Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Jonathan Goodman on How to Succeed as an Online Coach
Episode Date: October 28, 2020“Hey Mike, any advice on becoming an online coach?” “How can I start my own fitness business?” As an entrepreneur and creator of several successful businesses in the fitness space, I’m often... asked how people can break into the industry themselves. I can understand the enthusiasm. Lots of people who go through a life-changing fitness journey end up wanting to help others make similar changes in their own lives. That was certainly the case for me. While I’ve built my own thriving online coaching program, I came at it from a different angle--I already had a niche carved out for myself in the fitness world that I could use as a platform to build from. Not everyone has the books, blog, or podcast to launch a new coaching business, so to help people just starting out, I thought I’d talk to an expert. In this episode, I chat with Jonathan Goodman, who created the first-ever (and only!) certification for online fitness trainers, the Online Trainer Academy. This is a program specifically for online coaches, teaching them how to earn more money and better serve their clients. Jonathan has also written several books on the topic, and is a host on the Online Trainer Show, a podcast chock-full of insights and advice for fitness professionals looking to build an online career. In our conversation, Jonathan breaks down . . . How to identify points of leverage Why books and courses are more valuable than masterminds and mentors How to find good people to learn from The power of marketing and branding How to build and use momentum Why you don’t need as many clients as you think So, if you want to learn how to start your own online coaching business or how to take your current business to the next level, definitely give this podcast a listen! 30:28 - What is the difference between maximizers and satisficers? 36:00 - Why is marketing so important? 42:16 - How do you build momentum once you start a business? 1:09:19 - Would you recommend training for free at the beginning to get a better following? 1:22:49 - Where can people find you and your work? Mentioned on The Show: Online Trainer Certification: https://www.theptdc.com/online-trainer-academy-certification The Online Trainer Show: https://www.theptdc.com/online-trainer-show-podcast Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://legionathletics.com/coaching/ --- Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello. Welcome to another episode of Muscle for Life. I'm your host, Mike Matthews.
Thank you for joining me today for an interview I did with John Goodman, who created the first
ever and the only certification that I know of specifically for online fitness trainers.
It is called the Online Trainer Academy. And I've been
aware of John and his work for some time and was looking forward to this interview because I get
asked fairly often about how to be a successful online coach and how to break into that line of
work. Most people who are reaching out to me have not even started yet, although some
have started and are just not sure how to gain traction. And unfortunately, I don't have,
or I haven't in the past, had great firsthand advice to share. And the reason being is while
I do have a successful coaching program, it actually does seven figures in sales and revenue
every year, I got there in an unusual way. So I first built a rather large following by writing
books and writing articles and recording podcasts. And so once I launched the coaching program, it was pretty straightforward to make it work.
Again, I already had thousands, if not tens of thousands of quote unquote true fans, people who liked my work enough and trusted me enough to at least consider anything I have to offer, not necessarily buy everything, but who are going to open the emails and click
on the links and check out whatever it is that I am offering. And so any advice that I would share
along those lines is not going to be very helpful to people who are wanting to just get into online
coaching, not get into book writing and article writing and podcast recording and so forth.
into book writing and article writing and podcast recording and so forth. And while I definitely have had some tip that I think are just good general business and good general marketing,
and I've had some advice to share in terms of how I would go about becoming an online trainer,
if I would have went about it differently. But because I hadn't done it myself, I always had to give people
a caveat that my ideas may or may not work. I can't really endorse them myself other than say
that based on what I know about business and marketing in the fitness industry and online
coaching, here's how I would go about it. Now, John, on the other hand, is really an expert on how to help online coaches succeed,
how to teach them how to start out, how to get their first clients, and then how to grow their
client base and how to get their clients to refer new people to them and to continue working with
them. So to increase the lifetime value of each client, so to speak.
And as I mentioned, John has a company that revolves around this called the Online Trainer
Academy, but he has also written several books on the topic and he has his own podcast on this
called the Online Trainer Show. And as you will see or hear rather in this interview,
show. And as you will see or hear rather in this interview, John is chock full of insights and good practical in the trenches advice for fitness professionals who want to build a career as an
online coach. For example, John talks about how to identify key points of leverage. And this is a
very powerful concept because it relates to branding and how to build
a personal brand that is going to set you apart from all the other online trainers out there and
get people to feel like you are the one for them. You understand them best and you are going to be
able to best meet their needs. John also talks about why books and courses are more valuable
than masterminds and mentors, which can be much more expensive. John explains why you don't need
as many clients as you may think to do well, which is a breath of fresh air for many people
who feel very intimidated by the prospect of having to establish a clientele roster in the hundreds or thousands.
It does not have to be like that and more.
So if you wanna learn how to start
your online coaching business,
or maybe you have already started
and you wanna learn how to take it to the next level,
then this podcast is for you.
Also, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast
and elsewhere, definitely check out
my VIP
one-on-one coaching service because my team and I have helped people of all ages and all
circumstances lose fat, build muscle, and get into the best shape of their life faster than
they ever thought possible. And we can do the same for you. We make getting fitter, leaner, and stronger paint by numbers
simple by carefully managing every aspect of your training and your diet for you. Basically,
we take out all of the guesswork, so all you have to do is follow the plan and watch your body
change day after day, week after week, and month after month. What's more, we've found that people are often missing just one or
two crucial pieces of the puzzle. And I'd bet a shiny shekel it's the same with you. You're
probably doing a lot of things right, but dollars to donuts, there's something you're not doing
correctly or at all that's giving you the most grief. Maybe it's your calories or your macros.
Maybe it's your exercise selection. Maybe it's your food or your macros. Maybe it's your exercise selection. Maybe it's
your food choices. Maybe you're not progressively overloading your muscles or maybe it's something
else. And whatever it is, here's what's important. Once you identify those one or two things you're
missing, once you figure it out, that's when everything finally clicks. That's when you start
making serious progress. And that's exactly what we do for our clients.
To learn more, head over to www.buylegion.com.
That's B-U-Y-L-E-G-I-O-N.com slash VIP and schedule your free consultation call, which
by the way, is not a high pressure sales call.
It's really just a discovery call where we get to know you better and see if you're a
good fit for the service. And if you're not for any reason, we will be able to share resources
that'll point you in the right direction. So again, if you appreciate my work and if you want
to see more of it, and if you also want to finally stop spinning your wheels and make more progress
in the next few months than you did in the last few years, check out my VIP coaching service at www.buylegion.com slash VIP. and more about recently because of what's going on in the world and something I have not really produced any content on maybe one or two things back some time ago, but I do not consider myself
an expert on how to build a successful coaching business starting from scratch. My story and how
I built a successful to whatever degree coaching business is very different. I already had sold
books and had
Legion and had a following, and it was more just offering people something that a lot of them are
already asking me for. And so I don't have, unfortunately, I don't have much good advice
for the people who are reaching out to me saying, Hey, I want to get into this, or I want to
transition from offline to online. What do I do? And you are the expert, one of the top experts I know of on how
to make that work. So yeah, thanks for taking the time to come on my show and help people out who
want to succeed as an online trainer. Absolutely, Mike. I'll be honest, man. I'm a little bit
apprehensive to do this podcast. Your voice is so soothing were saying i should i could do the what is it
it's uh is it asmr or is it amsr i don't know i think it's what is that you know where people
speak oh no you've definitely seen this it's a whole thing on the interwebs it's certainly on
youtube i've seen it where people they talk in a very soothing voice oh hilarious and they and
they make noise they like scratch the microphone and they have
the gain all the way up.
And so they'll like, I don't know,
pet soft things and make
all these weird noises. And some people
get, I forget the name of it, they get
apparently, I've tried, I don't get it
unfortunately, but some
people they get, I guess it's like
tingles all over their body when
they hear it and
it just makes them feel good.
And so that's-
So you should do that.
I mean, stop whatever you're doing now, whatever that is.
It's not going so good anyway.
Just stop whatever you're doing.
It's not going so well.
Whatever I'm wasting my time with and just become an ASMR.
I think it's ASMR superstar.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't know why we even need to talk any further.
And I think, I think we've already established your path.
And maybe for anybody else, then if you're out there, if you're thinking of being an
online trainer, and if you have a voice that could work for, I just Googled it ASMR.
Yes, that's right.
If you have a voice that works for that, maybe you should just do that instead.
Maybe, maybe not.
I think, you know, one of the things that you said in your little, in the little intro, I guess, is the intro after the intro, because you said you were
recording another intro before. Yeah. That's more just to, you know,
beef up your bona fides and let people know why they should listen to you.
Perfect. I like that. Anytime you can beef up my bona fides, I'm happy. You know,
one of the things you mentioned that I think is a really good, perhaps jumping off point is
you spoke about how you had all of these assets
going into building your online coaching aspect of your business and make you guys do so many
things from supplements to books to coaching, but you came into it with all of these assets.
So you can't really connect with people who are perhaps transferring in from an in-person
coaching business or even transferring in from another career. We have a lot of people who are unhappy in whatever they're doing in another career.
