected to stay for a year, well, that's $6,000. Now I can put an energy and
effort to $1,800 at the same 30% more.
And that's a significant amount more.
I think Dan Kennedy said the way to get to the top in business is to be able to outspend
all of your competitors to acquire a customer.
And so when your LTV is super high and I can tell you like, you know, Alex Formozzi,
before he sold Jim Lange, I knew some of his numbers.
His LTV on customers was upwards of $40,000.
LTV's there in terms of lifetime value. So your lifetime value of a was upwards of $40,000. LTV stands for lifetime value, right?
So your lifetime value of a customer upwards of 40 gram.
What do you think you can spend to acquire that customer?
Why do you think you see them everywhere
on Facebook and Instagram ads, right?
The guy could literally afford to outspend you
because he knew he was gonna deliver a service
that kept you around forever.
He's like, I get one.
It's like the leaky bucket scenario.
You know, filling a leaky bucket with water doesn't do shit.
It's a lot of work man.
It's a lot of fucking work man.
And like we know acquisition is the hardest thing.
It's why starting a business is harder than scaling a business for most people.
Right?
That whole, what is the, there's a stat out there and I'm going to completely butcher it.
But there's a stat out there about like nine out of every 10 new businesses will fail.
Yeah.
Right?
There's a reason most people only get to 100 grand.
They don't get to a million.
And then, you know what, the percentage of businesses
that gets to 10 million is so, it's like what,
3% maybe, like the way to keep going is super hard
because most people, they wanna do the sexy shit.
Like what's sexy about putting in systems to keep a client?
Nothing, right?
Like how many gurus are out there?
In fact, if you're listening to this podcast,
scroll your Facebook, scroll your Instagram,
find me an ad that says,
we're gonna teach you how to keep your clients.
It doesn't fucking exist, right?
But if we sat down and we interviewed
every high-level business guru
and we were like, why are you successful?
They're like, well, people stick with me for a long time,
they pay me a ton of money.
And so what are you gonna do?
Are you gonna raise your front end rate to 100 grand?
No, no one's gonna fucking pay you that.
But I bet you, if you demonstrate value
over the course of a year or two,
you would get somebody to buy enough times
toward they get close to that 100 grand payment.
The most successful businesses have repeat customers.
Low-choice.
Loyal, loyal, like Apple comes out with a new phone
and all the Apple owners show up for it.
I mean, complete transparency.
We just had a conversation with our marketing team over exactly this topic.
And it's because we have such a high lifetime value of each of our customers.
If somebody enrolls in one of our programs, the odds that they'll get three or four more
is astronomical, right?
So we want to continue to invest more in that unless in just getting more people in
because we know that that's what,
that's number one brings real value.
So that's our mission statement.
We really want to help people.
Well, that's how you're going to help people.
And number two, that's how we're going to win.
Is by doing that.
If you guys knew Drew Canoli, right?
Organic.
And like when he first started Russell Brunson
used to use him as a case study.
I was out.
Doug and I went to an internet marketing.
When Drew was there and they used them as an example.
Right.
That's the way I first met him.
What they talked about was he spent all of his time in the beginning trying to acquire
customers.
Yeah.
And what he realized, what propelled, organized in the beginning was not new acquisition
strategies.
It was once he had a customer, he was like, well, you bought greens.
Do you just want to buy six more of them at a discount?
And he couldn't believe that people would actually do it right away.
Like he actually did not fathom the fact that like one purchase equated to multiple purchases.
And he's like, as soon as I understood that back end purchases were really what was
driving my business, he's like, everything fucking changed.
He's like, as I now needed to acquire less customers, because they were all higher value. He's like
my, you know, my front, like my money spent, my overhead decreased, and my bottom line
increased. And I was like, holy shit. And so one thing that I recommend to every coach, and
this is something we do in our program is that you have very strategic activation points
in your business, meaning most people are not going to come in with
enough inherent trust to buy two years from you. But you should have an early win in your program,
and you should also have a very clear activation point. Meaning at some point in your business,
you know that you're going to have an upsell conversation. And so your program should be designed
as such. So when somebody comes in, you're like, here's the wins I'm going to create for them. And this is where I'm
going to have the conversation around what we've achieved and what still needs to be achieved.
And when you've created the success and the trust that comes with that success and you
showcase the long term plan, people are very likely to buy in. We've seen people add
10, 20, 30,000 dollars a month in their business, purely from instituting
activation points and stopping the emphasis on front and acquisition.
