Digital Marketing Strategy: Chris Handy on How He Built a $400K 2-person Agency in 24 months

If you’re a marketing agency owner who’s struggling to get traction, how would you like to hear from an agency owner who was very successful early along? Chris Handy built a $400,000 two-person agency in just 24 months, and he has generously agreed to share what worked with the BrightIdeas audience. (For more agency Bright Ideas, check out our other posts that are especially relevant to marketing agencies.)

Chris has excellent strategies for lead generation, LinkedIn and other social promotion, lead nurturing and more. In addition to the ThinkHandy digital marketing strategy, Chris shares ideas on how to select a profitable niche.

Listen now and you’ll also hear Chris and I talk about:

  • (5:00) Introductions
  • (8:50) His background with eBay
  • (12:30) How his exposure to process has molded his thinking
  • (14:50) Overview of #1 lead generation
  • (15:30) Overview of how he’s using LinkedIn
  • (19:50) Overview of how they are blogging for leads
  • (24:20) Criteria for selecting a profitable niche
  • (26:30) Overview of lead nurturing
  • (31:00) Overview of retained income and how assessments lead to it
  • (40:00) Overview of how they systematize the deliverables
  • (43:30) How they are using client interviews to create blog posts
  • (45:00) Overview of deliverables given for retainer
  • (51:00) Overview of social promotion strategy
  • (56:00) Advice on how to get started at content marketing
  • (58:20) His biggest mistake and lessons learned

Resources Mentioned

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

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Transcript

Trent: Hey there, bright idea hunters. Welcome to the Bright Ideas

Podcast. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid and this is the podcast

for marketing agencies, marketing consultants and entrepreneurs

who want to discover how to use content marketing and marketing

automation to massively boost their business without massively

boosting the number of hours that you have to work every week.

As a matter of fact, the goal is to help you reduce the number

of hours you have to work every week. The way that we do that is

we bring proven experts onto the show to share with us what’s

working for them. When I say a proven expert I don’t mean a guru

or a theorist, I mean someone who’s actually using this stuff in

their business and they’re getting significant results by doing

so.My guest on the show today is a guy by the name of Chris Handy,

and he is the Founder of a marketing agency by the name of

ThinkHandy.com. He and his wife are actually the two people that

are behind that agency. He launched that in the beginning of

2011 and here we are just not even two years later he’s at

$20,000 a month in recurring revenue from retainer business.

They’re on track to do $400,000 in revenue this year and as you

can imagine with no overhead and only he and his wife as being

the two key employees that also translates into a very

profitable business venture.In this interview I get Chris to share all sorts of stuff with

us in great detail. For example, I want him to, or get him,

rather, to explain how he’s using LinkedIn to generate leads and

he does something that’s very unique and interesting. It’s

different than what I do and I’ll go so far as to say it’s

smarter and better than what I am doing so of course I need to

adjust my action as a result. You’re going to hear that at

roughly the seven to nine-minute mark and then after that we

start talking about his criteria for selecting which niches that

he pursues and that is a real key part of his business strategy

is choosing those niches correctly because as he points out not

all niches are created equal. Some are going to be a whole lot

more profitable for you than others.Then we walk through his four-step process for taking a lead

that goes through the funnel and requests an assessment then

there’s four steps that he does to convert them to a client and

it was very interesting as he shared the details on that because

the one thing that he doesn’t do is he doesn’t ever go and meet

them face to face. The really wonderful thing about this is no

matter what town you’re in or where you live you can get clients

that are anywhere if you listen to this interview and you

replicate the process that Chris explains.His background involved a lot of work with process improvement

and process automation and that really shines through in the

systems that he’s using to run his agency. We talk about that as

well. When a client says yes, how efficient you are or aren’t in

delivering the work that you’ve promised to them is going to

make all the difference between whether you build an agency with

lots of revenue and no profit or you build an agency with lots

of revenue and lots of profit. You really need to get good at

this whole systematizing and process management and in this

interview Chris shares a whole lot about that.Finally, towards the end of the interview he shares one of the

biggest mistakes that he made early on and the lessons that he

learned as a result of that. Do make sure that you stay tuned to

the very end and check that out.We’re going to welcome Chris to the show in just a second, but

before we get to that I want to very briefly tell you about a

new book that I’m working on and how you can get an advance look

at it, some free chapters and a discount when it comes out if

you go to BrightIdeas.co/book all of the information will be

there and this is going to be a book that covers extensively

everything that I’ve ever learned plus everything I’ve learned

from all the guests that have been on the show about two really

important topics, content marketing and marketing automation.Why are those topics so important? Because in this day and age

that’s the magic sauce that gets you all the business and all

the clients and the growth and the profits. I didn’t really have

a name for the book yet but if you go to BrightIdeas.co/book

you’ll see there a landing page that I created and you’ll be

able to opt in and get all the things that the landing page

says. With that said, please join me in welcoming Chris to the

show. Hey Chris. Welcome to the show.Chris: Thank you, Trent. Great to be here.Trent: It is a thrill to have you on. Just from what we were talking

about before we hit the record button we have a very good

interview coming your way so for the listeners who have not

heard of you please take a moment, introduce yourself, who you

are and what you do.Chris: Sure. My name is Chris Handy. I’m in Fort Worth, Texas, and I

operate a company called Think Handy and we’ve really decided

against putting anything as a definer on the end of that name

because we were kind of in marketing sales and operations and

we’re a consultancy in helping people streamline those and get

more out of their marketing dollars, but also integrating sales

and service into that.Trent: In the last, so you started this firm at the beginning of 2000,

and we’re going to get into your background and everything in a

minute, but I want people to know the results that you’ve

achieved in a pretty short period of time. You started in the

beginning of 2011, correct?Chris: Yes.Trent: Here we are, 2013 now. Middle, I guess fall and in the last, so

you started off from zero. Nothing. Right?Chris: Started off from zero. I took a few freelance web design

projects in 2010 and really proof of concept is, we were just

trying to see if we could get clients and found out that we

could so in 2011 went ahead and took the plunge and got started

and it was a slow ramp up. We’ve grown quite a bit in revenue

and in recurring revenue specifically so this year we are on

track to do about, hopefully about 400,000 by the end of the

year.Trent: In the last six months you said, off air you said you’d done

200.Chris: That’s correct.Trent: That’s pretty good. Your recurring revenue is at how much per

month now?Chris: We’re at about $20,000 in retainer relationships for each

month.Trent: That’s pretty fantastic. It makes, when you run a lean business

like you do with virtually no overhead, then 20,000 a month

coming in on the first day of every month makes for not a whole

lot of stress of, ‘Hey, where’s our next meal coming from.’Chris: It’s definitely improved our quality of life a little bit. Not

having to worry but we’re investing a lot back into the business

and in our marketing. Really we’ve spent a lot of time figuring

out where we go. We can obviously grow now so which way do we

grow? That’s very important to me. I want to make sure that when

we do make that next hire, who’s it going to be? What’s that

role going to be for and how can we make the most of our future?Trent: I have a lot of people who listen to my show based upon the

emails and so forth that I get that are solopreneurs. A lot of

marketing consultants, [freelance] web designers and I think I

speak for the when I say they all want to grow up. They want to

get, they want to make their firms bigger. They want to get more

recurring revenue. They want to be able to hire some more

employees and they want to use some more resources. They want to

grow like every other entrepreneur on the planet.I really want to make this episode for them so let’s, I want, I

really want to walk through kind of how you made that transition

from that first freelance client and I know there’s a lot of

people who listen to my show as well who maybe aren’t even in

business yet and you talked earlier how you kind of did a little

project with some freelance work to see if you could even get

clients. I want to talk about that.Before we get into both of those things I want you to tell a

little bit about your background because you have this rather

unusual background, this eBay consignment thing. You want to

talk a little bit about that so we have context?Chris: Sure. A lot of people bring up the 40 year old virgin when I

bring that up because you’ve seen that movie. The girl that

Steve Carell was going after, she managed an eBay store and what

an eBay store is is where you walk in and you hand the item to

the person at the counter and say, ‘I’d like to see this on

eBay.’ What they do is they take the item back and list it on

eBay or another online sales channel and basically sell it on

consignment so they’re going to take a commission and give you

the rest. Email you a link to the auction so you can see

everything that’s going. I was in that business which was

definitely interesting and that business has kind of, that whole

industry’s changed a lot in the last few years obviously.Started off in a small shop and then was recruited to the big

boys of the eBay consignment world, and I found myself managing

a distribution center that we routed trucks and went out and

picked up items from different people’s homes. We had five

stores in the Dallas Fort Worth area, that’s where we’re located

so all over the Metroplex. It’s a really large area so we had a

lot of ground to cover.I found myself routing all these trucks, managing the creative

team. Working on marketing these items. Actually getting them

listed onto eBay, working with software, working with people.

Managing a lot of people, customer service. Really just

everything that you could possibly think of with that business.

I was the operations director but that just included all these

different things. I learned a lot from the upper management

there. A lot of the people that were in management there were

former executives at Radio Shack and they had some great

processes. That was one of the things I really picked up during

that, what I called boot camp for sales and marketing and

operations.I was taught there that you don’t have to manage people as long

as you can manage the process and that was the most important

thing that I learned. We would create detailed process books for

everything. Now when I say everything I mean this is what you

say when you answer the phone. Scripts are easy to identify but

we encourage people to riff on those, obviously but also this is

what happens when an item comes in. Let’s say we get an item

from a person who wants us to sell something for them. This is

exactly where it goes, this is the process here, here, here.All the steps are detailed on an online document that everyone

can see. What we found was if ever there was a situation where

the, where something went wrong, rather than saying, ‘How, why

did you mess up or how did this happen,’ you simply say, ‘Well

did you follow the process?’ Either yes or no. If they did

follow the process, well, then you change the process. You don’t

have to do anything with the person because it’s not their

problem. That if they follow the, or if they didn’t follow the

process then it becomes a situation where, ‘Hey, here’s our

process book.’ You point to the book and you don’t have to

really do any disciplining of any kind. It’s just letting the

process manage the business for you so manage your team.Trent: Now being a guy that runs a marketing agency, how did all that

exposure to the importance of processes, how has that influenced

how you’re building and running your business, right, the way

from, and we’re going to go into detail on all these things but

just kind of at the high level right the way from lead

generation all the way to delivering your service. How has that

influenced you?Chris: Well it’s kept me, kept my eye on the prize of duplicating

myself and making sure that I don’t have to be the one pushing

all the buttons and following all these processes. If I work to

build these processes as we grow our agency then it won’t be

very difficult at all to manage people and every agency owner

wants to grow. Every agency owner wants to have a team of X

number of people. We have our own growth goals and I want to

make sure that we’re ready when we get there and that we have

detailed processes in place.We use a lot of online tools to get there so you have to kind of

come up with a process before you build the tool. That’s been

really important in our marketing process and then everything

that we do as far as client service.Trent: Where do you store all these processes?Chris: Well we use a project management system called Podio, but many

of them can do similar things. I found that this one works for

us because we can customize certain things with regards to

marketing campaigns specifically we can trigger actions based on

creating an item. We have a very detailed process on how we run

campaigns so if we have a client we know that we need to create

a downloadable offer for that client and we know we need to

create some blog posts to promote those downloadable offers.Every time we come up with a marketing persona to market to we

know we need at least one marketing offer and at least eight

blog posts to promote that marketing offer. As soon as we create

that persona, all these other tasks are created automatically so

it helps manage me. I’m extremely ADD. I don’t know what’s going

on.Trent: Join the club.Chris: If I don’t have it written down or if I don’t have somebody

bugging me to do it then I’m going to forget. There’s no

question. I built the software and built it on top of the

software basically just to keep me in line.Trent: My wife does that for me along with software. Let’s go back to

the thing, I want to talk about lead generation here because I

think a lot of people really struggle with it. Can you tell us

what you’re doing? What’s your number one method of generating

leads?Chris: Number one method of generating leads has got to be creating

content. I’ve had the website for two or three years now and so

I’ve done a lot of, before I really got into inbound marketing I

did a lot of SEO work, so I spent time making sure I was getting

found for some local stuff here in Fort Worth. That really

doesn’t bring me any business to be honest.Now our focus has been to get global and to not worry about

local because our best clients are not anywhere close to us so

we got away from that and really started getting active in

social networks. I think LinkedIn is the best place to promote

our content that we’re creating. [inaudible 15:45]Trent: How do you promote your content on LinkedIn? I want to see if

it’s similar to what I do.Chris: Gotcha. We’re writing blog posts that promote offers. That are

behind a form so that we’re gathering leads that way. I’ll look

for conversations where information we’ve written about is

applicable. I’ll go and I’ll say, ‘Hey we wrote this. Maybe this

can help you out.’ I’m a member of a lot of different groups. We

do have some verticals that we target and we’re always looking

to figure out what the best verticals are going to be for us to

go after. We’re still defining that.We’ve done a lot of construction marketing and home contractor

marketing which is interesting. It just kind of found us. We’re

testing out a new market right now and I’m involved in some of

those groups and I’m starting to kind of get in on those

conversations and help people. I think that’s the number one way

is helping people. Eventually they’re going to either need your

help or need more of your professional help or they’re going to

refer you to someone who does.Trent: How much of your time do you spend going into, how many groups,

first of all how many groups are you a member of?Chris: I think I’m a member of 45 right now. I had to delete myself

from some groups that I just wasn’t all that active in in order

to pursue some other ones in the verticals I want to see.Trent: Define specifically your activity in these groups. When you

produce a blog post on your blog, like when we do, we can put a

check mark in every group and say Add to group and it puts a

link to your post and your little intro. It’s not really like

one on one discussions. How do you do it?Chris: Sure. We use HubSpot for marketing automation. It does the same

thing and I think that’s the number one mistake people make when

they go in and they see this fancy social media tool, and they

can just check all the group boxes and then they end up spamming

everyone in their LinkedIn feed. That’s not good for anyone

because everyone sees that you just posted in 15 different

groups and that really doesn’t add any personal value.I really do spend time watching the groups and figuring out who

the influencers are there. Then when a conversation is heating

up and someone actually has something that I can add to, so

there’s a question about marketing in that particular instance

and I have something that’s of value to them I’ll add it into

the conversation manually. I will go ahead and automate some of

the posts, like when I do a new post on the blog. We’ll put that

out there to everyone on LinkedIn but I’m not spamming it into

groups. I really do consider it spam if you just add it to

everyone’s group. That’s how we do it. Even though it’s

marketing automation I think you really need a very human touch.Trent: I agree. I don’t think the way that we’ve been doing it is

ideal. It was, I had a past guest on the show was a LinkedIn

expert author of a book and that’s what she told us to do and so

we’ve been doing it since.Chris: That’s how you do it. I’m sorry.

Trent: No. I don’t mind. This is how we get better, we see what other

people are doing. How much time per day do you spend on LinkedIn

monitoring these conversations? Because with 45 groups, I mean

dude, you could spend like four hours.

Chris: You have to pick your battles. I’m not active in 45 groups. I’m

a member of 45 groups right now. Some of them are professional

groups. Some of them are places we’re targeting so maybe four or

five different groups really right now I’m active in and

actually helping people, and I spend maybe an hour throughout

the day monitoring LinkedIn. It’s one of the first things I look

at when I get up in the morning just to see because I get the

emails of what was going on yesterday, the hottest

conversations, that kind of thing.

Trent: So you . . .

Chris: I just look for anything that I might be able to help add value

to.

Trent: Do you subscribe to a daily email for every group that you’re a

member of?

Chris: Some of them. Yes.

Trent: Some. You wake up in the morning and you check and see what

people are talking about and say, ‘Can I add value to that

conversation?’

Chris: Correct.

Trent: That’s a good way to do it. I should probably do that too. What

other things are you doing for lead generation?

Chris: Aside from LinkedIn, just creating content around those

personas. We do a lot of keyword research. Now we’re trying to

actively solve problems. I prescribe to the Marcus Sheridan

school of blog topics. Marcus Sheridan made his pool business

grow by answering his customers’ questions online. I know that

you’ve interviewed him before.

Very much inspired by his process. Let’s just figure out what

questions our customers are asking and each one of those is

going to be a blog post. I look for questions that have not been

answered in the industries that I’m targeting and I answer those

questions. Simple as that.

Trent: Is that working well for you yet?

Chris: It is. Absolutely. I’ve got a few blog articles that are just

machines. They’re bringing in more leads than I need. A lot of

them we have to qualify throughout with some nurturing sequences

and stuff like that because it’s bringing in more than I

probably need to but you need to kind of cast a wide net at the

top of the funnel and then figure out who’s going to be a fit.

Trent: Absolutely. What types of lead magnets do you find are working

really, because you’ve got your blog posts and people are

getting there via either LinkedIn or search? They’re reading the

article. Are you using one lead magnet across all your posts or

using ten different lead magnets? How many do you use?

Chris: We rotate them out. I’ve got a few. I’ve got one that’s Inbound

Marketing 101 that is a really nice go to for the top of the

funnel and for some of our more basic blog posts. We categorize

our blog posts by three levels, introductory, intermediate and

advanced. I try to make sure that people that are visiting see

that, ‘Hey, they’re on an intermediate article, or they’re on an

advanced article.’ I’ll have it even suggest introductory

articles to folks who found us on an advanced just in case it’s

above their heads because this is an education game.

People need to understand when we’re talking about marketing

automation or even sales process improvement they need to

understand a little bit more about how we work so we’ll always

suggest a previous post to try to educate them along the way.

To answer your question I’ve got probably 15 different offers

that we’ve got and we use five or six of them more than all the

others. We kind of refined those fringe ones every once in a

while and repost it every once in a while.

Trent: What would you say is your number one lead magnet for top of

the funnel?

Chris: I’ve done this really interesting thing. If you’re familiar

with Facebook marketing you’ll have a cover photo at the top of

your Facebook page. I found myself always going and Googling the

dimensions to create a custom Facebook cover photo for my

clients and for me. We create a new one all the time. I found

there wasn’t any great place to find it, so what I did is I

created a Facebook page that is called Facebook Cover Photo Size

Helper.

In fact, if you Google Facebook Cover Photo Size it’s like

second or third result. What it does, it puts the actual cover

photo shows all the pixels on it so you can see exactly how to

build a perfect cover photo for you. Then I link to, I

constantly post some of our articles, and I link to a landing

page where you can download an even bigger guide on how to build

Facebook cover photos.

Trent: What’s the, I just did that search criteria. What is the URL

for your particular?

Chris: It’s Facebook.com/coverphotosize.

Trent: Yeah, okay, number two.

Chris: Right behind Facebook’s Help article.

Trent: Smart, smart, smart. Look at that, 9,643 likes.

Chris: And growing.

Trent: That’s a smart idea. I might even have to call that one a gold

nugget.

Chris: Sure. It brings us 15, 20 leads every single day.

Trent: How many of those, because not every lead, not all leads are

created equally of course. Do you, how many of those leads are

converting to customers?

Chris: I’d say we’ve gotten two or three referrals off of that.

Trent: You mentioned earlier that you are targeting a few different

niches. Can you talk a little bit about the criteria that you

use to analyze the viability of a niche?

Chris: Sure, Trent. I think that, especially when you’re talking about

a retainer relationship, now we really shy away from projects

but every once in a while we’ll take a project, if it’s a

referral that we think is going to help an existing relationship

we’ll do a project. That is different criteria but if we’re

going to go after someone that we think can be a pretty sizable

monthly retainer with a multi-year agreement or 12-month

agreement, we’re looking for something that is a large decision

purchase so it’s a business that has to do a lot of education

before a sale can be made. Maybe something that has really long

sales cycles.

I would not go, we found ourselves doing some construction

marketing and home contractor marketing. That’s just kind of how

we grew. That’s some of the first projects I took on so I keep

getting them, but I would not, today target those industries

because they are kind of one time and the need for recurring

services is not there. I want something like a big software

purchase or a managed IT company, something like that that

targets maybe huge facilities. Just an example of something that

is really a big decision and they need to have a lot of

expertise in any particular field.

Trent: Interesting that you mention managed IT. That was the industry

that I was in before and I’d never want to deal with those guys.

Once you get your leads into the funnel I’d like you to talk

about how you are segmenting them and if you’re using mid-funnel

lead magnets. Because where I’m going here is, as I said before,

not all leads are created equal. There are, and even if they

have the same need they’re at different phases in the buying

cycle. Some people are early. Some people are ready to buy. How

do you handle all of that using automation?

Chris: Sure. Everyone that signs up for any one of our offers is

automatically subscribed to our blog. I’ve had people give me

different feelings on that, whether or not you should just put

everyone on your blog but I find that it really works because we

get a lot of social shares. That’s something that immediately,

they’ll see everything that comes in every week. [inaudible

27:10]

Trent: I’m sorry to interrupt you. Do they get an email for every post

that you publish?

Chris: I choose to have it go out once a week.

Trent: A weekly summary?

Chris: Sure. Weekly summary. We’ll do three or four or five blog posts

every week. In a perfect world we’d have one for every day or

two but right now we’re producing about three or four every

week.

Trent: They get those on Sunday morning.

Chris: Mm-hmm. I find we get the best open rate then. I’m sure once

this thing goes live if you have enough listers that now

everyone’s going to be coming through on Sunday morning and

we’ll need to change it to another day. There’s no hard and fast

rule I’ve found. People will tell you it’s Tuesday at noon.

Well, it really is just when your audience is getting up. I find

early in the morning is great for me. No matter which day.

Trent: What type of, what are some, how are you segmenting? Just kind

of walk us through that. I opt into your funnel. What happens?

Chris: Now you’re signed up for the blog and if you click on any of

the links in those blogs I can identify that you’re somewhat

interested. That’s the only criteria I have to go into an

automated list. I’ve segmented that list off then I will segment

off the agencies because there are a lot of other agencies that

read our content. Then I narrow it down further and I look and

see where people came from. I’ve got some other smart lists that

tell me where they came from. If someone came from that Facebook

cover photo size helper and they’re not an agency then I send

them more introductory content on basic marketing and I look at

that as a way to get more social shares, more cheerleaders out

there because not everyone that comes through there is going to

be a fit for large scale retainer services.

Once I kind of siphoned off all of those other folks, I look at

everyone by industry and I’ll try and send something very

specific. We’ll create new landing pages all the time with

webinars because I can write a webinar. If I see that I’ve got

five different, for instance, managed IT companies that have

come in and filled out forms I might decide to try out a

webinar. I’ll say, ‘We’re going to do a sales and marketing

alignment webinar specifically for the managed IT companies.’

I’ll send them all an email and if somebody signs up, I do the

webinar. If somebody doesn’t sign up, I don’t.

It’s just something else out there a lot of times that we do, we

do end up getting that. I’ve got a real quick process on

launching new targeted landing pages and so we do that all the

time.

Trent: Define all the time. How often would you say you do it?

Chris: Once every week. Probably creating a new vertical just checking

it out seeing what comes up and then it’s another page out there

on Google to be found. Especially, we do have a field on all of

our forms that’s biggest marketing challenge. I think I saw that

on several different marketing automation software original

forms and so I started doing it. It’s kind of my gauge on what

questions to ask folks.

I’ll go and create content around that and make sure it’s in the

weekly email coming up. Even if it’s not a direct, ‘Hey,’ I’m

targeting this person,’ it is something that I can answer and

I’ll find that, let’s say managed IT, I’ve got ‘How do I build a

workflow for marketing automation with a managed IT company?

I’ll build that blog article. I’ll make sure it’s in the next

week’s weekly RSS email that gets sent out. Oftentimes those

folks click on those and then they go straight to an assessment.

Our bottom of the funnel’s always that request a free

assessment.

Trent: That was going to be my next question. What’s the main call to

action? You mentioned that you’ve been particularly successful

to the tune of $20,000 a month in generating clients that pay

your retainer. How long did it take you to get from zero to

20,000 a month?

Chris: Actually only about four months. We had all the pieces of the

puzzle we just hadn’t put it together really until early this

year. I read a book called the, god. Is it “The Agency

Manifesto”? I think it’s, “The Marketing Agency Manifesto.” I’ll

make sure that you can have a link to this but it’s basically a

quick read but it has 12 proclamations. Unfortunately, I’m

unable to think of the author’s name right name but basically

one of them is, ‘We will specialize.’ One of them is, ‘We will

charge for our services.’ I just really was inspired by that and

a lot of different things that is said in there is how can we

charge more for our expertise?

We really don’t accept projects anymore unless, like I said

earlier it was a referral or it’s something that we think will

further our business. We’re just very steadfast on that. I’m not

sending out proposals. I will flat out tell you I’m not in the

proposal writing business because I don’t want to spend my days

writing proposals. We are right now a two man shop and we can’t

do that. We really want to do business. Make the verbal

agreement that we’re going to go forward at that time a contract

will be signed and we’ve eliminated the proposal process

entirely. I think that’s allowed us to spend most of our sales

time on getting quality clients and then weeding out those that

must present a proposal to a board and all those extraneous

steps that end up getting in the way.

Trent: What is the average size of your retainer right now?

Chris: Right now it’s about $5,000, $6,000.

Trent: You’re talking roughly four clients that you have on retainer.

Do these clients all go through your funnel and do the call to

action for the assessment that’s at the bottom of your funnel?

Chris: They all filled out the assessment. Some of them were referred

straight to the website and one of them just called me actually

but in equality I guess he requested an assessment. But two of

them came all the way through the top of the funnel.

Trent: When you do this assessment, so I want to make sure that we,

the listeners and myself understand what this assessment is. Is

that them filling out a form on the website with lots of

questions or is that you on Skype with them asking them a bunch

of questions? What is the assessment?

Chris: Sure. I’m really just wanting their information with that form

and then it’s a 20 to 30 minute conversation. We run a

consultative sales process. It’s very defined. I’ve got four

steps basically in the process. Starts with the assessment. I’m

going to identify what your goals are, ask questions. That’s

really a question and answer session. Sometimes if we need to do

a little coaxing to actually do the assessment once we get on

the phone after they fill out the form we’ll set an appointment

for this assessment. The way it’s positioned is that we’re going

to give you some tips on things you can do online, things you

can do in your sales process to improve. No obligation.

It’s just an opportunity for me to give them a few things that

they could change right now and either get more visits to the

website or drastically improve things and it’s an opportunity

for me to really interview the client and understand if it’s the

right fit. Start to identify some of the questions I’ll ask in

the next call.

Trent: All of this stuff is done on the call? You don’t get face to

face with your clients to do this?

Chris: I try not to, even here in town because what it does is it

takes another hour out of my day to go and drive across town and

get in front of someone and it’s just a big waste of everyone’s

time especially with that first call. I really refuse to even

have people out to my office for that first call because I just

want to get a feel for what they’re after. If the first question

they ask is how much does it cost, I know that that’s going to

be a big factor in the whole relationship and it might not work.

Trent: Do you do these calls with video like you and I are doing right

now where you can see each other?

Chris: Typically, what we’ll do is we’ll use Go to Meeting, and I’ll

have their website or lack thereof up on the screen and we’ll do

a screen share.

Trent: If that’s step one. What’s step two?

Chris: Step two, after we have an assessment we’ve identified their

goals, we’ve identified that there is a need and they’ve

identified that they would like to continue talking with us. We

go to a goal setting call where I send them homework beforehand.

They’re going to fill out a lot of different questions. Here’s

where they fill out a lot of questions and it’s basically just a

spreadsheet that asks them the frequency of marketing and

different channels. How often are they blogging? How often are

they performing these X marketing activities and it’s designed

to do a few things to give us an end result of an arbitrary

score, sort of holistic score based on their entries.

Also the process of that prospect filling out this form and

saying, ‘No, I’m not doing any of this stuff,’ it’s a

psychological trigger and it’s sort of an “aha” moment. ‘Oh my

gosh, I’m not doing any of this.’ That’s been really effective.

Trent: Is there any chance that you would share that spreadsheet that

we can make as a downloadable from this episode?

Chris: I can give you a PDF copy of it, yes.

Trent: That would be wonderful. Thank you. For my show notes, what am

I going to call that?

Chris: Let’s call that an assessment questionnaire. This will be

homework between my assessment call and my goal setting call.

Trent: Very helpful. Thank you for that. That’s very generous of you.

What’s number three after that goal call?

Chris: After the goal setting call we get on the phone and we’ve

identified, ‘Hey, we want to increase revenue by $1 million next

year and it’s going to take us three big projects to do it.’

We’ve kind of gone through the process of, ‘Well how many visits

do you have to your website right now? How many more are you

going to need to get? How many leads are being generated by your

website?’ We can reverse engineer a number of visitors that we

need to bring to the website so we’ll have to put together a

plan. That plan will vary based on how effective their website

is right now, how many calls to action we need to add. Are they

doing anything or do they have any offers? Do we need to create

some? That will all kind of go into the last call [inaudible

38:03:]

Trent: What do you call this third call?

Chris: Sort of just a deal presentation or a solution presentation. I

won’t write up a 20-page document but what I will do is, I have

a PowerPoint presentation that has some of this stuff in it

already. I will just manipulate that to show what our plan might

look like. It’ll detail out the services that we would perform

on an ongoing basis and it’s really a visual meeting so we’re

screen sharing that and we’re talking about, ‘Hey, this is the

plan that we’ve put together. Based on the things you told me

this is what we think we can do and this is how long it’s going

to take us to get there and here’s the cost.’ Only after they’ve

said, ‘All right, let’s do it’ will I go and actually draw up a

contract.

Trent: That’s the fourth call?

Chris: Yes. That would be the fourth step.

Trent: You just review the contract, get them to sign it and send it

back to you?

Chris: That’s right.

Trent: How do you collect payment for retainer? Credit card or direct

debit?

Chris: I require a credit card, recurring payment. I found that when

we did not do that they’d come in late, they’d come in early,

they weren’t as reliable. I don’t mind taking a hit on the fee

because it’s peace of mind. There’s no question it’s going to

come in.