Maybe they're a pharmacist or nurse. Yep. I hear from a lot of those people.
They have their own transformation and they love fitness and they want to try to do something with
it. A hundred percent. And online coaching is a fantastic way to transfer into the industry.
And so, you know, they don't really have the quote-unquote assets that you had starting it.
But I think what's really valuable is everybody has points of leverage when they enter into
a new opportunity.
And what's really important is identifying what those points of leverage are, what are
those advantages that they have, and being able to use that.
Sometimes it's your story.
A lot of people might say, oh, I know, I don't look like a trainer.
You know, I'm not a shredded dude or whatever, this guy or this gal on Instagram.
And so how could I possibly be in online fitness?
It's like, well, okay, so they've got, you know, oiled up Photoshop photos.
Maybe you don't have that, but like, you've probably got a great story.
So then can you become a good storyteller?
And I would say that that can resonate with some people, but it also can turn other people
off.
And in my experience, in particular, it can turn people off who are, let's say, maybe
not 30s, but 40s and beyond because they say, yeah, good for you.
There's no way I could ever look like that. And so there's
a disconnect there in the marketing, even though that is not necessarily true. Many people 40 plus,
as we both know, can get into great shape, even if they've never been in shape before in their
life, really. But many of them, if they haven't learned, I would say maybe at least the fundamentals
of evidence-based fitness, they just don't see how I would say maybe at least the fundamentals of evidence-based
fitness, they just don't see how it ever could be possible. And so then whether they consciously
are thinking this, or if it's more just a subconscious thing, they conclude that,
man, this person is just not like me. This is not the person who's going to be able to help me.
They help people half my age look like them. I need someone who understands my
situation. And ideally, of course, there's that identification aspect of where people like to
be around and interact with people who are most like them. So it's something to consider,
anybody listening, if you're not jacked and shredded, that actually can be an advantage
with a certain segment of the market.
Well, let me tell you a story that really hammers that in. So I agree with you a hundred percent,
and it might surprise you. This is, I want to tell you a story as well, but it might surprise you to know that. So we sell the certification, the online trainer Academy, which is the only
certification for online fitness professionals. And you may be surprised. And I think a lot of
people listening to this would be surprised, that our fastest-growing segment is 35-plus years of age, and we actually have
a significant number of 60-plus-year-old men and women. When they were starting their careers
25, 30 years ago, fitness wasn't an industry. It literally didn't exist.
None of them worked in fitness at the
beginning, but they were always active. They were always interested in it. They've seen their family
and friends fall into disease, fall into inactivity, and they really want to help them.
Online fitness is an act of retirement. We see a lot of people transferring into the industry now
at 30, 35, even 40, into their 60s with that in mind because they see their friends and family
falling out of shape. They've always been interested in fitness, but when they started
to work, it wasn't really accepted as an industry. When I started to work as a trainer in 2005,
it wasn't really an industry. I didn't ever think that I'd be a trainer for more than a year or two.
I figured I'd do this for a couple of years in university because I worked at the university
gym.
And then I'd work for a couple of years out.
And then I'd go back and do my master's and PhD in muscle physiology, and I'd be a researcher.
That was what I thought that I would do.
And so now these people are realizing that it's a viable career, but they're kind of
looking at the gym and they're like, no, I don't want to work at the gym.
That's not going to be very fun.
Obviously, now with COVID-19 hitting more and more people are like, no, I don't want to work at the gym. That's not going to be very fun. Obviously, now with COVID-19 hitting more and more people are like, no, I don't want
to do that. But even beforehand, it's like, I'm going to bust my butt competing against 20-year-olds
in the gym who have no dependents, no expenses, no real difficulties in life who are working 10-hour
days in the gym.
I'm going to go against them and having to work those hours, I guess.
So they look at the industry and they basically see online fitness.
They say, okay, well, this is a great way for me to
take that first step and see if this is for me.
Yeah, that's interesting.
I see that demographic skew in my work just dealing with consumers i mean i have a lot of trainers who
follow me and who like legion but that's not my primary market my primary market is is i would say
maybe not gen fit maybe they're one phase beyond they're just general fitness meaning just like oh
yeah i just started exercising, not even necessarily
training, quote unquote, for the first time. And so it's usually right after that phase,
when they start to get into it a little bit more, that's, I'd say that's my sweet spot and Legion's
sweet spot. Like for instance, a lot of people find me via books, articles, podcasts, which means
that they're taking their time to educate themselves and they're into it a little bit
more than just like, oh, I guess I'll try this for, I'll try exercising for a month and see what happens.
And I've seen though more and more people in the 30 plus men and women demo coming our way.
And that's also why one of the next bigger books that I'm working on that's going to be out next
summer is this Simon and Schuster book. I'm doing a Simon & Schuster and it's specifically for the 40 plus crowd, men and women. And I
pitched that to Simon & Schuster as basically, and I 100% believe it, that this book has the
most potential out of all the books that I have. I've sold a lot of books and my books have done
very well, but this one, I will be surprised if it does not vastly outsell the others over like, you know,
bigger, leaner, stronger is coming up on eight years in the marketplace.
So give muscle for life.
It's going to be name of the book, eight years.
And I'll be very surprised if it does not beat bigger, leaner, stronger is five or 600,000
copies sold.
Yeah.
I don't think it's going to take you eight years to do that, but you know, people find
you, right?
This again, goes back into our
discussion of how to be successful in the fitness industry. People find you that are already engaged
because of the work that you've done and put out into the world, the work that precedes you.
And so they're a different type of consumer. And that's why you said they're kind of one stage up.
I think people's goals are valuable. Like when you look
at what messages you're putting out, particularly on social media, you attract a certain type of
person and also what groups and communities you might navigate in. So I'm in a number of, well,
two main, I guess, sort of high-end business owner groups, right? Like just business owner
support group type things. There's a couple of fancy or
both the most sort of these like highly vetted 150, 200 people thing.
Like mastermind type things?
Mastermind type things. I mean, I don't know. Mastermind is kind of one of those words,
like functional. It just kind of doesn't mean anything anymore. But you know, it's like mentor.
I generally tell people when they ask, when I get business questions about quote unquote
masterminds, my first advice is buyer beware.
Yeah, 100%.
Because there are a lot of them out there that are just going to take your money and
not deliver much of anything beyond what you could get just reading a few books.
And it's almost never the first thing that you should do.
I believe very strongly that courses are the first thing that you do, which is why I built my business to start with a course. The Online
Trainer Academy is your first step if you want to be an online trainer. You might,
further on in your career, decide that you want to hire a business coach.
But hiring a business coach or joining a mastermind, these things are like 5,000, 10,000 plus now, which is insane.
I mean, there are some, I'm sure you've, I don't know if you've been pitched on them.
I've been pitched on ones that are six figures a year.
Well, those are, yeah.
I mean, those are a different league.
Those are basically like who, you know, like buying a spot in the room.
But if you were starting and it might be useful for you, right?
Because some of those connections might be useful for you, but that's because of where you're at in your business. Hiring a business coach or joining
a mastermind as the first thing that you do is an incredibly inefficient, expensive way
to gather the knowledge that you need in order to make the right decisions to move forward.
At the beginning, you don't really know what questions to ask, and you don't really have the information that you need to be able to ask the right questions yet.
A business coach is somebody who's going to lead you down a path that's probably going
to be the wrong path if you don't know what questions to ask.
I think that everybody should start with a course, and then once you start with a course,
maybe you're good to go from there.
There's a good chance that as you go deeper and deeper and deeper, you'll figure out what those questions are. The path will become
eliminated. You'll recognize where the gaps in your knowledge are. And then you go to whoever
you feel like can fill in those gaps for you. And that's a much more efficient way to do it.
But to learn the basic processes is not. But anyway, I mean, so I go to these.
I completely agree. Just to interject to people listening. I would say I agree with that. If we're talking online coaching or just business
in general, when people, again, when they reach out to me, I've, I often get people asking me to
mentor them and there's no way I can make the time for that. But I do say also you're just in the
beginning. You really don't need a mentor here, Read these books. And if you have questions, let me know. But this is going to give you everything that a good mentor could possibly give you in the
beginning.
Because in my experience, in my work and building my businesses, I've had a couple people, I
wouldn't call them mentors, a couple very successful people.
I've gone to get their ideas about certain things or just kind of use them as a sounding
board.
Not often often though,
because I don't want to take advantage of the relationship, but only now am I in talks with
somebody who works, he works in private equity and finance and he's become a friend, but only now
in where I'm at in my business, would I say that I've started to work with someone I would
consider a quote unquote mentor, even though I don't like that word, he's really just an advisor.
We're not going as far as setting up a board, but it would be something like that.
And that's only because he has a lot of connections to people who have unlimited money and who
have done a lot of things similar to what I'm doing.
