Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - David Tao on Creating the “ESPN of Strength Sports”
Episode Date: February 1, 2021I’m often asked about how to make money in the fitness space. One obvious route is becoming a coach or personal trainer. This can be done in-person or online, but if you can help people get into sha...pe, build muscle, and lose fat, and know how to market yourself, you can earn a decent income. And I’ve talked before about building an online coaching business and becoming a successful coach. Another path, though, is content marketing. This can be monetized in various ways, but it all begins with creating high-quality content that provides value. This is also something I’ve discussed on the podcast with the likes of Lou Schuler, but today’s episode is a bit different. Specifically, I’m having a fireside chat with David Tao, the founder and CEO of BarBend. In case you’re not familiar with BarBend, it’s a hub for all things strength related: news coverage, training and nutrition articles, product reviews, and more. And David isn’t a new kid on the block—he wrote for Fortune and Greatist.com before creating Barbend and turning it into what it is today. So, who better to discuss building a media business than someone who found a gap in the market, and carved out their own niche by creating unique, valuable content and grew it into the premier news source on strength sports. In this episode, David and I talk about . . . How he seized an opportunity to “scratch his own itch” Why creating content is hard and the biggest mistakes creators make The importance of staying top of mind The beginning of BarBend as a news outlet and when he realized it could be successful Monetization (advertising and sponsorship) His biggest mistakes that turned into lessons His game plan for the future And more . . . So, if you want to learn how David created a strength sports content empire from scratch, listen to this episode and let me know what you think! 8:01 - What was the opportunity you saw? 16:29 - When starting out, should you focus on quality over quantity? 324:35 - How did you start out? 30:04 - At what point in that first year did you see signs of life? 38:07 - How did you go from having a great idea to having a viable business? 49:34 - What are some of the worst decisions that you made that later became great lessons? 59:16 - What are your future plans? Mentioned on The Show: BarBend Website: https://barbend.com/ BarBend Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/barbend/ BarBend Podcast: https://barbend.com/podcast/ Shop Legion Supplements Here: http://buylegion.com/mike --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Howdy ho, friends. Welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews. Thank you for
joining me today. Now, something I am often asked about is how to make money in the fitness space.
How did I do it? And what are some other viable ways of doing it? Now, one obvious route is to
become a coach or become a personal trainer. And you can do that in person. You can do it online.
But if you know how to get into great shape yourself and how to help other people get
into great shape, build muscle, lose fat, get healthy. And if you know a little bit about
marketing, you can do well for yourself. And I have talked about that in an interview I did
with John Goodman, for example. So if that sounds really interesting to you, you should go back and
find the interview I did with John Goodman and check out his company, the Personal Trainer
Development Center, PTDC, as well as his online trainer academy, which you can find over at
theptdc.com. I'm not getting paid to plug that, but I genuinely like what John is doing. And so
I definitely recommend you check his stuff out if you want to learn how to become a successful trainer. Now, another path to fitness riches
is content marketing, which can be monetized in various ways. But before you can get to
making shiny shekels, you have to know how to make good content, how to create high quality content that provides value
to people and that they are going to talk about and probably also that Google likes too. Because
if you don't know what you're doing on the SEO front, you're going to have a very hard time
growing a content marketing business. Now, I have talked about how to create good content here and there in the past. For example,
I did an interview with Lou Schuler on that topic. And if you want to dive into that
specifically, just go check it out. His last name is S-C-H-U-L-E-R. You can find the interview in
the feed. Now, in today's episode, I have a fireside chat with David Tao, who is the founder and CEO of barbend.com, which
is a major hub for all things strength related news coverage, training and nutrition advice,
product reviews, and more. And David mentioned in the interview that it was over 2 million
visits per month. It's probably more than that now, and it continues to grow. And he's not new to this game either. He wrote for Fortune. He was involved in Greatest.com
before he decided to go off and create Bar Bend and turn it into what it is today and what it is
becoming, which David says is the ESPN of strength sports. That's his big vision for what is obviously
a media company. It's more than just a website. And so I got David on the show to talk about how
to build a media business, how to find a gap in a market and then establish a toehold and build
that into a bridgehead. And from there set about taking some real territory and building a real
brand and a real
business. And in this interview, David shares all kinds of interesting tidbits like some of the
biggest mistakes that he sees content creators making, the importance of staying top of mind
and how to build that into your content strategy, the very beginning of Bar Bend and how he realized
that it had legs, that it could be successful. Some of the
bigger mistakes that he has made along the way, some of the big lessons he has learned and more.
Also, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my
sports nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you, is the leading brand of all natural sports
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would have you believe, but there is good evidence to suggest that having many servings of artificial
sweeteners in particular every day for long periods of time may not be the best for your health.
So while you don't need pills, powders,
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And just to show you how much I appreciate my podcast, peeps, use the coupon code MFL at checkout and you will save 20%
on your entire first order. Hey, David, we did it. We made it. We're recording.
For people listening, we were going back and forth with schedules is what it was. And that
happens sometimes. I know regulars around here have heard me open podcasts this way.
And that's what happens when I'm busy. Someone like David is busy, but the stars have aligned.
It's funny how difficult it is to schedule things
when people are spending more time at home than ever.
I've had more trouble scheduling during COVID than before.
I don't know why that is.
That's like, someone can write a dissertation on that,
I'm sure.
My hypothesis is Netflix.
Do we need to go much further than that?
Oh, Mike, I can't talk today.
I have to finish
the Queen's Gambit. It's just really important. Yeah, exactly. That's the show my brother-in-law
is raving about. And then my wife, I told her that maybe she wants to check it out first.
And I'm very hard to please with TV because I generally don't like watching TV. I think it's
okay, but it's not something I particularly like, oh, I'm looking forward to my time on the couch.
So she watched the first episode and was thoroughly unimpressed. And so that's not something I particularly like, oh, I'm looking forward to my time on the couch. So she watched the first episode and was thoroughly unimpressed. And so that's not
going to be on our list. Well, it's good that you have someone kind of doing the first round
of cuts for you. Delegation, delegation. Exactly. That's the way to do it. Eventually,
your kids are going to get old enough to where they can tell you what to watch, what to avoid.
It's perfect. You just got to make sure their tastes suit your own. Yeah, which is unlikely. So what I wanted to talk to you about is something that
I get asked about fairly often. You probably get asked about it fairly often. And that is a
series of business-related topics and specifically relating to, of course, your business, which is
primarily it's a media company, but also my business and well, Legion in particular, which is a sports
nutrition or a supplement company. At least that's how it appears at first glance. But I would say
it's just as much a, I wouldn't call it a media company because that makes it, it sounds kind of
pretentious for what we are doing. You truly are a media company, but it is a content first and
education first kind of approach that obviously
came out of all the way back in the beginning. I just wrote a book and published it and wrote
more books and started writing blog articles. But I've kind of maintained that as the core of my
personal brand and also of Legion's brand for a variety of reasons that I think, well, there are
some of the argument is I think it's good business and good marketing. And then there are just personal reasons.
I like that kind of work, but I wanted to talk to you because I often get asked about
getting into the fitness industry and how to make money in the fitness industry and
how to make money with content marketing or how to produce good content.
