Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Story of My 7-Figure Fitness Publishing Company
Episode Date: January 11, 2019According to a 2016 article in the New York Times, only 40 authors had sold more than 1 million books on the Kindle store in the previous 5 years. Another survey by Digital Book World found that the v...ast majority of self-published authors made $1 to $999 per year—with most authors on the lower end of that range. These numbers are a stark reminder of how grateful I should be to have achieved the level of success that I have as a self-published author. Specifically, I’ve sold about 1.3 million books in the last 6 years, and last year was my best yet, with over 300,000 books sold. This is why I get a lot of questions from aspiring writers about publishing, writing, and the business of selling books. Sometimes people are looking for help writing a book of their own and other times they’re just curious about how the sausage is made. I haven’t spoken much about the ins and outs of publishing here on my podcast, so I thought it might be worth sharing an interview I did on another podcast called The Food for Fitness Podcast. In this discussion, the host Scott and I get under the hood of my publishing company, the publishing space, and the fitness industry in general and discuss the good, bad, and ugly. We talk about the genesis, growth, and goals of my publishing efforts, some of the key factors that have made my books so successful, some of the common mistakes, shenanigans, and skullduggery used to sell books, and more. 5:21 - Who are you, what do you do, and how did it all start? 14:37 - Why did you decide to write books and create businesses? 21:34 - Why do you think fitness gurus overcomplicate weight loss and muscle building? 36:36 - What type of diet will be big in the future? 44:52 - What’s the one thing you know now that you wished you knew when started? 47: 02 - Where can people find you and your work? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think initially getting into any business type or commercial endeavor, it doesn't make
sense to do that in most cases, especially if it's all new, get something out there as
quickly as possible.
That's good by your standards, but you know, not anywhere near perfect because you just
don't know it might be in a complete waste of time.
Hey, Mike Matthews here from most for life Life and Legion Athletics, and welcome to another
episode of the Muscle for Life podcast.
Now, according to a 2016 article in the New York Times, only 40 authors had sold more
than 1 million books on the Kindle store in the previous five years.
store in the previous five years. Another survey by Digital Book World found that the vast majority of self-published authors made $1 to $999 per year, with most of them on the lower end of that
range. Now, I mention these numbers because they are a stark reminder of how grateful I should be to have achieved the level of success that I have as a self-published author.
Specifically, I've sold about 1.3 million books in the last six years.
And last year was my best year yet, actually, with over 300,000 books sold.
And this year, we have plans that should get us over 500,000 books sold. And this year we have plans that should get us over 500,000 books
sold. Now, the reason I say those things is not to brag, but just to explain that that's why I get a
lot of questions from aspiring writers who have either heard me mention things maybe in writing
or on the podcast. I don't really talk about it much, but I've mentioned here or there, and you can find it specifically if you're looking for it, or who know what Amazon sales
rankings translate into in the way of sales and can see that I'm selling a lot of books.
So I hear from a lot of these people fairly often who want to know about the business of selling
books, about the writing of them, about the publishing selling books, about the writing of them,
about the publishing of them, about the marketing of them. And sometimes these are people who are
looking for help writing a book of their own. And other times they're just curious about how
the sausage is made. Now, I haven't spoken much about the ins and outs of publishing here on my
podcast. So I thought it might be worth sharing an interview that I did on another podcast called the Food for Fitness podcast.
Now, in this discussion, the host, Scott and I, get under the hood of my publishing company and
the publishing space and the fitness industry in general and discuss the good, the bad, and the ugly. We talk about the
genesis and the growth and the goals of my publishing efforts. We talk about some of the
key factors that I believe account for my book's success. We talk about some of the common mistakes,
shenanigans, and skullduggery that is used to sell books and more. I hope you
liked the interview. This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the bills,
but I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead,
I'm just going to quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically my fitness book for women,
Thinner, Leaner, Stronger. Now this book has sold over 150,000 copies in the last several years, and it has helped
thousands of women build their best bodies ever, which is why it currently has over 1,200
reviews on Amazon with a four and a half star average.
So if you want to know the biggest lies and myths that keep women from ever achieving the lean, sexy, strong, and healthy bodies they truly desire, and if you want to learn the simple science of building the ultimate female body, then you want to read Thinner, Leaner, Stronger today, which you can find on all major online retailers like Audible, Amazon, iTunes, Kobo, and Google Play. Now,
speaking of Audible, I should also mention that you can actually get the audiobook 100% free when
you sign up for an Audible account, which I highly recommend that you do if you're not currently
listening to audiobooks. I myself love them because they let me make the time that I spend
doing things like commuting, prepping food, walking my dog and so forth into more valuable and productive activities.
So if you want to take Audible up on this offer and get my book for free, simply go to
www.bitly.com slash free TLS book. And that will take you to Audible. And then you just have to click
the sign up today and save button, create your account. And voila, you get to listen to thinner,
leaner, stronger for free. All righty. That is enough shameless plugging for now, at least.
Let's get to the show. Hey, Mike, welcome to the podcast. Hey, Scott, thanks for having me.
Absolute pleasure. Mike, give us a bit more info about you. I mean, if anyone is semi into fitness,
they've probably already heard of you. They probably have at least one of your books.