And so it's more about the connections. And it's also
about his business experience, building and selling a number of different businesses and
being on the boards of different businesses. And it's not even about me knowing what questions to
ask. It's more of him saying, here, did you even know that this door is over here? You could just
walk through that. I'm like, no, I didn't even know that's an option. You know what I mean?
So just to put it in perspective, I totally agree with what you're
saying is that in the beginning, self-education and just start working, start seeing what works,
what doesn't work and start building maybe a list of questions that you might get to a point where
it makes sense to invest beyond that. But in many cases, I would say that especially take your
business and the quality of the content that you put out that you have in your cases, I would say that especially take your business and the quality of
the content that you put out that you have in your books. And it's not extremely expensive,
like especially in a book is inexpensive. Your certification is reasonably priced.
And I would say that anybody wanting to get into coaching, I know you're going to be sharing
specific tips, but I don't want this just to be a pitch for you and your services,
but anybody getting into coaching, really, I do think they could go through what you've written in your books and they
could get certified with your company. And they probably have, I mean, I don't know, you'd be
better qualified to comment here than I would, but I would say they have a lot of work now that they
can just go do and they can get up and running and build a viable business before they ever need to
give you another dollar. There's this really interesting logical disconnect that exists in the market. I mean,
I would say that's a mentor for you that you're speaking to about in private equity. And
unfortunate, I have a couple of people in that world as well, and a couple of people who are
connections to that world and whatnot, who I consider friends and I go to. And to your point,
I mean, you've only got so many
bullets in the gun, right? You've got to be careful with what questions you ask and what
demands you make on their time. But here's the thing. I don't know what your situation is, but
I certainly didn't seek them out. I sure as hell didn't respond to a Facebook ad to get on a 15-minute
phone call to apply for their program. These types of people don't sell
business coaching. They don't charge money for it. It's done for two reasons. One is, especially if
they're in private equity, they're looking for good deals. The other is, I mean, the top level
of Maslow's hierarchy is legacy. People who have achieved a level of success want to build their
legacy and they want to find people like you, Mike, who are great, who they can help, who they can help build their legacy.
That's how they get filled up.
This idea of this, I'm going to hire a mentor.
It's like you don't hire mentors.
That's not how it works.
Anybody who is good enough to be a mentor to you is not for hire.
There's this weird logical disconnect whereby it's actually a really bad business model
to be a mentor. By definition, mentors, there are some examples of coaching services that are
really scalable. I don't know of a single one in the fitness industry that exists that's actually
a good business. It's this weird disconnect where
the people who are teaching you business by definition of how they're running their business
shows that they aren't very good at business, right? They're not producing any assets.
They're not producing anything that works for them. They're creating a tremendous amount of liabilities.
They're unable to replicate themselves and their services at a high level.
They're just, I mean, it's all of these things are like not what you want.
You can't hire somebody who's really that exceptional.
For how much money when you have, and I totally agree that that's-
It's not a money thing.
Exactly. There's nothing that you could pay them.
They have so much money in their time. How do they even value their time? What would even be
appropriate to them? Whatever would be appropriate to them would be so inappropriate to even ask that
they wouldn't do it. I always think of one of these people, for me, he's got, put it this way,
he's got a few money. It's into the nine figures.
And he told me this analogy once.
He's just like, everybody laughs at Michael Jordan because he's got this $30 million mansion
that he never looks at and never pays attention to.
And it's breaking down and becoming decrepit and all this kind of stuff.
It's just like, if you actually think about that in terms of his wealth, that $30 million
mansion is
like you beat up 2001 Honda Civic in your backyard.
Exactly.
He's a billionaire.
That's it.
His personal income, I don't know, you probably find speculation on the internet, but he's
making whatever it is, $50 to $100 million a year in just cash flow.
There's a point where nothing matters anymore.
It just doesn't matter.
So, I mean, when you're looking for people to learn from, right?
I believe very strongly in look at people who have skin in the game.
Look at people who showcase that they actually have done the thing, that they've done the
thing well, that they've done the thing in multiple different ways in different scenarios and had success with it. One person who has success,
maybe, maybe or not. That's a key point to just to punch up is multiple successes,
not just one, because anyone can get lucky one time, but they become more believable to me
when they've had multiple successful businesses. If we're talking about businesses or exits or
whatever. We're talking about businesses. I would also talk about fitness professionals.
One person who gets into shape themselves, do they have something that they know that you can
learn from, that you can gain from? It's possible. And it's certainly an important and valuable data
point, but it's definitely not a guarantee. One person who's had been able to achieve success with their
fitness, with their business themselves, and then in multiple different situations over different
timelines with different confounding factors, it's like, well, that person has probably dug out some
fundamental foundational principles that are globally applicable that you can gain from.
And that's really what you're looking for.
Like people, for example, if someone's looking for a coach, of course, they want to see
not only that they've succeeded with other people, not just with themselves, but as you know,
I don't have to tell you this, but people look specifically for, has this coach helped someone
like me do what I want to do? Would you agree with
that? I agree with that. I agree with that. And I challenge that. I would challenge that because I
think it's very hard to figure out whether there is somebody like, like if that person is actually
like you. I mean, I'm speaking from, I guess, just my own experience selling coaching to the degree
that I've sold coaching. And what I have noticed is that people do pay attention minimally to gender and age.
Like those are two big buttons where if you have a 50-year-old woman and you show that you got a 20-year-old guy into great shape, it does count for something. But it doesn't count as much in her mind as another 40 or 50 or 60-year-old woman.
And even if that's all she knows, I mean, we don't have to get extremely granular like, okay, I'm a lawyer.
Was she a lawyer? But minimally, it seems to be the gender and the age.
Well, so let's dig into that. Because I think that that's a really valuable jumping off point
for online coaching, and for particularly people who are newer to online coaching,
who are trying to build a business with it, is the fundamental understanding that hiring a coach is very rarely
an actual merit-based decision. I think it's very important for anybody selling coaching to
understand. It is almost impossible to actually figure out how to delineate whether one coach
is better than another coach. I mean, it's just too hard. I mean, I don't know how to do it.
The majority of consumers in any market are ignorant consumers. I mean, it's just too hard. I mean, I don't know how to do it.
The majority of consumers in any market are ignorant consumers. I'm an ignorant consumer for most things that I buy. There's just simply too much to know. I go and buy a TV. Do I know
all of the different pros and cons of all of the different tech and specs and everything like that
a TV is? No, I want something that has moving pictures. I so I'm ignorant, right? And I know that.
The majority of people who buy fitness in any capacity are actually pretty ignorant
consumers.
A lot of coaches who sell coaching are what's called maximizers because there's two types
of humans.
If you look at the behavioral psychology of this, which I know you're super into, Mike,
is there's maximizers and satisficers
are the two types of consumers. I've written and spoken about this.
There you go. All right. So it's almost like we talked about this before, which we didn't.
Although we should talk about how we had a call that we were going to record a podcast episode
and you and I just got talking so much. That's true. I totally forgot to mention,
I should have led with that. So everybody listening, we had a previous appointment set up and we had a time block
there to record an episode.
And then we ended up just talking about business stuff.
And that wasn't why I wanted to, I love talking business, but if I were to really do business
interviews, it'd have to be a separate podcast.
It'd be a bit random to put business stuff on my podcast.
So we had to reschedule because we ate up all of our time just talking about business things, because as we discovered, have a lot of similar perspectives about business and have similar interests in the specific aspects of certain aspects of building businesses.
Yeah, that was super funny.
And that was the first time we've ever spoken to is like, look down, you're like, okay, should we record the podcast?
I'm like, yo, I gotta go.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. yeah no it's good though i mean i enjoyed the conversation even though it yeah it
was great it was great that's always the best thing to do on a podcast by the way is to tell
everybody listening about how great the conversation was that wasn't recorded
maybe i'm just teasing the uh the business podcast yeah there you go don't do it it's a trap um you
you're doing fine you don't need to do it. It's a trap. You're doing fine. You don't
need to do anything different. So you've spoken about this, right? There's maximizers and
satisfizers. Most people- Yeah. If you want to quickly summarize, I'm not sure who listening
has, I don't remember when I went into this, but I did in an article that I turned into a podcast.
Well, I'll quickly summarize. Most people in most aspects are satisfizers. There are very rare times when somebody is a maximizer in everything they do.
I mean, I know one or two of them.
They're the people who read every single forum about every single thing that they buy.
But the majority of things that we buy, we satisfy some.
Basically, we say, is it good enough?
What we look for unconsciously is we look for any kind of signs that this thing is probably
going to be okay.
we look for any kind of signs that this thing is probably going to be okay.
Our purchase decisions are much more guided on avoiding catastrophic failure or feeling like we're going to look like an idiot versus trying to maximize and get something that's for the best.
Most of the time, we don't actually care. We might pretend like we care about whether
something is the best, but we don't actually care about whether something is the best.