And I have my standard answers that in questions that I ask people to try to help them kind of flesh out
whether they should do it
or how they should go about it.
But I would love to hear your take on the process
and the process you went through
that led you to start Barbin
because you're a smart dude
and you were already familiar with this space,
with your work at Greatest.
And I'm curious, what was the opportunity you saw? Because
as you know, a bad plan is just to start doing things exactly the way everyone else is doing
them. That is not likely to work out, but you found a niche and you found a unique selling
proposition really to take advantage of, and it has gone quite well. Well, first off, Mike,
thanks so much for having me on the podcast. It's always a pleasure to chat with you.
I really enjoyed when you came on the Bar Bend podcast.
And I'm really honored to be on this one because this is, I truly believe, one of the best
fitness-related podcasts online.
And to talk about the business of fitness is something that's always really fun for
me.
And I want to say, we were chatting a little bit before we started recording.
The thing I tell people now is, if you want to make a living in fitness and you want to
start something in fitness, maybe don't make it a content company. And I know that sounds really pessimistic, but you know better than most. And you've been doing this for a long time, Mike. You're OG. Content is hard, right? Making it work from a business perspective is difficult. And the thing that I really want to emphasize with Bar Bend, it's about four and a half years old. We actually had our four-year anniversary, like the beginning of COVID. So we couldn't really celebrate it because New York City,
where we're based, was on lockdown. Zoom party.
Zoom party. Yeah. Zoom party. We should have bought Zoom stock when we had the Zoom party.
That would have been the best business decision. Put it all on Zoom stock.
Put it all on Amazon at this point. That's it. There's the investment strategy.
Yeah. End of podcast. Done. There's your business advice, folks.
The thing I want to emphasize is it wasn't my first rodeo. I saw an opportunity. I was a strength
athlete myself. I am a strength athlete. I love strength sports. And I originally wanted to start
something where I looked for an outlet that had strength sports news all in one place. There were
a series of subreddits. Occasionally, strength sports news would be covered on an existing
website. But there wasn't that go-to place if you wanted results, world records, etc. from across the strength
world. We're talking weightlifting, powerlifting, strongman, CrossFit, bodybuilding, we're doing
more of now. There just wasn't that place. And so I wanted to start that place in many ways.
But at the same time, I also knew due to my prior experience in media that that wasn't enough.
We had to diversify across platforms, across
monetization structures, across partnerships. It wasn't enough to just have a news blog in
Strengthsports that wouldn't be very scalable. That could have been a passion project that I
did from my apartment in Manhattan. And it could have done well. It could have gotten a lot of
traffic. But I do think that these days, and we're seeing it with major publishers,
and we're seeing it with startups. If you want to start a media brand, it can't just be a blog, you have to find 100 different ways to reach one person, you can't just expect one particular, you almost have to be platform agnostic, right? You can't just have a blog and expect that to carry you. You can't just have a podcast and expect that to carry you. You kind of have to do everything, which is what you've had to do with your own personal
brand, but also with your business, right?
Totally.
Yeah.
And just to comment quickly, I think what you said right off the bat is an important
business lesson, which is that you were in a space that you understood because you are
a strength athlete and you were looking to scratch your
own itch. And that's something that I often tell people about. And I have like standard little
lists of business books that I recommend people read if they haven't, if they're wanting to get
into business for themselves. And one of them is Lean Startup by Eric Ries, I believe. And in that,
he talks about the concept of creating a minimum viable product. And he talks about scratching
your own itch.
And so I think that's something that it might seem like a minor point, but it can be a major
point because if we now look at the marketing of Take Bar Bend or any business, this is
now the field of persuasion.
And there's a big difference between the right words, the right message, and the almost right
words and the almost right message or the right message, and the almost right words and the almost right message
or the right product or service to that real product market fit and the almost right product
and service. It's almost like a miss can be a mile. I think that the biggest miss I see people
make when it comes to content is, first off, I think creating quality fitness content,
a lot of people do it. You all create so much quality fitness content. Before Bar Bend, there was a ton of quality fitness content.
Some of it I was involved in at outlets like Greatest.
I did some writing for them.
I did some work with Times Health Imprint.
I was a media consultant for CrossFit HQ, for Samsung.
I spent a few years as actually just a media consultant for both content companies and
big businesses that wanted to dabble in fitness or had fitness related products, right? So that's kind of where I really sharpened my teeth in many
ways to kind of see it from the company aspect, not just the media, not just the media company
aspect. But I think the biggest thing people miss about content, about the difficulty of content,
this is something that I know, I know you understand, and you and I have chatted about
before. It's that consistency is absolutely everything because there are a lot of places
for people to turn online
and they have very short attention spans.
And if you're selling like a widget, right,
people will buy it once
or they'll buy it on a subscription
or something like that.
But you don't have to produce a new version
of it every single day.
With content, you have to constantly produce content
and there are really no days off, right?
For Bar Bend, since our very inception, I can count in the past four and a half years,
on one hand, the number of days where we haven't published multiple original pieces of content
over, you know, well over a thousand days.
And I think the tricky thing on content is that you can't just,
it's not enough just to produce quality content.
If you want to build a brand that has real stickiness
across platforms, you need to produce it consistently. Now, there are a lot of individuals
and a lot of fitness influencers as individuals who have built strong personal brands by producing
great content somewhat inconsistently. But I think that's even falling by the wayside. And you're
seeing these influencers have to really leverage the power of consistency to stay top of mind. So I think it's two sides of the same coin here. If content is your business,
it's producing great stuff, right? But it's not enough to just produce great stuff. You have to
produce it consistently. Otherwise, people will start going elsewhere for what they want to see.
Now, the content might not be as good.
They might need to go to five different sources instead of the one-stop shop
that Barbin's trying to be for all things strengths.
But they will migrate away
and you will lose their attention.
And so that is one of the downsides
I like to mention very early on for content
is like, okay, you want to build content,
you want to make that your business.
Cool.
Build systems from the beginning
or if you're doing it yourself,
just expect to have no days off
where you are constantly producing.
And I'll just add to that, that quality, I believe, matters a lot as well.
And have you come across the website Backlinko, Brian Dean?
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
I actually first came across him on YouTube, and then I realized that was a drip strategy he had because he was selling a course for a YouTube engagement.
Oh, got it. I don't know what he's doing on YouTube. I've just followed his
Backlinko website for some time now. And he has taken the approach of, although I haven't checked
it recently, actually, so I can't, I'm assuming he's still doing the same thing, but for a long
time, he was taking the approach of consistent, but I think it was, let's say it was no more than once every couple of
weeks. It might've even been once a month, consistently producing long form, well-written,
very easy to understand, well-researched, well-presented, you know, screenshots and
graphics and articles. And he has done very well with that strategy. So the reason I say that is
just anybody listening who
immediately then is discouraged that how are they supposed to publish several original pieces
per day that are of any quality? I totally agree. If you can do that, that is outstanding.
I don't even do that. I mean, obviously individually, I don't even do that. I pop up
on Legion's blog every week or so, or every seven or 10 days, something
original comes from me. And then I have some other people I work with and they get credit for what
they write. And I'm the author on what I write, but we average probably like our, well, our
strategy that we're currently implementing about done with implementing will probably, I believe
it'll put up a piece. This is including updates of existing content to refresh it.
