The Sevan Podcast - Jay DeCoons & CrossFit HQ | Live Call In
Episode Date: October 31, 2023Welcome to this episode of the Sevan Podcast! Checkout SWOLVERINE'S Collective Program https://swolverine.com/pages/influencerprogram 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod....com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice BIRTHFIT Programs: Prenatal - https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1621968262?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Postpartum - https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/program/mathews-program-1586459942?attrib=207017-aff-sevan Codes (20% off): Prenatal - SEVAN1 Postpartum - SEVAN2 ------------------------- Partners: https://cahormones.com/ - CODE "SEVAN" FOR FREE CONSULTATION https://www.paperstcoffee.com/ - THE COFFEE I DRINK! https://swolverine.com/ - THE SUPPLEMENTS I TAKE! https://asrx.com/collections/the-real... - OUR TSHIRTS https://www.vndk8.com/ - OUR OTHER SHIRT https://usekilo.com - OUR WEBSITE PROVIDER 3 PLAYING BROTHERS - Kids Video Programming https://app.sugarwod.com/marketplace/3-playing-brothers/daily-practice Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Good morning. Happy Monday. Thanks for joining me this morning, you guys.
Siobhan, as you know, is probably on his way home from LA as we speak, or getting close to.
So we're running the show today.
I'm going to stay in my lane.
Heidi, good morning.
He's too hungover for this dude probably uh no it's
like he's not gonna be rescheduled i was um in command of the ship yesterday and uh and this
morning so but seban will be back tomorrow morning uh 7 a.m i do believe we're gonna have tyson bajan join us as well too so we could chat
about all that and everything else jay good morning morning caroline cave dastro good morning
judy what's up what's up yeah i want to um i want to talk a little bit about the jay coon saying i have the uh i have the live call in and as always like will it work or will it not work um
the text message so i've i've got did you guys watch the show uh yesterday's show when um i asked
katie henninger and i was like hey katie Katie, you know, we're not going to keep you for long.
We were texting back and forth.
And obviously she's had a long weekend.
She was trying to like find a warm spot and was, you know, had been out in the rain all day dealing with everything at the event.
And then I opened with like, was Roman allowed to bring his translator out on the field?
and i'll have to tell you guys too the like the perspective from being like co-hosting and like chilling and letting sebon just like run the show like the amount of confidence i get from that i'm
like i leave the show i'm like man i'm i'm feeling good like i could really do this and the second
he's gone and it's just like you're the only one standing up there like staring at yourself in the
screen you're like oh this is much much harder being the one driving the show rather than just sitting passenger.
But yeah, that was hilarious. I think that one will probably trump the Sarah Sigmunds daughter
running away from me. I am striking out every time as I step up and try something new there.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Anyhow, Devon was texting me about that.
I just thought it was pretty funny.
In the group chat that we have with everybody else, too.
They were already giving me shit for it, whatever.
You do act a little different, but you're doing good susan yeah i mean like i said seven to one driving it so it's like it's uh
it's easy to sit passenger side and build your uh and build your confidence up
um will always coming to help me out a little bit. What you did was not even close to as bad as Jonghyun versus Katie.
Well, I was messing around with the group that we had on and stuff.
And I was telling him, I'm like, yeah, at some point, every time Katie comes in,
she's just like slapping people around.
Like everybody got it in the chat at least once, right?
Where she called somebody out on whatever they did. And everybody got it in the chat at least once, right? Where she like, you know,
called somebody out on whatever they did.
And all of a sudden you see their face turn red
and they like start to like shrink down super small.
And that's like exactly how I felt.
Like the perspective that I had
when she like did that to Taylor
and she did that to John Young,
like sitting there watching, I'm like,
yeah, give it to him, Katie.
That's hilarious.
And then when it happened to me,
not, not, not,
not so much when the shoes on the other foot, um,
can I get one of you guys please to call in and we'll start,
we'll start chatting a little bit about, um, HQ and, uh,
Jada Coons and some perspective on that. Um, okay.
So it is connected now. If one of guys oh put up the call on a number dummy
that would probably help um if one of you guys could call in and just test it real quick that
would be awesome yes hot hot chocolate with marshmallows i'm like i'm the kind of guy that uh
drinks hot chocolate with marshmallows when it's cold.
No, it's coffee. Paper Street, of course. The only thing we know. Oh, fantastic. Somebody's
calling already. This is great. Give me one second, Collin. Let me see if I could. Oh,
no. Now more people are calling. Hold on. and set change this oh my goodness there's so many
people calling now okay hold on hello caller oh my lanta testing it is working wait can you speak
again for me please hello you just hang up on me, I didn't. I don't know what's happening. Did you just hang up on me? Do you know who you're talking to, Sousa?
No, but that accent gets me going.
How you doing, pal?
I'm doing great.
How you doing?
I figured I'd call you and make sure this thing's working.
Oh, I love it.
So thank you so much.
Sorry if I did hang up on you.
There was a bunch of people that all called at one time.
So thank you so much for testing that out.
But I was trying to manage it there.
So how are you doing this morning?
Beautiful man.
Just relaxing, you know, and then to you, you got a day off.
Oh, nice.
Couple of things.
Yes.
Throw a couple couple of things out there.
Please vindicate amazing apparel.
Good stuff.
The T-shirts top of the line.
Beautiful.
Great. Street coffee. What a guy, huh?
Gabe, he's the man, bro. Travis in game.
He picks up the phone. He calls me and lets me know, Hey,
I got you covered. This thing's a little late,
but I'm going to send this stuff out to you.
He's trying to offer me extra stuff and everything. I'm like, listen,
you're going to give me a discount. Don't worry about it. He's telling me everything. I'm going to send
you some stuff. I'm going to do this, do that. What a guy. One-on-one conversation on the phone.
Good stuff. Yeah. Good dude. All of them take care of us and they take care of everybody inside
of our community here. It's amazing. Beautiful. Beautiful. Good stuff, Susan.
Awesome. Thank you. I appreciate it. Have a great Susan. Awesome. Don't crush it, man.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Have a great day.
Thank you for testing it.
You too.
See you.
Bye.
Okay.
All right.
So yeah, if you guys, I get a lot of questions and the DMs about different stuff for affiliates are like, hey, I'm a new coach or I'm thinking about opening up a gym or what do you think
about this or what do you think about that? And so I put it on Instagram and I was hoping that a few
people that I had asked that would call in because I think a lot of the questions that are asked
actually are continuous almost. Somebody will ask like, hey, I belong to my gym. I coached there for
a really long time and I'm having this conflict with the owners. There's some conflict going on.
And so it's always good just to call in and get these out in front of a bunch of people.
Because I feel like if one person has a question, there's probably a bunch more that have the same question or something similar to.
Or if you just want to call and give your perspective.
Okay, so we're going to get into the Jada Coons hire.
The Jada Coons hire. I'm going to gonna bring up y'all know i'm fancy because i
got linkedin huh you didn't know about that so this gentleman here and is now vice president
at crossfit i think it's like head of affiliates the the titles are kind of weird right it seems
like the titles are always shifting a little bit and i don't necessarily mean that in like a
terrible way as they try to like figure out organization but it is a little bit. And I don't necessarily mean that in a terrible way
as they try to figure out organization,
but it is a little weird.
It's like vice president or is he head of affiliates or what?
Jeff, Jeff, you're here.
I thought you weren't coming until Stefano's back.
It's an awful presentation.
Here we go.
We got another caller here.
Caller, good morning.
You're live on the show.
What's happening?
What's going on?
Who is this?
Is this the one and only Blade here?
You feel me?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to get this call in early because I got the morning cracking with the girls.
But I've been meaning to say this for a minute.
Yeah.
Is that become the nominator.
Now, I haven't ran an affiliate, but I worked as a coach in one for a while and worked in a few.
One that doesn't run anymore because it lacked this.
And then another one that's still kicking because it thrived in this. And it's like, you got to love people or learn to love people and interacting with them.
Because that goes for almost anything.
Even with what I do, people ask me advice and I go, if you watch Bad Boys 2 and that's what inspired you, that ain't it.
what inspired you that ain't it you need you need to love people and learn to love people because 98 of almost anything you do that's going to be the nucleus of it and the most of it and then
after that everything else grows from there and so that that would be from a former CrossFit coach who's been in multiple cultures.
Yep.
That'd be something that I see in the thriving gyms is the environment
and loving the people, as we always say, the community.
And then the ones that kind of look at it as more of numbers and strategy
and all that, like you could just enter a data point. Yeah. It looks cool,
but that in itself isn't really sustainable. You know what I mean?
So I think that's what kind of aroused, at least with me, when,
with the new hire and talking about how he's going to do.
And if he could, I give everybody a chance. Yeah.
I mean,
I've had people full blown swastika tattoos on their face,
shake my hand.
So I'll give anybody a chance.
Wow.
Okay.
Yeah.
You're open.
Anybody,
anybody could get a chance.
Yep.
But,
but,
um,
I can see,
I can see the scare part because it may seem a little robotic at first, but who knows?
Maybe his cheeks won't be so tight.
He'll loosen up a little bit and make this thing happen.
Hey, let me ask you a question.
With your perspective as a law enforcement officer, how important is communication in your job?
Tell you what, it's a difference between somebody pretty a lot of times it's a difference
between somebody damn near handcuffing themselves and sitting in the back of your car versus you
having the tears or possibly getting a lethal force to counter yeah so it's it's fucking big
right it's the difference of it being a nice and easy situation or escalating to who knows where.
Yeah, or even if it's not somebody from the quote-unquote other team, just within your own team, all y'all being on the same page.
Because then somebody thinks that somebody's doing something, somebody else thinks that, oh, he was going to do it.
And then before you know it, there's three assignments that didn't get done, but then one assignment got done four times.
And what do you think about the communication piece of it right at the get-go, right?
So let's say you're conducting a stop, right?
Pull me over and I'm like, hey, what the fuck you stopped me for, man? This is a waste of my time.
You guys are out here sitting on this street corner here and this is a trap.
Right.
Right?
Right there. It's a flowchart, you know what I mean? It's a trap. Right, right there.
It's a flow chart.
You know what I mean?
Every it's a big ass flow chart.
Yeah.
So just imagine it like you're in one of those interactive games right there.
And you have to say, okay, am I going to respond with this negative energy with
more of it, or am I just going to kind of diffuse it, you know, like, okay,
fight fire with fire now we just got a big ass phone
sometimes you don't want to be the fire yeah yeah that's right and so i'm in the in the reason why
i kind of it i i kind of front loaded that question a little bit because i think that's
the biggest missing link with what crossfit hq is doing right now like they they they got pulled
over by the community so to speak and bear with me on this
analogy in the way that um jayda coon was was presented to the community in my opinion was
the equivalent of the guy why the fuck you pull me over you're just sitting here at this corner
anyways this is a trap right like it could have been handled differently from the start in terms
of communication to the affiliates in terms of communication to the affiliates, in terms of communication to the CrossFit community, and in terms of communication internally within the office place.
Now, obviously, we don't know the internal on the office place because I don't have access to that.
But judging by how it rolled out for every other piece, I'm guessing it probably wasn't the best first introduction.
Right. And now we're dealing with a okay now what and so the right part and the cool part is we we can take a few nasal breaths
just take three that's what i tell my daughters to do whenever shit's hitting the fan stop time take three big slow nasal breaths and now what okay we we we cried
repeated we got piss in our cheerios yep now we're gonna do we're gonna go cry in the car
we're gonna make sure that we we are on the same team that's right i mean that's right
because because you know you know who wants us to take an L? Fucking F45 and Orange State.
That's right.
They're sitting behind a tree rubbing their hands together right now.
That's 100%.
So we're going to let them win or we're going to, okay,
we're on the same team for a moment.
Who's more right doesn't matter.
Let's find what we agree on and build from there.
You know, just to realize, okay, we're on the same squad
and we may not have the same methods to get to the goal we want to,
but we do have the same goal, hopefully.
Yeah, great advice.
Hey, dude, we need to get you scheduled back on the show.
I'm going to reach back out.
And I know Sevan's got a bunch of content here.
He probably wants you to thumb through with him in the future.
Oh, yeah.
He loves sending certain videos my way.
I look forward to it.
But y'all have been on fire.
So it'll happen when it happens.
And I'll be ready.
All right.
Thanks for the call, Blade.
Appreciate it.
We'll be seeing you soon.
All right.
I love, man.
Yes, sir.
Bye.
Yeah, that's a great point about the communication piece.
I hope that analogy kind of made sense.
Sleeky had a good thing.
Sleeky, why'd they wait so long to announce his hire?
He was brought on the week before the HQ summit in Boulder.
Yes, that is exactly what I'm talking about.
Because when there's little things like that, it starts to break
down trust and how many things like that could occur before people just are like, okay, this is
just total bullshit. And we could start with the very first one, which is Rosa himself. You remember
he had the fucking black and white photo. It was all cinematic. He was going to come in as a savior.
And I don't have the quote on me right now, but I'm pretty sure he said something to the
effect of like, hey, I bought this thing.
I'm going to be in this position for the next 50 years if life allows.
And I'm going to ride off into the sunset.
We're going to build CrossFit into this thing that is just going to take over the world.
And everybody was rallied up behind it.
Everybody, I think at this point, was just looking for some sort of stability, most importantly within CrossFit because of the attacks on Greg, the community kind of eating each
other, um, cannibalizing ourselves versus, you know, the I'm out crowd versus the I'm not. Um,
and so we all bought it. And then as time went on, it started to seem a little fishy, like, huh,
is this dude really in charge? Like, is Rosa the right guy for this?
And then all the bullshit came out like,
oh, the board put him as like chairman and they've escalated his, you know, position.
