Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Paul Getter: Become a Marketing Mogul | E99
Episode Date: January 25, 2021Meet the ultimate internet marketing nerd!  In today’s episode, we are chatting with Paul Getter, consultant, social media expert, speaker and serial entrepreneur. He is the founder and CEO of The... Internet Marketing Nerds and is in the top 1% of ad spenders of Facebook!   In 2009, Paul Getter was broke, struggling, and delivering phone books out of the back of his car to make ends meet. After teaching himself about the power of internet marketing, he created The Internet Marketing Nerds and quickly became one of the most sought after marketing experts in the world. He has spent over one billion dollars running ads and campaigns for his clients, and has helped scale numerous businesses into eight figures per year. Paul has worked with famed clients like Tai Lopez, Les Brown, Grant Cardone, Lewis Howes, and Tim Storey. He is one of the most successful and sought after digital marketers in the world.  In today’s episode, we discuss how Paul got his start working with Facebook paid ads, how to capitalize on organic reach, and we’ll uncover he was able to snag top-tier clients. We’ll then get into the golden rules of paid advertising, why personal branding is so important, and go over the fundamentals of funnels and why they are so important.   Sponsored by Podcast Republic: https://www.podcastrepublic.net/podcast/1368888880  Clubhouse Master Negotiation on Feb 2nd Event with John Lee Dumas, David Meltzer, Heather Monahan and more!:  https://www.joinclubhouse.com/event/9mWKeJnm  Social Media:  Follow YAP on IG: www.instagram.com/youngandprofiting Reach out to Hala directly at Hala@YoungandProfiting.com Follow Hala on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Follow Hala on Instagram: www.instagram.com/yapwithhala Follow Hala on ClubHouse: @halataha Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com  Timestamps:  01:39 - Paul’s Background in Theology and the Transition to Marketing 03:26 - Paul’s Facebook Page Beginnings for His Church 07:40 - Facebook’s Original Organic Reach 12:36 - Paul’s Thoughts on Clubhouse 15:42 - How Paul Reached High Level Clients 20:11 - Meaning of ‘Relationships Over Revenue’ 22:08 - Networking Tips 25:47 - Why Paul Wanted to Start His Personal Brand 29:27 - How Much Money Paul Has Spent on Paid Ads For Clients 30:33 - Golden Rules of Paid Ads 34:58 - Paul’s Perspective on Permission-Based Marketing 37:27 - Thoughts on Data Sharing and Apple’s New Policy 39:53 - Ways Our Data is Being Tracked 42:34 - Line of Ethics with Paid Ads 44:30 - Defining a ‘Funnel’ and its Aspects 54:50 - How to Get Your Funnels Right 57:57 - Paul’s Love of Side Hustles 1:06:23 - Paul’s Secret to Profiting in Life  Mentioned in the Show:  Paul’s Website: https://www.paulgetter.com/ Paul’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-getter/ Paul’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paul/ Paul’s Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/PaulGetter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode of YAP is sponsored in part by Shopify.
Shopify simplifies selling online and in-person
so you can focus on successfully growing your business.
Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com-profiting.
You can crush your fingers and all your toes
during a data center migration.
You can knock on wood, pluck a dozen for leaf clovers
or look to your lucky stars for a successful office expansion.
You could hold your breath, shut your eyes, and say all the well wishes to help avoid cyber
attacks.
But none of that truly helps you.
Because next level moments need the next level network.
With the security, reliability, and expertise to take your business further.
AT&T Business.
The network you can rely on.
Hey, young and profitors, quick announcement before I get into
the show. I'm now on Clubhouse and you can find me at
Halla Taha. I love this new app and I've been spending a
ton of time on there and starting February every other
Tuesday. I'm going to be hosting a live masterclass with past
the app guests on Clubhouse from 4.30pm to 6pm
Eastern time. On February 2nd, our kickoff event, John Lee Dumas, David Meltzer, Jason
Waller, and Heather Monahan will be joining me to discuss influence and negotiation. And
the best part is we'll be taking live questions from the audience. If you wanna get in on this event, follow me on Clubhouse at Hallitaha
and mark your calendars for February 2nd.
I'll put the Clubhouse link in our show notes.
You're listening to YAP,
Young and Profiting Podcast,
a place where you can listen, learn and profit.
Welcome to the show.
I'm your host, Hallitaha,
and on Young and
Profiting Podcast, we investigate a new topic each week and interview some of
the brightest minds in the world. My goal is to turn their wisdom into actionable
advice that you can use in your everyday life, no matter your age, profession, or
industry. There's no fluff on this podcast, and that's on purpose. I'm here to
uncover value
from my guests by doing the proper research and asking the right questions. If you're new to
the show, we've chatted with the likes of XFBI agents, real estate moguls, self-made billionaires,
CEOs, and bestselling authors. Our subject matter ranges from enhancing productivity,
had to gain influence, the art of entrepreneurship, and more.
If you're smart and like to continually improve yourself,
hit the subscribe button because you'll love it here
at Young & Profiting Podcast. This week on YAP, we're chatting with Paul
Getter, consultant, social media expert, speaker, and serial entrepreneur.
Paul is the founder and CEO of the Internet Marketing
Nerds. In 2009, Paul Getter was broke, struggling, and delivering phone books out of the back
of his car to make ends meet. After teaching himself about the power of Internet marketing,
he created the Internet Marketing Nerds and quickly became one of the most sought-after
marketing experts in the world. He has spent over $1 billion running ads and campaigns for his clients and has helped
scale numerous businesses into eight figures per year.
Paul has worked with famed clients like Tai Lopez, Les Brown, Grant Cardone, Lewis House
and Tim Story.
In today's episode, we discuss how Paul got his start working with Facebook paid ads.
We'll understand how to capitalize on organic reach, and we'll uncover how Paul was able
to snag top-tier clients.
We'll then get into his golden rules of paid advertising, why personal branding is so
important, and we'll go over the fundamentals of funnels.
Hey Paul, welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thank you very much, Holly.
How did I get on Young and Profiting?
I'm like, I'm too old to be on Young and Profiting,
but thank you very much for having me here.
Oh, we actually have listeners of all ages,
and I tend to interview people who are older than me
and older than our listeners
because you guys have the wisdom to share.
And so there's no age limit on young and profiting podcasts.
Don't worry about it.
Okay.
Good, good, because I've been on old and profiting podcasts before, but it's the first time on
young and profiting podcasts.
We're not at...
We're not at...
Of course, of course.
And this is not going to be stale, like, old and profiting podcasts is going to be super
fresh.
Good. So, let's talk about everything marketing. So you are like a paid advertising guru, right?
We're both in the marketing world. So we have plenty to talk about. I think we're going
to jive really well together. And so you've worked with super high profile guests, like
Grant Cardone, Tilo Pez, Tim Story, who was just on my show.
Really? I was just on my show. Really?
I was just chatting with Tim yesterday.
So awesome guy.
Good for me.
He is so amazing.
I love that guy.
Oh my gosh, we hit it off.
So he's a great guy.
And you've worked with everybody, Gary Vee.
I mean, it's incredible, you know,
who you've had on your list of clients.
And so we're going to get into that,
had a network, and had to reach those high profile people.
But first, I want to talk about your come-up story.
You actually went to school and you had a degree in theology.
That's really strange.
Some people don't even know what that means.
Tell us about that and how you went from theology to marketing without any formal training.
Okay.
Yes.
Again, thank you very much for having me here.
How it's amazing to connect with you in your audience.
So yeah, I got a degree in theology.
And for those that don't know what theology is,
a study of God, I went to Bible college
and often called seminary.
And one of the things that I quickly learned
after graduating with a degree in theology,
that it wasn't a very marketable degree. You feel on an application and say, you got a degree in theology that it wasn't a very marketable degree.
You feel on an application and say you got a degree in theology, people are like, okay,
I don't know if you're going to work for us, you know, and things like that.
I remember feeling on an application one time, someone said, theology, isn't that the
study of rocks?
I'm like, no, that's geology.
So yeah, I brought up my father was a minister and really if someone gets a degree in theology,
they're not necessarily going to school to figure out how to make money, it's more of a personal
development type of path. But quickly after graduating with a degree in theology, I realized,
hey, it's not very marketable. And then I kind of found myself. I was always involved in tech or nerdy type stuff.
And so I just kind of begin to explore at this time.
It was more of kind of like building websites and search engine optimization and things like that.
Yeah.
And so you for I think Facebook is like your main platformer or at least used to
be. We'll get into maybe what you're using today. But you first got onto it because you created
a Facebook page for your church. Tell us how you did that and how that opened your eyes to
the possibilities of what Facebook could do. Yeah. So you do amazing research. You know,
how do you know these details about it?
You know what?