The person who is, okay, to close a cold lead, right, so the acquisition part, you're,
like, if you're a good business, maybe 25%, if you're crushing it, you know, most lower,
single digits, probably, to sell somebody who has already purchased something for you. It's like 80% amen. It's like night and day difference
So we're spending all this time on all you know getting this attention on something that is such a low closing rate
When you've got four or five clients that you already closed that are 80% more likely to renew or buy something else
Look as trained look as earth trainers that are 80% more likely to renew or buy something else. Totally. Look at as trainers, if you're a good trainer, you know this.
You get a new potential client, not a referral, so a brand new person.
The odds that they're going to get 60 sessions from you are way smaller than when your clients
coming up for resigning.
Yep.
I got a client who's been with me for a year, resigning's coming up.
Oh yeah, she gets 60 sessions every single time or or five years or whatever, it's gonna happen.
Because why the value is there, I don't gotta sell anything.
I've already sold it because they've seen what I can deliver.
This sounds like common sense, by the way,
someone listening to me, I'd be like, well yeah, duh.
Well, if it's such a duh, that's the focus,
that's the focus right there, because then it's really easy.
I also think that people are messing this up tactically.
And I think that you brought something up
when somebody's coming up for Resign,
it's the worst time to sell them.
It is literally the worst time to sell them.
And like, let's put this in like a real life scenario.
That's actually true.
Right?
If we all went out,
we went to a party tonight, right?
We're like, we go out at like 10 and then at like,
make a real life at like,
at eight o'clock.
Yeah, we're dad's bro clock, we're dads bro,
we're gonna look six,
we're planning to be home by night.
But like, you know,
like let's say we go out to 10,
and it's like,
you know,
the bar shuts down at two.
And at like,
150, I'm like bro,
like I heard about this like underground party
that's like still going
and like you're literally like paying your tab,
you're like putting your fucking jacket on.
Ty,
well you're like ready,
that yeah,
you text the wife that you're ready to go home.
You're like, I'm not fucking going anywhere else, right?
But if at like midnight, I'm like, yo, I heard there's this rager there.
Right.
Like I heard like 50 cents performing like a private thing.
Like, let's go.
You're like, fuck yeah, like let's go.
Like the drinks are hitting you.
Like, you're ready to go.
So you like, you grab your shit.
Like, let's go.
Getting people to do more is much easier in the midst of having fun or in the midst of seeing success. So why don't we take
that and put that online? Why are we waiting until someone's contract is about to expire to make
them an offer? Plus they anticipated anyway. Absolutely. You're always especially initially, there's
that anticipation like, okay, here comes the sale. Here comes the sale. Yeah, all right, versus,
you know, we're halfway through or not done yet. I'm seeing great stuff. I'm like, okay, here comes the sale. Yeah, right, versus, you know, we're halfway through
or not done yet.
I'm seeing great stuff.
I'm like, man, I love Jason Phillips.
Like, he's really doing a great job.
And then you present me with something to say,
hey, look, I'd like to work with you longer.
Here's this other plan that I have.
I think we should do it type of deal, you know?
We also speak about like the wins
that would be associated with that, right?
So it's, you know, if we're halfway through,
let's just, let's not just talk about duration
because people don't buy duration.
People don't buy the service.
I mean, as much as I, you know,
wanna be in the gym with a trainer,
I'm not buying that, I'm buying the result
that it gets, of course.
And so if we're gonna sit down
and we're gonna have that conversation
at an activation point,
it's like, well, here's what we still have to achieve.
And again, you've built that inherent trust
because you've already demonstrated
what you're saying is true.
And that is so critical. You're leveraging the trust, you've built that inherent trust because you've already demonstrated what you're saying is true. And that is so critical.
You're leveraging the trust,
you're leveraging your knowledge,
you're leveraging the relationship you've built
all in an effort to extend that value,
extend that contract, and it works really well.
Excellent.
Now, the next point that you had us put down,
and I've heard people say this before,
but I don't quite know what it means,
is the comparison between someone who's an entrepreneur
versus a solopreneur. So what's the difference between the two, an entrepreneur versus a solo prernor.
So what's the difference between the two
and why is it a mistake to be one versus the other?
Yeah, I'll explain it in the way that I completely fucked it up.
And so, you know, for the people that don't know,
when I started my journey,
what really triggered me to like go all in
was I couldn't afford a cup of coffee.
