Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Helping People, Building a Brand, and My Biggest Lessons Learned
Episode Date: March 30, 2017This episode is a little different as it’s me being interviewed for another podcast called The Business of Coaching Podcast. It’s run by a super nice guy named Miles, who heads up a company in the... UK that helps coaches--mainly life and business coaches--get more clients, get better results with them, and so forth. I want to share the interview with you because it’s not about health and fitness. Instead, we talk about a variety of topics ranging from business, to personal growth, happiness, money, fame, and more, and I’d love to hear what YOU think about the discussion. I plan on branching out and producing more content along these lines because more and more people are asking to hear my thoughts on these things these days and they’re subjects I enjoy to read and speak on, so it’s a win-win. So much so that I’m actually am working on a new book that’s going to be my “playbook,” so to speak, for achieving happiness, success, and fulfillment in life. And I know that sounds like every other self-help/development book out there, but I promise that mine is going to be unique. It’s not going to be another uninspired rehash of the same old shit explained in the same old ways. You know, create a vision, set goals, work hard, develop good habits, don’t give up, help others, blah blah blah. It’s not that those are bad ideas per se, but in the end, it comes down to implementation. It’s what you can DO with the information that matters, not how it makes you feel while you’re reading it. That’s why I want to produce a book that isn’t just insightful, but it is PRACTICAL. That doesn’t just give you titillating ideas but shows you exactly how to USE them to improve your life. Anyway, I’m kind of on a tangent at this point, so I think I’ll shut up and get to the interview, where I share a few of the ideas that are in the outline for this book. Again, please do let me know what you think about any of what we talk about in the interview. Just shoot me an email at mike@muscleforlife.com. 7:50 Tell us about your personal and fitness journey 26:30 What fuels your need to help people? 35:24 What is your vision for the next 10 years? 1:02:47 What has been your biggest lesson in building your own brand? Can you give advice to people who are building their own brand? 1:28:55 How can people stay in touch with you? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Mike, and this podcast is brought to you by Legion, my line of naturally sweetened
and flavored workout supplements.
Now, as you probably know, I'm really not a fan of the supplement industry.
I've wasted thousands and thousands of dollars over the years on worthless supplements that
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Also, if you like what I have to say in my podcast,
then I guarantee you'll like my books.
I make my living primarily as a writer.
So as long as I can keep selling books,
then I can keep writing articles over at Muscle for Life and Legion and recording podcasts and videos like this and all
that fun stuff. Now I have several books, but the place to start is Bigger Leaner Stronger if you're
a guy and Thinner Leaner Stronger if you're a girl. Now these books, they're basically going
to teach you everything you need to know about dieting, training, and supplementation to build
muscle, lose fat, and look and feel great
without having to give up all the foods you love or live in the gym grinding away at workouts you
hate. And you can find my books everywhere. You can buy books online like Amazon, Audible, iBooks,
Google Play, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, and so forth. And if you're into audiobooks like me, you can
actually get one of my audiobooks for free with a 30-day free trial of Audible.
To do that, go to www.muscleforlife.com forward slash audiobooks.
That's muscleforlife.com forward slash audiobooks, and you'll see how to do this.
So thanks again for taking the time to listen to my podcast.
I hope you enjoy it, and let's get to the show.
Hey, hey, it's Mike and welcome to another episode of the Muscle for Life podcast.
Sorry that we missed last week.
If you listen to my voice, you can probably guess why. Unfortunately, I was sick. And again, this winter has been kind of brutal to
me and my family, really. For the last seven weeks, we've kind of been passing around this cold
flu plague thing that's been going around. And yeah, it's been really annoying. It's just been
this lingering, I got it first, I don't know, six, seven weeks ago
and then gave it to my wife and son
and then I got better, but they still had it
and kind of gave it to me a couple of weeks later
and it's been very, very annoying,
but we're all better now
and the cold weather is going away.
So maybe I can just chalk it up
to my first real winter or something out of Florida,
even though this was a pretty mild winter. I mean, just a couple of weeks ago, we were having like
sixties, seventies and sunny here in Virginia. So that was pretty cool. But anyway, let's get to
the point here. So this episode is going to be a little bit different as it's me being interviewed
for another podcast called the Business of Coaching
Podcast. That podcast is run by a super nice guy named Miles who reached out to me because he
wanted to have me on his show. And he heads up a company in the UK that helps mainly life and
business coaches get more clients and get better results with those clients and so forth. Now,
I want to share this interview with you despite the
fact that it's not about health and fitness. Instead, we talk about a variety of things
ranging from business to personal growth and happiness, money, fame, and more. And I really
would like to hear what you think about the discussion. Reason being is I plan on branching
out from the health and fitness space and producing more and more content
along these lines because, well, I mean, more and more people are asking to hear my thoughts on
these things these days. And they're also subjects that I enjoy to read about and speak on. So I
think it's going to be a win-win. So much so that I'm actually working on a new book that I don't
really have an elevator pitch for just yet.
But if I'm kind of going off just shooting from the hip here, it's going to be, I guess you could say it's going to be like my playbook, so to speak, for achieving happiness and success and fulfillment in life.
What are the things that have really worked best for me?
best for me. In almost all cases, these are ideas and tools that I've just taken from other people and other things that I've studied and put into practice and found helpful. I know that sounds
like every other self-help kind of self-development book out there, but I promise that mine is going
to be unique. It's not just going to be another uninspired rehash of the same old shit explained
in the same old ways.
And if you've read any of these kind of books, you know what I'm talking about.
If you just kind of look at the table of contents, it's just a combination of stuff like
create a vision and set goals, work hard, develop good habits, don't give up, help others,
blah, blah, blah.
And it's not that any of those ideas are bad per se, but in the end,
it doesn't really matter how insightful the ideas are. It really comes down to implementation. It's
what you can do with the information that matters, not how it makes you feel while you're reading it.
I mean, what we really want from any of these books is lasting change, right? And that's why I want to produce a book
that isn't just insightful or enlightening, but is also practical. It doesn't just give you
titillating ideas, but it shows you exactly, you know, step-by-step how to use them to improve
your life. So I'm kind of on a tangent at this point. So I think I'll just shut up and get to
the interview where I share a few of the ideas that are in the outline for the book. So again, please do let me
know what you think about any of what we talk about in the interview. Really, I really would
like to hear your feedback. Just shoot me an email at mikeatmuscleforlife.com. I get a lot
of emails, so it'll probably take a few days at least for me to see yours, but I will see it and
you will hear back from me. So with that, let's get to the interview. Mike, welcome to the show. The best place to start is tell us who is Mike Matthews.
Tell us a little bit about your personal and then maybe fitness journey for those that are not
familiar with you. Yeah, absolutely. So yeah, thanks first for having me on. I appreciate it.
And so I've been in the fitness space for a few years now. I first published a
book called Bigger, Leaner, Stronger in 2012. So that was kind of the beginning. At the time,
I was in a different line of work and that was kind of just a nights and weekends project. And
the reason why it even kind of came about was I myself had kind of gone through a bit of a
transformation, which I can talk about briefly in a minute. And I can also, people can, if they want to know more about that, I'll just kind of send
it over to my website and they can kind of read the whole thing.
We don't have to go through all the details.
But so I went through my own kind of personal transformation with my physique and then was
essentially training just friends and family, really.
I wasn't, I didn't even set up a business at that time.
It was just kind of sharing what I had learned and what had worked for me with people that I knew that had just asked. They saw the change and they're like,
whoa, what are you doing? I've always liked to read. I've always been a good student
and had interest in writing. And at the time, back in 2011, I guess it was, Amazon's KDP platform was
getting a lot of media attention because when I first heard about it was there was a dude named John Locke.
And he's still actually writing.
Interesting guy.
So he built up, I think it was an insurance business, and then sold it and then did it again, and even bigger and better, and sold it again.
He built up and sold like two companies and made enough money at that point where he basically was like, okay, I don't need money anymore. So what do I want to do? And he just chose to write, he chose writing is something
he always wanted to do. And so he writes, I think they're mainly, the books are mainly for women.
I think they're just kind of like, I mean, they're fiction or I think they're just kind of fun
stories with, you know, sex and violence and stuff and whatever. He was like the first dude to sell
his books for 99 cents or that really that no we probably first do it
but he was the first one to do it in a big way so he was the first guy to sell
a million books and one of his things was first self-published author saw a
million books on Kindle his thing was he sold him for 99 cents because he kind of
didn't care if they made money like he was just doing it for fun anyway and he
thought like at the time you couldn't,
I mean, now there's,
obviously there are cheap books all over Amazon
and some of them are okay
and some of them are not okay.
But yeah, at the time that was pretty novel
that you could read a book
that you would enjoy for 99 cents
as opposed to like a 50 page piece of shit
that was written by English as a second language person
in some random hole in the world,
you know, in some random country. So when I heard about that, I was like, huh, I mean, I've always been
interested in writing. This might be an opportunity to do something. So that was just kind of like a
serendipity, I guess, just a confluence of circumstances there where I just like,
this could be an interesting opportunity. So kind of a nights and weekends thing. I wrote
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger and just kind of laid out. And it's not so much what has, I mean, yes, it's what has worked for me,
but it's also just kind of breaking down the, in simple layman's terms, the science of diet and training.
And, of course, there's a lot more that you can know.
Even the book now is, you know, I've overhauled it since first releasing it.
And so now it's bigger and better now.