I'm just on point.
We don't screw around here at Young and ProfitingPod.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you found the great details.
So, yeah, when I, one of my friends was going off the college
and they said, hey, you need to get on Facebook.
And I remember at this time, Facebook was kind of like games.
They had Farmville and silly things like that.
And I was like, I don't need to get on that.
That's just the waste of time.
And eventually I caved in and got on Facebook started a Facebook.
And what year was this?
Like 1870.
No, I'm just kidding.
No, I think it's probably around 2008 or so, 2008, 2009, somewhere around there.
And so it was Facebook, it was in its very beginning, infancy stages.
And again, the trend then was these micro games inside of the platform and you could play
games endlessly.
And it was less socializingizing more about playing games. But eventually I caved in, got on Facebook and started playing around and building Facebook
pages. And I noticed that a few businesses would have Facebook pages. And so I was like,
hi, you know, I really didn't have a business at this time, but I thought, well, maybe
set up a Facebook page for our church, well, maybe set up a Facebook page
for our church.
And so I set up a Facebook page for our church
and just the picture and a little bit of information
and everything like that and put a couple videos
on there and stuff.
And I remember a couple weeks later,
I went to church and there was this new family there.
And I asked him, I was like, where did you hear about us?
At, and they said, oh did you hear about us at?
And they said, Oh, we saw your Facebook page. And it was like a light bulb moment for me. I was like,
whoa, okay, these are real people. They found out about us from Facebook. They showed up. And it was
then I realized, okay, Facebook could be a platform that if used properly could help out a lot of businesses.
And so at that point, I began to kind of like dabble around
and connect with friends that had businesses
and say, hey, you know, you need to get on Facebook
and I saw a business opportunity at that point.
Yeah, so this is really interesting to me
because I think it's important for my listeners
to understand the need to take the opportunities in front of you.
So for example, you were really into your church, you had a theology degree, and you connected
the dots, you found this face, you realized that, you know, hey, I can start this Facebook
page.
And then your passion for starting marketing and working on Facebook kind of out grew your
passion for theology marketing and working on Facebook, kind of out-grue your passion for theology, right?
And so it's just so cool that you took that experience
and oftentimes people don't,
like they're too afraid to learn something new
and just to take on a new experience.
And I feel like that's the only way
you can really find your true passion
is to actually take those experiences.
Yeah, I think to better word it,
my passion in theology and church,
my faith, my relationship for that found a place where I could equally connect those and
and as I mentioned, a degree in theology isn't very marketable from a monetary standpoint and you
don't do it for that reason. It's kind of like someone that has a degree in bird watching.
Well, you may not make a whole lot of money in bird watching,
but if you built a course or a training
or something like that in bird watching,
well, there is an opportunity.
So it was a perfect fit where I could join the passion
and a business connect them together,
and it could grow from there.
Totally.
So let's talk about organic reach.
When you first started on Facebook,
it was like the Wild Wild West,
huge organic reach.
I mean, LinkedIn was kind of like that a couple years ago.
Now we see Clubhouse, which I want to talk to you about.
I just absolutely love Clubhouse.
I'm not sure if you're on it.
But like, tell us about Facebook.
What was the organic reach like when you were first on it?
And why does that happen?
Why do platforms lose organic reach over time?
Yeah, so it seems like every platform starts out like that.
And I'll explain the reason here in just a moment.
But yeah, so let's say for example,
you had a Facebook page of 100,000, 100,000
likes. I actually heard that Facebook is removing the metric of how many likes you have on
your Facebook page. That's going to be changing soon. But let's say you had 100,000 likes
on your Facebook page. If you would post something, a hundred thousand people would see it.
So, you know, instead of having a page of a hundred thousand people,
you'd post something and you'd get a hundred likes.
You would get a hundred thousand likes and comments.
And it was just, it was incredible.
And so, during that initial phase
when the organic reach was very high,
you could build Facebook pages.
We would build Facebook pages from zero to a million in a month, maybe two months.
And again, the organic reach was incredible.
I remember when things would go viral.
I had a small page, which the page that I had, that again, I started building, I was like
hobbies for fun. The name of the page was called had that again I started building them as like hobbies for fun
the name of the page was called I love Jesus and I posted something on
there it only had 200,000 likes on it but I would post something on there and it
would always get at least 200,000 300,000 likes and I remember as it grew it would
get 200,000 300,000 shares on post.
So you could imagine how the organic reach was completely different back then.
And then as you know, things just slowly, slowly started to go down.
And the reason why that happens is because of the audience on a social media platform,
it grows.
And so they wanna have a more intelligent timeline.
So, if you're following 5,000 people,
well, it's not necessarily the best timeline
that all 5,000 people, their content shows up.
So they begin to throttle the engagement
and the algorithm shows you what you engage with the
most because they feel like that's more effective. So as a platform grows for you to see and interact
with the stuff that is most important for you, they prioritize content based upon your engagement
and what's relevant to you at that moment versus a true, just organic
reach.
Got it.
So it's more like they keep changing their algorithm to make it more personal to you.
And then wouldn't you say also like more content creators, more competition, like as people
find out, something's getting big organic reach, all the content creators go flock there.
And then it's just more competition too.
Yeah, so it is. It's just the more people that get onto the platform,
the more that they have to change that algorithm to meet what you want to see,
or what they think. And that's why people oftentimes hate algorithms.
I call them algorithm monsters, is because they're like,
well, I'm not really seeing what I want to see
or I'm posting.
A lot of the, most of the times the people
that complain about the algorithm
is the content creators because their content
isn't being seen by as many people they think
should be seen.
And so yeah, it puts you in a position where content and what you do and the
quality is more important than just putting out, you know, silly, meaningless means or something
like that. Totally. So are you on Clubhouse? I am on Clubhouse. I am on Clubhouse. My user name
on Clubhouse is nerd or nerds. I don't know if a singular poor plural.
I think it's, I think it's just nerd.
I tried to get Paul.
My Instagram name is Paul, which is,
you know, that was a big trophy for me.
That's a main, wow.
Yeah, my Instagram name is Paul.
I tried to get Paul on Clubhouse,
but one of the founders of Clubhouse, his name is Paul.
So apparently he's not gonna give it up.
Okay, yeah, make sense.
Well, I've been loving that app.
I mean, that app has incredible organic reach,
incredible networking opportunities.
If people haven't heard of it,
it's like an audio only app you need an invite right now
to get on it, but it's growing super quickly.
And all my, I'm a LinkedIn influencer, right?
So I've got a big following on LinkedIn
and I have a lot of LinkedIn influencer friends.
We're all flocking to Clubhouse.
It's like the new hot thing.
So any thoughts around that platform?
Yeah, so I've played around with it.
My New Year's resolution for this year
is to become more my primary platform, as I mentioned,
is Instagram.
I've got over a million followers on Instagram,
very active and involved on Instagram,
but I do understand the importance of being
on multiple platforms and putting content out there.
And so I'm focusing in on YouTube
and also TikTok putting content out on them this year.
I've actually brought more people on my team to help me out with that.
And then all of a sudden, Clubhouse comes out.
And everybody's like, kid on Clubhouse.
So I jump on Clubhouse.
Number one, just to grab my username so nobody grabs it before me.
And I played around with it.
I heard someone explain it really well.
It's like the only live social media.
It's like truly live.
And not only that, it's kind of like an interactive podcast, which is cool.
So there's like that engagement where versus Instagram, for example, you post something
and then people respond to it whenever they see it or whatever.
But clubhouse is like, everybody's sitting around the dinner table talking and having a conversation.
So it's real live interaction. I think it's really cool and a huge potential.
Yeah, I love it. I mean, I do live streams all the time. And so when you're doing a live stream,
people are chatting questions, but it's not the same as hearing their voice.
And not to mention the fact that there's no videos,
so there's no pressure.
You could be driving in on clubhouse,
you could be doing chores in on clubhouse,
and it's just so stress-free.
That's what I love about it.
It's like no work.
I mean, it's time, but it's not really a lot of work to do,
so I love it.
It's funny when I first got on Clubhouse, trying to figure it out. And I just click on
some of these marketing rooms and people talking. And then automatically they push the button
or whatever and they put me on stage like, okay, talking now. I'm like, okay, okay.
You know, it's like this is how it works. You just jump in and then people tell you to talk.
I'm like, I don't even know what they're talking about.
And you just start rambling and they ask you a question.
So it is, it's really, like you said,
I don't even have my bow tie on for Clubhouse.
It's just, I'm ready to go at any time.
So yeah, it's cool.
Yeah.
I love it, man.
I swear, I put in, to everybody listening today
is a day where I put in my two weeks
notice to Disney streaming services and I swear one of the reasons was like I need more time
for Clubhouse.