Like on Thanksgiving day, I was on a vacation
with my girlfriend at the time and I went to Starbucks, like some people know I have like
a seven-year Starbucks streak and I went to get this Americano that's next to me and I
get to the front and they're like, hard to climb. Now it was Thanksgiving day, they were
super nice, really, you can have it for free. But I'm like walking around the grocery
store and I'm like, that's not a mistake. Like, I'm fucking overdrawn. And I knew it and I like, check my account balance.
I'm like, negative $27.
Like, fuck, like, what am I going to do?
Fortunately for me, like, we call it the things giving me miracle.
By the time we walked out of the store, $500 and miraculously appeared in my bank account.
Like, I deposit a check the night before it's bank holiday, not supposed to happen.
But it fucking happened and I was eternally grateful.
I didn't have to like tell this girl I was dating that I was a degenerate, like a degenerate
and I was suffering life.
And so I was like, all right, we're going to want to pick Nick and you can pick him.
Yeah, of, hey, do you mind, do you mind paying for the groceries?
Because your boyfriend's fucking bro.
We're going to pick some fruit, some natural fruit in the garden.
Like surely I'm getting laid back.
But it, you know, it all worked out for the best, but I was like, all right,
man, I got to figure this shit out.
And I feared that so bad.
And I think a lot of early coaches,
they fear being broke,
because they remember what it's like to not be successful.
And so I was like,
everybody that comes in my business,
I'm gonna service them.
And I love this, and you know,
it's badge of honor,
like I'll never fucking burn out.
And I got up to 167 clients.
And I mean, like when I tell you,
I was working my ass off.
Like I was working 20 hour days.
There's a video out there somewhere
of me back squatting 405 while taking a client call.
And I mean, that's the kind of shit I did.
Like I would take CrossFit classes with headphones in.
And I would be like talking to people.
It was absurd.
But I was willing to outwork the whole fucking universe.
And I was a solo prodorer.
I didn't have an assistant.
I didn't have help.
I did all my own billing, I had no systems,
I mean dude, I had a Google spreadsheet,
an Excel doc of everybody's billing day.
And I would wake up in the morning
and I would send PayPal invoices,
like I had no efficiencies in my business, right?
And I was like, one of two things was gonna happen.
Either I was gonna burn it to the ground
or I was gonna die.
And neither of which were good options.
And I'm like, I need to figure this out. The real
problem came when I needed to hire other coaches and I needed to stop working so much because
this is the part nobody looks at is at 167 clients. I was doing, I don't know, 34, 35,000
dollars a month. And that's great. And I was all taken. I know overhead. As soon as I started
outsourcing some of those clients, coaches, well right off the top,
I'm losing 30 to 40%.
And the more that grew and I had to pay admins
associated with it, I wasn't just losing 30 to 40%.
I was losing 50%, 55%, sometimes 60%.
And it was like, fuck, like now I'm making a hundred
grand a month, but I'm taking home less money.
What the fuck is going on?
Most coaches think that like it's this badge of honor
to work with so many clients early on
when that's just a job.
That is literally trading dollars for hours.
And that's, I wouldn't even know if I'd call that a solo
pranora, but that's just doing things on your own.
Being an entrepreneur is building something
that over time can have enterprise value
or at least is making you money passively.
And so if you're going to scale and you're going to have other coaches, you need to start
thinking from day number one, what is it that I'm selling, right?
Not transactions.
I know we'll talk about that.
But like, what is it that I'm actually selling?
If I'm going to have people working for me, like, what am I paying them?
What's required to go into that?
What are my margins?
Am I actually looking at my numbers?
And nobody has any concept of this. They are literally only thinking
how many new people am I putting into my business
every single day?
They're not thinking about taxes.
They're not thinking about anything of it shit.
We could, we could on the tax rabbit hole.
I mean, the very first time I realized that,
I got hit in the face of the $400,000 tax bill.
And I'm like, fuck, I don't even know
if I have $400,000 in my name.
So that was a really scary time too,
but nobody's thinking about those things
when growing
a business.
I'll go on record stating, if you're a coach and you're trying to grow a business, if
you don't just want a job, that's the delineation that I'll make, you should not take on any
more than 25 to 30 clients.
And I think that is the cap and I have thousands of data points that I could, you know, point
to 25 to 30 is your cap.
And over time,
you should try to get that number under 10,
as high-level clients as you can work with,
but you should be building other coaches.
Because your business should be about impact, right?
You should be trying to impact as many people
and you personally cannot do that.
Well, the difference between a good idea
and a great idea is the scalability, 100%.