Trent: Absolutely. That’s been very interesting and so now you’ve got

to the point, and I promised early in this conversation, at

least I think I did, that we were going to talk about process

automation and how it’s fitting into your business because I

know that having run a service business myself in the past and

now launching another one how efficient you are or aren’t in

your service delivery can make the difference between being

wildly profitable and making no profit whatsoever.

I think a lot of people especially the solopreneurs or even

people who haven’t started yet maybe haven’t had that experience

and they just assume that if I get more revenue I’ll naturally

have more profit. Doesn’t always happen. Can you describe to us

and let’s stay on the thread of a retainer client, so you’ve got

this spreadsheet, you’ve got a solution, you’re going to need to

do all these things, how do you then systematize the delivery of

the deliverables so as to maintain your efficiency?

Chris: During the process of the sales process we’ve already detailed

out exactly what we’re going to do. Typically that’s going to be

creating offers, promoting those offers and then working on lead

generation. I’ve got in my project management system, which they

have access to, I’ve got built in templates for all these things

so once I launch the new marketing persona that we’re going to

craft for this client, let’s say they are managed IT and they’re

performing managed IT services to let’s see, theme parks, right?

You have to solve very specific problems for that theme park IT

manager.

We want to create a construct of that person so I said all that

to say once we create that persona we know we need to deliver an

offer for that persona to download on the website. We work

backwards. I don’t start with the blog posts. I start with the

offers; I start with the personas then the offers, the promoting

blog posts.

I’ve built my project management system the same way. When a

persona is created we know an offer needs to be created. When an

offer is created we know a blog post needs to be written, in

fact eight to ten. It’s automatically going to create all those

tasks for me. This helps me keep in line because I’m prone to

forget things and I have to have a system that allows me to go

back and make sure we’re on track.

The number one thing we’ve done is make all this open to our

clients so we have complete visibility. The clients can see what

we’re doing all the time. As we create these offers they can

comment, like. They can add files; they can contribute as we’re

working. This makes our meetings so much more productive because

we’re not having to recap, ‘Hey here’s everything we did this

week.’ They know what we’ve done this week. That’s already been

established. Let’s just talk about our strategy for next week.

Let’s talk about the results so that we don’t have to spend so

much time educating them on what we’re doing.

Trent: You’re using Podio to make all this happen?

Chris: That’s correct.

Trent: Do you speak to your retainer clients? Is there a weekly

meeting with them just as though you’re their director of

marketing?

Chris: Yes. Weekly or bi-weekly. That’s how often we meet and we

structure our meetings based on the week number so we’ll have a

different style of meeting at the beginning of the month than

from the end of the month. Then during the middle of the month

we’ll have what we call interviews so we are talking about

topics that we’ve identified are going to be good keywords for

them to target. We’ll put an outline out there and just have

them talk about it and we’ll record the session on Go to

Meeting, come back and use that interview content to actually

build the blog post so that each blog post will be in the voice

of that particular business owner or marketing director.

Trent: That is an excellent idea. Did you think that one up or did you

learn that from Marcus?

Chris: Marcus definitely talked about that and we had already been

doing it for a while when I heard him say something about that

and it’s been a great thing. Once I heard him giving it I said,

‘We’re on the right track.’ We implemented processes around

that. Now it makes our meetings a lot more fun, we don’t have to

spend as much time digging up, ‘Oh god, what are we going to

talk about this week’ because I know a lot of agency owners that

have to speak to clients on a regular basis.

You might find yourself struggling to come up with, ‘What are we

going to talk about?’ That was genuinely a problem I used to

have. Not much has changed. We’ve gone up a little bit. This is

really where we thought we were going to be as far as visits,

leads and sales but we have this meeting on the books. Now we

have something to talk about for these meetings and it’s way

more productive and way more fun honestly because people love to

talk about what they do. It makes them happy.

Trent: Let me feed this back because I want to make sure that myself

and the audience has understood this. In these meetings you come

into the meeting with an agenda of keywords that could be

targeted, correct?

Chris: Yes. They’re framed in the form of a question.

Trent: Like give me an example.

Chris: I have a client that is an HVA, commercial HVAC contractor.

People have questions about how to better cool a commercial data

center. ‘How do I keep my data center cool?’ We’ll just come in

with that and have that business owner share their expertise.

Trent: Your team knew that that was a keyword that you should target?

You then do this meeting with them and you ask them that

question, you record the answer so now you have it in his voice.

You transcribe it and edit it and turn it into a post.

Chris: That’s correct.

Trent: For these clients that are paying you the $4,000 to $5,000 per

month, how many posts per month, like what is the deliverable

that they’re getting for the $5,000 a month?

Chris: It depends on the level of retainer, but we don’t suggest

having any less than ten blog posts every month. There are some

graphs that I’ve got in my presentations that show when you get

to 30 blog posts a month, which we’re not even at, but when you

get to that point the leads start coming in like crazy. It’s

just all about having more content out there on Google but we’ll

have anywhere from ten to 20, in some cases 25, blog posts per

month.

Trent: That’s a lot of posts.

Chris: It’s a lot of posts. That’s what it’s all about though is

creating content that is going to get found.

Trent: You’re doing these, so in one of these calls then, if you’re

doing this once per week you must have to have four different

blog posts in mind that you’re interviewing them for, and so

four questions and they’re giving you the answer to those four

questions and those four questions become four different blog

posts.

Chris: That’s right.

Trent: Tell me what the process that goes from recorded answers

through to finished blog posts and are subcontractors playing a

role in any of this anywhere?

Chris: In some cases yes, we use a content marketplace to fill out

questions, if we didn’t have a chance to do interviews and we

look for experts. For instance I have a client that is in the

hockey space and we found a contractor who is awesome at writing

about hockey and he just knows hockey better than I do. We’re in

Texas. I don’t know anything about hockey. It may be different

from up north but we’re Cowboys football, Rangers baseball down

here. We have the Starts, but it’s just not as big of a deal so

we really struggle in that area but we’ve been very successful

with the content we’ve been able to create because we found an

expert to help us. We do have a few contractors in different

verticals.

Trent: Going back to the first part of that question, you’ve got the

recorded answer. You’re not going to use a contractor so do you

then pay a transcription service to transcribe it and then you

or your wife edit that into a post?

Chris: We don’t pay any transcription services. I take a lot of notes

during so I’m bulleting things out and I do this in Podio where

the client can see so as I’m typing they can see all this stuff

go down. Then we have the transcription so that by the end of it

we’ve got a nice bulleted list of maybe 15, 20 bullets of things

that they hit on during the conversation and then we also have

the recording to fall back on. We can go in pretty soon after

that meeting, we like to go ahead and just type it all out. Get

it ready; get it into a finished format.

We might go over one or two passes as an editorial pass and just

clean it up. Make sure we’re matching it up with the right offer

but we’ve typically come up with that offer and matched it up

well before the interview even takes place.

Trent: How long are these posts typically?

Chris: Six hundred to 800 words is our normal rule of thumb.

Trent: If you’re doing, you said ten of these a month or 20 a month

per client?

Chris: Depending on the client it would be minimum ten. I don’t think

we’re doing only ten for anyone but 15 to 25.

Trent: Let’s just use a number of 15. You’ve got, say five clients

doing this. That’s 75 posts per month?

Chris: Yes.

Trent: Written by just you and/or, well not written, edited, crafted

because it’s already there in the transcription.

Chris: Correct.

Trent: That just seems like a boatload of work.

Chris: It’s a lot of work. We’re putting together a growth plan right

now. We don’t envision us doing that forever.

Trent: I was going to say because that doesn’t scale very well is my

thinking.

Chris: Not for the business owner or the agency owner, for sure, but

what it does it doubles as service. You spend this time client

facing, they’re talking about something they love to talk about.

They’re seeing their ideas realized. They’re seeing the results

they’re getting based on that content. It’s a very positive

experience so that client time spent is actually helping us

produce the content so we’re overlapping a little bit there.

Client service.

With our software being so open they can see everything we’re

doing. We minimize the time on the other side of constantly

struggling to prove your worth. I know that a lot of agency

owners are constantly trying to prove their worth so I’ve tried

to eliminate that step by making everything as transparent as

possible.

Trent: I think that’s very smart. That was a big challenge that we had

back when we ran the IT company because if the computer network

didn’t break, why am I paying you $10,000 this month? Well,

because it didn’t break but it was challenging at times. Where

do I want to go next? Yes, so what strategies do you do to

promote all of this content that you’re creating for clients? Is

it purely an SEO strategy or are you going to town on social

networks?

Chris: We go to town on social networks. I’ve got very specific

numbers of posts for each client that we’re going to make on

each day. For instance our own, we treat ourselves as a client

so the exact same processes you’ll see for our clients are being

used for us. I’ll interview with my wife. My wife and I co-own

the agency together, we work together so we’ll have interviews

together just to kind of extract this content. We find it’s the

best way but for our business, our Twitter account, we post 20

to 25 times a day. Almost every hour and I found that when we

did that we increased now, month over month, 20 percent every

single month in followers. That same growth in my retweet reach,

so our reach is growing at the same pace. If we drop down to 15,

that growth lessens quite a bit. I found that’s optimal for our

business.

Trent: What tool do you use to schedule Twitter posts and get

analytics?

Chris: We use HubSpot for pretty much all of our marketing automation.

That’ll be different for each client. Sometimes the client

preference is simply, ‘I don’t want to have that many posts go

out on my Twitter account.’ That’s understandable. We can show

them, ‘Hey, this is how you get results,’ but we can’t always

convince 100 percent.

Now Facebook’s a different story. We found three to five

different posts every day is appropriate for some and then in

some cases it’s only one.

Trent: Are you sharing other people’s content like in your own Twitter

account, are you only tweeting out your own stuff or do you

share other people’s stuff as well?

Chris: We do both and there are a lot of different schools of thought

on this. A lot of people will say, ‘Share 80 percent of other

people’s content and only 20 percent of yours.’ I found honestly

that’s not the way to go. We’ll schedule out 18 to 20 posts of

our 24, of our own content. We’ll spend time interacting with

other people as sort of an alternate to that plan of sharing

everyone’s content. We’ll retweet. We’ll reply to people’s

tweets. We will generally share the love online but tweeting out

other agencies content, we’re not doing that. I generally don’t

want, I’d rather get the leads. I don’t believe that’s selfish.

If somebody writes a really good article that I used, I found,

‘Hey, how do we use this marketing automation tool in this way?’

If I found value in that, absolutely I’m going to retweet that

because I found personal value but typically we’re going to

write about things as we discover them and that’s the content we

want to promote.

Trent: You guys are doing a lot of writing.

Chris: You have to. It’s content marketing, right Trent?

Trent: Absolutely. You know what? Writing’s better than cold calling.

Chris: That’s true.

Trent: I gave a talk here in Boise just last week. I was given zero

notice. Guy calls me up the night before. He had broken his

tooth and he was supposed to speak and I had lunch with him that

day, just met him. He said, ‘Can you go talk for me?’ There was

like 80 small business owners that were in the room, mostly I’m

going to say three person companies and fewer. A lot of

solopreneurs in there.

The beginning of my talk I asked, I said, ‘How many people here

know what content marketing is?’ What would you guess, let’s

just say there was about, about 70 people in the room. How many

hands do you think went up?

Chris: I’m going to say not many, right?

Trent: Like six. Then I said, ‘How many people here are cold calling?’

Three quarters of the room put their hands in the air. I said,

‘How many people here receive cold calls?’ About half of the

room’s hands went up. I said, ‘How many people who receive them

like getting them?’ Nobody’s hands went up. Then I said, ‘Of

those of you who are making them, how many are getting results?’

Nobody’s hands went up. I’m like, ‘Stop. You’re just pissing

people off and you’re not getting results.’

Chris: Exactly. You’ve got to make warm calls, right?

Trent: Absolutely. So much more I could talk about that, but I’m going

to make a blog post actually about that, that talk that I gave.

Folks will be able to get that at BrightIdeas.co. Let me look at

my questions here and see where I want to go with this.

For the folks who are listening to this and they’re thinking,

‘This is content marketing and marketing automation thing seems

like it’s a pretty good idea, but man oh man does it ever seem

overwhelming. There’s like so much stuff to do.’ A lot of times

people get overwhelmed, they don’t do anything. What advice

would you give, Chris to someone who wants to get started? Who’s

the cold caller and they want to stop being the cold caller and

become a content marketer.

Chris: Start answering folks’ questions online. I will not shy away

from spreading Marcus Sheridan’s advice there. That’s the big

thing because it solves a few problems, well, it solves your

customer’s problems, right? It also solves the problem of what

do I write about? That’s the biggest challenge that I had at the

beginning. I’d write about what my customers are asking me and

you should do the same. Start writing. Don’t worry about what

domain name you’re going to use. Don’t worry about getting a

logo. Don’t worry about getting business cards. If you’re trying

to start a business don’t let any of that get in your way and

just pick something. Just put something out there. Don’t worry

about the design because Google doesn’t care about the design.

[inaudible 57:16]

Trent: You can host it on yourname.com.

Chris: Sure. Anything. That, ultimately it doesn’t matter because

that’s not what people are going to be typing into Google. If

you’re truly going to attack content marketing you’re going to

be attacking questions people type into Google or phrases people

type into Google. They’re not going to be Googling for your

website address, at least that’s not going to be the effect

content marketing has for you, so start writing. Start answering

questions and pick a vertical. Pick an industry that you want to

target because there are a ton of content marketing agencies, if

we’re talking to agency owners, there are a lot of content

marketing agencies, inbound marketing agencies. It’s becoming a

saturated market. It’s not a differentiator anymore so pick a

vertical.

Trent: Absolutely. Is there anything that you thought we should have

talked about in this interview which I’ve neglected to ask you

about? Anything that has worked exceptionally well for you or a

big mistake that you made that you learned a lot from? Anything

at all that we’ve missed that you think we should talk about

before we close out?

Chris: Sure. I think that the biggest mistake I made at the very

beginning was relying on marketing automation and not

remembering that each piece of automated action and all that

stuff really requires a human touch. That’s why I spend so much

time on LinkedIn personally answering questions. You can’t just

set it and forget it. A lot of material online would lead you to

believe that. Remember that each person that you’re trying to

get as a lead is also a real person and they’ve got their own

challenges, their own problems that need to be solved. Start

identifying with them.

Speak with these folks, even if they’re someone who’s not

qualified pick up the phone every once in a while and ask them,

‘Hey, how’d you find us? What did you find valuable in the

content that you read and that you downloaded?’ I do some of

that. I like to spend time just speaking with people even if I

know it’s not a good fit, just understand what challenges they

have and really work with them to better understand. That helps

me build out better lead nurturing sequences, helps me send

better emails. It helps me identify better prospects and that’s

what you have to do over time to improve your efficiency is to

spend time with the folks who are going to be a better fit for

you.

Trent: Absolutely. Those are your biggest cheerleaders and with the

80, 20 rule they’re also going to be responsible for 80 percent

of your revenue.

Chris: That’s right.

Trent: Chris, thank you so much for making this time to be on the

Bright Ideas Podcast. It has been a good time to interview you,

rather a lot of fun to interview you. Download [sounds like],

the episode number of this but I’m just going to pull it up and

so I can rattle that off. Actually I’ll put it in the, I’ll do a

recording here just after you and I are finished so again,

thanks so much for being on the show.

Chris: Cool. Thanks man. I really appreciate your time.

Trent: All right, so that wraps it up for this episode. To get to the

show notes where you can download all of the things that Chris

and I talked about, go to BrightIdeas.co/80. It’s just the

number 80. Then the other thing that if you could do is go to

BrightIdeas.co/love, there you will find a prepopulated tweet

and you’ll also find a link that will take you to the iTunes

store where you can leave some feedback for the show.

I would really appreciate it if you take a moment and do that

because the more feedback that the show gets, of course the

higher it goes in the iTunes store and the more exposure that it

gets and the more entrepreneurs that we can help to massively

boost their businesses with all the bright ideas that are shared

by my guests here on the show.

That’s it for this episode. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid. Thank

you so much for being a listener. I’ll see you or hear you or

we’ll see you again in another episode very soon. Take care.

About Chris Handy

ChrisHandyChris Handy is the Founder & CEO of Thinkhandy, a sales and marketing alignment consultancy in Fort Worth, TX.

Clients working with Thinkhandy find a helpful partner dedicated to shortening their sales cycle and generating more qualified leads.

We create a much more efficient business development environment with an aligned marketing and sales strategy.

 

 

 

Digital Marketing Strategy: Jermaine Griggs on How He Used Marketing Automation to Build a 7 Figure Online Business

Jermaine Griggs, 30, is a minister, musician, entrepreneur, and public speaker. Having grown up in the inner city of Long Beach with just his mom and sister, he always envisioned life on the other side of the tracks. At 16, he started Hear and Play Music, an instructional music company specializing in teaching piano by ear. With only $70, he bought the domain name HearandPlay.com and launched the company that would not only change his life but hundreds of thousands of musicians around the world through his books, DVDs, and online training courses.

Today, what started as a high school hobby has gone on to produce 8 figures in revenue since inception. More than two million aspiring musicians download his online lessons every year and over 301,700 loyal students receive his regular newsletters.

While in college studying Law & Criminology at the University of California, Irvine, Jermaine relied heavily on automated follow-up and marketing processes to run his business while he made good on a promise to his family to graduate school. What resulted was a unique automation strategy and philosophy that he follows religiously til’ this day.

As a result of his success and uncanny ability to mesmerize audiences, Jermaine started attracting the attention of the business world. He’s been featured on Msn, Yahoo, Kiplinger, D&B, Aetna’s Innovators, Msnbc, and more. In 2011, he was awarded Infusionsoft’s “Ultimate Marketer of the Year” and teaches entrepreneurs how to repeat his success by working smarter and not harder. He recently launched AutomationClinic.com in 2012 as a place to share his marketing automation philosophies and strategies.

Having seen his company grow from a few hundred dollars a month into a multimillion dollar business without venture capital or loans, he now shares his inspiring story with young people and entrepreneurs all over the country. He’s been a mentor in organizations like Operation Jump Start, NAACP / ACT-SO, NCCJ, and speaks to school districts, churches, and youth groups regularly.

Listen to the Audio

Our Chat Today

  • What happens when a user opts into the funnel
  • An overview of how he uses negative tags
  • An overview of how he tracks how long people stay on a page
  • An overview of how he evergreens a product launch
  • How to do a broadcast to increase profits
  • How to ensure people aren’t receiving more than one email in a day
  • An overview of how he’s driving traffic
  • An overview of is custom dashboard and leadsources
  • An overview of how he’s using upsells
  • His advice on whether to focus on traffic or conversion

Additional Resources Mentioned

Content Marketing Strategy and Tom Martin on His Painless Prospecting System and How You Can Use It to Make Client Attraction Easier Than Ever Before

Tom Martin knows a thing or two about developing a content marketing strategy. He’s a regular contributorTom Martin 4IN X 6 IN X 300DPI X FCto standout blogs like Ad Age, Copyblogger, Social Media Examiner, Social Fresh and MarketingProfs, to name a few. So when Tom shares his well-tested strategies for content creation and content promotion, youmight just want to listen. (One Quick Tip: Use social media to identify where your target audience hangs out, and then place content in those places.) His content strategies come together to form a Painless Prospecting System. In other words, if you do content right, clients will be attracted to you and you won’t have to work so hard. (As you may know, I’m a firm believer that content marketing has forever changed client attraction, and to succeed in business you need to learn to take advantage of this shift.) Listen now and you’ll also hear Tom and I talk about:

  • (3:25) Introductions
  • (6:10) Overview of the Painless Prospecting System
  • (8:55) Overview of his target customer
  • (10:45) How he finds places to put his content
  • (13:55) Overview of his content creation strategy
  • (16:55) How he’s using dictation to produce effective blog content
  • (21:55) How to find Propinquity Points
  • (28:05) How he suggests to become a contributing author

Resources Mentioned

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business. It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