Listen to your podcast. You're kind of a popular dude in the industry. But if someone's been living under the proverbial fitness rock, tell us who you are, what you do, why you're so
good at it and how it all started. I'll start with the last question, how it all started. Well,
let's start with the first actually, who I am, Mike Matthews. All right. So that's who I am.
Yeah, there we go. I'm primarily, it's funny. People ask, you know, if I meet people, whatever.
Oh, so, you know, what do you do? Like a fitness things. I guess that's the best answer. Primarily I'm a writer, right? So, um,
probably what I'm best known for are a few books that have sold, um, about a million copies over
the last five or six years. And those books are bigger, leaner, stronger. That's for men,
thinner, leaner, stronger women. And then the other most popular book is called the shredded
chef, which is kind of like a flexible dieting cookbook for obviously both men and women.
book is called The Shredded Chef, which is kind of like a flexible dieting cookbook for obviously both men and women. My journey, I guess, in the fitness industry started in 2012. I published
Bigger, Leaner, Stronger. I had a different business, different life at that time. And I
really just kind of did it as a nights and weekends project. I wasn't really sure if anybody would
care about the book. And that's why I self-published it because I didn't have any connections in the
industry. I didn't have, looking at it objectively, I knew that there was no reason for an agent to care about me or put any faith in me and no reason for a publisher to care or put any faith.
And it would take a lot of – I was assuming it was going to take a lot of time and a lot of effort to get any agent or publisher to care.
And I'd rather just put that time and effort into just doing it myself and going straight to the marketplace and seeing if, because ultimately what really matters
is readers, right? If you can get a large enough readership, then you win either way.
So I just self-published it and it was a minimum viable product type of approach. It was,
wasn't very large. I want to say in the beginning, it was maybe 70 or 80,000 words at most. It might
have been as short as 50.
I don't quite remember in the first edition.
And it was really just like, all right, here is the book that I wish that somebody would have given me back when I was 17, 18, getting into weightlifting.
It was the result of many years of doing a lot of things that weren't very effective.
And then I think when I first published it, I want to say it was probably four years or so of doing things that were very effective.
And it was me just explaining, okay, so here's where I've been.
Here's what I've tried.
And here's what I've learned.
And here's how I've learned it.
And here's what you need to do to put it into use and see for yourself if it works for you.
I guess this is more just a product of my personality.
for you. I guess this is more just a product of my personality. It was from the beginning,
a more evidence-based approach to diet and exercise. The references section, the citations have grown since then because the book itself has grown since then. I've done several updates to it
and I'm actually releasing this year, November, December, January, let's say there's going to be
a full transition over to a new third edition that I'm releasing, which I'm super excited about because I basically rewrote the books for men and women
from scratch. And all the fundamentals are the same, but I'm a better writer now in the last
four years since I published the second editions. I've done a lot of research. I've done a lot of
writing on my blogs and a lot of speaking on my podcast. So I just, I'm excited because these
new third editions, in my opinion, are far better than the current second editions,
even though I do stand by the current second editions as solid books and probably the best
that I was capable of four years ago, but I'm just capable of so much more now, in my opinion.
So anyways, that was back in 2012. I published that book, I think, Bigger Than Stronger. I think
it sold 20 copies or something in the first month. And I was like, Oh, that's
cool. Somebody bought my book. And then it sold maybe 40 copies the next month. And I put my email
address in there. I had, I think it was build healthy muscle.com or something. I just made an
email address, Mike at build healthy muscle and invited people to reach out if they had any
questions or suggestions or anything. And I started hearing from people who liked the book and thought it was very interesting.
At that time, flexible dieting wasn't as popular as it is now. Not as many people had heard of it.
Heavy compound weightlifting, like strength training. It was more niche now or then than
it is now. I'd say probably in many ways, thanks to CrossFit, it has become more and more mainstream. This, the idea of like heavy-ish barbell training has become more mainstream and
more just trendy now than it was, you know, back then. And so for a lot of people, it was just very,
a very different way to eat, a very different way to train than they were used to. And then started
getting people, you know, results, uh, where people would say, Hey, I've been doing, you know,
the program that I included in the book for the last three months. And it's amazing. I've
lost all this weight and I've gained all this strength. And so by the end of 2012, it was
bigger than your strong. We're selling several thousand copies a month. And it was just on
purely on word of mouth. Um, I wasn't doing any sort of, I didn't have a business, a fitness
business. I had a different business doing something totally different. And I'd put up a
couple other shorter books as kind of trial balloons,
just stuff that I felt like writing about basically and to see it, see if it would resonate.
But at that point going into 2013, I saw there was really an opportunity to dive really into this and
create more books and, and write articles and maybe do podcasts, YouTube videos or whatever,
focusing on education, because that's what I myself am personally interested in. A lot of what the fitness
industry doesn't resonate with me personally. And I was actually resistant to getting into it
initially. I didn't want to be a fitness person. I actually was more interested in starting a
publishing company and sell and use what I had learned about book selling and particularly online and using
internet marketing to sell books and just publish other people's stuff and not necessarily health
and fitness stuff. But yeah, I probably would have ended up niching into something, but try
different genres and try different markets and see what I like the most, but there really was a big opportunity there. And so I, I kind of
decided, okay, I'll do it. I'll become a fitness guy, but I'm going to do it in my way. And that
means that I'm really not interested in trying to suck up to the tastemakers in the space or the
king makers in the space, or I'm not chasing after editors or chasing after
people who have followings and basically begging for them to plug me. I'm just going to create the
best possible content that I can. And that means articles, books, you know, everything I've
mentioned. And if I can build a large enough following, then I can just do my own thing.