And it was just more bullshit
because then at that point,
you knew once he had fired Dave
that it didn't settle well with the community at large.
And then they had to bring him back in
and Rosa had to pretend that he wasn't like fired,
but yet moved to this
position. And now where is he at? What happens? We don't know. He's gone. And so more and more
time as that bullshit is being fed, it's harder and harder to, uh, to believe them.
Will Branson are also, if they waited so long to announce it, how did he not have his, um,
how did he not have his L one done so they could announce it without having him to say and getting his L1 in a month?
Fucking exactly, dude.
And here's the reason why.
They don't value it in terms of the position they hired him for.
I'm open to being wrong,
but I don't think that the board
thought it was as important
as it actually was for the community,
that the guy that's freaking in charge of the affiliates,
like that little Hiller thing,
the guy that's freaking in charge of the affiliates,
needed to have his L1.
They're probably, and this is, again,
why I was making the speculation
that he was not hired by,
Jada Coons was not hired by Don Fall.
I think that in the little bit of time that Don has been around, assuming he's starting to understand the nuances of how this community works a little bit. And if that were the case, I think he would have agreed that he probably should have got the L1 prior to announcing anything.
It should just be prerequisite, right?
Like, you can't own an affiliate unless you have an L1.
But you could be in charge of all the affiliates if you don't have an L1.
Like, y'all played yourselves, bro.
Not good.
Not good.
Dude doesn't need the L1 for what?
Here's the thing, Jeff.
In terms of the position that he's in, you're probably right. You're probably right. But in
terms of the knowledge that he needs to have about what it is that he's growing and the leads that
he's bringing in, in the understanding what the methodology is,
he 100% needs it, dude.
He 100% needs it.
And I know he's not coaching squats.
I know he's not walking into affiliates
and checking out people's mechanics and stuff like that.
I get that.
But you have to understand that
if he hasn't at least read the playbook,
the manual, the L1,
then does he even
know at that point what he's protecting or what he's selling or what he's growing?
That's the question I have for you, right? So sure, you could make the statement like,
dude, he's not in their coaching classes. Well, he fucking should be, in my opinion.
And if you see some of these businesses, like, fuck, I don't want to use any of the franchises,
but it's hard to come up with one on the spot without a franchise. So take Chick-fil-A,
for instance. If you are going to own a Chick-fil-A franchise and you start at every
position in the business that you own, your knowledge and perspective of what everybody
else is doing is going to be tenfold than if you
just came in from the top position and said, well, I don't have to understand what the cooks go
through. Well, I don't have to understand what the cashier goes through. Well, I don't have to
understand what the drive-thru person goes through. Yes, you do. Because if you're going to manage
that business and you're going to make sure that things are running smoothly you need to have perspective on those jobs otherwise like how would you how would you truly understand it um in each in each level um let's see here
but how do you guys feel about it in general do you do you think so uh caller
caller hello welcome you're live on the show hey man uh let me put it this way just kind of right
does he need the l1 no but the video that came out at his uh south by southwest conference
explaining that crossfit is dangerous he doesn't understand how people can just open an affiliate without the proper training.
Now, if CrossFit, see, they dropped the ball there.
They let that get out, hired the guy, didn't have anything ready.
The backlash came out.
They had to put something out.
So Jay's now saying, I have been training.
I understand that it's not that way.
They should have had like a little segment of him at his gym doing CrossFit
and understanding that the ball was dropped.
Unfortunately, it's too little too late for the people who understand
that we needed to see that.
They put that statement out because of the backlash,
not because that's what CrossFit wanted to do.
Right.
So you're basically saying they were reactive.
They weren't proactive on it at all.
Oh, for sure, because
I find it hard to believe
that they hired this guy
with that video out. We're not idiots.
People who coach and who are affiliate
owners, they know right
away because that's what we get all the time
as coaches and affiliate owners is CrossFit's dangerous. we're the ones that convince people that it's not dangerous
talking about runners how they have more injuries other sports have more injuries catastrophic
pickleball pickleball pickleball yep the rates of increase of hospital hospital digits pickleball
are crazy yeah that's what i'm saying like yeah crossfit could have done a much better job at that and they didn't and we kind of were seeing through like the little
uh uh story that they're trying to push that he understands now i don't buy it i'll give him a
chance just like uh chase said and yeah you know kind of agreed yeah i'll give him a chance but
they got to be real careful of how they present it yeah i think that i think that's a great perspective so basically you're just saying
hey everybody was just super reactive to what happened because he got hired and like sleek he
said why didn't they announce it earlier when they're at the summit that could have been a
great opportunity too and they probably knew that it it wasn't going to settle well and then
information potentially was going to leak uh leak so then they decided hey let's get out in front of it i wouldn't be surprised based off the video and interested to hear your perspective on
this if they fucking call them right then and was like dude hey shit it's getting out you need to
make a statement right now just go out in your backyard and do it how cringy is that video dude
it's and you know what it's not and again i want to make a clear distinction here that I don't want this to be beating
up on Jade, the person, because I don't think that that's fair.
None of us actually know him as a person.
If we saw him at the grocery store and I was holding the door open for him as he came in
and he said, hey, thanks, man.
And I was like, hey, no problem.
Probably fucking get along with the guy.
I don't know why I use the holding the door open reference.
That's what that's where I went.
But you know what I mean?
And since he was presented in this way,
he should almost be a little bit upset
with HQ's kind of plan to roll this out
because they kind of fucked him from the start.
Remember, I remember watching Hiller's videos
from the beginning.
They were like backdoor, like Gonzo video. He's progressed so much to the point of like it looks professional
jay went in his backyard holding the phone in front of him moving around hey i'm jay you know
i'm gonna be this why couldn't they go to his affiliate if he's at an affiliate have him in
like a crossfit t-shirt the background of whatever affiliate he's at with the rig and be like, hey guys,
I'm Jay.
I'm coming from CrossFit X.
I'm here.
I'm going to be your XYZ
and I'm going to show,
I'm going to prove to you
that this is what we're doing.
This is the methodology.
I'm so entrenched in it
and I've changed my decision
of how I felt about it before.
But he couldn't do that.
He's in his back foot.
Come on, guys.
What are we doing?
Oh,
fuck you nailed it, dude.
I think that would have changed
everything as far as uh first perspectives that's nuts this isn't crossfit of 2007 of 2007 this is
crossfit 2023 they're they're a major corporation they're a global brand come on yeah yeah sloppy
sloppy well thanks for calling in brother brother. I really appreciate that perspective.
Yeah, man, great job this weekend.
Everybody on the team, great coverage, and we'll talk to you soon.
Thank you.
Thanks, bro.
All right, man.
Later.
I saw another call come in.
Call back.
Whoever just called.
I had it saved on my phone.
Yeah, I mean, that's a really good perspective perspective there like what jethro just said i think if it's
all i mean a lot of the times right in life it's not what you say it's how you say it
it's not the message but the messenger right like fuck that shit matters so much especially with uh
with this uh community here hello you're live on the show calling what's up brother
hey sir that's joe neils across the couch how's it going joe neils What's up, brother? Hey, it's Joe Niels across the country.
How's it going?
Joe Niels.
What's up, my guy?
How are you?
Hey, I'm good.
I'm good.
So I'm going to try to lean into this, at least for the here and now. So my time working back in the corporate world for a company that was owned by a venture capitalist company,
there was a lot of times where we would lose someone internally who was like a
director or a VP and the VC would consistently fill that position with
someone from, you know, an Ivy league school with MBAs.
And it's like stack resume because they think that they're going to do all
this amazing stuff.
So I'm going to lean into the fact that I don't really think this was an
HQ hire. I think it's the VC doing the things that they strongly think is what's best for the
company, less than an HQ thing. So I think HQ, I hope it's just playing the hand as best they can that's being dealt with them.
So basically, you're kind of agreeing that this wasn't a dawn-fall thing.
This wasn't anybody of the normal characters we're seeing.
This was just 100% the board over at Berkshire Partners getting together, finding the guy that looked good on paper and saying, this is our dude.
That's what I've seen in my previous life in the corporate world.
And it felt the same way.
Like we would have people internally that were very vested in the company and trying
to do the job that understood the nuances of the business and the vendors really well
and the customers really well and the nuances of whatever seasonal changes.
And they'd bring in someone that would be this Ivy League grad.
And they'd come out with all these hot phrases and catchphrases you know like rci and let's have a
kaizen event let's do all this 5s and all this stuff is great when you have very process related
problems um but crossfit's such a nuanced thing right as we know and the people that need to be
in place are the people that are leading with
passion because crossfit's just not another company right like you know i'll give the example
of you know hillar who is an unpaid you know person from crossfit right like he has no actual
employment through crossfit but when something happens in the space and it's 9 35 at night
hillar's going to drop
everything and make content because he's passionate about it you know someone that's brought in from
the outside is going to look at this role like it's any other job and so when you see something
drop at 9 35 at night most people that work normal jobs have normal relationships to that job
they're like oh we should talk about this tomorrow morning. That was pretty interesting. Not drop everything and how can we make action on this already? Because for us,
like us, we live, eat, sleep, and breathe this. We don't look at it like I'm stopping what I'm
doing to start working. It's just how we do things. And that's what really, I think, is the
hard thing to manage from anyone that's coming to
the outside in. It's almost impossible for them to treat this like another job. And it can't be.
Yes, I agree completely. Because all this shit at the Ivy League School, the Harvard MBA,
like you said, the nuances of this, what CrossFit is in the community, in the affiliates,
in the games, there's so much nuance there.
And a guy from an Ivy League school with all the right stuff on paper
isn't necessarily going to understand any of that.
And by the time they do, they won't be effective in that position.
It's going to take so fucking long to figure that out.
100%.
It's like how many times as an affiliate owner do you get a call
or an email from whatever class pastor, whoever it is,
it's like, hey, if you could have 30 members in the next two weeks or blah blah blah like would you like that like
no no i wouldn't you're not good leads i can't manage this yes more money and more members is
great but there is no way the retention is going to be there yeah and so it's again like you have
these ideas that come from the outside like well why wouldn't you want you know 30 new members in 30 days well it's like well they're jamming them down my throat
and they're not good leads and they have no idea the nuances of crossfit they're gonna walk into
a class from whatever they're used to doing and being like this is i don't know why i'm here but
uh i'm out yeah paid for class pass. I'm going to go do something else.
Dude, you nailed it across the board.
I mean, you nailed it with the reason why Jay Coons was hired and was looked at for that position, which I completely agree with.
That's what I've kind of been saying as well, too.
And then you nailed it with the lead thing.
When you look at it like it's an F45 or an orange theory,
you also have to remember that those businesses do workout A on Monday,
workout B on Tuesday, workout C on Wednesday, and it's a rinse and repeat.
And the reason why they do that is so that way they could just have people in there that aren't necessarily coaching to a really high level, but just kind of moving the class through the logistics of the system that's put in place by the franchise.
Yeah, right.
What they do is just so turnkey.
It doesn't matter if the person has efficacy in any side of fitness or understanding. It's just three, two, one, go. And here you go. This is station A, station B, station C. Carry on.
100%. Hey, somewhat off topic, but on the same topic, how's everything going, dude? How's it been approaching people in the wild?
dude it's been so good um like i think in the 30 days we've captured i think in total i think it's 111 leads uh we had eight current paid signups we probably have another five two i would say nine
that are like in the pipeline we're just messaging back and forth trying to get them in
yeah and starting um you know we had four members joined just by normal means so there is a chance that
we could have netted 20 new members in the 30 days alone holy shit so from like an roi standpoint
it's been absolutely insane when i went into it you know i'd be like i would love five i would
i would love knowing that on my own i could drive five new members in my gym yeah that would be
enough for me to be like, you know, Hey,
this is something I'm going to adopt every single day going forward.
Right.
And again, it wasn't like I was carving out extra time to do it.
It was just, Hey, I got to go to,
I'm going to go to Meyer to get sweet potatoes today. Like, Hey,
I'm going to hit this and try and find someone to talk to him. Right.
I normally don't go to Walmart, but you know, that was for.
Yeah.
Content baby.
The content.
Dude. Right. No, it's been so, so good. don't go to Walmart, but you know, that was for more of the shock factor.
Dude.
Right.
No, it's been so, so good.
Big picture for my affiliate alone.
And that was honestly how it started.
I just wanted to do something for my affiliate.
Yeah. Proved to me that I could challenge myself.
And then, you know, Jess really stepped up and said, you know, I also kind of said, man,
I wish I could do this bigger, but there's just not a way for me to like do it all and so jess stepped up to the plate and was like hey i i think you
know you could you could offer some value you know doing the youtube stuff i'll step up and edit
and it's been so cool like even being i was at rogue this weekend and the amount of people i met
that would just bump into me like are you the kenosha guy I was like yeah and like how and how and how inspired they were whether they were an owner or
coach or a member because either of the three were trying to drive this whole thing forward
for their gym so that's that's the thing I'm most excited about and really what I wanted to see
happen is that we could inspire more people to just do what I'm doing and more CrossFit coaches to do what I'm doing and owners to do
what I'm doing,
that we can really drive the ship forward because we can't always rely on HQ
to do every decision that's going to align with what we want.
And we're the ultimate decision makers and protectors of our business to have
those leads. So it's been so cool to see
people excited. The hardest part is that I don't think we've reached enough people, right? I don't
know the YouTube algorithm all enough and we can only get so much exposure. And I've had meetings
with HQ and they're working on ways to try to amplify it i know that they
uh featured us in the affiliate uh email that was last week um it was on the same email that
jay jacoon's got it out so i think that was kind of uh you didn't scroll much further after that
they fucking buried you dude they buried you under the tragedy yeah it's like yeah we got
some big news yeah slide joe into here no one going to scroll past this anyways, dude. Hey, so I gotta ask, I want to compare some numbers with you.