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Transcript

Trent: Hey, there Bright Idea Hunters. Welcome to the “Bright Ideas” podcast. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid. And this is the podcast for marketing agencies, entrepreneurs, and marketing consultants who want to discover how to use content marketing and marketing automation to massively boost their business. And the way that we do that is we bring proven experts onto the show to share with you the specific tactics and strategies that they use to make themselves successful.And today’s episode is no different. My guest on the show today is a fellow by the name of Tom Martin. He’s the founder of an agency by the name of Converse Digital. And he is also the author of a book that is just about to be released called The Invisible Sale.And what Tom has done and what we’re going to talk about in this interview in detail, is he has created what he calls a “painless prospecting system.” So, if you’re suffering from making cold calls and doing all sorts of expensive and exhausting outbound marketing strategies and you’re not getting the results you would like to, this is definitely going to be an interview that you will find very helpful.For example, in about the seven-minute or so mark in the interview, after we get through the introductions and we give an overview of what the painless prospecting system is and how to find customers, we go into detail on how on some specifics of how to get your content placed in all of the right places where your target audience is going to find it, so that they are going to want to come back to your blog and learn more about you.He is also going to talk about how he is rapidly producing content and then reproducing that content so that he’s able to get published on so many different places. And some of the places he’s published are on Ad Age, Adweek, MarketingProfs, Copyblogger, Social Media Examiner, Social Selling, SOCIAL FRESH. So, he’s getting a whole lot of distribution for his content. So, if that’s something that you would like to learn more about, make sure that you tune in to this episode.So, we’re going to welcome him in just a minute. Before we do, the other thing I want to tell you about is the Bright Ideas Mastermind Elite. And you can get more information at brightideas.co/mastermind. And here, on a one-by-one, hand- selected basis, we are assembling a group of people who all have one goal in common. And that is to build a very successful online marketing agency or marketing consultancy. And they don’t want to be just stuck out there in isolation without anyone’s help and without anyone’s ideas. And that what the mastermind is there to do is to bring us together to allow us to share, encourage, support, and motivate each other. So, if you’d like to learn more, brightideas.co/mastermind.So, with that said, please join me in welcoming Tom to the show. Hey, Tom. Welcome to the show.Tom: Hey, Trent, thanks for having me. Trent: No problem. It is a thrill to have you have here. I really want to learn more about this painless prospecting system and this propinquity theory that we talked about just before we hit the record button. But before we get to that, I want to make sure that the listeners understand what they are about to get by listening to this episode. So, let’s start off with who are you and what do you do? And after that, we’re going to talk about some of the pretty amazing results that you’ve achieved. Tom: Well, I’m Tom Martin. I founded a company here in New Orleans called Converse Digital. And it’s a digital strategy and lead- generation firm. We work with digitally-challenged clients to help them understand “How do you take a traditional lead gen process and power it with digital tools”? I’m 20 years in the ad business, most of which was spent actually as the business development person at an ad agency. And since a lot of that experience has now translated into what we call “painless prospecting.” But it’s basically the methodology I use to both launch and power the growth of my firm since 2010. Trent: Okay. And that growth has averaged how much per year? Tom: We’ve averaged about 25 percent year over year. I’m not a big fan of huge, gigantic growth. I’m much more of a fan of a nice, easy- measured growth that I can manage. So, we’ve kept it right in that 25-percent range. Trent: Okay. And you mentioned one other statistic to me, too, that I want to get out in front here real early, is your close ratio for clients. It was pretty impressive. You want to talk a bit about that? Tom: Yeah, I think it’s probably the thing that most has excited me as a guy who was the biz dev guy in an ad agency environment where, if we were closing 25 percent of the pitches we got into every year, we were super excited. We thought we were doing great. Since I’ve converted to this painless prospecting style in Converse Digital, we are looking at, right now, at about an 85 percent close rate. We very seldom don’t close a lead. And if we do, it’s always price-oriented. They thought we’d be less expensive than we are, and we just don’t fit their budget model. Trent: So, now we’re going to dive in to how you’re closing 85 percent of the people that you’re talking to. And I think that’s really the dovetail into the conversation that we’re going to be having about the painless prospecting system and the propinquity theory. So, can you just, in a short a period of time as you can, sort of explain at the high level, what your painless prospecting system is? And then, we’re going to get down into the nuts and bolts of exactly how someone can do it for themselves. Tom: Sure. The painless prospecting system is all premised on the concept that today’s buyers are self-educating. They’re hiding behind Google searches or they’re just going online and looking for information to help them make buying decisions or just do their job better. And the whole idea behind the painless prospecting is that we all have our sort of go-to set of online resources that we use to educate ourselves and figure out what things we need to purchase to do our jobs better. In a painless prospecting world, what we do is identify and categorize those locations online, we call them “propinquity points.” And then, we plan and schedule our own content to appear repeatedly at these propinquity points, thus giving a prospect the opportunity to sort of trip over us and find or discover us, as well as repeatedly be exposed to our content and our messages. Which, you know, just like advertising, frequency creates awareness, content frequency creates awareness or what we call “propinquity” that ultimately leads that person to move from a “I know who you are” to “I get to know about you, I like you and ultimately, I want to buy from you.” Trent: Okay. So, the key, it would seem to me, is two critical success factors. One is, “I’ve got to make sure that I’ve got the right content that is going to resonate and speak to the audience that I have chosen.” And then, “I also have to make sure that I get that content to the places where they’re already hanging out.” Is that correct? Tom: Absolutely. It really comes down to those two simple points. And if you can nail both of those, then you can painlessly prospect. I like to laugh about how my painless prospecting system is generating leads while I sleep. Or last year at Mardi Gras, while I was having fun here in New Orleans at Mardi Gras, there was a new business lead that was coming through my system and ended up calling me and saying “Can we have a meeting because I’m going to be in New Orleans for Mardi Gras.” I had one meeting and three weeks later, I have a new client. I didn’t do a thing other than have him meeting with a guy and then write a contract. But, my system did all the work for me while I was out with my family having a good time at Mardi Gras. Trent: So much better than making cold calls and doing every other kind of thing that people spend all that kind of money doing. So, let’s get into some more nuts and bolts. Who is your target customer? Because I want to walk through the specifics of how you did this. Tom: Well, my target customer tends to be one of two people. They’re either a mid-size business owner or they’re the senior person on staff in marketing. It might be a VP, a director, their titles vary. But they’re the senior marketing decision-maker, again, at a mid-sized firm. That’s kind of where I play right now is in that mid-size arena. Trent: How much revenue is “mid-sized” just so we understand? Tom: Say around $25 million or less. Some of our clients might be $5 million or $6 million. But I would say if it’s a true B2B group, they tend to be in that sort of more $15 million to $25 million range. Trent: Okay. And what industry are they in? Tom: We really do not specialize in a particular industry. Currently, we work in a pharmaceutical, liquor, restaurant, travel, and hospitality. People come to us for the process and the approach, and then, we help them meld it to their industry. I have a pretty rich background in terms of, throughout my 20-year career, I touched a number of industries throughout my advertising career. So, once we get in with a company, we understand what are the business levers that power their particular industry. We can usually help them figure out how to turn our system to really fit and maximize the effectiveness of the system in their industry category. Trent: Okay. So, in your case, you wanted to make sure that you were creating content and that that content was placed in locations that your target audience would find it. Can you walk us through, what are some of those places and how did you find them and how did you make that happen? Tom: Sure. Early on, one of the core platforms that I was able to penetrate is Advertising Age Magazine. In the advertising world, there are two trade mags: Ad Age and Adweek. And I’ve always felt Ad Age was probably the bigger of the two; it was a little bit more national. And so, early on, I’ve secured a reoccurring writing position there in their small agency diary column. And that really did two things for me. It put me on the radar of the senior marketing people. Not so much that business owner, but that senior marketing person, not only at the mid-size, but at the national level. It also gave me an enormous amount of clout. The real kind, not the online version. And people saying “Wow, you write for Ad Age. You obviously must know a thing or two.” And it really opened the doors to a lot of the things. Because you tell people, “I write for Ad Age.” When you try to then go to some of the other, more targeted. So, like MarketingProfs, because it’s a huge B2B community. Copyblogger, because I think it’s one of the premier social media content marketing destinations. A lot of people go read Copyblogger. Social Media Examiner. Again, people that are interested in social, Social Selling. A lot of them are there. SOCIAL FRESH. A lot of these big, sort of aggregator-type online blog areas. All of those, when we said I write for Ad Age, that was an instant credibility check. You can write for them, you probably can write for us. So, laid the Ad Age, then began to lay all of the social media sites. Primarily because when I first launched Converse Digital, it was in the height of social media. It was 2010, everybody and their dog was getting interested in social. So, it created a really nice niche that I could populate very quickly and establish myself as an expert within that niche. And from there, as social media has begun to become saturated. Anybody with a laptop is now a social media consultant, then I really began to dial my choke down to where it is today, which is really focused on helping people use social media, e-mail and Web content to shorten the sales cycle and improve the conversion rate, which really dovetails nicely into my professional background. Because that selling of professional services has been what I’ve done for more than half of my career. So, I’ve just been slowly dialing down into a real niche core that, currently, not a lot of people function in. There’s a whole lot of people talking about social and digital and e-mail. You don’t have a lot of people really talking about social selling, yet. That’s sort of the next big thing I think that’s coming through. Trent: So, you’re producing content for other people’s blogs as well as your own. What percentage of your time do you spend sitting and writing this content? And when you produce a piece, does it only go to one location? Or can you cross-publish the same piece of content to more than one? Tom: Well, I’d say a couple of things. One, it varies because the way I think about content creation. I think, fundamentally, content creators are thinking about content creation at the wrong level. Everybody thinks about it at the individual blog post level. And I believe that you need to look at it from an ecosystem. So, I try never to write or produce anything once. Big believer that you have to look for ways to take anything you create and place that in multiple channels. Now, I don’t just copy and paste though. So, for instance, there’s a section in my book that talks about using voice to text software to make it easier to write more blog posts. Trent: Like Dragon? Tom: Yeah, like Dragon. Specifically, Dragon. And how you can use that software along with an iPad or your iPhone to, instead of just driving to work in the morning, you can write a blog post while you’re driving to work. And I take people through step by step how you do it. It’s super simple. It’s made it real easy for me to create a lot more content. So, I might write a blog post on my own blog about that. I might take some of that content from the book, build it into a nice 700 to 1,000-word blog post, put it on my blog. But then, and for instance, I actually did this. You can go to MarketingProfs, for instance. I took that and I angled it to where I just focused on the mobile application of it. And I wrote a post for MarketingProfs that was “How to lose weight while blogging.” And it was all about how you can take this mobile device and this mobile application and go get on your own your ellipse or your stationary bicycle or whatever. And while you’re walking and running and getting a little exercise, you’re actually writing a blog post. Trent: So, now, I’ve just purchased Dragon, myself. I was actually messing around with it for the first time yesterday on my desktop here. So, do you use the mobile version and put it on your iPhone, so that you can create your content while you’re on the move is question number one. And the second part of that question is do you lay out, in form of bullet points, for example, just on like a postcard or whatever, so that you have your, sort of, talking points so that you don’t end up rambling on? How do you do it? Tom: Yeah. I actually wrote entire sections of my book while driving to and from speaking engagements. And what I did learn, in fact, I talk about this in detail in the book, is the number one thing you have to figure out is when you move to a dictation model of writing, you do have to write down, sort of, your core, thematical outline, if you will, of whatever it is you’re going to create. Blog post or white paper or whatever. Because, yes, if you don’t, you just roll into these tangents, which is fine because once you transcribe it over, you can copy and paste. But you end up losing so much time in the editing process that it kind of outweighs the benefit of being able to work out or drive and write a blog post at the same time. But if you can do it well, it’s perfect. In fact, because I know you produced a lot of content. Another nice opportunity, and again, another way I spun that particular blog post, is I wrote one about how you can use this type of software to break through writer’s block. Where I can’t get any words on the page. Okay, fine. Put the headset on, go for a walk and just start rambling. And what happens is that, you know, just the act of talking through your idea, you end up kind of finding some points, getting into a theme. And before you know it, you’ve got a rough outline for a blog post. Versus just sitting at your desk with your hands over the keyboard going “Oh, man. I have nothing to write today. Nothing’s coming to me.” And so, again, it’s a way of looking at, “Okay, I wrote one blog post.” But I was actually able to take that base post, pull a piece of that, angle it a different way and create a new, valuable piece of content that solves somebody’s problem. One being writer’s block. The other being a little bit more fun with MarketingProfs that was a “Hey, here’s how to solve two problems content creators have, ‘How to Create Content and How to Find Time to Exercise.'” And it was fun, but people liked it. And that’s the way I look at the content. You always are looking for ways to “How can I take this? Spin it to where it makes sense as a new, valuable post and makes sense on that person’s particular platform.” So, for instance, that “Lose Weight While Blogging,” I would have never offered that story to Copyblogger. I just don’t think that’s Brian’s style. But, Ann Handley over at MarketingProfs, she loves fun stuff like that. That’s her style. And MarketingProfs has a sort of fun angle to its brand. So, you offer that story over to them because it fits their brand. And so, I think that’s a big part. When you’re planning this content distribution to your propinquity points, you really have to understand “What is the platform? What is their style? What do they value? What kind of information do they like”? And then you take your core content and you spin it to fit and then, of course, you back link across so that’s there a reason for the person for the person at Copyblogger or SME or MarketingProfs, there’s something there that you’re not going to explain in-depth because it’d be a whole other post. But they kind of need to understand it to understand the post they’re reading today. And so, for me, a lot of times, that is one of the core strategic underpinnings of a painless prospecting platform is the social theory called propinquity. Real world, most people have never heard of it, few people know how to say it. So, when I write guest posts that talk about painless prospecting or social selling, I always try to find a way to work in the concept of propinquity. It’s usually very easy because it’s a foundational element of my thoughts. But I never define what it is. It’s always a link back to a post on my website that explains, “What is propinquity and why does it matter to marketers?” I always get a lot of back traffic from that, and it’s a good use of a propinquity point to then drive inbound traffic to my blog where then I can hopefully maybe capture somebody with, register to get a newsletter or get the blog sent to you by e-mail, etc., which, again, escalates that ability to move someone through the sales process. Trent: So, the question I asked earlier that you didn’t give us, probably because I asked two questions at one time, was what percentage of your time do you spend creating content? I’m still curious about that. Tom: Right, I didn’t. I would say on a weekly basis, three to four hours. But, then, what will happen is at least once a month, I might do a six to eight-hour binge where I’ll sit down and really create more of that, sort of, ecosystem. I’ll create my core posts that I’ve written and then, I’ll begin to create the spinouts that are going to be sent off as guest posts to other platforms. I’ll set aside a day, six to eight hours, maybe sometimes more. And I try to do it all in one sitting because I just find it’s a more efficient way to do it than to try to one-off stuff, a little bit here, a little bit there. Trent: The concept of bucketing, I guess, would be a good way to describe that. Tom: Absolutely. And it works. Trent: All right. So, what advice would you give to the listeners who are thinking “Okay, this makes some sense. I want to get started.” What advice would you give them to start? Should they be, I guess, they’ve got to research the locations where they’d like to have their content seen. Would that be the first place? Tom: Yeah, the first place really is to define those propinquity points. There are lots of tools and techniques that can be used. If you’re fortunate enough to have access to social-listening software like a Zissimos [SP] or a NetBase or a Radian 6, those are very helpful. But if you don’t or you’re just not sure you want to go to that level, the easiest thing to do is to, for instance, in Twitter, create a Twitter list of all of your prospects that are on Twitter that you’d like to business with. And put them into a single Twitter list, throw them into a client like a HootSuite, make a column. And then, get an intern or a receptionist or somebody that doesn’t necessarily have a lot to do every single day that requires them not to be able to look at a computer because it’s a better use of their time than yours often, because your time is best spent selling. And have them just simply catalog every single URL in a spreadsheet that is shared by members of that list. And what you’re looking to do and this will take you six weeks, maybe a couple of months because you need time to allow the trends to appear. But, like, for instance, every single time somebody shares a link from Social Media Examiner, you document “Hey, that’s one more tally or tick mark in the Social Media Examiner column.” And what you’re going to see is over time, you’ll start to see certain websites. A lot of times, those that you’re familiar with, but sometimes ones you’re not so familiar with, will bubble to the top. So, then, you can be pretty confident that those are valid propinquity points. Because you’ve got, it’s a highly-shared website by your prospects of a sub-segment of your prospects. And that’s usually a really good place to start. Because that content is obviously drawing the right kind of people. It’s obviously considered valuable because it’s getting shared. And if you can get your content there, you increase your opportunity for virality of your content because again, you already know that content is getting shared by prospects within your target audience. Trent: That’s a cool idea. Tom: It’s super dead-simple. And like I said, it’s the perfect job for an intern or a receptionist who, in-between welcoming people to your building or accepting phone calls, they’re going through Twitter and going “Oh, there’s another one. There’s another one.” It’s just super simple and easy. Again, it takes a little time to allow to have enough. You can do the same thing with hashtags. If there’s a hashtag that’s relevant in your industry, create a list in HootSuite that searches for every instance of that hashtag. Do the exact same thing. Look for what websites are being shared under that hashtag. And you know, you will find, sometimes, a little niche-y, like a blog or a forum that doesn’t show up in Google searches because it’s just not that big. But you will see an overabundance of those content links being shared by your prospects. And so, what it helps you really do is that it helps you discover those little niche-y blogs, forums, etc. that you just otherwise don’t see. Unless you’re really paying attention and looking for the patterns that are emerging. You can do the same thing with LinkedIn. Follow all of your prospects on LinkedIn, see what they’re sharing in their news feed, Facebook, you name it. Any place where somebody is sharing content, you can do the exact same thing. In fact, we like to bring it all together, which is why if you have something bigger like a Radian or a Zissimos, you can do it inside those platforms. It just makes it a little bit less heavy-lifting. Trent: So, with Radian or Zissimos, do you still have to have a person manually collate or count how many times the links are all shared? Or is there some type of reporting mechanism that you could essentially say “Here, I want to follow these 37 people and I want to look at their tweets over the last 30 days and da, da, da” and now I know, instantly, which are the most popular sites? Tom: Zissimos makes it a lot easier. It’s not a complete turn-key system, but it’s infinitely easier. You can create the list and the system will help you find it, the URLs and tabulate some stuff. Radian can do some of it. The biggest challenge with Radian is when you look at their URL share report. If they’ve used a short link, a bit.ly, a t.co, it rolls all that up under the short link. Doesn’t look underneath the short link to see, the, what really was the media that was shared? And so, that becomes a challenge. Whereas Zissimos will look underneath and return back the underlying URL which really gives them an advantage. But they’re also three times as expensive as Radian. So, really, it’s an enterprise-class platform. If you have it, great. If you don’t, yeah, you can do some of that through Radian. Or you can just do it yourself with a simple spreadsheet and HootSuite. Trent: What’s the URL for Radian? I can’t seem to find it. Tom: Radian6.com, I believe. I think that’s what it is. And Salesforce bought them, so maybe they’ve switched. I just have it bookmarked because we’re a subscriber to it. So, I just have it bookmarked. Trent: Okay. And folks, if you’re listening to this and you’re driving, don’t worry about writing all this stuff down. Everything is going to be in the show notes. You can get to those show notes at brightideas.co/78. There it is. It’s now called salesforcemarketingcloud.com. Tom: There you go. Trent: Good enough. So, that has been absolutely a very, very interesting way to go and find out where your audience is hanging out. Now that you know where they’re hanging out, what would be some suggestions to you when you’re reaching out to some of these blogs or websites and you want to become one of their contributing authors? I’ve got to think that they’re getting a lot of people saying “Hey, let me write for you.” So, how do you separate yourself? Tom: Yeah. I think, especially, the smaller, niche-y ones, not so much, maybe. But definitely the bigger ones. Really two. Some of them will have, they’re looking for contributing authors. You go to socialfresh.com. And Jason Keith has got a form that says “Hey, you want to write for us? Fill this out.” He’s actively looking for and he’s got his process. Others won’t have that. And even if they do, I think it never hurts to really do what I would suggest, which is, get to know the people that own and operate the platform. There is just no replacing the development of relationships. Good old fashioned sales 101. People like to do business with people they like. And you know, every platform that I write for, I personally know the people who own or are the key editors at that platform. And I knew them before I wrote for the platform. So, I was able to meet Ann Handley over at MarketingProfs, get to know her. Meet Jason Keith, meet Brian Clark, meet Michael over at Social Media Examiner. All these places I write for, I was able to meet those folks through either Twitter. Fabulous, I think one of the best uses of Twitter in a social selling environment is it’s using it as a platform to meet people that you don’t currently know. And start to form the budding of a relationship that can then maybe be transferred over to, maybe, like a Facebook where it’s more of a private friend. You can kind of get to know them a little bit more. Maybe LinkedIn. Or just exchanging e-mails and so forth. So, I always tell people “Identify where you want to be. And then start to build a relationship with the people who own that outpost.” Because if you get them to like you, respect you and appreciate your content, then, when you make that ask and say, “Hey, I really think I can bring some value to your readers. Here’s an example of something that I might want to do. Would you be interested in a post like this?” And it doesn’t have to be a finished post. It can just be a really tight outline that gives them a really good sense of what you’d want to write. I think you’ll find that your listeners will find their take ratio will be much higher. Than if they’re just Joe Blow sending in an e-mail. “Hey, I really love your site. I think I have something for your readers and I’d like to write for you.” You and 10,000 other people. Because you’ve got to remember, these people are making money quite often through the sale of advertising or event monetization, things of this nature. And so, by giving you a guess-posting capability versus forcing you to pay for access to their audience, that’s a big give. So, if you’re not really bringing high-value content to them and creating value in the other direction, you’re not likely to get it. You’re not likely to get it at all. Trent: Okay. So, this whole propinquity theory and painless prospecting has worked very well for you. I want to thank you for sharing the nuts and bolts of how to make it happen. Before we wrap up, have we missed anything, Tom, that you think is really salient to this discussion? Tom: No. From the prospect of using digital tools as an inbound selling strategy as opposed to cold calls, I would encourage your listeners to pay very special, close attention to it and begin to experiment with it. But I would also encourage them to make sure that they understand that this, I think it’s a slower selling process than, like, the cold call process is. I always just say “This is sort of like fly-fishing versus tuna- fishing.” Tuna-fishing, you throw out a bait, you troll, you dang near run into the tuna. Fly-fishing, much more elegant. You’ve got to keep dropping that bait in the water, presenting it, in hopes of getting a bite. And that’s really what this is. It’s a much more elegant way of doing it. It’s a hell of a lot more fun. And if they want more information on how to do it or if they’re looking for a guidebook, next month, my book The Invisible Sale is coming out. And, literally, that book is a field guide for anybody that wants to do this. I give you the arguments to make to your boss, the statistical arguments for “This is why we need to it.” I show you exactly, step by step, how to build the painless prospecting platform. Show you how to create every type of content imaginable. And give you apps and shortcuts and tips and techniques, both my own and from pros; podcasters, videographers, etc. And then in the end, we talk about how do you actually close that self-educated buyer. Because it’s a little different. You have to come it at differently than maybe the traditional sales. And it’s really a tool for anybody that wants to learn this in- depth. And really begin to do it themselves and I would highly encourage anybody to go pick it up or pre-order it at theinvisiblesale.com. Trent: That’s The Invisible Sale singular? Tom: Singular. Trent: Okay, I’ll put that in the show notes, as well. All right, Tom. Thank you so much for being a guest on the “Bright Ideas” podcast. I, as I always hoped to, got some really good golden nuggets. I loved what you shared about going on Twitter, going on LinkedIn using hashtags, figuring out all your prospects, websites they’re mentioning and using that as a way to start your outreach program, so that was terrific. And if people want to get a hold of you, what is the easiest, single way to do that? Tom: They can follow me on Twitter. I’m @tommartin. Or visit conversedigital.com. Both will find me. Trent: Okay. Terrific, Tom. Thanks for being on the show. Tom: Thanks for having me. I really appreciate it. Trent: All right, so that wraps up today’s episode. If you want to get to the show notes, just go to brightideas.co/78. The other thing that I would really love it if you would do is go to brightideas.co/love. There, you will find a pre-populated tweet and also, a link to the iTunes store where if you would take a moment and if you thought this episode was valuable, leave a five-star rating in the iTunes store. I would really appreciate that. It helps the show to get more exposure and build the audience. And the more people that are aware of the “Bright Ideas” podcast, the more people that we can help to massively boost their business. That’s it for this episode. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid. Thank you very much for being a listener. I look forward to being with you again in an upcoming episode very soon.

About Tom Martin

Tom Martin headshotTom is a no nonsense, straight-talking 20-year veteran of the advertising and marketing business who favors stiff drinks, good debates and helping companies grow their businesses. As an internationally recognized digital marketing keynote speaker, blogger, founder of Converse Digital, and Author of The Invisible Sale, Tom marries his two passions, marketing & technology, to teach companies how to leverage digital marketing channels to achieve and sustain sales growth, enhance brand perception and painlessly prospect for new customers. His first book, The Invisible Sale, is now available for pre-sale at TheInvisibleSale.com. You can follow him on Twitter @TomMartin, connect with him on LinkedIn, circle him on Google+ or contact him at http://ConverseDigital.com. You can find Tom’s marketing missives on his blog at ConverseDigital.com, Ad Age, where he is a regular contributor, as well as many of the top social and digital marketing blogs like Copyblogger, Social Media Examiner, Social Fresh and MarketingProfs, to name a few.

Digital Marketing Strategy: Brennan Dunn on How He Launched His SaaS Business in Under 4 Months

The software business – like so many others – is extremely unpredictable. If you’re not careful, it can suck up more time and money than you ever thought possible, and never generate enough cash flow to even get off the ground. But it can also be one of the best businesses, with the potential to progress very quickly from cash-guzzling monster to cash-generating machine.

If this is a business model you’re considering, you’ll want to learn from others who have already had success. Someone like Brennan Dunn, who has taken his Software as a Service (SaaS) business from concept to launch in under four months.

Brennan shares his story, as well as valuable insights for other new businesses (software or not). He provides insights on how to come up with an idea worth developing, how to attract potential buyers and generate cash flow even before your product is ready, and how he structured his marketing automation so that once he started paying for traffic, he got a 10 day ROI on his investment.

Quite impressive!

Listen now and you’ll also hear Brennan and I talk about:

  • (5:00) Introductions
  • (7:00) An overview of Planscope
  • (11:00) How to come up with a software idea
  • (14:00) How he developed his minimum viable product
  • (17:30) How to build software if you aren’t a developer
  • (20:30) How to attract leads
  • (26:00) How to generate cash flow before the product is ready
  • (30:00) Lead generation that doesn’t scale
  • (33:00) How he created his newsletter each week
  • (36:00) How and why he wrote his first book
  • (40:00) Why he was able to charge for content that he also gives away
  • (43:30) How he’s using drip email to generate leads
  • (45:30) How he’s structured his funnel to give a 10 day ROI with LinkedIn paid traffic
  • (48:30) Why he chose LinkedIn for paid traffic
  • (57:00) An overview of his concierge service product
  • (58:00) The biggest benefit of using Infusionsoft vs Mail Chimp
  • (1:03:00) An overview of an experiment he’s running for SaaS signups
  • (1: 07:00) An overview of how he manages his time

Resources Mentioned

Themeforest

FreelanceSwitch.com

HackerNews

Reddit/freelance

freelancersweekly.com

PerfectAudience.com

GetDrip.com

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Listen Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

Transcript

Trent: Hey there, bright idea hunters. Welcome to the Bright Ideas

podcast. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid. I am so thrilled to have

you on the show with me today. This is the podcast for marketing

agencies, marketing consultants, and entrepreneurs who want to

discover how to use content marketing, and marketing automation

to massively boost their business. The way that we do that is we

bring proven experts onto the show to share the details of how

they became successful. I don’t have people on here who are

gurus who aren’t doing it. Everyone on the show is living,

eating, and breathing it.On the show with me today is an entrepreneur by the name of

Brennan Dunn. To say that he is doing well online is just an

understatement. He is bringing in multiple six figures from a

variety of sources, all of which we talk about to a certain

degree during this interview. He has authored a couple of e-

books that are being sold. He has consulting training at $1,800

a pop. He’s got a SaaS application called Planscope, and we’re

going to talk in detail about that during this episode.This is also an episode that is absolutely stuffed full of

golden nuggets. Now those of you who haven’t heard my episodes

before, a golden nugget is one of those ideas that makes you

want to pull over and write it down, because you know that the

second you hear that idea you can put it into action and start

to see immediate results in your business. You are really going

to enjoy this episode. There is some really good stuff. At about

the six-minute mark, we are going to talk about how he came up

with the idea for Planscope, his software as a service

application. At the nine-minute mark, we’re going to talk about

how he came up with a minimum viable product, so if that’s not a

term that you are familiar with, you definitely want to hang

around and learn what that is.If you are not a software developer, and you’d love to develop

some software as a service, he’s going to talk to you about how

you can get that done. Just to give you an idea of how good this

business can be, by the way, he is doing just over $10,000 a

month from that one product alone. It takes him about two hours

a week of his time to maintain that particular business. In the

episode, we are going to talk a lot more about what he is doing

to grow it, but as you can see the profit margins are really

crazy. You don’t need millions of customers. You figure $50 a

month, 500 customers-that is a pretty phenomenal business.When we get to the fifteen-minute mark, we’re going to start

talking at length, we spend about half an hour about how he is

attracting leads. There are so many people who have come up with

software, but they don’t sell any, or they don’t sell enough,

and so the business ends up not being successful. So if that’s

you or you think that might be you, and you are struggling with

how to attract more customers for your business, you are going

to love this episode, because we go into a lot of detail on

which social networks he’s using, how he is incenting them. He’s

given specific examples of landing pages, landing pages by the

way with opt in rates of 30% and 40%. One of them he said was

47%, which is phenomenal. We’re going to talk a lot about that.

Then we are going to talk about the specific tools that he uses

to generate leads and how he has structured his sales funnel so

that he can get a ten day ROI on his paid traffic. He’s using

LinkedIn for that paid traffic and we are going to talk about

how he does that as well.Finally, we are going to talk about how he’s using InfusionSoft

to automate a whole bunch of the portions of his business so

that he is not working a gazillion hours a week, and he can

still be a husband and father of two. This is really going to be

a wonderful episode. When you get to the end of it, and enjoyed

it, please head over to iTunes and leave some feedback, because

that really helps the show out.With all that said, please join me in welcoming Brennan to the

show. And one more thing, I am a big believer in masterminding,

because it is a way to surround yourself with other like-minded

entrepreneurs, and Bright Ideas now has a mastermind available.

It is called mastermind elite, and you can learn more about it

at brightideas.co/mastermind.Hey Brennan, welcome to the show.Brennan: What’s going on, Trent?Trent: Just sitting here recording a podcast with another successful

entrepreneur who has a very good story to share. Welcome aboard,

and I’m really happy to have you here.

Brennan: Awesome, looking forward to it.

Trent: For the folks who are listening, who don’t know who you are or

have never heard of Planscope, just very briefly take a minute

or two to introduce yourself, who you are and what you do, and

then we will dive into the meat of what we are going to talk

about today.

Brennan: Sure, so my name is Brennan Dunn. Planscope is probably my

primary business, though I have quite a few different things

that I am working on. I’ve written two books, Double your

Freelancing Rate and The Blueprint. I also teach two online

workshops, and I write a weekly newsletter that is targeting

consultants that just passed 7,000 subscribers. I am juggling a

lot of different things, I guess.

Trent: Yeah, no kidding. One of the questions that I wanted to get to

eventually, but I will bring up now, because it seems so

relevant, is VAs. Are you using a lot of VAs in your business?

Brennan: The only real assistant that I have is somebody that helps me

with the coding of Planscope. I still handle all of my front

line support. I still book all of my interviews manually. That

is getting better now that I am doing some automated things to

send out booking requests and everything. When it comes to

person to person communication it is still just me.

Trent: Here is what we’re going to talk about and why I asked Brennan

to come on the show with me. I want to talk about his company

Planscope, because so many people, myself included, want to make

a success of a software as a service business, because the model

is so compelling. For the folks that aren’t familiar with you,

let’s go right to the results. Well first of all, let’s say what

is it and how well it is doing financially right now?

Brennan: Planscope is a project management app for specifically for

freelancers and consultants. There is Base Camp, there are a lot

of different, it’s a very saturated market. It’s a very niche

project, and it’s doing very well actually considering that I

don’t even work on it full time. We just crossed five figures a

month in recurring revenue. One of the benefits, I’ve done SaaS

and I have quite a few different transaction products like books

and workshops. The amazing thing about SaaS, and I think the

thing that attracts most of us to it, is that I’m going to wake

up October 1st, and I’m going to know how much money, at a

minimum, how much money I will be bringing in through Planscope.

Trent: How much is that going to be?

Brennan: There’s no restart. With books, you kind of always need to be

promoting, or doing something to keep sales up. With a SaaS app,

you have a churn rate, meaning a cancellation rate, and a growth

rate, and as long as churn is less than the growth, it is just

going to keep moving up and to the right.

Trent: Which is right where you want to go. How much comes in on

October 1st for you?

Brennan: It’s going to be, it’s hard to predict, but it will be about

$10,500-ish, I would imagine.

Trent: That’s not bad. Now is there much cost in running this

business?

Brennan: My total overhead, if you include my time, or if you don’t

include my time rather. I put up a challenge, kind of like an

apprenticeship challenge, and I have a part-time developer that

is at $1,000 a month. I also have my webserver that is at $80 a

month. Then I have a few different monitoring apps and

everything. My total is probably about $1,200 or $1,300 a month

in expenses.

Trent: How many hours a month of your time does it take to operate

this business?

Brennan: The baseline is most likely two, maybe three hours a week.

That’s for maintenance. Right now I’m working on a lot of high-

touch sales with bigger, more enterprise, great clients. That’s

requiring a lot of phone time, but if I were to do nothing and

keep the standard trajectory that we’ve been at for the last

year and a half, I could get away with two hours a week. That’s

really just support, and something that I could eventually

delegate out to a VA, to do at least the front line “how do you

do this,” copy and paste jobs.

Trent: That’s pretty phenomenal. One thing I hope the listeners take

away from this, and we’re going to talk about costs and how he

funded it and the whole thing, but you don’t need this world-

changing idea and you don’t need a gazillion dollar marketing

budget to make a very, very nice-I guess I’ll use the word

lifestyle business for lack of another word, for yourself that

you can run from anywhere in the world, and Planscope is a

really awesome example of that.

Brennan: Thank you, like you said, actually I just started doing paid

advertising. That’s sort of just retargeting, so it doesn’t even

count as much. If you know what you are doing, and know what

problems people have, and can build at least the minimum to

solve it, you can get something off the ground, usually pretty

quickly.

Trent: Absolutely. That seems to be a big stumbling block for a lot of

people. They say, “I don’t have an idea.” What would you say to

them?

Brennan: I would say look online, and find people that are willing to

pay for problems to be solved, and look for consensus. Look for,

or do a Google search for, “Why Base Camp sucks,” and find what

people are talking about, or what a certain segment of people,

or what I like to call a cash flow of people, that is people who

are all willing to pay money to solve the same problem. Look for

consensus. The way I look at it is my price point is between 24

to 200 a month. My average customer monthly recruiting revenue

is about $50. So it is about $50 a make on average per paying

customer. I don’t need more than 500 of them to do pretty well.

500 people on the whole wide Internet is not a lot of people.

Trent: And that makes for a very nice life. By the way, with respect

to discovering that idea, is that what you did? Did you start

off with “why Base Camp sucks?” Or was there a more specific

process, or did you have experience in this space already?

Brennan: I built Planscope largely for my own consulting business.

Before Planscope, I had an eleven person consultancy. I was just

frustrated with the tools we had. Specifically, I was frustrated

by the fact that I couldn’t find any project management app that

actually cared about money or cared about budgets. I wanted to

build one that took into account, is this project going to get

done for the money that we are hoping to get it done for? That

was sort of the core premise that I built Planscope around.

What was nice about having that pain of knowing that myself and

a lot of other people I talked to and a lot of other consultants

that I have talked to were frustrated by the fact that there was

a disconnect between invoicing and project management. I wanted

to build the minimum viable product, and it’s a cliche term, but

it’s an accurate term, that somebody would pay for to solve a

part of that problem. As I’ve developed Planscope, it’s

continued to solve more parts of that problem. I think the

biggest hang up that people have is that they look at a mature

product and say nobody will buy it unless it rivals this company

with 20 full time developers working on it. They just give up,

because it’s such a big undertaking.

Look at an app like Buffer. It was a simple, plug in a tweet and

we will post it at a certain time. Now it is much more complex,

but at its beginning, and this is true of just about any product

you find on the Internet, at its beginning it was much different

than what it is today. I think people get hung up on the whole,

it needs to be huge, it needs to be perfect, it needs to do

everything that the competitors do.

Trent: So the minimum valuable product. Let’s go back in history. When

did you decide okay, “Hey, I’m going to build something?” Then

how long did it take to get your MVP, your minimum valuable

product, out the door and how much did it cost?

Brennan: Okay, so I have two things going for me. The first is that I’m

a developer and designer in one body. The second is that I ran a

team of ten other people at my consulting firm who effectively

paid my bills for a few months. I bootstrapped it. I’ve never

taken any outside funding, and I really don’t plan to. I decided

to break ground on it in late October 2011, and I had my first

customer February 1st. We’re looking at about four months or so.

Trent: So four months of development or was it sort of two months of

digging around, making sure that the idea was really accurate,

talking to a lot of people. What did that phase look like?

Brennan: It was really all at once. Development really has never ended.

What I would do, first off was to put together a one-page

landing page. The benefit of when you’re not focused more on the

idea, but on the problem that you are solving, you don’t need to

put up screenshots, you don’t need to put anything up really

about the product. You just need to say, this is the problem

that you have that I empathize with and here’s the solution that

I’m proposing. If you’re interested, put in your email and I

will keep in touch.

I had that kind of opt-in page, and I develop each week, and

then sometime during the week I would email that list as it grew

and let people know what I would be working on next and solicit

feedback with real life examples of how a new feature that I

might be working on to build the app, and if it was a worthwhile

thing that they had a problem with. I kept a conversation going

at scale, and I learned specifically about what I could do

either make a company money or make it lose less money, because

those are the two big things that if you nail one or two of

those, people will pay you if you can make them more money or

you can help them lose less money than they’re paying. That was

the big focus for me.

Trent: That’s not unlike the focus of my old business where we helped

them to lose less money and we built a couple million a year

revenue as a result of that. I will say, though, that having

been in two businesses, one where I help you to lose less and

one where I help you to make money, it’s a whole lot easier to

sell something that people believe will help them make money

oddly enough.

Brennan: That’s right.

Trent: Now, I’m not going to turn this into a call about the technical

of how it was developed and so forth, you already said you were

a developer and designer, and obviously if someone isn’t a

developer, do you think that that should stand in their way?

What advice would you give them?

Brennan: I was in the business of building SaaS products for non-

developers. That was my consulting firm. That’s what we did. I

saw a lot of them that never took off. The reason that they

never took off wasn’t really a product or technical issue. If

you pay a competent developer and point them in the right

direction and let them know what you need, you can get what you

need built built.

