Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Ryan Serhant: The 3-Step Strategy System You Need to Build Your Brand From Scratch | E281
Episode Date: April 1, 2024With big dreams of Hollywood stardom, Ryan Serhant moved to New York City to work as an actor. But when he became one of the many unemployed actors struggling to make rent, he decided to get into real... estate. Having closed more than $8 billion in sales and starred in multiple reality shows, he has built an impressive personal brand as one of the most successful real estate brokers in the world. In this episode, Ryan will do a deep dive into branding and break down the three-step strategy that transformed him into one of the most recognizable brands in real estate. Ryan Serhant is a real estate broker, producer, reality TV star, and bestselling author of three books, including his latest, Brand It Like Serhant. He is the founder and CEO of SERHANT, number six on The Real Deal’s list of Top Residential Brokerages for 2022. In this episode, Hala and Ryan will discuss: - His come-up story from struggling actor to real estate superstar - The business opportunity COVID presented to him - Why he wrote Brand It Like Serhant - His three-step strategy for growing a brand from scratch - Why it’s easier to get your name out there in 2024 - Feelings a good personal brand must evoke - The three-step Serhant brand strategy system - How to discover your core identity - Why entrepreneurs must start building their brands today - How to build your brand personality using power adjectives - How to contextualize visual identity within your core identity - The fears that prevent people from building their brands - And other topics… Ryan Serhant is a real estate broker, producer, and star of Bravo’s Million Dollar Listing New York, and its spin-off, Sell It Like Serhant. He is the founder and CEO of SERHANT, a real estate brokerage that combines media, entertainment, education, and technology. Known for its award-winning marketing content and PR campaigns, the company ranked number six on The Real Deal’s list of Top Residential Brokerages for 2022. Ryan is the bestselling author of three books, including his latest, Brand It Like Serhant: Stand Out From the Crowd, Build Your Following, and Earn More Money. Named “the most influential broker in the world with the most exposure,” he is an official contributor to Forbes and is often quoted in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Wall Street Journal China. Resources Mentioned: Ryan’s Website: https://ryanserhant.com/ Ryan’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryanserhant/ Ryan’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/RyanSerhant Ryan’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ryanserhant/ Ryan’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RyanSerhantOfficial/ Ryan’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCG98giOsUxIlXV0rNUhxLew Ryan’s Book, Brand It Like Serhant: Stand Out From the Crowd, Build Your Following, and Earn More Money: https://www.amazon.com/Brand-Like-Serhant-Stand-Following/dp LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at indeed.com/profiting Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com/host More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I get excited about things like AI and the ability to generate brand everywhere because 20 years ago, it just wasn't in the cards for so many people.
Is that a scary thing? Sure. But I would rather take a greater opportunity and make it global than stick with the hierarchy we've known for 100 years.
The founder and CEO of Sirhan.
One of the most successful and well-known real estate brokers.
Ryan stars in...
Bravo's hit TV show, Million Dollar Listing New York.
Building your brand today is giving yourself your own newspaper
that got put on the front doorstep of everybody you wanted to be in front of 20 years ago.
But most of us these days have a fear of being embarrassed.
You don't want to be embarrassed, you don't want to make the wrong move,
what if I put it out there and my friends make fun of me? Whatever it might
be. Pretend that no one else exists other than the community you're trying to
reach. You focus on the things you can control and just humbly put your
successes out to the world so that people see you because success begets
success. But what's changed today is there's a middle C that's been created
because you can no longer just do content to commerce because it's been
diluted now. Anybody can do content on their phone and try to create commerce and no one cares.
What they care about is
Young and Profiters, as you likely know, I am a huge advocate for having a strong personal brand.
And it's more important than ever in 2024.
A lot of us are entrepreneurs, we're freelancers, and the way that we're able to get our name
out there and our business out there is by the digitization of our personal brand and how strong
our personal brand is online.
Whether you are a corporate employee or an entrepreneur,
you need a strong personal brand.
Even people wanna hire people with a strong personal brand.
It is becoming so important.
If you wanna be young and profiting,
you need to have a strong personal brand.
So I've been having a ton of episodes on this topic recently because I feel it is so important.
And that's why I am interviewing Ryan Sirhant today.
Ryan Sirhant is a bestselling author.
He's the CEO and founder of a very large brokerage real estate firm called Sirhant.
He's written several books.
His latest book is called Brand It Like Sirhant.
And today we're really gonna be focusing
on branding, personality, adjectives,
and why we need to have that.
We're gonna be talking about consistency, bragging,
shouting our brand from the rooftop
and why that's important.
So we've got so much to uncover today.
Without further ado, Ryan,
welcome to Young and Profiting Podcast.
Thank you for having me.
You came on the show way back in 2020, episode number 59.
And in that episode, we really focused on big money energy.
And today we're really gonna get straight to the point.
We're gonna talk about branding.
We're gonna talk a little bit about your background story,
but really the meat and potatoes of today's interview
is gonna be on your new book called
Brand It Like Sir Hunt.
So to kick us off, Ryan,
can you give us a super high level overview
of your career journey and how you ended up
being the real estate mogul that you are today?
Mogul, I think is a big, generous word.
I got into real estate in New York City in 2008
because I just ran out of money
and I needed to pay my rent.
It's the only reason I got into it.
It wasn't in my blood.
I wasn't obsessed with it.
It was, what's better than being a bartender?
That was the math that I did.
Then I fell in love with it and I fell in love with
the entrepreneurship of being able to work for yourself.
I think I'm also a builder.
I'm a builder. I like to create.