We just want something that doesn't suck, which is largely why brands are so valuable. Because
when you look at the difference between buying a Panasonic TV versus a Japanese no-name TV,
the Japanese no-name TV might be actually technically a better TV for less money,
and it's never going to sell because we really don't know whether it's good.
But we're pretty sure that the Panasonic is not going to be crap.
So we buy the Panasonic because we know that they have a lot, you know, they've invested
so much into their brands.
They have so much to lose by building a crap product that we're pretty sure it's not going
to be crap.
Take our certification, the Online Trainer Academy, like we have a textbook, like it's
the only textbook that exists for online training.
You can't produce a textbook.
One of our students that we did an interview for, it's the best quote that sums this up.
We interviewed him and asked him why he signed up.
And he goes, you know, I didn't really know who you guys were.
I didn't really know much about you, but I came across your stuff and I saw that you
had a textbook.
And all I could think to myself is, ain't nobody going to go to that much trouble for
some bullshit course.
And so like-
It's too much work to be a scam.
These things are mutually exclusive. It's way too much work.
If you wanted to scam, you wouldn't produce a textbook.
If I wanted to scam, I'd send you a Facebook advertisement with a single landing page on a
ClickFunnels or whatever to a phone call. And if you Googled me, you wouldn't be able to find
anything about me. And then I changed my
name multiple times, which is literally what some of these people have done. I didn't know the name
changing. That's good. Oh my God. Dude, there's one guy. Oh my God. I got to tell you the story.
There's one guy who was outed in a group because he created a whole bunch of, we've got a large
group of like 40,000 online trainers, a free group. And there's one guy who, no joke,
you can't make this up. He still operates. And he created a whole bunch of fake Facebook profiles.
And he friended everybody who he thought might be interested in hiring like a fitness business coach.
And he pretended like it was a real person and started talking about how he was using this guy's
service and having all the success. And the reason that he got outed is, and this is the kicker, the reason that he got outed
is because somebody discovered, I don't know how, that the profile photo that was being used for the
account is a male gay porn star. Is that not the most disturbing story in every capacity in every way in defense of the
sleuth probably just a reverse image search pulled that one up quickly you don't even have
you don't even have to be into gay porn or you just quickly go oh yeah hey google tell me where
this image comes from and now you know with their face recognition they'll immediately be like oh that's this person what an idiot for choosing like if right it would
not be hard right it would not be hard to find a random photo of somebody nobody would know who
it was all you got to do is find something that isn't reverse searchable there you go
i mean i'm sure that you've had you put it in defense of the sleuth i'll talk about how it
might not be i'm sure you've had it Like I've had people who have contacted me because people have taken my pictures and put it on like catfish on dating
sites and stuff like that. And people are like, I thought it was you. Or they'll just like,
they'll swipe my images and then they'll swipe my copy. And then it's the click funnels page
selling shit, whatever. I mean, I just send it off to our attorney and he takes care of it,
but we don't go
actively searching for it because that wouldn't be a good use of resources. But yeah, people do
give me heads up now and then. So it does happen. But so anyway, so there's this idea of maximizers
and satisfizers, right? And the majority of people who buy personal training, who buy fitness in any
capacity, I mean, this is supplements too, to be honest, it's anything, are satisfizers. And the
majority of fitness professionals who sell fitness are maximizers because what
we often do is we often maximize in one or two things and satisfy in about everything
else.
And we're fitness professionals.
So, of course, we maximize in fitness.
And we have a hard time empathizing with people who aren't fitness professionals thinking
that everybody is like us.
And it becomes very frustrating then as
fitness professionals, because it's like, oh, these people are all buying from this other person,
from this other guy or girl or whatever, who is not as good as me. It's like, yeah, because that
person could speak their language better. Because that person knows that these people don't actually
really care about the force velocity curves that you're putting out on Instagram every single day,
right? The homemade infographics.
Right. And so you talk about like why people, yeah, the homemade infographics,
I've made some of those, don't knock them. But the idea that-
Some of them are nice, some of them not so much.
Yeah, mine are not nice. But the whole idea that we, so the question then comes down to like,
how do you get somebody to buy from you?
So really what we're talking about here is we're talking about the power of marketing
branding perception.
And I totally agree.
And that the quality of the product or service has often has little to do with any of that.
And that's very true.
That's one of those maxims of business that someone observed a long time ago.
And due to the nature of human psychology, it's not going to
change. But the reason why I want to just highlight that is that's something that I often tell people,
whether they want to get into coaching or just business, any sort of business is you'd better
care about marketing. You'd better be willing to educate yourself about marketing and not many
people for whatever reason, they're turned off
by the idea of selling, right? Because what is marketing at bottom? Branding is its own thing.
It's a little bit different. We're talking about marketing, especially advertising. A lot of
marketing is salesmanship in print or in video, or it's on a more massive scale than a one-to-one,
you know, selling process. But there are very similar principles
that marketing and advertising work on.
And many people, they're uncomfortable selling
and then that extends over to marketing.
And so then they're backed off of marketing
and they really just wanna focus
on what's most interesting to them
and what they think matters most,
which is like you were saying, I'm gonna be the best.
I'm gonna have the best programs
and I'm gonna have the most accurate information. And maybe even I'm going to get
into the best shape, even though that's impossible. So at this point, we're really
talking about, I'm going to really work on getting in great shape and you can do all of that.
But without these other points that you're bringing up, you're not going to, if you don't
also marry your high quality product or high quality service with high quality marketing, which again, I'm going to pass the torch back to you here in a second, but which I'm sure you're going to talk about is being able to, for example, speak to people the way they speak to themselves to meet them where they are and speak their language, if you can't bridge that gap, and it really is a gap, then I would say you're
never going to do well. And it's not just in coaching, but in business, in anything, unless
you, okay, sure, whatever, you create some completely revolutionary piece of technology
or software or something, and then somebody good at marketing, some big company that has the
marketing machine pays you a lot of money. Sure, fine, whatever. It's possible, but.
Practically speaking, it's not going to go anywhere.
Watch Shark Tank. I mean, look at what they buy and look at what they don't buy.
Yeah. True.
I mean, it's who cares if you have a patent, somebody's still going to know.
Yes. True.
Right? I mean, they say that straight to their face. They're like, it doesn't matter that you
have a patent. What are you doing? And then somebody goes on the show that's good at SEO.
One of my friends, Stephen Aristotle, Tower Paddleboards was one of Mark Cuban's most successful investments. And the reason why Mark
Cuban was so interested was not because he had an inflatable paddleboard. It was because Stephen
is so good at SEO that he ranked number one for inflatable paddleboards. That's why Mark Cuban
made that investment. I mean, that's what it was. So, you know, let's talk about how to
start. Cause obviously, I mean, it's this crazy problem, you know, industry. I mean, we talk to
people and it's like, you have taken seven certifications on fitness and nutrition,
and you haven't read a single business book. Perfect example.
What are you even, of course you're frustrated. I would be frustrated too,
but single industries, single bodies of knowledge are inherently uninteresting
and unvaluable. Even if you're a great marketer, but you can't combine that with any subject matter
expertise, it's not valuable. But once you start to combine these things, once you build
a high level of knowledge in one thing, say fitness, and you start to combine it with a few basic transferable skills like marketing, like behavioral psychology, like advertising,
like writing, well, then things start to get... And then, of course, money management and wealth
management. And then you start to build that with managerial skills or start to collect that team
because, I mean, at that point, it's too much for one person. Well, then things start to get
really, really interesting. And then the coolest thing
about that is once you're able to start combining those skills, well, like you could do anything.
Like, I don't know about you, man. I do know about you actually, because I know you've got
a book under a pen name. That's like number one in a market completely unrelated to fitness.
It's bill of rights for me, but I don't, I have it up in Legion store and I explain, Hey, this is a pen name just because for marketing reasons,
it'd be a bit random for Mike, the fitness guy to be writing about the bill of rights.
So I have a pen name, Sean Patrick, which are just a couple of names from people in the family. And
I didn't give it too much thought to be honest, cause it was just kind of a side project for fun.
But yeah, because of what's going on here in America, it's ironically, it's my number one, as of last month, my number one bestselling book
in America is it's called the Know Your Bill of Rights book by Sean Patrick, aka Mike Matthews.
Which is ridiculous, but-
What a strange timeline.
But that proves kind of this point that I'm making that if you are able to attain these transferable skills, I feel like I'm good enough at writing and marketing now that I can make money literally no matter what I'm doing.
Obviously, I'm in the fitness industry, and I love the fitness industry, and I think the fitness industry has the potential to do more good in the world than perhaps any other industry.
to do more good in the world than perhaps any other industry. But think about what that allows me to do from a confidence standpoint. Think about what that allows me to do from a, I mean,
I just know that I'm untouchable, right? I know, I always say that freedom is providing yourself
the opportunity to fail. And so once you are able to collect these transferable skills, you can fail, right?