I've overhauled it since first releasing it, and so now it's bigger and better now.
But still, it's not everything that you could know, obviously, that could benefit you. But I would say it's probably the 20% out of everything that you can know that's going to give you 80% of your results.
So it's the basics of diet and really how the metabolism works and how energy balance works and how macronutrient balance works
and the truth about nutritional value of your diet and how does balance works and how macronutrient balance works and the truth about
you know nutritional value of your diet and how does that relate to body composition and how does
it relate to just general health and performance and so forth and then the training side of things
some of the basic variables that you need to understand with training some of the basic
fundamentals of muscle growth what really causes muscle growth what's the primary driver how do
you stimulate it best and then it gives you a kind of a prescriptive, here's a routine, do this. So on the diet side, here's how to make a meal
plan that's going to work, here are all the pieces, here are some examples, okay, do it yourself,
step by step. In the gym, this is what I want you to do, I want you to be doing that, these
exercises I want you to be doing, you know. So essentially the training program is it focuses
on heavy compound weightlifting. It's moderate volume.
The workouts aren't very long.
They're 45 to maybe 75 minutes at most.
Most are around an hour, and that's with a fair amount of resting in between sets
because we are focusing on gaining strength on key lifts more than getting a pump
or just sweating or just moving around a lot.
And some people, when they come from the more high-intensity style of exercising,
where you're always moving and you're rarely resting and you're doing tons of reps,
they'll come from that to what I espouse, and they'll get emailed sometimes where people are skeptical
because they feel like they're not doing anything compared to how they were training before.
But then, you know, they stick with it and then they're very surprised to see how their body responds.
And they can get a lot more if the goal is to get stronger and gain muscle mass and even to get leaner,
which obviously is more diet than anything else.
Heavier weightlifting and focusing on compound exercises to do a lot more for you than lighter
weightlifting for a billion reps and doing tons of machines and bodyweight exercises and
isolation type work. So that's basically what kind of got laid out in the book.
And a little bit of information on supplementation as well. I put it up in 2012 with no, so I didn't
have a website. I didn't have a following. It was just,
I just put it up on Amazon just to see if anybody would care. It got maybe like 20 downloads in the
first month. And I thought that was pretty cool. And then maybe it got 30 or 40 in the next month.
And it kind of started to pick up exponentially because it was getting good word of mouth. People
started emailing me because I set up an email address and I was like, if you like the book,
you can always email me if you have any questions. And so I started getting people
actually emailing me and saying they really liked it and having questions about how to do this or
that. And by the end of the year, it was selling a few thousand copies a month. And I had also
started on, I think I'd already published one or two other books that also were minimum viable
product type approach where they were shorter books, they were simpler. I was just trying some different ideas to see what would resonate.
You know, so it was at the end of 2012 when I saw that this is more than just like, I can make this
into my thing. You know, this could become my full-time job. But initially, actually, I didn't
really want to be a fitness guru guy. I wanted to take what I had learned with my own books and
with, you know, how do you go from just an idea to like a book that sells well?
There's a lot that goes into that, obviously.
And I wanted to create a publishing company, actually, and publish other people's stuff.
And so I recruited my friend, Jeremy, and we started working on that together.
So it was like, I remember talking to Jeremy.
I was like, honestly, I don't really like the fitness space.
It's a lot of bullshit, a lot of scammers.
I mean, I like helping people, and I like that element of it,
but I wouldn't be willing to do the standard type of approach,
which is you have to get networked.
You have to get in with people normally.
You know what I mean?
Like if you want to have a guest article anywhere on any website
that has any sort of traction and traffic, you have to either know someone or you have to already be established.
So it's kind of there's that catch 22 there, but it can be hard to get to know people if you're not established.
So a lot of that in the beginning, I just wasn't really interested running around trying to suck up to people who I honestly didn't really respect.
who I honestly didn't really respect.
And now that I'm obviously much more familiar with the industry, I would say that's still true,
although there are quite a few people whose work I really do like.
More of the evidence-based type people.
A lot of them are not necessarily great marketers,
so their work is kind of obscure in the grand scheme of things.
You know, a guy like Lyle McDonald, super smart dude, really knows his shit.
I had him on my podcast recently.
Yeah, my wife loved that episode, by the way.
She loved it.
Oh, yeah, great.
So, I mean, Lyle's an example of someone who I really respect him for the work that he does,
but he's not a great marketer, and I don't think he would even take offense if you were listening.
I think he would say, yeah, I mean, that's just not his thing.
He's more of a science guy, you know.
So when I was initially getting into it, I didn't know about Lyle actually at all.
I just kind of looked around, like, go to the bookstore and just go see what you have available for you in Barnes & Noble if you want to try to –
let's say you're someone that wants to get in shape, and the people that get the book deals and that are most out there in the public eye are generally just full of shit.
out there in the public eye are generally just full of shit.
That kind of includes people in the cooking space, like Rocco Dispirito, Negative Calorie Plan, shit like that, where it's just ridiculous.
So initially, I was like, eh, fuck, I don't want to do that.
Let's create a publishing company.
There's an opportunity.
It still actually is an opportunity, and it's something I'm going to be pursuing.
There's an opportunity because traditional publishers have distribution and they have that lockdown. Of course, if you
want to get into Barnes Noble, you can get in as a, as a self-published author. It's just hard.
You have to have serious numbers. Like I know I can get into Barnes Noble and get to into other
places. I just haven't, I'm bringing somebody on this year to kind of help expand everything on
the book side of things. Cause I'm not going to do it myself. But if you don't have big numbers that you can show, it's going to be hard to get a buyer at
Barnes & Noble to even care. So of course, you have to go through a traditional publisher.
Now, traditional publishers, that's what they have. What they don't have is,
most cases, they're not very good marketers. They're not good at helping refine concept of
the book and the hook of the book, taking that initial rough idea and turning it into something that will really grab people's attention and make them want to buy.
They're not good at necessarily – I mean, these are generalizations, but they're generally true.
Not good at helping with getting to a title that, again, really grabs your attention and really promises strong benefits and evokes curiosity and so forth.
And they're not good at writing copy for the book and et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
So they also don't know shit about internet marketing.
There's so much that can be done there.
So I was saying like we could do this.
We could actually like, I mean, one other thing is this is more true now even than in 2012 or, you know,
I guess it would be 2013 actually is when jeremy and i were
looking at this the publishing industry is is very they want people like i'm actually going to be
doing a book deal this year because i want to i actually need the distribution because i'm going
to do a new york times campaign so the next book i'm going to write i'm going to make a new york
times bestseller which i have a big enough following to do that. I mean, basically, if you can get 10,000 pre-orders, you're good to go.
If you can get 5,000 pre-orders, actually, you're probably going to make it on the list.
But it's not just about numbers with the NYT.
It's also about who published the book, where is it available.
So the safest bet is to just go with a traditional publisher if you want to do that, and I want to do that.
But publishing companies are interested in just working with people like me. I have
websites that get a couple of million visits a month. I have over 300,000 people on my email
lists. I've sold close to a million books, self-published over the last, you know, since
2012 and blah, blah, blah. I have a popular podcast. They want home runs or they don't even
want to talk and it's becoming more and more true. So Jeremy and I were looking at that going, we could find people. We know what
good content is, especially in the health and fitness space. And we could branch out into other
stuff. We could get people that otherwise publishers, they don't want to take the time
to really put the work into developing. They want just a killer proposal that shows this person has
it all. They have the marketing brains for it.
They have the following. They can create the content. The publisher just wants to almost
be the facilitator. They don't want to take something that is rough and really mold it and
shape it and do a lot of editorial work and so forth. So we were going down that road,
but then during that couple month period of putting it all in place, getting the website created, putting, you know, just creating our plan and shit, I mean, the book sales kept growing, and I kept on getting more emails, and more and more people were happy.
We looked at it, and actually, we were like, really, we probably should just go with this opportunity.
It's a better opportunity, really.
So I just kind of was like, all right, well, I guess I'll become the fitness guru guy then. And so that was 2013.
And then so we launched Muscle for Life and we've changed gears, kind of pivoted in the other direction here and launched Muscle for Life in March of 2013. And it grew very quickly.
It's really kind of a glorified blog, but it's going to get a complete overhaul this year.
We're going to be ramping. Well, it's going to get completely redesigned. We're going to be
adding a store, new products, new services, cleaning everything up. And then I'm going to be ramping up the
content production on it. And we have some big plans for it because it's kind of been neglected,
honestly, because we've been focusing so much of our marketing bandwidth on Legion, which is my
supplement company. And so, yeah, so 2013 and, you know, since then, it's just been kind of
continuing just nose to the grindstone and continued recruiting people as I needed them and building out the organization and launching Legion and writing more books and doing stuff, podcast.
And I released an app recently and the idea is it's not like really what we're building is an ecosystem.
So where everything can feed everything else.
So book sales, feed, supplement sales, supplement sales, feed, book sales, app sales, feed.
And then and so as we add more and more things, it allows them.
And there are many, many advantages to that.
Like it's not just good for having multiple streams of income, but it's also good because it allows us to – our customer acquisition costs are much lower than many of our competitors in each individual space.
Because, you know, like my supplements, one of the USPs of that company is we simply spend a lot more producing our products than most supplement companies.
And we spend that money intelligently, meaning that we put it into good formulations.
We're not just spending it haphazardly and have expensive products that aren't very good.