A lot of my clients had an issue with shipping. As a non-

developer they had a very binary perspective of products, I

think. They either saw a product as not done or done. The issue

that I would see time and time again was that we would build

something and they would keep tweaking little bits and just

never getting it out and never launching anything.

One of the most depressing parts of my consulting career is how

many clients I had that we put months into their project and

they never shipped it, never put it live. I think just

understanding the, it’s kind of a black box for a lot of people,

software. If you don’t know how to write your own software it

can be intimidating I think. I think the best thing that you

could do is go to Treehouse or one of these online coding

platforms. Don’t even necessarily, the goal isn’t for you to

write your own app necessarily, but the goal is for you to know

how to program out a problem that then you can at least have a

little more context when working with a developer that you hire.

That’s what I would do.

In terms of design, you can go to Theme Forest and find a really

good looking landing page for nine bucks. Most buyers don’t know

necessarily that it is a template, and as long as the copy and

the messaging and everything else is good, it probably shouldn’t

matter. Copy writing is one of those skills that I think, it’s

somewhat a technical skill, but for the most part-learning

Photoshop requires a lot of time, learning how to code requires

a lot of time-good copywriting just requires knowing the English

language and knowing enough about sales, persuasion, and things

like that I think.

Trent: Yeah, there’s definitely a format to follow when producing

sales copy. Just as a side note for folks, I used to be really

intimidated by building software. Start small. I went to

freelancer.com and I put up this description of this WordPress

plugin I wanted to get built, and miraculously it got built, and

I’ve sold almost $20,000 of it so far. I really encourage you

not to let limiting beliefs, by the way, I only paid $1,000 to

develop that thing, so commercially it’s been quite successful,

and it taught me a lot. If you’ve never done software before and

if you are listening to this thinking you could never do that,

banish that thought from your mind, because you can do anything,

and if you have enough vision, and you can get your MVP

developed on the cheap, you will also be able to find investors,

because it is a compelling model. Building it is great, but if

you don’t have any customers, then who cares, right?

Brennan: That’s the reason, I think, 90% of startups fail is that you

focus too much on the product and that idea that you completely

miss first of all, how do I find people? And secondly, am I

actually solving a viable problem for them. For me, the way I

found customers and the way I find them still to this day is to

engage with them more on the product as it relates to their

company. What I mean by that is, when starting out, I would just

loiter around Internet forums where consultants hang out.

There’s a sub-Reddit for freelancing. There’s a lot of these

different community sites.

Trent: Can you list a few of them off? I want to put them in the show

notes.

Brennan: Yes, there’s freelanceswitch.com. They have a somewhat active

message board. There is Hacker News. It’s not exactly a

consultant community, but there are enough consultants on it

that it was viable. Then there is Reddit slash freelance I

think, which is a sub-Reddit dedicated to freelancing I think.

Trent: So that first one was freelanceswitch.com?

Brennan: Yes. So I would just kind of hang out here, and I would look to

see what kind of problem, the thing about Internet communities

is that the same topics keep coming up again and again. What’s

the common stuff that people keep talking about? Considering I

had a lot of experience when it came to consulting, having built

an eleven-person business, I decided to start writing about

those topics. I put together a blog, for Planscope, and just

started writing general purpose consulting and freelancing

articles.

Usually what I would do is instead of replying in the community,

I would reply, and I would put in a few sentences of copy and

then I would say that this relates to something that I wrote in

my blog and I would include a link to my blog or to the article

in question that relates to that topic. It definitely was not

scalable, but starting out it helped me build up an announcement

list of about 300 people, and when I launched within four months

I had people ready to go.

The biggest mistake that you can do, and I see this all the

time, is that you collect an email address and then you sit on

it until you are ready. So six months later you vaguely

remember, but don’t really know who they are and why you should

care. Then all they do is talk about themselves and say, “We are

ready, us, us, us,” but you just delete the email. I really

build up the conversation each week, while building Planscope,

and by the time I was ready to go, people were eager to get in.

Trent: That’s very good advice. I’m writing like mad on post it notes

for stuff I need to do for my own SaaS application, which we are

coding like mad right now, and I have not yet put up a squeeze

page, shame on me.

Brennan: You’re violating the number one law of selling anything online?

Trent: I’ve done a different thing. I obviously here with the Bright

Ideas podcast have a fairly sizable audience of marketing

agencies, and I have done demos, because we developed a mock up

for $500 to get a mock up done and Twitter bootstrap, and I have

been showing that mockup one on one with people for some time to

validate, “Hey, are we actually solving a real problem? Would

you pay for a solution to this?” You can sort of get a feel from

the tone of peoples’ voices when they see stuff. For one portion

of the application, we actually have a desktop version that is

fully coded and we’ve sold quite a bit of it. People say that

it’s awesome and you know that it is resonating.

Brennan: You know what I would put on top of that, I would say, “Okay,

would write me a check for it now.” The thing that I’ve

discovered, and I know from talking with a lot of people about

this is that people don’t want to be critical, necessarily. When

you can actually put them on the spot and say, “Will you pay for

this? Great, pay me now.” You can learn a lot about really what

people think and if it something that they would actually pay to

implement in their business.

Trent: I can hear the collective limiting beliefs of a few of the

people in the audience, and I’ll throw, myself under this camp

as well. They say they don’t have anything for sale yet, how can

I ask someone for a check, so what do you do?

Brennan: I didn’t presell Planscope, because I didn’t know enough about

preselling back then, but I have presold both of my books and

all of my workshops. Workshops are kind of a no brainer. You

typically collect payment and then you have a workshop some

point in the future. With a book, though, the way that I was

able to establish that early cash flow, with both my books.

I’ll talk first about my first book, because at that point I

didn’t have an audience. The second book was a little easier,

because once you’ve already written a book and successfully

delivered it, people trust that you are going to be able to do

it again. But with the first book, the same rules applied. I

talked about pain, I presented a solution, I countered

objections through just knowing about why people would buy this

and talking with a lot of different people about how to set your

rate. I knew kind of what common things people kept throwing

back at me when I pitched the book over Skype.

I had this long-form sales page. At the bottom, I had a

prepurchase link. With my first book I did a discount, so I did

20% off. On my second book, instead of doing a discount, I kept

the price what it would be on launch but I included an exclusive

one-hour webinar. If you preorder the book, you get the book

first before I go public with it, and a seat in this webinar

that you and all the other preorder people would get. Both sold

very well. The benefit was, for me at least, when there’s money

sitting in your account, and it’s really a liability, because

you need to actually deliver something, otherwise you are going

to get charge backs. It really lights a fire for you to get it

out there; wrap it up, get a production ready and ship it. I

really focused on that and having preorders was a really smart

move on my part.

Trent: I’ll echo that, because maybe a year ago, I think I did a

mastermind group for some people and I had about $12,000 in

preorders, and I hadn’t developed any of the content, but then I

knew that I was going to really knock their socks off with the

content that I promised. It was only twelve people, but they

paid $1,000, so I wanted to make sure it was really good. When

you already have the money, it makes it so much easier to put

the time in, because you’re like, “I’ve been paid for this now.

I have to make sure that I come through for everybody.

Brennan: Right, it’s a good solid move and the best proof you can get of

your product. It’s much better than an email address.

Trent: Yes. Okay let’s go back to… Here’s the thing in case

listeners want to know why they should keep listening. I want to

cover a little more on generating leads and converting those

leads to customers. Then we will talk a little more about

outsourcing. Brennan, do you use InfusionSoft?

Brennan: I do.

Trent: We will probably spend some time on how you are taking

advantage of all of the horsepower that InfusionSoft offers. If

time permits I also want to talk about some of the paid traffic

that you’re using, if you’re using any, to sort of ramp things

  1. That’s where we’re headed.

With respect to lead generation, you did this thing, you said it

didn’t scale, but it did work very well. Every startup, I wish I

could give credit to the guy who I’m about to quote. He was a

very well-known VC in the valley and he said, “In the

beginning,” I think it was Dan Morris that sent me this article,

“you need to focus on stuff that doesn’t scale.”

Brennan: That was Paul Graham’s article on doing stuff that doesn’t

scale.

Trent: Thank you. Exactly. That’s what you did by hanging out on

Freelanceswitch and Hacker News and Reddit in the beginning.

What did you do after that?

Brennan: It lasted through Summer 2012. It was in the Summer of 2012

that I started writing my book. The thing you’ll discover about

SaaS, if you eventually get one, it’s very slow to ramp up.

Twenty percent growth rate month to month when your income is

$100 is a very slow growth. But given the law of time, give that

three years and it becomes a very large investment.

What I realized is that I wanted to do a lot of things. I wanted

to go to a conference in Europe and I just didn’t have the

money, so I decided to write a book. Actually doing this was

probably the best marketing decision for Planscope I ever made.

The thing that I’ve learned about building a B2B heavy duty SaaS

that people need to convince themselves to use, and, in my case,

then switch their team and clients to it, is that isn’t an

impulse thing. You’re asking for a lot. If you’re sending

traffic to your marketing site, you probably don’t have any

rapport built up with that person yet.

What I ended up doing was I started really promoting this book I

was working on, and the thing about a book is that it is an

impulse buy. You spend $50 on an e-book, and you get the value

within a few hours. You read it, you get that value out of it,

and it’s done, and there’s very little risk, right? There’s very

little risk for will you extract value out of it. So I did a

book.

Trent: Brennan, I’m sorry to interrupt you, but the dog barking in the

background, is there a door or anything you can close?

Brennan: It’s downstairs. Let me get the nanny and tell her to put the

dog outside. Can you hold on for one second?

Trent: And we’re back, no more dog.

Brennan: What was I just talking about?

Trent: So the question that I’d asked you which got us going down this

path was how long did you focus on things that didn’t scale?

Then you talked about the book.

Brennan: So I started really writing this book and building excitement

around the book. I did the same thing I do with Planscope, I

started writing the book. In this case, the book prepurchase

list grew weekly, and I felt like I had to then. If they already

paid me money, I don’t want to take their money and disappear

and come back in the future at some point with a book. I just

started writing them about what I was writing about in the book.

I would just kind of extract chapters and sum it up in a

newsletter format. And after launching the book, I just kept

doing it. I realized I could stop, the book was out, and my duty

was done, but I converted it into a newsletter.

Trent: Paid or free?

Brennan: Free newsletter. By buying the book, you get on the newsletter.

Eventually, people outside of the book wanted to get on the

newsletter, so I started putting opt-ins on the Planscope blog.

The thing about a newsletter is that if someone just reads a

high-quality article of yours and you say that you deliver

things like that to an exclusive list, I mean my opt in rate for

my newsletter squeeze page is something like 40 or 45%, which is

something I’m very happy with and frankly could be higher.

Trent: What is the URL for that?

Brennan: That is freelancersweekly.com. I would send a lot of traffic

there and have opt-ins on my blog posts. I just started building

a list and started writing to them weekly. These weekly emails

weren’t kind of your typical graphic heavy newsletters. They

were more or less plain text-ish from me to them. I just kind of

built up a relationship with people over time.

What ended up happening was, I would drop very soft and subtle

relationships to Planscope like, “Here’s my thoughts on

estimating, and I actually built into my product Planscope,

things that actually correlate or complement this philosophy

towards estimating.” Actually, these days, more than 60% of my

new Planscope customers come from my mailing list first. They

are usually on it for months. They will sit on my list for

months. They might buy my book a month into it, then my second

book a few months later. Then they sign up for Planscope and

then six months down the road they buy my $1,800 workshop.

The thing is, what I’m doing, I’m able to really, everyone on my

list and all of my products focus on consulting. They focus on

freelancers and consultants. They’re all just different facets

of it. The Planscope, my SaaS, focuses on helping consultant be

more transparent with clients, and be basically better at

managing their projects. My first book, Double your Freelancing

Rate, helps consultants price higher. My second book helps them

deal with inbound marketing better.

All of my products are complementing a different part of

somebody’s business. For a lot of them it’s sort of natural

like, okay I paid Brennan $50 and he helped me raise my rate,

and I’m making $10,000 more a year this year. I’m very open to

spending more money on him and his SaaS business or SaaS

product, and expecting that same sort of investment to output

ratio.

Trent: So your book, without going into a ton of detail, I’ve never

heard of anybody say I needed money to go to a conference so I

wrote a book. Most people say I went out and got a new client or

something like that.

Brennan: I could have done that, and I’ve thought about that for a

while. What I realized is when you’re working with a client

project, I compare it all the time to crack cocaine. It’s

immediate gratification. You work an hour and you get paid for

that hour. With a book or any sort of product, the delay is

longer, if that payoff even ever comes. Secondly, you’re

building equity in something long term. By focusing on the book,

and making that money through presales, that I could have made

through consulting, I built up more long term equity that to

this day I still sell a few copies a week. I’m really not doing

much to make that happen. Secondly, it’s building up my personal

empire of consulting products, which further strengthens things

like Planscope.

Trent: But a book. Isn’t that a big deal? How many pages are we

talking here?

Brennan: So it is about 110 pages. I did it in about a month. I focused

on writing daily and making it a habit.

Trent: Like an hour a day, or six hours a day?

Brennan: I want to say I spent about 100 hours total, so we’re talking

about an hour per page. I mean I’ve been so comfortable with

blogging a lot that writing this stuff wasn’t really, I wasn’t

needing to pull teeth. It was things that I’ve been talking

about to a lot of people over email and phone calls and things

like that. The material was all up in my head. I just needed to

commit it to paper. I did it, and I’ve got great reception. I’ve

sold something like 3,000 copies. I don’t know specifically what

it is off the top of my head. So 3,000 times 40 to 50 a piece

depending on whether they had a coupon code of it was during

presales. I mean that is still, for 100 hours, and that’s just

as it is right now, and I’m still bringing in at least 1,000 to

2,000 in revenue from it.

Trent: That’s very nice passive income. How big was your list when

you started to do presales for the book?

Brennan: I had the Planscope list, but they thought they were on a list

for a project management app, so I didn’t really have a list.

The book started my list. I heavily cross promoted to my

Planscope list, which at that point had about 2000 people on it

at that point. Through Twitter, and really through a lot of

content. I would just extract the best parts of my book as I

wrote them, convert them to a blog post, and promote them. And

people would go on the different aggregator sites and… I’m not

afraid to put my best content forward for free as a way to

generate leads.

Trent: That’s a very good point, and I am so pleased that you brought

that up, because I know that when I first got online, and I know

a number of listeners can relate to this, I really struggled

because I had a membership site, “Well, what do I put on the

blog for free versus what I put in the membership site that is

not free?” Can you talk about with a book, or anything that’s

behind a paid wall of any kind, why do people pay for stuff that

they can get for free? And is it unethical to charge for stuff

that you make freely available in some other format, somewhere

else?

Brennan: I don’t think so, and here’s why. I think when you are selling

something to somebody wearing the hat of a business owner or

wearing the hat of a general business, there is no such thing as

free Internet research anymore. The best example I’ve ever heard

of this is my friend Patrick once said he put together a video

course on life cycle emails, and he got a lot of rebuttal from

people from Hacker News and other websites saying all this stuff

is available for free online. He said sure if you want to go

around and Google and get hit or miss articles for two weeks, go

for it. Or you can spend $500 and get a very curated, to the

point, start to finish overview of life cycle emails.

He put it in the business perspective that you are trying to

sell a CEO on having one of his developers implement a life

cycle email campaign. The CEO does not want to write a payroll

check for $10,000 for two weeks of this person’s time that has

in the memo field, “reading free information online.”

There’s two things. First off, you’re able to put it into your

own voice and into your own way of thinking about a problem.

Secondly, it’s up to you, as a content provider, to organize it,

make sure it’s relevant, make sure it’s cohesive and so on. I

say this all the time. When I’m confronted with a problem, do I

want to Google around for a week finding articles that might be

crappy, or outdated, or whatever, or would I rather pay $50 and

get the concise guide to it that I’ll have all that info pretty

immediately?

Plus, I back everything of mine with a money-back guarantee. If

you don’t think it’s worth more than the $50 you paid, write me

and I’ll gladly refund you. I think I’ve had 3000 sales and only

five total refunds. It’s a great way to kill an objection people

might have and a worthwhile thing to include I think.

Trent: This is kind of a parallel to the best way to attract the best

clients is to raise your prices. That might sound unrelated to

this, but what I’m trying to say is that by charging for stuff,

you are going to attract people who really and truly understand

the value of their time, and therefore your time, and those are

the ones that are the most enjoyable to deal with. And in your

book about how to raise your prices, I’ll bet that’s probably in

there somewhere.

Brennan: It’s almost funny. The people in the highest tiers of

Planscope, the people paying $200 a month, they hardly ever

reach out for me when it comes to support, or anything like

that. A lot of the $24 a month people can be very persnickety.

Trent: Yep, so very true. Are there any other ways that you are

generating leads, because we are still actually on that thread,

for Planscope that we have not talked about yet?

Brennan: Yeah, I have a drip email campaign that I have set up. This

kind of crosses into the paid advertising realm, but I’ve done

two different ways of acquiring eyeballs, I guess. The first is

something I started doing a long time ago, which was drive,

through LinkedIn ads, traffic to my page because I saw it had a

high conversion rate. If that rate was consistent, I could make

a pretty good return, probably, from LinkedIn advertising. I did

that and it paid off pretty well. I got about a five to one

return and still do to this day off my LinkedIn ads. That is

really just driving people to my newsletter. I don’t really have

a lead [magnet] or anything, I just have the opt-in page. I get

a pretty good amount of people who sign up through that and then

I have about one out of every ten people who join . . .

Trent: Let me interrupt you, you’re sending paid LinkedIn traffic to

freelancersweekly.com?

Brennan: That’s right, yep. I do have an auto-responder sequence set up

that actually asks three questions. The first email that I send

out says this is who I am and this is why I think I am qualified

to talk about consulting and freelancing. The second email is,

what is the number one problem you have right now with your

freelancing business? The third email is, here’s what the number

one problem that people have told me is and that happens to be

about undercharging, so I promote my book there, and I get about

a 10% conversion rate just then off of paid traffic to buy my

book. Considering what I pay to get the click, I pay about $5 a

click, I’m basically breaking even when it comes to acquiring

people through LinkedIn.

Trent: Yeah, but you’re doing that in a week, you’re getting your

money back in a week.

Brennan: Actually ten days. But the benefit of that is that the book is

just a stepping stone, I guess. I have a more expensive book

that gets up to $250. I have Planscope, where my average

lifetime value is between $200 to $1,000. I have my $1,800

workshop. I’ve had people who I’ve spent $5 a conversion on who

I broke even on with the first book, but I’ve had products

waiting in the wing that were contextually relevant to them that

then they bought and everything was pure margin, I guess.

Trent: That’s a very nice sounding funnel. You’ve mentioned earlier

that it was okay to save people research time by packaging up

knowledge and putting it all in one place so long as it was done

high quality. You have a lot of products, so I think some of the

listeners are thinking it might take me forever to create all of

those products. Do you think it’s okay for somebody to say, “I’m

going to produce a report on whatever, and I am going to go and

do all that research, and I am going to curate like mad, and

give credit where credit is due of course, and assemble my

workbook, for lack of a better term, that is the result of all

of my research on whatever topic it is, and I’m going to sell

that?”

Brennan: I think that if the deliverable is going to measurably impact

somebody’s business in such a way that it outweighs the cost of

getting that product in their hands, then I don’t see any

problem with that. I would just complement that by-it’s so easy

for a virtually 100% margin product for a book or an e-book to

put a money-back guarantee, that look, if my product doesn’t

help you, I only want you to buy this if can deliver $500 in

value to you. I think that’s a great way to do it, and if

somebody doesn’t take value from it, don’t take their money.

Trent: Its’ really about being clear with setting expectations up

front and backing it with a guarantee.

Brennan: That’s right.

Trent: For people who have not yet bought any paid traffic, why did

you choose LinkedIn over any number of other sources like

Facebook, Google PPC?

Brennan: Okay, so I actually have done Facebook also. I did Facebook and

LinkedIn. LinkedIn was a little better overall. So I phased out

a lot of the Facebook ads. I’m using Facebook, now, for

retargeting, which is amazing actually.

Trent: You should explain to people what is retargeting.

Brennan: Retargeting is when you go to a website that is using a

retargeting advertising provider, what happens is, when you go

to another website, like Facebook, you will start seeing ads for

the website you were on before. It’s kind of like when I was on

a gardening website, and I saw SendGrid, which is like an email

service provider, ads. I knew that SendGrid is not spending ad

budget on a gardening site by default. But because advertisers

know that if you have been to their website in the past, you’re

more than likely in their demographic, so you have a higher

click through rate for them, which means more money in your

pockets. But for the advertiser, it’s more money in your pocket

ultimately.

I heavily used Facebook retargeting. Now that they have newsfeed

ads, which if you’ve been on Facebook and you see advertisements

in your newsfeed, that also are websites that you’ve been to,

that is why. Those ads, I get 4 to 5% click through rates

sometimes on that. A good click through rate is sub 1% usually,

so I am kind of using both.

Trent: Are you using AdRoll for retargeting, or is Facebook itself got

its own retargeting service?

Brennan: I’m actually using a service called Perfect Audience, which is

a [Y-combinator] startup, and they do display ads, so they do

your general website banner ad retargeting, but they also do

Facebook ads. One thing I like about them, I don’t know if

Adderall does this, is that they allow for email for targeting.

Considering that I have a big email list, I’m able to put in my

email template the pixel ad for Perfect Audience, which will

then start retargeting for my list.

You can also segment that list to say not to show ads to people

who already have an account or already bought this, then you can

make it so that only the right people who, so if you have a free

newsletter, instead of hammering your newsletter with book

stuff, you could have your newsletter have this tracking pixel,

and then in somebody’s Facebook feed, you put a free email

course that directly relates to your book. You put your picture

and your name on it, and they already know you produce awesome

content. They join that email course and the goal of that course

is to sell them on the book, which is one really clever way to

sell your products through a newsletter.

Trent: So everything that you just explained in the last three minutes

or so, you can achieve using Perfect Audience, is that correct?

Brennan: That’s correct, yep.

Trent: So you don’t have to be some coding genius to be able to figure

out to do everything.

Brennan: No, if you are able to put Google analytics code on your

website, you will be able to figure it out.

Trent: Okay, and folks, the show notes for this episode where I will

be putting all of these links is going to be found at

brightideas.co/77. That’s just the number 77. All right unless I

missed something, I think we pretty much talked about how you’re

attracting leads. Is there anything else that you are doing for

lead generation that we have not talked about?

Brennan: It’s pretty much give away great content. Get people into, what

I call, my ecosystem. You know, get them to know who I am. The

amazing thing is when people reach out to me with support

requests for Planscope, they almost always start out with, “Hey

Brennan” comma. People know that I’m behind Planscope. I make

that a very public thing. It’s just a different medium. The

books are one medium, Planscope is a different medium, but they

all achieve that same goal, which is to help make somebody have

a better consulting business.

I have a have a very stepladder approach, where at the bottom is

my newsletter, and from then on up it goes to my impulse buy

with the book, and then bigger purchases, and ultimately

Planscope and my workshop. People sell segment. If somebody

spent $50 on you and got a great return, those people are more

than likely to spend $1,800 on you for an even bigger return.

It’s funny, I can go to my workshop customer database and plop

any of their email addresses into my CRM, and all of them bought

a book of mine a few months ago, or something. I could drive as

much paid traffic in the world as I want into an $1,800

workshop, no one will register. There needs to be a gradual

approach to doing that.

Trent: How much do you spend on advertising in a typical month?

Brennan: I spend about total, I want to say, maybe 400 or 500 a month.

Trent: Okay, and what would you say your annual run rate for your

revenue is right now?

Brennan: So my workshop, I do now just about every other month, and

that’s $1800, and I sell 14 seats, so whatever that would be.

That’s about $20,000 or so. I usually consistently sell them

out. My books bring in total about $3,000 to $3,500 on

autopilot. Planscope just passed five figures. It’s hard to say

for Planscope, because that one keeps growing, which isn’t a bad

thing.

Trent: No, definitely not, so somewhere between 25,000 to 30,000 a

month.

Brennan: About that, yeah. That’s pretty consistent.

Trent: For a business with one programmer, and only $500 a month in

advertising. You’re doing pretty good.

Brennan: It’s funny, when I was consulting, I was billing $200 an hour.

If I was full time, I would be bringing in $32,000 a month. I’m

actually making less than I would at consulting still, but it’s

a lot better.

Trent: Because your income is not so directly tied to the amount of

hours you work now.

Brennan: That’s right. If my primary client fired me, I’d be out, but if

one person decides to quit Planscope, it’s whatever.

Trent: Right, no big deal. Do you still have the 11 people in the

service business working for you? Did you shut that down, or

sell it off? What happened?

Brennan: What I did is promote my business development guy to run it in

my absence, and I basically converted everyone to a 1099,

because if I was inactive, I didn’t want to deal with having a

fixed, expensive payroll each month. Some of them still relate

to us, but for the most part, a lot of them are just kind of

independent consultants now, so it’s intentionally gone

downhill, but the goal wasn’t to keep it alive.

Trent: The service businesses can really be wonderful. I interviewed

another guy by the name of Sam Ovens-that’s at brightideas.co/69-

he also has a SaaS business, but he, like you, funded it on the

back of his consulting business. So service businesses can

really be wonderful. I’m doing exactly the same thing. Bright

Ideas makes money from doing services in our agency and we are

taking that money and reinvesting it in assets and recurring

revenue products, because ultimately that’s where I’d like to

have the money come from.

Brennan: Yeah, I actually think that there’s a lot of room for what we

think of as turn-key products like SaaS businesses to have more

concierge services to it. If you look at something like, Rob

[Walling] who has a new project called DripOut, which is a very

simple throw this job description on your page and you will have

an email course option widget on the bottom of your screen. One

of the things he’s doing is have a concierge service where yes,

he has a platform that will help you plug in all of your email

courses, but you can pay him X amount and they will write them

for you. It’s kind of like consulting, but it’s kind of your own

marketplace in a way. You have the product that people are

paying you monthly for, but you have these transactional one-

offs that allow you to charge significantly more to deliver

personal value, I guess.

Trent: And what website should people go to for that?

Brennan: That is getdrip.com

Trent: Okay, I’ll put that in the show notes as well, so if you’re

driving, don’t try and write that down. All right, I’m such a

big InfusionSoft fan, I can’t help but ask you some questions.

We’re going to finish up the interview with how InfusionSoft

fits into all this, so if you don’t care, you’ll probably have

gotten all out of this that you wanted to, but InfusionSoft is

some of the most amazing marketing software on the planet, so

we’re going to talk about it. What do you think is this biggest

benefit to your business of using InfusionSoft versus AWeber,

GetResponse, iContact, all the cheapies?

Brennan: So for the longest time, and still to this day, I haven’t fully

transitioned everything yet. Before I was doing everything

through MailChimp. Kind of the pain for that was, there wasn’t

really, I have one massive list, while you can’t segment or

group something out, it’s very hard to say something like, “Hey

I’m putting together a workshop on recurring revenue next month,

if you’re interested, click this link.” The only way to really

do that with MailChimp would be to drive people to a landing

page where they would then need to type in their name and email

address again, submit the form and opt in for a new list.

Right now, I’m using InfusionSoft for all of the life cycle

emails for Planscope. It’s kind of nice, because you can do

things like, well the first email they get from me is, what’s

the number one thing you want me to help you with? The three

options are, I want you to help me estimate, I want you to help

me better manage my clients, or I want you to help me better

manage my team. I ask them to click one. It’s the standard where

I have a goal that is to click on a link. Depending on what they

choose, it creates a task in my InfusionSoft account, where then

I will follow up with them manually and ask how I can help them

estimate.

Again, if I had a thousand new accounts a day, there is no way I

could keep doing this, but what I’m doing is actually using this

to build out an eventual email sequence for each of these three,

so eventually clicking the I need help estimating will spin off

a sequence that’s all about estimating that’s going to be based

off of the conversations that I’m having now. That’s one cool

thing that I’m able to do.

When somebody activates or pays, I tag them, and then I have

certain sequences kick off from that; likewise, when somebody

churns. The biggest thing for me is having a centralized CRM,

where I can know this person that just bought Planscope bought a

book three months ago. Before that was a very manual operation.

I had to cross reference things to figure that out. I can better

do things like when somebody joins my newsletter, if they happen

to stumble upon the Planscope website, using the web analytics

InfusionSoft capabilities, I can then start getting in touch

with them selling them Planscope.

It’s a very nice, from that point of view, where everything is

in one place, and I don’t need to have multiple lists and juggle

things around it. Instead of having a Planscope list, a book

buying list, a general newsletter list, and a workshop list, I

just have one list, but I’m better able to kind of know who on

that list has done what.

Trent: And what enables this is called tagging. Tagging is I think it

is the greatest thing ever with respect to InfusionSoft, because

it allows you to categorize the people that are in your

database, it allows you to trigger automation based on their

activity. I could probably do an entire podcast just talking

about examples of how I’m using tagging, and it’s pretty awesome

stuff. It’s so much different than, like you said with

MailChimp, where you have a list for this and a list for that

and it’s really painful to get one person from one list to

another and there is a lot of friction, whereas, with

InfusionSoft, it’s effortless.

Brennan: That’s right. Considering that the value of a team account,

where a bigger enterprise account is so much more valuable to me

than a freelancer account. When somebody says, “I need help

managing my team,” I prioritize that task. That’s permanent. Now

I know that this person is probably running a team. Then they

are the ones that I promote my higher value, more team focused

products to versus the college student who is moonlighting some

additional revenue on the side.

Trent: Absolutely. That’s right. All right, I think we are at about an

hour here, and I could ask you so many more things, but in the

interest of keeping my episode to just an hour, I think we are

going to stop here. Before we finish up, is there anything that

I have not asked you about, which you particularly stoked or

want to talk about? Number one.