I mean, you could, and there's nothing wrong
with somebody who wants to run a business
where they work those type of hours
and they make a decent income.
Yeah, good for you, make better person than I.
Yeah, and, but if you have these ideas or dreams
of building a real big business and enterprise
like you're talking about that you've got to think
about these things right now, like, you know,
can I actually scale this and can I remove myself?
I mean, luckily we have the experience we had before,
we all got together, but I wish someone would have
explained this to me in my 20s,
because I got really good at that.
And my response, and I know there's someone listening
right now has the same attitude, like,
I'll worry about that when I get there.
I just want, I just get to a place where I was making money.
And I got really good at getting to six figures.
So like really good, like I got to a point in my 20s
where I'm like, you could strip anything from me to all my,
yeah, I'll find a way.
I'll get right back up to making 150 grand a year.
No problem in almost any industry.
I felt confident I could do that.
But then I would hit the ceiling all the time
because I was maxed out.
You didn't have enough hours.
Yeah, I was maxed out and you were building jobs.
Yes, you were building businesses.
Yes, you were just building glorified jobs.
And so now,
and when we all got together later, right, fast forward to now, when we started this in our 30s,
when we would even, even when we were starting to scale this thing early, early on, and when we had
the time, we had the flexibility, we have four of us, we still would look at ideas and go like,
wait a second here, like, you know, can you see this 10X? And where are you in that?
And how is it going to still run without you in that?
Because if we're going to be growing this business and making more money in this area,
but then it requires each of us X more hours every single week, well, then eventually,
we're going to get capped there and then sure, we might grow that and now we're making
X amount more, but now we're stuck and now there's no other options for
anything else because we're tapped out.
Well, at a super high level, are you building a cash flow entity or are you building enterprise
value?
Right.
And if we ask coaches, they're like, what the fuck does that even mean?
Right?
Well, cash flow is like, you're trying to pay yourself every single month.
Enterprise value is, I'm going to sell this for a very high multiple, both of which require,
you know, I mean, enterprise value, your margins have to be reasonable,
but you got to be able to get a high EBITDA and ultimately, to sell on a good multiple.
Cash flow, you're trying to rip as much money out as possible, put that away, probably
invest it, and then just retire without selling.
Most coaches aren't even considering those long-term things, and a lot of it just comes
down to ego, right?
Very few people are willing to outsource, and let's be honest, as you're growing,
as you're hiring, as you're scaling,
finding really good talent is very difficult.
And I think that if you were to sit here
and you were to interview the Hormozies,
or you were to interview other people
that are killing it out there.
And you said, what's the number one skill
that a really good CEO has?
It's probably hiring and keeping really good talent,
because those are the people
that are gonna grow your business for you.
I don't know how you guys feel about this,
but I think at the level we're at,
I think the last time I came here,
we were probably a $4 million company.
Now we're upwards of $15 million.
The less I do, the more money we make.
Which is crazy.
And I remember the first time I heard Taylor
well to say that, Taylor and Chris Evans
that owned traffic and funnels,
they were like, the less you do as a CEO,
the more money you make.
And I was like, that's blasphemy.
And like now I'm like, fuck, the less I do,
the more money we make.
Because the people that you put into the positions
are so dedicated to that position.
And they want that position to crush.
And the more positions you take on as the owner of the CEO,
the less dedication you can give to each position.
So now you've got all these positions in it, 60%,
whereas each position could be at 110%.
When you've got them at 110%,
you've got a ship that can go to the moon.
But otherwise you're just fucked by yourself.
And to kind of circle back to like the best time
to start that in, you know, Adam's saying,
well, I'll worry about that when I get there.
That's a very hard position to be in.
When you're making X amount of dollars
for all the hours that you're putting in, now trying to figure out how to scale, you're already busy,
your hours already taken up. Like, how do I do this? These people already want to be with me.
I've sold me so much. Not my pro. I know these people that you plan to be on. Yeah, like,
it's very difficult versus starting out the gates with that idea and say, okay, I'm starting
this with the idea that I will be able to scale this much better. It's a much better approach. Waiting till you get to the point where you're
making lots of money hourly and then saying, how do I switch this now to a scalable business?
It's a hard you turn to make. It's a hard way to do it.
Well, I think that I think this kind of goes into the next thing we were talking about
off-air, which is transactions, you know, versus what do we say versus having systems, right? And so I think that inside of that,
dude, I gave you as a stat off air that I want to share on air.
In December, we held a live event.
And we had 270 people in the room.