Cause I did some stuff on the backend through like, um, uh, like Facebook advertisement or
different things like that in the past. But I will tell you right now, just, just kind of listening
to the numbers that you had, like the 111 leads, I wrote down like five to nine of the pipeline.
I'm hoping to, at the end of the 30 net close to 20 members. I mean, that blows the Facebook advertisement out of the fucking water.
And on top of that, they're already building the connection with you and establishing the trust
because I'm assuming they're going to come in and see you in the gym or if you're not the one
teaching them immediately, you're going to be there to kind of greet them. Right. So like they
kind of have this continuity from like, Hey, there's a guy I talked to that, you know, maybe, maybe help me take that extra
step to get in here. And now that I'm in the gym, there is again, helping me out. So, but a real
quick, go ahead, go ahead, go ahead. Yeah. No. And what's nice too, is like, I'm the one having
the conversation and you know, as an owner or coach or a crosser in general, like it does not
take long to think that CrossFit to fit for that person. Right. We know it's in general, like it does not take long to think that crossfit's a fit
for that person, right?
We know it's for anyone, but it's not for everyone.
And it's that mindset of how they communicate.
And so it is one of those things that we can kind of vet the conversation as we're going
up like, hey, this actually is some sticking power here.
I think this person actually could have some buy-in in how the conversation goes.
And so when you're talking to people, you're also in control of the leads that you're generating.
So like I said with the whole class pass stuff,'s like you know it's going to be whoever walks
in my door and whatever their predisposition of what they're going to do i already have a good
idea of who they are what they're like and what's going to drive them to stay so like i'm already
like qualifying that lead as best i can that okay when jeff walks in the door you know i he's kind
of swung this way and
how I should motivate him whether it's gonna be a little bit more of like high level coaching
or this dude just needs a cheerleader and I just want to get him excited about moving
yeah hey is there any spot like out of all the places that you've been to number one that you
would recommend people go because it it kind of had the engaged or qualified lead there and number
two is there a spot that you would recommend people just absolutely avoid because it was a dud?
Yeah, so we're going to try to make the next wave of content, like kind of like funneling people to do have more success.
In that, for us, there was a Mission Barbecue chain by us.
And I think it's because they're more of a military,
like they support military and police and fire departments.
I think it just already has a clientele for whatever reason,
that's really well positioned for like community centric stuff. So I think finding any business that does have those good,
those ties that lean that like military way really successful for us um i would definitely discourage
walmart that's what i was thinking too i was like probably walmart's gonna be last on that list
interesting right if you're really trying to save the absolute lost um yeah you can go there
if you have a dog if you have a dog a dog park dog park was really good for us.
Just like the comfortable, casual conversations because dog people are going to naturally trust dog people.
And it just seemed really easy to have organic conversations.
But no, so that'll be kind of the next wave of content.
We might lean a little bit more of like doing YouTube shorts
and just start like banging out some good content.
I'm like really easy, tangible stuff.
And then kind of my process of like, you know,
how I kind of qualify leads and how I funnel them to hopefully a yes and a
sign up. But even bigger than that,
we're going to put out a video that is going to offer basically to three
affiliates is the goal where they're going to kind of on a little pitch apply. I'm going to fly out. I'm going to spend three days with the affiliate,
give them the full on crash course of just going to places and talking. And then hopefully they
take the next 27 and crush it on their own. And then they kind of push it through affiliates
and really try to like get this just really really rolling because it's been unbelievable for my
affiliate and i just want other owners to really see that it is super doable and the momentum not
only from them but like my members have been so excited seeing me do this and lead from the front
they're like hey dude i was at a like x y and z and like i gave it a shot like that's awesome i
tried pitching a little bit more. Yeah, dude.
Good shit. Hey, when, uh, when you do that, let's stay in touch.
Cause I would love to,
I would love to have you come out here in the Bay area and like,
I would love to do something with you.
Maybe we could leverage the channel and even get a seven behind the camera a
little bit. And me, you knew you go out and have some fun with it.
I think that would make some great content and be, be a lot of fun.
All right,
brother.
Thank you so much for your call,
dude.
Great perspectives.
Hey,
you are doing amazing for the,
uh,
for the community.
I love that.
You're not only leading from the front for your gym,
but for all affiliate owners,
there's so much that that could take away.
And I love the fact that you're packaging everything that you've learned and
you're going to make that just available,
um,
in multiple different ways for affiliate owners.
That's huge.
I think Jada Koons will probably be reaching out to you soon to develop some sort of strategy.
Sounds good, brother.
All right, man.
Take care.
Thanks for your call, Joe.
Bye.
Bye.
Yeah, bye.
That's awesome.
So those numbers that he kind of spit out, and I know if you don't really own an affiliate
or you're just not familiar with the the leads thing the hundred the 111 leads
um the five to nine people in the pipeline in the potential net 20 members is insane if he's able to
uh package this in a way that has maybe like 80 percent of um of that consistency regardless of
the location that he's in that's in, that is such a huge deal for
CrossFit and for CrossFit communities. It's nuts. And to give you guys some perspective too,
if you were to spend $1,000 on advertisement to achieve only five members in your gym,
that would still be profitable by month three on your $1,000 of investment in advertisement just by getting five people into your gym.
Joe's doing this and spending his time,
not even the $1,000, in getting 4X to 5X that.
So that is crazy.
Yeah, Cave Dash Show, that's probably about 10X from normal.
If you're just kind of like sitting there,
and we've been super lucky as CrossFit gyms.
I will tell you guys,
my whole business has been built off referrals.
And I'm assuming majority of the gyms,
when I say the first,
probably right before the pandemic,
up until right before the pandemic,
the only thing we did was referrals.
That was how people showed up at my gym.
And in fact, the first two years I opened it,
I only had an email. I didn't even have a phone number and stuff set up. And
it was just people bringing in their friends and having a great time. We did a lot of community
events. We still do. And that really keeps the community tight and allows it to be a fun outlet,
which people bring people to, and then they become members. I put a couple of
starred comments up here that I wanted
to go through real quick. Um, Jeff, our lovely Jeff, he put love the guy that looks good in a
suit, knows the bud were buzzwords and has all the right papers. That is it. That's exactly what Joe,
Joe was just talking about where it's like from, um, from a partner managing perspective,
you're just looking at the resume and going like, Oh, check this box, check this box,
You're just looking at the resume and going like, oh, check this box, check this box, check this box.
Good to go.
Move them in.
And the nuance with the CrossFit community, it's really tough to do that in the same way.
Clock, Jay partnered with the founder of the bar method and then sold it to Anytime Fitness.
Was he brought on to repeat this transaction?
Will he become a subsidy of... We will become a subsidy of any
time or lifetime. Can't wait. Dude, I don't... Is it going to be packaged up to be resold?
Who would be the buyer there? And can it be packaged up and sold that way? These are great
questions. And I don't necessarily disagree with what you're saying. I don't know if anytime or
lifetime would be the buyer there. But I think the spirit of what you're saying is something that
could become a reality. If it wasn't an L1, and it wasn't CrossFit experience, and it wasn't
some sort of authority in the community that they were looking for as far as bringing in the new head of affiliates,
then what were they looking at in terms of why they decided to bring this guy in?
And Clock's comment here about potentially packaging up CrossFit to help it to sell it to something else could be the reason.
That is one speculation that i don't disagree with
uh can we put up a poll to see who rather we'd rather have run an affiliate justin
oh i you know what i if i was faster at doing some of the polls and stuff like that
maybe i could but it's so hard to like manage all this stuff and still stay like present with uh
It's so hard to manage all this stuff and still stay present with all these at the same time.
But that's fair.
That's fair.
Joe makes me hungry to do nails.
Extra slop to do more to do nails.
Joe makes me hungry to do more extra sloppy.
Yeah, he does.
Joe Nils is leading from the front.
I had a million questions for him as far as does he have a go-to script that he's going off of now?
Does he, you know, what works as far as an opener?
How quickly in the conversation can he tell if someone's into it or not?
How much like, you know,
time does he spend from the conversation to then handing them over the phone
to capture the information?
Does he qualify a lead through looking at them
talking about them like how does he choose the people he's going these are all questions that
i think uh would be interesting uh i met him at the meet and greet on thursday night such a good
dude yeah he seems like he's uh he seems like he's a really great guy um susan can you pull up the bar method like what the website or like the wikipedia on um on it let's see let's take a look over at it
let's see let's see uh mr burns wait hold on guys sorry
well their website doesn't seem to be working, at least not for
me right now. So that could be one issue. All right. Well, maybe we'll get back to the
bar. Oh, here we go. It just took forever to set up. Interesting. Okay. So here is the
sign up online for bar today. It's what the website looks like.
Reject all.
Oh, it's like a streaming platform.
Interesting.
Okay.
I don't know anything about the bar method.
I don't know anything about it.
Let's go to this comment here.
Sleeky always has great stuff.
Berkshire was offered $365 million and turned it down from an individual.
They're going to franchise.
They don't want to sell to an individual.
Interesting information.
If they bought it for $200 million and they were going to have 165 million dollars in profit based off of what
they spent on certain initiatives that worked or did not work i wonder what
you think they could franchise it though how is that
oh i don't know i'm gonna see that option c neither. Yeah, Judy, no option C in this one.
Will Branson, the bar method website is terrible.
So hopefully they didn't hire Jay as their website designer.
Yeah, that was a really kind of ugly site.
That wasn't good at all.
I did not like the website.
God, it's getting cold here in California. And by cold, I mean like, you know, mid-60s.
Okay, so I want to get through this,
which is just kind of dissecting Jada Koons' LinkedIn real quick.
So vice president, he puts out a thing, MBA, CFE.
What is CFE?
Do you guys know what CFE is?
Connect?
Yep.
Should I add a personal note? Hi, I'm talking
about you on the show right now. No, just kidding. So I wanted to read this portion here because
to Sleeky's last comment about saying they're going to franchise it. They don't want to just
sell it to another venture capital company or private equity company or just people with money that just want
to buy it and hold it for a little bit and up its value, then resell it again. She's basically
claiming that they would rather control all the affiliates, create it like a McDonald's type look
to where every gym looks and feels the same, operates off the same exact systems, produces
the same exact results.
But his about here, as vice president at CrossFit LLC, I support the global work of over 13,000 affiliated gyms.
Now, here's the issue with that L1.
If the first line is going to be,
I support the global network of over 13,000 affiliated gyms.
Again, he's not coaching them, but he's
looking over them. He's supporting them. Is the L1 important to do that? Is the L1 important to
do that? I want to know your guys' perspective on that, which I already know. Yeah, it is. The fuck? Of course it is.
Ensuring quality standards. So, okay, let me just read the whole thing and then I'll start doing the breakdown about it. Sorry, guys. Let me just fill you in on this. This is the about on
Jay DeCoon's LinkedIn profile here. About as a vice president of CrossFit LLC, I support the
global network of over 13,000 affiliated gyms, ensuring quality standards, operational excellence, and revenue growth.
I lead a global team that is passionate about supporting our affiliate owners to help them
achieve more success in their businesses. Okay. So now let's dissect this a little bit,
if you will. And please, if you guys have a
different perspective than this with me or just anything else, call it in. Throw it in the
comments. Let's talk about this. Hopefully, you have the opposite perspective. So that way,
we can have some good conversation about this. Okay. So I support the global network of over
13,000 affiliated gyms. Probably important to do the L1 if you're doing that.
This is kind of the most interesting line right here.
Ensuring quality standards.
How?
How are you going to ensure the quality standards?
Number two, if the L1 is setting the quality standards,
but you don't have the L1 yet, the quality standards, but you don't have the L1 yet,
what quality standards can you ensure?
Heidi, why would hopefully we have the opposite perspective? So that way we could just get on
here and argue with somebody. As those words came out of my mouth, I was like, nobody in this round is going to have the opposite
perspective. God, put that up on the list of... So Katie, not going to keep you here long. Was
Roman allowed to have his translator on the field? And over and under, are they banging? No,
just kidding. Just kidding. Yeah,uring quality standards. That sounds a lot like a
franchise talk, right? Emily, he can't know quality standards without the L1.
That is the predicament, isn't it? That is the predicament. So yeah, that's kind of the one
thing that really gets me where it's just kind of like
thrown in the meat of the ensuring quality standards.
So the big question I have is if he doesn't have the L1 yet, he doesn't have it yet,
once he does have it and kind of understands the quality standards,
okay, give him the pass on that, then what happens if you're an affiliate that doesn't
follow the quality standards?
And what does that mean?
So if the L1 decides a quality standard and you're going to say,
hey, this is the book, that's only on the methodology.
So is it the quality standard going to be if the gym doesn't follow the methodology?
Or is it going to be about the systems in which they operate like if i don't
have an on-ramp versus i do have an on-ramp class like is one bad or one good now and um
i would encourage you guys to if you don't listen to uh craig howard and jamie lee's podcast over
with uh diablo crossfit prs all day podcast the um uh craig and jamie lee have been having on like a lot of really old
school like affiliate owners that have been around for 10 plus 15 plus years and um he did one with
um with uh uh uh adam adam knifer and he did one with nicole christiansen both of them have been
around uh known their affiliates at um crossfit for vancouver and then uh nicole christian
i think is like crossfit roots in colorado if i apologize anybody if i messed that up and then
obviously craig howard about devil crossfit they had a great discussion on like best practices and
all three of them operated differently but all three of them have been really successful for a
really long time so that's kind of the issue with the ensuring quality standards, because if you have different gyms that are all operating,
you know, differently with their own nuances and kind of operating how they do within their
own communities. Um, and now you're saying we're ensuring those quality standards. Does that mean
they're all going to have to be the same? That's kind of the, the fear that i have with the ensuring quality standards like just
how how and what what and how um operational excellence okay that's cool um no issue with that
sure you know ensuring operational excellence i don't know how you're going to ensure it happens, but
we want all the affiliates to operate at a top tier. In revenue growth,
revenue growth, how, again, how, how, how? So these things just, more questions rise with each
one of those. Insuring quality standards, operational excellence, and revenue growth.
with each one of those?