Because I know that I'm going to be able to figure it out. I know that I'm going to be able to land
on my feet. That allows me to take risks. That allows me to take action in ways that many of
my contemporaries can't. And that's a huge, huge, huge, huge unfair advantage in the market,
in any market. How then if we then pivot to let's talk to the person who is wanting to start out as an online coach.
So how do they and of course, you're not going to be able to give the entire roadmap here on this episode.
But how do they go from I would like to do this to at least the flywheel is now spinning. They've built up momentum and they have a system that's working that they can now just
pour more energy into and get even more out of it, you know, and then eventually, hopefully
one day reach what you're talking about, where they've built enough, the right skills to
be able to create something that's bigger than them.
I want to talk about that.
But first, I want to talk about all of the other books that you've
written under the Sean Patrick pen name. Okay. I see a Nikola Tesla book. I see an Alexander
the Great book. I see an Awakening New Inner Genius book. And I see Kingdom of the Flies.
Kingdom of the Flies, I can't take credit for. I don't know what that is.
Oh, that's somebody that's a different Sean Patrick. It's put under your author account that's funny i guess amazon maybe auto linked it or something or
so nikola tesla that's you yeah so i i can't it sounds more impressive than it is because
the awakening your inner genius book was a fun little that was also a side project i just did
for fun years ago and the tesla and the Alexander, and I thought I did
one other, but are actually chapters. So that book, Awakening Your Genius, I took, there was
a psychologist. I actually, I forget his name now. He has an unusual name. And he published some
research on the different traits of genius. And he broke it down into 20 something different traits. And he explains why he believes
that what we would generally just recognize as genius is really a combination of some, many,
or maybe in very rare cases, all of these characteristics. And I thought it was interesting,
something that just kind of, I don't know, piqued my desire to write. And so I took like 10, I think maybe eight to 10 of the characteristics
that I just found most interesting. And I wrote a book and each chapter.
Yeah. It's like 46 pages. It's short.
Yeah. So the inner genius book is longer. It's a standard book size. And then, so each chapter
is about one of the characteristics. And then just as a literary device that I like, because I just like
history and biographies, I found people who I believed exemplified that characteristic. And so
the chapters were stories about these interesting people and what they did and how they used this
characteristic or why I believed that this one characteristic most characterized that person and was most responsible for their success and
whatever that they were doing. So Tesla, there's a chapter on Tesla. There's a chapter on Alexander
the Great. There's a chapter on Queen Elizabeth, I believe the first. There's a chapter on,
I wrote it years ago. I don't even remember. I'd have to look, but that's how the book is laid out.
So I took the Nikola Tesla chapter and publish it just as a free book to get people interested
in the other book.
And ironically, that Nikola Tesla book has been downloaded more than any other book of
mine, period.
It's been downloaded worldwide millions of times in the US, a million plus downloads
as a free book.
Yeah. I mean, it's got like 8,000 reviews
or something like that. So anyway, I just, yeah, that's, I wanted to make mention of
that. You're a bit of a polymyth, I guess that way.
If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my VIP one-on-one coaching service,
because my team and I have helped people of all ages and circumstances lose fat, build muscle,
and get into the best shape of their life faster than they ever thought possible. And we can do
the same for you. This idea of how to actually start then and how to market yourself, go back to right at the beginning of our conversation.
And this, okay, well, what are your points of leverage?
What do you have going into it?
There was always some way.
Can you explain that?
Because do you mean like a unique selling proposition?
Is that-
Kind of.
I would go even deeper than that.
I mean, we call it 1% uniqueness factor. And it's based around the
idea that most fitness professionals market themselves on the 99% that makes them the same
as everybody else. They burn fat, they lose muscle, they help new moms, they whatever.
It's boring. You're going to compete against people with way bigger budgets. You're going
to compete against people with way bigger markets than you are. How are you ever going to break
through? What you need to do to get an advantage at the
beginning is identify what is unique about you. It often has nothing to do with fitness.
But what's unique about you that's uncommonly common with a small subsection of other people,
of another community? I can give you a couple of very distinct examples and I'll do that.
Because when you figure that out, it actually starts,
it creates your vision, which illuminates your path start to finish, which allows you to put
blinders on. And a lot of people who are marketing these days in the fitness industry are basically
doing a lot and getting nowhere. They're putting out content everywhere. They're on TikTok,
they're on Facebook, they're putting out material, they're trying all this stuff, and they're not actually doing anything because there's
no concentrated effort because they've never actually created this vision.
And it all starts with this 1% uniqueness. And so what is unique about you? What's kind of weird
about you? I'll give you two examples. Troy Bennett, he lives in Chicago. He's the Chicagoland
cosplay fitness expert.
And for people who don't know cosplaying, that's where they dress up as like characters from video
games and movies and stuff, right? And they just like, it's for a fun thing.
I learned about that when I met Troy. And so, you know, Troy is a personal trainer in Chicago
and love cosplay and was in those communities. And so he went through this exercise with us through the Online Trainer Academy and basically
said, okay, I love cosplay. I'm already in the Chicago cosplay community. I'm just going to
market myself as the Chicagoland cosplay fitness expert. And that day he had five new clients
because immediately now- Other cosplayers?
Other cosplayers. Okay, good.
Other cosplayers. Because immediately now, why would anybody pick a personal trainer, right?
Why would anybody pick a fitness professional?
Well, there's usually not like a good reason that they can identify, but they kind of want
somebody like them.
They want somebody to commiserate with them.
They want somebody who they feel like understands them.
And also, to be honest, somebody that's just convenient, like they ask at the right time,
the right way in the right community. And you're more trusted if you're in that community. So Troy then,
of course, goes deep into the cosplay world and starts to market himself that way.
And now think about what that does. What Facebook groups does he join? What types of content does
he put out? What language does he use? Where does he promote himself? He'll market on Twitch,
right? He's not going to market himself on Facebook.
All of a sudden, also now his instincts are very valuable because first and foremost,
he's a cosplayer himself.
He understands the people he's speaking to.
He already speaks in their language.
Yes.
And so he knows exactly how to speak, where to put up material, what type of material
to put out and who to contact and what
to name his programs and what goals to build his program templates and his programs and stuff off
of. And has he built a successful business? I mean, that's obviously relative. Is that like
his primary source of income or is it still a side thing? He had a side thing online training
before COVID hit because he loved working in the gym. COVID hit and now he's pivoted fully online.
And the reason I ask that is, and I assume there is enough demand in that community for him to build a business that provides a good income.
I would go as far as guessing that you have a lot of people who want to look like, look
at how a lot of video game, or I think it's also like comic
books, like superheroes and stuff where you have a lot of, I'm sure guys who would like
to lose a bit of fat and gain a bit of muscle.
So they look cooler in their costumes and you have a lot of women who want to wear sexy
costumes and they want to look more sexy.
I could see that working.
Yeah, a hundred percent.
And so let me give you another example.
Carolina Bamos, who's actually my co-host on the online trainer show.
We brought her in to be a co-host, but way before that, a few years ago. She is a single mother of three
who is originally from Mexico, moved to Canada, basically had, with her daughter, had two more
kids with somebody who she met here, is now divorced. And so she's a single divorced mother
of Mexican origin living in North America.
Well, that's pretty unique about her, right?
And wouldn't you bet there are a lot of support communities for Mexican expat single mothers.
So she is, of course, already in these communities.
Put out a post in one of them one day.
It's been an active member of these communities.
I think this was on Facebook.
Put out a post.
Yeah, it was on Facebook.
Put out a post on Facebook, basically telling her story in Spanish,
of course. She sent it to me and I translated it poorly, so I kind of know what it says.
It just told her story of how difficult it was. She was a teen mom, of how difficult it was coming
to Canada, and then how finding health and fitness has changed her life, and how she's
now become a trainer, and how she now works with women and particularly mothers and that kind of thing. She had 800 emails in the comments of her Facebook post of people asking for
more information. From that, she hosted a paid webinar. She said it was $6 the first time.
Then she did it a second time because, of course, no system is worth anything if you don't repeat
it. Then she did it a second time, did another webinar for eight bucks. She got paid over a thousand dollars for hosting a webinar that
filled her coaching program twice through a single post in a single Facebook group.
That's awesome. That's a very instructive story because it just shows the power of,
and really what we're talking about, what I think of is branding the knee plus ultra of branding, the knee plus ultra of branding, or maybe the highest, maybe a better way to put it
is the highest purpose and goal of branding is to own a category. You have to be the leader in
something. You can't get into a category that is already owned by somebody else or some other
business and try to fight your way up the ladder. It can work to a degree, but you're
never going to achieve nearly as much success as you will if you find a category that you can own,
even if you have to create it, which speaks to exactly what we were talking about. I mean,
I love the, I mean, these are both great stories and I love from the branding perspective in
particular, the cosplayer one, because whether he realized it or not, that was brilliant branding. That was a really smart decision to make him because he owns that category. Now I'm sure like
if he's really involved in that community and anybody in, I don't know how far his sphere of
influence extends, but if he's working at it, it probably at this point has spread pretty far.