I like to wake up and say,
what am I going to do today to be successful?
And let's go do that instead of just doing
what I've been told to do.
And so I built a big sales team.
Most people know me from Million Dollar Listing New York,
which we did for 10 years on Bravo
that aired around the country.
And then I did a bunch of other shows.
And then I started my own company in 2020,
wrote my second book.
That's when you and I met.
And we sold a lot, I think, you know,
all across, I think total lifetime sales this year
of about 10 billion this year,
probably sometime over the summer.
And we sell real estate all over the world now.
We do sales training, we do B2B sales training
all over the world now.
We have a production studio now,
and it's all just because we just invented, you know,
we just make things up, see if they work,
see if people are interested,
and then we just make them really real.
I love that.
And it's so true, entrepreneurship is a lot of making up
ideas, making up offers,
and seeing if we can make money off of it.
So I totally agree.
And I heard from a little bird that you have a new Netflix
show coming out.
So like you said, you were on the super popular show, Million Dollar Listing,
and you were sort of like the breakout star from that show.
You had a spinoff and everything. So what's this new Netflix show about?
Well, I can't tell you the title or when it comes out,
although it'll come out soon. It's a real estate show,
but it's not Million Dollar Listing New York and it's also not selling sunset.
I don't even know how to describe it. It's a million dollar listing New York and it's also not selling sunset. I don't even know how to describe it.
It's a reality show, but it's about me and the agents that work with me, the
deals that we go through, the drama, the fun, the insanity and the building of
our business.
So I think anybody who is entrepreneurial, who wants to see what's at stake when
you bet the farm to go build a business in New York City, it goes through the pain.
It comes out soon.
And so we shot it last year.
I don't know if anyone pays attention to these things, but 2023 was the worst housing market
in global history since 1995 post savings and loan crisis.
Less homes sold globally in 2023 than in 2008 in two thousand eight and two thousand nine.
And those were the worst years ever that was leaving brothers that was bankruptcy that was the stock market crash more home sold.
During those years then sold in twenty twenty three and that's when we filmed this tv show so it is just.
It's a lot but anyway i hope everyone watches it and tunes in netflix is a great platform it's exciting to do it's a lot. But anyway, I hope everyone watches it and tunes in. Netflix is a great platform.
It's exciting to do.
It's my fifth TV show, my fifth reality show.
So it'll be good and good for business, hopefully.
Amazing.
Well, we can't wait to hear more about that
when it officially releases.
So like you were just saying,
you started this business during COVID.
Everything shut down, I think,
almost immediately after we met up.
Actually, I was just about to start in-person interviews for the first time
and then it squashed all my plans to do in-person interviews for a while.
Since then, you started this company. You may have just started it when we talked,
but it's like rapidly expanded. You guys are all over the place.
I'm actually looking for a new place in the city. I see your listings everywhere.
So your new company, you did it in a very risky time.
COVID was a really bad time for real estate.
So talk to us about that.
Why did you decide to take that risk
and why do you think you were successful
in such a terrible time in the market?
In hindsight, it was the best time.
I think when things are good,
they're only gonna get better. And when things are good, they're only gonna get better.
And when things are bad, they're only gonna get worse.
As I'm talking to you right now,
the price of Bitcoin is back to over $60,000 a coin, right?
Six months ago, you would have said that was insane
because it was bad and it's only gonna get worse.
But now that it's here,
now everyone needs to all the news and everything,
oh, on its way back up to a must, it's only gonna get get higher, it's only going to get better. So people are lemmings.
They will follow you into off a cliff. And so for me, I've just always tried to take the contrarian
point of view. And you're not always going to win. A lot of times the contrarian view is wrong.
But sometimes it's right. I got into real estate
in the first place. The day Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in the subprime mortgage
industry collapsed. That day, worst time ever in hindsight, best time ever because I had less
competition. Same thing for when we started the company. And my goal wasn't to start it during
COVID. I started brainstorming and thinking about starting my own company in 2017.
Took me three years to get out of the firm I was at previously because we had a huge
sales team and it was a lot.
I could do a separate podcast about that whole thing.
And then I was good to go by the end of 2019.
Here we go, July 1st, 2020 is going to be a start of a new decade.
And then people started getting sick and this whole thing, obviously everything happened.
And so I just had to delay a couple months. But in hindsight, COVID was the best thing that could
have happened to me. It was obviously terrible for anyone that lost their jobs or got sick or
passed away. But it gave me the opportunity to go do something big and new against the grain.
So as every other competitor was cutting back and firing and
furloughing and having a hard time,
I was able to come out and say,
no, we're good.
We're brand new. Everything's amazing.
It drew a lot of attention and was cost-efficient.
Because I didn't have to pay for paper.
I didn't have to pay for employees in New York City. I didn't have to pay for paper. I didn't have to pay for employees in New York City.
I didn't have to cover office expense for a while.
Like, oh no, listen, during COVID,
we don't have to do that stuff.
And so it was a great time to start a business.
If I go back in time, I would have started
more businesses in 2020.
I think we all would have.
I also would have bought Tesla at $25 a share.
It's so true.
It's like we can either look at obstacles as opportunities
or we can look at them as giving up.
So I think you did the right thing
and everything worked out.
Let's move on to the main topic of today's episode
which is branding.
And it seems like branding has really served you well
in your career.
So can you talk to us about that?
I'm in sales.
I think most of us are in sales,
whether we like to think that or not. I saw a statistic by the US Department of Labor in 2018
that said 23% of all United States taxpayers are filing a 1099, which for those outside of the
United States means that that's self-employed work, right? That's 1099, which for those outside of the United States
means that that's self-employed work, right?