I'm not beholden to anybody. I can write what I want to write. I can say what I want to say. I mean, it's not just a matter. I guess maybe it's a matter of
integrity, but it's also just a matter of, again, I think just my personality. In psychological
terms, I'm a very disagreeable person. So that that means that there are certain certain things
that just don't suit me very well, trying to play politics and there's a lot of that in any industry.
And now that I've been on the inside of it, of the fitness industry for a number of years, yeah, that's going to conferences and trying to wangle your way into the good graces of people that who in many ways I really just don't respect.
It's just that that never appealed to me.
So I, in 2013, launched launched a website called muscle for life. Um, that was like March or
April of 2013. And that grew quickly. Um, and that gets anywhere from, I'd say 1.2 to 1.4
million visits a month depends on the time of the year and what Google's doing. Like Google's
recent update has traffic's been up down on the,
it's, it's been interesting, but you know, I'm not concerned over time. It'll all settle out.
And as long as you keep doing what Google likes, which is creating good long form content,
you'll be rewarded. That's kind of the long story short, I guess. And since then I've written,
you know, the book for women, which came about because women would write me and ask and say,
Hey, so I read this book. I know it's for men, but I read it and I like it. Can I do this?
And so it was clear that I needed to write a book specifically for women because while the
fundamentals are the same, obviously a man's metabolism fundamentally works in the same way
as a woman's for example, or the muscle building machinery in men works in fundamentally the same
way as the machinery in women. There are some differences that women should be aware of and training priorities are almost
always different, right?
So in men, it's going to take a lot more work to get the upper body that they want than
the lower body and in women, the other way around.
So that's why the women's book came about.
And then the cookbook was just something that, you know, I like to cook and it seemed like
a good opportunity.
You know, I've just released a new book, which was particularly on motivation called The Little Black Book of Workout Motivation.
And I started a supplement business along the way as well, which we could get into if you wanted to, but that's called Legion.
And so I've just continued to build – I guess you could look at it from like an ecosystem basically.
So I look at myself as kind of the nucleus of this and then putting things out there
that can just bring more people into my orbit. And I could say that if people like me and they like
what I have to say and they like the information that I give, then they'll probably like my app.
They'll probably like my supplements. They'll probably like my digital courses, et cetera,
et cetera. Yeah. There's scribbling notes here. There's so much I want to talk to you about,
which I'll probably do offline
rather than bore the listener.
But I have a book coming out next year.
Actually, it's my first book published thing.
And we can chat about more about that.
And Google as well, what's been happening there.
A lot of interesting things.
But again, won't bore the listener with that.
But before you started writing the books,
what did you do?
I mean, were you a personal trainer?
Did you do any of this at uni?
Or was it purely interest-based that you saw this gap in the market for like an evidence-based
book that wasn't you know talking absolute nonsense or aimed at people who want to be
bodybuilders or what prompted you to do that yeah so it really was um just the latter it was
I mean I wasn't a trainer by trade. I had helped a number of people
that would really, it was like friends, family, even just, so like just, just acquaintances. And
they would, I would say, okay, just come to the gym with me and I'll give you a rundown of things.
And we would start, you know, okay. So on the diet side of things, I would start real simple,
real practical. We'd look at their numbers. What do you want to do? Where are you at? Okay. So
like, I just did it recently with a are you at? Okay. So like I just
did it recently with a buddy of mine even now. So a guy I met in the gym and he wanted to, I think
he was about 230 pounds and he had tried many different fad diets and he had gone up and down
and really just his settling point for his lifestyle has been about, you know, 230 pounds
for some time now. And so he was asking me, Hey, what do you think about the keto diet? You know,
I would really like to get down to 200 pounds. His name's Josh. And I was like, all right,
Josh, let's just start here. I explained to him quickly, energy balance, quickly,
macronutrient balance. I was like, but just do this, eat 2000 calories a day. You know,
given your workout schedule, 2000 calories a day, I want you to eat, let's say 60 to 100
grams of protein. And from there, I'll just leave the rest up to you. I don't really care what you eat. I would recommend that you get the majority of your
calories from nutritious foods. But to start, just all I care about is you hit your calorie
needs and you hit your protein target and that's it. And, you know, he was like skeptical. He's
like, really? That's it? What about carbs? What about sugar? What about gluten? What about,
you know, all the stuff he hears about? I'm Like, I don't care. I don't care.
Eat, eat whatever you want to eat.
Again, I recommend that you eat more nutritious foods because it's healthier and it's going
to make it easier.
If you eat very calorie dense junk food too much while you're in a deficit, you're just,
you're not going to feel very good and you're going to be hungrier than you need to be.
But hey, do your thing, whatever.
And, you know, it's funny.