Brennan: I could talk about an experiment that I’m running now if

anything is interested. It’s a sort of SaaS logistics. So before

I was doing a credit card up front sign up process, where you

would need to sign up, put in your credit card, and you would

have a two-week trial. If you didn’t cancel in two weeks you

would get billed. I did this for a while and it worked well. I

was having a 40% conversion rate from trial to paid.

What I’m doing now, I kind of have a squeeze page for

Planscope’s website. Instead of having a full blown marketing

site, it’s really just type in your email address and a password

and jump directly into Planscope. What I do is I have a very big

on-boarding process that has like an interactive video. At the

end I ask somebody to create their first project for a client,

because when somebody is using Planscope on a client project,

they are deriving business value out of it. It’s no longer about

seeing if the interface is friendly for them or whatever else,

and what I do then is capture their card then and bill them

immediately, but I put a 60-day money back guarantee.

I launched this on Friday. I don’t have enough data yet, but my

earlier site would get maybe a 1% conversion rate to trial and

now I am getting about a 10 to 11% trial rate, which means more

email addresses that I can build up relationships over time

with. So fewer drive-bys right? A lot of people, they stumble

across Planscope and they don’t know who I am, they’re not going

to give me their card, any of that stuff. Now it is much quicker

to get in, but I charge you immediately, so if you’re going to

be using this for a client project, I’m going to charge you

right now, but you have a full two months to ask for your money

back. I’m excited to see how this will work.

Trent: Are you doing this right from the homepage of planscope.io

right now or is there a different landing page?

Brennan: No, so you go to the homepage, planscope.io, there’s really no

navigation except for signing in, type in your email and

password and get started. I’m getting an 11% conversion rate on

this page.

Trent: Is that connected to InfusionSoft?

Brennan: Yes, it is.

Trent: Is that just an InfusionSoft form behind the interface or is

there an API?

Brennan: I’m using an API to do it. The form actually submits to

Planscope, and creates an account and inserts a bunch of stuff

into my database, and then I’ll replicate it over to

InfusionSoft.

Trent: Okay, so if someone says, “Hey, what’s my password,” you would

be able to tell them, because it is going to be stored-obviously

you can get it out of Planscope-but it’s in InfusionSoft, yes?

Brennan: I don’t put password info in InfusionSoft. I actually encrypt

all the passwords so you’d need to reset your password if you

were locked out. All I send to InfusionSoft is their email

address. Once they activate I get the account name and the first

and last name, so I’ll update the record then, but for most

people I just get the email.

Trent: Okay, I’m going to ask you one more question. How on Earth do

you manage your time? I know for me it is a massive struggle.

There are so many projects on the go, so many things you could

be doing, from tweaking the sales funnel, to testing sources of

paid traffic, to split testing landing pages, to creating a

podcast, to getting a guest, to writing a post, and on and on

and on. You seem like you get a lot done.

Brennan: I work fast. I like to say I live in organized chaos. I think

the best thing that I do is I usually get up at around 5:00 or

6:00am. I’ll start before the world is awake, I guess, and I’ll

just bang stuff out. I’m trying now to really focus on bucketing

where I’ll have a certain day be Planscope day and another day

be newsletter day, and another day be new product day. That in a

perfect world would be ideal, but the biggest issue for me right

now is how much my day is spent in my inbox. That’s actually the

biggest problem that I have because one of the things that I ask

people with a lot of my newsletters are, “Reply and tell me what

you think about this.” And I label it all in Gmail, and it’s

great for-one great marketing lesson is throw people’s words

back at them. So if you know how people describe in their own

words a problem, and you reflect that on your marketing site,

it’s better overall for sales.

Now that I’ve got quite a few thousand people, I send out an

email and say, “Tell me what you think about this,” I might get

200 or 300 replies. And I tell people, “I’ll reply to everything

I get.” That is starting to get pretty hard.

Trent: I want to offer up a resource for that. Chris Ducker did an

interview with Amy Porterfield. Her last interview on

AmyPorterfield.com, and Chris is actually going to be on my show

coming up soon too, and he’s the guy behind Virtual Staff

Finder. He actually describes at length in the interview how he

outsourced his inbox, and he has a VA do the first round of

filtering because he’s much like you. He says, “I want to get

people back answers,” but many time as I’m sure you’re aware,

the answers are the same or more or less the same over and over

again. So you can absolutely train a VA, or even have something

like [YesWare] installed on your browser, so your stuff is

already prewritten and someone else can go through that first

round for you, so when you log into your inbox, it’s only the

stuff that nobody else could actually answer for you.

Brennan: It’s a great idea. I think there’s a benefit in that it’s the

author’s own voice replying to you. Frankly, there’s a lot of,

especially if somebody’s emailing me about spending $1,800 in my

workshop, I’m going to talk to them as myself. I’m not going to

hire a VA to do that.

But I think you’re right. For at least delegating to me what’s

important or what needs my focus is a great idea. I’ve never

been good with delegation admittedly. It’s one of those things,

I’d love to be much better at it than I am now, but it’s more of

a mental hurdle I think for me.

Trent: I think it is for a lot of people. You eventually get to the

point where you decide I can have either massive growth or

massive control, but I can’t have both.

Brennan: That’s a good point. That’s a really good point.

Trent: You just can’t do it all. There are not enough hours in the

day. Brennan, thank you so much for doing this interview with

  1. I learned a whole bunch and got lots of notes going into the

show notes here. There is going to be a transcript. Again folks,

you going to be able to get to that-I’d like to say, “If you’re

just tuning in . . .” But that doesn’t happen with a podcast,

you’re either here from the beginning or you’re not here-at

brightideas.co/77. All the stuff we talked about will be right

there.

Brennan, if people want to get a hold of you what is the one

easiest way for them to do that?

Brennan: Easiest would be my personal website, that’s brennandunn.com or

I’m the same thing on Twitter, @brennandunn.

Trent: Okay, terrific. Thanks so much for being on the show. I look

forward to crossing paths with you again soon.

Brennan: Awesome, thank you, Trent.

Trent: So that’s it for this episode. To get the show notes and all

the links that Brennan and I talked about head to

brightideas.co/77. And please do me one other small favor, head

over to brightideas.co/love, there you’ll find a tweet you can

send out, as well you’ll find a link to go ahead and leave

feedback in the iTunes store. So if you thought this was a

valuable episode and you found some golden nuggets, I would

really love it if you would take the 60 seconds or so that it

takes to fire up iTunes and go leave a five-star feedback for

the show. When you do, more ears get to hear the show in the

future because iTunes ranks it higher and the more entrepreneurs

that we can help to boost their business with all the bright

ideas that are shared here by guests like Brennan.

So that’s it for this episode. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid. Thank

you so much for tuning in. I really cannot wait to produce

another one of these fabulous interviews for you in the future.

If this is your first exposure to the show, you want to make

sure you never miss another one, head over to brightideas.co, go

ahead and opt in, and you’ll make sure you get notification of

every episode we ever produce. Thanks so much. Have a wonderful

day.

About Brennan Dunn

brennan-dunnBrennan Dunn provides great software and products to freelancers and consultants.

He is founder of Planscope, a project management software for contracts and freelancers; author of “Double Your Freelancing Rate“; and owner of We Are Titans, a consulting company that focuses on improving their clients’ profits.

Digital Marketing Strategy: Robert Rose on How the Content Marketing Institute Uses Email Marketing to Land Consulting Clients

This podcast is a real treat. Robert Rose is the second guest I’ve had from the Content Marketing Institute (CMI), which is virtually an institution of knowledge on content marketing. Robert is CMI’s Chief Strategist there, and I definitely learned some new strategies taht I’m looking forward to sharing with you!

CMI’s stated goal is to advance the practice of content marketing, and one of the ways they do this is by training their consulting clients.

Robert walks us through the process they use to turn a brand new lead into a paying client, including details of their funnel and what they do if a prospect doesn’t buy.

He also shares some strategies that can significantly inflate the reach of your content as he walks us through how and when to use press releases for posts, and how to cross post influencers’ content.

That’s not all. When you listen to this interview, you’ll hear Robert and I talk about:

  • (2:45) Introductions
  • (4:45) An overview of how they are attracting consulting clients
  • (10:00) An overview of how they track where their leads come from
  • (11:55) What happens if their consulting leads don’t buy
  • (17:45) An overview of how to structure an agency funnel
  • (20:30) The different types of registration forms and how to use them
  • (22:45) An overview of the BrightIdeas funnel, and how it could be improved
  • (29:45) How a secondary call to action mid-funnel can improve the buyer journey
  • (31:45) Traffic or conversion, which is easier to increase?
  • (35:15) How to attract other writers
  • (38:45) How to engage a new contributing writer
  • (40:45) How & why to do a press release for a new post

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Listen Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

About Robert Rose

Robert-headshot-2011-color-medium-300x240Robert is the Chief Strategist for the Content Marketing Institute, and Senior Contributing Analyst for Digital Clarity Group.

Robert is the author of the book Managing Content Marketing, which spent two weeks as a top ten marketing book on Amazon.com.  As a recognized expert in content marketing strategy, digital media and the social Web, Robert innovates creative and technical strategies for a wide variety of clientele.  He’s helped large companies such as 3M, ADP, AT&T, KPMG, Staples, PTC and Petco tell their story more effectively through the Web. He’s worked to help develop digital marketing efforts for entertainment and media brands such as Dwight Yoakam, Nickelodeon and NBC. And, he’s helped marketers at smaller organizations such as East Harlem Tutorial Program, Coburn Ventures and Hippo to amplify their story through Content Marketing and Social Web Strategies.

He is a featured writer for the online magazines iMedia Connection, Fierce Content Management and CMSWire and also a featured author in the book “Enterprise 2.0 How Technology, E-Commerce and Web 2.0 Are Transforming Business Virtually.

An early Internet pioneer, Robert has more than 15 years of experience, and a track record of helping brands and businesses develop successful Web and content marketing strategies.

Digital Marketing Strategy: Andrew Dymski on How He Launched a Successful Marketing Agency Right out of College (part 2)

If you want proof that you don’t need decades of experience and a huge Rolodex full of clients in order to start a marketing agency, look no further. Andrew and his colleagues at Guavabox launched an agency right out of college, and by all measures are on track to have a tremendously successful business.

Guavabox does an impressive job of generating content marketing. And, more than almost anyone I’ve spoken with, they not only understand the importance of list segmentation, but they provide an overview of how they’ve segmented their list, and how this segmentation has helped them identify their hottest prospects, and appropriately nurture and convert their leads into paying clients.

In addition, Andrew explains the thinking behind, and validation of, their business model, sharing insights helpful to any startup. There was so much goodness in this interview that I had to break it into two parts.

If you missed Part 1, you’ll want to check it out to hear Andrew and I talk about:

  • (3:30) Introductions
  • (5:50) Why the old model of web design doesn’t scale
  • (8:30) An overview of financial results
  • (10:00) His business philosophy and how it played a critical role in their launch
  • (13:30) How they validated their business model
  • (16:30) How taking on a new client went wrong
  • (21:00) How they picked their niche
  • (25:30) How they are generating leads
  • (27:30) How blogging plays a role in lead generation
  • (29:30) How they developed their personas
  • (35:30) An overview of outbound marketing

.. And be sure to check out Part 2 below, where we discuss:

  • (3:00) An overview of various nurturing campaigns
  • (7:00) An overview of how they’re using personas to segment their list
  • (13:00) An overview of when and how they decide to follow up with each lead
  • (16:30) An overview of how they are changing their business model to a retainer fee model
  • (21:00) An overview of their retainer plans
  • (12:40) How they report results (traffic & leads) and what they’re planning for the month ahead
  • (25:00) How they manage client expectations
  • (28:00) How they are producing blog content
  • (31:00) How they are using contractors
  • (33:00) An overview of how they are in track with their goals

Resources Mentioned

Inbound Marketing 101 Ebook
Zerys.com
ClearBloggingSolutions.com
Guavabox.com
Best Buyer Formula

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Listen Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

Transcript

Trent: Hey there bright idea hunters, welcome to the Bright Ideas

Podcast. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid, and this is the podcast

for marketing agencies, marketing consultants and entrepreneurs

who want to discover how to use content marketing and marketing

automation to massively boost their business without massively

boosting the amount of hours that they have to work every single

week.On the show with me today is Andrew Dymski, and this is part two of a

two part series that Andrew and I did. If you missed the first

part, you can get to it by going to BrightIdeas.co/74, and in

this episode we’re going to continue the discussion that we had,

where he is explaining to us how he is building, very

successfully I might add, his marketing agency GuavaBox.In this second part we’re going to be talking about the very creative

and intelligent ways that he is nurturing and converting his

leads to customers. We’re also going to be talking about how he

know when to follow up with and who to follow up with out of all

the leads that are coming into his funnel.We’re going to talk about an overview into how they’re changing their

business from a fee based business, rather like a fee per

project based business to a retainer fee income based business

and how that’s having a wonderfully positive effect on your cash

flow as you might imagine, and we’re also going to talk about

how he reports to his clients all the good stuff that they’re

doing for them so that those clients have a high level of

motivation to keep on paying that retainer on an ongoing basis,

to produce that long term client relationship of course that we

all want and need to make our businesses grow.So before we get to that just wanted to very quickly talk to you

about a Bright Ideas product, if you are at all struggling when

it comes to business to business lead generation, that’s an area

where I have extensive experience and I’ve created a product

called the Best Buyer Formula.You can get to the sales page at BrightIdeas.co/BBF, and in that

video based course, it’s delivered in a membership site, that

you’re going to see just a treasure trove of content that

explains to you exactly how I built my last business and how I’m

building this one in terms of lead generation. Like with all my

products I stand behind it with a 100% money back guarantee, so

if you get access and you think that it’s not for you no

worries, just send an email to my team and we will give you a

refund, no questions asked.So with all that said, thank you so much for tuning in and please

join me in welcoming Andrew back for part two.All right Andrew welcome back for part two of this interview with

Bright Ideas and yourself, for your firm GuavaBox which is an

inbound marketing agency. If you missed part one folks you can

get at it by going to BrightIdeas.co/74, and in part one we

talked a whole lot about how Andrew and his two cofounders

launched his business, how they picked their niche, how they

launched with what we call the minimum viable product, how

they’re generating their leads, there’s a whole bunch of really

good stuff in there in that half hour interview, and now we’re

going to pick up right where we left off.

So you mentioned that you’re getting leads, a lot of leads from your

blog. You also mentioned from referrals and some other things. I

don’t imagine that everyone is ready to buy right away.

Andrew: Sure.

Trent: So what’re you doing to nurture and convert? And if you like

you can also talk about how you’re doing this for your

customers, because I imagine it’s not terribly different than

how you’re doing it for yourself.

Andrew: No it’s not. Again just following the same line that we

prescribe for our clients is we’re HubSpot partners and we use

their workflow tool to kind of lay out lead nurturing sequences.

And the way that HubSpot is built if anyone isn’t familiar with

their product, but it’s a marketing database first so you, as

leads come in they kind of fill into this marketing database and

then it kind of watches their behavior and tracks the different

content that they’ve looked at the content that they’ve

downloaded, emails that they’ve clicked on and clicked through,

all these different data points to help create a smart marketing

system.

So we can go in and set different life cycle stages within the

software, so if someone downloads a what to expect in a

partnership with GuavaBox eBook, we’re going to respond probably

with an email right away, just introducing ourselves, a more

personal touch. But if someone downloads Inbound Marketing 101,

kind of a higher level offer, based on some of the form fields

they will be entered into, just a lead nurturing sequence, just

an email drip sequence basically, like you could set up through

MailChimp or any other email tool you may use. So we use the

nurturing to kind of follow up with people and keep our finger

on the pulse of what they’re clicking through, what’s

interesting them, so that’s how we nurture right now.

Trent: Okay so let me make sure, I want to feed that back and make

sure that I understand and we’ll go to the website here. So

someone on your sidebar, it says subscribe to the GuavaBox blog,

when an email address goes into there, what happens? Are they

just getting blog updates from that point forward, because

that’s its own follow-up sequence correct?

Andrew: Correct. So there, when someone subscribes from our blog we’re

only going to send them blog articles, so that’s a really top of

the funnel lead in our system, so from a follow-up standpoint

there whenever you get a new blog post from us you’re going to

have an opportunity to download an eBook from us, right now it’s

Inbound Marketing 101, kind of a brief overview of what

Inbound’s all about, and gives them more detail.

So if they’re reading our blog, they’re probably going to be

interested in Inbound 101, and that’s kind of the generic first

offer that we offer people who come to the site. And then if

someone downloads say Inbound 101, now they’re kind of a

marketing qualified lead in our funnel and they’re going to get

a different sequence of responses from us, and again it’s based

on those personas. We’ve got a best describes me field in our

form.

And it’s a CEO is looking to increase sales, a marketing manager

who’s looking for a boost, other marketing agencies so depending

on what that field result is right there, they’re going to get

entered into a different lead nurturing sequence and that’s how

our system’s built right now.

Trent: Okay, so this is the offer that I see at the bottom of . . .

I’m assuming it’s every blog post, that green box with a red

button, get started with the free guide correct?

Andrew: Well the offer’s going to change a little bit depending on what

the blog post topic is, so if we’re writing about personas it’s

going to be kind of a buyer persona guide that we have down

there, we cycle between three and four top of the funnel offers

at the bottom of our blog post.

Trent: Okay, and so when your segment, because segmentation’s

unbelievably important, your segmenting by number of employees

and this field called best describes me, so speak to that again

if you would. So let’s say that I choose marketing manager who

needs a boost versus CEO slash owner who needs sales, how is the

experience in your funnel going to be different for me as a

result of one or the other of those choices?

Andrew: Okay, let’s think back to our personas again, if we’ve got

cutting edge Chris, Chris is the CEO of a company, it’s a

pretty, it’s a young and growing company that’s looking to

expand, they’re looking for a new source of leads that’s going

to help throttle their growth and a company that we can scale

with as well. So what kind of information is he looking for?

He wants to know return on investment, he wants to know what kind of

leads he can expect, far more metric driven, straight to the

point kind of stuff, so our content to Chris is usually shorter

than our content would be to the marketing manager. In the

marketing manager we share more tactical information, because

they could be attempting to do inbound on their own right now,

maybe they’re a HubSpot customer, [Marketo] or they’re just

trying to use WordPress by themselves, whatever it is. So

they’re going to be interested in more like how are you driving

leads to our website, whereas the CEO just wants to know are you

driving leads to my website and what kind of return am I going

to see from the money that I’m giving you. So that’s how we use

personas to kind of break up the type of message that we

communicate to our leads.

Trent: Now that’s pretty smart by the way, so bravo to you for that.

Andrew: Thank you.

Trent: Now the content that you’re delivering, is it, are you

basically just writing short emails that then direct them back

to specific posts which would be relevant to the persona that

they selected, or is all of the content delivered in an email so

they don’t have to click through?

Andrew: No we’re typically, we have some emails that are just within

the email, but we’re primarily linking people back to landing

pages, providing them another opportunity to convert on our

website. Another powerful that HubSpot gives you is progressive

profiling in their forms, essentially what that is, is if

somebody has downloaded an offer from your website and they’ve

entered their first name, last name, email address, their

company name and their company URL. We don’t need to ask what

their company name and company URL are again.

If we want to keep the number of fields shorter, we’re going to ask

them a different set of questions. So it’s, their database looks

at we can build out ten questions and if three of them are

already answered they just kind of bump the next three up so

then we might get employee number, or the biggest marketing

struggle, questions like that that help us to get more

information and identify their pain point more clearly through

the automation process.

So we want to take them from the email to a landing page and

sometimes we’ll send them back to a website but the primary goal

is to get them to a landing page to offer them another piece of

content that can help them solve whatever problem they’re

facing.

Trent: Can you give me an example of one of those landing pages? Let’s

say have you got one that you could rattle off for the CEO-owner

persona.

Andrew: Yeah. Well we don’t structure the landing pages. They’re going

to be structured pretty much the same, in the way that we lay it

out. But the email copy is what we vary based on the persona.

Trent: Okay.

Andrew: So an email, we want to get say a CEO to click through, we

might only have three or four sentences, break it up into like

three paragraph breaks with only a couple sentences on there,

and then that is going to get them to click through and then,

I’ll pull up one of our pages, one of our landing pages right

now and kind of walk you through how we use personas to

construct that.

So if someone just goes to GuavaBox.com, and you can go down to the

bottom, in free marketing resources section and click on all

online marketing sources, here’s just a collection of all the

eBooks. Everyone’s just welcome to download as many as they

want, I hope they can help you out.

Trent: Right. I’ll make sure if you’re driving in your car right now

don’t worry about writing any of this down, all you’ve got to do

is come to the post which for this part two episode will be at

BrightIdeas.co/75, and I’ll put links to all this stuff.

Andrew: So when we build a landing page, we understand the personas are

going to read things differently, so in our like H1 tag we want

a straight to the points text that a CEO is going to relate

with. So he’s just breezing through, so in our Inbound Marketing

101 landing page, which is like I said our top of the funnel

offer, the H1 tag is reach new customers with inbound marketing.

That’s going to relate to a marketer but it’s also going to

relate to a CEO because at the end of the day that’s what they

want their marketing to deliver, is new customers.

And then when you drill down into the H2 copy it says learn how an

inbound marketing game plan can bring all marketing efforts into

focus and grow your business. So that helps more of the

analytical thinker, helps them understand more precisely what

this eBook’s going to help them deliver, and then you go down.

And we’ve got bullet points that break down specific tactics

that the marketer’s going to want to understand on how this

value’s going to be delivered.

Trent: This is a lot of content to produce, all these eBooks. Were you

able to take generic eBooks that HubSpot produced and then just

put your branding on them?

Andrew: We have, some of them, their partner program is Out of Sight,

and I recommend every marketing agency at least look into it

because the support that they provide to you is outstanding

beyond just learning their software, they give you offers that

you can convert and co-brand with them. So I’d say about half of

our offers are cobranded offers, and then we have original

offers that we have just created out of problems that have seen

arise.

Trent: Interesting. What does it cost you a month to have HubSpot?

Andrew: We are on the professional package so it’s $600 a month, for

  1. Obviously that’s a number that’s going to scare away or just

chase away smaller agencies, but we were able to pace up towards

  1. And then once you begin to get clients who are using

HubSpot, they have basically an affiliate referral program where

you get 20 percent back from any package that you’re able to

sell. So if you’re able to sell, you’re able to basically get

your portal for free after not too long.

Trent: Yeah, okay. All right so when people are downloading these

various . . . you’ve got all these offers that are in your

funnel, and then I would imagine that you’re doing some type of

like, where I’m going with this is how do you know when to

follow up with who?

Andrew: Great question. When you’re getting started and leads are just

flowing into your system, you don’t really have time for the

lead nurturing sequence to go all the way through. You know if a

company downloads Inbound 101 and we click over to their website

and every day we’re going through the leads that have converted,

and so we see their website we see their in our niche or they’re

a company that we wouldn’t mind working with then we’re just

going to give them a call. You know reach out or send them an

email, say, “Hey, this is Andrew from GuavaBox. I notice that

you were on our website yesterday and downloaded Inbound

Marketing 101. Just wanted to follow up and see if you had any

other questions or if there’s anything I can help you out with.”

And you know that gets a conversation started.

Sometimes people deny that they’ve ever been there. They say, oh I

don’t know what you’re talking about or . . . it’s crazy. But

other times you’ve got people who are really open to having a

conversation with you and that can kind of move the sales

process along just by reaching out. And that’s why we’re in the

inbound marketing is because there is that connection, you can

understand what pages they’ve looked at, you can look at the

type of offer that they’ve downloaded and that from a sales side

that gives you an insight into the kind of problem that they’re

facing. So then as a salesperson you can really offer some

legitimate value to their business, you’re not just interrupting

them with a cold call.

Trent: Absolutely. So I noticed that you do ask for, especially for

your lead magnets that are further in the funnel, you do ask for

phone number and URL.

Andrew: Yeah.

Trent: Have you split tested at all to see the effect on your

conversion rate by asking for those two extra pieces, because I

see that you make it mandatory?

Andrew: Yeah we do, because at the end of the day if someone’s not

willing to give me their company name or their phone number,

it’s not really a lead that I’m ready to follow up with at that

point. So we have like a 30 percent conversion rate, average on

our landing pages, and that’s bringing a good amount of leads

right now that we’re comfortable with. And so if someone’s at

the point where they’re ready to put in their phone number,

that’s great you know and if they’re not at that point yet,

that’s not a lead that we want in our funnel right now.

Trent: But let’s be clear for the people that are listening, people

can get into the top of your funnel with just first name last

name and email.

Andrew: Exactly.

Trent: So they’re only seeing these deeper offers if they are either

reading the emails that you’re already sending to them, or by

their own effort are coming back to your blog and then clicking

the calls to action at the beginning of a blog post, and then

“opting in” again to get this lead magnet that is deeper into

your funnel. So it’s not as though you’re not getting the lead

at all, you just want, and it’s very smart. You’re basically

saying I don’t want to actually talk to this person until

they’ve provided me with more than their name and email but

you’ve already got their name and email.

Andrew: Correct. And I’m going to communicate with them with the

information that they give me, so essentially they give us

permission to market to them through email but not phone, and

we’re just going to market to them through email, until they’re

ready.

Trent: Smart, smart, smart. All right. So very, very early, I think it

was in part one of the interview or it might have even been

before we hit the record button, you talked about how you’re

transitioning the services that you’re offering from you know

just web design to, I want you to describe what it’s going to.

Andrew: Sure. So we started out, again it was a yes-man business where,

“Can you guys do website design?” Yeah. Can you understand

twitter? Yeah. Can you do YouTube videos? Yeah. We did viewer

production, kind of the whole gamut of isolated online marketing

activities. And then as we continued to learn and grow we found

out that none of these activities really drive ROI until they

can be connected together into a system that makes sense, and

that’s going to drive new business in a smart way.

So we wanted to shift to a retainer model business, and that’s kind

of where we started exploring different partnerships and we

ended up going with HubSpot because they provided the best

support, the best technology to help us facilitate that

transition.

So essentially what it is, is we were just a website design agency,

we would do basic WordPress web design, we would do Twitter

strategies, Facebook strategies where we would just write up

basically smart stuff like, just, not smart just whatever you’d

find, like best practices that sort of thing, and apply them to

the client and deliver those sources to them in a way that would

help them kind of do their own marketing.

We would tweet for some clients, we would post on Facebook for some

clients, we would do Facebook design, Twitter design, YouTube

background design, all that kind of stuff, but now the shift

into inbound marketing is really . . . it starts with the

philosophy and it’s no longer a project based system but now

you’re trying to sign up with customers for six month to twelve

month retainer relationships.

So now you’re really aligning yourself as a partner instead of just a

repairman or you know a painter basically who’s coming in and

painting one room and leaving. We want to work alongside with a

company to help on kind of the 50,000 foot level, establish the

growth goals, the revenue goals, get on the same page and figure

out where they’re trying to grow their company, where

opportunities are, and then create a marketing strategy that

helps them get there, and then deliver that strategy over the

twelve month relationship. So that’s kind of what the model

looks like, and then…

Trent: Go ahead.

Andrew: So that’s the model and tactically, where sometimes it is a

website redesign, sometimes it’s just putting a HubSpot portal

on a sub-domain of a client’s website and just starting to blog

and create landing pages and create emails and stuff like that,

it can kind of, we haven’t completely lost our website design

roots yet and that’s been a good skill to have when you

augmented into a retainer relationship.

Trent: Okay so I’m on your retainer pricing page and I see fast,

faster and fastest which I love so much better than bronze,

silver and gold. One is 3000 a month, one is 5000 a month and

one is 10,000 a month. When did you start offering retainer?

Andrew: We started offering retainer just over a year ago. And it took

. . . it’s a learning curve for us and it’s a selling curve as

well because it’s a lot easier for someone to sign up for a one

time $2000 website than it is for someone to sign up for 10,000

a month to work with a company that they don’t really know yet.

And so when you’re just getting started in a new line of business,

it’s basically restarting the business for us because we had to

prove a different line of value to clients, and we really

started just by doing it to ourselves and being like we can show

people our blog at least and show them what it looks like.

And so essentially the pricing model is built off of, we want to

direct it more and more towards value delivered, right now it’s

very activity driven, we don’t think that’s, that’s kind of the

next stage of where we want to go is more value driven, to focus

again on the growth that that CEO really cares about at the end

of the day. So again get it up and get it out but our pricing

model is something that we’re continuing to modify and push

forward as we grow.

Trent: I remember when I had my technology services company I went

through the same transition that you did, at the time in the

industry the common way to bill was per hour to go and do

technology projects, and I realized that that wasn’t ever going

to build me a company that I could sell for any meaningful

amount of money, because there’s no ongoing, recurring revenue

and so we switched and it was painful in the beginning.

We didn’t know exactly how to price things and selling it was a lot

harder but years down the road when we had $80,000 a month

coming in the front door on the first day of every month that

made life a whole lot easier and ultimately why I was able to

sell it for the amount that I did, which was a good amount for

sure. So I applaud you for doing this, because it’s going to

absolutely make your life so much better down the road. How’s it

going so far, have you sold any retainer stuff yet?

Andrew: We have. We have three clients up and running on our retainer

model, which is awesome.

Trent: Is that on which level? Fast, faster or fastest?

Andrew: That is fast and faster.

Trent: So you got eleven grand a month coming in the beginning of

every month.

Andrew: Yeah. It’s transformed our business.

Trent: I bet.

Andrew: And it’s exhilarating too because the clients that we have

we’re delivering results for and so they’re happy. And when you

deal with a bigger ticket client, one who can afford that kind

of price tag per month, they’re going to be less nit picky about

the little things, they’re going to trust you more because I

don’t know when you charge more for something people seem to

think you’ve got your act together more than when you charge

less.