That's gig work, which means you're selling something, whether you're selling advertising
for your podcast or you're selling yourself as a freelance reporter, you're selling insurance,
software, real estate, whatever.
You're selling something.
Today, that number is 36%.
And the US Department of Labor says by 2027, over 50% of all US
taxpayers are going to be filing some form of a 1099, whether they have a W-2 or not,
which is crazy. It's right in line with my greater thesis that as higher education points
to a less secured outcome than what we know it for. And sales, gig work, entrepreneurship points to a more secure outcome.
The axis is coming, right?
Within the next couple of years.
But you can have the greatest podcast, you can have the greatest blog, you can have the
greatest t-shirt, whatever.
You can't sell it if no one knows about it.
So I wrote my first book, Selt Like Sarhan, in 2018.
That was the sales tools, like the toolkit.
This is how you sell in the 2020s and beyond.
Big Money Energy that you and I spoke about a couple years ago was, okay, so you've got
the toolkit, but if you don't have the confidence to use it, then it's the toolkit's going to
sit in the garage or sit in the closet.
And this is the last book I will ever write ever.
Cause they're so hard and take so much time, but branded like sir hand took me
two years and completes that sales trilogy, which is okay.
So you know how to sell.
You have the confidence to do it.
Now, if you, no one knows what you're selling, then you can have the
greatest idea in the world.
No one's going to buy it.
You're never going to make an income from it.
You're never going to be able to leave that nine to five that you want to leave so much to go and work on
your side hustle. That could be that big thing. And I just could not find a branding blueprint.
How do I use podcasts? How do I use TikTok? What is an Instagram reel and why is it different from
a YouTube short? How do I work with PR? There's a whole section on PR. And so anyway, it all came from all of my branding failures over the years and
everything that I did wrong thinking, what is a brand?
I don't know.
Nike?
Is it a logo?
Is it coloring?
Like, what is your brand?
How deeply entrenched is it into financial education and and into podcasting, and to your appearance?
How do you define that?
So we built a brand strategy system for people.
I started teaching it to our sales teams here in New York City.
We started branching out and teaching it to
salespeople in every industry all over the world,
and all that has turned into the book.
I'd love for you to dig a little bit deeper
how the landscape has changed over the past four-ish years.
There's no more corporate ladder, remote work.
How has it shifted to make personal branding
just so important and more important than ever?
Well, I think it's always been important.
I just think there was never a focus on it.
Think about you're an analyst at a company or you're just an
employee. Your brand is your reputation. If you do the math,
forget product branding. I mean, the book goes into product
branding a lot, but just focus on personal brand. You have one
whether you like it or not. You just might not know it. Mine was
when I did this exercise, the premature gray haired white guy who thinks he's funnier
than he is, who looks at the ground while he walks. And that's it. That's what someone
told me. It's like, well, really? That's how you describe me without using my name. That's
my brand. It's like, yeah, that's how people know you. I'm like, that's what people say
about me. That's not great. That's not the image that I want to present to the world.
So brand starts with core identity,
core identity when it leaves your fingers or leaves your lips turns into
perception, right? The perception the world has of you,
that perception when you leave the room or leave the chat or put your phone
away turns in reputation. And just like a pot of boiling water,
over time it eventually boils. So over time that work eventually becomes the brand
It's what you're known for and it's developing a clear and concise and memorable
personal brand that I think will make the biggest difference for
everyone who wants to build a successful career or
Whatever definition of success that you have
Obviously the world has changed a lot in the last 10 years.
10 years ago, 2014, Instagram had just come out.
YouTube was still kids playing with slime and just random clips.
Early, early days of vloggers.
Netflix was DVDs.
It's just a different world.
10 years before that, the biggest show on the planet was American Idol,
survivor, and daytime soap operas.
The world has moved incredibly, incredibly quickly and people want
to hire people that they know.
And so how do you get them to know who you are and what your value proposition
is and the way to do it today is so much easier than it was 10 years ago, five
years ago, you just have to be able to build a machine that cuts through the noise to grab that attention
because there's a lot of people building brands now.
It's not just one person.
Think about how hard it was to get your name out there 15 years ago.
There are far fewer platforms, far fewer distribution engines.
So to get into or onto one of them, you had to either be well connected,
have tons of money, or have gotten quote unquote lucky, right? Have amazing talent or get lucky.
Today, everyone in the palm of their hands has a distribution engine. You know, it's something that
I say to companies, you know, I speak at different firms all the time, and every company has to be a
media company. You don't have to be like me me you don't have to have it actual production company as part of your umbrella but you've got to
be immediate company as you are pushing yourself out there and getting brand awareness and
i think there's nothing more important today used to be that you hire an assistant as your
first hire like why i need to hire assistant i think you're either hiring a content creator
or a
publicist as your first hire these days, because your job is to generate
business, to generate lead flow.
You want to sell more ads, you want to sell more shirts, you want to sell more
software, whatever it is you sell, your number one job all day long is to build
business.
Let's hold that thought and take a quick break with our sponsors.
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Being an entrepreneur and working remotely definitely has its perks.
And I know a lot of you listening in are in the same boat as me.
But do you really take advantage of being able to work from anywhere?
I know I typically don't, but thankfully this past holiday, I finally decided to make
use of my work flexibility for the first time ever.
My boyfriend and I decided to pack up and leave to the west coast to spend an entire month
working from home in the sun. We got a super cute bungalow in Venice Beach with a fence backyard.
The change in scenery, the fresh air, and the slower pace to help me to inspire some really
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So I recently interviewed this guy, Rory Vaden on the show.