He, he's an interesting guy because he has,
um, what is, so he has a master's in history. He studied history and philosophy, but he's a
financial planner and he, and he studied history and philosophy simply because it's interesting
to him. He knew that those degrees are useless in terms of a career, but he just wanted to do it
because it's interesting to him. So, so he always has interesting anecdotes to share, but he was
like, you know, this reminds me of something, uh said, basically, that the truth that you need is in the place that you least want to look.
Right.
And I was like, actually, that's that's profound.
I actually like that.
And I totally agree with that.
And that applies to really any area of a lot of our lives.
The thing that we are most running away from is probably the thing that we need to confront the most.
And for him, that was calories, right?
And he's like, that totally makes sense.
And that's really what I've not wanted to hear for all these years is that I just eat too much fucking food and that's it.
And I was like, exactly.
So then now I think he's down 20 pounds now.
And he was like, well, OK, so that's that's nice to know.
So I would take people, you know, years and years ago, I would do that kind of process with them. I'd say, OK, here, let's start real simple here in the gym. Come work out with me. Let's start three days a week. Let's just start push pull legs. You're going to do some heavy weightlifting. We're just going to go with a simple auto regulated double progression model, which I wouldn't even I wouldn't use those words with them. But I'm like, basically, we're going to work in this rep range. And when you get to the top of the rep range for one or two sets, we're just going to add weight to the bar and we're just going to progress like that.
And that's nice because if you are feeling good and strong one day, you're going to have some
weeks inevitably are going to be good based on, cause there's so many different factors, right?
That if, especially if you have a life, if you have a job, if you have a family, if you have,
if training is not your number one priority in your life and gaining muscles, not the number
one priority in your life, some weeks are going to be better than others in terms of energy, in terms of what you can actually do in the gym.
And so when you can kind of just regulate it yourself and if you go, hey, I feel really good today.
I'm going to try to go for my top set this week and see if I can make progress.
Whereas I run into this.
This week is a good week.
Last week, everything just felt heavy. I don't, I don't know if I even gained a rep on anything major last week
because it was just one of those weeks. But this week, um, I went up, you know, just today I went
up in my squats and my leg press today just cause I was feeling good. And, uh, so I would start
simple with people, but I wasn't, I wasn't a trainer per se. I wasn't, you know, I didn't
charge them any money. And in working through
that with people, I saw that opportunity where I was like, again, there was no book like bigger,
leaner, stronger on the market at the time. And I was wondering, why isn't somebody just write
a real book that isn't marketing bullshit, that isn't fad, that is just timeless principles that
work like a starting strength, but more for, I wouldn't even say amateur bodybuilding. I would really just say like everyday gen fit, uh, flavor of bodybuilding, which almost
bodybuilding almost seems like too much of a, too kind of extreme of a term for it.
But I guess that's what it is, right?
If you're a guy or if you're a gal that wants to, um, have a lean kind of sculpted athletic
body, it's going to take bodybuilding to get
there. There's no other real word that I know of that kind of describes it. And so that's really
how it came about. And again, I was writing the book to 17 or 18 year old me. That's who really
I was writing that book for initially saying, if I could get, give this back to, you know,
young Mike, Hey, do this. That was kind of the viewpoint, at least when I initially wrote it.
And again, I didn't really have any master plan for it at all.
I didn't know if anybody would even care.
I put time into it, but I didn't belabor it obsessively and, you know, work on this book
for years and years because that just doesn't make sense.
I think initially getting into any business type or commercial endeavor, it doesn't make
sense to do that in most cases, especially if it's all new, get something out there as quickly as possible.
That's good by your standards, but you know, not anywhere near perfect because you just don't know
it might, it might be in a complete waste of time. Yeah. Hey, quickly, before we carry on,
if you are liking my podcast, would you please help spread the word about it?
Because no amount of marketing or advertising gimmicks can match the power of word of mouth.
So if you are enjoying this episode and you think of someone else who might enjoy it as well,
please do tell them about it. It really helps me. And if you are going to post about it on
social media, definitely tag me so I can say thank you. You can find me on Instagram at
Muscle for Life Fitness, Twitter at Muscle for Life and Facebook at Muscle for Life Fitness.
Jumping right back into when you were working with your pal josh and he couldn't believe how simple weight loss is in
principle as in calories in calories out negative energy balance eat sufficient protein don't lose
muscle weight loss will happen eat good food most of the time why do you think that people love to
confuse that message or they think okay this is pretty much 90% of what we need to do
what we're going to do therefore is ignore that and then argue over this 10% or tell people
that they need to time their carbs at this point and supplement with this bullshit and so on why
do you think there are so many charlatans or gurus out there who just seem to want to ignore the basics and
make it harder than it needs to be? You know, I think of it in terms of how I think of the
government, at least the higher echelons of government, in that it's probably half corruption
and half incompetence, or maybe 60-40 one way or the other. So I think that you have a lot of people
that are just incompetent. They don't actually know any better. They themselves actually may think that they're doing people a favor by talking about, oh, yeah, it's all about your carb loading or carb timing or it's all expedient because in some ways, I'll bet you – I mean I think this is probably irrefutable – that going about it that way, that couching your entire pitch in those terms, it's going to appeal actually to a lot of people.