I can't see this anymore.
Wow.
Wow.
So yeah, exciting.
Okay.
So you've interviewed a lot of people that I've interviewed before.
Like we said, Tim's story earlier, I'm sure there's so much overlap in terms of the people
who you've had as a client and who I've interviewed.
And Ty Lopez was actually your first big break.
How did you end up landing that big client?
And what is your advice in terms of reaching really high
level people in terms of your networking?
Yeah, so that's a great question.
A lot of times, as far as notable individuals,
Tai Lopez was one of the big names that I connected with initially.
But prior to that, I think that there was a lot of big wins.
It's the iceberg theory, there was a lot going on here before I started working with
Tai Lopez.
And of course, Tai Lopez, when I first started working with him, this was six years ago
or so, he was less prominent than he is now, still a very successful individual and doing
big stuff.
But I had a lot of big wins before that that where I had proven my skill and I was getting
results for other clients.
And really how did it happen?
Is it was a word of mouth referral?
It's my understanding.
I don't know all the details to it, but somehow one of the clients that I was working with
was at the barber shop talking to the barber
and just regular conversation was going on.
How's business going?
He's like, oh, great.
Things are really growing.
I'm working with this guy over in Florida, and he's been doing this.
This guy was a client of mine and he was talking to the barber about it.
That was the extent of the conversation.
Well, the next person in the barber seat was Tai Lopez.
Is either Tai Lopez or someone on his team,
they got talking and next thing, you know,
I'm getting a phone call and I didn't know
who Tai Lopez was and it was kind of a different field
of work that I was doing again at this point.
I was helping people grow their social media, grow their Facebook page, grow, help monetize
their presence and things like that.
So I got a phone call from a guy, hey, you know, I heard you were working with someone.
So tell us a little bit more about what you're doing.
And I'm just answering questions, just telling them what I'm doing and stuff.
And he told me, well, this is what we're doing.
And I pulled up their profile, started looking at it.
I'm like, oh, yeah, yeah.
I can cut your calls probably by 80, 90%.
And it wasn't anything that I just thought, yeah,
I could do that.
They're doing it wrong.
It was one of the things that I learned really quickly
is a lot of people were doing marketing in the early days
that they were running ads, but there
was no real system or a Facebook had it where you could just like click a button, launch
and add and it was going.
So a lot of people would just do that automatic ad population.
Well, it wasn't the best way to do it.
And so I thought, yeah, I can get your costs 80, 90% down. And the call ended in about
15, 20 minutes later. The individual told me they said, Hey, my brother Ty wants to know
if you could fly out to California tomorrow and have a conversation with us. I'm like,
well, this is strange. I want to fly me out there tomorrow. And I was like, oh, yeah, okay,
sounds good.
And so next thing, you know, I'm sitting in Ty's office talking with him. That was his brother
Ben that I initially had a conversation with. And I just had my little iPad there. I'm like,
yeah, so this is what you should do. This is what you're doing. And I remember at the end of the
conversation, Ty was like, Hey, Paul, you know what? I'm pretty sharp at marking. I could probably figure out how you're doing this,
but I don't want to waste my time.
I want to hire you.
When can you start?
And I was like, well, as soon as I go back to the hotel,
I can set up the ads.
And so went back to the hotel, set up the ads.
And I remember an hour or two later,
I took a screenshot and showed them,
okay, this is what you were doing.
This is what you're doing now. And
you know, Calsper click had dropped 90% using the method that I was using. He's like, okay,
let's, let's go. So that was kind of how I got, yeah, how I got connected with Tai Lopez.
Cool. Well, it goes to show the importance of relationships, right? You got it through a client
referral and making a good impression on everyone is so important. And you actually often say relationships over revenue, right?
So what does that mean exactly? Yeah, so here's the thing, there's a lot of times people
they in business. And I think maybe it's a natural tendency is to how can I say it just chase the money? You know, what can I do to make money?
And that's how we try to conceptualize a business is how to make money. And I think in the
infancy stages of a business, that is like, okay, what can I do to pay the bills? What can I do to
make money? And so you're trying everything. But when you reverse it and you say, how can
I help people? How can I build relationships? Granted, that is a longer process. And I've
done the reverse where it's like, what can I do to make money? And it's like, you know,
being an affiliate or doing, you know, click bank and things like that and you make money,
but you're not really helping, you're just making money.
And so the thing about making quick money is it disappears as quickly as it comes.
But when you build relationships with people and you authentically want to help people,
then that goes so much further. That's it lasts longer. And I had a lot of my coaching
students or clients during all of this craziness that we experienced in 2020 reach out to me.
Paul, Paul, what do I do? What do I do? You know, just kind of nervous and apprehensive.
And I just told him, like, help people, help people. You might have to help people in a different
way now. But if you help people,
you will always be in business
and the money will come from there.
Yeah, I completely, completely agree.
And it's one of the best ways to even get a mentor
is to just offer help and to help people
and to just always be a value and provide service.
So I totally agree there.
Do you have any networking hacks or tips
or a cool networking
story that you can share with us in terms of like a scrappy way that you got to meet someone or get
somebody like get your foot in the door in terms of a client? Yeah, so a couple different things.
Obviously, when it comes to social media, you're one DM away from anybody you want to connect with.
Really? I mean, that's you can meet anybody, it just takes some persistency. So I do this
and people oftentimes find this peculiar that I would do this, but I will message, personally
message, 20, 30 people a day, people that I want to connect with, build relationship,
or just someone doing cool stuff. And so I do that. I personally send messages to them
telling them, you know, I like their
content. They're doing amazing things. And leave it at that. I don't go for like, Hey, I want
to work with you. I want to do, I just, you know, build a relationship. And then the ask
might come later down the road. It might be a week. It might be a month. Who knows? But
I just build relationships. I comment on their content. I I build relationship with them on social media and
You know, I've had amazing people respond to messages that I've sent them and so that's a great way to
Build a relationship a lot of times when it comes to connecting with higher profile people whether it's a list celebrities or big name influencers
higher profile people, whether it's A-list celebrities or big name influencers. Sometimes it's easier to connect with someone that is connected to them first versus connecting
with them directly.
So you kind of watch, you know, they have friends, they have people, maybe it's that person
that is always commenting on their posts and getting a response.
Or you just kind of research and look,
who's connected to them?
Because it's often difficult to get connected
to that person that you really wanna get connected to.
But if you connect with people that are connected to them,
then it can naturally open up to building a relationship
with them, but a great way, and I've done this,
and I still do this, is you find that big influencer.
Number one, you have to have a skill that is of value to help them.
You've got to be able to add value to their situation.
But you just connect with them and say, let's say, for example, you're a graphic designer,
reach out to them and say, hey, I know, I would love to help you out when
your graphic designer.
Is it okay if I make you, you know, 10 images, no charge, help you out?
Maybe your video editor, whatever your skill set is.
So volunteer that for free.
And then what that does is that opens the door for a conversation to get started.
If your skills are good, it will just go further from there.
Yeah, I love that advice. And I think that it's such an easy thing for people to do, especially
if you're in college or something like that and you're looking for a mentor or somebody
you can intern for, I think that's the way to go is to just use whatever skills you have
and offer them something for free and see if that gets them talking to you. So totally
agree there.
Yeah, it's building relationship, it's helping them.
And again, number one, your skills have to be good
because if you're doing graphic designs or whatever it is,
and it's not good, then it doesn't, you know.
Exactly, they're just gonna be like,
well, I don't want you to work for me.
Oh, yeah, that's okay.
Yeah, hone your skills first.
I totally agree, totally agree.
So let's talk about personal branding.
So at some point, you were behind
the scenes. And then you decided that you wanted to kind of come out and really start your
personal brand. So what triggered you wanting to start your personal brand? And then how did
that influence your business later on? Yeah. So when it comes personal branding, I often look back
and think, man, I wish I would have started this sooner. But it was, I was kind of content with just helping other people build their brands, helping
other businesses.
And it wasn't until individuals like Ty Lopez would kind of like pull me out and say, hey,
you know, this is a guy that's been helping me.
I've been working with him and invite me to speak at masterminds and conferences and stuff.
And so it's just kind of, you know,
if it wasn't for individuals like that,
pulling me out and saying,
hey, he's been helping me on this.
And I probably would have been satisfied
just staying behind the scenes.
But I think you do have to look at sometimes people
they are hesitant about building their own personal brand
because they don't want to become across as arrogant
or, you know, just me, me, me and stuff. But if you can sincerely help people,
then all you're doing when it comes to building a personal brand is getting people's attention
on you so you can show them how you can help people. So when it comes to building a personal brand,
there's so much benefit of doing that because it is, when you building a personal brand, there's so much benefit of doing that
because it is when you build a personal brand,
whatever you connect yourself to, it will grow.