He's a branding expert.
And he told me that his definition of a personal brand is a digitization
of your reputation basically online, which I thought was really smart because really
personal branding right now is just how do you make yourself known and visible and searchable
online.
And it's really hard to stand out today with AI.
There's so much content going on.
There's so much competition.
Everybody is on social media. So a lot of people are looking at creating a personal brand as really
competitive, really daunting, and they might have a negative outlook on this is
just so overwhelming. So what is the positive good news story of this? What is
your encouragement for people that it's not too late to start their own personal brand?
Well, I know Rory well. I work with Rory, work with Rory on branded like Sir Hans
because that's what his company does.
And I get excited because of the opportunity.
You just want more opportunity.
It's like people getting upset about AI
and what it's going to do to Hollywood
and all the jobs that it's going to put out.
Every single revolution we have,
whether it's industrial
or technological, makes certain jobs no longer necessary.
And so you have to make the determination of,
are you going to be on the unemployed
or on the employed side?
Because someone's gonna have a job.
There are more workers today than there ever were before,
ever.
There's more jobs created today
than there ever were before.
Maybe the jobs are different, and so you have to adapt, right?
You have to ebb, to flow.
There's no blacksmiths the way they're used to.
And thank God, I like my shoes being made out of plastic and making me bounce and what
would life be like without it?
I get excited about things like AI and the ability to generate brand everywhere because I'm
more excited about the amount of talent around the world that we get to meet now.
Just like we were talking about before, ten years ago how hard would it be to
find that musician, that writer, that artist, that actor out there. Twenty years
ago you had to be so connected or have money
which just wasn't in the cards for so many people and the cemetery is full of
musicians and athletes and very talented people that just never got their opportunity
They never got their opportunity the greatest basketball player that's ever played
You don't know who they are and will never know
basketball player that's ever played, you don't know who they are. And we'll never know. Because they never got the
opportunity. The fastest human on the planet, the greatest
actress on the planet, the greatest guitar, but we're just
never going to know who they are because they never got the
opportunity until now. Because if they are great, they can
point their phone at themselves. And that value distribution
engine can take that talent and put it to the world and then the
world gets to decide just like Elon Musk on stage with
Sorkin talking about you know how the world will decide the world will look at your talent and they will decide are you worth it?
Is that a scary thing sure, but I would rather take a greater opportunity and make it global then
Stick with the hierarchy. We've known for a hundred years.
Yeah, I love that.
Okay, so let's move on to getting some strategies
from your book.
So let's talk about what a good personal brand feels like
to your clients and customers.
What kind of feelings does a good personal brand invoke?
Well, every personal brand needs a strong
know, like, and trust factor. That's the first thing. invoke? Well, every personal brand needs a strong no like
entrust factor. That's the first thing. Think about every job
you've ever had every relationship you've ever had.
No one wants to work with you or talk to you unless they feel
like there's a little bit of trust. They like you. People
don't want to work with people they don't like, for the most
part. And they know you they know who you are they know of
you right? That's that brand awareness that we create the feeling needs to always be relatable and or aspirational so there are
brands like lvmh one of the most valuable companies in the world i'm in soho right now lvmh owns all
these stores like all of them all of them and a lot of them are aspirational because they're expensive, right?
It's not just that they're luxury luxury.
I think it is got a wide definition because what's luxurious to
you might be different to me.
Expense is different though.
And there's a singular definition there.
And so that is aspirational, but then you have relatable.
Like we mentioned Nike before that's relatable.
I want to run faster.
I want to be in shape.
I want to be happy.
I want to be fit.
I want to hit my weight goal for this year that I told myself I was going to hit.
And I've always said from the day I got into this business and sales that people
hate being sold, but they love shopping with friends, which is just so true.
You walk into a store and someone comes up to you and says, Hey, anything I can help
you with?
And you say, no, no, I'm good.
You walk into a shoe store, you got shoes on your feet.
You didn't walk in barefoot.
It's not like you need shoes.
So how do you create the want?
How do you turn a need into a want?
And then vice versa, how do you turn a want into a need?
Because that need is what opens up the wallet
that gets the credit card swipe,
that creates a new customer.
And you're only gonna do that if you feel like
you're shopping with a friend,
or there's that no like and trust factor there
where the person or the content or that brand
is fully relatable and or aspirational.
Those are some really, really great tips.
I agree with all of them.
And I know that in your book, you have a three component strategy and you call
it the Sirhant brand strategy system.
Could you go over that at a high level and then I'll just ask you
some questions about each one.
Sure. Like I said, it starts with core identity.
It's really understanding and really breaking down and being incredibly honest with yourself as to
who are you? What makes you you?
Define yourself without using your name.
What are you known for?
I told you when I did it, I look at the ground when I walk.
Why on earth would that be my brand?
Like, what does that even mean?
That's not my brand.
I guess that's my reputation.
Why do I do that?
Oh, okay.
I guess from the ages of 14 to 24,
I had really, really bad skin.
And it built a muscle memory in my brain
that told myself that when I walk and see strangers,
I get embarrassed when they look at my face.
So I'm just gonna look at the ground
and I'm just never gonna stop doing that.
I'll just look at the ground.
And even though I got older and my skin cleared up,
I never changed.
My brain didn't rewire itself.
So I had to make certain determinations that way.
And you're figuring out what I call your and. And anyone can can do this like my mom is building her personal brand right now. She just wants to play more golf
You're a mother and golf and what's your aunt? I am real estate and media and you can have a thousand ands
But you gotta pick one. What is the one what's that one thing that you are connected to?