There are a lot of people out there.
If you look at this in terms of stages of market awareness, the first stage as a consumer is you're completely ignorant and you're most susceptible to scams and bullshit.
And you're also probably most hopeful of – you're going to be in the magic bullet kind of shortcut quick fix mindset in the beginning, right?
So let's say you're that person.
You're my buddy Josh, right?
You want to lose 30, 40 pounds and you are just
getting into the weight loss space. This is your first time ever looking into it. And you hear
somebody say, you can lose 30 pounds in 30 days and gain muscle and completely transform your
body. Yeah. And you're like, well, shit, that sounds pretty cool. Okay. And then you have
someone like me out there saying, um, all right, so let's go for 1% of your body weight per week
in terms of weight loss. Oh, and also the other person saying you can do eating literally whatever
you want. You just have to follow these random rules. And I'm going to restrict a couple of
your, let's say I'm going to restrict, you can't eat these two foods, but you can eat all the
butter and all the bacon and all the hamburger you want and blah, blah, blah. Right. And you're
like, well, that sounds pretty cool too. And then you come over to me and it's like, well, it's one, let's say, let's say 1% of your body weight per
week. Let's just shoot for that. And, um, while yes, you can eat whatever you want, you do have
to work within the reality of energy balance, which means that hamburgers are just not a great
choice because of how many calories, you know, pizza is not a great choice. Yes. You can have
some pizza here and there, but you know, when you really look at it and you go, well, shit, this is going to be fifteen hundred calories and it's going to keep me full for, I don't know, like four or five hours max. And it's no protein. It's just carbs and fat. It's not a very, quote unquote, diet friendly food. Can you make it work? Yeah, I guess if you're willing to. You're going to pay for it, though. You're going to pay for it in hunger or your diet is just going to be not very enjoyable if you give too many calories to quote unquote junk foods.
So there are a lot of people though that would go or even worse, maybe they go, okay, so this
person says it's, I can, I just have to follow this weird diet and I can lose all this fat in
30 days and gain muscle. This guy, Mike says that, you know, I can't lose all that weight and all
that fat and I have to kind of track my calories and weigh stuff. And that sounds hard. I don't
want to do that. And this guy over here, he says that if I just take these pills, I can lose 20
pounds in 30 days and not even pay attention to my diet at all. Just keep doing what I'm doing.
There are a lot of people of course that go, well, fuck it. I'm going to start with the pills
because Hey, if it works, it works. I mean, why not? Right. And then, OK, so the pills don't work and they go, well, shit, that was a
flop. What's the what's the next easiest choice? All right. I'm going to go with the guy that says
that if I just leave out the gluten and let's say just even the carbs. Right. And I just eat a bunch
of fatty foods, which, hey, I like fatty foods. I can make that work. I'll try that. And then that
doesn't work. And then at that point, OK, so now they've kind of moved up in
their market awareness where they probably start starting to realize that the quick fixes,
they either don't work at all or they're not sustainable. So there are quick fixes out there
that amount to just starvation dieting. Yes, starvation dieting works. That's, of course,
true. If you have a very highly restrictive diet that in the end makes you eat, let's say,
half of the calories you're burning just due to the nature of what you are, quote,
unquote, allowed to eat and not allowed to eat, yes, you will lose weight. But then what happens
at the end of that? And I've spoken to so many of those people over the years where they go,
okay, this is clearly not sustainable. I can't eat like this forever. I was now 20 pounds. It
kind of sucked. I was miserable and hungry all the time, but I did it. And I've
just had my first taste of real food again. And I really want to eat all of it. What do I do now?
I don't know. And then it just kind of spirals out of control and they gain everything back.
Very common, right? So eventually though, the people, they move through that process and then
they find, hopefully they remember me and they go, okay, well I'm going to try that guy, Mike.
I mean, his process seems a bit more, it looks, seems like a bit more work and it, uh, is not as sexy, but you know, at this point also,
I do have a lot of success stories. And so that's what I'm trying to cater to. You know, ideally I
get people in the beginning and say, Hey, that's, this is kind of the process. This is how it's
going to go. Hopefully you can, I can convince you to just skip all that initial frustration really is all it's going to come down to and pain
and just come straight to reality, which is what I'm trying to promote. But there's a lot of money
in just going, okay, we're just going to sell bullshit to the people in those first two stages
of market awareness. And there are a lot of people that
are very, they're brazen about it. They don't try to pretend behind the scenes that they're
doing anything else. And to them, a dollar is a dollar and they do inevitably help some people.
That's true. Some people do, you know, lose weight and feel better and they can get something out of
it. Uh, but when you weigh it on the whole, I would say it's probably a net negative.
It probably would just be better if as a whole, collectively in the space, those of us who coach
or train people in person or educate people would just collectively say, OK, let's just start at
reality. Let's I understand that you want a magic bullet, a quick fix. It makes sense in anything.
It would be great if to stumble on but in this case there
really is none so why don't we just start with what actually works over the long term and what
is sustainable yeah i think as well the bullshit spreaders fuel a wave of attribution biases
amongst the amongst their followers because the fact that they're not educating them on the
specifics of while how their approach work they're not saying them on the specifics of how their approach works,
they're not saying the reason you lost weight on my diet is because you consume less calories.