So it's not just about a job or being employed
by someone else, but you are building in your own personal,
personal brand gives you a few things.
It gives you longevity.
So a brand, whether it's personal or personal brand gives you a few things. It gives you longevity. So a brand,
whether it's personal or business brand gives you longevity. It gives you a longer lifespan
in that. Then it gives you loyalty. People are loyal to brands. They connect with personal brands
and business brands. So loyalty. And then it gives you legacy. When everything's done and you fold up the chapter
and you want to move on, you can pass on a brand,
a personal brand or a business brand
onto somebody else that can carry it on.
So those are kind of like the three Ls
of personal branding, loyalty, legacy and longevity.
So yeah, like, Shaq, I was just walking through
the mall the other day and I see posters and cutouts
of Shaq and he's one of these guys that he was an athlete.
Everybody knew him as an athlete,
but now he is a huge personal brand.
If he wants to endorse general car insurance, he's the face of that.
If he wants to do frosted flakes, he's the face of that headphones, he's the face of
that, just so many different things.
So if you have a good, strong personal brand, you're not limited to just marketing or just
one specific field, but whatever you attach yourself to, people want to be connected
to it also.
Yeah, I totally get that, totally agree.
I often call it a transferable asset.
So no matter where you go, you can go bring your personal brands.
And for me, I grew my personal brand on LinkedIn and I've never felt more secure, like in terms
of job security, because it's like, you just become so like everybody just wants to talk to you, network with you.
There's just so many opportunities.
So I would encourage everyone to start building their online personal brand like you have
one whether you like it or not.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay.
So how much money would you say that you've spent over the years in paid ads, like your
clients, budgets and things like that?
Like, how would you say?
Yeah. and paid ads, like your clients, budgets, and things like that. Like, how would you say? Yeah, so I can tell you this, it has been over a billion dollars
that we have not, obviously not my money,
but I'm clients in different companies
that we have worked with.
You know, we've done campaigns
where people are spending tens of millions of dollars
a month on ads.
We've worked with companies that spend 100 million dollars in a a month on ads. We've worked with companies that spend $100 million
in a few months on ads. So yeah, over 10 years, a few big clients, it adds up really quickly.
Wow. So over a billion dollars in ads, what pops in my mind, you know, as a marketer
too, is experimentation. Like, man, you've done a lot of experimentation over the years
if you had a billion dollars
that you've been running ads on.
So like, when it comes to like all the learnings
that you've done, you've ran so many campaigns,
I'm sure you now, you're probably not actually doing
the day to day.
So this might be a tough question for you,
but like, what are the golden rules
in terms of paid ads right now?
Is there anything like, I know the platforms keep changing,
the level of targeting keeps getting more micro, but like, what are the red threads that you see,
like over the years have been doing it for a decade? Great question. So this is something,
I think it's kind of the one-on-one of marketing, but people, they think that it doesn't apply when
it comes to digital marketing. A catch phrase or a word that people use all the time is disruptive, so it has to be disruptive.
So here's the challenge about being disruptive in online marketing.
And I've seen this and I've been kind of like the catalyst of trends that happen on social media and running ads. So this is what happens is a marketer has a cool idea
or a new style or something that they start running an ad
and it's disruptive and it, all of a sudden, man,
this is doing amazing because maybe it's the color,
the style, the types of videos, the format,
all of these things.
You know, you're always tweaking because you want people when they're scrolling, it's like,
whoa, that catches my attention.
Stop the scroll, right?
Yeah, stop the scroll.
And so that's the challenge on social media.
You want to stop the scroll.
So as someone that is innovating and really pushing the envelope on stuff that you always
want to be testing
what catches people's attention.
So what happens is you put together something
and you do it and it starts working.
You're like, oh man, amazing.
This is disruptive.
This is getting a great click-through rate.
Awesome results.
Then other marketers, they start seeing it like,
whoa, man, that's doing awesome.
I really caught my attention.
And so guess what they do? is they start doing the same thing
Yeah, and that they start to copy it and next thing you know
What you were doing six months ago that was disruptive you've got a thousand other markers that are doing the exact same thing
So it's no longer
Disruptive it's came af's camouflaged into everybody else's ads.
So that's the challenge is you always have to do.
So I've seen this,
like there used to be a time when I almost laugh about this,
but people would run ads where they would have
a red outline on their ad, on the picture.
There was a red outline and then there was a green outline.
So it was like, okay, this would make it stand out more.
And then everybody started doing red outlines,
and then it was just like, it became annoying
to people with stop catching their attention,
and it started annoying them, and everybody stopped doing that.
But then it goes into a different trend.
But now I've seen recently, and like five years later
after a trend, people are doing something that was popular
five years ago because people stopped doing it.
So it's kind of one of those things that you always have to look at what other people
are doing.
And I guess be a contrarian and don't do that.
Young and profitors, do you have a brilliant business idea, but you don't know how to move
forward with it?
Going into debt for a four year degree isn't the only path to success.
Instead, learn everything you need to know about running a business for free by listening
to the Millionaire University podcast.
The Millionaire University podcast is a show that's changing the game for aspiring entrepreneurs.
Hosted by Justin and Tara Williams, it's the ultimate resource for those who want to
run a successful business and graduate rich, not broke.
Justin and Tara started from Square One,
just like you and me.
They faced lows and dug themselves out of huge debt.
Now they're financially free
and they're sharing their hard earned lessons
with all of us.
That's right, millionaire university will teach you
everything you need to know about
starting and growing a successful business.
No degrees required.
In each episode, you'll gain invaluable insights from seasoned entrepreneurs and mentors who
truly understand what it takes to succeed.
From topics like how to start a software business without creating your own software, to more
broad discussions such as eight businesses you can start tomorrow to make 10K plus a month,
this podcast has it all.
So don't wait, now is the time to turn your business idea into a reality
by listening to the Millionaire University podcast.
New episodes drop Mondays and Thursdays.
Find the Millionaire University podcast on Apple Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Your dog is an important part of your family.
Don't settle when it comes to their health.
Make the switch to fresh food made with real ingredients that are backed by science with NOM-NOM.
NOM-NOM delivers fresh dog food that is personalized to your dog's individual needs.
Each portion is tailored to ensure your dog gets the nutrition they need, so you can watch them thrive.
NOM-NOM's ingredients are cooked individually and then mixed together,
because science tells us that every protein, carb, and veggie has different cooking times and methods.
This packs in all the vitamins and minerals your dog needs, so they truly get the most
out of every single bite.
And nom nom is completely free of additives, fillers, and mystery ingredients that contribute
to bloating and low energy.
Your dog deserves only the best, and nom nom delivers just that.
Their nutrient packed recipes are crafted by board certified veterinary nutritionists,
made fresh and shipped to your door.
Absolutely free.
Nom nom meals started just $2.40, and every meal is cooked in company owned kitchens right
here in the US, and they've already delivered over 40 million meals, inspiring clean bowls
and wagging tails everywhere.
Ever since I started feeding my dog Nom Nom, he's been so much more energetic, and he's
getting older, he's a senior dog, but now we've been going on longer walks, and he's
much more playful.
He used to be pretty sluggish and sleeping all the time, but I've definitely noticed
a major improvement since I started feeding him Nom Nom.
And the best part, they offer a money back guarantee.
If your dog's tail isn't wagging within 30 days, they'll refund your first order.
No fillers, no nonsense, just nom nom.
Go right now for 50% off your no risk 2 week trial at trinom.com-shap.
That's trinom-n-o-m.com-shap for 50% off trinom.com-shap. This episode of YAP is sponsored by Podcasts Republic.
Hey Android users, this one's for you.
Podcasts Republic is a podcast app where you can discover and subscribe to 1 million
shows and enjoy live radio streaming.
They have over 85,000 authentic reviews
and a 4.6 star app rating in the Google Play Store.
It's no secret that Podcastry Public is one of the best
podcast apps for Android users.
Podcastry Public has super cool features
like the ability to take notes while listening to your
podcasts, and you can even schedule to play a podcast
at a specific time.
Imagine being able to wake up and start your day
with Young and Profiting Podcast.
If you're an Android user,
head over to the Google Play Store
to download Podcast Republic.
And don't forget to rate and review
Young and Profiting Podcast while you're at it.
That's really good advice.
And I think that it's advice that is evergreen.
We can use it now and 10 years from now, it's still true.
And I totally agree.
You need to make sure your stuff stands out if you want to get any attention on social
media, whether that's organic or paid.
So I had Seth Goethe on my show.
I had him recently, episode number 87.
Amazing.
Amazing.
Thank you.
And like me, I'm more of like a brand marketer, organic marketer, like I dabble here and
there, Instagram ads, YouTube ads, trying to really get up to speed there.