Maybe it is books and makeup.
Maybe it is podcasting and finance.
Everyone has one.
You figure out what that and is and that's what's going to connect you to a
personal customer because it used to be that it was just content to commerce.
You'd see movies, every TV show, you'd see a Mercedes Benz drive through,
and that was
content to commerce.
The brand paying for access to the consumer that's going to watch that movie or TV show,
and then maybe you might go out there and the next time you drive by a Mercedes dealership,
you might say, oh, that's the same car that Brad Pitt, okay, yeah, I like Mercedes.
And now all of a sudden you drive a Mercedes.
That's content to commerce.
But what's changed today is there's a middle C that's been created because you can no longer just do
content to commerce because everyone does it. It's been diluted. It's a
commodity now. Anybody can do content on their phone and try to create
commerce and no one cares. What they care about is a community. So this
started with early influencers, and that whole business
has completely changed now. But how do you go from content to community commerce? And
the way I think about it, once you build that and and create that core identity, it's community
first. The community will tell you the content to create that is unique to them. Maybe it
has nothing to do with video or images.
Maybe your thing is a LinkedIn.
Maybe it's a blog.
Maybe you're a thought leader.
Maybe that's your thing.
So you've got a great community
that you've built based on your and
because your and is bicycles.
I love cycling.
Okay, that's the community that you join.
Now you're gonna build your own community
that's unique to you and cycling.
From there, that audience will tell you what they want to see.
Maybe it's you cycling. Maybe it's every morning,
jumping on that Peloton and what music are you going to listen to?
Whatever it might be.
That's going to create that consistent content that is phase two of our brand
strategy system. That doesn't have to be videos.
It doesn't have to be dancing. It doesn't have to be anything,
but it has to be consistent.
Maybe your consistent content is just picking up the phone,
call a hundred people a day.
Maybe that's your thing.
Great.
But you got to do it and you got to be consistent with it.
And that community will tell you what they want to see.
And then from there, phase three, you know, we call amplification in there,
but it's shouting it from the mountaintop.
No one's going to know what you do well unless you tell them.
Your mom isn't telling all her friends.
Your dad's not telling all his friends.
And you can only brag so much on social before that algorithm just crushes you.
So you've got to be able to humbly put your successes out to the world so that
people see you because success begets success.
People want to work with people who are busy people wanna work and they wanna buy things.
That other people have how do you create that phone how do you build that velvet rope how do you put that out like i'm standing in a office building right now that i built in the center of soho in new york city the building was built.
New York City, the building was built to be the Tommy Hilfiger flagship store in New York City and a realtor has it.
That makes no sense.
How does that make any sense?
How do I afford this place?
I have a building in Soho that's bigger than Prada.
That's crazy.
Totally crazy.
Except for the world has totally changed.
The brand has changed and the statements that we make using that consistent content that's built out of our core identity totally changed. The brand has changed. And the statements that we make using that consistent content
that's built out of our core identities has changed.
And the only reason I do all this,
and I'm not like a professional author,
even though I've written these books,
is I have this itch as I think about legacy
and like what is my giving back other than money?
How can I help empower the next generation of entrepreneurs, of salespeople, of 17 and
18 year olds who are graduating high school and saying, now what do I do with my life?
People with first, second, third careers who are trying to say, why did I take this job
15 years ago?
I want to go and do what actually makes me happy, but I'm nervous I'll never make money.
Where can I figure out how to go do this?
That's why I write these things and do this stuff
and put it out there.
And I just hope people listen a little bit.
Such great strategies.
I really love it.
And I really like that identifying your and.
And I actually talked to James Altucher just a few weeks ago
and it's similar to what he was telling us about intersections and purpose sex.
And this was actually related to creating a new business idea.
And so he basically was saying,
pick two things that you're an expert on or two things that you love and combine
them to create your next business idea.
So it's very similar in terms of figuring out what are your two main pillars for your brand
that is uniquely you.
So my question about this is,
what questions should we ask ourselves
to discover what our and is?
First of all, it's relatively pretty easy.
I mean, I think you have to think about,
okay, this is what I did Monday through Sunday.
What did I do during the day, what I do at night,
what do I like, what's interesting to me.
And it could be as simple as you have kids,
you hang out with your dog, that's what you like.
You like wine.
To start, it can always change.
You can change your and whenever you want,
but you've gotta find that initial hook, right?
We say like ask them, so it's like you hook them, you help them, you ask them.
All right, that's kind of the three prongs
to getting new customers.
You wanna hook them with something and then you help.
You help, you help, you help, you help, you help.
You show them that you provide value and then you can ask.
You never start by asking somebody for something.
Why would I ever help you?
Well, I don't even know you.
That's that retail issue that we talked about
where you walk into the store and someone says,
hey, can I help you with anything?
Oh, no, no.
You haven't hooked me and you haven't helped me.
Please don't ask me any questions.
I'm just here because I saw this.
I'm gonna go buy it online later by myself,
comfort of my couch.
And so you have to ask yourself those questions
of what do I wanna be known for two years
from now?
Like if you could just write down and be realistic in two years, my personal brand will be Ryan
Serhant and what you got to have that North star.
So what is it?
And then what are you known for today?
I was Ryan Serhant and my and was my hair.
My and was the fact that I wouldn't make eye contact.
And I needed to say, okay, well,
which one am I gonna take control over?
I want my and when I get into the business early,
I need my and to be confidence
because you gotta work with a salesperson who has confidence.
So I'm not gonna touch my hair. I think the hair is actually going to help me.