I believe it's going to be one a day.
And that's with a team of people.
And like you said, systems in place.
But for somebody who is just starting out, my hypothesis would be, and this is obviously
this is going to be subject to the whims of Google and social media and so forth.
But if it were me starting from scratch, I would focus on quality
over quantity initially. What are your thoughts on that? I completely agree. I want to give a huge
addendum that I should have made much clearer on my first statement because you and I are very much
in sync here. Bar Bend started as a news outlet. Now we produce long form content. We produce
evergreen content. We produce a lot of content that isn't just news. But we first gained traction and it took a little bit of, you know, it took a lot of
A-B testing and trial and error.
We first gained traction as a news outlet.
So I should clarify, I'm coming at this from the perspective of Bar Bend was first and
foremost and continues to be largely a news outlet, the news in strength sports, right?
And we've diversified.
We produce a lot more evergreen content now. It's
become more and more of a focus. And actually, as our team has grown, we've been bringing on
people who never touch news. They focus more on our evergreen content and the other things that
might not be so time-pegged or news-pegged. But when it comes to what we had to do for news,
I realized very early on, if we missed an event, and we started in 2016, if we missed an event or
we were late to cover something, our window of opportunity there to cover that was over, right?
People didn't want to read about World's Strongest Man results a month later on or
results from the Olympics a month later on.
But even more impactfully, what I saw is if we didn't cover an event, we quickly fell
out of people's consciousness as a go-to source for that strength sport because we
covered content across strengths. And anybody listening who uses a news aggregator, I'll check websites like if I want right-leaning
news, I'll go to Zero Hedge. If I want left-leaning, I'll go to Drudge.com, which is the
Drudge Retort. Although at this point, Drudge Report is essentially just CNN. So either Drudge
Report or Drudge. And so I understand that psychology where obviously I'm expecting 15 updates a day if I want to quickly see what's going on.
A big part of that, and this is getting into more specifics and not to play too much insider
baseball right now, right? But a big thing that goes to how your business is structured,
there are a lot of news outlets and content outlets that do... They really focus on paid acquisition. They are paying through any number of systems,
social media platforms, Google Ads. They're paying to get people on their website.
Bar Bend, when we started it, we knew we were going to try several different business models.
We knew we were going to change and evolve a lot as a company. But we built it to be an organic
shop to where people... We did not do paid acquisition.
We don't do paid acquisition. Everyone who's reading Bar Bend is coming there because they found us through an organic channel, be it social media, be it Google, be it Google News or Google
Discover or something like that. So I think that there's an additional impetus for us to produce
fresh content because, look, we're playing in many ways in Google's sandbox. It's not our only
traffic source, but we want to stay top of mind and we want to stay toward the top of not only their
organic search results, right? But the other platforms for discovery that they're really
pushing heavily, including Google News. And something else just to rewind a little bit
that I think is worth emphasizing that I like about your approach that makes a lot of sense to
me is you were looking for something, you found an opportunity, you found a gap in this bigger health and fitness space.
And instead of just kind of aping what somebody else is doing, and I can relate to that because
when I wrote Bigger, Leaner, Stronger back, I mean, I published it in 2012, January. So I was
writing it over the course of 2011.
I started writing that book because I remember looking on Amazon and going to the bookstore
and looking through books. And I was looking for that book. I was looking for a book that just
makes it simple, just gives the basic science-based principles, the fundamentals for diet that
explains energy balance, explains macronutrient balance,
that is heavy on the meat and light on the sizzle, or heavy on the steak and light on the sizzle,
so to speak. I don't need all the marketing bullshit. Just kind of tell me what to do.
And on the training side of things, just explain the importance of lifting heavy weights and
progressive overload and getting enough volume in to be able to progressively roll your muscles.
And give me a program that puts me in the gym for maybe 45, 60 minutes a day, three to five days a week. I can do some cardio outside of that as
well, because I knew that at that point, based on what I had learned and what I had experienced,
that that approach works and it delivers the results that most guys who are getting into
weightlifting want. They really don't need to do much more than that. And of course,
there are some other nooks and crannies that are worth exploring, but that is why I wrote that book. It wasn't that that book already existed. And I was like, oh, I can just do my own version
of that. It was that the book didn't exist. And I was really surprised actually. I was like,
really? Nobody has just kind of written a simple how to actually just stick to the science.
Don't take the approach of some new
weird bullshit fake breakthrough, trying to sell some sort of fad diet or fad workout program with
some patent perpetually pending bullshit name. And that's why I wrote that book initially.
How you started Bar Bend, there's just a parallel there in that you saw something that didn't exist
that you yourself wanted to use. And you knew that there were likely other
people out there like you who would appreciate it if it existed. Am I right? Yeah. I think that,
again, it's important for me to emphasize that there was good content out there, right? It's
not like we were coming in and saying, hey, nothing has been produced that's up to standard.
I think for us, it was trying to create a home for the strength athlete as a concept and for people interested in strength as a concept. It sounds like though the news,
I mean, you had mentioned this and that's why it just stuck in my mind. It sounded to me though,
that this news aggregation angle was something that hadn't been done yet the way that you
envisioned it. Yeah, certainly. But you know, the creating the ESPN for strength sports
was an original pitch.
Now, I don't want to use that too heavily
because I don't want to be sued for trademark infringement
or something like that.
But ESPN has bigger problems.
I think they just laid off like hundreds of people.
Yeah, I think they're a Disney property now.
They have bigger fish to fry, right?
But really being that, because the theory was like,
okay, if I am someone who first discovered
Olympic style weightlifting and then discovered CrossFit and then powerlifting after that,
like my strength journey is...
Everyone's strength journey is unique and different.
But I thought, well, if I'm interested in all of these things, and I'd love to be able
to go to one place to produce all of these things or to get my information on all these
things, then there have to be other people out there who are also interested in all of
these things. At the time, this is in 2016, this might seem relatively late,
but at the time, you know, if you wanted results on some of these more niche sports, right,
especially when it came to things like strongman or powerlifting at the time, or even weightlifting,
it's funny, sometimes you would still have to wait for a physical magazine to come out to get
the information on who did
what at these events or in an earlier age of social media you know people might post their
own lifts on instagram once instagram like introduced video as a component right in those
like early 15 second clips you remember those or you could maybe go to you know a place called like
power lifting watch or something that may have those results up, but actually treating them as, you know, ESPN did something
groundbreaking, I think, which is, hey, we can treat the news of sports as entertainment, right?
People enjoy not only seeing who won, but reading about the game. And my theory was,
okay, a strength athlete, maybe it's a CrossFitter, they might be interested in watching
someone snatch and clean and jerk really heavy. And they might also be interested in the drama that actually occurred at that meet because there
was a misload on the barbell or someone bombed out who was expected to win. It might not be
super relevant to their day-to-day training, but they're still interested in that. So I think
there's a level of cross-pollinated interest across strength, whether you're a competitive
strength athlete or you're just someone who's lifting weights because you enjoy training or because you just want to get leaner and stronger because
you're a Mike Matthews fan. You know what I mean? I think a lot of your listeners on this podcast,
they might not be actively training to have the heaviest snatch and clean and jerk possible,
right? But if I tell you, hey, someone just snatched the most weight in human history,
do you want to see a video of that and learn a little bit more about this person?