Ensuring quality standards,
operational excellence, and revenue growth.
I mean, the big question is how and what?
I lead a global team that is passionate about supporting affiliate owners
to help them achieve more success in their business.
Okay, just sounds like a buzzword at that point.
So that's interesting, right?
Just breaking that down a little bit there.
Now, let's look through some of these comments real quick. Jeff, quality of running a business versus quality of movement are totally different. Lots of people on their L1 high horses here.
though. But I just think in terms of coming into this community and everything else and being head of affiliates, that you should definitely have the prerequisite that it takes to own the affiliate.
And I understand that might just be, so to speak, in the way that you're looking at it,
checking a box because that doesn't have much to do with this job. But I would disagree. And here's
why. This might be an interesting perspective. I disagree
because I think that the educational piece and what we do in CrossFit training, I think that
that is the most important part of CrossFit. And I think that the more that CrossFit establishes
itself as the expert in the health and fitness space, that the better off it is for the affiliates and the more
longevity that CrossFit, the company will see over the years. Because that's the differentiator.
So many times people are like, oh, why would I go to CrossFit and pay 200 bucks a month and
have to dodge a gym dog and there's no heating and I could just go to 24-hour fitness for 10
fucking dollars and have all of that. Because of the education, because of the methodology,
and hopefully because of all the value you're receiving from the coaches as they help you
understand that and make lifestyle changes for you and your family. And the more that we could
establish ourselves as that expertise, again, the more seats that we have, or the more butts in seats we have at the L1s,
the more people and affiliates you will have,
the more coaches and affiliates you will have.
The more we could attack kind of these bigger questions here,
or not bigger questions, but the common questions of,
oh, CrossFit's bad for you, or oh, CrossFit,
all they do is fake pull-ups, or you're going to get injured.
And if we just pushed everything we
could kind of like the crossfit journal did about what we know in the space and what we know to be
true in the health and fitness space that that will start to just that you won't even be compared
to the f45 and the 24-hour finishes and stuff because they won't be relevant. You will establish yourself as something completely different.
And the fact that we don't see L1 commercials just all the time,
and not just outside of our community,
but also inside of our community, is astonishing to me.
Everything that CrossFit is a part of or partnered with
should just be pushing L1 commercials
with people from all walks of life.
And that, I think, would just help establish
the differentiator between us
and everything else within the space.
I mean, that was the whole NSCA case.
And to me, the fact that that was settled and then covered up was a huge mistake, a huge slap in the face to affiliate owners. We fucking paid for that. Greg was fighting to keep what we were doing inside of our gyms legal.
gyms legal. The NSCA wanted to establish themselves as the expertise in the area,
and they wanted to do it through government regulation, not by just being the fucking best,
but through the government by saying, hey, we're the expertise. People are getting hurt.
Look at these papers that we did on CrossFit. Look at these studies. See? The injury rate is so much higher, which by the way, those were all falsified. It was fucking made up data, made up injury rates.
And they tried to use that to then say, this cannot be the leader in health and fitness.
It's too dangerous. They have to go through us. So then over time, what would happen is
people would come, they'd come knock on your affiliate door. Hey, do you have these training certificates? You need to to keep people safe. And if you don't that. He was protecting the L1. He's protecting the affiliate
owners. He was protecting all the ones that would come after that. And the fact that we didn't just,
and we being CrossFit, the community and the affiliates and the money that was used to do that,
the fact that we just didn't just keep, just bury them and then fucking own them afterwards, but yet just settle, take a check and let them move on.
Fuck. Crazy. And here's the thing that blows my mind. When you talk to a lot of affiliate owners,
I would say the vast majority have no fucking clue that that happened.
The vast majority would have no clue that that happened
and how important that was
and how much of a slap in the face it was
just to settle and take the money and go.
Okay, I'm going to try to keep up with some of these questions here.
Sorry, guys.
Oh, you guys are just kind of like arguing with each other in here.
That's great.
My bigger concern with
this guy is uh with this guy is making franchise fees like 50k and reducing the barrier to entry
i don't care about the o1 yeah i mean the changes that could come to affiliateship is uh is
could be crazy with that. Martin, I picked your comment just simply because of your photo.
I really like that photo of you, Martin. Okay. It'd be good PR for a VP to have an L1,
but it's not necessary. VPs are money and HR people. They have managers who must have their L1 that execute the VP's plan.
Yeah, but I mean, yes, again, I agree,
but I still just think it's the prerequisite, dude.
I mean, if you want to be an authority
within your affiliate,
if you want to be authority within the CrossFit community,
the L1 is the prerequisite.
That's the first stone you step on
as you make your way there jeff has some great comments going back to when i said call in and hopefully you have
a different perspective heidi jeff was what i was talking about because you can see i'm using him as
discussion points here jeff again mike i said earlier, I think everyone should take their L1. The issue here
is going after the hire because he doesn't have the two-day certification. Okay. Okay.
I'm buying it. Bull boy. Mike, do you think he squats below parallel? Do you think he squats at all? Does now. Does now. And I want to talk a little bit more about HQ, but I'll finish up this with Mr. Jada Coons here.
As a board member, New Dawn Ventures is an investment platform that comprises the experienced founders and investors providing growth capital and shareholder liquidity to emerging brands in the consumer health and wellness space.
Just let that one simmer for a moment.
Out of all the things we talked about.
He's a board member on the New Dawn.
Interesting.
Okay, bar method, five years, three months.
Brand president full-time.
Became CEO first and then became brand president.
Interesting.
President and COO of YogaWorks.
And was principal at Highland Capital.
Jay DeCunes was president and COO at YogaWorks.
Jay oversaw the operations of YogaWorks, 30 locations in New York, California with over 800 employees and north of 40 million
in sales. See more. YogaWorks is the leading national provider of yoga Pilates in specialized
group fitness programs. Seeing a little bit of a trend here, principal uh this was in july of 2006 to may of 2009
developed strategies to identify and pursue growth stage investment opportunities sourced
investment opportunities by building relationships directly with entrepreneurs in financial
intermediaries okay well what's it like to trade crypto on kraken let's say i'm in a state-of-the-art Okay. Well. Kraken, powerful crypto tools backed by 24-7 support and multi-layered security. Go to kraken.com and see what crypto can be.
Not investment advice.
Crypto trading involves risk of loss.
See kraken.com slash legal slash ca dash pru dash disclaimer for info on Kraken's undertaking
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If you weren't skeptical of packaging for sale
or packaging for potential affiliateship,
then you definitely are after reading that resume.
Again, if we go after a lot of the discussion
that we had earlier
and some of the things that we were talking about
in terms of like the board,
just looking at the resume and why they decided to choose him. I think that kind of, uh, I think
that kind of gives us the tell sign. Phillip Kelly, who's skinnier, Suze's or to come.
You tell me, bro. Phillip Kelly and I were I were partners in a workout during the larger body athletes.
Phillip, anything we do now, I feel like that's going to be, you're going to be like my safe
bed if we're somewhere and there's like some sort of workout and it's a partner thing.
Like I'm just going to gravitate towards you each time now.
You know, you like pick a seat at the beginning of school, the beginning of school year, and
you're like, I'm going to sit here next to these people and you do it the rest of the
time. It's me and you and partner workouts.
Okay. Let's head over real quick and let's look at the CrossFit website. I want to talk about this.
Um, so in conclusion, I just want to anchor down, um,
philip k philip kelly i carried susan that workout facts facts philip kelly is fit i can attest to that okay so here's the uh oh um my uh final thoughts on
jada coons number one as a person we don't know't know him. So I'm not talking about that. We're strictly
talking about his relationship with CrossFit and is he a good fit as the hire and what his
intentions is for CrossFit and why he was hired. So I think for that, only time will tell. We'll
have to see. Who knows, maybe we're completely
wrong about this. Maybe he's going to go get the L one. Um, maybe we'll see some really cool stuff
that'll come through. That'll be really beneficial for CrossFit. Maybe some of the perspective that
he could bring from outside of the space could definitely help some of the affiliate owners.
So we'll give them a little bit of a, we'll give them a chance, right? You have to give everybody
a chance. Like you heard Chase say when, which was great, the discussion between him and Taylor, when he was like, hold on a minute, hold on.
And he's like, you got to give him a chance. Let him see, you know, if we're going to be a welcoming
community, you have to welcome him into the community. Let's see what happens first and then
go from there. And so, and I agree with that perspective. I do think we should give him a
chance. Let's let him in, like Blade was saying earlier, we're all in this together.
So let's kind of see what happens from that.
But trust but verify, right?
So I'm open, but I'm a bit skeptical and will kind of be watching it.
But the thing is, too, and my last note on this is, fuck, dude, like, CrossFit,
get it together in terms of your communication, especially when you're implementing things in
this whole like hiding shit, and then being like, oh, fuck, now we have to react to it because of
something that happened. And maybe hiding was the wrong word, but not being forthcoming with
information as it's
rolling out and then trying to backtrack into like being this reactive communication it's not a good
look develop your plans and your strategy behind closed doors and then present it before that takes
place that's going to be i mean that's going to be the I mean, fuck. That's going to be the biggest opportunity that you'd have.
Dan, this feels like the opposite of giving him a chance.
I was actually thinking that same thing as I was talking to this.
I wanted to just try to be fair about it.
But you're right.
I'm not super stoked with just the way this whole
thing was presented, obviously, and
I am quite skeptical of what he'll
be doing in his position
here, but yeah, you're kind of right.
I'm just going to mumble my way out of this.
More perspectives on the L1.
Dan, again, maybe it takes more
than L1 to be a VP.
I agree, but still should probably start there,
especially with the emphasis that we place on it.
The L1 was like birthed this CrossFit ecosystem.
That was the seed that planted everything that it grew from.
Greg compiled all the information he had,
and he packaged it up to be able to disseminate that information to everybody so they could use
the methodology to help improve their life. I don't think that that should just be overlooked.
But I do agree that that necessarily isn't going to maybe aid him. It's not like he read some book
and now he's going to be able to perform as VP better
because of that.
But I think honoring and understanding
the importance of it
and the importance to the community
of what the L1 is,
is the reason why you would do it.
Not because it's beneficial from his job.
Philip Kelly.
Sousa, does this hire make you question re-affiliating? Dude. every year since greg left my affiliate my affiliates are fees are due in december
every year since greg left i've struggled with this a little bit but here's the deal If I leave, people like you leave, if Craig Howard leaves, if these other people in the community leave, then the whole thing kind of crumbles.
So that's the emotional side of it, right? if you start to see these big name people leave,
and it's not replaced by something else that binds this community together,
then does the whole thing fucking, does the bottom of it kind of fall out?
Okay?
So that's the emotional side of that. Now, if we're talking in terms of business, I could still tell you that if I go and
I ask everybody who comes in my gym, hey, how'd you find out about us? Hey, what brought you in
here? And I look at in terms of the metrics that I have as like, how are people finding the gym? What channels...
I hate to use all these buzzwords as we're talking about this, but what channels are they coming
through? Is it through Instagram? Are they coming through through my website? Are they coming in
through a Google search? All of that. I could still tell you that the number one searches that are there, CrossFit gyms near me. CrossFit gyms near me. So at a $250 a month,
right? Because that's three... Well, fuck, we don't know because apparently they're going to be
raising the affiliate fees at some point. At least that's the current rumor that's happening right
now. But at $250 a month, a $3,000 affiliate fee, I know that as long as people keep coming in through the door, on average, two members a month there, and then they stay, even if you have a really short lifetime value of a customer, and let's say they only stay for three months or they only stay for six months, you're still going to be coming out on top in terms of what you pay for with the CrossFit name.
Right?
pay for with the CrossFit name.
Right?
And so, yeah, like the business side of it would still tell you, yeah, it's worth it. You know, depending on how well you have.
Oh, is this true?
Sleeky 4000 January 1.
Philip Kelly, it's going to be $333.34.
$333.34. 4K. Okay. As that price raises,
you could start to question the business side of it. And the business side of it for us is like,
is paying that amount, the $250 right now, potentially the, the, uh, $330 a month as that
increases and starts to creep up, then you'll start to go to the, you heard me talk about the
emotional side of it, the brand, keeping it together, the community, you know, CrossFit's
our thing are being the affiliates are being the L one trainers are being the practitioners of
CrossFit that are in the gym are thing. Um, power thing.
Um, but then on the business side of it, it's still like, okay, if I do pay, if I pay that
amount, then I'm still getting ROI off of that. Right. And so if that number creeps up, then the
business side of the argument to stay starts to drop and it's hard. And you can't necessarily just be, you know,
obviously making a ton of emotional decisions like,
oh, I'd be so sad if I wasn't a CrossFit gym anymore
and if the community fell apart.
But that's interesting.
Slinky, do I lie?
No, you do not.
Good morning, Athena.
Hope you're doing well.
I like that.