With most products and services, you get what you pay for.
Not entirely true with supplements because a lot of supplements are expensive,
but they're complete shit just because of the markups, really, that are needed.
In a traditional retail model, you have to sell a supplement for 8 to 10 times or 8 to 12 times what you paid to create it,
or what it cost you.
That's a lot of things.
Whatever shirt you're wearing, same thing.
It probably cost one-tenth or even one-fifteenth of what you paid, but you don't care because it's a shirt.
You bought it because, for whatever reason you bought it, you like the brand, you like the fit. It's a shirt.
You don't even give a shit. You just bought it and it's not being sold. Like it's going to do
anything special for you. It's a shirt, wear it or don't wear it. It doesn't matter. Supplements
are very different. One, the hype obviously is, is just over the top. And most supplements are sold
with, you know, they promise all kinds of
things they can't deliver. And you can't make a good supplement for like, you can't make a good
pre-workout for $5 a bottle. You can't, period. I don't care what you do. I don't care what you
try to do. It's going to be crap because you're not going to be able to use ingredients that are
actually going to be able to do anything. You're not going to be able to use doses that are going
to do anything. So one of the things with Legion is we just spend a lot more.
Like I'll say my green supplement costs me almost $20 a bottle to produce. We could have done a
shittier green supplement and it would actually be more competitive because green supplements are
usually about $20 retail, meaning that like most companies, like if you're anyone listening,
if you're taking listening, if you're
taking just a green supplement, just some vegetable and fruit powder type of run of
the mill green supplement, it probably costs them a few dollars, maybe four, $3 to produce.
I want to do something different though with green supplements.
And that's why mine is very expensive to produce because it has things that you just don't
find in other green supplements because they're expensive.
And the margins work because I have a direct consumer business and my green supplement will
never be in GNC. The margins aren't there. It would have to be a hundred dollars or something.
You know what I mean? Even if I'm willing to not take the normal type of margins that supplements
want or supplement companies want when they sell to wholesalers or distributors. And even if GNC
were willing to take lower margins, which they'd have to,
it still would be a hundred dollar product, maybe one hundred and twenty hundred
and thirty dollar product. So what the one of the reasons why I can
do that, though, is because I have this ecosystem that drives customers to Legion.
I mean, of course, we do a lot in terms
of advertising and paying the customers, but we also get a lot of customers
that we actually don't pay for. In fact,
we make money like on book sales or on app sales or on in other ways. And then that also gets us
customers for everything else. So that was kind of the approach from the beginning. It's pretty
obvious and straightforward, but it's just a lot of work and you have to go about it the right way.
So, so yeah, I mean, that's a pretty much of the whole story. And in a nutshell, I guess, to where I am now.
You know what?
That's the primary reason why I wanted to get you on, Mike, because it kind to be called in that space, is the ones that go
from just doing something because it's enough money for them to achieve their financial obligations
versus the ones that seem to make it an ethical obligation for them to help other people get the
result they want. You know, like what you said about Lyle, I also know some really great trainers
that are working, it seems to be unintentionally quite selfishly on their own space,
their own needs.
It's like,
yeah,
I've got my financial needs met.
I'm cool.
I don't need any more clients rather than the way that I perceive you to be
doing it.
Especially when you talked about,
I'll just interject that.
I don't,
I don't know if that's Lyle's thing.
I think there are people like I've spoken to people that tell me just that.
But I don't know if Lyle's one of those guys.
Yeah, no, I mean, obviously I don't know Lyle.
Yeah, so definitely not.
I'm more so indefinitely in our space.
I know that the coaches, trainers, consultants,
probably some that are listening right now that can look and go, yeah,
that's me when I talk to them about what would success look like to you at the
end of 2017.
And they talk about like their needs and their goals and what they're
going to achieve for them rather than rather than the human need of contribution and you struck a
great chord for me when you said about you know we recognize that getting a book out getting a
publishing deal one is bloody hard work and two they don't seem to always have your best interest
at heart so we're going to do it ourselves to help other people get their message out and you know and that's I love that about you and that leads me to my next
question which is why do you do what you do like what's different for you neurologically that made
that shift for you where you went from maybe you've always been this way but maybe doing things just
for you and your needs to go and you know what i'm actually gonna do what i say i want to
do and i'm actually gonna give a shit about people and not just say it so that i can achieve my own
little financial goals why so why do you do what you do um it's a good question you know and it's
sometimes hard because i'm me and i'm in my head looking out and it's just it's just it's been a
part of my personal i wouldn't say that i've always been a super selfless type of person,
but I definitely have always had maybe a sense of ethics and some sort of integrity,
but where it would probably begin would be in how I was raised.
So my parents and my dad in particular is very much like that.
And I say my dad in particular because I saw it in his work.
I mean, my mom's like that too, but she raised me and my brother.
My dad, he has built up a couple businesses, and so he's a successful business person.
So I always had that as like a model growing up, and he's very much like that.
I mean, he has a bigger heart than I do for sure, and that's not a slight against myself.
It's just he's like one of those guys that everybody likes because he's super generous
and super nice and really cares about people.
And again, like I actually don't know of anyone that actively really dislikes my dad. I mean,
some people here and there, whatever, especially his ex-business partner, maybe doesn't like him
so much, but that, but you know, that guy though, that's a whole nother story. That guy's an
interesting dude. And that was my dad sucking, getting him because he was too nice and giving this guy so much stuff.
But anyways, you know, I probably kind of internalized a bit of that just growing up.
And it was never – and how I was raised, I guess I wasn't maybe raised in the same way that many of other millennials have been raised, which is a whole other discussion,
but I think we're seeing a lot of blowback from just terrible parenting.
And I was maybe instilled, you know, had certain values of hard work and personal responsibility
and also just responsibility and general responsibility to others.
I'm all for individualism in certain ways and to a certain degree,
but I wouldn't say like, you know, I think Ayn Rand took it a bit too far. I liked parts of what
she had to say and Atlas shrugged, but then other parts, I was like, all right, well, I mean,
I disagree with that. I think that we all live together. And so we do have, I mean, I don't think
it's, I don't look at responsibility as a burden, you know, I don't look at I have
a responsibility to do these things for other people and it's such a burden.
I look at it as something positive as, I mean, I truly believe that, you know, service to
others is, in a way, it's like a rent that we pay for living on the planet.
And I very much disagree with people that only live for themselves and don't want to
give back to society and don't want to give back to society and don't
want to give to others and just want to take, you know, those are, I guess, kind of just deep-seated
values or virtues for me. And they're very much kind of tied into the type of person that I want
to be. I'm more interested in being the type of person that I want to be. And that matters more
to me than even the things that I'm doing or the things that I
get from what I'm doing, like what I have from it. So what I mean by that is I get satisfaction
more from, I would say, exhibiting the type of person that I want to be and being that person
actively and doing the things that like that. But what I do is more coming from that as opposed to doing things just to have shit, just to be like, oh, I want a Lamborghini, so I'm going to do whatever it takes to get a Lamborghini.
Those types of ambitions are, I think, meaningless, and they are more conducive to the corner cutting and the selfishness just because they're so so empty and they actually, they are just inherently
meaningless. So, you know, I don't know. I don't know if that's helpful at all, but I haven't
honestly thought all that much about it. So I'm kind of just trying to reverse engineer.
How did I come to that type of approach? You know, I'd also believe in cliched shit,
like you should treat other people the way that you want to be treated. And if you do that,
even cliched shit like you should treat other people the way that you want to be treated.
And if you do that, then it comes back to you in spades.
And again, it's not so much that I feel like I do that just so I can get things from people,
but that makes me feel good about myself.
And again, that matters.
How I feel about myself and how I feel about my character and how it's developing matters a lot to me.
So that means that in a lot of cases, like I'll do things, of course,
that maybe I don't really feel like doing at that time. Or if I were just more into pleasure than actual satisfaction and fulfillment,
then yeah, I would probably live very differently.
I wouldn't work as much as I do.
There would be a lot of things that I wouldn't do. I would do a lot of things that I'm not doing right now. And I would, you know, live in a way that would be a bit more,
uh, what people would honestly expect. Cause you, there's a certain level, you reach a certain level
of success financially and people expect you to kind of just turn into a prick and you know what
I mean? And, and, and mean? And just fucking throw your money around
and try to show off how cool you are
and try to make other people envious.
And I find that like abhorrent though.
I would legitimately hate myself if I became that person.
So, you know, again, I don't know if that's helpful,
but it makes a lot of sense.
And my background started out in the fitness industry
as well my mom managed a gym a health club for 20 years and I grew up in that environment I was like
covering on reception when people came to the door from like the age of 10 and my mom similar to what
you said about treating people the way you want to be treated my mom's motto for me growing up was
she said miles you know if you treat people that little bit better
than they expect you can't go wrong and i always remember that on the gym floor and then that
ironically led me to niching out and now working with some of the gym chains and brands around the
uk on retention of members and customer experience for those members and that arguably wouldn't
have happened if it hadn't been for the the upbringing in the gym and and also just some great experiences some valuable experiences of like
meeting people like showing them around the gym and hearing some of the personal stories i'll
never forget a quick story a woman who came into a gym really closed off really defensive apparently
like i just want to have a quick look around i've only got 10 minutes I've got to get back to work she was on the surface really quite rude and after just asking her some
questions to show that I gave a shit she actually opened up and started to get quite emotional and
then actually did started crying and she said you know what I've had three or four tours in the past
week in gyms and I haven't joined any of them. And in truth, the real reason why I'm here, Miles, is because my husband and I haven't had sex in about four months.