A lot of them might actually say yes, even if they don't do that movement regularly or have never even tried that before.
And that cross-pollinated interest, it was a concept that was very quickly proven out when we started getting traction within our first few weeks of putting the site live.
And how did you start out?
Because this comes back to this minimum viable product that I'm a big believer in and I, I think, is almost always the smartest way to go about starting a business. How did you de-risk? So you had this theory,
you had this hypothesis that there would be these other people out there that would be interested.
And if you did it in a way that appealed to you, it would probably appeal to them. And where did
you go from there? And the reason why I think this is worth talking about in particular is I can think of a couple of examples that come immediately to mind of people. One is specifically in health and fitness. And then a couple of other examples actually in other industries where people started out with, I think, reasonable theories like you had something that, yeah, I could see that working. Nothing is guaranteed. Anybody who has worked enough in marketing and who has done enough A-B testing of things, particularly with conversion rate
optimization knows that sometimes things that make so much sense to you and seem so clearly better
than your control just lose. And sometimes it's baffling. Sometimes I can't even figure out the
psychology of why some of these tests don't win. And a big mistake that I've seen people make is start out with a reasonable theory.
It's not dumb. It's not something you would hear and just shake your head at, but then
move way too quickly, quit their job and pour a bunch of money into it and go into this long
development phase before they ever de-risk their theory. Get it to market as quickly
as possible. This is my personal philosophy is do as little work as you can initially to create the
bare bones product or service that the early adopters will, or even you could say the innovators,
the real left of the distribution people who love finding just new things, even if they are
very imperfect and start getting feedback right away,
start seeing, does this really have any legs? Am I really going to gain any traction?
Yeah. I think there's a lot to unpack there. And I think that you speak to both your own
personal experience and to what you've seen in the fitness industry, which is why I just
love having these sorts of conversations, especially with someone like you, who
has been around the block. Not that you're old, but you have a lot of experience. I'm okay with getting older.
Wiser. Let's just say not older, but wiser, more experienced. But I think, look, don't quit your
day job is something I grew up hearing a lot. I grew up in pretty rural Kentucky, more suburban
these days whenever I go back and I see how it's grown. But I kind of had this thought in my head or grew up with this like,
hey, maybe don't be so entrepreneurial, right?
I didn't come from that background.
Not that it was necessarily discouraged,
but I never really saw myself starting my own thing.
And I think with Barb and there were a confluence of factors
that influenced my ability to take the risk,
quote unquote, while de-risking what I could do for myself.
I do have co-founders and they were extraordinarily supportive. And at the time,
we were actually doing quite a bit of work for clients when it came to marketing, social media
marketing, SEO, and content development for clients. So the first year of Barben's existence,
we were not only running Barben, we were running some other websites, and we were doing paid consulting for companies when it came to online marketing or digital
marketing, or how do they create content, things like that. So Barben didn't make any money when
we launched. It's very difficult to make money in content unless you're launching with an established
audience, right? If you're selling an ebook online, and you already have 5 million followers,
that's one thing. If you're starting from zero, which we did, good luck making money in your first year, maybe in your second
year. But I actually had the idea for Bar Bend during a period of time when I was going to just
take... My plan was to take 6 to 8 months off of working entirely. I was burnt out. I had worked
for over 2 years at that point as a content consultant in and around the fitness industry. I was on the road for between 25 and 30 weeks of the year. I was just burnt out. And I actually decided that I needed to reset. I was at CES in Las Vegas in 2016. And if you've ever been to a conference in Las Vegas, there's partying, there's a lot of drinking. I really enjoyed all the people I got to spend that time with. They were fantastic,
but I just got burnt out and exhausted
and I came back to New York
and I was like, I need a reset.
I need to take some time,
kind of do my walkabout, so to speak.
Maybe I'll go to a cabin in the woods
for some period of months and just reset.
But there was something in the back of my brain
that was still kind of tickling me.
And I had talked to my now co-founders.
They were just kind of some business acquaintances and friends of mine at the time. And I mentioned, I was like,
Hey, I think I'm going to take some time away. And when I come back, I have this idea for something
I might want to get off the ground. And their response was, Well, why don't we just do that now?
Why wait? The longer you wait in the digital content space, the harder it gets.
What if someone else comes to market with that idea first? Then you'll have to play catch up.
And they convinced me to not take that period away and just get started. And by partnering with them,
I was able to roll in some of the clients I was still doing consulting for. And they were able to...
And they already had clients that they were working with as well. So we were able to have
an economic base that helped fund Bar Bend for the first year until we raised our own round of
funding. And then until the business actually got to the point where it was making enough money to
sustain itself. So all that to say, it can sound like this great leap of faith to just go all in
on Bar Bend. But I was extraordinarily fortunate in that I had a bit of an economic lean to or base
that basically helped fund the company until the flywheel was spinning fast enough for the company to support
itself. And at what point in that first year, did you see signs of life? Did you see that your theory
may well be correct, that this could become something? What happened for you to know,
like, ooh, this looks like this was a good idea? There were two. It's a very good question. And I
want to give two specific examples.
The first was World's Strongest Man 2016.
World's Strongest Man is an interesting event because it is a television show.
There has never been a live stream of World's Strongest Man to where you can watch it as
it happens, like you would the CrossFit Games, right?
Or the World Powerlifting Championships.
It is recorded to be a television show that airs at different times in different countries.
And that's how the event is built.
It's literally made for TV.
So because of that, it can be difficult for fans
to figure out who won, when it actually happened,
because the actual show might not air on TV.
I think that year it aired like six months later
on television, right?
And it was difficult to get reporting on it.
We covered it.
The results are not necessarily secret, but they're just not broadcast. And it wasn difficult to get reporting on it. We covered it. The results are not necessarily
secret, but they're just not broadcast. And it wasn't something that at the time,
mainstream outlets were really picking up. Now, once Hofthor Bjornsson and a few other folks and
Eddie Hall and all these folks became bigger, more mainstream names, people started covering
them a little bit more. ESPN started picking it up, etc. But we published the results of
The World's Strongest Man that year, basically before anyone else. I think we were the first to publish.
And there were accurate results.
They gave color and context and life to this competition.
And I remember publishing that.
I believe it was like a Sunday night.
I could be wrong here on the timing.
And I went to bed and I woke up the next morning and had my commute and walked into the office
we were renting out of a shared workspace.
And I walked in and my co-founders were like,
they're more morning people than I am. And they were like, hey, have you checked analytics today? I was like, no, I was about to. And they're like, you should check analytics.
And I think it was something like we had 100,000 people on the site or something like that that
day. Not at once, but we had about 100,000 readers that day. And previously, our high had been like a few thousand, right? So suddenly, I realized like,
okay, people are coming to us because they want this information and they can't get it anywhere
else. And they're coming to us through different means, through Google, through social media,
etc. But that was something, our first 100K day. It was quicker than any other site I'd been
involved with from the beginning. So it was quicker to 100K in a day than any other site I'd
either helped launch or was involved with very early on. And the second thing that year I noticed was the 2016 Rio Olympic Games. We wrote articles, and I wrote many of them myself, actually. Every weight weight class, we wrote results, what happened, full-on articles and full-on coverage.