And I asked a question from stage,
if I gave you $10,000 and you had to come on stage
to describe how you create results for your clients,
how many of you could do that?
And I told you guys how many people raise their hands,
but the number was three.
Three people in the room could actually articulate
how they create results.
That's fucking scary, right?
Well, if you're reliant upon the fact that you're really good
and that you can sit down in a room with somebody
and you can diagnose where they're at
and you can pick them apart
and you can build their macros
and you can build the training program.
That's great.
You're a great practitioner.
You suck a business, right?
And so again, you're a sole pro nor or you have a job, but you don't have a fucking business.
Because the truth is, as you said, Justin, how do you teach somebody to do what you do?
Because every good business, like if we go to an Apple store, we expect the same service
no matter which Apple store we go, whether we go to the one in San Jose today or I'm taking a flight to Phoenix, whether we go to one Apple store, we expect the same service no matter which Apple store we go.
Whether we go to the one in San Jose today or I'm taking a flight to Phoenix, whether we go to one in Scott's
Daily's afternoon, we should get the same level of service. Same product exists. Right. Now the personality of the person that sells us
Probably different, but ultimately we're probably going to pay through the same point of sale system. We're probably going to get the same price, the same
Whatever, right. It's going to be the same from start to finish.
That's how it should be in a service-based business too.
Every customer should get the same experience.
Obviously, the personality of the person in like integrating or implementing
will be slightly different, but from front to back, it should be the same.
From the minute they pay, they should get the same onboarding.
They should get access to the same materials.
They should have the same check-in cadences.
They should have the same access as the same availability.
The system by which results are created should be the exact same.
But nobody's thinking about these things.
They're only thinking about somebody pay me,
I deliver service, and then when that person's leaving,
I'm getting another person.
And that is literally the problem with online coaches today.
They're only thinking about three things.
Get a new client in the door, service my client,
go find more clients.
That's it. That's not a business, man.
No, you're limited. I remember learning that as a trainer as an early trainer.
I was really good at selling myself. And then very quickly, my schedule got filled up.
I think within a couple months, I was very enthusiastic, charismatic, and kid.
And so handsome. But then, yeah, super way more handsome than I'm now.
But I'm like, how am I going to be able to continue to sell training, but my schedule is full.
And what I did, and you know, at the time, I don't really have anybody coach me this,
I said, well, I have to sell the program, not me.
Because if I sell me, I can't work with you.
My hours are booked.
So I have to sell the system.
And so I really had to learn what that system looked like, put that together.
And then when I present to somebody, it's not,
Sal's going to do this.
It's, here's what the system will do for you.
And once you buy this and hire this,
the system, I'll set you up with a trainer
that can apply it.
I think the main problem with this, though,
is that in its, your last point,
which is the lack of patience is,
you know, and it's, and we're,
it's way worse today too.
Well, and we, and we, this, and this,
and by the way, it's never ends, right?
So there's a lot of things that we're building out right now that it would, it would be better, okay,
for putting more money in our pocket to cut that side of the business completely out. I mean,
we are, we are spending so much money on contractors and editors and people to grow this side of
the business and find ways to provide even more value for our customers knowing that
Eventually it'll work it's way back to us, but right now
We're losing they were in the red in that department completely, but outside person looking it has no idea
They don't know that they don't know that we're losing month over month over month on that side of the business
But we're patient we believe we believe in what will eventually happen,
and you gotta have those patients in order to do that.
It's hard when you're in that transaction phase
where you're just trying to collect a paycheck,
and it's like, oh, I have the opportunity to go
from making six grand a month,
this month I'm gonna make 10 grand a month,
and you just wanna get there,
or I can make four grand a month,
and teach somebody else how to do something else
that I'm doing, and then it's gonna take me another six months,
maybe to get back up to that six or eight,
and then I'm at that same option again.
I could get back up to that 10,
or maybe I could hire another person,
bring me back down just to six this time,
but now I've got two people that have,
so it's that the patience and the foresight to see that.
I think one of the things that I always,
I actually learned a lot from you,
just watching you in conversations
that you and I've had privately,
was your patience in terms of finances.
And I think this is also a problem in our industry,
is that coaches want financial success tomorrow.
And they deem financial success
as how much money they can spend.
Not how much money the business is making.