And I realized that if I don't do something to improve my physical appearance, I think my marriage is going to be, frankly, over.
And that since then was like, wow, that's like, wow.
So if somebody ever asked me, why do you do what you do in that industry?
I'm like, it's things like that.
You know, it's things that really just treating people, you know, had I not treated her that
little bit better than they'd expect, like her marriage could be over.
And there's a positive end to the story because I still know that that gym on a personal level
and her and her husband are both still members of that gym.
And they've been members together now for about 10 years.
Who knows what might have happened had she not had that experience. So, yeah, that's
awesome. And I, you know, I get, I get a, I've gotten quite a few over the years now, quite a
few of those types of stories. And those are always my favorite. Like, yeah, it's cool for
people to go from out of shape to in shape, but it's coolest when there's real context there and to hear just
how it affects other areas of people's lives.
Because, I mean, I think getting into great shape or just getting into good shape and
just getting into the routine of it all is probably one of the easiest things you can
do to improve every area of your life, everything.
Everything gets better if you are exercising regularly, if you have a good diet, and if you're not overweight.
And there's a point, obviously, where there are diminishing returns in that regard.
But if you just look at how the average person lives in terms of sedentary living and overweight and terrible diet,
and then if you change all that to active, there's also something to be said for the vanity of it, too.
I mean, there is that matters to all of us how we look.
So there are the psychological and the emotional benefits that come with that that just go beyond the physical.
But, yeah, it's cool.
Yeah, love that.
Here's a question.
So I was just having a look back through your website for the purpose of doing the bio the other day.
And I found it really cool because I was wanting to ask you the question, you know, what's the vision for you personally?
And also, because I know you've got a little one now, what's your vision for you personally in the business over the next 5, 10, maybe 20 years?
And I know you talked about it and called it your big evil master plan.
I need to update that.
I need to update that.
That's also going to be updated when we do this update because I'm probably like, I can't say, I mean, I've obviously reached a lot more than a million people now. But I can't say that I've actually, my work has helped a million individuals.
It's definitely in the hundreds of thousands now.
So I'm getting closer to that.
But, yeah, that's going to be updated with the new site.
Because I have now Lennox who, you know, he's a little guy on that page.
Now he's four because it's been a couple years.
Wow.
I have a girl.
I have a daughter on the way.
She's going to be here in August.
Amazing.
Congratulations.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Yes, I'll be updating that.
But, yeah, so to your question, so the big picture, if I have to kind of break it down by property, I guess, for Muscle for Life is I want to make it really kind of like the go-to place for not just evidence-based material,
but evidence-based material that you can really understand. That's been something that I've really,
I think I've improved on actually quite a bit since the beginning, but was still my,
really what I was striving to do in the beginning is not show off my intellect or my vocabulary or my writing skills per se,
but really just explain things clearly and in a way that anyone can understand them and give people practical advice that they can apply.
You know, like, for example, someone whose work I like in this space is Greg Knuckles, and his following is growing, and he's doing a great job.
But his material is very hard to understand if you don't already have a very good understanding of a lot of different things, including biomechanics.
And he does a tremendous job serving the crowd that he serves, but the general fitness person would never be able to try to read his how to deadlift article, for example, or any of his stuff, really.
And the problem is not that he doesn't do a good job explaining things, but it's written at a, if you were to put it in like the Kinkade, you know, reading or one of those reading assessment types, it's probably a high school, college level.
That's what it would score.
And he uses a lot of jargon.
There's going to be a lot of words that people don't understand. And that, you know, if you don't understand the words, how are you going
to understand the sentences and the paragraphs and so forth? As much as I, as I admire what he does
and how much of an expert he is, I am not trying to necessarily be him. I'm trying to more just
kind of serve the people that are, especially, I mean, I really, I really like helping people that
they don't necessarily have to be new to the health and fitness especially, I mean, I really, I really like helping people that they
don't necessarily have to be new to the health and fitness space, but they have never really
gotten good results because they never really learned the basics. And so that, that's the crowd
that I'm looking to serve with. Also, then I would say that's probably like my 80%. That's the crowd
I'd like to serve. And then more intermediate and advanced people with certain articles that I write are just more geared toward those people.
And so I don't want to completely neglect people that want necessarily the life cycle to be like once you know something, you could just move on.
But I'm definitely weighted toward bringing in more and more people that can really benefit from a discussion of, like I was saying earlier, about energy balance, for example,
and how does calories in, calories out really work?
What does it really mean?
Just because those, I think, people have the greatest potential benefit
because if you have someone who's a more intermediate or advanced person,
let's say you have a guy, he's already gained 35 pounds of muscle.
He's already gotten down to 10% body fat. He's
strong. He knows what he's doing. It's cool to take a guy like that and show him how to go to
the next level. But I guess maybe it's more emotionally satisfying to help people go from
really not knowing anything and being upside down and hearing and just being lost in all the
conflicting information to finally going, oh, wow, this is actually how
it works. And you get to that point where then you realize that you're in control of your body
composition. Now you realize that you're never going to struggle to lose weight again. You're
never going to struggle to gain muscle again. You are going to get the body that you want.
If you just keep on putting in the work and you can maintain it for the rest of your life,
that's just kind of like in the beginning, that was kind of my target.
Those are the people I wanted to go after and I still feel that way.
So I want most of life to really be a go-to kind of resource for them.
I have a lot of plans in terms of expansion, ramping up the content more by working with
some other writers.
Again, going to be adding a store.
It needs to be better monetized, really.
I mean, again, it hasn't been the focus, but we're going to be focusing on that.
I'm going to be putting together digital courses, which I could just write more books, and I will continue writing books.
But I also want to have some digital courses because I think having some multimedia stuff would be cool.
And I have a coaching service that's kind of – I promote it, but I don't push it that hard because it's very high touch kind of personal
one-on-one service that we are, we're like maxed out right now. So we, and we're very picky with
the coaches that we work with. So now we're bringing on another coach, she's getting trained
up and then I'll be able to take on, it's just growing stepwise as opposed to like the lazy way
to do it would just be give people copy and paste bullshit plans and not really care or whatever.
just be give people copy and paste bullshit plans and not really care or whatever. This is very much the opposite of that. So it's more work, but it's a really good service. Like we have some awesome
success stories, the kind of stuff like what you're talking about earlier, which is really cool.
So expand that out to, you know, we have about a hundred clients active right now. So that
really can scale. I mean, I think by the end of this year, we could have it at a few hundred active, and it just scales beyond that.
I want to certify coaches because I get a lot of people asking if I could recommend a PT or a coach, like, wherever they live.
Unfortunately, I don't have that.
I don't have, like, even a Rolodex like that.
So what I would like to do is start certifying coaches so they would go through a whole training thing,
and then I would funnel, I would send them people because I get people asking again.
Like every day, every other day, someone's asking about it.
Of course, I don't promote it.
I don't even talk about it.
I don't have anything to offer.
And I think there's an opportunity to take the coaching service offline
and to do a boutique gym kind of concept where it's a personal
coaching only. Like one of the things that with the coaching service is we pitch it as a 90 day
service and that we want you to fire us after 90 days. Like this isn't something that you're
supposed to just come on, pay us for the, you know, for the rest of your life. We're not only
going to tell you what to do, but we're also going to educate you so you can just do it yourself
after. We don't want to create people that are dependent on us to continue in their journeys, basically.
And we actually ended up offering a continuity service because people were demanding it.
But in the beginning, there was none.
It was just like, no, 90 days.
That's it.
You're going to pay this amount.
This is what we're going to do.
And then by the end, you're going to be good to go.
But then we've worked with a lot
of people by now. It's been a year and we've put a lot of people through it. There are quite a few
of them that a few hundred dollars a month, they don't care about the money. They just like the
accountability. They like their coach. It's just working. So they want to stick with it. So,
but I think it could be taken offline and there's a gym concept there where it's not a gym where you
go to work out. Like if you're not working not working, the people there, they come to get trained,
and we take care of everything in the way that we do with meal plans,
and we have a whole system in place.
So it could be exported offline.
I'll probably start doing live events myself next year probably.
And so I would say that probably falls under the umbrella of Muscle for Life.
Right now, again, like I said earlier, it's kind of a glorified blog.
I want to turn it into, there could be a digital magazine and so forth,
almost a publication of sorts.
I guess it's a bit more like a real brand, I guess,
a real health and fitness brand, you could say,
that is known for specifically education and services,
like working with people.
So that's Muscle for Life.
Legion, over the next five to ten years, I think revenue-wise, I think it is very realistic
that it could be, like Jeremy and everyone in the group, like our big goal is $100 million
a year in revenue, which is a big
number, but it's big in the sports nutrition space, in the supplement space. Honestly, it's not
probably, it's a decent size supplement company, but in the sports nutrition space, that'd be one
of the bigger ones, but I think we can do it. And given the trajectory so far, I think it's very
realistic. And there's a lot, of course, a lot of work to do,
and we're going to need to catch lucky breaks and, you know, blah, blah, blah.
That's with anything, really.