And that wasn't something that the mainstream outlets were doing.
Someone like NBC, someone like ESPN or CBS, they may cover weightlifting at like a 5,000-foot view.
And they might write like, here's what happened.
It's going to be a highlight reel.
Exactly.
Here's what happened that day or here's like if any world records were set, right?
Or here's what the Americans did oftentimes.
But there wasn't
anyone stateside who was covering every session in full. Now, there were people posting on the
subreddit, people posting on social media, some really smart, fantastic folks who were trying to
give weightlifting some coverage. But there wasn't a site that did that. And we saw such amazing,
sustained growth in traffic over the course of the Rio Olympics and growth on social.
And I think that's really where we built up a lot of our initial weightlifting leadership.
So it was those two events where I was like, okay, okay, there is a desire for this.
We just happen to be right now the only one hitting publish in a timely fashion.
And then from there, I'm assuming it was time to double, triple, quadruple down on the strategy.
Well, certainly we want to double down on the strategy, but we also began to realize that, like we talked about earlier in this recording, Mike, you have to
find 100 different ways to get one reader or one listener, right? Living in New York, I kind of have
a ringside seat to some of the not great things that have happened in New York media over the
past few years. And one of the big mistakes a lot of brands made years ago was they went all in on
Facebook. And they were like, we're going to become a Facebook news outlet. We're really only
going to publish on Facebook. We're going to publish natively to
Facebook. And a lot of them were big VC backed companies that quickly hired hundreds of employees
and they don't exist anymore, or at least they don't exist in that format anymore because they
were so beholden to one platform. Yeah. Organic reach has just gone down, down, down.
But especially, you know, Facebook tweaked their algorithm and some people lost 90% of their traffic, right? I mean, that's happened with the trio. I believe
it was three Google updates that we've seen in, I say, MySpace, maybe, I don't know if, well,
no, you produce a lot of similar content. So you probably saw Google Medic hurt me. It hurt Legion's
traffic. And then the latest one helped Legion. And so on the whole,
it's actually been okay. But there was a period of decline. It was like one or two updates. It
was Medic. And then there was another one. And then there was a third that rapidly increased
traffic. So similar situation. Although fortunately, we don't rely on Google for
certainly not for much immediate income, people clicking to the
website and buying. That's not generally how it goes. That's very hard to do to have anyone
click into your blog and not know anything about your company, even if they like the article and
go buy something. So it's more a process of getting them on the website. Hopefully they like
the article. Most of our traffic is blog traffic. Hopefully they liked it. And then we can follow
them around with ads that hopefully get them back. And then really what we want is
we want to get them onto our email list where then we can create more of a personal relationship.
And there are onboarding sequences and people can reply to the emails that come from me and
hear from me and so forth. But yeah, I mean, it's important to, I think, for media companies to
hedge. I mean, there was a time where we considered going really tripling down on Facebook in our
first year. Right. And I'm so glad we didn't because halfway into our first year, Facebook
updated their algorithm. And, you know, there were a lot of media companies that just went out of
business because they didn't have any more diverse traffic sources. Look, I'd say Google is certainly
the biggest player that dictates how organic traffic flows on the internet. It's not the only one. We get quite a bit of organic traffic from non-Google
browsers, especially internationally. And making sure our site is super light and super mobile
optimized so someone in India who's using potentially a low cost or a low data device
or plan can access our content and it still be a rich experience as were, had gigabit internet on a desktop in the United States.
It might not be the exact same,
but how can you make them somewhat equivalent?
So we were very lucky early on
that we decided to try and diversify
the types of content we were producing,
but also the platforms we were reaching people on
and to understand, like to really bet on ourselves.
Because at the time,
so many folks were just publishing directly on Facebook
or a lot of outlets actually switched over to just publishing on Medium. Medium was the new
hot thing then. Mike, I'm sure you saw people were like, well, we're going to migrate away,
and we're just going to be on a Medium subdomain. People and companies who have had some success
there. We see it now with journalists moving over to Substack. But I think that we bet that
our most valuable asset would be barbend.com. And how can we make that the best
experience and then disseminate that content or syndicate that content across platforms?
That was the decision we had to ultimately make in 2016. And I will say we got a little lucky.
It could have gone either way. There are many, many people much smarter than I who made a
different decision that ended up being wrong that year in doubling down on Facebook or doubling down on Medium or something like that. Look, you need to be lucky and good, ultimately,
in business. It's not to say that all of this was like a master plan and everything was perfectly
predicted by us. Sometimes you come to a fork in the road and you hope you make the best decision
based on the information you have. That's true in the content business. It's true in the supplement
business. I mean, that's true in any entrepreneurial endeavor. Any area of life, really.
True.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports
nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you,
is the leading brand of all natural sports
supplements in the world. Talk to me about monetization. So you have now a proof of concept
and you have gained a readership. And how did you go from that to a viable business?
Yeah, I think the first place any publisher looks for monetization is advertising on site, right? Which over the course of the internet has certainly ebbed and flowed, right? Gone are the days where you start a personal blog in the late 90s and big fat Google checks just show up or big fat checks from Yahoo just start showing up out of nowhere. It's a slower build these days and traffic has a different value than maybe it once did. But for us, on-site advertising was pretty big. Finding an ad network and finding an ad experience that
didn't detract too much from the reader experience that still made people want to
click through to different pages on our site that was still very mobile-friendly.
We are constantly tweaking that. We are constantly tweaking the on-site ad experience.
And we get a lot of traffic. We get millions of visitors a month. And that is, for us, monetizing via on-site ads, it's very viable for us because we get that much traffic.
For a lot of blogs that are even more or sites that are even more niche than us,
it's not necessarily viable. We also do a good bit of sponsored content. Now,
that's obviously disclosed and disclaimed and treated very differently than non-sponsored
content on our site because we want to be... Our readers are smart. We're not pulling the wool over anyone's eyes. And so if you read a
sponsored piece, you know that it's sponsored. But as our traffic has grown, that's something
that brands are interested in doing with us directly. It could be... It takes different
forms. A sponsored post, a sponsored podcast, a sponsored newsletter. It takes a lot of different
forms. So that's something that didn't really become an option for us until we'd already proved traction and proved growth.
We were a little slow to accept sponsored content partnerships until brands started coming to us.
Most of our sponsored content partnerships are brands approaching us, not the other way around.
So it's only been very recently that we've built a dedicated sales process for that because we
really wanted to take our time and we didn't want to partner with brands and then have them not
get any perceived value out of that. So it took us a long time to develop that,
but that's something that our team's gotten much, much better at in sorting out and approaching in
a way that is clear to our readers and is in line with everything you're supposed to do online,
but also gets value for our partners. And then another way we monetize
through some affiliate sales,
I should give the disclaimer and disclosure
that disclaimers and disclosures
are on all of our pages that have affiliate links.
We do have an affiliate partnership with Legion.
So I should say that right now,
I'm big on disclosures and disclaimers.
That's another way that we monetize as well.
Because you only partner with the best.