Trent: Absolutely.

Andrew: So they’re going to trust you more, and everything’s seems to

flow smoother once the prices start to go up.

Trent: So how do you, because people get excited in the beginning and

sure, yeah they sign up, but then you’ve got to keep them,

you’ve got to retain those clients. How are you reporting to

your client the value that you’re delivering for fast, the fast

level or any of the levels for that matter? What specifically

are you sending to them?

Andrew: Touch points is huge, having a point of contact that you can

get in touch with on a regular basis that makes time for you,

and setting that expectation up front is something that we’re

going to continue to do a better job of. But at the end of each

month we get together and we look at traffic and we look at

leads, we outline what we’re going to do in the next month,

based on the strategy that we put together at the beginning.

We’ve got to start everything with an inbound marketing game plan

that outlines based on the terms that they want to be known for

and the keywords that they want to rank for and stuff like that.

We put together a blog strategy, and then as we go and we see

what works and what doesn’t work very well we kind of tweak that

along the way.

And obviously we haven’t run someone, we haven’t had a twelve month

client yet so we’re still tweaking those game plans as we go and

they’re getting smarter with every month. But essentially we

review traffic and we review leads, because we’re not a sales

augmenter, we’re a lead augmenter and so at the end of the day

it’s our client’s responsibility to close those sales, so we can

deliver higher quality leads than they used to get, and those

leads just get more and more qualified as time goes, and we

understand their business better and understand the way that

visitors act on their website.

But visitor traffic and traffic to lead ratios are big for us,

looking at individual landing pages to get visitor to lead

conversion ratio, and optimizing calls to action and stuff like

that to try to improve click through rates, we kind of hit on

all of those different areas, all of those key metrics and key

performance indicators.

Trent: Now I would imagine that each of the three people that you have

on retainer now probably weren’t doing much in terms of digital

before they engaged with you. Is that correct?

Andrew: Wide, wide gamut. One client didn’t even have a website up, the

other one was spending like 5K a month in PPC, and just not

seeing any quality results from that spend.

Trent: I’m guessing that’s the guy that signed up for the faster

level?

Andrew: Yeah, I mean they already, they understand the value, and

they’re online and they just know that they need help, and

that’s a good place for us to start.

Trent: Okay, so for the folks that didn’t even have a website and here

you are showing them traffic and you’re showing them leads and

you’re showing them all this stuff. What’s their reaction when

they see that relative to the three grand they’re paying you?

Andrew: It depends, and it leans back on that expectation that you set

up front and this is another part that we keep rolling with and

saying we’ve got to do a better job of that next time is just

outlining what they should expect. Because sometimes it’s like

well I’m not getting any calls just yet like what’s going on,

well we’ve only been working for two and a half months, we

started from zero, we need time because we do everything

organically, right now we don’t have any paid elements of our

offerings, not against PPC or Facebook ads or anything like

that, just it’s not part of our offerings right now.

So just setting, well having honest conversations because again if

we’re going to be marketing partners and work with you over the

next 12 months we need to be able to be transparent and honest

with each other and just be able to communicate authentically

essentially.

Trent: Setting expectations is such a valid point because if somebody

were to hire you as an employee to be their marketing person, no

one would expect that within a month of hiring you that you had

radically transformed their website and traffic and leads and

blah, blah, blah. And yet, obviously enough, some people that

hire a marketing agency expect that within 30 days, they’re

going to be just cranking.

Andrew: Exactly.

Trent: Why do you suppose that is and how do you manage that? What

conversation do you have at the beginning to make sure that you

don’t end up in that hole?

Andrew: We like to set the vision that it’s going to be four to six

months before you start seeing any real results from this. So I

mean from the beginning of our sales process, we’re linking back

to the growth goals, where the company wants to be in 12 months,

what dreams are associated with those goals, why do you want to

get to that point, what happens if you don’t get to that point.

And so then when we start delivering with a client we can lean

back on those numbers, and really it begins to point more and

more towards an organizational change and setting mutual back

and forth expectations at the beginning.

That’s part of our contract to is here is here’s what we’re going to

be delivering to you as a marketing partner and here’s what you

need to deliver to us, because it’s a two-way relationship. If

you want to make real change and grow as a business, that’s not

going to happen over night and you’re going to need to change

the status quo, that’s going to need to be altered and we need

to know do you have enough skin in the game here to make a

strategy like this work.

Trent: Yeah, if they’re not going to change what they’re doing and

they’re just going to sit back arms crossed and say okay magic

boy do your stuff, that’s probably not going to work.

Andrew: No, it’s not and that’s the type of client you get when you

just do one off projects. But if you want to shift to a retainer

model, that’s the kind of client that you need to be comfortable

enough in yourself and in your business model to say you know

what, I can refer you to a couple people who might be able to

help you out but I don’t think we’re the best fit right now.

Trent: Yes indeed. And when you’re doing your inbound marketing

yourself and these people are coming to you and they’re raising

their hand by downloading various reports that’s going to

obviously make converting that sale a whole lot easier.

Andrew: Exactly because the expectation there, I mean it’s a small

expectation set but still they’re the one coming to you for the

information and so inbound marketing at the end of the day

positions companies and agencies as thought leaders and the way

you structure your sales process following that can even lean in

more on that fact and position you instead of a sales person as

more of an adviser into their growth model.

Trent: How are you doing in terms of blogging for your clients?

Andrew: So we batch all of the titles based on keywords, and then we

work with our clients to get kind of the guts to most of those

blog posts, whether that’s bullet points or we’re going to start

experimenting with just audio recordings, so having them like

record a quick clip on their iPhone or something like that,

talking about a subject that we want to write a blog post about,

and then we send those out to different contract writers that we

work with.

And then they take the content, they do some research, and then they

tweak it into like a 400, 500 word blog post, and then we send

that to the client, get the review, and when they give the okay

it gets scheduled to get posted on their blog.

Trent: Okay. So how many clients, so right now I guess you’re

producing blog content on an ongoing basis for your three

retainer clients, yes?

Andrew: Correct.

Trent: Okay. The system that you’re using to manage the producing, the

blog content and the editorial calendar and getting it approved

and pushing it out to the clients blog, I mean is that kind of

spreadsheets and email right now?

Andrew: Right now that is we use [Podeo] internally, it’s an awesome

free platform where you can kind of spin up your own custom work

spaces, and structure your workflow the way you want to. That’s

gone pretty well for us, from the client side it’s just email.

We’ve experimented with Basecamp, but haven’t stuck wit that as

a long term solution. We’re actually working on our own custom

software solution right now that would facilitate client

communication and contractor communication.

Trent: Well at the risk of plugging my own products, I am a cofounder

in a software company and we have an app that is going to solve

that exact problem so I’m happy to show that to you after we

record if you like.

Andrew: I would love to see that Trent.

Trent: Are you using any curation for your clients?

Andrew: Not at the moment, we’ve looked at a couple options, but

haven’t really integrated it well into our strategy yet. That’s

a topic I need to circle back with [Gray and Brennan] and figure

out if that is going to add some value. I think it adds a lot

even for ourselves. We’re kind of the guinea pig for our

marketing strategies and so we tried it out on GuavaBox first

and if we see results then we send it out towards the clients.

Trent: Yeah. Okay, well we’ll cover that when we go off air here. All

right, services offered, service, oh contractors. Can you just

give an overview of the type of contractors that you’re using?

Andrew: Yeah, we’ve done a couple different models and you know there’s

websites out there where you can kind of submit to a pool of

authors and then they can bid on your work or submit trials,

that takes a lot of time to manage that but sometimes it’s a

good way to start. At the end of the day, you need to pick a way

that you can establish a relationship with a writer that you can

trust and so sometimes Elance is a good way to do that.

We’ve done some writing, more like design work through Elance than we

have actual contract writers but that’s been a good source for

  1. Relationships, networking, one of our best content writers

is just someone who went to college with us and who freelances

on the side, so don’t throw that model out. But Zerys is a good

platform.

Trent: Zerys? How do you spell that?

Andrew: Z-E-R-Y-S I believe. You can just Google them and they’ve got a

good pool of writers on there. Content Launch is another one

that we have tried out and has had some good results, and

ClearBloggingSolutions.com is another one that we’ve used with

success.

Trent: Okay. Well my pen just ran out in the middle a name.

Andrew: Perfect timing.

Trent: Luckily, luckily I have another one in the drawer.

Andrew: That’s good.

Trent: Hang on I’ve got to, there we go. Don’t you love this audience

from the hosts, holds up the show because his pen runs out of

ink? Okay, so you got a couple of resources which I will include

in the show notes, clearbloggingsolutions.com, Zerys.com.

All right, I think it’s time. What have we missed? What do you think

for the intended listener here is someone who is you six months

ago, who got a start at an agency and then you know want to make

a success of themselves, what have we missed? What would you

talk about for that person?

Andrew: You’ve got to set goals. You’ve got to know where you want to

  1. Because if you’re just running on a treadmill, I mean

starting a business is hard work, that’s why so many people

quit. But if you want to start an agency and you want to go

somewhere and you want to add value, set some goals for your

self, set goals each day, each week.

We set like 12 week goals at GuavaBox on how we want to perform

across finance, marketing, sales, operations, and we strategize

those metrics and we try to hold each other accountable for that

and we’re a small agency so it’s easy to let each other off the

hook. But again if you want to grow and you want to scale a

business to the point where you want to sell it, you’ve got to

kind of pick a spot on the horizon and start running towards it

in a way that you can measure against yourself.

Trent: I’ve got a resource that I want to throw up as well, it’s one

that I was reading this morning, it’s one of Jim Collins’ early

books, it’s called Beyond Entrepreneurship or Beyond

Entrepreneur or something like that, chapter two. So folks if

you want to grab yourself that book, it talks a lot about a

specific strategy for laying out, and you’ve heard this before

this is not new but it’s incredibly important, your mission

vision, your core values and your beliefs.

And I’m not going to hijack this interview with why talking about

that is important but if you read chapter two you will figure it

out and it’s something that I’m doing in my businesses, because

especially when it comes to attracting the kind of customer that

you want to deal with and attracting the kind of employee that

you want to work with, if you don’t have this stuff defined,

you’re going to end up with culture problems down the road.

Andrew: So true.

Trent: And so I’ll leave it at that. All right, I think this has been

a really terrific interview and we divided it into two parts so

a half hour each. I hope everyone enjoys it. Again, if you guys

who listen to my podcasts regularly think dividing it into two

sucked, definitely let me know, as I cannot exist without your

feedback. But like I say in my effort to attract new listeners I

thought smaller, more bite sized chunked pieces of content would

be less intimidating for them to download.

know that when I look at a video and I see that it’s an hour long I

go, “Ugh, I don’t know if I want to watch that whole thing.” But

if I see something that’s shorter than an hour I’m more inclined

to give it a go and that was the thinking in dividing this

episode into two parts.

So Andrew, thank you very much. For those folks who want to get a

hold of you the best just rattle off one if you would please,

what is the best way to do that?

Andrew: Best way to get a hold of me is on my email that is

Andrew@guavabox.com.

Trent: All right, terrific. Andrew thank you so much for being on the

show. It has been an absolute pleasure this has been I think a

terrific interview that I look forward to publishing.

Andrew: Thank you so much Trent for the opportunity and for all the

work you’re doing, doing great stuff, inspiring entrepreneurs

and hats off to you.

Trent: Well thank you very much, I appreciate that. All right to get

to the show notes for today’s episode go to Brightideas.co/75.

If you really enjoyed this episode, I want to ask you a little

favor please go to Brightideas.co/love and there you’ll find a

pre-populated tweet which you can send on out to your followers,

as well and even more importantly there’s a link that can take

you to the iTunes store so that you can leave a five star rating

for this particular episode. It really means a lot to me when

you guys do that because it really helps this show to gain a lot

more exposure and the more people that hear it the more people

that we can help.

So that’s it for this episode, I am your host Trent Dyrsmid and we’ll

see you in another episode soon.

About Andrew Dymski

AndrewDymskiAndrew is the a co-founder of GuavaBox, a web design and inbound marketing agency. Guavabox helps clients in the industrial space reach new customers through inbound marketing.

You can email Andrew at andrew@guavabox.com or connect with him on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Digital Marketing Strategy: Andrew Dymski on How He Launched a Successful Marketing Agency Right out of College (part 1)

If you want proof that you don’t need decades of experience and a huge Rolodex full of clients in order to start a marketing agency, look no further. Andrew and his colleagues at Guavabox launched an agency right out of college, and by all measures are on track to have a tremendously successful business.

Guavabox does an impressive job of generating content marketing. And, more than almost anyone I’ve spoken with, they not only understand the importance of list segmentation, but they provide an overview of how they’ve segmented their list, and how this segmentation has helped them identify their hottest prospects, and appropriately nurture and convert their leads into paying clients.

In addition, Andrew explains the thinking behind, and validation of, their business model, sharing insights helpful to any startup. There was so much goodness in this interview that I had to break it into two parts.

When you listen to Part 1, you’ll hear Andrew and I talk about:

  • (3:30) Introductions
  • (5:50) Why the old model of web design doesn’t scale
  • (8:30) An overview of financial results
  • (10:00) His business philosophy and how it played a critical role in their launch
  • (13:30) How they validated their business model
  • (16:30) How taking on a new client went wrong
  • (21:00) How they picked their niche
  • (25:30) How they are generating leads
  • (27:30) How blogging plays a role in lead generation
  • (29:30) How they developed their personas
  • (35:30) An overview of outbound marketing

.. And be sure to check out Part 2 to hear:

  • (3:00) An overview of various nurturing campaigns
  • (7:00) An overview of how they’re using personas to segment their list
  • (13:00) An overview of when and how they decide to follow up with each lead
  • (16:30) An overview of how they are changing their business model to a retainer fee model
  • (21:00) An overview of their retainer plans
  • (12:40) How they report results (traffic & leads) and what they’re planning for the month ahead
  • (25:00) How they manage client expectations
  • (28:00) How they are producing blog content
  • (31:00) How they are using contractors
  • (33:00) An overview of how they are in track with their goals

Resources Mentioned

Inbound Marketing 101 Ebook
Zerys.com
ClearBloggingSolutions.com
Guavabox.com
Best Buyer Formula

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

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Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

Transcript

Trent: Hey there, Bright Ideas hunters. Welcome to the Bright Ideas

podcast.

I’m your host, Trent Dyrsmid, and this is the podcast

for marketing agencies, marketing consultants, and entrepreneurs

who want to discover how to use content marketing and marketing

automation to massively boost their business without massively

boosting the number of hours that they have to work every single

week.

And the way that we do that is we bring on whip-smart

entrepreneurs to share with you the tactics and the strategies

that are working so very well for them, and that is exactly what

we’re going to do in this episode today.

On the show with me today is a fellow by the name of Andrew

Dymski. He is one of three co-founders of a new marketing agency

called GuavaBox, and they are doing some really impressive

things which we’re going to get into in this two-part podcast.

So in Part Number One, which you are now listening to, we are

going to be talking about how they launched the company, how

they picked their niche, and there’s some real key takeaways in

how and why they picked this specific niche that they did. We’re

going to talk about how developing a minimum viable product fit

into their business model and how it made figuring out what they

should sell and who they should sell it to so much easier than

it would have been if they had gone the traditional route of

building their portfolio of services and then trying to figure

out how to sell it.

We’re also going to talk about how they validated that business

model very, very early on so that they didn’t waste a whole

bunch of time going down with the wrong product for the wrong

customer in the wrong direction, and losing all that time and

losing all of that money.And we’re also going to talk about how they are generating

leads, and specifically, how they’re using, very successfully, I

might add, content marketing to drive more leads to their site.And then in Part Two, we are going to talk about what they’re going to do with those leads to convert them into customers. But

tune into Podcast Episode Two, and we’ll talk more about that.So before we welcome Andrew to the show, I just want to tell you

very quickly about a Bright Ideas product.

It’s called the Best Buyer Formula, and you can get it at brightideas.co/bbf, and it

is the lead generation formula that I used and use. I built my

last company with it, which was a company that got up to just

shy of $2 million a year in sales, which I ultimately sold for

over $1 million, and it’s also the very same formula that I am

using to build the Bright Ideas Agency, which we focus on

dentists with that agency. So if you are struggling with lead

generation and are looking for solutions, go check out the Best

Buyer Formula. And of course, like all my products, there is a

100%, no questions asked, money back guarantee. So if you don’t

like it, you can easily get all your money back.So with that said, please join me in welcoming Andrew to the

show. Andrew, welcome to the show.Andrew: Hey Trent, glad to be here.

Trent: It’s a treat to have you on. I’m super excited to get you to

tell the story of how you’re building your company, because just

based upon what we talked about before I hit the record button,

yours is a story that’s really going to resonate with the new

entrepreneurs who are just in the very early stages of building

their agency and are maybe under $100,000 or just over $100,000

in revenue, somewhere in that range, and maybe even the folks

that are doing larger ones, because I think that you’re going to

have some pretty interesting ideas and stories to share.

So before we get to all of that, please just take a moment, a

minute or so, and tell us who you are, and just a little bit

about your company.

Andrew: Sure. I am Andrew Dymski. I am a co-founder of GuavaBox. We are

an inbound marketing agency. We help companies, particularly in

the B2B space, industrial manufacturers, create a high-quality

lead generation machine through their website that helps them

scale their business in a way that they hadn’t been able to

before. We started out as a traditional web design shop. It

didn’t take us long inside that model to notice that it wasn’t a

model that could scale very well. So, over about the past year,

we’ve been putting the pieces in place to transition ourselves

from a one-off project work based company into more of a

specialist marketing services delivering firm that we feel like

can scale beyond just myself and my two partners.

Trent: So, I want to get you to talk about your financial results in

just a second, but before we go there, you hit on something that

a lot of new entrepreneurs don’t foresee – and I experience this

in my own business – and that issue of scale. You said that the

web design business isn’t going to scale very well. Can you

expand a little bit on what you meant by that, because that’s

causing a major shift in how you’re running your business,

correct?

Andrew: It definitely is, and if you just look at the way the sales

process has to work, when you want to close someone as a web

design client, there’s an extended sales process there and

you’re going up against a ton of competition where it’s really a

race to the bottom. Unless you have a relationship established

upfront with the prospective client or partner, at the end of

the day, it’s going to be a price war.

And we looked around and we said, you know, we’re spending all

of this time selling. We spend four weeks, eight weeks putting

the website together, and then it’s have a nice day, and walk

down the road. We do website hosting and we manage all of that

stuff, so that’s kind of a source of recurring revenue. But when

we started this business in college, we looked at it and said,

okay, we want to start families and kind of grow this business.

We can’t predict our income beyond two months out max. And so we

kind of walked back to the drawing board and said what do our

customers need and what services would we like to be able to

supply to them but we can’t because we’re constrained by this,

you know, put up a website?

We wanted to be able to showcase return on investment to these

clients, but if all you can do is just build a website and put

it out there, but then not control the content that gets pushed

through that system that you spent all this time selling and

building, then at the end of the day, you can’t show a return on

investment because the system is not in place. So we saw that,

and we knew that there has to be a model that we can build off

around this pain point.

Trent: And did you think about, in your shift from a non-scalable

business to a more scalable one, did enterprise value or an exit

strategy factor into that thinking?

Andrew: Definitely. No clear picture at the end of the day on where we

want as an exit philosophy, but from the start point, the three

of us are friends, and an idea that we had is we want to be able

to build a business that hinges off of the lifestyle that we

want. And so we looked at the lifestyle we wanted, and we said

we don’t want to be building WordPress websites and scheduling

tweets for the rest of our life, so how can we structure this

thing in a way that will facilitate a more hands-off approach

down the line so we’re free to spend time with our family, to

travel, to volunteer on sports teams, those sorts of things. So

it definitely played in.

Trent: So would you classify your business as a lifestyle

business?

Andrew: No, I would not right now, not in the sense that you can travel

the world and do this thing at the same time. But I see the

processes that we’re starting to put in place to get the agency

to the point where we could sell it if we wanted to if we wanted

to pursue the more hands-off lifestyle. It’s definitely a

location-neutral business, and for the first two years of our

existence, we operated location-neutral, three different states,

using a lot of GoToMeeting and Google apps. But no, I wouldn’t

say it’s kind of a lifestyle based business.

Trent: Okay. Alright, for the folks that don’t yet know how much

revenue you’re doing, how big you are, because I want to make

sure that the right people are listening to this interview

because we’re already a couple of minutes in, how much revenue

are you doing per year right now, and how many people are on the

payroll?

Andrew: Sure. On our team right now is just the three co-founders, so

it’s myself, Gray MacKensie, and Brandon Jones, and we are on

track to do about $150,000 – $160,000 this year.

Trent: And how many years have you been in business?

Andrew: This will be the end of year three.

Trent: Now, was this a full-time venture in years one and two, or were

you guys juggling college and doing this at the same time?

Andrew: So, when we started, we had two seniors and one sophomore, and

right after Gray and I graduated, Gray jumped in full time. I

went and worked at a PR firm for about nine months, and Brandon

was still in school obviously. So it wasn’t until this past May

when Brandon graduated from college and then I jumped on board

probably a year-and-a-half ago. So we’re only running full power

since May, with all three of us going full time.

Trent: Since May of 2013?

Andrew: Correct.

Trent: Okay. In my research on you, you talked about having a specific

business philosophy, and I want you to expand a little bit on

that because I think it played a role in how you started your

company.

Andrew: Yeah, it definitely did, and it started in college. Gray and

myself, we were on the same freshman hall, and so we were good

friends kind of from our freshman year all the way through. We

were on the lacrosse team together, we joined the same

fraternity, and that’s how we met Brandon as well. He was two

years behind us, but same fraternity and on the lacrosse team

together.

So Gray and I had decided from our freshman year that we have to

find a way to do business together. He was a business management

major and I was a marketing management major at Grove City

College, and we had a good friendship and we just wanted to find

a way to work together. So senior year rolls around, Brandon,

Gray, and I were all on the Officer board for our lacrosse team.

It was a club sport at Grove City, and we were all very

passionate about it. We had built up a machine really that we

launched the team’s first website. We put together the first

successful social media campaigns, email campaigns to reach out

to folks, and got connected with media and everything. It was

really successful, and we said, well, we enjoyed doing this on

the team, we’re graduating now, can we find a way to turn this

into a business?

We kind of put our heads together and we started the business in

the spring of our senior year in the dorm room after classes,

after homework, after lacrosse practice. We’d huddle around a

card table and kind of sketch out the idea.

But it started with the relationships first. You know, you hear

all the time don’t do business with friends, but really, the

friendship is what has saved this business through the dark

times and the ups and downs. We’re not really sure what the

model is going to look like. We’re not really sure where the

revenue is going to come from. We’ve leaned on that friendship

first and we kind of put a line in the sand and said this

friendship is going to get our business through and it’s not

going to tear it apart. And we’ve been blessed to come through

that with our relationship even stronger than it was when we

started.

Trent: An MVP is also a part of your launch philosophy or your

business philosophy, is it not?

Andrew: Can you break that down a little bit more?

Trent: Minimum Viable Product.

Andrew: Yes. So, we could build websites. I understood Twitter and

Facebook and what it took to build a following there. So we

said, great, we can kind of take this out and see if anyone

wants to hire us with this. And so we worked our connections and

found a website project first, and then a Twitter strategy

project after that, and so little by little, we build it up. We

figured out how you build a website, how do you charge for it

when you’re still learning how to build stuff on WordPress and

you’re still learning how to get your hosting account set up and

stuff like that.

But we didn’t build a business plan. We just got together. We

knew we wanted to be in business together, and we found the

minimal viable product that we could offer to people that would

still have value. And those were friends at the beginning, so

they knew where we were in our development stage. We were honest

with them and said, hey, we’re just getting this business going.

Can we build a website for you for $500? Is that something that

you would be interested in? And one or two of those, you pick

them up and they have friends, and that’s how we got started.

Trent: And so when you first launched, I’m assuming you didn’t have

the beautiful website that you have now. You didn’t have all of

the fancy stuff. You just decided, hey, we’re just going to go

and talk to people and say we’re looking for work, this is what

we know how to do. Are you interested?

Andrew: Exactly, yeah. Leaning on the friends and family, and the

fools, I guess, is the third piece. But yeah, that’s how we got

started.

Trent: I dwell on it because it’s an important point. I get a lot of

emails from people, and I’m thinking of one person in particular

right now, and I won’t mention this person’s name to protect the

innocent, but they’re overly caught up in getting ready to be

ready. There’s an expression that I did not originate, it’s

called ‘Version One is better than Version None’. And it’s so

incredibly important, because you don’t – and I want you to

speak to this, but you didn’t really know what it was that you

were going to do or who you were going to do it for until you

started to do it, right?

Andrew: Exactly. You know, they say that success sits just on the other

side of failure. You’ve got to go through failure a lot until

you get to that success point. And so we just decided to plunge

in and say let’s see how this goes. And it’s hard at times

because you’re still trying to figure it out as the clients are

demanding things, and as a young company, inevitably you want to

make everybody happy. So that’s caused some setbacks for us

along the way, but also some really valuable learning

experiences.

So you can’t sit around and wait to build what you think is a

perfect business model because you might get out in the market

and realize that nobody wants what you think is perfect. And so

at the end of the day, the best way to value your time is say,

hey, here’s an idea. Let’s go see if someone will buy it, and

that’s how we kind of build up.

Trent: And I want to reference another entrepreneur that I interviewed

here for the folks that are listening, because Sam Ovens was a

really, really good example of also starting a business, and his

business is crazy successful now. You can get to his interview

at brightideas.co/69. And he really didn’t have a clue what he

was going to do in the beginning, but he went out and instead of

building something and then trying to sell it, he went out and

talked to customers and said, what problem are you having? He

talked to enough of them to identify a commonality in that

problem, and then created a very basic solution and showed it to

them, and his business literally took off.

So, I bring this up when I ask these questions because if you’re

one of those folks out there who are spending time getting ready

to be ready, I would encourage you to start shooting, see who

falls down, and go over and look at what’s available for you as

far as feedback and information.

Andrew: That’s great advice.

Trent: All right. So, let’s talk about – you mentioned you made some

mistakes. I think that’s another thing where people, they are

unnecessarily paralyzed by their fear of making mistakes. But if

you talk to any experienced entrepreneur, they’re all going to

tell you that mistakes are a natural part of the going forward

process. So I’m sure you made some. I think we talked about

something, it was an old-school newspaper company – and I want

to pre-frame this by saying that the lesson I’m hoping people

get from this is that saying yes to everybody all the time isn’t

necessarily the best strategy. Can you tell us, Andrew, a little

bit about what happened?

Andrew: Sure. This was shortly after graduation, we had a really good

friend who worked at an old-school newspaper company, it was

like a weekly mailer, and they were looking for a way to get

this mailer online. I was like, well, this is going to be a

really good opportunity. I think it’s something that we can add

value in. So I was kind of the point of contact here. I mean, I

can build a WordPress website, but when it comes to kind of the

technical back-end of setting stuff up and integrations and all

of that, I have to check to my buddy Gray. He’s the genius

behind the machine.

So, the problem started – I was kind of the project manager and

the salesman, promising things to the client because we’re a

young business, and this is a big company, and I would love to

sign this contract. I think it would be good for us. So I’m out

there promising things and setting their expectations really

high, and it was kind of doomed to fail from the beginning

because their level of technical understanding wasn’t very high

at that point, and they were kind of asking for features and

wanted things to happen with little disruption on their end on

how they produce this paper and wanted to get it online, and I

was saying, oh, yeah, yeah, we can get that, that’s no problem

at all.

Trent: So you were selling flying toasters?

Andrew: Exactly, because I just wanted to make them happy. I wanted to

get the deal signed. Even after the deal was signed, for some

reason I wanted to just keep them happy. I think that’s great to

want happy clients, but sometimes a happy client is a client

that you need to say no to or a client that you need to reset

the focus, because I was promising yes, and then I turned around

to Gray and said, hey, can we do this? And we were living on the

opposite sides of the state at this point, and so there was

conflict within our company because of the way I was handling

this as a project manager.

We grew through that in a tremendous way, thanks to just honesty

and transparency, and again, that friendship we were able to

lean back on, and get us through this tough project. And it was

a great stepping stone because it kind of elevated the level of

client that we worked with but also helped us learn how to

manage a bigger team on the client side. So it’s not really a

small business owner anymore, you’re dealing with a whole crew

inside a company and you have to manage expectations across kind

of a whole organization. The biggest lesson we learned was don’t

overpromise and make sure that you’re lined up with your team

before you go out and start promising what they can do.

Trent: Absolutely. And do you think that you – you mentioned before we

started to record that you’re going through a shift in your

business model. We might talk about that now, but we’ll probably

cover it more later, but do you think that that shift to more of

a retainer model is going to help you avoid selling flying

toasters in the future?

Andrew: I do, because we’re an inbound marketing agency, and there’s a

specific methodology that we want clients to follow. And

obviously, it’s going to be a little bit custom for everybody,

but when you break it down to activity, it’s creating blog

posts, and it’s writing emails, and it’s creating awesome

content offers, and so there’s a more defined process to what

we’re trying to tackle now.

I think in the beginning, people had a problem or they had low

budgets and high ideas or big dreams, and they wanted to be able

to have all these shiny features on their website, and now we’re

able to sit back and say, you know what, that’s really not a

priority right now. You want to be able to structure your post

like this, or you need to include these kinds of conversion

points in your website. We kind of lean back on that methodology

a little bit harder than we did at the beginning when it was

just like, what do you want? We can go make it happen.

Trent: And we’re going to talk more about that, but I think what you

just communicated as well that I want to emphasize is you would

not have been able to figure out that you needed to deliver your

services in this way if you were getting ready to be ready.