They say the reason why you lost weight on my diet is because you ate X, Y, and Z,
or you cut out gluten. So then the people therefore don't have this awareness of calorie
deficit and then go and say, I lost weight because I'd stopped
eating bread. I was like, no, you didn't. That's just a consequence of what you were doing. So it
is difficult to try and break that cycle. But I think there are those of us out there who are
trying to cut through the BS and explain to people the basics of what they need to do and just show
them how to do it rather than
blaming foods. Yeah. I mean, and we can, we could probably lay some of the blame. I mean,
I don't think there's no need to blame anyone, but we could say that we could lay some of the
responsibility at the doorstep of the evidence-based space in that. And this is, I think,
one of the reasons why my content on the whole has done well, although I mean, I hope I'm representing it accurately in this in this interview.
But I think I do a pretty good job, at least in writing, when I'm putting all my thoughts down and arranging them, explaining things in simple terms that most people can understand and apply and get results with. And I think that has been a major problem is that the science has been inaccessible
to so many people for a very long time because I mean, it's just, let's just start with jargon
alone. If you were to give just your average everyday person who's saying, Hey, I just want to,
I want to lose 30 pounds like my buddy Josh. Now, I mean, he's a pretty educated guy and he's a high
IQ guy, so he might be able to actually muddle his way through it, but he might also not even be able
to work his way through. Let's say if I were to give him, you know, there are a good few papers.
I think of a review that was written by Dr. Eric Helms and I think Alan Aragon and a couple other
guys, James Crear might've been involved in it. That's a very good, it's just a, it's a natural
bodybuilding to paper on natural bodybuilding. And it's just a – it's a natural bodybuilding. It's a paper on natural bodybuilding and it's just a – it's a research review and has a lot of great information.
And because it's a review, it is written in a more narrative style, more just prosaic style.
But there still is a lot of jargon in there.
brand new to this, the average person doesn't even know what a calorie is, let alone why you should count them or why calories in versus out matters. And that's not a slight on the quote
unquote average person. It's just like how if I were to go, I don't know, like, I don't know
shit about cars. So, you know, I hear something like camshaft. I'm like, what's a camshaft?
And I have to look at it. And, but somebody knows anything anything about cars and there was probably a time when i'd be like axle what's the
what's an axle and it's similar the other day we had an electrician around and he's talking about
two gang switches and i'm like i don't know what two gang switches exactly but to him and he says
oh it's it's one that's got two switches oh okay now i know yeah it's the simplest of things right
but if you didn't stop to clarify that if if you're just like, oh, yeah, two gang switches, okay.
And you were to try to read a textbook on how to wire average person is at and where the average,
I would say, evidence-based educator is at in their level of communication. And in many ways,
I think the bullshit artists are winning in that space in particular, in communicating things that
people can understand. Yes, they might be wrong and there might be 180 degrees wrong, the exact opposite
of what you should be doing. But if people can understand that, they're much more likely if they
can at least get it and they go, OK, so that's what I'm supposed to do. They're much more likely
to do that than the right thing explained poorly or in a way that's above their heads.
Yeah, I think you've hit the nail on the head that the the gurus are generally better communicators and marketers than those in the quote quote
evidence-based space and i also think you get those in who would again class themselves as
evidence-based practitioners who write content as if they're writing for their peers and they must try and impress their clients
with how scientific they are and how learned they are and how many how many oh yeah they can how
many obscure things they can reference yeah like personal trainers if you're listening to this your
client does not will never need to hear the words like muscle protein synthesis fat oxidization anabolic window even like they just
don't need yeah yeah i know they just need to know things like okay have protein after to help you
recover and maybe get bigger lose weight it's simple terms and i think they're forgetting that
they're trying to or at least if you're going to use those terms you have to define them so if you
have somebody that maybe is a bit more interested in learning and would like to know a bit more of the technicalities,
okay, that's fine. Some people are just naturally inclined that way, but then it's on you to make
sure that you are defining your terms and you are communicating in a way that can be understood.
Yeah, I agree 100%. And I think it is disappointing when you see, or not disappointing,
it's just a shame when you see or not disappointing it's just a
a shame when you see people who have the right intentions and are frustrated by the nonsense
out there but the way they're approaching it is just so yeah just they're almost making the
problem worse because they're just adding this element of confusion that the the boo
shell there's shitters will prey upon and just make the message much easier
yeah and so yeah i mean in the end that was again i say well um if you want to measure it in terms of
mind share or market share or measure it in in financial terms the bullshitters are winning
by a lot and if you don't like that get better what else can you say look who's on tv mainly i
suppose on your side of
the pond if you look at the big who hosts the big health shows on tv and look at the message
they're pointing out it's not to do with calorie deficit and balance and moderation it's they love
to talk about hormones and detoxing and cleansing and biohacking and all this and you know i would
say that in this
sense, the media, the mainstream media is probably agnostic. If we're talking politics, I think you
get much more into biases and personal biases and corporate agendas. And, but in the case of,
you know, health and fitness reporting, I would say that they're probably pretty agnostic. They
probably could care less the substance they could, they don't really care about. It's just adoption. So they're just going, Hey, whatever people want to hear right now, whatever is going
to get clicks and, you know, get people sharing around and talking, just do that. We don't give
a shit. Whatever that calorie deficit stuff is, you know, if you can present that in a way that's,
that makes it interesting and, and that, that resonates with people. Sure. Well, we'll run
with that all day. We'll never talk about hormones ever again.