Well, first of all, one of the quickest things
that I think almost every entrepreneur makes is a mistake,
is in the beginning you think the amount of money your business makes
is the amount of money you can spend, right? And like, I'll tell you admittedly, I fucked
that up so early, bro. Like, I remember I was like, I was doing like a million dollars
a year and I'm like, I'm fucking rich, right? I forgot about taxes. I was like, business
needs to reinvest in things. You don't realize that only a percentage of that is your actual
take home. And so most people are like, well,
if I'm making $10,000 a month,
I wanna live a life equivalent to making $120,000 a year,
except you should probably live a life equivalent
to making $20,000 a year.
Because the business, your most powerful asset
is your ability to invest and your ability to reinvest.
And so many people, one of the things you always told me
was how little you took out of the business.
You always share with me the investments you were making and I was like, man, like, that's so dope.
And I think that like, you know, now I'm very fortunate in our business in a position where we can make a lot of investments.
And I pay myself very little. In fact, you know, my CPI got on me last year.
Like, you don't pay yourself enough. Like, the IRS is going to come after you if you don't pay yourself more.
Because I want to be able to reinvest and shit, man. I know for us to get to the level that we wanna get to,
we have to be able to reinvest.
And I had to, dude, I spent,
I would never see the pandemic as a blessing,
but it allowed me to get really, really still.
And I remember I cut out every expense,
and I haven't said this publicly,
as a person I really said it,
and then I lived in my parent's house during the pandemic.
I shut down every expense I had.
I didn't have rent, I didn't have rent.
I didn't have anything.
Dude, I had fucking three insane vehicles going in the pandemic.
I had an I-8.
I had a Range Rover and an Escalade.
Bro, I downgraded to a fucking, like, you got the C-T-5,
you know, V-wing, right?
And I had like a fucking standard C-T-5, like $40,000 car.
That was all I had.
It was the only bill I had.
I think my payment was like $650 a month. And dude, I every penny away? Now I came out of the pandemic. When we went into the pandemic,
I probably had like a two and a half to maybe $3 million company. We came out of the pandemic,
the $15 million company. I didn't say a $15 million, but I reinvested every fucking day.
It was one of the most valuable lessons I learned in two years. I mean braw
I'm 37 and the grand scheme of things that's nothing. I still got a way to go
How does somebody lose you know 60 pounds forever?
It's a slow process, right? You lose it in two months. You're gonna gain a bat
Yeah, it's a slow process it takes patience And I think especially today with the internet
and with social media, people believe it to be a faster process
than ever before.
The same rules of marketers are ruining it.
They make you think that, right?
And yeah, you can definitely do 10 grand in a month, right?
A lot of percent.
But then can you keep doing it?
Just like can you lose 60 pounds real fast,
but then will you keep it off?
Well, dude, let's talk about that
because tactically right now,
the promises being made around the 10 grand months
are such bullshit.
We were talking about this off air, right?
The strategy that is going around right now,
and I'm sure everybody's seen it,
open up your inbox on Instagram or on Facebook,
and you've got tens of hundreds maybe,
called DMs.
And people are like, hey, I see that you like fitness.
If you want to talk about your fitness goals,
and like, first of all, if you're the person
sending those please stop.
Like, that must feel so douchey
if you're the one sending that message every day.
But second of all, like, to the gurus teaching that strategy,
they know one thing.
Everybody has a hot network, every human.
I don't care who you are.
At this point in your life, you have expressed interest
or you have shown desire around something
you're passionate about.
And for health coaches, it's about changing people's lives
through health and fitness.
And so when you actually make an offer,
these people probably were too scared to invest in themselves,
but they like you, because your friends,
they're in your hot network,
and they trust you because you've shown passion.
And so they're willing to accept that offer.
So you're like, oh my God, this cold DM shit. It's great. Everybody I talk to buys from me,
except at some point you realize your network is only so large.
And when you burn through your network and you go to somebody that has no idea who you are
and you send them that same message,
you're not going to get a yes, you're going to get a middle finger.
Or you're going to get something way worse like I'll send you,
which is like, yo, go fuck yourself.
But like at the end of the day, that's not a strategy to grow your business.
And so we've got these gurus out there.
Like, I can make you 10 K overnight.
And maybe they can.
But why aren't we talking about what we can make you in a year?
And I always say at NCI, I don't care what you can do for somebody in 10 weeks.
I'm going to judge your results as a coach as to where your clients are 10 years from
to. If your clients are 10 years from.
If your clients have still lost weight, if they're still successful, if they are still
living a life that they are proud of and they're showing it and paying it forward to their
families and their kids, you did a great job as a coach.
And we should be holding our business coaches to the same fucking level of accountability,
but we're not.