And so if anybody in his orbit, so to speak, or just connected to
him in some way gets the idea of like, oh, I'd like to get in better shape for the next convention
or whatever, he's the guy who immediately comes to mind and good luck to anybody else who tries
to compete with him. Maybe a traditional branding theory would say that if the market's big enough,
there is room for a number two.
And between the number one and number two, that's going to be the vast majority of the market share.
So somebody else could probably do something similar. They'd have to go through the process that you're talking about. But the fact that he got there first and he established the category
means that it's just his to lose at this point. Well, and so 100%, there's three things that I
want to hit on that I think are really important
points with this, because I think this is such a fascinating conversation and such a powerful
conversation to have. The first is, you actually don't need that many clients. Most trainers don't
need a lot of clients. This idea of, would you rather be first or second or third? It's like,
if you think about it, you actually only need 30 clients paying you $200 a month to make $72,000 a year. So you actually don't need that many customers. This
idea of, oh, I'm so scared because if I go deeper, then the market's going to be much smaller. It's
like, yeah, it will be, but it's going to be big enough. We have one of our students in level two
of our certification, Marc-Andre Sears, is French. And I remember him coming to us a couple of years ago and basically saying, oh, he's in Quebec, he's in French Canada. And he said, oh, should I
promote myself in French or English? The problem is the French market is so small.
I was like, yeah, but there's no competition there. And guess what? Marc-Andre is doing
50,000 bucks a month in French, in Quebec, to French Canadians.
Because there's nobody else.
So that's number one.
You actually don't need that many people.
So he found his niche.
He found his category.
Yep.
And number two is you actually don't need to make...
This is, I think, a huge point that I want to make sure that I sell properly.
huge point that I want to make sure that I sell properly. Fitness professionals are some of the least selfish, most selfless people in the world. And that's what makes them so amazing. That's why
I love being around them. That's what frustrates the heck out of me so much with them because
they just want to do good and they beat themselves up and they give themselves away
in order to do that.
There's this misconception that you need to make the majority of your money from the people who you want to ultimately support.
That is 100% not true.
To tell you a story that illustrates this, if you're really passionate about dental hygiene in third-world countries and you believe that the solution is to donate a whole bunch of toothbrushes. You don't need to start a toothbrush company. You need to start
any company that makes a lot of money so that you can buy a lot of toothbrushes to give
to those places. So, you know, we have another student, Ben Mudge out in Ireland has cystic
fibrosis and he really wants to support the cystic fibrosis community. Well, the cystic fibrosis. And he really wants to support the cystic fibrosis community.
Well, the cystic fibrosis community, unfortunately, a lot of the time are pretty down and out. They
don't have a ton of money. So what we basically did is we showed him because he's got, he's like
Thor. This guy is like jacked. He's out in Ireland. He's got a huge, he's got like 140,
150,000 on Instagram. He's got a big following. He's gotten tons of media.
We basically said to him, like, we're going to teach you how to build a premium program where you
charge, because he's in Ireland, where you charge over 1,000 pounds for 12 weeks, and
you only need to take 10 people.
Because if you do that, then you can build a low-end or free membership program to support
your cystic fibrosis community.
And that's 100% what it's done.
And so that's one part of it.
We have another student, Frank Benedetto, who's in New Jersey, who trains fighters,
and he gets fighters prepared for their fights, which is fighters don't have a lot of money.
Right. And so, you know, you can't, I mean, obviously, like the top, top, top fighters,
but even like five levels down from the top don't have much money. I mean, obviously like the top, top, top fighters, but even like five levels
down from the top don't have much money.
I mean, really, like, unless you're, it's like the LPGA, right?
Like, unless you're like.
I was going to say, it sounds like golf and women's golf more so than men's, but even
men's golf, if you're not winning, well, not winning.
If you're not placing consistently, you're on the PGA tour, you're struggling.
But what these fighters do have is a lot of people
who do have a ton of money, i.e. corporate alpha male types who admire these fighters,
who want to train like fighters are also there. So we basically went to Frank and we said, okay,
well do this program for fighters. We're going to show you how to build it in a really scalable way. And so he's got one of the top programs for fighters out there. So he has
a whole bunch of fighters preparing them for his fights. Mark gets that. That's his brand.
On the back end where he makes his money are high-end premium programs to corporate alpha
male types who want to train like fighters. And literally the program is called Train Like a
Fighter. Makes me think of Mark Devine's whole seal fit brand. Yeah. I mean, look, that's,
we're not making up anything new, but it's this idea that like, there's this misconception. You
don't need to make the majority of your money from the people, even in your brand. If you really want
to help people work with people, you're passionate about working with people that don't have a lot
of money. It's like, that's cool, but understand that you're not going to be able to make a lot of money from them.
So where does that fit in? And then the final, the third point is every community needs a fitness
professional, every community, every publication, you don't need to get into men's health.
You know, you could get into St. Augustine guitar weekly. I mean,
Is that a magazine?
No, I just made it up.
I've been saying Augustine.
I'm just thinking about a couple of-
I don't know.
I thought you might be a guitar aficionado.
No, I'm not.
I don't play guitar.
I was thinking about guitar
and I was thinking about a couple of our students
who live in St. Augustine
who own a fitness facility and do hybrid training
and have done really well with it at St. Augustine.
That's, I don't know why I just put those two together.
But this idea, the most obscure idea that I could find, you know, the St.
Augustine Guitar Weekly, it's like, if you become the fitness professional to the St.
Augustine community of guitar players, my mom and I, we just had a week off with my
family and my sister and her family and my parents and I all went to the cottage and
it was great.
We had that all last week.
And my mom was telling me a story of in her neighborhood here in Toronto, there's 40 women who are all retired or
like most semi-retired who all have money, who basically one woman just started it and decided
that she wanted to do like an exercise class or whatever, brought her in and everybody brings
the new people. And anyway, there's 40 women. And one of them says to the group, hey, I found this great hairdresser.
And now this hairdresser is full. You don't need, all you need to do is get in with a group like
that. Or you need to get in with the St. Augustine Guitar Association. You know what I'm saying?
Like, what is it? And this would come back to the point you're making on
what's unique about you and so if somebody is is very good at and into guitar and then that could
be an angle is the point that could be an angle that could be you know you probably have contacts
in those communities who have platforms you know could you then train somebody for free that's influential in that community
in exchange for them showcasing there? That was the next question I was going to ask you.
So let's say people listening. So they're getting some ideas now about how they could brand
themselves in a unique way and how they could promote themselves in an authentic way that
would resonate with people like them. And it would be a pretty low friction
sales process, I guess you could say. And one thing we're taking for granted here,
and I think it's fine, is that you do have something of a story relating to fitness.
I think that goes without saying, like if you have done nothing with your own body,
and you might disagree with me here, but I would think that that's step one is, again,
you don't have to get jacked, but you do need to, I would think, you want to walk the walk to some degree, embody what you're talking about, and have something of a story that you can share and how fitness relates to it.
It doesn't just have to be a, oh, I got jacked and shredded story.
You've already made that point.
It could be more about your life and how you found fitness and what it has done for you.
And I think minimally, you probably want to get to a point where somebody would say you're fit.
Would you agree with that? Yeah. I mean, you've got to have gone on a journey for sure.
Yeah. I mean, I would say, and again, this is something that you know more than I know,
but if I were that person getting into it, I would assume, okay, I got, I have to at least
get to a level of fit. It'd be a bit odd if I'm going to teach somebody how to play golf and I'm like duffing every shot.
What's going on here? Yeah. But you don't, you don't have to be great. You could be going through
your journey, right. And broadcasting that and projecting that you're going through your journey
and inviting other people with you. That's a good point. We do have a lot of people at various, you know,
ends of that, of that spectrum. Well, that's good to know. No, no. I mean,
that's valuable information because again, I'm not speaking from experience in, in this discussion.
Again, my experience was very different. So I'm being the person who's kind of the newbie
in that sense. Like, Oh, how would I go about this? You know? Well, let me tell you a story
that I think hammers that in. I've done over I've done multiple bouts of 100 plus phone calls with
our audience just to get to know them. I think people don't speak to each other enough these
days. And I think when you actually speak to people, you gain some really valuable insights.
I know. It blows your mind. It's amazing what happens when you actually speak to another human.
We hear all the time in our Facebook groups, like, how are you guys getting clients? I'm
doing everything. I have this funnel and I'm putting up these Facebook ads and nobody's
responding. What are you doing? And I'm just like, how many people have you spoken to today?
They're like, well, I mean, but I did this landing page and I did this ebook and I did
this ethical bribe and I have this email list. I'm like, how many people have you spoken to today?
Well, none. It's like, eh, maybe you should speak to somebody.
But anyway, so, you know, this was in one of those conversations and it was a woman who I won't say her name because I don't want to, I don't know if she's
okay with sharing her story a bit, but long story short, she asked a question very similar to you.