I like partnering with people who have great smiles,
great abs. No, I'm absolutely kidding on that. I'm partnering with people who have great smiles, great abs. No,
I'm absolutely kidding on that. Not to butter Mike up too much, but I should also say that we've sold content to companies. That's something we've done before. A company might want... They
look at our content. They're like, that's great. We would love to publish that. We don't have a
team that can produce that. Can we buy it from you? And we have white-labeled or private-labeled,
whatever you want to call it, content for other
media brands. That's something that we are thinking of exploring more and more as a potential path to
monetization because we are very proud of the content production systems we've built. And other
brands, they're looking at us and they're like, we want that, but we don't want to spend the years
and years building the team and the systems. What's your price? And that's something that I
think we will continue to potentially explore with the right brands. We don't want that showing up on really
terrible spammy websites. So we're being a little discriminating on who we work with on those
projects. And that is a theme of a lot of what you've been sharing on this podcast is, for lack
of a better word, I know it's a trendy term right now, but authenticity and transparency and essentially treating your readers and your followers as you would want to be treated.
Like you mentioned, making it clear that sponsored content is sponsored and making sure that it's
good content and that you're not willing to trade. You're not willing to trade a little bit of your
brand equity for some money. And that
requires some foresight and it requires some integrity. And I think that that has certainly
contributed to your success. And it also, it's just apparent if you spend some time on the website
and you pay attention to the details, at least it's apparent to me, if you pay attention to the
details, I just get the impression. I mean, I know you, so I know this, but I would get the impression that somebody who cares is behind this. And if
that were not the case, I would say you're good at faking it, but it is the case. And the best
way to do that though, is to actually care, is to actually have some ethical standards and to pay
attention to the details. And again, to just really deliver the product
and service that you wish somebody could deliver to you. And I think if you operate from a place
like that in business, it will permeate so many aspects of your business in ways that you are not
even going to be aware of, but that people from the outside looking in, especially new people, will get an intuition.
They'll just get a sense of, I like this and I'm inclined to believe this or this person or this
website. And I understand even as a consumer who I think is, I'm fairly good at marketing and
persuasion. I'm good enough at least. And I get this experience where I'm just inclined to trust
this person or this source. And yes, I can be wrong sometimes. And sometimes
people are just good at pretense, but often that's not the case. Often when I looked into it further,
I just get my intuition further confirmed. And I think that a bar bend is a good example of that.
Well, one thing I will say is a guiding light for us has been, look, if we're doing something,
that's maybe a sponsored post or a partnership. when I say sponsored or partnership, it's not necessarily,
it's not always paid. For example, we have a partnership with USA Weightlifting. We're their
official media partner. We do have an editorial separation of church and state there. Some content
we do collaboratively and it's labeled as such. Some content they have zero input on. And we also
do a lot of work with World Paralympic Powerlifting, which is the governing body for Paralympic powerlifting, if that's not abundantly clear. We look at any partnership
content or sponsored content through the lens of, okay, if this was not a piece of sponsored content
or partnership content, would it still be good enough to pass muster on bar bend? If this didn't
have a brand or a sports governing body associated with it, would it still be good? Would it still be,
are we cutting corners to have this content go live?
Yeah, could you stand by it?
Could you field an email from a reader
who is asking questions about it and its legitimacy?
Exactly.
And look, I'm gonna be honest, we're not perfect.
And I think there are instances in everything we do,
be it sponsored content, partnership content,
regular content, news coverage, podcasts, we can always do better. And I think that it's all too easy to separate things
out when you're a content company to, hey, here's our monetized content. Here's maybe our not so
heavily monetized content and treat them separately. And in a sense, you do have to treat them
separately because they go through different editorial processes. They have different
disclaimers. But you should be working to get better at all of them. It's very
easy to say, here's how we do sponsored content. Here's what a brand gets when they do sponsored
content with us and to not push those to get better editorially. Every piece of SpawnCon we
publish should be better than the last piece of SpawnCon we publish. That's the same expectation
when it comes to our news coverage, right? World's Strongest Man is coming up this year. Our coverage
of World's Strongest Man 2020 sure as hell better be a lot better than our
coverage of World's Strongest Man 2016 that I referenced, right? Content is content. It
represents your brand. And it doesn't matter if there's another brand or another brand partner
attached to it. It still represents who you are. Or a guest author, right? Maybe it's not
sponsored content. It's just a guest post. I've seen many websites.
We publish a lot of guest posts from outside contributors, and I literally can't count the
number of times I've gotten an angry phone call from a contributor being like,
what do you mean this isn't good enough yet? It happens a lot.
That reminds me of a little anecdote. I believe it was about Henry Kissinger,
who there was a story that when aides would bring him reports or just written material,
his standard go-to reply was basically that they can do better. Go work on it some more.
It's not as good as it can be yet, please. We have an op-ed section. And one thing that
annoyed me in the early days before Bar Bend started, I was very annoyed because I didn't
feel like there was a standard practice in the fitness industry to label op-eds as op-eds.
It was tough to figure out like,
what is someone's opinion?
And what is someone saying is fact?
I'm sure this is an issue
that you have run into many times before
in your own career in fitness.
And our op-eds still go up.
They still go through an editorial process.
It's not like someone sends us a document
and they're a big name influencer in the industry
and we just publish it without taking a read and
pushing them to make it the best possible thing. And that's turned off some people. I'm not going
to name names, but we've made some people upset in the industry because they're like, well, I
thought my name would be enough to get me a byline on Barbet. It's like, no one's name is enough to
get them a byline on our site. The content should be what gets you the byline on our site.
Totally agree. The thing with that is that's one of those little micro decisions that,
yeah, in and of itself, does it really matter if you accepted the content as it was or if you
wanted it better? No, if you just looked at it out of the bigger context and saw it as this one little transaction.
But if you do it once, then how many other times are you going to do it? And over time,
making a lot of individually poor decisions can add up to a complete mess. And it's just
an important business lesson because once you have achieved some success and once you have
the flywheel spinning and you've really gained some momentum, I think it can be easy to think that now you can kind of just rest on your laurels and you can do things that would have actively gotten in the way of you getting to where you are.
You will make so many decisions as an entrepreneur
that are wrong. You might make more wrong decisions than you do correct decisions as
an entrepreneur. That might just be how it is. And everything has an impact. And I think the
second wave of building any company is surrounding yourself with people who know more than you do
about certain things, or at least really care as much as you do
about certain things and can help contextualize decision-making so that you're not looking at
every single thing through your own biases. And that's obviously very important in something like
news coverage, but there are lessons there and impacts there for every type of company.
And look, fitness, it's very easy for us to say, oh, fitness is very simple, right? It's calories in versus calories out. It's periodized resistance
training. There are these principles that we like to hang our hats on in a fitness space and say,
like, these are truths and anything that isn't these is false and like everything's been figured
out. But even if there are fitness principles that might seem relatively straightforward to us,
people and people who
are passionate about fitness are inherently complex. And that adds a level of complexity
when it comes to doing business in the fitness industry, when it comes to serving content in
the fitness industry, when it comes to selling products in the fitness industry. It's never
going to be as straightforward as you might assume because people are complex individuals
and they have their own biases and thoughts. it can get frustrating. It can get frustrating to say things that might seem very simple and to lean on things in the
space that are very simple, but it's never that simple, especially if you are dealing with millions
and millions of readers. What are some of the wrongest decisions that you've made? What are
some of the, when you look back, yeah, some of the big mistakes
that obviously turned into big lessons, but I'm curious. Or just whatever jumps to mind,
like things that stand out as, it would have been nice to know that before doing that.