People will be super confused by how old I am because they'll see the back of my
head and they'll say, Hey guys, and then I'll turn around and they'll say, what
just happened, but I will fix the looking at the ground because that doesn't
scream confidence and I'm going to eventually get my aunt to be Ryan Serhant
and confidence to Ryan Serhant and luxury real estate to Ryan Serhant and confidence to Ryan Serhant and luxury real estate to Ryan Serhant and luxury
sales to Ryan Serhant and CEO to Ryan Serhant and technology and so on and so forth. And if you need
help doing this, you can ask a friend game show style and ask them the same question I did, which
is without using my name, how would you describe me? Don't ask your parents, don't ask siblings,
don't ask anyone that would be afraid of upsetting you.
Get a real answer.
Actually ask the scariest thing, but also the best thing that million dollar
listing did for me early on in my career was internet commenters.
You know, you don't have to listen to them, but I had never actually put a camera
in front of my face and gone to work for a year and then put that out there to
the whole world.
You wanna see what your personal brand is
and how people really think about you?
Go do a reality TV show
and then see what the whole world has to say about you.
That was an eye-opening moment
and your first instinct is to push back,
be like, well, everyone's an idiot.
You know, right?
These anonymous commenters, like they're just stupid.
But then when it's a lot of them, then you say,
huh, maybe I should do a deep
internal dive and try to understand who am I, who is that person?
So you do that work and you ask those questions to have a really clear self
identity.
So many people I think walk around and they really have no identity of self.
They really just don't know.
They wake up, they brush their teeth, they get coffee, they go out the door,
they're tired, and then another year goes by and another year just go by.
So if you're not figuring out what that North star is for where you want to get
to two years from today, that gives you a year to put your plan into action and a
year to execute them before, you know, it's 2030 and then it's 2040.
And I think building your brand today is giving yourself your own newspaper.
20 years ago, you could have your own newspaper that got put on the front
doorstep of everybody you want it to be in front of.
I would have taken my own New York times 20 years ago.
I would have taken my own Washington post.
And today you all have that opportunity.
So what you're talking about really is being intentional,
having brand vision.
Something that I just wanna call out as important
of what you just discussed,
is the fact that you actually need to decide first
what you want your personal brand to be
so that you can be intentional and consistent
in your content so people know what you stand for.
If you don't know what you stand for,
first off, you're not going to be able to be consistent.
So you need to have that vision like you were talking about.
So another key component to creating a brand, you say,
is identifying three key brand adjectives.
What are your key adjectives
and why do you think that's important for people to have?
Again, it's an exercise that I put into the book and that we put into our
courses just to help people have a frame of reference
for where they're trying to get to. So it's who you are today
and where you want to get to. It's just like a fitness journey. Today I weigh x,
tomorrow I want to weigh y. And then really making the determination of
but do you? Do you really, do you understand the trade off?
Do you really, really, really want the thing you talk about
because maybe you really don't.
And I think most people kind of don't.
You wanna quit smoking, but it's like,
I'm gonna die anyway.
Like I hear that from people all the time.
I'm in sales, you know, lots of people smoke.
So for me, one of those power adjectives
that I wanted to work towards,
and maybe comes from, I don't know,
insecurities that I had when I was younger,
I want people to understand that I am polished.
Now, polished has a lot of different definitions,
different ways to think about it.
Could be just shiny
Polished for me is put together
Polished for me is confident when I talk to a seller of a fifty million dollar penthouse
I need them to not think I'm messy. I need them to not think that I don't have my shit together
I need them to know as part of my brand and they'll never
actually say the word out loud, but I need it to be present, clear, and memorable that he is polished.
So the marketing materials I bring to the table, the way I speak, the way I present myself across
social, our newsletters, everything that I do, I think about the word polished as one of my words.
And so you can go on thesaurus.com
and start typing in words based on where you wanna get to
in those next two years.
You can start acting that way today.
Being polished is not that hard.
It's exactly what you just said.
It's about being intentional. Being intentional as to how you want to have the world see which goes back to that core identity math.
Building that personal brand so that is one of my adjectives and there's so many different words out there.
I think it is important and it helps create that vision board vocabulary.
important and it helps create that vision board vocabulary,
which I think so many people were so visual, we all create these vision boards,
whether you do or you don't,
and you print out that photo of the person
who looks like that,
or you print out a photo of a car you want
or of a vacation you want,
you put it there and you remind yourself all the time.
And I think that can be helpful, it can also be sad.
And so I like using words that you wanna get get to, right? So if you want to make
more money, maybe one of your words is rich, right? Maybe one of it, it's wealth. Like I have a,
I don't know if you can see, but there's a one B on my wall that I put there to basically self-shame
myself every day that we're building a billion dollar brand here. Under the umbrella, the holding company, one day,
could be tomorrow, could be in a hundred years,
I don't know, but it's there all the time.
And my camera on these Zooms podcast looks directly at it
when my head's not blocking it
because I have to get close to my microphone.
And it is there to remind me all the time,
hey, there you go, that's a visual,
but there's a word that's attached to that.
And pick those three adjectives.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
I teach a LinkedIn masterclass,
and one of the biggest influencers on LinkedIn,
and a big part of my masterclass is branding.
Something that I noticed with my students is a lot of people
just feel like brands are fonts and colors and
That's what they're laser focused on
But in reality that is in my opinion one of the least important things that you should focus on
So can you talk to us about why visual identity isn't the main thing that people should focus on?
Yeah, I remember when I delivered the first manuscript of of Brandele Hint, and the publisher looked at the chapter on visual identity
and saw how long it was.