We're only talking about results tomorrow.
Totally.
Jason, look, we said this earlier, we started the show and we did it for free.
Literally, we all had day jobs at kids, families, responsibilities. We used to show up. And
I think it was Monday, I want to say Mondays and Thursdays. And it was like 8 p.m. So after
work, after everything, you know, kids go to bed, whatever, we meet up, and we record
three or four episodes.
We'd be there till 11 o'clock at night and we did this for a year and we didn't start
monetizing the show until literally we were getting messages and people were knocking
down the door saying, can we want to give you money for all the value that you guys
provide?
Do you have anything?
Do you have t-shirts?
Do you have, and that's when we sat down and we said, all right, I think we now have
proved that we have a business.
Let's start. But that's a whole year.
How many people would work for an entire year for free?
By the way, we got signs within that year
that we could have sold stuff,
but we still waited because we wanted to be patient.
We didn't want to be that flash in the pan.
Well, what if we just ask,
I always love to ask this question from stage, right?
If I, if I could, it's not my thing,
you're just like, hey, here's $10 million.
And you are, you get $10 million, five years from today.
Are you gonna take it?
And everyone in the crowd's like,
Yep, I'll take it, right?
Unless you get some douchebag,
it's like, oh, but a big way more than 10 grand.
Or 10 million.
It's like, dude, you're probably broke.
Like, shut the fuck up.
You would take the time, right?
So, but like, somebody's gonna take it.
And then I'm gonna, then I'm gonna qualify that statement.
And I'm gonna say, here's the the caveat you only make 60 grand a year for the next five years
Are you still taking 10 million dollars in five years?
Everyone's like fuck yeah, right? I live on 60 grand to get to 10 million
No, why the fuck are you acting like you need to be a millionaire?
I know why are your actions that you're taking on a day-to-day basis
stating that you have to live the life of a millionaire?
The truth is, they don't really believe
that they're gonna get that 10 million dollars.
Exactly.
That's why.
And it's like, dude,
and if you told them to guarantee
they're gonna get 10 million dollars,
everybody goes, oh, I could suffer for four or five years,
but the truth is that's part of this game.
Most people aren't willing to suffer.
Yeah, you get to be part of this game.
And there's not a single wealthy person in any industry
that woke up the next day after starting those ultra wealthy
No, the grind and the suffer and the sacrifice is part of success no matter who you are
And I mean, dude you guys have had the most successful people in this studio and we could all all of us could sit down
And I think it's actually what happens. I mean off air when we're all in rooms
We don't really talk about our current success.
I would argue most of the stories are about the shit we all live. Of course, right? Because that's what built us.
That's the characters that have, or it's the character that we've developed because of the hardships and because of the learning.
And I think that, you know, I think that's really the whole thing in mentorship, too, and why I'm a big advocate of mentorship.
I know collectively in this room, we've all spent millions of dollars in mentorship.
It's, you're learning from other people's mistakes.
Yeah.
So, somebody yesterday, I was on a call with someone
and they were talking about, and they're like,
man, you know a thing or two.
And I was like, yeah, I know a thing or two
because I fucked up more times
that my whole community combined.
And I don't want you to have to make the same mistakes
that I made.
Like, dude, I did it all.
And I wish people could have, like you said earlier, mistakes that I made like dude I did it all and I wish people could have like you said earlier
I mean I wish people were telling me this from day one, but it wasn't discussion and
I think that's why we're here man to get the word out and to really make sure that people aren't making those mistakes
You know, I like to do it. I like to communicate like this
So we talked early the beginning episode we talked about application
Part of that is being able to communicate what you know effectively and here's what trainers and coaches understand
They understand fitness for themselves very well all the other stuff they have to learn
But they know how to work out themselves they've been doing it for a long time and you go up to a fitness coach
And who's very fit and you say hey, man? I want to look like you. What do I got to do?
You know what they're gonna say to you man? I've been working out for 10 years
I've been doing this for a long time. You know what or I was really skinny. And you want to look like me.
Like it takes a long time of consistency
and I didn't miss workouts and I ate really healthy.
Same thing.
Same thing.
It's the same thing when it comes to business.
There's no different.
You're not going to get super fit, jacked or ripped overnight.
You're not going to be super successful overnight.
It's the same kind of patience.
Just like you did when you first started working out
and you sucked at squats and you can only put a 10 pound weight
on either side of the barbell,
when you were bench pressing
and now you can bench press three hundred pounds,
it didn't happen overnight,
took years and years and years of sucking
before you could do it.