I really like that video on your 12 inch box jump
when i saw that shit is great i love that
good morning what's up it's philip kelly how you doing brother i uh i'm good man i um i i asked
you that question about the uh the new hire and, does it make you question re-affiliating? Because, well, for a number of reasons, but one of them is I just met with a owner of an old CrossFit gym and she deal with the affiliated.
It doesn't matter. But she was basically asking me, well, why should I affiliate? She wants me to coach there. And I was asking her questions about her gym and everything. But she was like, why should I affiliate? I couldn't really give her many good answers other than the ones that we all typically would throw at her. And she's like, well, I just don't see the value in it. And that's why we de-affiliated before. She's like, I don't get much out of affiliating with them other than getting to use the name CrossFit.
She's like, we still do functional fitness in here, but we just can't call it CrossFit.
That was bugging me internally because I'm like, well, I love CrossFit.
That's what I do.
So it was just a conversation that we were having.
And I found it hard for me to like justify it, even with that, that price increase that's
going to be coming to in January.
Right.
It is the question, right?
Like, and I mean, here's the thing.
And I totally get what you were saying about like, if you tap out, then it's like someone
like the OGs who are super successful, like Craig Howard, I know Craig would be like,
what the hell dude?
Like, you know what I mean?
Yep.
And that's the thing is like, know what i mean yep um and and that's the things like yeah i do i totally agree like we got to stick together otherwise like yeah the ship's just gonna sink even deeper without all of us you know what i
mean um there needs to be people who and there are people who are still flying the flag but man
they keep making it hard over at hq they do yeah i mean it's tough because like even just to come in to question it right like we are a crossfit like we love this community we love we
love the name and we love what it represents and we love to represent it but it does like as a lot
of this stuff happens that um you know is getting harder and harder to agree with or harder and
harder to get behind it does start to beg the question right and that's yeah that's yeah that is the issue and
i agree with you like sometimes if you come up against somebody who's like you know when you
saw hiller in um his last video if you saw the one about jada coons and kind of the new hire he was
like why are you still a crossfit gym um and i mean these are these are fair questions for some
and these are questions that people like you and I who like, you know, bleed this shit,
like have to try to justify in some points.
And it's tough, right?
When you come up with somebody like that.
You know what her issue was?
Actually, just for an example, she doesn't like, this is classic too.
She doesn't like, she feels like it gives people a bad taste in their mouth.
And people are worried about getting injured because people get injured doing CrossFit.
I doubt she even knows the truth behind the NSCA case, to be honest with you.
Yeah, most don't, man.
But just for an example, this is an owner of a gym who no longer is affiliated, who really just doesn't even care.
She just wants to run her gym and carry on.
Yeah, yeah. And you don't blame some of these people, right? doesn't even care she just wants to run her gym and carry on you know yeah yeah and it's you know
you don't blame some of these people right it's not like you see that and you're like instantly
like oh man why would you do that that's terrible it's kind of like oh shit like all right well
there goes another one but you're right i think for those of us that are really like understand
this understand the history of crossfit understand greg vision, which I think is like what everybody's kind of still like clutched on to. And personally, that's what I'm
like clutched on to. Like when he was doing the stuff with the DDCs and all those subject matter
health experts, and we were bringing that into the space and he was attacking all the lies and
the disinformation that our trusted institutions were pushing out there. That's what I was fucking
fired up by.
I was like, dude, we are going to change the world.
Like when Greg was collecting all those doctors at the MDL ones going in there and giving
out all those information to the doctors, and then you could come back at the next one
they'd have and they'd push you into this lecture hall.
If you already took the MDL one and you could listen to these subject matter experts speak
on different things that are happening inside the health and fitness industry and how it's tied to the medical industry.
I was sitting in that room listening to those people and seeing this vision of what Greg was doing here.
And I was like, fuck, this is it.
This will become the new expertise on exercise science and health and being able to go to a source of truth,
right? Instead of just this corrupt fucking bullshit that have been fed for a long time
and are continuing to be fed by our government regulated and ran institutions.
Yeah, exactly.
Crazy. Crazy. Well, thank you for your perspective dude well i just keep watching
what uh what hq keeps coming out with man yeah good luck good luck to you as an affiliate owner
dude hey thanks bro come stop by sometime and work out if you're ever in the area
i will i will and then i can have pool boy coach me 100 yep all right brother thanks for calling later oh man yeah it's like
what philip was talking right there it's like you come into like this gym owner that maybe used to
be a crossfit or something like that and and they're like i stopped affiliating and you're
like why and then you try to come as an affiliate owner or just somebody who believes in it like
come back and like you kind of have this back and forth and then at some at some point like it's uh you're just like fuck how do i even justify this like is it all
emotional is it all emotional for me like maybe but i feel like it's it's the flag we carry the
crossfit flag and if we set it down we being like the ogs the people that really understand
the crossfit journal that was birthed through the crossfit journal that was birthed in greg's vision
like if we lay down the flag like who's who's gonna pick it back up the people that really understand the CrossFit Journal that was birthed through the CrossFit Journal, that was birthed in Greg's vision.
If we lay down the flag, who's going to pick it back up?
Who's going to carry the message?
Who's going to carry the boats? I fear David Goggins.
Mr. Seva Matosian.
Source of truth.
Mr. Seval Matosian.
Source of truth.
CrossFit was going to take the mantle from the CDC for all things health.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
I mean, that's what I saw.
So I had this vision for my gym, and what I wanted it to be, like, like in this really long term kind of thought was a health center.
It's like, of course, it's CrossFit gym.
In the front of it, you can imagine this.
We have offices, consultation rooms, like a spot that would almost look like you were going to go to the doctor's office.
But the biggest difference was, is you went a little bit further down the hall past the bathrooms in a big CrossFit gym opened up.
So that way, you had an alternative. You could go in, maybe you're overweight, you know you need to make some lifestyle changes, whatever the case may be that you're dealing with. Or maybe you're
just fucking sick of the answers that you were getting from our traditional slide you down the
line healthcare. So you walk into my gym and go, Oh, hi, Mike.
I'm just going to use Mike here. Hi, Mike. Welcome to the welcome. Welcome in. Oh, you're here to see
Dr. So-and-so. Great. Go right up and make the left on the hall. So then they go down, they see
their doctor. Their doctor is able to start to build a relationship, ask the right questions.
And then when they go, okay, rather than say, all right, well, I'm going to send you
over here. I'll make sure you have some diet and exercise and go down to CVS and fill your
prescription. And we're going to start monitoring your stuff because you're going to be on meds.
Or the alternative of that with, hey, if you don't make these changes here and start to
move a little bit more and eat better, you're going to have to come back and get on prescription
meds. So instead of that, the doctor that you would see that would be in my gym would say, or in my facility would say,
okay, great. Hey, what we're going to do is I'm going to send you to two places. We're going to
send you down over to our trusted dietitian here. That's going to go ahead and get you set up with
what you need to make sure you're on the right path to eating meat, vegetables, nuts, seeds,
a little starch, no sugar. And then after you go see them,
we're going to go send you over to my CrossFit coach here. And they are going to help you out
with getting yourself starting on some movement. And then there you go. So rather than being
written a prescription for drugs, or just being told, hey, go do this, find an outlet for it.
And if you don't, which you know nobody fucking does that.
I mean, very few people go to the doctor and get that news and walk out the door and say,
hey, now I'm going to make a bunch of lifestyle changes.
It happens, which is great.
But without the help, without a resource there, chances are it just goes away.
So then afterwards, you go and see the doctor.
The doctor prescribes you to the dietitian. The dietitian
helps you out with making some changes in your diet. And hopefully they start adding stuff in
rather than just start taking stuff away. They really look at it and they understand the long
term approach that they're going to take to your diet. So that way, when you go to the normal
doctor and they say, go to diet and exercise. You don't start scrolling on Instagram or Facebook and just find the latest six-week
challenge, right?
But you actually understand it from a holistic, long-term approach perspective with your eating.
Then you go over and you go see your CrossFit coach.
And we start going through, hey, are you hurt?
What's going on with the body?
What are some things that we're going to have to progress to work towards? What does this look like? And then they start to get you
moving. And then on top of that, when you walk through to that last door and you enter into the
CrossFit gym, you have the most important piece, in my opinion, which is the community of like-minded
people that you're going to be around. That's what's going to keep you consistent, is finding
your people, going into that gym, and getting yourself healthy. That will give you that small motivation to get in the door
every day that will start to lead to the habit and the consistency that hopefully forms with your
eating and with your exercise. And we all know that when a bunch of CrossFitters get together
like that, everything starts to change because you don't want to be the guy that shows up with a box of donuts. Maybe if it's a holiday party or something, but just on average.
You don't want to be the one that walks into your affiliate like was a CrossFit coach and is like,
here's a box of donuts. So with that pressure of the community and the like-minded people in there,
it helps make sure that this stays this way. Because it's like the same thing,
you wouldn't show up with some alcohol at your AA meeting, right? You would hide that shit.
You would fucking lie about it. You would hide it. And at least that creates kind of this like
shame or guilt that will help kind of hopefully put you on the right direction because you want
to be in with this crowd and you want to keep with this community and you want to make sure that you're staying fit and healthy. And when Greg was doing the DDC, and DDC stands for
Derelict Doctors Club. When he was doing those, I kind of had this vision because again, I was a
real student of Greg, of everything he was putting out in the journal. I was watching kind of these
things that he was doing at CrossFit HQ. And was watching kind of these things that he was, that he was doing, um,
at CrossFit HQ.
And I was like,
Holy shit,
this kind of aligns with,
um,
exactly the vision that I,
I was kind of seeing and where Greg was taking this.
And that's why I was so adamant on like getting myself into that DDC because I
wanted to like get in there.
I wanted to see what,
see what he was doing.
And it confirmed exactly what I was thinking.
But I also just wanted to be within that collection of people. And luckily for me,
through Sevan, he sent me the email. At the time, it was Karin Thompson. She was director of
CrossFit Health. And luckily, I was able to get in there. Once I got in there, I was like,
holy shit, this is it. And that was a vision that I could get behind. And it was massive. There was
no like ceiling to it. Like we were going to take on fucking big pharma. We were going to take on
the corruption through the health institutions. Like we were going to fucking get after it.
And that, that fired me up. That fired me up. Um, and so I was excited about that vision. And
now I don't like, I don't know if that vision is still there. Are we going to see the current administration at CrossFit H2 say, hey, a bunch of this shit that these health institutions are telling you is fucking bullshit. And here's the truth. And here's why. I don't know. I don't know. One second here.
Colin, good morning. You're live on the show.
Hey, Sousa.
Hey, what's going on, brother?
First time caller, man. Casey out of CrossFit Ridge City in Jonesboro, Arkansas.
How are you, man?
Oh, I'm great. Thanks for calling, Casey.
What can we do for you?
Yeah, dude.
I mean, I'm a little behind on the live.
I'm working out running
the streets. And so if this has been talked about, just tell me to shut up and I'll go.
Um, but the, uh, the, the question I have, and I've, I've reached out to my affiliate representative,
um, which is something that I think is a big part. Like if, if us affiliates are, uh,
are concerned about what's happening with the Coons,
can I assume you're still on that topic? Um, I think we all need to reach out to our affiliate representatives. I think that's going to be number one. This needs to be like, you know,
your representatives for government. Um, we need to reach out to our representatives and express
some concern. Number one, and ask questions. Uh, I've done that with Chase Ingram, who's mine,
and I'm trying to get on a call with him soon. Awesome. But also, why was this person hired outside of that group of affiliate
representatives? That is the question, right? And that's like when I was kind of rolling through
Jada Coons' LinkedIn and looking at what he had done in the past um i definitely was a little more concerned with it yeah you know
what i mean yeah i agree because he checks he checks all the boxes on the on the resume as far
as like bringing in this kind of like exec types that um have either packaged up and sold stuff or
have built and grown like in his words a brand right so then that way there's more value from it
and then again they could either sell it
or they could change the way that it's being organized.
But all of it is to their fiduciary obligations
of growing the business, right?
A hundred percent.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that was just the red flag that,
the main red flag that I've seen in this scenario.
I don't have much more than that.
I just want to put it out there that,
hey, if you guys or if any other affiliates are concerned like I am, just reach out to your
affiliate representative and let's like take it up the chain a little bit. Yeah. I think that's,
I think that's a, that's a great advice there, Casey. And I think that that's important to do.
Yeah, man. Well, thank you. Keep it up. You're doing a great job.
Thanks brother. I appreciate the call. Have a great rest of your day, man. All right keep it up hey you're doing a great job thanks brother i appreciate the call have a great rest of your day man all right i'll see you yeah i mean that is it's like
those those things were put in place for that right like the affiliate reps so like maybe there
is a conversation to be had there and uh at the very least maybe you'll get a few more um some
more answers or maybe a different perspective that uh you weren't didn't really have or wasn't thinking
about until you talked to your uh affiliate rep he has he has uh chase ingram as your affiliate
rep i mean that's fucking great like give him a call i chase would be more than happy and the
thing is too is like in um my affiliate rep is katie hogan and i've gotten the same vibe from
her and obviously like knowing chase and everything i gotten the same vibe from her. And obviously like knowing Chase and everything, I get the same vibe.
Like these people aren't just here to defend a message.
Like, like if I give Chase a call,
he's going to have an open and honest conversation about it.
He's going to give you his honest perspective and he's also in it with us.
Right.
Like, like he's a part of this thing.
And so he wants to see it be successful and he has the same concerns and the
same aspirations that majority of the affiliate owners have.
So at the very least, like just giving your affiliate rep a call to have that conversation
or shooting an email might just more or less just even give you just a little peace of
mind or to let you know, hey, fuck, at least I got a buddy in this.
You know?
Yeah.
Right here.
Give it a program, Chase.