Aside from revenue, I would like it to be, like, the premier natural science-based supplement line, basically. And, you know, a lot of people a few years ago when we started Legion,
not very many people were talking about clinically effective doses
and were taking that contrarian stance of like supplements are on the whole shit. They're
not necessary by any means. You don't, you know, supplements don't make great physiques, proper
diet and training does, and the right supplements can help you in certain ways. But if you don't
want to take supplements or you don't have a budget for it, don't worry about it. You'll be
fine. And so, you know, that was unusual.
That was unique in the beginning.
And now you have a lot more companies that are saying the same thing.
Where they can't compete though is, well, I think I have a few kind of competitive advantages.
One is that I spend a lot more on their products, on my products than they do.
Depending on the company, they just can't do that.
Like if they're in retail, they can't make my products.
They can make shittier versions of them, but they can't make them.
And then also, like I was saying earlier, I have this ecosystem that's growing and I also have a personal it's I'm the face of the company.
I think that I resonate better with my potential customers or my crowd more so than the face of other brands that I won't name or the faces of other brands.
In some cases, the namesakes, and in other cases, the top-tier kind of athlete dudes.
Because even in some cases, like I'll say, like take Steve Cook for on.
He seems like a cool dude. I've never met him. Great physique physique very good looking guy has has is the whole package in that regard but I wonder
how much beyond that I don't know for for me I think I just have a have a different I retract
a different type of person maybe because beyond how he looks and just his personality seems like
an effusive, friendly dude.
There's not much else there from what I can see.
And I'm not saying that to criticize Steve.
I'm just kind of trying to view it objectively as a marketer.
Obviously, On is massive.
They're probably close to a billion dollars a year in revenue at this point.
So that's kind of neither here nor there.
So that's kind of the goal with Legion.
It breaks down into there's a lot of specific things that we want to do in terms of new products. We also are very much about customer experience and not just trying to
sell people stuff, but actually help people get into shape. And that's ultimately the goal. When
they come to us, they're not buying a protein powder because in most cases, they're not buying
a protein powder for random because they heard a protein powder is because they like the taste of protein powder or something. You know what I mean? They're buying
stuff from us because it's part of an overall journey and that they're going through. I would
say probably a hundred percent of our active customers that order from us every month are
exercising in one capacity or another and are doing it, you know, because they want to look
better. They want to feel better and so forth so our thing is very
much how can we help them do that and then also as a byproduct sell them
supplements so we're gonna be doing just more and more in in that regard and we
already like have our very good customer service in that like people can write us
with any question that they have and we'll give
them real help it's not just going to be oh yeah here buy this fat burner that's what that's what
you need to do in fact in some cases we may recommend like you know i know for a fact
actually in many cases that people will ask hey should i take this supplement and we'll say like
not really like should i take should i take this fat burner while i'm bulking so i can just like
you know minimize fat gain there's plenty of companies to be like, yeah, yeah,
yeah, definitely. You should take all of them. You should take everything.
We'll tell them no, actually it's probably, it's a waste of money.
You should buy our supreme bottled air as well.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. You should huff that shit every,
every time you work out every time, every time 40 squat, trust me.
You know, future. That's it. Yeah it yeah that could work actually like we could just
say it's like high oxygen you know it would work someone would buy it um so so we go we go we go
about things differently so you know i also would like legion to have a reputation as uh really
really as a company of people that really care and a place you can go and actually really get help and have a community of good people, people that, again, are supportive and are real and are
willing to answer questions and help. And we have that growing. We launched a Facebook group
recently. Yeah, I'm in the group. Love the group. It's fantastic. Yeah, really good. Yeah, exactly.
So like, so, you know, I want to see a lot more of that kind of stuff in addition to revenue, of course. So, so that's Legion on the book side of things. My initial goal was to sell my initial big, like what I felt was a stretch goal was to sell a million books. And I'm, I have to get my final numbers for last year, but I'm pretty much there. If I'm not there yet, I'll be there by probably the end of next quarter. That's kind of done. So I guess the next stretch will be
like 5 million books. And to get there, just recently started working on a new book, which
is going to be, there are a handful of health and fitness books that if I could just clone myself,
that I would also write concurrently because I think that they could serve a need and there's
a gap there and I could do a good job on them. So I probably will end up doing them actually
or at least turn them into digital courses
so I have that content out there for people that want help.
But the next book is going to be a lifestyle kind of play.
Like I would like to branch out into the self-development,
self-help kind of self-transformation space.
And honestly, I don't like a lot of the material in the space.
I guess, I mean, I almost feel like it's a, it's deja vu from when I got into the health and
fitness space where I was like, this space sucks. Like a lot of this content sucks. A lot of these
people suck. And I don't mean suck in like, oh, I'm just so better than them, but no, like they're
dishonest. They're unethical. I don't like what they're doing. They just take advantage of people.
Yeah. So I kind of feel similarly about
the self-help, self-development kind of self-transformation space. I honestly, I don't
think it's as bad. I think it's worse in the health and fitness space, but I want to write a
book that is going to be, I guess, a kind of a manifesto of sorts for my tribe because I've built
a pretty big following by now. And I know just from emailing, I mean, I checked the other day, my email inbox has 55,000 emails.
I'm not unread, but that's the total amount of emails that are in my Gmail.
And so I've spoken with literally tens of thousands of people.
I mean, of course, that includes all back and forth and stuff.
And so I know that part of the reason why people follow me is, yeah,
I mean, they like my health and fitness information and like we have to say in that regard,
but they also, you know, many people like what I have to say about stuff like what we're talking
about in this interview, whether it's more life related or business related or marketing related.
Again, I don't say that because I think I'm so cool.
I'm just looking at it, again, objectively as a marketer and saying,
okay, what's working here?
If I were breaking down all the individual factors of why do I think I'm achieving success
and what is working and, okay, so if we have like five different things,
I'm really strong and really focusing on three of them and two of them,
I think there's opportunity to improve. So I feel like this is an area where there's opportunity to
improve. I also just kind of staying in touch with so many people keeps my finger on the pulse,
I guess you could say. And I get asked, you know, for example, regularly, because a lot of people
that follow me, they know that I read quite a bit. So I get asked a lot for book recommendations
for, again, self-help type stuff, like just being a better.
Because a lot of people that obviously that are into fitness also are interested in improving their lives in general.
Absolutely.
It's a certain type of person.
There are a lot of people that they're not into working out and they never will be.
It's because of an underlying type of personality.
And they're also not really that interested in improving their life.
They're kind of just complacent, and they have whatever they have,
and they're doing whatever they're doing, and they are however they are.
They don't really feel a desire to change.
And that's fine.
I just don't know how to serve those people.
So the people, though, that I know that I can serve
are the people that have a desire to change, that want to change.
Fitness is one element of that.
And then vice versa, you have people that just want to improve their lives, like they want to change conditions in their life for the better,
and they inevitably find their way into fitness because that's the easiest place to start.
If anyone says or feels like, hey, I wish I was just a little bit happier in life life or i wish i just had a little bit better of a life or if we start going to the
gym and or even just i sometimes would say it could be even simpler than just you know because
happiness is obviously just a state that's elicited just by a change in physiology i'm like you could
just stand there i'm like try being in a shitty mood by just doing 10 jumping jacks on the spot. Yeah, that's true.
Yeah, it's true.
I mean, just looking at the neurochemical element of it.
So that's the book that I'm going to be working on.
I mean, I am working on.
That's the book that I would like to have the manuscript done by the end of the year.
There's going to be a bit of work.
I want to really put in the time and make sure I do a good job on this because I would like this book to outsell everything that I've produced so far. And I would like it to serve
as the platform for other intellectual properties. Yeah, I think it'd just be fun. It's something I'm
just personally interested in. And I think I could offer something unique. I think I can,
my story, I think I've achieved enough,
at least outward success that, you know, Legion's an eight-figure business,
MFL's a seven-figure business,
I've sold over a million books, blah, blah, blah.
Like I have things where I think I can stand on that
and say, hey, this is what I've done
in the last four to five years,
and in a sense, here's kind of my playbook.
Here are the things that have helped me the most, and here's what I believe in.
And again, kind of going back to, and this is going to be something I want to talk about in the book,
what I was talking about earlier, like I very much believe in being the type of person,
if you're starting at just I want to have more money,
let's just say a simple thing that a lot of people, a lot of desire to just be more
financially successful or have less financial stress. And a lot of people, they go straight
to just tactics. Okay. So what are the tricks? What are the shortcuts? How do I, and I believe
more in starting. Yes. So of course there are things you have to do, but I believe more in
starting with getting real about who is okay okay, what does it mean to really
be the type of person that is financially successful? What does their worldview look like?
We can get to what they do, but I would start more with who is that person at their core?
Who is their, what does their character really look like? What are their values? What do they
think is important? Sure, we're going to get to to what you need to do, but I think a lot of the do, again,
comes from the be.
It comes naturally.
Through the course of my life, I've met people that are extremely, if we're just saying
financially successful.
I know two people right now who are one guy's worth $800 million, another guy's worth close
to $5 billion.
And I know people that run very, very big businesses.
And again, I'm not
saying that to brag. I'm just saying like, I just know these people and I have spent a lot of time
with people like that. And in just so many cases, it has struck me that a lot of what they do that
is obviously contributing to their success is not something that they force themselves. It's not
like it wasn't part of some calculated plan of theirs.
It just felt natural to them.
They were just like, yeah, of course you do that.
Like, what else would you do?
You know what I mean?
And that's because it's intrinsic to them.
It's an expression of who they really are.