But if it's all about hormones and eating fatty foods and exercise doesn't work and
calorie counting doesn't work, if that is registering more impactfully, then we're
talking about that.
Sorry.
And I think that's, again, I don't think it's really there's any sort of conspiracy,
so to speak.
It's just, you know, they're speak. It's just their weather vanes.
They just go with wherever the market is.
Where do you think the market will go next?
Because veganism was big at the start of the year.
Everyone was in veganuary and all this kind of thing.
And it seemed to, if you look to the statistics, the sort of number of people following a vegan diet
had trebled since the year before.
But then that seems to have largely disappeared
or retreated more.
And keto is now back at the forefront again,
even though keto has been something
people have done in the past.
It's just kind of action.
It's so big right now.
It's actually strange.
Again, more on your side of the pond.
If you look on Amazon again,
look at the bestselling books in this fitness space,
about 90% are all keto recipes,
keto dieting and so on.
It's not as big over here,
but what do you think the next thing will be?
Once people get bored of keto,
if you,
if you have a magic,
uh,
ball,
what,
what do you see in the
future in the bullshit space i mean it's hard it's it's usually i mean if we want to just take
it in terms of contrarian it could swing to high carb and that's now a thing which is gratifying
in its own ways of course eat all the carby foods that you want but i don't know i i actually don't
really spend much time trying to prognosticate because I think it's probably mostly a waste of time.
It's more reliable to have your finger on the pulse and see when a wave is starting to build.
Let's say take keto. That was clear, whatever, a year ago or so that this was going to become
a thing. And you have some big personalities in the health space. You have some, some big
websites and big podcasts and some price and big TV shows. And you just kind of, if you keep an eye
on what they're talking about, it was very clear. Again, I think it was probably about a year ago
that keto was going to become a thing. I didn't jump on the bandwagon because I think it's stupid.
The diet, you know, initially it's, it's a medicinal diet. It's,
it's for, it was designed to help people who have seizures, who get seizures and a true ketogenic
diet. It's actually low protein, low carb, very high fat. And there's even a debate in the keto
space as to whether a high protein, low carb, high fat diet truly is even a ketogenic diet.
But either way, it doesn't really matter. The diet makes no sense for the average person who's in shape and into fitness. It makes no sense unless,
I guess maybe in some cases, if you have people that are more endurance type athletes and they
feel, some people really like it. I know they feel very good on the keto when they're in ketosis a
lot of the time and they like eating the foods and it works for them,
that's fine. But for the average person who's like spending more of their time on resistance
training and doesn't particularly like the keto diet, there's absolutely no reason to follow it.
So where we go from here is, I don't know, your guess is as good as mine. Again, it's simple
things usually that do the best. So demonizing one macronutrient like carbs, that's been a thing for a long time
now that works well, or it evolves a little bit to demonizing insulin. And so that obviously works
well. If you can tie some science and some history into it, that makes it more believable.
So that there's paleo, right? Where you had a pseudoscience and pseudohistory really to sell something similar to the ketogenic
diet. And now we know a lot of the story of paleo is mostly just kind of mythology. This is not how
our ancient ancestors ate. And a lot of the science is questionable, especially around the
high level of saturated fat intake. I think that's just reckless, period. Unless you've
worked with a doctor and you know that genetically you can handle high levels of saturated fat without seeing a large increase in your LDL cholesterol.
If you know that and there are people out there that genetically they just – there's no problem.
But then there are people, a lot of people out there where it is an issue and a lot of people that are predisposed to high levels of LDL.
exposed to high levels of LDL. One of the guys that works with me actually did that as a little personal experiment to see what would happen if he greatly increased his saturated fat intake and he
did blood tests and yeah, his LDL shot out the roof. But by your standard paleo gurus recommendations
or keto gurus recommendations, his diet would have been, oh, great. Yeah, you're doing it perfectly.
Yet there he is. He's sitting with LDL two and a half times where it should be. Yeah. Okay. That's good.
So yeah, we'll see, huh? I don't know. This I think is more of a global phenomenon,
both in a, in a literal and, and more just kind of abstract sense that we're moving more toward,
I think science in general. And there are, I think, aspects of that that are both good
and bad. But hopefully we see just more of a general push in that direction in the fitness
space, because inevitably that does go back to energy balance. And there'll be a point when,
and I think we're not there yet, but there'll be a point where it becomes kind of radical to say,
you know what? All of these fad diets are bullshit. Here's
the one thing you need to know, energy balance. If we're talking about body weight, that's it.
And here's all the science. And the science goes back over a century now. And there's probably an
interesting story that could be told about how that science developed and why it did catch on.
There was a time when it was mainstream and now we've just kind of ran off into the weeds chasing other things. But I suspect it will come back to that. It just it needs to have the right marketing appeal. And that's that's anything, though, that that's reality. And, you know, there are a lot of people like you had mentioned in the evidence based space, you know, scientists, researchers, very smart people that not only are terrible marketers, they don't want
to be good marketers. They have no interest in marketing. It's kind of like the artist syndrome.