It's not that I can't think of anything. It's that I'm trying to figure out where to start.
I think the first thing, okay, we were talking about this a little bit before
the episode started recording. We are a New York City-based company. And for a long time, I was such a stick in the mud about every team member we have needs to be based in New York City.
And we need that because we need to have that in-office presence.
We need to film everything in office.
We need to treat this like a true media brand.
I would say this thing that was just so wrong.
I was like, blogs don't have offices.
Media companies do.
Which is the dumbest thing in the world, by the way. Where did you get that?
I made it up. I'm assuming. I made it up.
I was watching an episode of Mad Men
and then I woke up
and in a fever dream, I was like, this is what I need to say.
And it's the dumbest thing.
Eureka moment. It was the dumbest thing in the world.
I literally would say that to people.
And about, no, we need to
hire people in New York and our full-time employees will
be in office and that's where we do things.
It's like, obviously, that's not the case, right?
And it really took COVID for me to understand that that's just not the case.
And I understand.
I didn't have a little motto to go with it, but I thought it was more important than it
has turned out to be. I thought it was more important
to be in the office together. And some people would prefer it probably, but many of the people
now that we're fully remote and don't have any intention to change that regardless of where
COVID goes, most of the people are very happy with the setup. Several people, they formed their own
little group and they're in Florida. And then several other people were able to go live in the places they want to live.
So I understand. I also just had this idea that, I don't know, just precluded me from even looking
into fully remote work. And that's just like you had mentioned that we just, we have our biases
and sometimes we're not willing to push back. The irony of it is I was the first person, you know, back in the 2000, early 2010s, I
guess we're in a different decade now.
I was the first person to be like, the old ways of media are not sustainable.
Print is not the future.
The old guard is going to have trouble.
The old legacy publication is going to have trouble and they need a new way of thinking.
But then I would also be like, well, you know, Time Magazine has a big fancy office. CNN has a big fancy office. We got
to have a big fancy office. It was like, it was, the irony was just staring me in the face, Mike.
And, you know, I look back on it, even I look back at myself nine months ago and I'm like, how,
how obtuse are you? You know what I mean? How stubborn are you, David? One of many examples where I was
just wrong. I think there was a time in Barben's history where... And this goes back to something
I said earlier, our website being the most valuable asset we have, barbend.com, the thing
that gets X number of millions of readers per month. And I think there was a time when I thought our social media strategy, which we're currently in
the process of completely redoing and actually bringing on some new people to do that. I thought
that social media, the only point of it for us was sending traffic to the website. And I was
convinced that if we weren't funneling everything from social media directly to the website,
then it was pointless. It was pointless. Obviously Obviously that's incorrect as well. Social media has value beyond pointing links to
your website, right? And beyond pointing traffic to your website. It's a way for your brand to
interact with someone on a very different level. And that can be really powerful and really potent.
And that's something I was all too slow to pick up on.
I have been in the same boat probably because I don't particularly enjoy social media. I like that
it's an easy way for me to interact with people and answer their questions and just hear from
people. And it's similar to email in that sense for me, where I enjoy the one-on-one interaction.
But outside of that, I'm just not a social media user. I rarely ever even scroll one
flip on Instagram's homepage. If I'm opening Instagram,
it's usually right to DMs so I can just answer people's questions and check comments. And that
is mostly it. I understand now that I should have taken it more seriously as a business owner and
set up a team sooner to use social media better than we have previously. And even probably
get some help with my own because I can only do so much and it only makes so much sense for me to
spend so much time on it given the other things I have to do. That's also something I'm in the
process of expanding is the team and the focus on social media strategies that I think are more in
line with best practices. And the same thing goes
for sponsorship and working with influencers for whatever reason. I just didn't quite,
the potential effectiveness didn't really resonate with me until I started to see
what it was doing when somebody took the time and it was their job to build it up.
And I look back and I go, that's kind of dumb.
Like I've missed, I've missed out on many, many millions of dollars of sales that could come from an area of the business that I don't have to be very involved in personally, that I just need the
right people who enjoy that kind of work. And it's totally their thing and they can just build it up.
You know? I mean, hindsight is 2020. And the cool thing about, well, I know you're a very data-oriented guy. So I know tracking sales and conversions and things
are things that are always in your mind. And you have people on your team who are also responsible
for that. On the content side, we can see traffic in real time. We can see trends in real time.
For us, a lot of the decisions we make that are incorrect, we know it almost immediately.
It's true in all businesses. At a certain time, hindsight's always 20-20. But one thing about content, and I'm sure you do this
as well, looking at analytics and performance and things on your own content and your own sites,
you're able to see it relatively quickly. So the good news about content, as much as I was
pessimistic earlier in this recording, and I was like, don't get the content if you want to make
a living. The good news is you can kind of spot your mistakes pretty quickly and a lot more quickly than you can with other realms of business.
So that is actually something that's really nice about content if you're willing to stay somewhat open minded and to actually look for those things.
Yeah, and probably not be easily discouraged, right?
easily discouraged, right? Because there are a lot of ideas, and I'm speaking for myself,
a lot of ideas for talking about content, even for ideas for articles, ideas for podcasts,
and in many cases, ideas that I put a fair amount of work into and just didn't really do that well. And then there were many pieces of content that didn't take as much work, sometimes not nearly as
much work, and that I didn't expect.
I remember what immediately comes to mind, the flashbulb memory is, I remember years ago when
I had Muscle for Life, which eventually I just merged into Legion, gave it all the content,
all the links and everything. I remember I wrote an article on fasted cardio. And this was years
ago before now there's a lot of content out there and it's not a particularly interesting topic for many
people because it's kind of beaten to death. But at the time there was not much out there. Like if
you searched Google, there wasn't anything particularly interesting on the first page.
And I thought it was just kind of interesting. And I spoke about some of the research that showed
that it probably doesn't do much in terms of increasing fat loss
in and of itself. But if you combine it with yohimbine, which is a neat supplement, and then
if you're going to take yohimbine, you might as well take some sinephrine and some caffeine as
well, blah, blah, blah. And so it was a pretty simple article and it talked about a little bit
about stubborn fat too, and explained people, explained what that is and how it relates to
yohimbine. And what was interesting though, is SEO research indicated there was no real value in it. I don't even know if it was getting a thousand
searches a month according to the research at the time. And I didn't do much in the way of
social media digging to see how much chatter there was out there about it. It's just something I was
getting asked about semi-regularly,
and I thought it was interesting, so I wrote an article on it. And that article exploded.
Within a few months, it was getting six figures a month. It was breaking 100,000 visits a month from an article. I was baffled because according to the, I don't remember which SEO software I
was using at the time, maybe Ahrefs or Moz or something.
There wasn't much search volume. So I still really don't know exactly what happened,
but that article became, and I have to look actually, because it's been updated several times, it probably still is a consistent performer years later. So just to that point that there have
certainly been flops and things where I was like, cool. I just put 30 hours into an article that is basically in the graveyard. That's great. And then there are other
instances where I just swung really hard and happened to hit the ball and the bases were
loaded. Yeah. It's look, writing is oftentimes a content creation is oftentimes about killing
your darlings. And just as often you'll have successes and you're just scratching your head.