Like, interacting with customers and falling down and getting

skid marks on you is what enabled you to define, hey, here’s a

better way that we need to deliver our services so we don’t sell

flying toasters.

Andrew: Exactly. It’s like sports. You can game plan all day long, but

until you get out on the field and you run a play, you can’t

look at the tape and diagnose something that hasn’t happened

yet. You’ve got to get out there and break the huddle and go

make a play and then make your adjustments on the fly. Keep it

lean.

Trent: So, in the beginning, you talked about you have targeted a

specific niche, B2B industrial manufacturers. Now, picking a

niche is something that in my course, the Best Buyer Formula, I

spend quite a bit of time really trying to drive that point

home. At Bright Ideas, we actually have our own agency and it

focuses on dentists because there’s very specific reasons for

that. What are the reasons that you decided, and how did you get

there to focus on industrial manufacturers in the B2B space?

Andrew: The journey, it was kind of happenstance, again, just by going

out, relationships started there from a website design

perspective, from video production. We had some really good

relationships with some industrial manufacturers, and so we just

kind of stumbled into it. We’re in western Pennsylvania right

now, so this is old steel country, and Marcellus Shale is really

making a big impact on the economy out here. There’s a lot of

folks inside the manufacturing industry, fabrication shops,

machining organizations, those sorts of things, who are trying

to get their toe into that pool.

We really recognized an opportunity where we looked at, okay,

we’ve had some success with these kinds of folks, and it’s

really low-hanging fruit in a way because not a lot of

industrial manufacturing companies have an awesome online

presence. There are some that are doing a good job, but most of

them, even who are present, let’s say they have a blog or

they’re on Twitter or they’re doing some YouTube tutorials,

consistency is really a problem. And so that’s part of our value

proposition is we are a marketing partner, so we’ll come

alongside even if you’ve got a couple of marketing people within

your organization, we augment that. We don’t compete with them.

So we can help provide that consistency in there.

We identified the market and said, we need to find a focused

approach, because there’s only three of us, and so as we craft

content, as we work on our positioning statements and refine our

sales process, it’s going to be more valuable for us to be able

to showcase success stories to companies who are similar to the

people we’re talking to on the phone so they can relate to them.

We’re still young guys, and so when we get on the phone with

people or we’re talking to them on a GoToMeeting or something

like that, there’s still a large amount of credibility that

needs to be built based on our age. And so that’s something that

we learned early on too is how can we find ways to position

ourselves as experts, and focusing on a niche is a way that we

see to really help that out along the way.

Trent: Now, was this niche, do you think that it is – like, one of the

things that I talk about in my blog posts and in my products is

pick a profitable niche, because when you do, if you pick a

niche that has – like Sam, for example, in his interview with

me, when he launched his agency, he focused on B2B as well, high-

ticket items, and the reason was is because he could charge so

much more to do the same amount of work because an individual

customer to his client was worth $50,000 to $100,000. Did that

factor into your decision process as well?

Andrew: Absolutely. I think it’s really surfaced after looking back and

saying, wow, if we can work with companies who, if they make a

sale, it’s a $50,000 sale, and they’re signing a $50,000

contract with us for the year, we can deliver ROI way faster

than if they’re selling a $40 widget. So let’s go after the

companies that make manly stuff at a big ticket price, because

that’s a niche that we think we can thrive in. So that

definitely guided the decision.

Trent: All right. So, audience, here’s what’s coming up. We are going

to talk next about how Andrew and his team are generating leads,

and then when we come back in Part Two of this particular

podcast, I’m trying something new here. I’m going to break my

podcast up into half-hour podcasts instead of hour long or hour-

and-fifteen long podcasts to see if it is more popular with the

audience. So if you have an opinion on that, please make sure

that you leave it in the comments that will be down on the

bottom of this post.

But in Part Two, we’re going to talk about how they’re nurturing

and converting their leads into customers. We’re going to talk

about services that they’re offering and how they’re delivering

those services, and how scale fits into that, and how they’re

billing, and how they’re shifting from one-time projects to

retainer fees, and how they’re delivering their services. So

there’s a lot of really good stuff coming in the second half.

But before we get to that, a lot of people really struggle with

lead generation, so I would love it, Andrew, if you would go

into as much detail as you would like on how you guys are

generating leads.

Andrew: Sure. You’ve got to walk the walk. We are a marketing company

that encourages people to create awesome content on their

website and offer that value to their prospective buyers, and so

we’re trying to walk that walk and create regular blog posts on

our site that are targeted to our geography, that are targeted

more and more towards our niche industries. So we do get a good

number of leads through our website right now. I mean, you can’t

ignore referrals, so if you have a customer right now, if you

have a group of customers that you’re able to showcase success

for, don’t be afraid to ask them, do you know anyone else who

could use this? Some of our greatest clients have come from

other clients, and so it’s kind of an old-school, offline way,

but, I mean, it’s tried-and-true, and it works. So, go to

referrals…

Trent: Let’s talk a little bit about the blogging that you’re doing,

because referrals are going to become part of – I mean, there’s

things that you can do to stimulate getting more referrals, and

if you have specific strategies to share, please make a little

note to yourself and we’ll come back to that in a minute. But in

the beginning, when you don’t have any clients, it’s tough to

get referrals, so I am really interested on the strategies

and/or tactics that you decided to do with your blogging. And

you could even talk about what you’re getting your customers to

do, because like you said, you have to walk your talk. So how

are you making blogging work for you?

Andrew: Again, the industry, it kind of starts with that persona first.

We have four buyer personas right now that we try to base all of

our content off of and to speak to them, and then from our

marketing strategy, lean into our sales process as well to

figure out what kind of questions are these people are asking,

because a second-generation owner of a manufacturing company is

going to have a very different set of questions than say an

inside sales manager or a director of a sales team.

So we try to outline what kind of questions each of these people

are asking, because content, if you want it to be guided and if

you want it to be closed loop in a way to unite with the rest of

your strategy, it needs to start with the customer in mind at

the end of the day. You want to put yourself in their shoes. And

so we’ve invested a ton of time in looking at our current

customers and what has gone well, and what kind of personalities

and positions we want to stay away from, and we’ve constructed

those buyer personas. So that kind of guides our blogging

strategy.

So then we take a look at the persona and then we do keyword

research off of that and figure out what kind of keywords we

want to target, what kind of keywords we want to rank for.

Obviously, we want to be found when someone Google’s ‘inbound

marketing agency’. That’s really big for us, and so we spend a

lot of time optimizing and creating valuable content around that

keyword.

As an example, in a pretty competitive market, when you’re a

marketer trying to create an online blog, some people even

advise you don’t even worry about marketing for yourself online

because it’s so competitive, but I would shy away from that.

Again, lean into the industry. This is definitely an area where

we’re trying to grow into, but be the source for marketing

information for whatever niche you’re targeting. For us, it’s

industrial manufacturers, and even that is a wide swath. There’s

a ton of different companies that can fall into that. So

continue to break down your niche, and the more focused you can

become, the more personalized the content, the higher the

conversion rate is going to be and the greater the value that

you’re going to deliver is going to be.

Trent: So, how did you develop these four personas? I think that is an

area where people will get stuck as well.

Andrew: Yeah, as a buyer persona, you just want to just develop an

idealistic picture of a potential client. And so we looked at

the clients that we had, and there’s obviously clients that, you

know, we want to work with more people like this. This is how we

want to scale our business. These people are responsive, they

don’t sweat the small stuff, they give us the freedom to make

decisions. They’re also there when we need to ask them

questions. So those are the kinds of people we want to work

with.

Then there’s – we call them Bob the Builder. He is an owner of

his own company. He’s kind of grown it up from absolutely

nothing. He knows that he needs to be online and have a

presence, but he doesn’t really want to invest anything into it.

He just wants to pay someone to get the website up, and that’s

  1. So that Bob the Builder persona is someone we worked with a

lot when the company got started, but not the kind of person we

want to continue with. So if we get a referral or if someone

contacts us and says, okay, we’ve got a Bob on the phone right

now, that’s the kind of lead we want to pass up. We still

explore it, but have that persona in your mind to say this is

not the type of client that we can scale with, and have the

courage to say no in that situation.

Trent: And are there tools or resources that you use that help you to

develop your personas, or did you simply get the whiteboard out

and look back at the people that you had spoken with or had done

business with and sort of describe as best you could the persona

that you thought represented that person?

Andrew: Both, really. We’re HubSpot certified partners, so they create

amazing content, and one of the pieces they have is a buyer

persona template. It has a great starting point to go out there

and help you. It asks the right questions to get you thinking

about that person on a more personal level. They’ve got a

PowerPoint download that you can get on their website. We also

have an e-book on GuavaBox.com that you can go and get that has

a similar template in mind to help you build up personas like

this.

But really, it starts with trying to put yourself at their desk.

What kind of pictures do they have sitting on the table? What do

they do on the weekends? What kind of music do they listen to?

So it’s not really like what’s their job title or how much they

make a year. Those things are important, but you really want to

ask questions that can put you inside their shoes as best as

possible.

Trent: And the reason for that is because you want to make sure that

you use words and phrases and content that they will relate and

respond to?

Andrew: Exactly. So some of our clients in the manufacturing space,

they’re selling to maintenance managers who are on the floor all

day in the shop and they might have just a high school diploma,

but they’re also selling to engineers who are drawing blueprints

for a new power plant. So those two personas are buying the same

product, but they’re asking incredibly different questions.

So from a client delivery standpoint, it helps us out a ton as

we’re trying to learn a new industry and learn a new set of

terms and stuff like that. Get those buyer personas cranked out

right away. Ask your clients, what does a typical buyer look

like for you, or if you could describe three typical buyers that

you sell to or that you’d like to scale your business towards,

what do they look like? What kinds of questions are they asking?

What do they do on the weekends? What kind of pains or questions

are they asking, those sorts of things. That really helps us

create content geared towards the people they’re trying to sell

to.

Trent: And when you talked earlier on about creating content that

answers questions, obviously, you know Marcus Sheridan. He’s

been on my show, it’s brightideas.co/27, and he kind of became

quasi-famous as a result of river pools and spas because he

decided to create a lot of blog content that answered the pre-

sales questions of people who are considering getting a pool. Is

that an approach that you took?

Andrew: Definitely. Marcus did an awesome job with that business of not

being afraid to address with confidence questions people have.

You know, what’s fiberglass versus concrete, those kinds of

questions for pools. The same sort of thing approaching your

marketing, approaching your client’s marketing, what are

questions that everybody is asking that no one is answering.

And that can be – maybe you take at the beginning of a campaign,

just take a half day and call, or have your clients get in touch

with 25 or 50 of their customers and figure out what kind of

questions were you looking for, what kind of questions you

continue to have. Do a little bit of market research on the fly

almost, but just reach out and figure out, maybe it’s surveys or

something like that. Just get a finger on the pulse of the

customers that have already converted with you and figure out

what kind of questions or pains that they have. If you client

has a sales team, always talk to them and figure out what kind

of questions are people coming to you with? What question do you

answer ten times a day that you wish you could just hit copy,

paste, and send a reply back to, because that’s an instant blog

post right there. There’s no shortage of content out there, you

just need to be able to ask the right questions to the right

people.

Trent: Now, I’m going to finish up Part One here with two more

questions. The second one is going to be are you doing any

outbound marketing, but the first one, I noticed you mentioned –

you said you were a HubSpot partner. Your blog is on WordPress,

and I know that HubSpot encourages people to use their blogging

platform as opposed to an independently hosted WordPress site.

Can you briefly speak to why you’re using WordPress?

Andrew: We redesigned our website probably six months ago, and HubSpot

had not spun out their new COS, which, if anyone is unfamiliar

with that, it’s a Content Optimization System that they have,

and historically, their CMS wasn’t very user-friendly. WordPress

is obviously incredibly user-friendly, and it’s open source, and

there’s an awesome source of plug-ins and stuff like that. So we

went with the WordPress theme because we had more flexibility on

the design side. We could spin out the design much faster than

we could with HubSpot, and we also knew that the COS was coming

down the line, and so to redesign on their CMS and then have to

redo it six or eight months later, it wasn’t something that we

were really excited about.

Our next design is probably going to be on that COS on HubSpot

because it is pretty powerful. They encourage it, but at the end

of the day, as long as you’re creating content, it doesn’t

matter.

Trent: Okay. Last question then for the first part of the interview,

outbound marketing. Are you guys making cold calls, are you

doing direct mail, are you doing any paid advertising? What

other things are you doing to generate inquiries?

Andrew: I think cold calls would be the closest to outbound that we

get. We don’t do a ton of cold calling. We like to do it just to

continue to hone our positioning statements and stuff like that,

and if an opportunity comes through, that’s great. But we really

haven’t had a lot of success with it, so it’s not something that

we’re going to lean into if we haven’t had a lot of success.

We like to think kind of creatively around the marketing,

obviously, and how can we add value with content through maybe

traditional off-line methods. So even if we do a press release

or – we’ve got some partners, like, we’re in a technology

incubator right now, we moved into this office space at the end

of May, and they’ve got a press release that goes out in a print

newsletter to the community here, and so we created a content

piece that was kind of about what GuavaBox is, but wrote it like

inbound marketers in a way that could help a potential business

owner who might read it, understand the value of inbound

marketing and the potential that’s out there and the lead

machine that they could create, those sorts of things. So, just

applying inbound methodology through outbound channels is as

close as we get. We try to remain pure.

Trent: And it’s not just trying to remain pure, like there’s something

uncool about outbound marketing, but with respect to cold calls,

they just don’t work as well. People don’t like making them, and

people don’t really like receiving them, so I think why would

you do that?

All right. So that wraps up the Part One of this interview. I

tried to keep it to about a half-hour. I went over by just a

couple of minutes. So as I mentioned, in Part Two, we’re going

to dive deeper into how we’re nurturing and converting leads,

what services are being offered, how they’re being delivered,

how leads generate in retainer’s fees, and probably a whole

bunch of extra things that I’ll ask as a result of the answers

that Andrew gives us. So we will see you in Part Two.

So that wraps up Part One of this interview with Andrew. You can

get the show notes at brightideas.co/74. Now, if you really

enjoyed this podcast, I would absolutely love it if you would

take a moment to go to brightideas.co/love, and when you get

there, you’ll find a pre-populated tweet that you can send out,

as well you’ll find a link to go to take you to the iTunes store

so that you can leave some feedback for the show. And if you

would be kind enough to go give a five-star rating, I can’t tell

you how much I would appreciate your taking a moment or two to

do that, because it really does make a huge difference to the

show.

So that’s it for this episode. I’m your host, Trent Dyrsmid, and

I look forward to seeing you in another episode, and for sure in

Part Two.

About Andrew Dymski

AndrewDymskiAndrew is the a co-founder of GuavaBox, a web design and inbound marketing agency. Guavabox helps clients in the industrial space reach new customers through inbound marketing.

You can email Andrew at andrew@guavabox.com or connect with him on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Derek Coburn on How He Built an Engaged Tribe of Raving Fans (and Paying Clients)

Do you wish there were some way to generate twice as much revenue in your business without doing twice as much work?

Derek Coburn felt the same way with his wealth management firm. He realized that in order to significantly increase his revenue, he was going to have to either work a lot more hours, or find a different way of working.

Luckily for Derek, he was able to specialize and differentiate himself from other financial advisers, which significantly increased his client retention, as well as the amount his clients valued him. In Derek’s case, this value came from what he calls “The Ultimate Tie Breaker” – he was able to differentiate himself by sending clients referrals. There’s nothing a business owner loves more than more business, right? Derek was so good at making those connections that he made a whole second business of it (cadre).

Luckily for you, Derek has shared his story with us. He includes details on cadre, which he co-founded with his wife Melanie. They call cadre an “un-networking” group, and have had great success by helping their group members help each other.

When you listen to this interview, you’ll hear Derek and I talk about:

  • (03:25) Introductions
  • (06:00) How he built his financial firm
  • (08:30) An explanation of his first networking group
  • (10:30) How to add extra value to his clients by referring them clients
  • (13:30) How he expanded the conversation with his clients, to talk about more than financial planning
  • (16:00) How he used surveys to reach out and ask how to provide extra value
  • (17:15) How he created the time to launch his second business, cadre
  • (23:30) Going from idea to reality with cadre
  • (26:40) How he used a webinar to launch the concept
  • (31:00) How he got existing members to refer more
  • (36:00) How his business model has evolved to justify $3000 upfront to join
  • (41:00) How he ran a launch meeting
  • (46:00) His plans for the future of cadre
  • (48:30) An introduction to his book
  • (50:00) The Boise launch plan
  • (1:03:00) An overview of how to be more useful to your clients

Resources Mentioned

cadre
The Thank You Economy
Care.com
Informly’s podcast
Amy Porterfield’s podcast
Human Business Works – Chris Brogan
Youtility – Jay Baer
School of Greatness – Lewis Howes

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Listen Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

Transcript

Trent: Hey there Bright Ideas hunters. Welcome to the Bright Ideas

Podcast. I am your host, Trent Dyrsmid. This is the podcast for

marketing agencies, marketing consultants and entrepreneurs who

want to discover how to use content marketing and marketing

automation to massively boost their business without having to

massively boost the number of hours they work every week.We do this by bringing on experts who share with us the story of what

made them so successful and this episode is no different. We are

going to be joined by a fellow by the name of Derek Coburn who

is a partner in a very successful financial advisory firm and

has about 15 employees and he has been doing that for quite a

while.But, more recently he’s also the author of a book and founder of

another company. The book is called “Why Networking is Not

Working” and as you might guess from the title it’s about

obviously why networking is failing and Cadre, his new business,

is predominately a DC based community of remarkable

professionals. Their members are the cream of the crop in their

industries and more interested in sharing resources than

gathering leads.So, in this interview Derek is going to share with us exactly how he

realized there was a need for this service and then how he

launched it and some of the ah-has he had along the way and

ultimately he is going to share with us his story on how he’s

making it a very successful company.But, before we get to that I want to tell you briefly about a Bright

Ideas product. If you are a marketing agency or a marketing

consultant and you are struggling with lead generation you will

want to check out my MobiLead Magnet. M-O-B-I Lead Magnet

.That’s at mobilead.com. It’s a WordPress plugin and will allow

you to build landing pages very quickly that display how bad

someone’s non-mobile friendly website looks on an iPhone and it

also shows them how good it could look if they had a mobilized

site. The idea is to use this landing page to capture their

interest and get your foot in the door to have a marketing

conversation.So, please join me in welcoming Derek to the show. Hey Derek welcome

to the show.Derek: Hey Trent thanks for having me.Trent: No, problem, man. I am jacked about this interview. We have got

a lot of really cool stuff that I want to talk about. Just

before Derek and I got on the air we were talking about how he

took himself from one business to two businesses and he’s got

two kids and he’s writing a book and he’s got a lot of really

cool stuff going on. I really want, because I know there is a

large percentage of my audience that still has a job and they’re

trying to make a transition and they’ve got a part time business

and they want that business to become more fulltime. Derek has

already gone down that trail and done it successfully. So, we

are going to get him to talk all about it.So, Derek thanks so much for coming on. Maybe just real quickly,

introduce yourself. Tell us who you are and what you are doing

to get through to all of the results that you’ve got.Derek: Thanks so much, Trent. So, I’m Derek Coburn. I own a wealth

management business with two other guys. We have been running

that for about 15 years now. We have 15 employees. Right now, I

spend about 20 to 25 percent of my time in that business, but

it’s hyper-focused on a segment of clients that I really enjoy

working with that are a great fit for me.I also co-founded what we call an “unnetworking” community in DC. I

co-founded this with my wife Melanie. It’s called Cadre. We have

right now about 105 CEOs, business owners, mediapreneurs if you

will that we bring together through offline events of different

types, facilitating connections online through our private

member community and about 90 percent complete with a book that

should be coming out in the next couple of months called

“Networking is Not Working.”Trent: And you have two kids.Derek: And I have two kids. My three year old started pre-school today

for the first time. So, I’m pretty excited for him. Time’s

flying by, but I try to make time for obviously those two and my

wife as well.Trent: Absolutely. So, for the folks, this interview is probably going

to be useful for a whole bunch of people but the ones that I

really want to speak to because I know I have a large following

in my community of folks as I mentioned earlier that still

either have a business and wanting to start another one for

whatever reason or they have a job and they want to start a

business of their own again for whatever reason. The reasons

aren’t terribly important for your and I discussion. The point

is, the desire is there and they’re trying to make that

transition.So, let’s go back to the point, so, you had a wealth management

business that you built up and was successful. Cadre did not yet

exist. How did it get created? Where was the motivation? I think

you were doing financially pretty well with the financial

advisory business, so something was tugging at your heart

strings.Derek: Yeah, so it really occurred to me back in 2008 that I had built

up a pretty good client base via cold calling and some referrals

from existing clients. I was focusing my growth strategy in

terms of meeting new clients by attending networking events.

Towards the end of 2008 that was the very beginning of what

would end up becoming the biggest sort of one of the worst

financial markets, if not the worst, financial markets since the

Great Depression.

The wealth management business, at least for me, is a recurring

revenue model, which is good. In fact, we use that same model

for Cadre. What it means is that if we are not providing good

value and a high level of service for our clients they can take

their money and go somewhere else.

So, obviously at that time there was a lot of additional hand holding

that was needed. We had to spend more time with our clients and

we wanted to really. We wanted to make sure that they had their

money and we were making the recommendations and providing the

advice that was in line with what they felt comfortable with.

So, what I realized was I was running out of time in my day. For a

variety of reasons I had to rethink really everything that I was

doing. What I realized, the average financial advisor has close

to about 400 clients. At that point, I had about 100 to 120 or

so.

The nice thing is cold calling and growing your business when you’re

first starting off, it’s great. You will almost work with

anybody. But, once you get a taste of what a really great client

relationship looks like, that’s sort of when you don’t want to

cold call anymore. That’s where you want to try to focus if you

can on only adding new clients who are going to be aligned with

you and are on the same page as what you are providing them.

Essentially, what I did was I said, I don’t want to be this guy

that’s working 70, 80, 90 hours a week with 300 clients that are

sort of all over the place. I began to really focus on quality

at that point. I slowed my growth and I realized that going to

these larger networking events was not a great use of my time.

And I ended up a way that I could fill both services or both

activities if you will in terms of providing great value for my

existing clients while also meeting new people that would be

ideal clients for me was I formed my own networking group of

about 20 or 25 people. This was not Cadre, but it was an event

where I brought together some of my great clients, some of their

top advisors and some other professionals that I had handpicked

and I was facilitating getting connections and adding value in

ways above and beyond the core service that my clients were

expecting of me.

Trent: Okay, and so was there some kind of a structure you had? What

did you tell these first 20 people when you said hey, I want to

start this networking group?

Derek: I had this big ah-ha moment for me. It’s what changed

everything. A client of mine, who I’ll call him a landscaper,

called me up. He was one of my best clients and he said, “Derek

I got a call from one of my really great clients and their

brother-in-law does what you do and they asked me if I would do

them a favor of meeting with their brother-in-law. I told them

that I really had a great relationship with you. I was happy. I

wasn’t looking to make any changes, but it was one of those

things where they were a great client and they said no

obligation whatsoever you would just be doing us a favor if you

just took the meeting.”

So, he told me about it ahead of time which was great. He called me

up the day after he had a meeting with this gentleman. He said,

“I got to tell you what happened, Derek. 45 minutes into the

meeting which was a pitch which is pretty consistent with the

way a lot of folks in the financial services industry would

approach a first meeting. He got to the end and the conclusion

that he drew was if I had my money invested with him instead of

with you, Derek, for the past couple of years I would have

earned an extra 2 to 3 percent a year in my portfolio.”

My client responded and said, “here’s something else that you might

want to take into consideration. Derek has referred me to

clients, to my business, over that time that have resulted in

over 2 million dollars of revenue for my business. If we were to

look at the big picture, Derek,” which I did not do by the way,

but “Derek could have lost half the money in my portfolio my net

perspective would have still been better off working with Derek

than working with you.”

He was laughing. He was saying that I had nothing to say. It made me

realize I am doing this without a lot of intention for a lot of

my clients right now. I’m focusing on their business and how I

can add value for them above and beyond what they expect of me.

What if I just started really focusing on it and building out a

process and trying to identify clients who in addition to

providing great value and a great service in terms of investment

planning, financial planning, what have you, that they have

businesses that I understand and I get and I might be able to

affect their business by identifying clients and being an

extension of their business development or marketing department.

Trent: Seems like a very good idea.

Derek: So, I call that the ultimate tie-breaker. If you think about

it, it’s also a great thing to be able to say from a marketing

perspective as long as you can back it up. So, I wasn’t going

around saying this to everybody, but most professionals, most

entrepreneurs, probably a lot of folks in your audience, they

probably feel like one of the best things that could happen to

them in their business is to get a great referral for a great

client.

I think that just to take that a step further and say gee, probably

the best thing that could happen for my clients, right now,

would be for them to get a great referral and if I am the one

that’s providing them that great referral you are going to have

a client for life and you are going to have somebody that’s

motivated to help you and somebody that’s going to be interested

in finding ways to help you succeed either through introductions

or additional business for them.

Trent: So, when you got nose to the grindstone with your financial

business. I think you described it that you were working pretty

hard. Was it a decision at this moment in time that you were

going to start referring clients to your clients or had you been

doing that all along with your 120 clients?

Derek: I certainly wasn’t doing it for all 120. I was doing it for the

ones where there was maybe a more obvious way to do it. But,

what I did was identify clients that I had yet to do this for.

That I felt like I might be able to help. I sat down with them.

I interviewed them. I got more information from them and shared

with them this additional role that I was going to be serving in

terms of the value and the deliverable that I was going to be

bringing to the table.

Trent: Was Cadre born out of your desire to do this, because I do want

to shift to that. But if it’s not I want to talk about how you,

I guess for lack of a better term, structured it? How did you

actually refer? Did you have a process that you used or a habit

or whatever to refer your clients? Obviously, they are going to

love you for that. That’s a no brainer. But, I want to know how

you actually made it happen.

Derek: Once again, for anyone that’s in a transaction business, when I

say transaction I mean you sell something one time and you are

never going to sell something to them again, I don’t think

that’s very many people, but because even if you sell something

to somebody now, there’s a pretty good chance you have another

service, another product 6 months, 12 months from now you could

potentially reach out to them in terms of an ideal client.

Really, for me, it was all about expanding the conversations that I

was having. What else is going on in your life? What else is

going on in your business? I think in any industry if you are

somebody that can help your client solve other problems they are

having. Whether you can provide the end benefit if you will or

not, then you are going to become important to them. Once you

start showing that with an individual one time, two times, then

you have these individuals that are reaching out to you.

My clients started calling me every time they had to make a decision

about anything. I’ve referred a great car salesman, probably 20

or 25 opportunities over the past few years. Anywhere from

larger purchases for companies all the way down to baby

photographers.

It takes a little bit of time, but if you just focus on what else can

I do for my existing clients and the important people to me in

my network, then you are going to find yourself in a position to

do this and to start adding value for them and then they are

going to start coming to you more often and referring people to

you, etc.

Trent: So, let me just make sure I understand this. Let’s say for

simplicity of this, you have two clients. One of them sells

mattresses. I brought that up because I bought a king size

mattress on line before we started this episode and the other

one needs a mattress and you find out there’s one of your

clients that needs a mattress and you know there’s one of your

clients that sells mattresses, so you say to your client that

needs the mattress, “Hey, I’ve got a really great source, a

client that sells mattresses, you should call him.” Is that

essentially what you are doing?

Derek: That’s fairly straight forward and that definitely happens, but

if you think about it a lot of us wait until we have something

to sell or it’s just an annual check in with our clients and its

always about how they are doing in relation to what we can do to

help them.

So, if you start reaching out to your clients, I know you’re big on

surveys. I’m big on surveys, getting information. Finding out

what else is going on in their business. They will appreciate

the fact that you are reaching out to learn about how you can

help whether you can help them or not. They will still hold you

in really high regard for doing that.

But over time as you build out your network you are going to be in

the position where you can start helping them and you are going

to be the go to person when they have really any sort of

business decision or personal decision for that matter that they

are going to reach out to.

Trent: So, the reaching out to wasn’t necessarily always on with one

on one phone calls. The surveys are a very time effective way of

telling your client that you are thinking about broadening the

conversation.

Derek: Yep.

Trent: Okay, cool. I’m just making a quick note here, all right. So,

at what point did you decide hey, I want to start Cadre?

Derek: All right, so we started Cadre back in 2011. My smaller

networking group was going really well, but the thing about the

wealth management business is it’s highly regulated. Compliance

departments are really on you about everything. Because of the

handful of individuals in my industry that like to try to take

advantage of people and take advantage of the system, they sort

of ruin it for everybody else.

Trent: Yeah.

Derek: I had the editor from the Washington Business Journal reach out

to me to offer the opportunity to write a weekly column for them

in the form of a blog. They were calling it a column, but it was

a blog. I went back to my broker dealer and just like 99 percent

of financial advisors out there right now, that just aren’t

completely independent, they said no chance.

The reason is pretty ridiculous. The reason is we can approve the

initial article, but we cannot approve or monitor the comments

in the blog. If somebody leaves a comment and says hey for me

and my situation how would you handle this and then I answer

them specifically, they are worried a year from now someone else

is going to search, find it, and think that answer applies to

them and make a terrible decision. So, that’s how ridiculous it

was.

I had been reading a lot of great books. The Seth Godin’s all of his

books. “Trust Agents” by Chris Brogan. I saw this other way.

Gary Vaynerchuk wrote his last book, “The Thank You Economy”. He

said, “if you are in legal or finance you better really love

what you do, because those are the two industries, that you are

really not going to be able to take advantage of all of the

other opportunities from a marketing, word of mouth, etc.

standpoint that other businesses can take advantage of in terms

of one line awareness in marketing.”