It's the same exact principles here.
As you're saying that I'm literally having images
of the first gym I worked out in when I back squatted 135.
And I was so proud of the fact that I back squatted
on a wheel late on these stuff. I remember I back so I don't feel like I'm going to waste my time.
I remember being like, I don't play it on each side.
But like, you know, it's crazy because like two days ago,
I posted a video of me hitting 405 for 20.
I saw that.
I saw that guy.
That's crazy.
That's crazy.
So like, I mean, it's five years ago, right?
And so it was, yeah, I mean, dude,
I started proud of hitting 135. And you know, in my career, I
hit 405 for 20 and, you know, I did, I mean, to other stupid shuddy, like 190 for 100. And,
you know, I, like, ultimately at 186 pounds, I back squad of 535. Like, you know, it's time,
it's, it's repetition. It's, it's patience. Man, I mean, if you would have told me at that time
that I would have ever hit those numbers,
I might not have believed it.
And if I'm being transparent, man,
on the business side of things,
if you would have told me that when I was overdrawn
and I couldn't afford coffee,
that I would be the CEO of a business,
one business that does over 15 million,
and also an investor in other businesses
that collectively my portfolio does,
you know, well over 20 million dollars a year. I would have been like, that's fucking insane.
And now I look at it and I'm like, well, we're just on our way. It's a, you know, 100 million.
And, and, you know, we were talking off air. I mean, you know, acquisitions and, you
know, there's, there's companies that want to, you know, have conversations around investing
in us today. And it's like, dude, I never would have. But I think what got us to this point
and I think collectively we can all agree is we wake up every day and we try to make the most of it, and we make decisions that are going to
move us forward today and in the long term. And we don't look into the future and say, like, this
is where it's going to be, because if you get caught up around where you're trying to get in the
future, you're never really going to get there. But if you win today and you win tomorrow, and
you're going to keep winning, like, and it's just like nutrition, right? And I think there's so many parallels,
nutrition and business.
Like, I don't need to worry about
if the scale is going to be any different in a week.
I need to make sure that when I put a big Mac in front of you
today or I put a salad in front of you,
you make the right choice.
And if you consistently make the right choice,
is that every meal throughout the day,
and you know, when you go home
and you get the right amount of sleep
and you control your stress, you have to win.
There's no choice.
From a business perspective, you go through all the things we said today.
You have a good offer.
You understand that retention is sometimes better than acquisition.
You get out of the transactional mindset.
You build systems, and you do this every day.
You create one micro win every day.
You're going to win long-term, man. I think that that's, it's a place that most people don't want to look
because they're like, I want to be fucking rich today.
And it's like, maybe you need to look inside and ask yourself why you need to be so fucking rich.
Like, why is your life so shitty that you need to be rich?
Like, maybe this isn't the industry for you.
It's all about the journey, isn't it?
I'll leave it with one statistic right here
that I love to tell fitness people.
Statistically speaking, there are more millionaires,
or your odds of being a millionaire are higher
than getting a six pack.
So if you're a coach or trainer listening right now,
and you got six pack abs,
you actually did something harder than becoming a millionaire.
I did not know that.
That's true, it's true statistics.
So I never knew that.
It's very, very possible.
It's just the same principle to you learn through exercise and the patience and the journey is what it's true statistics. I never knew that. It's very, very possible. It's just the same principle to you
learn through exercise and the patience
and the journey is what it's all about.
Well, I had my abs long before I had my millions of abs.
So I guess I did the harder thing to do.
Now I'm doing the easier shit because I'm getting old.
But dude, I wish more people understood that though.
And also, man, I think that, you know,
I guess my parting words in this is,
I think there's, we could all sit here and, you know, we're entrepreneurs and we could sit here
and identify all the opportunities in the world to make a million dollars. And I don't think that
outside of this industry, we would create as much success as we have in this industry, because we
genuinely love it. And I think if you wake up every day with the passion that you have for the
industry and you do it because you love it, you do it because you want to create a good result and
you keep that as the emphasis, right?
The money will come and you have to learn the business.
Don't get me wrong, you have to learn the business side.
But if you leave at the forefront, your desire to create success and you build an epic fucking
product which goes all the way back to the beginning of this podcast, you'll win.
And I think more coaches need to be tripling down on that, get the knowledge, get the application,
give a shit about people, stop trying sleazy tactics and just fucking triple down on the right stuff man
everything else will fall into the excellent well said man thanks for coming to show up thanks for having
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