It was like, are you really gonna talk about fonts
and coloring and everything that goes into this
for this many, I'm like, yes,
because it's really, really important,
but look at where it is in the book.
And it's like halfway through.
The process of building that brand,
I'm in real estate, so obviously,
this is the way I think about things.
The font and all of that stuff, that logo, is the paint.
It's the paint on the house.
It's what the shingles look like.
It's that appearance that that house has from the street.
But there is no house without a foundation.
There is no house without a cracked foundation.
There's no house without a flooded foundation.
There's no house without the two by fours
and the insulation and everything you can't see
behind those walls.
The house doesn't exist.
And so that's how I think about visual identity.
And I think if you just think about building anything
to get there, you're not gonna paint the house
before it's built, there is no house.
And so many people like to go to visual identity first
because it's how they kind of correctly associate brands.
But if you just saw the Nike Swish
without ever seeing the company,
you wouldn't say, ah, Nike.
I mean, it's been like 50 years now.
It's a long, long time.
But you associate it with athleticism
for aspirational body types for fitness for a leisure right there so many things you associated with.
That logo then just is there to remind you who created those sweatpants.
And so you gotta do that foundational work first that kind of goes back to just the core identity work which is not that hard to do. And I think the number one mistake people make when building a brand is they do
exactly what I did for years is I went immediately into my logo, my thing,
and picking a color. And I was like, okay, everyone in real estate in New York
city, they're all these different, no one's purple. And so my real estate
branding was purple because no one had purple. I didn't actually stop to think
about, well, maybe there's a reason people aren't purple.
And I had no connection to purple.
I didn't do the math, I didn't look it up.
I was just like, well purple, purple works.
And then I got bored of purple and I was like, what else?
Yellow, and then we were yellow for a long time.
I was yellow until we started the company.
And that's how we stood out.
We were yellow, yellow, yellow, yellow, yellow,
for no reason other than branding is a logo in colors. So when I built Sirhant,
the company that we started in 2020, the last thing I thought about was logo and color. I've
made all the mistakes. Now I'd rather regret the things I did than the things I never tried because
I learned from them. But let's take a step back. What is the core identity of this business of this product?
What does that look like?
Who is that person?
What do they do at 9 p.m. on a Tuesday?
Do all of that work that I talk about in the book that'll inform your logo and your coloring,
everything that community will inform it.
My first book was out like Serhan wrote it.
We created an education platform out of it.
And so we do sales training, direct to consumer and B2B all over the world now.
And we just always call it sell like Serhan.
And that's cause there's the chorus.
I did a TV show called sell like Serhan.
It's out there.
It's easy.
You get it.
But now the community that we built there has changed rapidly.
I started it and it was just real estate agents kind of around the world. Now the community that we built there has changed rapidly.
I started it and it was just real estate agents kind of around the world.
Now we have people who work in surgical centers in Mumbai.
We have people across Africa.
We have people in 128 countries
that don't fucking care about Ryan Serhan selling real estate.
They just don't know where else to go
for a sales education that helps them build
their career, that they can be a part of a cool community that's fun.
And so they influenced how our brand is changing.
And on the beginning of April, so like Serhan is totally changing.
New website, new look, new ads.
Since the day I started in 2019, the whole thing is changing as
influenced by that community.
And it's super exciting because they're the ones who told us what to do.
And they're the ones who have influenced what that identity looks like.
You're saying really smart things.
The main takeaway that I get from that is that your brand is always evolving.
Don't be afraid to evolve and change your brand and listen to your community.
And then to your point with visual identity, it's really
your messaging and your foundation that's going to inform the visual identity and there's psychology
of colors and fonts and you need to understand that so that it actually reflects what you want
to represent, which is really words that you need to put on paper and decide, right? So I really
agree with everything that you're saying. So let's move on to phase two. I just wanna understand for consistency is key.
What would you say people's biggest roadblocks are with that?
They just don't get started.
And they let the fear of embarrassment overpower
the fear of failure.
I don't think we actually have fears of failures these days.
You can always get another job.
You can always move back home.
You can always stop. The. You can always move back home. You can always stop.
The risk these days is nominally financial because that's what your risk appetite is.
I think most of us these days have a fear of being embarrassed.
You don't want to be embarrassed.
You don't want to make the wrong move.
What if I put it out there and my friends make fun of me, my mom laughs at me, my little
brother is going to call me a loser, whatever it might be.
You have to pretend that no one else exists other than the community you're trying to reach.
Embarrassment isn't real. It's completely internalized. There's nothing for you,
just like worrying. There's nothing for you. You focus on the things you can control and just put
out consistent content that is in line with you and your and and always make sure that you
have a post with purpose the purpose might just be to build engagement and
following because you're funny maybe you're charitable maybe that's your
thing and you're just trying to raise money all the time that's how you're
operating but you must be consistent you know I go through calendars and
everything in the book as to what works and every platform is totally different now.
It's a bit annoying, but it is what it is.
Just like newspapers were different platforms for magazines,
were different platforms for local radio and new state.
I mean, it's all the same now and different at the same exact time.
And so finding that consistency, at least minimum a couple times a week and
sticking to it is the only way that you are going to find any kind of stickiness within
the marketplace that you're trying to penetrate.
And you're going to end up finding something sticky that you never ever ever ever ever
anticipated.
It's typically going to be the thing you weren't focused on.
What you're focused on your brain is usually not what everyone else is focused
on. And that's part of the excitement. Also part of the fear.
And you just got to stay consistent over and over and over.
Okay. So moving on to the third phase,
which is shouting everything from the mountain tops.