If you're talking about, again, just financial success,
honestly, there are so many elements to it
and so many things that you
would have to do that it can be very hard to try to keep them all in. And it can try, you know,
it becomes draining in terms of willpower and it requires a lot of self-discipline. And if you don't
have the other stuff worked out where eventually, I mean, I just don't think it ever really works.
I think that there's something a bit more fundamental that has to happen personally
before it's worth even getting into what to now do.
Because in the case of anything, really, if we look at it,
I think achieving success, whether it's like in the gym with your body
or with a business or in any area of life,
a lot of it is kind of like the people that are successful,
they do the stuff that people that aren't successful don't like to do.
Absolutely.
And they do it every day.
And it's not that they always even like to do it,
but it's that their purpose is strong enough that their desires are subordinate to their purpose.
They value satisfaction and fulfillment,
which requires delayed gratification. They value that more than I just want to feel good right now.
So I'm just kind of rambling about it because I've started to put together an outline for this book.
But that's going to be the book that I'm working on. And I want it to serve, again, as like
a touchstone for like, this is what we're all about. Similar to like, for example,
you know, the Spartan race thing. So, so that guy, Joe, he has a book called Spartan up. So he has a
book called Spartan fit, which is, I haven't read it, but I guess it's a lot of just like getting
fit probably for, for obstacle courses and, or maybe it's just general fitness. I don't know.
And then he has a book called Spartan up, which I did read because it's relevant to what I'm doing. And that's very much what I'm talking
about. Honestly, I didn't really like the book very much, but it's the idea is he's kind of
saying, here's his story. You know, he has achieved a lot of success. He has a family. He seems like a
good dude, somebody we can learn something from. It gives a bit of his worldview on things and also kind of says this is what we, you know, obviously his tribe he calls them
Spartans and he's saying this is what we're about, like this is what it means
to be a Spartan. And yeah it sounds kind of cheesy and whatever but that's kind
of the idea. You know Marxism has the primal blueprint. I mean the Paleo
mythology has been more or less debunked in terms of the pseudoscience of it but
I mean it's a fine way to eat.
I don't agree with all the saturated fat obsession,
and it's probably not good.
We know now for a fact it's not good for some people.
Some people, genetically, it is going to increase.
If they're eating 70 grams of saturated fat a day,
it's going to increase their risk of heart disease.
It is not necessarily healthy at all.
But I do like that paleo is a high-protein diet.
I like that it promotes fruits and vegetables and nuts and so forth.
So it's much better than the average just standard American diet type of approach.
But that book is, that's what that is for SysNet.
It's like, here's the book that says, this is what I'm about.
If you're about this, come on over.
You're going to like being here kind of thing.
I think that Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner Stronger are kind of like that in their
own little niches of, but they're more kind of mechanical.
This is how you get into shape.
So I want to do something that's more comprehensive.
I want that book alone.
I would love, like my big goal on that
would be if that book could sell a million copies in the first, let's say two years, first year,
maybe, I don't know. I have to see. But I wanted to achieve a lot of success outside of my
following. All the people, sure, I can sell a lot of copies to the people just kind of tapping into
the people that are in my orbit,
but I really want this to kind of create a beachhead into a new space that I can expand into.
So that's the books.
And stacked, I want to make it like the premier weightlifting app, basically, or resistance training app, I would say.
It's not ever going to be like just kind of the gen fit hey if you want to just like do some
jumping jacks here's a you know here's a jumping jack routine with some videos i want it to be for
people that are a bit more like i'm going to make it more newbie friendly going forward it's not
newbie friendly at all right now but that was intentional but i want to make it for people that
are they're they're into training more so than exercise, meaning that like exercise is you kind of just move your body around
and burn calories and fine, it's great.
You know, it's exercise, your body needs exercise,
but training is a bit different.
Training is more structured, it's goal-oriented,
you know, it's a different type of crowd.
So that app is, you know, I've kind of soft-launched it
because I wanted to see how this first build would stand up
to 10,000, 15,000 users before I just go apeshit.
And I still think by the end of the year, I can get it to 500,000 downloads.
So that's what I did.
So I emailed basically one time to one-tenth of my lists.
It's gotten about 14,000 downloads in the last few weeks.
There were big bugs that need to be fixed, so I'm glad I did it this way.
We're getting through that.
Probably in three weeks, all the bigger problems are going to be ironed out,
and then we're going to get to a few weeks of improvements that I need to make
before I officially launch it, and then I'm going to officially launch it.
But one of the nice things about this app is its best competitors are,
in my estimation, good.
They're not great.
They're good.
And it's taken them a few years of development to get to good.
And I don't know why that is, but I just know that it's an opportunity for me to just jump in and say, OK, I'm going to get to great in six months.
So, you know, I mean, like, whatever. And then we'll see who wants to keep up.
And I mean, I have advantages for the more from the marketing side of things, because I can again, I'm going to make it like everyone that comes into contact with anything of mine is going to learn about this app.
I also, I think I have a financial advantage in that I don't care if I make money from it or not.
In the immediate, like in the long term, sure, at some point I'll make money, but I'll end up spending a million dollars on development before I don't even care.
Like I'm not, I've spent $250,000 just to launch it. And I probably have another 500 K in development already like lined up, like guys
go fast, do all this stuff. And going forward, I'm just going to always be rolling its money back
into it, which I don't know if anybody else directly in its proximity is going to be able
to do that. So we'll see. Yeah. So, I mean, that's better. I guess those are the bigger plans. There's some really great stuff there. And I think really well into
the next question, which is, you know, what's been your biggest lesson on building your own brand?
And for those that are listening, there's probably a lot of coaches, trainers, consultants that are
probably right now hovering probably around the six figure mark or then there's even some
startups in there as well.
They're just kind of getting started out in the coaching space.
What would be a biggest lesson that you've had on building your brand and
something that could be used really as advice for them?
So I'd say like probably top of the list is really doing whatever is needed to
serve and really,
really be helpful.
I mean,
I still answer emails.
Obviously, I have some help now, but there are still,
because a lot of questions that I get asked are actually just like,
hey, that's a good question, go check out this article.
So I have one of my coaches helps, and he jumps in and answers some questions for me.
But I still answer emails from people every day. We have a little system in place where, like, if he's not sure,
then I have somebody else that if that person's not sure, then it'll come to me kind of thing.
And then there are also just communications that are directly to me, like people I've been in
touch with and they're like, hey, Mike, and then so it just gets forwarded to me.
Up until that has been only in place probably for a year or so, for the first couple of years,
I mean, I got to where I was spending four to five hours a day just answering emails and social media messages everything I
would answer everything every single anything any type of communication that anyone sent me on any
channel if it didn't get answered it's because somehow I didn't see it but I would go every day
and answer everything and that's something that is think, played a huge role in how quickly
everything has grown because nobody's willing to do that. And that is something that wows people.
Like they didn't, when somebody emails you and they don't even expect a response because,
I mean, it's even more so now, I guess, because I've achieved a bit more altitude, you could say.
But even in the beginning, when I just had published the book, I had no name.
No one knew who I was.
They still were surprised that just an author, because I guess probably because I had a book
that comes with a little bit of cachet, that the author would actually respond with a real response
and actually answer questions and tell you, hey, let me know if you need anything else.
Just email me.
And I didn't ask them to buy anything. All I would ask is if they liked the book, if they could just
leave a review on it. That's it. And of course, they don't have to do that. I would just ask
as a PS, basically. So that's hugely important. It doesn't scale, which in many ways, there's a
really good article. I think it was by Paul Graham from Y Combinator,
and if you just Google Paul Graham,
things that don't scale, really, really good article,
and I really, really believe in that,
that there is a lot of value in things that,
and this isn't of course everything,
but things that don't scale can be hugely valuable
for various reasons, and in this case it was
because it created a real personal
connection with people. And it's, again, something that no one else is really, I say no one, but
very few people in any sort of position of anything would be willing to do. And I still do that today.
And that will never change. Like, yeah, I may need at one point, I may need five people to help,
you know, sort through everything, but people will always be able to reach me if I'm needed you know I mean so for example if
someone said emails and says hey Mike how do I lose stubborn fat I may not
actually I may that may be me replying to it or it may be like Roger right now
he doesn't reply as me if I said Roger but Roger might jump in and grab that
and be like hey I work with Mike that's a good question check out this article
so I just have an article that's the answer is like hey just read this
article check it out but if it's something more specific or something
directly to me that I'm gonna get it so that's something that will always stay
you know stay in I mean as a funny little anecdote Charles Darwin
personally answered letters that was what he did every night for I think most
of his life after he was Charles Dawage, after Origin of the Species,
he still did it, and he just maintained personal connection with people.
And I think there's a lot of power in that because I think that, again,
people expect you to just forget about them, basically.
They expect you to use them, exploit them, take their money, and just move on.
And when you don't do that, that's how you win customers for life.
And it's not just about customers, but you win friends or whatever. I mean, a lot of people have just move on. And when you don't do that, that's how you win customers for life. And it's
not just about customers, but you win friends or whatever. I mean, a lot of people have just become
friends. I've never met them, but I would still say they're friends because I've spoken so much
with them. And so that's very powerful. And it's also divorced from the finances of it. It's,
I don't know, it's nice. I mean, it's nice to go and I can say that I, I mean, you know,
I get to email with all these different people that, again, I would consider friends or at least acquaintances.
I don't know.
That's my version of social network.