She said, you know, I don't look like a Instagram trainer or a conventional trainer. You know,
I still have a bit more weight to lose and I don't think that I can compete. You know,
why would anybody buy from me? And I said, okay, well, tell me about yourself. Why did you become a trainer?
Why did you, what was your story like? And she starts telling me her story and it is the most
powerful thing ever of drug addiction, alcohol addiction, got in with the wrong friends,
started a new life, had her friends try to bring her back in, pushed them away,
transformed herself. And it's like, have you ever told that story? Because if you did,
there would be a lot of people who would connect with that. They just grew up in the wrong place.
They made some bad decisions when they were young and stupid. We all made bad decisions when we were
young and stupid. Some of us pay for them longer than others. And you had the awareness that your life was spiraling downwards, your
health and your life was spiraling downwards. You got yourself out of addiction to, I mean,
hard drugs. And I mean, like super heavy binge drinking everything over the weekend. You got
yourself out of it. You separated yourself
from that. You built a new life. These people tried to drag you back in. Do you not think that
you would be able to connect with folks going through that journey in a way that somebody who
is 21 years old and shredded on Instagram and never had to suffer through anything and face
any adversity in their life ever, do you not think you're going to be able to connect with people in a different way than that person? If you tell
your story better. And how did it work out for her? I don't actually know. I wish I did. I'm
sure it worked out well if she pursued it because that's in some ways, that's a, yes, that's a more
powerful story than I have, for example, if we're really just talking about the dynamics of story.
So I totally agree. I was on a podcast once with two guys, with two brothers. I mean, for example, if we're really just talking about the dynamics of story. So I totally agree.
I was on a podcast once with two guys, with two brothers.
I mean, these guys, father committed suicide, mother was put in the mental hospital,
addicted to drugs, they had to raise each other, that type of story, serious adversity.
We were on the podcast with them and they asked me what adversity I had been through
in my life. And I'm like, I'm not even going to insult you guys.
Yeah. Can we just go to the next question?
I'm from a reasonably affluent Jewish community in suburbia, Toronto. Every adult I ever knew
was a lawyer, doctor, dentist, accountant, or teacher. All of my friends are lawyers,
doctors, dentists, accountants, or teachers. I mean, sure, have things felt like they have been hard from time to time?
Like 100%. They always will. That's just part of the human condition. But I'm not even going to
begin to... I have enough awareness that I'm not even going to begin to say that anything that
I've been through is anything compared to what you've been through.
And it's funny because I've listened to that podcast a few other times and people,
you know, are talking about their adversities. I'm just like, that's not,
I might've felt tough, but like, that wasn't tough, man. Like you would have been fine.
If things went wrong, I would have been able to go home and have two loving parents, you know?
Like it ain't bad. Yeah, no, I totally understand. And I would say I'm in a similar boat and I have talked about it a little bit here and there, but I don't talk too much
about it because it's not an interesting story. It's not. It's really not. It's not the story that
most people would be interested in even hearing. Maybe there are a couple of unique aspects.
I finished high school at a young age because i didn't
i didn't take spring breaks or summer breaks i just studied through my breaks and so i had enough
credits in florida that's how it works to graduate and then i started working in some different
businesses and it resonates with some people but with many people they're just like i had to work
through my summer breaks bro you know yeah yeah i know and uh yeah so whatever whatever. It is what it is, right? And of course-
But you did a lot with it, right? And I mean, I think that that's the most important thing.
And I was going to say, that's exactly the point with you as well, is you did take these
opportunities and make something of them. And I'm sure you know many people, because I know
many people growing up who had greater opportunities than I had by a lot. I mean, start with kids who came from families
with unlimited money and successful parents, or at least maybe the mom wasn't working, but very
successful, at least one or both of the parents who not only had the money, but the connections
to open any door that the kid could possibly want to go through. And where's that kid now? Nowhere, doing nothing,
just pissing away daddy's money. So there is something to be said for having that,
maybe you could say the character or the spirit to seize the opportunities that you had and to
take those advantages and make something into them that doesn't just happen, that take a lot of
and make something into them.
That doesn't just happen.
That take a lot of application.
Yeah, like, look, you know,
I always say to people,
a lot of what I have now,
I feel like I would have ultimately gotten to,
but it would have taken me five more years.
And I was gonna say that too.
I'll bet you, you take you and you put yourself into a very different situation
that's a lot worse.
And I would not be surprised if I were a betting man,
I would put money on you. I would say, I'll bet that John's going to go make it.
You know what? At 34 years old, I wouldn't have been here. I would have been 40, right?
100%.
So quickly, before we wrap up here, I would love to get to a point, I know you have to run in a
few minutes, but where we've gotten to where the person now has gotten their first clients and-
Oh, exciting.
Good for you.
Good for you, person.
Exactly.
And I think we're going to get good feedback on this because I want to set this up for
a potential follow-up, which would be the next part of the journey.
Because really where we've been talking about this first phase, and I think, I mean, this
is the obvious place to start.
And right, I think at the end of this first phase where a person now has given some thought as to the marketing, the branding, their uniqueness, telling their story,
attracting people who are going to resonate with that story and who are going to be willing to
at least get on the phone and talk more about what this coaching service might look like.
Would you recommend, you had mentioned this, but is this like a standard recommendation of yours to work with some people for free in the beginning to get success stories?
So then you have social proof or would you go for the sale? Yeah. Would you go for the sale right
away and then use that as your downsell basically? Not necessarily. I would be very hesitant to ever
train anybody for free. The only time that I would ever recommend that somebody
train somebody for free is some sort of influential person in that person's target market in exchange
for basically promotion. Beyond that, what we found is that ain't nobody does anything if they
don't pay. It's as simple as that. This isn't across the board.
People who pay the least give you the most trouble and do the least amount of work.
Do you see that on your, I see that man with customers.
We see that all over the place.
Oftentimes the most obnoxious customers are people who spend very little money with us.
Why do you think I sell books and not low-end programs? Because I learned over the years,
we had low-end membership sites.
Exactly.
And somebody who spends $20 a month for a membership site is going to give me less
trouble than somebody who's going to spend $800 on our certification.
It's just... And so we just don't even do it. It's like, if you want to spend 20 bucks,
totally cool. Buy the book. There's no expectation of service, which is totally fine. Like, I mean, the books are great.
I would also argue that as the average, I believe this was 2019, it might've been 18 data,
but in America, the average person reads just one book a year. And it's really what you're
looking at though. Yeah. That's the average. So it's not the median. That's the average.
So what really, what that means is you have people who read a lot and you have a lot of people who read nothing. I'll
bet you if you dig into that data, that's what that really looks like. And so I would argue,
and I think it's a pretty easy position to argue that your average book reader is just a cut above
average in different ways. As I would say, a higher caliber person in terms of pursuing goals
in particular, especially if they're reading fitness books, for example, the fact that they
read a fitness book and maybe even tried to apply it to them, it might seem like, of course,
why would I not do that? But what they don't realize is that the vast majority of people,
they won't even do that. They won't even read the book,
let alone try to apply it. So you're already pre-selecting for people who are special in some
way. I love how you just complimented all of your readers. That was well done.
That was like a magic trick that you just did. And everybody who buys my books is actually William,
and you guys are way smarter and way better than everybody else.
You're too clever. You just know my trick.
way better than everybody else. You're too clever. You just know my trick.
But I mean, think about like the entire fitness and self-help genre, right? Like you actually don't really need to buy more than one self-help book.
But the reality of it is the act of buying a self-help book and believing that you're going
to make a change gives you way more pleasure and way more reward than the act of actually doing
the self-help, which is inherently painful.
The entire self-help book industry knows this.
They feed into it.
It's actually kind of evil when you really get into it.
They know that you're going to get this dopaminergic response from your nucleus accumbens when
you buy a self-help book in believing that you're going
to make this big change. And they know that that hit is going to go away and you're going to crave
another hit. So you're going to buy another book and another book and another book. It's like-
Do you think that's true of that? I don't read much in the genre anymore. I have read some
self-help books that I've liked and I often recommend, there's probably three to five
that I recommend, but I got to where I read enough in the space where I was kind of just hearing the same ideas.
How many ideas are there?
Yeah, exactly.
And so I stopped reading it altogether.
So I would say that's 100% true of if it's the motivational variety and that would include motivational speakers.
Like, yes, that is what that is. It is get people fired up and they don't really know
what to do and they just feel good for a little bit and then they don't feel so good anymore.
And then you can fire them up with the next thing and then they're supposed to join your
mastermind and then go back to the masterminds. I believe so. I mean, I believe so pretty deeply.
I've written about this a fair bit, but then you come across somebody like Mark Manson with
subtle art and it was such a brilliant book. And I've had a chance to spend a
lot of time with Mark. And it's just such a brilliantly written book that it's so much fun
to read. And kind of the same thing with James Clear in Atomic Habits. Did he say anything new?
Absolutely not. He's not a researcher, right? He's like a Malcolm Gladwell. He's just a master
communicator. And so what these guys are able to do is basically communicate the same concepts
in a way that is just fun to read. And they're really impactful as a result of that.