I'm always here for it.
Absolutely.
Yeah. Heidi Krum. program chase i'm always here for it absolutely yeah heidi can we all just call chase whatever or
yeah just just go ahead guys just start blowing up his phone i'm sure he would absolutely love that
oh frog grat is that a euro or euros or pounds?
10 euros or pounds?
Either way, thank you a ton for the money.
I don't know why, but I play this weird validation thing like,
oh, yes, somebody donated some money.
Okay, it doesn't suck that bad.
We're good.
Suze, I DMed you about potentially having a call about future affiliate ownership.
I'm a long way off, but want to get myself started on the right track.
Taking my L1 at the end of November in the UK.
Dude, that's awesome.
And like the conversation we've been having, that's the way to start.
Go get your L1.
A couple other things I would say too. If you're whatever affiliate that you belong to right now,
have an open and honest conversation with that affiliate owner. I've had some a couple of calls
where people are like, Hey, I want to open a gym, whatever. Maybe there isn't a conflict there with
the current owners that you're coaching under or at the gym that you're working out in. But
you never know where those conversations are going to go. And I always used to use this saying for anybody that coached at my gym.
I was like, hey, we need coaches.
I need employees.
I mean, I need coaches.
He goes, and I said, I'm looking for owners, but I'll settle for employees.
Meaning you want somebody who is going to be like yourself that maybe aspires to open
up a CrossFit gym.
And hopefully the affiliate that you're currently going to that, um, owner
doesn't see that necessarily as like a threat, but as an opportunity to help you out or as a
potential opportunity to have a partner in the business, you know, maybe they need a little
extra help and that would be an easy way to, um, get yourself into owning a, owning a gym,
which is going to be relatively lower risk for you, depending on of course, like, you know,
how the whole thing's negotiated.
But it also costs you a lot less if you don't have to buy everything
and you could kind of get a little bit of a running start.
But outside of that, I would say getting that one first and foremost, yes.
Devouring everything that you could find in the CrossFit journal.
I know that we talked about it's buried.
It is buried, but it's not dead and gone. So you could still find a ton of great information in there. And then the second piece is, like I already said, let the affiliate owner know kind of your plans and then say, hey, maybe you could start to take on some tasks for that affiliate owner or do a few more jobs there. That would give you a little bit more of a perspective behind the curtain as to what you're going to be up against. Because in terms of affiliate ownership,
and I've talked about this a little bit before, you don't want to get yourself into this situation
where you're like, I'm a great coach. So I'm going to get in there. I'm going to open my
own affiliate. I got all these ideas and blah, blah, blah. And you forget the whole entire side
of that. It's like you're running a fucking business now, right? So there's a big transition from coaching and doing that job to now having to wear all the hats of the
business owner. And that's going to be a hard transition because you may be fantastic at
community engagement. You may be great at coaching a class and all of that stuff. But then when you
have to go to bookkeeping or when you have to start doing stuff like following up with calls with members as far as leads or just navigating
lease negotiations or issues that come up with the building owner, just all that type of stuff.
Taxes, right? There's so many other things that come into it. So number one, just kind of make
sure that you really want to take on all those extra jobs. Because if you don't, and you get yourself into a position where you're a really valuable asset to any affiliate, then you could go and become a number two somewhere. And I just use that for sake of just kind of like understanding it, right? Like a coach, like a GM or like a head
coach at another gym. And you won't have to take on all those other responsibilities, but you might
still be able to get the fulfillment in the career that you were looking for without having to also
be the bookkeeper, without having to also be the person that negotiates the lease and all those
other headaches that come with business ownership. I heard a joke one time that it was like, hey,
if you want to really fuck up your fitness, own a gym. Because you'll be in the gym all the time, but you won't be working
out. You'll be doing all the other shit, cleaning the toilets. Actually, I just think about that
now. I got to order some more paper towels for the bathrooms, right? Making sure the soaps have
soap in them, all that type of shit that comes along with it. So make sure that you're truly that's what you want to do
and do it on somebody else's time.
Just come in and offer your time and offer to help.
And that would be the best way and easiest way for you to kind of figure that out.
Find some more of these questions here.
This was, thanks for hanging out and being so interactive. You guys, this,
like you made this a lot of,
like a lot of fun and really easy this,
uh,
this morning.
Um,
Samantha H.
Hey,
since I'm a new affiliate owner,
congratulations.
Oh,
which I hit the fucking wrong one.
I didn't mean to give you crickets.
I meant to give you applause.
I swear that was totally on accident.
That wasn't on purpose.
Just a slip of the button there.
Got any tips to help increase memberships?
Okay.
So when you are very, very first starting out,
you just opened your affiliate.
Let's say you have 20 members in there.
Give them everything you can.
Everything you can. Develop really good relationships to them.
Every time you go back home, find something else that you can learn, that you could bring to the table that you could give them in terms of coaching, in terms of lifestyle advice of how
to stay on track with their eating. Do you know their eating goals? Like really eating goals. Do
you know their goals as far as lifestyle changes that they're trying to make? The more and more and more you could
invest into your first 20 members, that's going to turn into your first 50 members because they're
going to go get everybody around them and they're going to say, oh, you should come to this gym.
It's so different. Oh my gosh. I love Samantha. Like she is so like, she knows the name of my
fucking dog and stuff. Right. And like, she's really invested into me and she gives me these awesome tips and she goes
out and she learns a bunch of stuff and she brings it back.
Like there's a lot of life and there's a lot of energy into that because referrals
are your best lead source.
I basically ran my gym off the last nine years or more just off referrals, just off referrals.
Not, I didn't, you know, I wasn't really into the whole marketing thing.
I didn't do a ton of it. I didn't do any ad stuff. None of that. I just invested and gave
myself 100% into that core starting out group of members that I had. And they went and told
everybody and they became my lead generation for me. And the best part is, it's not like
everybody and they became my lead generation for me. And the best part is, it's not like referrals are linear, they're exponential. And so what I mean by that is if you give
everything to one person and they go out and tell two or three people, and out of two or three
people, two more people come in and you do the same for them. And then those two people go tell
two, two more people each. So the growth could really happen quickly based off referrals, as opposed to just doing ads on Facebook or ads on Instagram, something like that. That's more of a linear approach. And you're not going to necessarily get the same qualified lead because you're going to have a loudspeaker with each one of those members that you invest everything into that are just going to be non-fucking-stop.
members that you invest everything into that are just going to be non-fucking-stop. They're going to be so annoying to all their friends. You've got to come into Samantha's gym. You've got to
come into it. Oh my gosh. What's the name of your gym too? Maybe put that in things.
But that's my biggest tip as far as getting your first core group going.
And when I started 10 years ago, we're coming up on my 10-year affiliateship here.
I still have lots of that original group still with me,
even after all that time.
Majority of the reason why they leave
is they end up just moving out of state
because I live in California.
Okay.
Not Jeffrey Cohen.
Judy, you don't suck, Sousa.
Five bucks.
Thank you.
Seriously.
I appreciate that.
Judy, do you belong to Affiliate?
I know I said some things about Orange Theory
ignorantly because I've never actually done it before
and you got pissed off.
Not pissed off, but you were like,
they acknowledged my birthday.
You don't know what you're talking about.
And you were right.
I didn't know what I was talking about.
But have you gone to an affiliate yet are you currently belonging to an affiliate
oh there it is crossfit and key on key oh sorry i suck at pronouncing things right so i just like
randomly mumble it and hope that everybody who's listening as I speak into a microphone somehow does not done it.
Susie gave a free handy per referral membership skyrocketed.
But it was weird.
It was only dudes that kept showing up.
I wasn't really sure why.
Do I have a degree?
Negative. Negative. Jeffrey, like i said before like i um i uh graduated high school on a plea bargain it wasn't until about
six uh seven years ago as i made the transition of being like i'm gonna go to regionals and be
a competitor and like my mid to late 20s that I was like, damn, I should probably become just as focused on this and as aggressive as my competitive CrossFit into the business side.
And so I just started to devour books because that's the way that I learn. And I listen to a
lot of them on Audible. I read a lot of them. And the main thing is, is I immediately try to apply
that knowledge. And so no, I've just been feeling my way through the dark uh the internet's a huge advantage like people
i hate when people aren't resourceful and they're like well no one told me i'm like motherfucker
you got the internet you got google son even though it might skew the results and have a
little bit a wee bit of a narrative defending on it you could still find information like if you
you know brick and mortar businesses have been around for a long, long time. And there's a lot of information on
that. So like, don't ever use it. It's used like no one ever told me like, no, you just didn't take
the time to drop it into the Google to YouTube. You know, search out the information you were
looking for. So no, Jeffrey, I don't I don't have a degree. i had a like two-year stint at academy of art university
where i was a freelance illustration major um i was uh mostly focused on uh charcoal drawings
and aerosol artis although that wasn't part of the school that was some extracurricular
in moon lighting but uh yeah no no degree just lots of books susie trying to make this yeah yeah i know they're the buttons are almost the same like
the crickets versus the applaud button is like this like darker yellow and like lighter orange so
yeah but i fucked that up you're right bailey um i did uh one time um get a so it was funny everybody in my family that
graduated from college which is majority of them except for me the black sheep um
got like this check from my grandpa on my mom's side and it was like it was uh it was funny
because it wasn't until years later. So you go to the graduation parties
and like, you kind of sit there and I feel like a fucking loser because it's like, Oh, there's
another one of your cousins that graduated college. Oh, there's your brother that graduated
college, you know, all this shit. And at that time I had owned the gym, but I wasn't really
liking, like, I was still like going after to be the regional competitor. I wasn't really like
diving into like how to, how to operate a business and how the world around me worked.
I wasn't really diving into how to operate a business and how the world around me worked.
And so it was funny because multiple years later, as the gym started to get successful, when I owned it on my own, I didn't have the partners anymore. My parents knew that it was
a failing gym at the time. And I was able to get it from failing to becoming profitable,
to growing, to becoming sustainable for other people now to have their
livelihoods off of it and creates a living for me um and got a great membership and a bunch of
other stuff like that uh it wasn't until years after that then my grandpa kind of came over on
one of the visits it was actually really meaningful to me because he uh was like here and handed me a
card and when i opened it up it had the same kind of like congratulations that all the cousins and
everybody got from graduating college and i was like oh that's weird and i opened it up, it had the same kind of like congratulations that all the cousins and everybody got from graduating college.
And I was like, oh, that's weird.
And I opened it up and it said like,
congratulations on graduating the school of hard knocks.
And he ended up giving me the same cash
that everybody graduated,
which was pretty cool and like meaningful.
And now all those motherfucking college students
go to me for advice.
Just kidding.
But seriously.
Love a good Who is Suze episode.
We kind of did that with with Coffee Wads and Pods.
With Pedro.
If you guys check that out, I got into a little bit of it that there.
I'm always like skeptical of that, too, which was kind of funny.
I was talking to Sevan about it afterwards.
And he's like, no, it's good that people knew that. I thought you were a fucking nerd.
I was like, okay, that's true. That's true. So yeah, it's kind of interesting when people hear
some of this stuff. Yes, I did. Orange Theory Fitness for almost 10 years, but now I'm fully
a French CrossFitter. Okay. CrossFit 118 outside of Columbus, Ohio. 70 says converted me a few months ago.
Awesome, Judy.
That's cool.
You should call in and tell us about that experience one time.
What was it like when you got there
and how that whole thing went for you?
I think that that would be awesome.
Jeez Louise.
Good to see you, Jeez Louise.
What's up, Suzanne?
I look forward to owning an affiliate someday.
Yeah.
That's awesome. It's up Susan? I look forward to owning an affiliate someday. Yeah. That's
awesome. It's, it's really great fulfilling work. Like, you know, the days are long. So I'll give
you Friday, for example, this last Friday, I got to, uh, I got to the gym five 15 in the morning,
opened it up. I coached the five 30 AM class. I coached the six 30 AM class. I came here. I hopped
on, um, uh, with seven for a while on the podcast. I jumped off of it. I drove out to Hayward. I came here. I hopped on with Sevan for a while on the podcast. I jumped off of it. I
drove out to Hayward. I met with my firefighters at the fire station that I was supposed to go to.
I scheduled that for that day. Came back. Had a couple meetings, two meetings. Went back to the
gym just before lunchtime. Had a one-on-one, an intro course, no sweat intro course there.
Did that, worked out.
Then did some housekeeping stuff
that I had to do at the gym.
Hopped in my car, drove back here,
found out I was going to host that evening show.
Hosted that evening show,
ate a little food,
then went back to the gym
and coached the last day of our
ACEs Youth Strength and Conditioning
and got back home about 9.30 that night.
And so the days are super long, but like fulfilling because you're building relationships
with a bunch of people. You're providing a bunch of value for them that they're taking and like
improving their lives with. And that contribution that I'm able to make that small piece of it to
like empower them, hopefully to make some better decisions, especially the kids.
And by the way, side note here, Mike Pullboy, the kids, they love him. He's such a good coach. He basically came in and swept me
off their feet. They had their own little Ric Flair thing. And I was like, what the fuck? I've
been doing this for a year. They don't even like me that much. One of the kids gave him a card.
Anyhow, it's really fulfilling because you're making an impact. You're contributing to them
in hopefully a really big way. And the information and the feelings and the things that they're getting from you at the CrossFit gym,
hopefully that that is slowly spreading to the people closest within their circle.
And I mean, what a better thing to be able to do in life
to know that you're contributing to people that are going to go out and contribute as well.
It's got that nice chain effect in there.
Aaron.
Aaron, thank you so much.
I think you donated to the majority of the shows that I've done.
I really appreciate that, man.
Thank you a lot.