I don't use social networking for anything other than just business.
I don't care about it personally.
My personal friends in my personal life, you know, I would talk to on the phone or something like that.
I just don't really care about to use Facebook or Twitter or anything.
But, you know, that's my version of social networking.
So that was hugely important.
Again, being willing to do a lot of the work that you kind of don't, maybe you don't feel like doing.
This is something I want to talk about in this new book.
But it's not just about doing it and forcing yourself to do it, but it's actually changing your paradigm so you feel differently about it.
And part of that is probably just learning to have contempt for your feelings at certain times,
I think is very valuable.
I'm very much not a person.
I don't care very much how I feel about things at all, honestly.
And that's not because I have no emotions.
It's just I don't trust feelings.
Who knows what lurks in my head,
in my subconscious mind that can dictate my feelings. And also feelings are just too
malleable. They're too influenced by culture, by environment, by who the fuck knows what. So
I don't trust them. I trust more my analytical, forward-looking type of mind where I can say, what would my life ideally look like in five years, in ten years, and really kind of paint that picture and go, yeah, that would be awesome.
That would be very fulfilling. That would be very satisfying. I would be very happy with myself if I could put that in place and have that kind of life, not just with business or money, but with my family
and with here's the type of circle of friends I'd like to have and blah, blah, blah.
And then working it back to, okay, what's it really going to take to get there?
What are the specific goals, the measurable goals?
What's the timeline and so forth?
And so I kind of gravitate toward that and naturally away from feelings
and immediate gratification which are on the other side just for me personally
again that's been something that I think has been very helpful because it has
helped me do the amount of work that my average work week is probably 70 hours
that's 60 to 70 and sometimes it's a little bit less sometimes it's a little
bit more but it's been like that since the beginning in some cases it's been higher and but i never feel burned out like i'm just not
one of the i just don't have that like i don't even necessarily feel the need for quote-unquote
downtime i don't need to like oh well i was i worked hard today so now i can just now i've
earned four hours of netflix like i don't even want to do that shit i don't enjoy it
not i don't think that's because i'm necessarily like my brain is just wired differently I think it's been more conditioning
than just some sort of innate thing because when I was younger that wasn't necessarily the case
when I was younger I didn't really know what I wanted to do and I knew that I didn't know what
I wanted to do and my my wife's from Germany so at the time we were dating I would go and visit her she would come and visit
me we would usually flip-flop but like every probably like let's say four to
eight weeks I would be over in Europe and I would stay there for a few weeks
and I would just travel we would travel and stay in nice hotels and just just
have fun and it didn't bother me at all. I didn't feel like, oh, I'm not being productive.
I should be doing things.
Because at the time, I was like, this is what I'm doing.
You know, I was very much like, I didn't have all this other stuff worked out.
And at the time, I was like, whatever, I'm 20.
I'm sure I'll work it out.
For now, for the next year or so or whatever it was, I'm just going to enjoy myself because
I'll probably look back on this and be happy that I did it. So I know what it's like to be on both sides of that
coin. And I probably could go back to being that person if I felt I had a reason to, it's just,
that's just not where I'm at right now. And, you know, I think probably my, my next version of
that will probably be something with my kids as they get older, where I do want to make sure I'm involved in their life and not just be the dad that made a bunch of money but
was never around and we never saw him and you know I think that fatherhood is important even from
like what I was saying earlier with millennials and parenting and stuff I've seen people that
only had a mom that didn't really have a dad and I don't think that I just don't think that's
healthy I don't think that there's like biologically a reason why it takes a man and a woman to produce a child.
And I think there's value in the nuclear family. And I think both parents bring different things
to parenting and so forth. So that'll probably be my version of that in the future. We'll be
working less hours, but I'll be working in another sense. Like I have another purpose.
It's not just going to be, I'm going to work less so I can go drive my Lamborghini around. You know what I mean?
So, so, so, so that's been a big part of it. And then I'll one, one last thing I'll say is
self-education is a, I'm huge on that. And I a hundred percent believe really honestly,
like a hundred percent that people that aren't continually educating themselves are not going to live very good lives.
I'll just say it that way, I guess.
And you can say that that's by my standards or whatever,
but I'm going to say that they're probably not going to.
There's a quote from a guy named Joseph Campbell who was a big fan of his work.
He was a comparative mythologist, and he's most well-known
for a book called The Hero with a Thousand Faces, The Hero's Journey, The Monomyth. That's what
Star Wars was based on, the original Star Wars movie, episode four. And so there's a quote from
Joseph Campbell where he says basically that he doesn't think that people are so much like looking
for the meaning of life, but they're looking for the feeling of truly being alive they're looking for what can
they experience in the physical realm that results in true emotional and
spiritual satisfaction in a sense and where they can get caught up in the
rapture of being alive and the joy of being alive that really resonates with
me and I think that self-education is a huge part in achieving that. And there's no,
I mean, that's something I look at even in my own life where I feel like I've done a decent job now
of putting something in place where I can say that I really, I do on one level feel alive.
I like that feeling of having energy and being in action and enthusiasm and so forth. But honestly,
and being in action and enthusiasm and so forth. But honestly, there are people I would know,
I know some of these people that would step into my shoes for a week
and they'd be like, this is fucking terrible.
You know what I mean?
They'd be like, this is the most low-energy, boring shit life I've ever seen.
They couldn't wait, you know what I mean?
Because there are some people that it's not just about being more frenetic
and like sleeping two hours a night,
but it's about the quality of their life and the amount of responsibility that they shoulder,
which I think also is hugely tied into just personal growth.
I think going into what we were talking about earlier,
if you're just living for yourself and you have no responsibility even for yourself,
let's say you don't even have responsibility for taking care of your body.
You haven't even gotten that far.
That's a pretty sad state, but then you have people like Elon Musk who look at the amount
of responsibility that dude shoulders and he loves it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So I would hope to improve in that regard for the rest of my life.
I would hope that five years from now, if I look at myself personally, that there are certain probably principles and values that at the core I would hope wouldn't change.
But my understanding of them and maybe my manifestation of them or my embodiment of them, I would hope is going to improve and change over time.
And also then I just hope that my, you know, if I have more or less the same ideas about everything that I have now, five years from now, I've failed myself as an individual, I think.
And a huge part of that is self-education.
I guess more the philosophical angle of it.
But then there's also the practical angle if we're talking about building a business.
The least common denominator that I've found in just, again, knowing and meeting a lot of very successful people is they're always into educating themselves.
They love learning new things.
They have a bias toward action, not just like reading ideas, but doing things with ideas.
If I were to run down a list of the most successful business people that I know one for one, they're avid readers.
They've been like that their entire life.
They've built up such a huge repository of information over the course of decades now that they have all their personal experience plus all the accumulated vicarious experience almost that they've gleaned from books and from whatever.
And there's so many different ways you can educate yourself now.
It's a joke.
With your phone, you can tap into all the knowledge in the world, basically.
Just something I observed to where I was like, okay, I'm going to say that's like a law,
basically. So if you want to become very successful in your business, you have to be
continuing educating yourself. So for me, I like to read. So I'm just biased for that. But of course,
there are podcasts, there are videos, there are digital courses you can do, blah, blah, blah.
And I think that it helps in a few different ways.
One, it helps you model yourself.
It shows, like I really like biographies personally.
You get to get down into the muscle, bone, and connective tissue of who these people really were
and how did they live and what did they really think about things, how did they view things.
And you're not getting someone else's distillation of a life and someone else's filter on what they thought is important.
You kind of can just get, like, here's all the raw information, and you come to your own conclusions.
It also, for me, it helps me hold myself to a high standard where I look at talking about Elon Musk.
I recommend everybody read the Elon Musk biography by Ashley Vance.
Short, simple, quick read.
It's not your normal 1,000-page type of biography.
It's more of a pop culture type of book.
I mean, I like that.
I just find it inspiring, and I like some of Musk's ideas.
Like there's a little anecdote in there.
Early in his career when he was meeting with investors
and he was pitching them on trying to raise money for one of his ventures,
one of his first things. And he was saying basically that
like he told them one part of his pitch, I think he even came down, like they were asking why should
they invest in him? You know what I mean? And he basically said, because he kind of looks at
business like a samurai in that he would rather die than fail. And so that was enough. They're
like, yep, like you. And now you see that, dude,
you read that book and you read what that motherfucker went through. Those aren't just
words. That's who he is. I mean, there was a point in his life that they go over in the book where
it looks like everything is fucked. It looks like he's going to have burned through all of his money
he made with PayPal. It looks like Tesla is going to go under. They haven't even gotten to launch
yet. And they're way over budget, way over schedule. SpaceX is down to its last launch. He has no more
money after this launch. If it doesn't work, that's dead. He barely made payroll. Tough,
tough times. But people, just for example, people that were interviewed, that worked with him at
that time said that they actually didn't know when he went home to even shower because he slept
on a beanbag in his office for like four hours a night and he would work that's all they ever saw
him do was working and sleeping on the beanbag so it was like a joke at the office like dude i think
he legitly hasn't showered in like a month like he doesn't even leave but but it was it was definitely musk by surname and musk that's good i didn't even
think of that oh the pun musky musk yeah so so again not just words and and so you'll pick up
things like that and you'll i just think that the stories that we tell ourselves and the mental
models that we have created are super important,
and they influence us in so many ways subconsciously,
and we'll turn to them every day in one way or another.