When do you feel like we're ready to take things prime time?
And what are the things
that we should be doing?
I think your earliest successes are ready for prime time.
Your creation is prime time.
The people that are gonna pay attention to you
are gonna be few and far between,
but you wanna build up that early brand awareness
and cut through that attention kind of deficit
as quickly as you possibly can.
And you can do it across social. You can do it through collaborations.
You find someone that you want to be like, you can intern for them, work for them, do
things for free for them, push, push, help them as much as you possibly can.
And then you've got brand awareness by proximity.
How many people out there do we know because they were connected to somebody else you already knew.
How many brands do we know of because somehow they did a collaboration with a brand you were already aware of.
That goes a long long way and so putting yourself out there understand that success because success every deal you do.
People should know about it and it's not you congratulating yourself, it's you congratulating the client.
So amazing to wrap up this recent sprint that we did for my X and Y business
with Bob Smith and co.
It was amazing to watch what they've done.
I really can't wait to see how they succeed this year.
That's you just being nice while also telling your entire community you
did another deal. You helped people out again. You have a great value proposition again.
I think there's a fine line between how annoying you can be as somebody who touts their success
all the time, but there's also no memory anymore. No one cares. No one has any memory anymore.
Things come, things go.
What is terrible today,
no one will ever remember by Friday.
Yeah.
Okay, so I thought we could round out
this whole conversation.
I've got a really great quote from your book.
A brand is your map and compass all in one.
I thought this would be a great way
for us to round out the conversation.
Tell us what you mean by that.
It is the direction that you're moving forward to today
and it is the horizon that you're shooting towards
two years from now.
It's like personal financial goals.
I wanna save X dollars this year
so that within the next two years,
I can have paid off X and I will be debt
free or whatever you want to get to. You have to have those micro wins that are
then attached to that macro win. You can't have one without the other. You're
trying to get someplace and so that's what I mean by that, right? The brand that
you create for yourself today is going to guide you to the brand that you
want to build for yourself and be known for tomorrow.
That's the only way that I know how to do it.
And what's great is that we all have the power to do it for ourselves today.
You don't have to have a production company.
You don't have to go hire a huge social team.
You don't have to do all these things.
You can do it on your own.
Well, thank you so much for this conversation, Ryan, about branding.
I end my show with two questions.
It doesn't have to be about what we talked about today.
What is one actionable thing our young and profitors can do today to
become more profitable tomorrow?
Oof.
What can they do today?
Look at your subscriptions.
You know, what is that app that you downloaded a year ago
that you forgot that actually is charging you right now
and invest into yourself to make more money,
but also stop spending money on stuff
you don't need to spend money on.
And what is your secret to profiting in life
and this can go beyond business?
You work for the 70 year old version of yourself.
Use that faces app, age yourself to be an old person, print it out.
That's your boss.
At the end of the day, you don't work for your current boss.
You don't work for anyone else.
You're going to be that person before you know it.
And if that person isn't happy, you failed your job.
You got to work as hard as you possibly can so that that person has a great life. That means being profitable today, that's what
that means. If that means spending so much money right now so that that
person's life is super profitable then, the way I operate, then that's how you do
it. But just remember who you work for. It's no one else, it's you and the future.
I love that so much. Ryan, where can everybody learn more about you and everything that you do?
Just at Ryan, Sirhant, everywhere.
Branded like Sirhant, now out.
I guess it came out last week, whenever it came out.
Buy it anywhere books are sold, Barnes and Noble.
I signed a bunch of copies if you want a signed copy there
or anywhere books are sold.
Amazing, well, thank you so much, Ryan.
I love this conversation and hope to talk to you soon.
Thank you.
Thanks for listening to this episode
of Young and Profiting podcast.
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Before we go, I want to thank my production team,
Jason, Amelia, Hisham, Furkan, Ambika, Kridi, Aaron,
everybody on the team.
You guys are amazing.
Thank you for all that you do.
This is your host, Halala Taha, signing off.
Yeah, fam, I got links on links on links.
My clients got links on links.
My students got links on links.
We all have so many links.
Social media sites, websites, e-commerce sites, podcast episodes, webinars.
That's why I use Porkbun, the all-in-one solution for managing links and building your
digital brand.
As a content creator, you've gotta make it super easy
for your audience to know what you're soliciting,
which means that you need to be customizing your links,
specifically your link in bio.
Your link in bio is one of the most important links
that you have.
It's like the ultimate link of all links.
You don't want it to be a complicated thing
that nobody can understand,
because that's what it was like in the past.
But now we're in the future in 2024,
we have Porkbun and we can customize our LinkedIn bio name.
We can get our very own.bio domain name.
So in the past,
LinkedIn bio is where this random set of letters and numbers,
nobody knew what they were clicking.
Now you can be really specific
and you can create a.bio domain name.
And Porkbun has an amazing offer up for grabs right now.
For just $5 for your first year,
you can get Porkbun's link in bio tool
and your very own.bio domain name.
I think the.bio domain is perfect for personal brands
because your audience will know exactly
what to expect when they click.
So for example, it will be halataha.bio.
It's short, simple, and easy to remember.
With just one click, your audience
can get all your latest content.
You can make really nice, beautiful buttons.
You can design the background.
You can embed YouTube videos, podcast videos,
plus Porkbun has an incredible five-star support team,
available 365 days a year.
Get your.bio domain and link in bio bundle for just
five dollars from pork bun at porkbun.com slash profiting. That's porkbun.com slash profiting for
a five dollar dot bio domain and link in bio bundle. Porkbun.com slash profiting.