But you're more in the paid acquisition space.
And so that's your expertise.
So Seth Godin, for those who don't know him, he was a pioneer in internet marketing.
And he coined the term called Permission Based Marketing, which means anticipated personal
unrelevant messages that people want to get.
And he thinks it's the opposite of spam.
And so essentially, it's that consumers need to have the power to choose how they're
marketed to, and he believes they should be opting in.
And on my show, Seth said, just because you can steal my attention, doesn't mean you have
a right to steal my attention.
Do you agree with Seth on that? Like what is your opinion on on permission based marketing?
Yeah, so here's the thing is there used to be a day when it was a very direct response
type of marketing where it's like put it all for in front of someone, have a fancy headline, really entice them in and they buy.
And that was very popular, direct response marketing.
But there has been a huge transition
where people are very apprehensive of a direct response marketing.
And that has happened for several reasons.
Number one is there's a thousand other people doing what you're doing now.
So your voice is getting blended in with everybody else's and so you got to be different.
So there's that.
And then there's a lot of people that they've been burnt, the scammers and different things
like that.
And so online marketing can often have a negative connotation if it's
done wrong. So, so there, there is a transition where you do have to add value. You have to
give, give, give. Like I've seen this, that content that people are posting organically,
five years ago, it had been something you would pay for. It had been something in their mastermind course.
But now individuals realize, look, I have to lead with value
and giving to people.
And then there comes a point where I like that there's permission.
If good marketing, if it's done right,
people ask you to sell them something.
They really do.
I mean, it's like you're not even trying to sell something,
but people will start to reach out to you,
hey, will you teach me more about this?
Will is there a place where I can find out more?
And so they're asking you for more.
So it's not even selling.
It's just giving people an opportunity
to connect with you more.
So good marketing, you're not shoving something down someone's throw.
They're pulling it and say, hey, give me, I want more access to you.
I want more of your content.
Yeah, totally.
Have you heard of this new, it's been in the headlines.
The fact that Apple is going to be putting on a new feature for app tracking transparency,
which basically means that a lot
of Facebook marketers, the same targeting that they would get, they might not anymore
because a lot of people are going to opt out to sharing their data with Facebook and
allowing them to share data across different companies and stuff like that.
So are you familiar with this?
And do you have any thoughts in terms of that?
Yeah, absolutely. So this is one of the things that over the years
of Facebook ads and everything is,
there's always new policies.
I don't know how many times over 10 years
that there's been policies like you used to be able
to run Bitcoin, you used to be able to do ads for this
and now you can't at all, you get shut down
and things change and it used to have this feature, but you don't have this feature and so things are always
changing. But this is what, you know, in talking with Facebook, their number one goal is, is they
prioritize user experience over how much money they make.
And granted, they're a business and they know how to make money, but they have learned
that prioritizing the user experience over money means they're going to make more money
in the long run.
So, yeah, they've changed this and people are more concerned about their privacy and things,
but this is what it does. It makes bad marketers will stop because they don't know how to navigate
in the process and the good marketers will rise to the top. Good marketers are already doing things
and we already have platforms in place that are customized,
that are built out around our own infrastructure.
So if Facebook changes things, you know, we've got backups.
We know how to navigate in difficult things.
But the average guy that is just spamming Facebook with ads,
they're going to get left behind because they don't know how to work.
So every change that I've seen Facebook make, it might make the average marketer nervous.
Like, what am I going to do, but it will make the good marketers better and the bad marketers they'll leave.
So it's actually, it's going to be for the good.
Yeah, it sounds like it.
It sounds like the consumer is going to benefit and then, you and then the good marketers are going to profit off of that.
So that totally makes sense.
How about data tracking?
So is there any, like you're in this space,
you've probably targeted on a million different things.
Is there things that we just,
like little known ways that our data is being tracked,
that you can talk about?
Yeah, so here's the thing. I remember when my old buddy Mark Zuckerberg was before Congress
and they were questioning him about how the data is used and everything like this. What you
have to understand is that Facebook is just one point where data is collected. And so he can answer questions like,
hey, does Facebook do this?
And he's like, no, we don't do that.
And the answer is, right, they don't do that,
but they're partnered with a thousand other companies
that do that.
And so Facebook isn't doing it,
but there's other company that they're partnered with
is doing it.
So it becomes a slippery slope. So, data is being tracked every, and it's not just online.
It's when you go to Walgreens, you got your little Walgreens card. Data is being tracked about you.
You ever find it interesting when you go to Walgreens and they print out your receipt and then there's coupons that you receive that are exactly aligned with your spending history.
It's because Walgreens is tracking. If you go to a car dealership, you buy a car. When you sign those documents, you're being tracked, your information is being given to them and car dealerships, it's more than just selling cars for them, but
they are selling information about you.
So, everything that you do in one level or another, it is being tracked.
So, for a consumer, that might be something that is, that's startling to understand that
there's probably 50,000 or more attributes about you, whether it's your, you know, your age, your income level, your spending habits, the sites that you go to.
There's so so many variables like we could set up an ad that would say, hey, I want to target a single man that lives in Los Angeles, that has a bachelor's degree that makes over $100,000
that lives in this zip code that likes cats, matter of fact, that likes simis cats.
And anyways, we could set up an ad that would target a person on that level.
So for a consumer, that's something that would make them a little bit nervous.
But for a marketer, we're like, yeah, you know, that's great.
So it's a double-edged sword.
Yeah.
So is there any sort of like line that you have in terms of ethics and paid ads and personalization
and targeting?
Like is there anything that you're like, we can't go there?
Or do you feel like, you know, skies the limit when it comes to data tracking and targeting
and what are your thoughts on that? Is there any like kind of like line skies the limit when it comes to data tracking and targeting and, and
what are your thoughts on that? Is there any like kind of like line in the sand that you draw?
Yeah, that's, that's a great question. I think that in Facebook does have policies in place
that does not permit you to target people on certain attributes, you know, gender, ethnicity, things of that nature.
So I think that those are good guidelines to follow
that you're not gonna be targeting people based on
specific, the personal details.
So yeah, there is a line.
Obviously marketers always find a way around these policies. But again, Facebook
finds out about it. They shut them down and things. So a lot of times the people that complain
about the policies that Facebook or the other ad platforms have is because they're trying
to run that, that grade line. They're trying to do it the easier way
versus put in extra work, build a personal brand, work hard.
They're trying to get the quick money.
So policies that are put in place are normally for the good
and they keep good marketers good and keep the bad marketers
out of the industry.
Yeah, thanks so much for sharing that. So paid ads are the front end of a campaign, right?
And then what happens after that? So a lot of people who listen to the show, they're not marketers,
so they don't know anything about funnels and things like that. So can you explain what a funnel is
and maybe some of the core components of a funnel. Yeah, so basically it's a journey. It's a path that you take. And sometimes the path might happen
in, you know, immediately on your initial online visit, you connect with an ad and you go through
a path very quickly. Other times the journey, it might be a day, a week, a month, a year.
But that's basically what it is.
It's a path.
And the path might start out, you see that cool ad,
someone talking about something that resonates with you.
And so it might be an ad, I'll use myself as an example,
before this call, I was actually making video ads.
And so I start out by calling out the person,
hey, are you a coach, you're a consultant,
are you an entrepreneur wanting to take your business
to the next level?
Well, I want to talk to you about,
and so I'm calling out the individual with an ad.
They click on that ad and it takes them to a landing page
or the front end of my funnel.
And so that's going to be a page that is,
it has a hook, a headline talking to them about,
hey, maybe you're struggling, a lot of times
we hit the problems that they're having.
Are you having a problem getting applications
for your high ticket sales?
Well, we have the answer for it.
Matter of fact, we use a simple outline here and it's answering questions. I got my notebook here
that was doing it. It's a few questions like, who is the person? What is their problem? How we can
solve that problem? And so we're asking them questions in this and
we show them the solution. So initially they might enter their name, their email, phone
number, and they're going to be put into a list. And they might be pushed to fill out
an application to set up a call. There might be an initial, we call it a trip wire where they would buy
something a low ticket entry. Again, sometimes people try to go for the big sale quick and it doesn't
always work. We've seen individuals that we work with that they're spending a lot of money
on trying to sell, let's say for example, a webinar where the price is a thousand dollars and they're
just not making any money.
But we'll put something in the front, again we call it a trip wire where it's seven dollars,
twenty dollars and it just, so we get people to come in here and buy something, you know,
a micro commitment.
And then if they like that content, a day later, two days later, however long it might take, they'll go to
a webinar, they'll watch this and then they'll later make a thousand dollar purchase.