We're going to turn to these stories that we tell ourselves about ourselves,
about the world around us, about other people.
Somebody said, I forget who it was, but we're not rational beings.
We're rationalizing beings.
I very much agree with that. If we can find excuses to get out of doing the things that we
need to do, we're going to take them. And that's very much like a resistance kind of war of arts,
Steven Pressfield type of thing. But I believe in that. So just self-education has helped me
tremendously. And it's been something throughout my entire life. Again, I've always enjoyed reading. I was a good student growing up. And, you know,
I also would say that I think in business, continually educating yourself improves your
business instincts. I think that even, of course, you're not going to remember all of the key
takeaways that you had highlighted in a book you read five years ago, but subconsciously,
I do believe that we absorb a lot more than,
you know, it's not just can we remember word for word or even the basic concept of something
that we read, but in the future when you're faced with a decision, which I think a big
part of being a good CEO is the quality and the speed of your decisions.
How quickly can you make decisions and how good are those decisions?
So when you're faced with decisions every single day things feel right or they feel wrong again feelings
where are those feelings coming from if they're not coming from a place of
education and a place of insight and knowledge where are they coming from who
the fuck knows it could be like some shit you saw on Kardashians three years
ago honestly not joking and you don't you don't remember, but you're just
like, I don't know. It just feels right to tell this person to go fuck off and go kill himself.
Yeah, I'm going to do that. I look at myself as there are so many things I don't know. And I have
myself on plenty of bad ideas and bad stories and models that I want to root out. And I think it's,
I'm going to die that way, but I'm going to continue working on it.
But if you don't work on it, I really honestly,
and again, it sounds kind of bad,
but I think if you take a person
that doesn't educate themselves
and spends most of their time on social media
and just like watching reality TV and nonsense,
most of their ideas about life are bad, basically.
And it's unfortunate because those are the ideas and those are the models and stories they turn to to guide them in life.
And most are just fundamentally flawed and are going to lead to unhappiness and pain and suffering and so forth.
So, yeah, I'd say those are probably the three biggest things.
And, again, this is all stuff that I'm going to be talking about in this new book.
So if this resonates with any at all for people listening, I'm going to be working on it this year.
I want to have a manuscript done, and it'll probably get published end of next year.
Most publishers, they want a year at least from the time they receive the manuscript.
I'm also going to be writing some articles and stuff on this to kind of put up trial balloons and see how people respond to the concepts. I don't want the
entire book to just, you know, be posted on my blog, but I definitely want to see how people
respond to some of this stuff. Cool. I'll happily sort of promote that once that's ready to go.
Just let me know, because I think that there'll be a huge benefit, no doubt, to the people that
are listening to the interview for them with that. So cool. So, and that leads me actually to really last question, which is
firstly, I just want to thank you for taking the time to come on and for being so real, honest,
vulnerable, transparent. I think you've really broken down some of the myths on what it takes to
just be a great human being, let alone build a great brand.
And I think the two intrinsically go together.
I love what you've said about doing the inner work and doing the basics really well.
Probably a lot of people that are listening in maybe think that they've got to, you know,
I ran a workshop yesterday, a very brief story on podcasting, like how to start a podcast, because I started a podcast a year ago and and you know a big believer
and you once you've learned something you know then go and teach it and share that with others
it's really interesting the people coming into the group many of them when we wrote i said right
tell me what your outcome is that you want to leave at the end of the day because i've got a
training manual of stuff but that's not the most important thing what's most important to me is
that you leave with the outcome that you've come with and it was amazing how many people came with all these technical things that they
you know about the editing and everything when in actual fact the when we chunk down to it that it
was the purpose the real reason why they wanted to create it that they knew deep down was what
was going to keep them going and i think you've highlighted some really good examples today on
you know the it's great to learn all the technical complicated stuff.
And this is what I've learned just from your books is, you know, the repetitions, the mother of skill, doing the basics really well in any area of life, in business, in health, in a relationship, doing the basics really well and treating people as better than they would expect or as good at least as they would expect
will go so far and above and just doing the inner work will go so far above any clever
shortcut that people think that they can grab out that's gonna get them what they want faster and
then you know it may get them what they want it may get them what they want faster but that
happiness isn't going to be there because happiness comes from the sense of contributing and making a real difference and really giving a shit.
I think.
Yeah.
And that's the cliche of like money doesn't buy happiness.
I would say having money is more of an absence of a negative than a positive,
in my opinion.
So it's nice that I don't,
I don't have financial problems.
Like I don't,
you know,
I know I can pay my bills and take care of my family and I'm really not into
buying stuff. Like I think the only thing and I'm really not into buying stuff.
I think the only thing that I'm going to be interested in spending money on, so to speak, is collecting things,
just things that I think are cool that have significance to me, especially because history is the subject I've always liked to read about.
So there's just periods of history that I find very interesting, and I like to collect things.
But that's where that cliché, though, know, where you have someone where they think like, oh, how amazing would it be to just to make a million
dollars a year and have that Ferrari and fuck have like five Rolexes and have all these people that
are going to look at me and I'm going to be so sick. And then, you know, some people have a
strong enough drive and they sometimes catch lucky breaks or whatever, and they get there.
And then they realize like, this is really not as cool as it was in my head. Or they stay married to it, they turn to Golem.
It's like the ring. That's the metaphor. Honestly, dude, like, I think when it comes to attention,
being, you know, interesting, trying to get attention from people is, again, this is something
I'll probably talk about in this book, but I think it's so much more important to be interested in the world, interested in people than it is to try
to get attention. Absolutely. And that manifests in different ways. It's look at me, look at my
cool tattoos, look at my cool this, cool that, look at my money, look at my cool words that I
say like everybody else. And I listen to, look at the cool music I I say like everybody else and I listen to look at the cool music
I listen to and yeah, that's fine. I mean, I guess you can get it but the further you go down that road
I think the worse you get as a human, you know with fame the moment when you start desiring fame
That's when you're fucked if you can deal with fame if you don't care and you actually don't want it
But when you start wanting it, then you're
fucked. I saw a study. It was either a poll, like a Pew Research kind of thing, or it was a study
that, so they asked X thousand teenagers aged, I don't know, 13 to 17, what they want to be like
when they grow up. And it was, I want to be famous. That's terrible. Like again, terrible parenting,
terrible. That's the worst possible goal.
Honestly, I think actually, I think being rich is a better goal than being famous. It's still
being rich. It's still a shitty goal, but being famous is probably the worst. It's short of
psychopathy short of, I want to murder, uh, 500,000 people or something. I want to be, I want
to, I want to become a dictator. So, you know, just to interject there,
yeah, I think the money is never, and the things are never as satisfying as you think when you're
getting into it. If you don't find that, if you don't find really where the fulfillment is,
then that's, I think, it can lead you down a dark path.
Yeah. Yeah, I agree. I would say that, you forever banging on about the Tony Robbins human needs model. that we all have and like how do we fulfill it and we
were talking about you know i said something i do i've been doing you know some real deep inner work
of the past year with my coaches every morning do the obvious thing to you or i which is like
journaling what i'm grateful for but something else i've been doing is writing down what i'm
proud of your character development and how you take great pride in that kind of writing down what am I proud of and not just not external
achievements but internal achievements character developments like where am I now I did a video
the other day you know like people talk about their goals and where they want to be and I'll
say you know this time last year you know are you closer to your goals than last year?
And also, have you taken the time to look at what you've created in the past year, both internally in your character and also in that makes a difference to other people? And a lot of people go, oh, no, I'm so busy working on the next thing.
I haven't done that.
And I'm like, spoke to a guy the other day who's in the UK is a very well-known kind of fitness model type.
We were having a conversation. He was saying, I never stopped to think about what I'm proud of
that in itself. To me, that's now like calories in calories out. It's, it's so common sense,
but not common practice. I think. Yeah. Yeah. No, I like that actually. I like,
cause I also do use the five minute journal yeah i like the addition of proud
because it does give you a bit of insight into like where you're at basically absolutely yeah
absolutely cool well mike it's been a real pleasure i won't keep you any longer um tell me what's the
best way that people can connect with you and stay in touch with you moving forward sure yeah i mean
muscle for life is kind of like the epicenter i I guess, of all of my stuff. So if you just go to muscleforlife.com, right, again, it's getting a whole overhaul a little bit later this year.
We're wrapping up some work on legions, kind of doing a refresh of the legion website, and then we're going to be doing a stem to stern on Muscle for Life.
But that's where people can find me and contact me.
And, you know, I have hundreds of articles that I've written on all kinds of things. So they might like that as well.
And yeah, links to all my social media and so forth.
That's the simplest way to check out my world.
Awesome, Mike.
Well, listen, it's been a real pleasure.
Thank you so much for sharing your views on some really incredible things today.
It's been a wonderful conversation.
Thanks so much for joining us today.
Yeah, absolutely.
Thanks a lot for having me.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you.
Take care. Hey, it's Mike again. Hope you liked the podcast.
If you did, go ahead and subscribe. I put out new episodes every week or two,
where I talk about all kinds of things related to health and fitness and general wellness.
Also head over to my website at www.muscleforlife.com, where you'll find not only past episodes
of the podcast, but you'll also find
a bunch of different articles that I've written. I release a new one almost every day. Actually,
I release kind of four to six new articles a week. And you can also find my books and
everything else that I'm involved in over at muscleforlife.com. All right. Thanks again. Bye.