Do you typically lean towards educational books
or do you just read for pleasure in other genres and stuff?
I see you have a lot on the box, buddy.
I only really read and listen to books on finance, books on business management, books on
leadership, books on communication. I read a lot of biographies on people or the starts of companies
and things like that because I love to hear that story, that rise to the top kind of story and all the trials and turbulence that
came during that but no I don't I don't read um no I don't read just for pleasure like I'm not
like a Harry Potter Potter fan or I don't read any of those type of novels or like some of the
stuff that you see Dave Kasher read like these classic novels and things like that I strictly
like to have the information um that I could read or listen to and then apply.
And I'm a really, really hands-on guy in terms of how I need to learn.
So if I have information from a book or something like a course or something like that that I took,
then I have to immediately go back within the same day or very shortly thereafter and apply that information because otherwise I
don't really retain it. And one of the things that I've done this year is actually reduce the
amount of books that I read or listen to and try to apply them more or re-listen to a few that I
had in the past that gave me a lot of value that were good books that made a big impact on what I
was doing and try to re-get that information.
Because I truly believe that as human beings,
we don't really need to learn a lot more all the time as much as we just need to be reminded.
So that's kind of where I'm at right now.
I really was on a kick for like a book or two a month
for a long time.
And I thought that that quality
gave me some validity or something like that.
I think the reason why too, and this is something that I've kind of done
a lot throughout my life is I feel like I'm this ping pong ball, right? Like Harry Potter.
Oh, young Clark truth.
I know people that read a book a week, but what?
Yeah.
I mean, and I would be, I'd be lying to say that I didn't do that a little bit myself.
Right?
Like I'd be like, Oh, I found this thing that on average CEOs of major companies read like
three books a month.
So I'm reading three books a month now.
And I realized like, fuck, no, fuck no it's like um it's way more
about the applied material like you'd be better off reading like three books a year but extracting
as much value and information as you can are those books and then like like applying it like you'd be
far far more beneficial than that than just the number of shit that you're bringing in i will i will tell you that um hold on there is some other uh jesus again
um it it is very filling i love our members and i love to see them succeed in a way that they think
i've been coaching since uh 2019 yeah it's great, for me, especially with like the firefighters, like I really love that job, like a lot like that's it was great. Like there was a period of time, especially in the pandemic, like where I was like, fuck, do I do I really want to keep the brick and mortar like open because that's a lot of expenses as opposed to like with the firefighter contracts i there's other than my time and like my gas and you could maybe include the maintenance
on the car if you want to be a real stickler about it but besides that the fucking uh the return on
investment on that is huge because there's no overhead the overhead's super low like like i
said it's like gas in the car um and when I work with those individuals, like the firefighters and
stuff like that, that feels really, really rewarding. Because when you go in there and
I'm dealing with a firefighter that maybe has been dealing with like a shoulder thing for
months. And here's the thing with that group of people, those people with the firefighters,
especially, they don't really say shit. Like they're not, like majority of them aren't going to complain. So you go in there and I'm
like, Hey, how's your shoulder been? It seems like it's moving a little bit weird. And they're like,
Oh yeah, it's been bothering me a little bit. And I'm like, Oh, how long? They're like six months.
I'm like, what? That's a long time, dude. What's going on with it? Like, Oh, my whole arm is numb.
Like, what the fuck? Like, why don't you say something? So like, but being able to then
give them the tools and the resources to fix their shoulder or to alleviate it a pain or give them back their range of motion.
And then they come back to me the next time I stop at the firehouse and they're like, dude,
I was on call for this one thing and I was reaching up and grabbed it and I had no pain
in my shoulder. And I was like, fuck yeah, I could like move all around and like do my job better.
I was like, holy shit. Like that, That's hugely rewarding because I know that the impact
that I make on those individuals are the ones that are going around town, keeping us safe,
helping us during these emergencies. And to be able to have a small contribution to them
and what they're able to do so they could do it better is really fulfilling for me because I'm
helping the people that help the community. So that's huge and so
much more rewarding. But I was talking a little bit, I want to make this statement. This might
be give you guys a little bit insight more on me. I feel like I'm this ping pong ball. Remember the
old game that's like the paddles moved pong and the ball would just kind of like bounce back and
forth and you just kind of kept the ball in there so especially like with this book so when i um started and i own the affiliate on my own or like people would be talking to me
about uh about you know business or something like that because i'm a business owner now um
i i feel like i'm the ball and the two pongs or paddles the two paddles excuse me are uh a
superiority complex i could do this better than anybody.
No one's as good as me in crippling insecurity. I'm like, fuck, I suck. And this is never going
to work. Who do I think I am to do this? So those two paddles move and I'm that ball that just kind
of bounces back and forth, back and forth. But when I hit that side, that makes me feel like,
okay, I'm insecure. I'm in over my head. This isn't But when I hit that side, that makes me feel like, okay, I'm insecure.
I'm in over my head. This isn't something that I should be doing or maybe I'm not capable of.
I try to leverage that. So rather than leaning into it or succumbing to it, I'm like, okay,
so what could I do now that I could build my confidence? Not fictitiously, not like fake it till you make it type shit. But literally like what skill set can I start to improve or start to work on that would help raise my confidence and lower that insecurity?
Not like I said, because I'm faking till I make it, but it's an earned confidence.
It's because, no, I developed these skills.
You know, I tried new things.
I made the mistakes.
I learned from them.
And now I'm growing from it.
the mistakes I learned from them. And now I'm growing from it. And that kind of the books and the learning and all that really helped with that side of it, especially as I owned the business all
on my own. Because you feel like you're so connected to your affiliate. Like, fuck, it's
such a personal job. When somebody leaves your gym, you're like, oh, fuck, I suck. And at the
same time, it's like, no, you don't. Well you don't well maybe you suck but no necessarily it really has nothing to do with you a lot of times and if it does and you get feedback on you
know hey i left because of this then great now rather than defending your ego and being like
well that person doesn't fucking know anything again lean into that leverage it and say okay
does what this person said have validity and can i work on this to change it to make it a little bit better you know and that's kind of kind of rolling back everybody comments on that that Phil Knight book
the shoe dog sometimes some of these best books are ones that people most people that like aren't
like super popular like the one on how to be a great communicator.
There's another one that's behind me.
I can't really see that one.
But that one was great, and I'd never heard of that book before.
Samantha, you had a question?
I'm going to end on this, I think.
Can you dive in a bit more about this firefighter program?
I only know bits and pieces of it.
Yes, I can.
Trying to think how to position this.
If you wanted to get your own contract
or specifically what do I do with the file?
Okay, I won't get into how to get the contract
and the business side of it
and what you need to do to prove
that it's actually worth it to the city or to the department. We'll save that for another time because that
might bore most people on that side of it. But here's what I do with them. I'm scheduled at
one particular station each month, usually three to four days a week, depending on what's going on.
I go to that station. And when I get there, I do a wide variety of things. I usually have an
in-body scanner with me. I bought it a couple of years ago for our nutrition reset that we do out
here at the gym. But you could close it down and I bring it with me to the station. So I usually
show up and I'll go there and ask everybody how they're feeling. And that's a very broad question,
but I use it just as kind of like a icebreaker a little bit like, Hey, what's up guys? How's
everybody feeling today? And then I'll start going down the line like, Hey, and I'm making
these ends up. Jim, last time we talked, dude, you had a little bit with your shoulder thing.
Has that thing gotten better? Right. And you start to get real specific, you know,
how's your hips been? Last time I said, Hey, you're moving kind of a little funny. Hey,
you're moving a little slow today. What's going on with that low back? Uh, those types of things.
kind of a little funny. Hey, you're moving a little slow today. What's going on with that low back? Those types of things. And once I start to get into the conversation with them, things start
to come out. Hey, I have been dealing with this thing with my back or hey, I have been doing
something with my shoulder. And then I'll go and do some mobility stuff with them. Like, okay,
let's just take 10 minutes real quick. Let's do a quick assessment of your shoulder. Let's look at
it. What type of restrictions are happening? Because normally when it comes to mobility
things, you could do two things with it. You could either strengthen or you lengthen,
right? Pretty simple. So in terms of like, you know, if you got hit by a bus and there's an
issue, then that's kind of outside of the, that realm, right? That's different. But if you have
one of those injuries that just kind of, not even an injury, like a muscle tightness or an ache,
that's just kind of there, but you don't know why chances are you need to strengthen it or you need
to lengthen it. And it rhymes so you can remember it. And so I'll work with them on
that a little bit. If everybody's all good at that station, I'll try to pressure them into an
in-body scanner. I usually get them scanned once a year for sure. Like everybody in the department
once per year, at least I try to capture everybody in the department. If not doing it on kind of this
quarterly basis or so with them.
And then we'll do that.
Usually once they get scanned, the conversation about diet starts to open up,
which is cool because since I live at the firehouse,
I joke around with some of the guys I'm closer with,
and I'll start like opening the cabinets.
I mean like, hey, well, this shit could go.
Well, this shit could go.
Well, this is going to help you.
And we'll start to have those conversations or work with them on that. Uh, that could be really, um, like in depth sometimes where I could work with these guys like closely for a long
period of time with their diet, or it could just be some simple questions to like get them off on
the right track. And majority of the firefighters, as you guys know, too, are like, they're independent
capable people. So a lot of times once you kind of set them on the right track or even just give them the accountability of like hey these numbers ain't right and you know they ain't right
that helps them a ton to kind of like keep them to be like okay i'm back on track now you kind
of showed me the numbers of what what i thought was happening and now this is confirmed and
i can move on to um to to to correct those things uh and then sometimes I roll up and I just basically like
if the crew does CrossFit in particular
and I show up,
they're going to be like,
Oh, fuck.
Hey, Suze is here.
And the rest of the guys of the crew come out
and I literally just run it
like a CrossFit class at my affiliate.
So we'll just get in.
I'll write up a workout on the board
based off how they're feeling
and what they've done for that day.
There's no particular program because a lot of these guys do their own thing. And I only see
them, you know, very like if you're at my manager station, I'll probably see you two or three times
a month. And then I may not see you again for multiple, multiple months, just with how the
schedule works out. You figure I'm managing nine stations, um, three battalions. Um, so A, B,
A shift, B shift and C shift across nine stations. So to keep up with all of it is pretty tough.
But if you get the crew that's into it, that's into CrossFit, like one station, all the guys
did CrossFit and they were all signed up for the Open.
So during the Open time, when I went to that station, we literally did the Open workouts
and I judged them and helped set up all the stuff.
So that was a lot of fun.
But so that's basically what I, what I do with them. And, uh, I work with the recruits for the Academy as well. Um, so we start all of them off with, uh, with a movement assessment.
I teach them what I call the big three, which is going to be the squat, the deadlift and the press.
Um, and then, and I, and I use those two to see how well in tune they are with like moving with
their bodies. And, um, I also use that to see any mobility restrictions tune they are with like moving with their bodies and um i also use that
to see any mobility restrictions like right off the bat for those major lifts because those major
lifts are also they're going to see outside while they're doing their training and everything else
and then i'll do an in-body scan with them at the beginning of the academy so we could kind of
monitor what that was like at the beginning versus what that was like at the end um i also do a short
mobility assessment with them because i say that's kind of the beginning versus what that was like at the end. I also do a short mobility assessment with them.
Cause I say that's kind of the crystal ball into like,
is something going to come up in the Academy?
So I'll test her hip flexion.
We'll test her ankle flexion.
I'll test a little bit of their shoulder mobility,
super basic stuff.
It's not,
it's not like crazy in detail,
but again,
it just kind of gives me the like scope of like,
okay,
is there anything that's jumping out at me right away that we need to be
aware of?
And then, and then we'll actually go through the movements and I'll teach the squat. I'll teach the back squat. I'll teach the deadlift and I'll teach to the strict press.
And it's extremely simple. Uh, it's extremely fundamental. And that's all I focus on. Like,
we're not, we don't get fancy with it. I keep it to the basics. I keep it to the fundamentals and we try to do them really, really well. Like that's kind of the goal.
And so that's, that's what I do with them in terms of like the actual job that I show up and I
perform. And, and then with a little more pleasant and fire department, I just work with them through
their academy. So day one, I go out on the tower. i do a little talk i do a little uh introduction um of
who i am and what to expect uh during their physical training during the academy time and
then they show up to the gym uh two days a week usually i have done four days we've done three
days but the cadence the last like year or two has been two days a week and they show up at the gym
for an hour before they go over to the tower and And what I do with them is that's basically like the academy is normally like 20 to 22
weeks, I think.
And I get them for like 18 out of those weeks.
There's other stuff that goes on where they don't make it into the gym for those times.
But I teach them.
It's really it's an elongated like on-ramp class.
So if you were to come and show up in the first couple of weeks, you'd be like, I thought they did CrossFit. This seems a little like slower. This seems like you're
breaking these modalities into individual parts. And I do that on purpose because when I got a
group of 20 or 22 guys and I only have one hour and I assume all of them know nothing, that's not
always the case. Some of them are basically starting at ground zero, but a lot of them
have pretty good, like, uh, experience. Some of them may even belong to crossfit gyms and stuff like that um and i build it up uh as i would
the uh on-ramp class but i extend that over multiple weeks so if you were to show up like
i said the first week you kind of be like this doesn't really seem like crossfit necessarily
like they're learning some of the movements but they're not necessarily doing the metcon
and that would be because we're trying to get what down their mechanics.
That's right.
That's all we're focusing on for those first couple of weeks, the mechanics.
Um, and then after their first like 10 sessions or so, and we've gone through the mechanics,
we're just looking for consistency.
So then we elongate some of the stuff.