And then those people that go into a thousand dollar purchase, maybe they want to go faster,
maybe they want some one-on-one attention, maybe they want personal customized coaching,
they can set up a call where they'll get on a discovery call or a strategy call
and talk to a specialist about how we can help them.
And then they're offered coaching programs, stuff of high tickets, but it's a journey.
It's kind of like, you know, initially get connected, building that relationship and
then, okay, we have this, and then you take them.
And again, depending on the product, the offer, it might be something that it goes very quickly,
or typically the higher the price of it, the longer it's going to take for them to go from point A to Z.
But it is, it's a journey, we call it a funnel because, you know, funnels shape like this
and you have people come in at the top and then it just slowly goes down and then, you know,
you less likely the people are going to come down to here, but the people that come down here,
those are going to be the higher value people. So that's, yeah. And so, yeah, that's an excellent
explanation and I've never really heard of a trip wire, I've never heard of that, that's a real fun one. Yeah, that's an excellent explanation. And I've never really heard of a trip wire,
never heard of that concept.
I've heard about people giving free ebooks and stuff
like that, but I love what you said about offering
something like a micro commitment.
That's really smart.
So really cool stuff there.
And then the purpose of the form is to better qualify
your leads, right, so that you can ask specific questions
and maybe target them more.
So what's the purpose of the form? Yeah, so when you can ask specific questions and maybe target them more. So like, what's the purpose of the form?
Yeah, so when when you're having someone fill out an application, I'll give you an example of a
funnel that we have in our world is it would be
a $7 I have a book or an audio book talking to people about marketing and
You know I hit all the pain points. Hey, I'm gonna teach you how to do this this and this and it's seven dollars for that
Well then as they go to check out there's gonna be a little box
It says hey for $27 more. I'm gonna throw in all of these PDFs and all of this awesome stuff that is just,
you know, they're going to look at that like $27 is that all?
And they're going to fill just, they have to click that button because the value,
it's just an irresistible offer. So for $27 they get that.
And then a person is going to go after that, they might say,
hey, you know, we've got this one time offer for you
that I'm gonna teach you how, you know, the secrets of,
let's say for example, Instagram growth,
growing your following.
Normally, this is $300, but if you act now,
I'm gonna give it to you for $99.
And it's a nice video explaining to them the offer.
And again, this is this is before they
even click the final checkout button. They're going to get that. And then that kind of concludes
if they say yes or no on that. Maybe they say no, no to it. We'll come back and say, hey, you know,
how about we break it up into three payments of $40 for you.
Instead of one time 99, we'll break it up into three.
And then we try to get them to say yes again.
If they say no, we wanna go try to get them to say yes again.
And so again, there's kind of a little work involved there.
Then they check out they're done.
And after they check out, the thank you page
is a video saying,
hey, you know, you're a coach, you're a consultant, you have a business,
maybe you want to take it to the next level.
This is what we're offering. And it's a nice video talking to them about how
we might be able to help them with our coaching, consulting, business.
If you're interested, there is an application below that you can fill out
and set up a
complimentary 30-minute strategy session with one of our experts.
So they fill out this application.
And yeah, the application asks them qualifying questions.
Code when whenever you see free strategy session, that is code for sales call.
Just plain and simple.
Any, anytime you see that in people's bio,
free strategy session, that means sales call.
Granted, there's gonna be a lot of value
given in those strategy sessions where we pick apart
what you're doing and give you value.
But at the end of it, they're gonna say,
hey, you know, we offer a
coaching program, a mentorship program, and, you know, this is what we offer, and you make the
decision from there. I don't like high pressure. Like, you know, you got to buy, buy, buy, that's never
a good way to work with someone. But the application, it's going to ask in qualifying questions to see if they
would be a good fit.
If they're one of those people like, like I even ask on some of our applications, do you
realize the importance of investing in yourself?
And the answer, answer number one that they can say is, I don't have any money and I think
I should get everything for free.
So we ask them that question.
And then the second answer is, yes, I understand, but I'm on a limited budget.
I can only invest between this amount and this amount of money.
Then the third answer is going to be something like,
I mean business, I'm a serious entrepreneur,
and I understand the importance of really investing in myself.
And so those are qualifying questions,
where if someone is saying,
hey, I want everything for free,
and people do fill out applications and say, I want everything for free and people do fill out applications and say, I want everything for free.
Chances are they're not going to be qualified for a coaching program that we would offer to them.
So yeah, it's about the application is qualifying them.
Hear that sound, young and profitors.
You should know that sound by now, but in case you don't, that's the sound of another
sale on Shopify.
Shopify is the commerce platform that's revolutionizing millions of businesses worldwide.
Whether you sell edgy t-shirts or offer an educational course like me, Shopify simplifies selling
online and in person so you can focus on successfully growing your business.
Shopify is packed with industry leading tools that are ready
to ignite your growth, giving you complete control over your business and brand without having to
learn any new skills in design or code, and Shopify grows with you no matter how big your business gets.
Thanks to an endless list of integrations and third-party apps, anything you can think of from
on-demand printing to accounting to chatbots, Shopify has everything
you need to revolutionize your business.
If you're a regular listener, you probably know that I use Shopify to sell my LinkedIn
secrets masterclass.
Setting up my Shopify store just took me a few days.
I didn't have to worry about my website and how I was going to collect payments and how
I was going to trigger abandoned cart emails and all these things that Shopify does for
me with just a click of a button, even setting up my chat bot was just a click of a button it was so easy to do like I said just took a couple of days and so just allowed me to focus on my actual product and making sure my LinkedIn masterclass was the best it could be and I was able to focus on my marketing so shop of I really really helped me make sure that my masterclass was going to be a success right off the bat
and enabled focus.
And focus is everything when it comes to entrepreneurship.
With Shopify single dashboard, I can manage my orders and my payments from anywhere in the world.
And like I said, it's one of my favorite things to do every day is check my Shopify dashboard.
It is a rush of dopamine to see all those
blinking lights around the world showing me where everybody is logging on on the site.
I love it. I highly recommend it. Shopify is a platform that I use every single day and
it can take your business to the next level. Sign up for a $1 per month trial period
at shopfied.com slash profiting. Again,, go to Shopify.com-profitingalllowercase
to take your business to the next level today.
Again, that Shopify.com-profiting, Shopify.com-profitingalllowercase.
This is Possibility powered by Shopify.
Yeah, bam.
If you're ready to take your business to new heights, break through to the 6 or 7 figure
mark or learn from the world's most successful people.
Look no further because the Kelly Roach Show has got you covered.
Kelly Roach is a best-selling author, a top-ranked podcast host, and an extremely talented
marketer.
She's the owner of NotOne, but 6th thriving companies, and now she's ready to share her
knowledge and experience with you on the Kelly Roach Show.
Kelly is an inspirational entrepreneur and I highly
respect her. She's been a guest on YAP. She was a former social client. She's a podcast
client. And I remember when she came on Young and Profiting and she talked about her
conviction marketing framework. It was like mind blowing to me. I remember immediately
implementing what she taught me in the interview in my company and the marketing efforts
that we were doing. and as a marketer
I really really respect all Kelly has done all Kelly has built in the corporate world Kelly secured seven promotions in just
Eight years, but she didn't just stop there. She was working in I to five and at the same time
She built her eight figure company as a side hustle and eventually took it and made it her full-time hustle, and her strategic business goals led her to win the prestigious Inc. 500 award for the fastest growing business
in the United States.
She's built an empire, she's earned a life-changing wealth, and on top of all that, she maintains
a happy marriage and healthy home life.
On the Kelly Road Show, you'll learn that it's possible to have it all.
Tune into the Kelly Road Show as she unveils her secrets for growing your business.
It doesn't matter if you're just starting out in your career
or if you're already a seasoned entrepreneur.
In each episode, Kelly shares the truth
about what it takes to create rapid, exponential growth.
Unlock your potential, unleash your success,
and start living your dream life today.
Tune into the Kelly Road Show available on Apple Podcasts,
Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hey, Yap fam.
As you may know, I've been a full-time entrepreneur
for three years now.
Yap media blew up so fast.
It was really hard to keep everything under control,
but things have settled a bit
and I'm really focused on revamping
and improving our company culture.
I have 16 employees, so it's a lot of people
to try to rally and motivate.
And I recently had best-selling author Kim Scott on the show.
And after previewing her content in our conversation, I just knew I had to take her class on master
class, tackle the hard conversations with radical candor to really absorb all she has to offer.
And now I'm using her radical candor method every day with my team to give in solicit
feedback, to cultivate a more inclusive culture,or method every day with my team to give in solicit feedback,
to cultivate a more inclusive culture, and to empower them with my honesty.
And I can see my team feeling more motivated and energized already.
They are really receptive to this framework, and I'm so happy because I really needed this class.