You have a lot of artists out there who are very good, good enough at whatever they do to make a
living, let's say, but are struggling or make a good living, but are struggling because they have
no desire to get into the business or the marketing
side of things. And that's also why a lot of artists and those types of people get exploited
by people who are the people with the silver tongues, who are good at persuasion and unfortunately
are also often con men. So I hope that in the next, you know, I don't know, decade or so, we see the general discussion more centered around reality and what really works.
That, of course, has to begin with energy balance, macronutrient balance.
At least people have to understand it.
You don't have to count calories.
You don't – there are different ways to get at it.
But if we're not acknowledging that, then anything else is kind of a non-starter, right? Yeah. I just hope as well that they, I know there's the carnivore meat to diet that's in the
shadows at the moment that people are just saying, just eat meat, no vegetables. And so
people will see that for what it is.
Because I heard, you know, I actually didn't hear the interview myself, but a buddy of mine told
me that Jordan Peterson, I guess, is like only eats meat or something so is that is that a thing i thought it was just some quirky
thing that jordan peterson does well i don't actually know who he is but it was yeah someone
asked me on a facebook live he said what do you think of the carnivore diet and i thought please
don't let this be what i'm imagining it could be and oh no so yes it was that's what it is it's
literally you just eat meat yeah and nothing i mean there can't be can't be nothing else
honestly unless i've misinterpreted it i'm gonna google this when we're done because
yeah look into it and that's i mean it's ridiculous i mean even dogs don't just eat meat. So it's crazy. It's crazy.
Anyway.
You know, we are genetically linked to dinosaurs and dinosaurs once just ate meat.
So therefore, we should eat meat.
Just think about it.
Yeah.
If you don't think about it, it makes sense.
Yeah.
But don't you know, Mike, that you can get all your protein from broccoli?
Oh, there's that too.
That's true.
But maybe we should just eat broccoli then yeah that would be good if i got like imagine that as a
debate like a hardcore vegan for as in the health benefits of a vegan diet versus someone on the
carnivore diet that would be uh yeah i don't think there'd be i would i would i would go vegan
as long as i could supplement with a couple things way before i would do a
carnivore diet that's for sure yeah me too 100 what's quite funny my is that we haven't covered
anything that i was actually going to talk to you about this part of the show that's how these
things go right is you just kind of get off yeah on tangents and then you go oh shit um that's been
it's been 30 minutes we'll chat to offline i think we might have to do a follow-up episode because this one has been i'll let the listener into what we were going to talk
about so listener uh we were going to be talking about workout motivation in mike's new book but
we seem to have just had a rant about all things that are wrong with the fitness industry and
charlatans and fads and dodgy marketing so it's been it's been quite good to bitch about it very
unplanned but i i enjoyed it uh because we're definitely on the the same hymn sheet with everything so i'll tell you what mike i'll give
you the one question that i ask everyone when they come on the show at the very end and that's what's
the the one thing that you know and now that you wish you knew when you started out so let's say
starting out being that time that you penned the first book if you could go until 2012 mike
something what would it be and are you thinking more on the on the fitness side of things
personally or or life or business or what whatever whatever is the the biggest thing
well i'd say on the training side of things uh first and foremost i would say compound exercises
and progressive overload i never had really understood those things in the past. And they make all the difference in your training. A diet is obviously energy balance, macronutrient
balance. There's the 20% that gives you the 80%. In business, I would say be very intolerant of
badness, basically, because I've gone through some interesting evolutions in my businesses with people that I was too generous with actually, and should have recognized problems that were not
going to get better. Don't try to change people. Maybe I could just say it like that.
And if you have alignment on core things, that's great. You're never going to find someone that
you have alignment on everything with. But when you have misalignments on core values,
yeah, it's just not going to
change. You can't change people in my personal life. God, if I go, if I'm going back to the
beginning and nothing, nothing immediately jumps to mind, I think I've done a decent job. Well,
okay. I'll say this. I'll say how I tell myself to not get so consumed with work that, you know,
it starts to erode at my marriage. Cause I've had problems with my,
I would say it's not my wife. I mean, I understand where I would get so into my work where I would,
you know, basically I just would not be there for, for three weeks. But even if I was physically
there sometime, it's just like, I was so in work mode and my wife, Sarah would get upset,
understandably. So it never went, you know,
into like crazy, this is over territory, but it caused problems. So that would have been useful
advice. And it doesn't take that much time if it's quality time, in my opinion, to maintain
a good relationship, but it does take time and it does take quality time. So another few lessons.
Yeah. Love it. Love it. Right. where's the main place you want to send the
listener if they think oh that was quite a poignant discussion i quite like what he's got to say
where are you most active muscle for life is is uh the hub so that that's just muscle for life.com
and i have articles there and um you know you'll find whatever you'll find all my stuff there yeah
perfect and i'll link to that in the show notes and i'll post your social pages as well so mike thank you so much for coming on i don't
think it'll be the last time but i really didn't really enjoy chatting with you so thank you so
much thanks for having me hey there it is mike again i hope you enjoyed this episode and found
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