So, I mean, James's book has sold, what, 2 million, 3 million copies. Mark sold 10 or something.
Yeah. Impressive.
Oh, yeah. Mark, I mean, Subtle Art was like, it was the best selling copies. Mark sold 10 or something. Yeah, impressive. Oh, yeah.
Mark, I mean, Subtle Art was like,
it was the best selling.
It was a phenomenon.
Dude, it was the best selling audio book of all time
within like two months of it coming out.
It was the craziest thing.
That's cool.
Because I know the guys who did the audio book publishing
for The Motion as well,
James Tahn and his company, Podium Publishing.
And, you know, so they had, obviously,
the Motion was like the previous one. And the story behind that's really cool because they
basically own the audiobook rights. And then the print book rights were bought up by, I think it
was Penguin. I might be wrong with that. But they were bought up by a publisher and taken off the
market for six months. So the only version of the book that was on the market was the audiobook.
And so the sales just ballooned.
It was crazy. Go podium publishing there. They were happy about that.
Oh man, they, that business grew fast. I could tell you a lot of stories about that,
that audio book published. That's different. It's a conversation for us off air, I guess.
But you talked about, you know, should you train people for free? The answer is
in almost every case, no, you need to learn how to make what's called a compelling offer.
We have this process we call the founding client challenge. And basically, we guarantee people get one to five new clients
within seven days with no paid ads or phone selling. And basically, we just teach you how
to ask properly. I believe that basically everybody who is involved in fitness, whether
you're in the industry or not, you're still, if you're interested in fitness, you're still the
health freak amongst your community, right? Amongst your friends and family, whether you work in the industry or not.
And so as long as you have that, if you're like, if you've never really worked out that
much before and you don't have a social media account, this might not work, but we have
an 82% success rate with this.
And it's probably higher than that.
And could you quickly just give us a little bit of insight as to what does that compelling
offer look like?
I'll talk to you exactly how it is.
We call it a 5-1-60 ask.
Basically, you're looking for, you have to have a certain number of people.
So we say five people, you know, so I'm looking for five people who have pick your one goal,
who are 30 to 40 year old men who used to be athletes in high school, who are looking
to put on five
pounds of muscle, right? Like reasonably specific. And it should be a quantifiable goal because in
marketing, you just kind of need a quantifiable goal a lot of the time to get people in the door
and then you can sell them on long-term change, but it's going to be very hard to sell people
on long-term change at the start. It's a great point. An important point.
Yeah, absolutely. And that's hard because like get that the changes you make on the inside are way
more important than the changes you make on the outside. But I also understand marketing enough
to know that you got to meet people where they're at if you want to give yourself an opportunity to
take them where you think that they need to go. So five people, one goal, and then 60 days.
So five, one, 60. And then the final part of it is it has to be some sort of
new program you're offering. It could be the exact same thing you were offering before,
give it a new name. It doesn't really matter. But the key with that is you say, I'm looking for,
run with the same example, I'm looking for five men aged 30 to 40 who want to put on five pounds
of muscle who used to be athletes in high school in the next 60 days to test drive a new program that I've built.
When this program goes live in two months, it's going to be 500 bucks.
But for the first five people to help me test drive it, it's 197.
And in exchange, I need you to give me feedback and then use your results
as testimonials for when I promote the program.
And that does a lot of things.
So what that does is it gives people a compelling offer, right?
It gives people a reason to act right now because you give a deadline.
It calls out a specific kind of person.
It gives people a reason to act now.
It has a very clear and definable and quantifiable goal.
It gives them a great deal, right?
They're getting the discount on the program.
And then the final piece is it gives you permission to not be perfect because they're going
into it knowing that they're testing the program, which immediately alleviates a lot of the pressure
off of you to be perfect with how you're delivering it. Smart psychology. It also,
there's urgency there too, because if you're only looking for five, then of course, once you have your five, then that's it. It's not available anymore.
That's it. And I mean, look, you could say eight, you could say 10. We've had people get as many as
40 clients with us in seven days, right? Like you could take on-
The number is not the point, but it's the fact that you gave it a number.
Yes.
It creates some urgency there. What are your thoughts on coupling that with also
a money-back guarantee? Do you think it's not necessary? I don't think a money-back guarantee
is good, but what we teach people, one of the most popular strategies that we teach people in
the Online Trainer Academy, I'll give you the behind the scenes of that here, is what we call
a free upon completion. So you understand loss of ocean, so you appreciate this, is this idea of you basically get people in the door for, let's say, a 28-day challenge,
21-day, 28-day challenge. We find anything more than that is too much. But get them in for a
three- or four-week challenge with a very clear, definable goal, same type of thing.
Call out a specific person, give a date, a deadline where they have to sign up for.
And then you say this challenge is whatever,
197 bucks, and it's fully upon completion. What that means is that you pay $197. And if you
complete the challenge, or if you complete 75% of the challenge activities at the end,
you get your money back. And then if it's a 28-day challenge, 20 days in, you contact the people and
you say, hey, you're doing really well. I wanted to invite you into the next stage, which is, of course, now you're, call it your 12-week program. And why don't we just push
forward the 197 bucks into that? Yeah, credit it towards it.
Credit it towards it. And you'll get like an 80% take rate on your next program. Because
now that money is already gone, right? You've decreased the loss of version by telling them
that they're going to get it back. And then at the end of it, they've already had some,
to give you an opportunity to get them some results, right? Now they've already gotten
some results. And then at the end of it, the money's already gone. The money's already been
out of their bank account for 20 days. They're not going to miss it.
The pain of paying has long passed and has been replaced with the pleasure of the results that
you've provided them. And of course, now for the people who are still in it toward the end,
they're probably in it because they're getting results.
Well, for sure. I mean, and look, like, you know, the silly thing about the fitness industry,
it's like people say they can't afford a fitness professional, but then they go and spend,
you know, how much money on the dumbest stuff ever that doesn't actually do anything good for them.
Uber Eats. Give me your Uber Eats bill. Okay.
Right. It's like it's not that the money is there.
It could be half that if you just bought simple foods that you prepare yourself and cook them.
100%. I mean, sometimes, don't get me wrong, sometimes the money is really the issue,
but what we found is that most often it's not. It's a priority issue. And also, it's an awareness issue of whether the money is actually going or not going.
I don't have any problem with money-back guarantees. I mean, look, we give a guarantee
for everything. Online Trainer Academy, we say to you, you're going to make your first $1,000
of online training within 90 days of signing up for the program, but we'll give you all your money
back. And that's smart. I think risk reversal is very important, but I think you should do it
better than like, if you're not satisfied, you get your money back. Guarantees can be one of your best selling tools
if you do them well. I totally agree. Most people don't take you up on them,
ironically. And I'm not even speaking as like, oh, a devious marketer. That's just a statistical
fact that the first time I ever read about money back guarantees, I don't know, probably would
have been a couple of,
well, at least a decade ago in whatever marketing book it was, they already were talking about that,
that you can have a fantastic money back guarantee and totally stand by it. And even people who could take you up on it often won't for whatever reason. That's not taking advantage or exploiting people.
It just is what it is. And so at Legion, our money back guarantee, we just make it real simple. If you're buying something for the first time, you don't
like it for any reason, let us know. We give you your money back and you keep it. You don't have
to send it back to us. And often we do get some people who take us up on it and we're happy to
refund their money. And of course, then that keeps them, I mean, they're often surprised
because most companies wouldn't do that. And then though, what happens fairly
often is they have somebody else to give it to who ends up liking it, who then comes and checks
us out. So it's a good thing. For the longest time when I'd give people books or send people
books, I just pretend like I made a mistake and send them two copies instead of one.
And then when they call me to tell me that I sent them two copies, I'd be like, oh, I don't know.
I don't know why that happened. It must've been a mistake by a fulfillment. I just, I mean, you know, I'm sure you have
somebody that you could give it to. I like it. It's smart. That's why I love that stuff.
Okay. So let's wrap up with where people can, cause we haven't, I will give it in the intro,
but for people who skip the intro, where can they find you, your work and where can they find,
if they want to sign up for your certification, if they want to read your books, where should they go?
Yeah. I mean, the certification, if you go to onlinetrainer.com slash academy,
you can find it. You can also Google online trainer academy. You can find like a thousand
reviews or something for it, but we'd love to have you. We have a podcast called the online
trainer show as well. If you like podcasts, you probably do because you're here again,
wherever you listen to podcasts, it's called online trainer show or just onlinetrainer.com
slash podcast. Other than that, I mean, you can go to Amazon for the books and go to a store for the books,
but yeah, those two links you'll find. Awesome. Everything for me.
Awesome. Love it. Great conversation. Thank you.
Thanks, buddy. All right. Well, that's it for this episode. I hope you enjoyed it and found
it interesting and helpful. And if you did, and you don't mind doing me a favor,
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