With masterclass, you can learn from the best to become your best, anytime, anywhere, and at your own pace.
And we all know that profiting in life
doesn't just mean thriving in business.
With Masterclass, you can brush up on your art skills
or your cooking skills or even your modeling skills.
With over 180 classes from a range of world-class instructors,
that thing you've always wanted to do better
is just a few clicks away.
On Masterclass, you'll find courses from many app- Apple All-Star guests like Chris Voss and Daniel Pink. I've been
taking their sales and negotiation classes and I've been feeling like a real shark lately.
I've totally leveled up my sales skills. How much would it cost you to take a one-on-one
class from the world's best? A lot. But with Masterclass annual memberships, it just cost you $10 a month. I have to say the most
surprising thing about Masterclass since I started this incredible
journey on the platform is the value. For the quality of classes,
instructors, the platform itself is beautiful. The videos are super
high quality. You can't beat it. Gain new skills and as little as 10 minutes on your phone, your computer, tablet, smart
TV, and my personal favorite way to learn is their audio mode to listen on the go.
That way I can multitask while I learn.
Get unlimited access to every class and right now as a app listener,
you can get 15% off when you go to masterclass.com slash profiting.
That's masterclass.com slash profiting for 15% off an annual membership masterclass.com-profiting. That's masterclass.com-profiting for 15% off an annual membership.
Masterclass.com-profiting.
Yeah, what a great explanation.
I think you gave so many good gems.
So I work in marketing.
I have a podcast marketing agency.
And a lot of my, I don't do click-funnels for my clients.
So I don't set that up.
I don't claim I'm an expert.
I'm not, you know, I'm an expert in organic marketing.
That's what I'm really get at. Right? Everybody always asks me, so many people are so
misinformed and they don't know where to start and even huge companies that I've done work for.
They don't have their funnel strategy together. It just seems like it's a very like you don't
know, you either know it or you don't know it. And a lot of companies really don't have their shit together.
If you don't mind me cursing when it comes to their funnels, they don't know how to do it.
What do you advise people?
Like, where do you advise people to start?
Like, should they just get click funnels and kind of like do something out the box like that?
Like, what is your advice to either companies or people who really want to get their funnels right?
Because I get this question 20 times a week.
Yeah, so, you know, I've seen that and I've worked with companies that they reach out to
us and they say, we've got this college grad from Ivy League School, has a degree in marketing
and they don't know what they're doing. They honestly, you know, the danger in some
just being stuck in college academics
is that you can go to college
and what you learned there is two or three years
outdated in what's working.
And when it comes to internet marketing,
it's really you have to be studying it every week.
Like you mentioned, there's new policies coming out that you didn't learn about this
in college last year.
You have to be continually learning.
You have to have mentors.
You have to have groups that you can work with masterminds that you can always be learning
when it comes to internet marketing in particular.
There's probably some professions that, you know,
you can learn and, hey, it's good to go for a long period of time,
but internet marketing is not one of those things that that's true.
You always have to be learning.
So there's a lot of great platforms that work for things.
The best way to figure out what's working is
Find that individual that is the best of the best in the industry
Find those funnels find those websites find the experts see what they're doing and
Model it on success leaves a trail, you know, we call it in the industry funnel hacking
Where it's basically you find the funnels
that are working good, look at what they're doing.
And if this individual is making X amount of dollars,
they've done a lot of testing, they've done a lot of work,
and so you just begin to model that.
You don't copy it or just completely do exactly
what they're doing, But you model it.
For example, if their headline is over here on this side and this color, put your headline,
this side, this color. If they're using this color button, use this color button. If they're
using this type of video, use that type of video. And so you model what they're doing because
these big companies, they've spent millions of dollars testing and split testing.
So the quickest way to get to where they're doing is look at what they're doing and model
what they're doing.
That's super, super smart and really practical advice.
Thank you so much.
Let's switch gears really quickly.
Let's talk about side hustles.
So you wrote an online book about 27 side hustles.
I'm obviously a proponent of side hustles. So you wrote an online book about 27 side hustles. I'm obviously proponent of side hustles. I grew my business on the side of Disney streaming
for two years to multi six figures. So love side hustles. I think everyone should
have one, especially if they're a hustler. So why do you love side hustles? And
are there any side hustles for 2021 that you highly recommend?
in 2021 that you highly recommend. So here's the thing, is in probably in September,
October of 2019, I always have people come to me like,
hey Paul, will you teach me how to do what you do?
Teach me how to do what you do?
And I'm like, ah, you got a couple of years,
you wanna sit down and learn, we can do that.
But I realized what they were asking is,
can you teach me how to, that laptop laptop lifestyle work from home, make money?
And I know when I first got started in internet marketing, is there so many different ideas and people saying, do this, do this?
And I tried so many different things. I didn't know, okay, is this real or is this just a scam or and so it was just a difficult road to figure out what to really do.
So I put this book together to really show people this is the stuff that works. These, what I did
as I actually interviewed, I don't know, probably 60, 70 people that were making legitimately making
money online, not these get rich quick schemes or anything like that, but people that were making legitimately making money online, not these get rich quick schemes or anything like that,
but people that were legitimately doing things,
like for example, I interviewed a 17 year old boy
that while he was in high school, made over $20,000
in one year.
Now, $20,000 for the person that is fascinated by the guys,
driving the Lamborghinis and everything like that,
$20,000 a year doesn't sound too glamorous, but $20,000 a year to the average person will
change their life.
So especially if it's a side hustle.
This is somebody that is doing this in school.
So I interviewed him and said, hey, what are you doing and making $20,000 a year, 17 years old in high school? Obviously, if he could do it, the stay at home mom could do
it. The guy that is working 40 hours a week that's got, you know, 5, 10 hours extra a week
that he can put into it, they can do it. So again, that's what I wanted to learn and
interviewing these people. So I interviewed a lot of people that were doing things, some
were making $10, $20,000 extra year.
Some people were making a significant amount of money doing this.
A lot of times what happens about a side hustle is a side hustle.
If you get good at it, it can be turned into a full time hustle.
So when someone just starts to learn how to make the first $100 online, they can replicate that. So that's
what I did is I interviewed a lot of people that were doing cool things and compiled it, put
it into a book, made some videos and everything like that and just trying to give people a
blueprint here. Here's some cool things that are working, try them out. So that was 27 side hustles. Yeah, so anything you recommend for 2021?
So it doesn't have to be too complicated.
I mean, you do have to work.
I think that's sometimes the misconceptions people wanted,
like just click a button and money starts printing
with no work involved.
And don't we wish we could all do that?
I do believe in passive incomes,
but there's no income that doesn't demand some work, whether it's in the front.
At least that front, yeah. You have to do some work initially, somehow. So I'll give
you a few of the ideas that I saw. Man, this is amazing. So the 17-year-old boy that I interviewed,
this is what he was doing. Is he put an ad on Craigslist
saying, do you have an old cell phone that you want to get rid of? I will buy it from you for cash.
And people would respond to it and he would buy their phone and he knew based on this model,
the shape, the condition of it and everything like that,
that it was worth, let's say, $100,
where he would buy it from this person for $50
and then place it on Facebook marketplace,
eBay, something like that for the going rate of $100.
So it's just basically a quick arbitrage.
He would buy it from someone for $50,
knew the value was $100,
and there he's made $50 himself.
So you do that a few times a week,
a few different cell phones,
then you've made yourself $20,000 a year,
not a whole lot of work involved,
not very complicated to do, but it's real money. It's real money.
So I've seen that, I've seen individuals that will go to thrift stores and find something
at a thrift store that, like for example, books. There's an entire world of, they call them book
flippers. And it's really amazing. They will go to thrift stores, libraries that are getting away, old books and stuff.
And they will buy the books.
And you know, some of these stores, you can buy a book for 50 cents.
And they buy the book for 50 cents.
And then they will put it up on Amazon or there's other websites.
And they might sell it for $10 or $15. I met individuals
and interviewed individuals that bought a book at a garage sale for $2 and it was actually a rare
book and they sold it for thousands of dollars. So it's kind of like treasure hunting, you know,
digital treasure hunting, but it's it's real money. Another one is I interviewed a lady,
she had graduated from college and she was in between things, was wanting to go back, get a
her master's degree, and but she enjoyed traveling. And so what she did is she taught children overseas conversational English.
There's websites that you can sign up on and she told me she's like,
a couple hours a day, I go onto this app and I just have basic conversations
with young students wanting to improve their English.
And she does that four or five times a week.
And she makes a couple thousand dollars a month doing that. So again, there's real things. There are sites like Upwork
where you can, if you've got a skill set, there's sites like Fiverr that again, I, when
I first got involved in internet marketing, I remember putting gigs up on Fiverr and upwork and other sites like that and people would
hire me to do that.