And I will say, Hey, we have a fantastic team at Borobend. We have some folks who I think are
really best in class when it comes to data analytics, SEO, content tracking. And look,
we can point to examples too, where it's been months and months and we've done all this digging
and we're just like, we don't know why this one is working and we don't know why this one isn't
working. Those are clearly the exceptions to the rules. About 99% of our content, we can
deduce what's happening pretty quickly and pretty well, but there are still those head
scratchers online. The internet's a big place and you're never going to understand all of it.
Very true. Very true. So what are your future plans for Barbin? What is the next
one year, three years, or even five years look like if you've planned out that far, or at least kind of laid out a vision that you want to work towards?
Well, thanks for asking, Mike. I appreciate that. The game plan for us now is to build,
we've built systems and we've built a great team. Now the game plan is for us to build teams,
plural, and to really let people specialize a bit more. Now, I talked earlier in the podcast about
how you shouldn't double down on just one platform, right? But the question for us is,
can we build teams that really focus in on specialty content when it comes to a particular
strength sport? Can our news team stand on its own and be very separate than our content team
that focuses just on evergreen and training or nutrition content? The answer is yes. And I think for us, building teams around these systems we have is going to
be very important. And as we grow, bringing on people who can truly be specialists, because
that's what's going to allow them to become the absolute best. The more hats you wear,
as you well know, Mike, the more hats you wear, the more difficult it is to become a master of
anything. You can become a jack of all trades, but a master of none. Can we allow people
to grow at Barbin to where they can become not only responsible for something at Barbin, but
truly the best there is when it comes to their silo of content production? I would have loved
to have started that process sooner and have less of a generalist team. But with any growing
business, you have to follow the revenue and how the business is
actually doing.
That's going to dictate how quickly you can grow.
And I am someone who, I am not a big proponent for us of going out and getting institutional
funding to scale.
I've been involved in companies that have gotten institutional funding and it's not- I've spoken with a lot of people who have operated in those
circles and the advice uniformly is avoid it if you can, basically. There are scenarios,
but this flow chart is long and it has a lot of yes, no decision points to get to the take the
funding. And I will say I used to be a writer for fortune.com and for forbes.com and living in New York.
I know a lot of people kind of on both sides of that, right?
Who are founders and entrepreneurs, but who are also also work on the VC side.
And it's not inherently a bad thing.
But for us, because we are so niche and because we've been able to call our own shots, you
know, our scale and reaching our scale has to come from money and resources the company
itself is earning. And look, could we go out and raise a large institutional grant? Maybe,
maybe not. I don't know anything for sure until you've done it. But can we grow on our own merit
based off of our own business's viability? We're getting to the point where we can finally scale
more specifically and scale by silo and for very, very, very specific roles
as opposed to hiring editorial generalists
or even SEO generalists.
I want to get people who are increasingly
coming into and growing into more specific roles.
That's our game plan for the next year.
We've actually already begun that process.
We have a new employee.
We're onboarding someone tomorrow
and we'll be
onboarding more and more folks. Barbed is 11 full-time now. And we'll be onboarding more folks,
hopefully, over the next months and the next year. So our one-year plan is, let's build specific
teams around specific systems. Our two- and three-year plan is a gradual expansion beyond
just strength sports content, while also still understanding and
respecting that is our core audience and something we're going to continue producing.
But can we start producing content that's a little bit more general and meeting people
no matter where they are in their strength training journey? I hope so. And that's what
we're going to work to do. Love it. And the big picture media, do you want this to be,
is this the ESPN for strength sports? I think actually in many ways we're
getting there. I mean, I'll say I like the brand. That's something that immediately struck me.
It's a great name. I mean, and that matters. I'm a big believer in the importance of strong
branding and I like the, how the experience has evolved. I think it's slick. I really appreciate
that, Mike. I mean, I think the thing for us is we're already among the bigger sites in this
space. You know, we might be the biggest news source in this space that is specific to this space.
How do we grow smartly, but also not like, how do we disrespect our own ceiling?
Because I can't look at someone like we're not chasing anyone right now.
Right.
I can't say that there's like, there's not someone who's leaps and bounds ahead of us
when it comes to coverage of the space the way we do.
I think we can be much bigger and I think we can, you know, be a resource for all information strength. I think we can be much bigger and I think we can be a resource for all
information strength. I think we can get much better at video. I think we can launch other
podcasts. I think we can be a place that incubates talent from across the strength world. I really
do. That's something I was going to ask you about. I figured I'd just save it until after the
interview, but that's exactly where my mind goes. As soon as we can take over your podcast,
I'm absolutely kidding, i'm completely i'm
completely joking hey i love competition no no i mean you'd be a personality under the barb and
brander i'm completely joking you've built quite the behemoth i'm a very open-minded person i'm
willing to listen to anything and then go from there nothing is impossible but all that to say
you know you're a very smart guy i respect so much of what you've done in in the fitness space
and what you will do because i know you're also someone who does not sit on your laurels, so to speak.
But for us, I think being a home where personalities can exist and grow and be
built within the space, I think that is the next wave and call it the three-year plan.
Totally makes sense. I immediately think of, I don't know his name because I'm not into
hunting, but the meat eater guy that has that whole brand. Have you heard of that?
Meat eater?
Not coming to mind actually.
Oh, so I don't know his name, but I know he has a show on Netflix. I've seen just the cover of it.
And I know also he has essentially a media company and he has a whole family of podcasts
all around. I believe it's all around hunting is the
main topic, but apparently he does very well. And that is the model that he himself made it work
and then systematized it. And now is kind of like stamping out these, these other workable spinoffs,
you know? Well, you should be able to build a structure to where someone with like a personal
brand or who wants to build that it should be appealing to them because they can
build it under the infrastructure you already have in place, right? And they don't have to go
hire their own audio engineer and do, you know what I mean? It should, the flywheel's already
spinning. Like you and I have referenced a few times in this conversation. We'll see exactly
what that looks like. You know, the funny thing is about digital media is you can plan ahead,
but digital media always evolves and changes.
And the platforms we really prioritize now might be a little bit different in a few years,
or there might be new platforms, right? If we were having this conversation three years ago,
TikTok wouldn't have been a thing, right? But now there are... That's one of the biggest,
if not already the biggest social media platform in the world. So things will evolve and you don't
want to get... You want to predict and you want to guess and you want to make good inferences, but you don't want to, um, you want to stay open-minded as you
yourself have said. Continually revising, right? Oh boy. And being willing to be wrong, right? Or
how I look at it is just to be more right. That's how I like to, I learned a lesson that made me
more right. Okay. I will borrow that, but I will credit Mike Matthews when I use that phraseology.
You can steal it.
What was that?
That's Austin Kleon's thing, right?
Was it real artist steal or something?
But hey, man, I really appreciate you taking the time to this was a great discussion.
And we'll have to figure out something else we can talk about for round two.
I really appreciate it, Mike.
Thank you so much.
A huge fan of what you do and what you've continued to build, because I know that in many ways you're just getting started. So I very much appreciate
your time. Thank you. Thank you. Flattered. All right. Well, that's it for today's episode.
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