So instead of teaching back squat and being long winded or being really like, you know,
critical on teaching it the same way I would, uh, the same way you would see it on an L one. Now they get some weight on the bar and now we have
a heavy day. Um, and then, uh, uh, then it slowly ramps up. So then if you were to show back up,
um, like, you know, six, eight weeks into it, after we developed the mechanics,
I'm feeling comfortable with it. They all know what they're doing. We've seen that consistency.
We've seen the consistency, maybe, uh, the moving a little faster. I've seen consistency as they move under load,
meeting with some weight on them and stuff. Then you'll start to see the, um, the more,
uh, Metcons come in during that time. Um, and I also run it a little bit more indicative of
main site programming when I'm doing the Academy at my gym. So when they come in and they have a
heavy day, we're just doing back squat, um, you know, five sets of five all the way across. And that would be their whole workout
for the day. I put in a bunch of accessory work and stuff like that. Uh, I front load that as
kind of like the warmup and everything else. Um, so they don't just come in and back squat,
right? Like there's a whole thing to it, but that's pretty much how I, that's pretty much
how I run it. And, uh, and like I said, by, by like
six or eight weeks in, then I'm kind of running a normal CrossFit class. And then those last couple
of weeks, it basically converts into where they, they do the same workout as my, um, as my class.
So then I just come, I just come in and basically run the CrossFit gym. Now I will say I package
it differently. So, um, you know, I'm not having them climb rope.
I'm not having them necessarily get upside down, uh, get a little inverted, but I'm not having
handstand pushups or anything like that. Um, we're not doing a ton of, uh, Olympic weightlifting,
um, and things like that, just because it's gonna, well, the Olympic weightlifting we do,
but some of the higher school gymnastics and stuff, I stay away from just because, uh, I want
them to get the biggest bang out of their buck while they're in here. And I have to justify
everything I do to, um, the city and stuff. So what I mean by that is if I have rope climbs
in the workout and now all of a sudden they lost one of the recruits lost, I don't mean it that
way, but like, you know, they slid down or something happened and they burnt all the skin
off their hands or something like that. Then the department's going to come to me, um, and be like,
Hey, we had so-and-so and like, why were you having them climb rope today? And if you're like,
Oh, you know, and you can't justify it as opposed to just having them do some strict pull-ups or
something like that. Um, so you do have to navigate that a little bit. Uh, but a lot of
them will convert over and become members of the gym afterwards. And in which case they are doing all the same skills as the class.
So there,
it is a little bit void of some of the higher school gymnastics you would
see just because I,
again,
have to justify everything kind of through the department,
through the city.
So Samantha H.
So this is a county,
county wide contract for all the departments in your county.
No,
so we don't do county. It's all like city. So yeah, it's city wide. County-wide contract for all the departments in your county? No.
We don't do county.
It's all city.
So yeah, it's city-wide.
So what I do with Livermore Pleasanton,
it's for the cities of Livermore Pleasanton.
What I do for Hayward Fire Department is for Hayward Fire Department.
Livermore, Pleasanton, and Hayward
are all Alameda County.
So it's broken by city, not necessarily by county.
We do have the Alameda county fire department
i don't have a contract with them but um it's all it's all uh um city-based um and again i think
next time we could get into if you guys want to know like the how i got the contract how do i
justify it to the city um because that's more of the like the business side of it right because
the city just like everybody else they want to side of it, right? Because the city,
just like everybody else, they want to see a return on their investment. You have to justify your costs. How much do you charge for it? All these kind of logistical questions, I'll save it
for next time I'm doing a solo show and holding down the fort here. So that way I got some more
meat on the bone to talk about. What is an Embody scan? Okay, I'll show you this real quick i should reach out to them they should
fucking sponsor the show they really should show you what i use we'll end on this here
um sorry one sec while i bring it up
well okay so this is um this is a uh an embody scan here um this is the one that i have the 270 and basically it just gives you a little bit more of an in-depth on what's going on so it'll tell
you obviously your body weight um but it'll give you your skeletal muscle mass like how much muscle
you have on your body and it'll give you your body fat percentage um and so oh shit i didn't click
it i gotta change the screen sorry guys this is the one yeah the embody 270 and they have fancier
ones that that do a lot of stuff like we'll tell you kind of like your whatever like hydration and
things um but this one folds up and just is super portable.
And so that's why we decided to go with this one because grace also does, um, uh, the nutrition
reset that we do. We call it the challenge, but it's not like a weight loss challenge. So
the, the, the fitting, the word doesn't necessarily fit it that well, but when she does her, uh,
nutrition reset stuff, we also got this one to travel. She did it with Stanford Hospital out here in Palo Alto, where she took the program that she developed to that
hospital. And so it's nice to have one that folds up because it sits in the affiliate the majority
of time in the office there, which is used for the members and everything else. But when we do
need to bring it somewhere, we close it up and we could take it. And so yeah, it gives us some cool insights, but it also saves
all the information. And then I could plug into the back of this or extract all the information
that's on there and then upload it onto my computer and save all of it. And again, all the
metrics and data are super important to keep when you're dealing with the fire department because
they all want to see shit on paper. And by they all, I mean like the city and stuff like that. So when the department
goes to justify like, hey, we've been paying this person X amount of dollars, they've been coming in
and they go, okay, great. What have they been doing? And now you could bring this in and we
could show the mobility assessment and hopefully the improvements over time with the department's
mobility. You could show the body fat percentage and skeletal muscle mass, the average weight of
the department or individuals. And hopefully that improves over time, which all those matter in terms of their healthcare costs.
So when you talk about the mobility improvement, if you're not going out with these small little aches and pains, that could just be solved by just somebody with a little bit of knowledge helping you do the exercises to get yourself out of pain-free.
You have less people that go out on workers' comp stuff, less visits to the doctor's office, less cost in healthcare
things.
If you have one of these in-body scans and we're making sure that everybody has the correct
skeletal muscle mass, the body fat percentage, they're getting these numbers, which helps
keep them accountable.
Then again, we could go back to the city and I can show that, hey, look, everybody dropped
a bunch of body fat percentage, which therefore is going to help with long-term healthcare
costs for the department and for these guys when they retire and everything else later on.
So that's kind of why if you have some sound metrics, the city and stuff like that, well,
it'll be much easier to justify your spending. It'll be much easier to justify everything you do.
If you just kind of show up and do it and you're not really documenting anything,
especially things that are important for them to see,
or you can make them important for them to see by saying,
hey, these things do this, and then it's going to save you money here on the back end,
then it's going to get a little tougher to get your contract.
So that's why I particularly like the InBody Scan 270.
And for that, that's the only free one you fucking get embody someone's gonna kill me for plugging
them out that well without them sponsoring us you need to fucking sponsor us embody um
and so yeah so that's why that's what i use that's what i embody scan is and uh that's the reason why
i use it uh question top eyes do you charge a membership for the body not a membership when
you first come in we do your first one for free i think they're like 20 bucks a scan after that if you want to get it
um and then we also great like grace does stuff where she'll uh include a um in body scan and
then kind of like this consultation on like you know where you need to go in terms of your
lifestyle choices and eating that will be optimal for your health.
Zachary, Sousa, do you find that body fat percentage are pretty accurate? Do you cross reference it with cow pillows? No. Like the pinch test or whatever. The closest thing we've done it
with is like a dunk scan, like in the DEXA. The DEXA scans where like you go in there or does
a scan and they're pretty accurate.
You might have a few percentage points that are off here and there,
but from our uses in terms of just justifying that there was some sort of change
and then just having some sort of baseline metric, this works well.
And since we're reusing the same thing to scan them, that same baseline,
it basically runs. It's kind of like the same principle of like,
hey, the 400 meter track you run is, you know, whatever, 380. So it's not necessarily
400 meter, but if you're measuring your 380 each time, you're still
going to see that improvement. You just, you know, oh, fuck, that was probably a terrible analogy.
Sorry. And I made you all stupider because of that analogy.
But yeah,
yeah, that's the thing. It gets a little personal, right? Especially if you're working with the female clientele. You're like, you know, yeah. So it just makes it a little bit easier.
And here's the other thing too, Zachary. It doesn't matter who does it, right? Because when
you do body fat percentage and stuff like that with like a pinch test or something, it doesn't matter who does it, right? Because when you do body fat percentage and stuff
like that with like a pinch test or something, it's like, can Zachary now be replaced? So if
you have a, and this is getting a little bit into the system side of it, but if you have
a metric that you're using and one person does it all, and for some reason you're either need
to be at the gym or you're going on to get another firefighter contract and then you send somebody else to go to that same test, it's like, will that give you... Yeah. Will that give
you the repeatability? Will it give you the baseline there to be consistent? Because some
of these things in terms of the way that I think is like, can I be replaced by another individual
that could keep giving me the same result, can produce the same result without me being here. And that's a really good line of thinking to have in terms of business,
because you want to be able to always develop some sort of system that's going to produce the
same result that you want without you having to be there. And if you do that right from the get-go,
it makes life so much easier. But if you do it in your business, at your affiliate or anything else
you do, and then you have to backtrack into it years later, it becomes a lot tougher. So it just
gives me a consistency, whether it's me doing it or whether it's not. Todd Myers, are along the
thinking as long as you measure the same system that should be accurate.
Yeah, that's right. And it's not like I'm not going for like crazy accuracy for these guys
and gals. I'm basically just going for like some sort of baseline where we could start from.
So take it for what it is. Like if I measure somebody and it shows that they're 12.3% body
fat, but if we did it through a DEXA scan or dunk or something like that, and they're 12, you know, 0.3% body fat. But if we did it, you know, through a DEXA
scan or dunk or something like that, and they were like, Oh no, it's actually 11.6. Like,
does that matter that much for my use? Um, and the answer to that is no, uh, we just want to
make sure that they're healthy. And the biggest thing we focus on too, for the long-term health
is, um, is, uh, skeletal muscle mass. That's the hugest thing i'm like dude the more muscle you got
on the body the healthier you're gonna be get that muscle mass up so that way when you're when
you're 80 and shit if it's still high you're gonna live a lot longer um aaron will ai replace any of
these tools that uh including what the one-on-one offers to help the individual not in our lifetime i think
that the human touch is always going to be trump everything at least in the you know in the next 50
years um once it gets realistic enough to where you can't tell the difference like we're already
kind of seeing a little bit of that happen like online with a video and in photo format like then
shit might get weird but for right now you definitely need a human and photo format, then shit might get weird. But for right now, you definitely need a human.
And I think we're going to see the major shifts in the industry.
I think we're going to see come in terms of lawyers.
I think AI will replace lawyers quickly.
I think AI will replace surgeons.
Things like that. Things where the information is already there,
you just need to compile it in a certain way. Or you need something with really precision that is going to give you the same exact result regardless of sleep or mood that day or something
like that. So you could see that if a robot was built and you were all hooked up
to this machine, it could probably perform a surgery on somebody with a higher accuracy than
the best surgeon. And eventually it will get there. So that's what I think the first type
of things we'll start to see AI take over with. Samantha H., end with a favorite book for an
affiliate owner. That's a perfect ending. There is a lot of them. There's a lot of them.
But I will say this. There's a lot of different categories of when we're talking about like,
hey, recommend a book. Well, it's like, okay, am I recommending a book in terms of finance?
Is it in terms of systems? Is it in terms of systems? Is it in terms of communication? Is it
in terms of leadership and dealing with your staff? There's lots of different ways you could
go with it. But let me see. Give me one second, guys. Sorry. I'll bring it up. But this is where
I think you should start.
Hold on.
I wanted to give you a visual for it.
Sorry.
I see you guys want to fucking, you're just clicking around on here.
This is where I would start. If you want to add some
value to your personal affiliate or you're going to start an affiliate or anything like that,
Chris Cooper's books. These really helped me a ton. Two Brain Business, Chris Cooper,
Gym Owner's Handbook, Two Brain Business 2.0, Help First. You really can't miss with Chris Cooper and his books because all these books
behind me, I'm sure Chris Cooper is really familiar with, but he's positioned these books in a way
that take a lot of this information, a lot of the basic foundational information,
but then apply it to an affiliate owner context. So you don't have to read something abstractly and figure out like,
hey, how does this apply into my affiliate?
You could read one of Chris Cooper's books and then be able to not only apply it right away,
but kind of take some of this information from some of these other books and distill it down.
It's exactly how it fits into the affiliate.
So, okay.
Recommend a book for pure entertainment.
My version of entertainment might be different, but Two Brain Business Books is for sure where you want to go. If you guys want something for entertainment, go top shelf for this bad boy.
go top shelf for this bad boy 48 laws of power i read from this the last two times but this i mean it's dense as fuck so and
i mean it's not for the light-hearted right it's got that false that small font no pictures and
shit um but this like this is like the dark side of self-help. I'm pretty sure this book is like illegal in prison too.
But yeah, this is great.
Robert Greene is a fantastic author.
And I would say that book has never been opened.
Not one time.
Okay.
All right, guys.
Thank you so much for hanging out with us.
Two hours, 15 minutes. I appreciate
everybody. I appreciate you guys interacting. I also appreciate you bearing with me through the
weekend. You guys could tell the difference between if I talk about things that I'm
interested in and I know versus trying to host a competition thing. Not exactly my strongest suit,
but we made it happen. So thank you guys. Thank you for staying with us. Sevan will be back tomorrow with the Tyson Bajent show, I do believe.
So thank you guys.
Thank you to all the sponsors once again for holding it down.
CA Peptides, Paper Sheet Coffee, BirthFit, Toast Bases,
and I don't know what else to say.
Grill your ass off. And course paper sheet coffee all right guys
bye-bye have a good day