So if you've got a skill set or you can put in some time, there's a lot of different
ways that you can make money online.
Yeah, and that just made me think of an idea.
So not only arbitraging products, but also services.
So there's people who work at India and the Philippines and they might be good at graphic
design.
You could be the relationship manager and the broker between the graphic designer and
you find somebody who needs graphic design work and you can just connect the dots and you
could have no graphic design skills but you just manage the relationship and take a little
profit on top.
So it's like, there's so many different ways to like arbitrage on the internet I think.
Absolutely.
I had one of my coaching students, his name's Peterson.
He came up to me recently and he was trying to figure out how to do online businesses
and stuff. And he's like, I know a lot of people that know they want websites, they need
graphic designs, but I don't know how to do that. And so, I pointed him to some sites
where you can hire graphic designers, website designers.
If you can get the client, you just hire this team and they will do the work and you just
figure it out.
They're going to charge me $1,000.
I'll charge the client $2,000.
Like you said, as a middle person, you're making money there.
He's done very well in doing that. So yeah, you can
be a website designer, a logo designer. You can offer those services just by finding relationships
online that will do the work for you. Totally. Okay. So the last question I ask all my guests is
what is your secret to profiting in life? Secret to promise.
Give, give.
Ah, it's just give.
People before prophets, give to others,
pour into others, help others.
You'll never go wrong going back to my degree in theology.
There is a universal principle in all religions
that you reap what you sow. I mean, whether it's
Christianity, whether it's Buddhism, Hinduism, there's a universal principle that if you give
and you sow good, you will reap good. And it works. So just give help others, serve others,
and it will come back. Don't put money first, but just put people first,
and you'll always be successful.
That's fabulous advice. Thank you so much,
Paul. This was such a great conversation.
Where can our listeners go to learn more about you and
everything that you do?
Thank you very much, Holly. It's been my privilege.
Probably one of the easiest places is
find me on Instagram.
Again, my Instagram handle is Paul.
It's just PAUL.
Follow me on Instagram, send me a message,
be more than happy to connect with you.
My personal website is Paulgetter.com.
And you can find out all kinds of information about me there.
Cool.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting podcasts
with Paul Getter.
If I had to pick a favorite part of this episode, it would be when Paul gave the advice to put
relationships over revenue.
I love that and it's so true.
Put your relationships first and everything else will follow.
Today we live in the information age.
The more information that you have, the more powerful that you are.
And relationships are the best source of information. If you build relationships based on trust,
people will give you invaluable information. It may help you communicate better with your
customers, improve your products, grow your business, and gain a competitive advantage.
And not to mention referrals. Referrals are the lifeblood of an entrepreneur.
And without relationships, you won't get any referrals.
So I can't recommend this advice enough.
Put your relationships over revenue.
And then the last thing I have to say about this is having relationships with people in
your industry can also result in free advice that you would otherwise have to pay for or
learn yourself at a much slower pace.
So for example, Jordan Harbinger is one of my mentors now, and he's a huge
podcaster who is much more successful than me, and I learned so much from him,
and I always put relationships over revenue when it comes to our engagement.
And same thing with Heather Monahan, she's a speaker, she's a former C-Suite executive,
she's been everywhere that I want to go and
same with Jordan.
And so I get this free advice by having these relationships and putting my relationship
over revenue when I work with them.
And I think that's a key to success.
So kudos to Paul for calling that out, relationships over revenue, I'm never going to forget that.
And in fact, I always butt heads with my business partner, Tim, about this topic all the time,
because he likes to prioritize revenue,
and I like to prioritize relationships.
So remember, relationships over revenue,
I think that's the way to go.
What was your favorite part of this interview?
Tell me by dropping us a review on Apple Podcasts.
And if you're a new listener,
please take a few minutes to subscribe to Yapp
on your favorite podcast platform.
If you like this episode, you may also be interested to hear my recent interview.
Number 87, the practice of creativity with Seth Godin.
Seth is a marketing mastermind, public speaker, and bestselling author.
Here's a clip from that episode.
So let's look at Tesla.
The Tesla Model S tells a story which is if you
bought them Mercedes because you thought you were smart and taken care of your
family now you feel stupid because this is that car that you should have bought.
And as soon as a Mercedes driver in California saw the Model S totally
moon their day because now they were driving the wrong car and they had to go
solve their problem. That's the design of the Model S. So then they decide to come
out with that pickup truck and they blew it because Elon lost discipline. What
should the pickup truck have looked like? Well who buys a pickup truck? Why is the
Ford F-150 the single most popular vehicle in America? Why do pickup trucks
keep looking like pickup trucks?
Because the story we tell ourselves,
if we're gonna be the kind of person
who buys a pickup truck is, this is utility.
I'm not trying to stand out.
I am just a hard work in fellow or a woman
who's trying to do their best.
That's a pickup truck.
So when you make the cyber truck look like that weird
thing that was carved out of a piece of whatever, they blew it. That's not the story of a pickup
truck. What they should have done is built the most boring Ford F-150 knockoff ever, but
with just enough of a twist that it says, I'm the kind of person who buys a pickup truck, but I'm smarter than
you. That was the opportunity and they missed it because they didn't understand story.
So I'm hearing a couple of things here. One of the things that I'm hearing is that it's not
enough to just like create your own story. You kind of have to align to the stories and the beliefs
that are already out there. Yes. yes. So a couple more general marketing questions
before we move on to the main topic of the show,
which is your new book, The Practice.
What do you think that marketers are doing wrong today in 2020?
If you could call out a few things
that marketers do wrong today, what would they be?
Yeah, it hasn't changed in my whole life.
Selfish, short term, narcissistic,
lying, cheating, short cutting,ting, profit-seeking.
That's what they're doing wrong. Anytime you do any of those things, you're
burning trust. And marketing is a race to earn and preserve trust.
Again, that's number 87, the practice of creativity with Seth Godin. People love
that episode, and so I would highly recommend to go back and check it out.
As always I want to give a quick shout out to our latest Apple Podcast reviewers.
This user goes by the name of Millennial Podcast.
Diamond in the Rough. I found out Hollis Podcast through LinkedIn and I'm so glad I decided to
check it out. The guess she has all brings so much value and you always learn something new from every
episode.
It truly lives up to its name of young and profiting, but people of any age can learn more about
business, negotiation, entrepreneurship, persuasion, and more.
Thank you so much for that amazing review Millennial Podcast and I totally agree.
Young and profiting is for all ages, so do tell your mother, your brother, your grandmother, tell everyone how much you love Young
and Profiting podcasts.
If you found value in today's show, please take a few minutes to write us a review on Apple
Podcasts.
It's a free and effective way to support our show.
And I love saying posts about Yap on LinkedIn or Instagram.
Here's an idea.
Take a screenshot of your podcast app
and share it to your story and tag me at YAP with Hala.
I'll repost and support those who support us.
You can find me on Instagram at YAP with Hala
or LinkedIn, just search my name, it's Hala Taha.
And now I'm on Clubhouse.
My username is at Hala Taha and don't forget,
we have an epic event, February February 2nd with David Meltzer,
John Lee Dumas and Heather Monahan in Clubhouse.
The link for that is in my show notes.
Big thanks to the app team, as always,
you guys rock, this is hola, signing off.
Are you looking for ways to be happier, healthier,
more productive and more creative?
I'm Gretchen Ruben, the number one best-selling author of the Happiness Project.
And every week we share ideas and practical solutions on the Happier with Gretchen Ruben
podcast.
My co-host and happiness guinea pig is my sister Elizabeth Kraft.
That's me, Elizabeth Kraft, a TV writer and producer in Hollywood.
Join us as we explore fresh insights from cutting-edge
science, ancient wisdom, pop culture, and our own experiences about cultivating happiness and
good habits. Every week we offer a try this at home tip you can use to boost your happiness
without spending a lot of time energy or money. Suggestions such as follow the one minute rule.
Choose a one word theme for the year or design your summer. We also feature segments like Know Yourself better where we discuss questions like,
are you an over buyer or an under buyer, morning person or night person, abundance lever or
simplicity lever, and every episode includes a happiness hack, a quick easy shortcut to more
happy. Listen and follow the podcast happier with Gretchen Rubin.
DQ presents
Picture this.
You're getting together with all your best friends.
Now picture all your best friends are actually the delicious ingredients of the new cake batter
cookie dough blizzard.
That's DQ Soft Serve, cake batter flavor confetti cookie dough pieces, and DQ signature sprinkles.
Oh hey, it sounds like you got some pretty sweet friends, and that's worth cuing the confetti.
Cookie dough!
The flavor party isn't gonna last forever,
so hurry in and get your cake-batter fix today.
Only a DQ.
Happy taste good.