That’s when I said you know what I have way too much information and

I see all the great ways that I can be growing my brand, finding

clients, and I’m not going to be able to do this if I just have

the wealth management business. But, I like the business and I

like my clients so I’m going to figure out a way to start

another business. That’s sort of what happened at the very

beginning that had me thinking, okay, I want to do something

different.

Trent: I think a huge, let’s compare your wealth management business

to, I don’t know if this will be a fair comparison, but we’ll

try it, to “your job.” I’m trying to make it so that the people

who have a job can relate to where we are going to take this

conversation in the next few minutes. How is that you’ve freed

up time in bread and butter number one so that you had the time

and mental energy to start bread and butter number two?

Derek: So, the answer that I give you might not directly benefit those

with a job, but for me I had some good revenues coming in at the

time with the wealth management business and because I also had

two other partners, we were able to pool our resources together

and hire people that were really good at a variety of things.

So, it’s really been a while since I’ve sat down and rolled up my

sleeves and really taken a technical look at my client’s

portfolios. I do that at a high level but we have really smart,

awesome people covering a variety of topics, a variety of areas

that we counsel clients on, in place.

For me, I wrote a 300-page systems manual for that business. I got

very specific about who would be doing certain things and I

wanted to set up my financial advisor business so that it was

similar to going to the doctor, right. Where when you go to the

doctors you doctor doesn’t check you in and say fill out this

form and I’m going to take care of you. Your doctor has other

people in place that are perfectly capable of doing all those

things so the doctor can focus on the high level really

important health issues and really the reason why you are there.

I do think clearly, through virtual assistants, I figure out to this

day what am I doing right now either personally or

professionally that I can pay someone else to do? For example,

through a website called Care.com, which I think is a national

website, I found a housekeeper. She works 10 to 15 hours a week

for us. She comes in. She takes our dry cleaning. She picks

after the kids. She cooks for us one night a week. Really, just

takes care of all of these things that I would have to do if she

wasn’t doing them. We pay her $15 an hour.

I think that for a lot of us, especially if there is another

business, another idea that you have or that your listeners

have, take a look at it. If this works and we can start

generating money from this what am I doing with my time right

now that I can find someone else to do and pay them so that I

have that time freed up and I’m going to make more money to

justify the difference in that cost.

Trent: Makes perfect sense. You need to have your time make more than

$15 an hour which is not terribly difficult to do, especially if

you are selling something to a business person.

Derek: Absolutely.

Trent: So, for the folks we used the term Cadre and I know we

introduced it at the beginning of the show, but I want to make

sure people understand what we are talking about. Briefly

describe what Cadre is and then I want to walk through the idea

on a napkin to the 100 plus paying members that you have now.

Derek: Sure. You had mentioned, I think it was one of your recent

interviews, I think it was with Andrew Warner, you had a comment

that said, “just build what you want to be a part of that does

not currently exist.” Even though things were going well in the

wealth management business and with my smaller networking group,

which didn’t have a name by the way. I planned round table

lunches. I hosted wine tastings. I did some things on line. We

can expand this and there’s not really anything out there where

I know I can go into a room or to an event and I can be around

people that all have the same intentions that I have when it

comes to developing relationships.

Not trying to push their own agenda, not trying to sell me something

or get their business card into my pocket as quickly as possible

but people who were successful who had a really great business

and had a pay it forward approach and I can take the time to get

to know you and help you and knowing you are going to do the

same thing for me.

I reached out to a handful of individuals that were in my current

networking group, and I said I want to do what we are doing now

but I want to do it on a larger scale and I need your help. I’m

not sure it’s going to work or not because it sounds like

rainbows and unicorns. It sounds like this happy place where you

can walk in and everyone there is going to be on the same page

as you. They are going to have a good business. They are going

to be interested in learning more about ways they can help you

and your business.

I didn’t want them to recommend other folks from their network and

have them pay us unless I really felt like it was going to work.

I was skeptical. I felt like they are going to invite people and

maybe 50 percent of them are going to still try to take

advantage of the situation and try to sell everybody else on how

great they are.

We just did round table lunches at the beginning. That initial group

with the help of these individuals, we had about 60, 70, 80

people on a webinar where I introduced the idea. We said for the

next two months you can go to one lunch a month. You will have

five or six to choose from each month. Based on your

availability we are going to assign you and put you together

with other individuals who are participating. You are going to

have 5, 6, 7 minutes to share your story. What a good

opportunity for you looks like. What your ideal client looks

like and then you are going to have the opportunity to hear that

same information from 8, 9, 10 other people.

We did this for the first two months. We didn’t charge anybody

anything. We asked everybody who’s in and we had about 80

percent commit to remaining a member.

Trent: I don’t know if this sounds or not, but did you let them take

it home and try it and make sure they like it and if you want to

keep going then pay.

Derek: Yep. It was still a very low risk situation for us because it

was giving us an opportunity to meet 50, 60, 70 individuals that

we previously didn’t know. Even if it didn’t work we decided not

to move forward with it we were going to expand our network and

meet some pretty great people in the process.

Trent: Absolutely, you were. There is not a lot of downside to

reaching out to successful business people. Let’s talk briefly

about the webinar. How did you get people on it and what was the

core message that you shared?

Derek: The way we got people on it is something that I still do to

this day that works better than just about anything else.

Whenever I have anything that I want my network to help me out

with, to share, to promote. So now we are doing larger events

with best-selling authors. I’ll say here’s a link to share on

Twitter. Here’s a link to share on Facebook or LinkedIn or other

places.

But, if I actually type out an email that is verbatim, in most cases

they don’t make any changes to it. If I type out an email that

looks like it is coming from them and they can copy and paste

that into an email I am allowing people that are willing to help

me I’m making it incredibly easy for them to do this because I

am doing all the work. I think a lot of times we say you have a

referral for me, that’s great, or you have somebody you want to

introduce me to or a business you want to introduce me to, and

we sit around and wait for it.

What I realized is we have and I have probably 30 or 40 different

types of emails like this saved as templates that if I do the

work ahead of time and I’m making it really easy for you to do

it then you are much more likely to do it assuming that’ I’ve

done enough on my end to warrant me doing a favor for you.

Trent: Yes, if I like you and you send me an email and say, Trent, cut

and paste this and send it and I think you are a good guy

chances are pretty high that I’m going to do it.

Derek: You still might do it otherwise but it’s still work on your end

and you have to make the time for it and it may or may not

happen. I equipped these individuals that I was asking them for

help. I gave them the email and made it easy for them to send

along. The other great thing about this strategy whether it’s an

introduction, referral or whether it’s come to my webinar, you

are framing it on your terms. You are able to specify the action

or the next step that you want them to take.

A lot of times, if I hadn’t done that I would have gotten many emails

that said meet my friend Derek; they are putting together a

networking group that I think you would like. You should reach

out to them then what are they going to say? They are going to

say, “Oh that sounds interesting. Let’s get on a call or let’s

have lunch sometime.” I certainly did not have time to meet 75

people for lunch to tell them about my idea. The way that the

introduction was made was if you want to learn more then sign up

for one of these webinars and that’s how you can learn more

about it.

Trent: Do you remember what the wording of the email template was that

you gave to these people.

Derek: I have it somewhere. I can probably share it with you if you

want to include it.

Trent: Yeah, send a copy to me and I will include it in the shows.

Derek: I will give you another example if you think it will be

helpful.

Trent: Sure. Please, go ahead.

Derek: When we started expanding Cadre and we went from 70 to 100 we

had been asking our members were loving it, what we had put in

place. They were getting a tremendous amount of value. They

wanted to help. They wanted to make some introductions. We were

asking people they were saying they wanted to do it for a lot of

the reasons I just described. We were getting some but not a

lot.

In August 2011 or 2012, it was in August is all I know because I

documented this. We created an email for them to share to invite

prospective members to learn more about Cadre by coming to one

of our events and learning more there and the results was we

ended up having 60 interested individuals, 60 referrals that

came to learn more about Cadre. About half of them ended up

joining. What I always like to say is that all of my members

they didn’t like me more in August than they liked me in June or

July. I just made it incredibly easy for them to help me in

doing something that they were willing to do.

Trent: Absolutely. If I remember correctly, months ago when you and I

talked about this, you had mentioned to me back then some type

of incentive for the early adopters to become a paying member of

Cadre. You have gone through your two months. You are saying to

your members this needs to be commercially viable in order for

it to keep going, therefore there is going to be this cost. If

you get on board now, it’s this. If you get on board later, it’s

this. Am I remembering this correctly and if so can you explain

what the inside looked like?

Derek: Absolutely, so everyone at the end of that two month period,

everyone that had participated, the offer that we gave them was

to be what we called a charter member. Charter members were

going to pay $249 a month and then as soon as this two week

period was over on accepting Charter members, and any new

members after that would be paying double that $499 a month.

It’s something that we’ve never changed.

Once again, it worked for two months, but let’s create some incentive

for these individuals that started with us from the beginning.

And it also created some sort of incentive for them to go off

and say hey I’ve been coming to this for two months now and it’s

great and you should think about joining also. So, they were

able to bring some other individuals to the table at that lower

price point, if you will. Now in fact we’ve evolved where we

were just $500 a month, then we were $1000 up front and $500 a

month, now we’re $3,000 up front and $500 a month, month to

month.

Trent: Wow. We are going to get to that in a minute. I want to make

sure I understand the charter business part of it. So, after the

two months how many people were going to lunches? You could

chose, you could go to how many lunches per month could you go

to during this free period?

Derek: One.

Trent: How many lunches were happening per month? The lunches were

only 8 to 10 people each right?

Derek: Yep. Including those first two months going through the end of

the first year, we hosted 79 lunches. There were anywhere from 7

to 11 lunches per month that we were scheduling and we were

giving all of our members the opportunity to say these five

would work for me and then we would try to slot them to a lunch

where they could meet people and try to keep the repeats at a

minimum.

Trent: You had a lot of logistical legwork to make sure you had the

right people at the lunches, seated at the right tables. Did you

guys actually show up to the lunches or did you just have the

people say hey I need to be at the whatever restaurant at

whatever date at whatever time and 10 of them would show up and

just chat at each other.

Derek: We were at every single one.

Trent: Yeah, because you need structure.

Derek: Sure.

Trent: Okay. At that point in time 79 lunches in the first two months.

Derek: No, no, no. Not in the first two months. That was for the first

year.

Trent: Okay.

Derek: That was for the first nine months. Let’s call it six lunches a

month for those first two months.

Trent: Okay, so six lunches per month. Where I’m trying to go with

this is how many people converted from free to pay. I think you

said about 80 percent, right?

Derek: It was about 80 percent.

Trent: So, then you got some cash flow on which to now continue to

grow this business. Over time you have ratcheted up the price

for new people. The guy or gal that’s joining today, they are

going to fork out three grand up front which is not a small

amount of money and then $500 a month. What are they getting for

that?

Derek: The model has changed significantly since we started off. Our

intention was never to have larger events at all. We are now

doing larger events. We built out a pretty robust private member

only community online. It’s not another Facebook. It’s not

another LinkedIn. There’s a lot of other stuff that’s in play

right now, than when we first initially set it up. Quite simply,

$3,000 is a lot of money to some people and it’s just the right

amount for others.

Trent: Yep.

Derek: Before we got up to $3,000 we very strategically were charging

$499 a month without a long term contract. Part of what we were

selling was engagement and fit. We wanted to make sure that

everyone that was participating, what I was selling to everyone

else was you are going to meet other people like you that are

going to be engaged, that are going to be interested to help you

and to provide value for you. And if they are not or they don’t

feel like it’s a good fit for them or a good use of their time,

we want them to be able to leave and we wanted the ability to be

able to ask them to leave if they weren’t. So, there are other

organizations that charge an annual fee upfront. It may be 6

grand or 10 grand or 20 grand and I think what happens a lot of

times if it’s not a good fit or their not the right type of

member well you have to let them play out their contract.

Trent: Yeah.

Derek: We wanted people to just drop out if they didn’t think it was a

great fit. In 2012, I started conversations with 25 people,

proactive conversations, ranging from you’re no longer a member

to hey what’s going on. If you are not able to start attending

or getting back in touch with people no harm no foul but it’s

not going to be a great fit. 25 people and the majority of them

were at the $499 rate. We basically said goodbye to $150,000 of

annual revenue for the sake of maintaining culture and making

sure that what we were selling was actually true.

Trent: Absolutely.

Derek: Along those lines I think pretty consistently the goal is that

for anybody that looks at $500 a month and says okay this is

something I can do, I think the main thing we are selling at

this point is access to a phenomenal network of experts of

individuals. Some of them have been on your show before. Our

roster from top to bottom is phenomenal. I think there are a lot

of successful entrepreneurs and successful business owners that

would pay $500 just to be in a room without all of the rift

raft. Just to know they’re not spending their time going places

where they are not being pitched, they’re not being sold, or

their not meeting anyone that’s not relevant to their business

or their clients.

Trent: I couldn’t agree more. I’ll make this comment for the folks

that haven’t attended a lot of these networking events. Back

when I started my company I attended a ton of the banker board

of trade events. There are no CEOs going. It’s all the business

development guys and gals who are looking for new clients. If

you are a CEO and you are looking for other CEOs where you can

have CEO level conversations about business challenges, going to

the local board of trade isn’t the place to be.

Derek: I would also say to if you are a business development person or

you are in sales the CEOs in the companies you are selling to

probably aren’t the decision makers and probably not the ones

you are wanting to meet either. The quality of any networking

activity I think is it’s all based on are you surrounding

yourself with people that are in a similar situation to you in

terms of the market they serve and do they take the same

approach that you take when it comes to developing relationships

and strategically working together with other professionals.

Trent: I want to skip back a minute. I realized there was a question

that I skipped past without asking.

Derek: Sure.

Trent: When you were doing these lunches and it’s back in the first

two months when it was free you said you attended all of them

Obviously you’ve got to make the right, there’s a message you

needed to communicate. How did you do that? What did you say at

these lunches so that the people realized hey this is something

I want to be a part of?

Derek: I think that the main thing we were guarded against at that

time was that we wanted to make sure that we had the right

people and I would say that I mentioned 80 percent earlier in

terms of what we converted. Ten of the remaining 20 percent or

50 percent of the remaining 20 percent we didn’t even extend the

invitation to. Because they were either following up with

everybody in a salesy way or they weren’t showing up to the

lunches.

It was really about quality and really about hey I have this other

business that I’m running and I’m not talking about I’ve never

positioned myself as a financial advisor inside of Cadre because

I never wanted anyone to think that my reasons were for doing it

were a back door way to get additional clients to that business.

In fact, there are other financial advisors in Cadre that are my

“competitor” in my other world.

I wanted to be very clear that I was doing this because I was

passionate and I enjoyed helping people and I felt something

like this was missing in the marketplace. One of the basic

things I communicated was we want to encourage and we want to

embrace the idea of our members hiring each other and working

together, but we also don’t want it to be a pitch fest and we

are not going to be a leads exchange group.

So, what does that mean? That means anyone that you meet at any of

our functions you cannot follow up with them and say great

meeting you at the lunch. Can we meet again next week so I can

tell you more about how awesome I am? It has to be, I was really

intrigued by your story and think you are somebody that I can

help or that I can see us collaborating on some different things

together so let’s see if we can jump on the phone and come up

with a way to expand on that relationship.

Clearly, if somebody did not have a good story or they weren’t

connected or it was never going to work for them that’s where

that whole they could drop out whenever they want thing comes

into play. If somebody just says I’m a CPA and if you know

anybody that needs a CPA, they would be a great client for me

and you can refer them to me and that would be great. Well,

that’s different than the CPA that says I like to work with

business owners that have revenues between $500,000 and $5

million that are going through X, Y, and Z and they are painting

that picture and they are describing in more detail what an

ideal opportunity looks like. They are going to get a lot more

mileage than one that doesn’t do that.

Trent: Yeah, that’s true. That’s really being clear who your customer

is and that’s something that everybody should be doing because

that makes it easier to get customers because when you find them

they are going to get so much more out of what you are saying.

Derek: The message then and the message today is that we are one of

the only professional organizations that I know of that is

vetting for intention and quality in addition to some of the

more tangible metrics. There are a lot of organizations out

there that are similar to ours, not really a competitor but they

are similar and it’s hey do you make X amount of money per year?

Do you have a certain role? Do you have a certain number of

employees?

I think that our price point automatically gets us to the right

people because clearly if somebody has a business where they are

making a certain amount of money that $500 would be 10 or 20

percent of their revenues they are not going to do it. We don’t

have to say you have to be doing this or you have to be doing

that. But, we are the only ones that aggressively vetting for do

you believe in word of mouth marketing? Are you in a position

where you can add value for other people because you are

informational with your clients and within your network? Are you

somebody that’s willing to do that knowing that you are going to

be around others that are going to be doing that for you?

Trent: Feverishly writing notes again. Wish I could write faster. Let

me keep the questions rolling. So Cadre started off from what I

understand as a very localized business because you needed to be

able to come and attend these lunches. You live in DC so I’m

guessing in the beginning it was only in DC?

Derek: Still is.

Trent: Still is?

Derek: Yep.

Trent: Do you have growth plans or do you plan to scale it nationally?

Where are you going from here?

Derek: I think we’re finally to the point now that we are feeling like

we are going to be able to do that and that’s the next move.

We’ve decided a while ago, if we wanted to loosen up on our

ideals or our culture of who we are looking for we could have

150 to 250 members at this point. Mark [has shared] and you’ve

had on this show before as a member of Cadre. He talks about

assignment selling a lot, which is this idea of you want to

really aggressively tell people that are not a good fit for your

business or for in my case for Cadre you want to let them know

on a website you want to let them figure that out.

Between the website and a phone call with me I’d say 70 percent of

the people, I’m making that up, but I bet 3 out of every 4

people that are interested in learning more either go to the

website or have a conversation with me end up not being a good

fit. So, getting DC to like 200 members was never a big goal but

what we’ve been doing with DC is we’ve been through heavily

surveying our members and having conversations with our members.

We actually closed off entry for any new members for a period of

about six months and we just reopened that about a month ago

because we were so focused on evolving our model and sort of

taking that next step. You can almost look like what we’re doing

in DC right now that’s how we’re establishing our product and

really honing on who is our ideal member? Who is going to really

benefit the most from this and how do we communicate with them?

How do we find the message that we want to deliver them? We are

basically using DC and continuing to evolve DC to help us get it

exactly right for when we want to take it to other markets

across the country.

Trent: You are writing a book. Does the book also play a role in that

or what’s the purpose behind the book and please do name the

book for us?

Derek: The book “Networking is Not Working,” where I’m stressing the

not part. It’s everything that happened. A lot of what I shared

earlier, what took place in my wealth management business. It

will mention Cadre very briefly just to establish some

additional credibility. Okay, if you are growing your business

and you are attending networking events, there’s probably a more

efficient way to do that. Here’s what I did in my wealth

management practice where I freed up the time. Because you had

asked this earlier too, a big part of the way I freed up my time

to do this is I stopped attending networking events two times a

week.

Trent: Yeah.

Derek: I stopped playing golf one or two times a week which was 5 or 6

hours of time each time I did that. That’s really where I was

focused and wanted to share in the book or the process I used to

build out this 25 person group that I had and the ways that I

was integrating the value that I was delivering to my clients

with my networking efforts to meet more of the right types of

individuals for my practice.

Trent: So, let’s use me as a guinea pig for an example. I’m going to

get super selfish here. Tomorrow my wife and I pack up the

moving truck and we move from San Diego to Boise, Idaho. I

basically know nobody in town. What should I do? I really would

love to build good, deep, meaningful relationships in the

business community. Many of whom will never buy anything from

me, but that’s just fine because I want I want to have those

relationships anyway.

Derek: Good for you.

Trent: I love the idea of having a Cadre of my own, but let me not

taint your answer. What should I do my first 30 days in town?

Derek: Well, I still feel like that spending time online is a great

way. I don’t have to convince you or your audience this is a

great way to meet people. I think Twitter is the greatest, large

networking event that anyone can participate in or “attend”

because you get to see who’s on there, what they’re talking

about. You’re not interrupting conversations that are not

relevant to you. You can see who shares your interests, who

shares your passions, and use that as a way to meet them. You

already know that so I won’t spend a lot of time saying okay go

to Twitter and meet people that way.

The larger networking events, honestly I mean I’m not going to tell

you to go to a Chamber of Commerce event, not that there’s

anything wrong with them. There will be other people there that

would be good for you to meet, but there’s probably going to be

a lot of people there that are going to waste your time and are

not going to be a good way for you to spend a couple of hours

talking to them or a variety of them, if you will.

I think it’s something that you have to have a long term approach to

this but anytime you can go to a larger event where’s there’s

something else there, there’s additional ways to “win” if you

will, that’s what I’ve always looked for. It’s not like I don’t

go to larger networking events anymore, but if I do go I am

going to attend the ones who have speakers, who have material

that I am interested in learning more about. That way if I don’t

meet anybody, if I don’t get any quality connections out of

that, out of attending it, then hopefully I learned something.

Then I can say it was a good use of my time because I got some

great ideas. Do you have any clients there now?

Trent: No.

Derek: If you do get some clients, if you do get some individuals that

might be prospective clients or just good people to talk to,

start asking them which events are you going to or I found this

event. Then they can bring somebody else along, or you can bring

somebody else along and it’s a way for you to expand your

network where even if this event ends up being a total stinker,

then you are spending additional time with somebody that you

already had a relationship with and you are able to get to know

the person that they brought along and they are able to get to

know the person that you brought along.

Trent: So, let me tell you what I was thinking as far as a plan and

you can tell me what you think.

Derek: Let’s do it.

Trent: They have a vibrant technology sector in Boise, much to my

pleasant surprise. I was planning on finding who the CEOs are of

the fastest growing companies reaching out to them all asking

them to be on my show. Of course, then having lunch with them

and then having a conversation of who else in town I should

meet. What events should I go to? What groups should I

participate in and just letting the garden grow from there.

Derek: Clearly, I wasn’t sure if, because you are in a very unique

spot, so you have this great podcast and it’s a great way for

you to add value so you absolutely should take that approach. I

think if I were you I would say look, I’m new to town and I have

this podcast. You want to have a conversation with them first

and you have some pretty aside from me you have some pretty

amazing guests on your show on a regular basis, so you want to

be somewhat selective on who you have on and who you are having

these conversations with, but the types of people you want to

meet it’s going to peak their interest and make them want to

learn more about you and give you the opportunity to learn more

about them.

Trent: You are right. It’s true. Having a podcast makes an unknown

door very easy and it’s one of the reasons why I encourage my

listeners to start a podcast because it is the most powerful

networking tool I have ever discovered. You can literally tweet

people in 140 characters or less and they’ll come on your show.

I’ve done that over and over again. You say I have all these

fabulous past guests. That’s how I got a lot of them. I just

sent them a tweet. Either they are doing it for selfish reasons

because they want to get exposure, which is fine. If they have

value to add, I don’t mind giving them the exposure.

But, there’s also a lot of them out there that simply just much like

yourself have a good message and want to share it if for no

other reason other than to help other entrepreneurs succeed. I

think that’s a common trait among successful entrepreneurs. They

really want to give back. They know when they were young and

getting started other people played a huge role in helping them

become successful. So it becomes a huge part of the DNA.

So, if you are not yet doing a podcast out their audience I really

encourage you. It’s not a hard thing to do at all. The equipment

costs, you can do it for under $100. It doesn’t sound quite as

good as this but you can spend under $100 to get a really nice

microphone.

Derek: Okay, something I’m thinking about man I feel like you are

talking to me as well.

Trent: You should be, Derek. You certainly have the voice for it. It’s

not that hard. It’s like anything. It’s uncomfortable the first

time that you try it and then you get better. Then you get an

email like I got the other day. I got to tell this. Some guy

wrote me and he told me I’m so incredibly boring that he wants

to chew his arm off when he listens to me drone on. I hope that

he is listening to this. The only reason he listens to my show

is because I have such incredibly interesting guests.

Derek: That’s awesome.

Trent: Normally I get emails that are the opposite of that they have

a lot of really nice things to say about the show, but that one

was the first.

Derek: I completely disagree. I like your personality and I like the

show a lot. I’m trying to think where I heard this. Maybe it was

a podcast with Seth Godin a couple of weeks ago. He said anybody

that gives you one star on Amazon or one star on iTunes they are

never going to buy your products or be a customer of yours or do

anything with you. He’s actually gotten to the point where he

doesn’t even read them anymore because it’s so

counterproductive.

It’s great that you are laughing about it. I’m sure that it’s a lot

easier to laugh at something like that when you are getting as

many great notes and all the great feedback that you are getting

from everyone else it complete dwarfs that number.

Trent: That is the truth and also when you decide to become a blogger

and a podcaster you in essence become something of a public

figure in your own little world. There’s always going to be

people out there that don’t like your stuff and some will have a

mission to tell you that they don’t like your stuff. It hurt in

the beginning. You don’t like hearing that. You get to the point

where you look at it, I actually called my wife, I was laughing

so hard, and I said you’ve got to come read this. This is

probably the best one ever.

Now, in his defense I don’t think he’s a bad guy. He’s probably

listening to this, so I don’t want him to think I’m hating on

him or anything because he actually, the next episode he

suggested that I stand up. So the next episode I stood up to see

if I could make my voice any more exciting. When I introduced

this show I made sure I put more inflection into my voice than I

normally did. I turned down the bass a little bit on my mixing

board, because I thought maybe I was making my voice sound a

little too much like that. So, I kind of messed around with

things a bit. It’s not like I didn’t pay attention to what he

said and he didn’t write it in a malicious way. I wasn’t

insulted. It was taken as constructive feedback but at the same

time it was pretty damn funny.

Derek: It was nice that you took his advice you were able to do that.

I am often told that my super hero trait is that I’m the guy who

will tell you that your baby is ugly. I don’t think I would tell

anybody that their baby is ugly but people come to me

specifically to shoot down an idea or strategy or something that

they are doing. When your feedback is positive and its good

those people tend to like the fact that you are doing it. It’s

like when Simon Cowell on American Idol tells you that you are

really good, it carries so much more weight than when Paula

Abdul tells you that you’re good.

But then the problem is that when you start telling people what they

don’t want to hear, then they don’t like it as much. I am trying

to get better at massaging how I am providing feedback or

criticism to those individuals without taking away from the

charm of being the guy that will tell you that I think what you

have stinks.

Trent: Absolutely. Let’s wrap this up. There’s going to be a link in

this show. Derek it might be helpful for you as well. I’ve

written how I’ve podcast in the past. My guide to podcasting,

but a past podcast guest of mine by the name of Dan Norris, this

guy is a content creation machine. I’m going to put a link to

his guide to podcasting because it’s better than mine. It goes

into so much more detail than I did. I would encourage anyone

who is listening to this that wants to have a podcast to go and

check that out.

Also, in the show notes that invitation from you Derek, so please do

make a note to send us that. The email template on how you got

the people to come to the webinar to get your Cadre off the

ground, so to speak. Before we wrap up I’d like to ask you two

more questions. One is, are there any other podcasts that you’ve

listened to and would recommend?

Derek: I assume you want me to answer that one first.

Trent: Yeah, go ahead.

Derek: Without being completely obvious let me think here. I listen to

several but I am trying to think of who I can recommend that

might not, I think Amy Porterfield has a new podcast that is

really good, that I get a lot out of. I would also say Rich

Brooks has started one recently on marketing agents. Do you know

Rich?

Trent: No, I don’t. If you would like to make an introduction that

would be wonderful.

Derek: Sure thing. I have a lot in my rotation. Entrepreneur on Fire,

I love Smart Passive Income, I love. The Human Business Way

from Chris Brogan. All of them are great. There are about 15 or

so I can keep going if you want but those are a few for you.

Trent: Okay. I’ll include links to all of those. So, sorry the Human

Business Way?

Derek: The Human Business Way is a podcast that Chris Brogan does.

Trent: Okay, all right I’ll link to all of those.

Derek: I like Lewis Howes a lot, School of Greatness.

Trent: Okay. I’ll put that one down, School of Greatness. Then let’s

finish up with one book recommendation.

Derek: One book recommendation. I got to tell you it’s fairly new and

so it’s unlikely anyone has recommended it yet but Jay Baer new

book “Youtility”. Have you read it?

Trent: I have not.

Derek: Have you heard of it?

Trent: I have.

Derek: Youtility spelled Y-O-Utility. The basic premise is that so

many of us in business spend so much of our time trying to be

mind blowingly awesome. Over the top special. What Jay suggests

which I completely agree with is that we could probably get a

lot more mileage on focusing on how we can just be more useful.

I gave an example of that I think with the ultimate tie breaker where

I could have stayed awake for an extra two or three hours a

night and focused all my time, energy, and effort on how to

create a financial plan that was .001 percent better than it

already was or I could spend that time learning my clients

businesses and figuring out ways I can add value for them above

and beyond what I do.

So, the premise in the book is a lot of great suggestions for whether

it be apps. Whether it be events. It just a lot of great ideas

for ways that you can be useful and add value for your clients

and prospective clients.

The other sort of angle is that you Youtility is about creating

marketing that people want and there’s this huge competition and

you’re competing against friends and parents and spouses and

everyone else. Your email, Facebook and all those people are

already interesting to your ideal target audience. If your

emails or your newsfeed updates are going to remain relevant or

get opened by your community, then what you are sharing has to

be as relevant as what they are sharing.

I think obviously with the changes recently made by Gmail and

Facebook we already all know that they are not showing your

updates to 85 percent of your fans anyways. Just really figuring

out how can I remain relevant and useful and really help the

people that I want to reach so when I do have something I want

to sell they are much more likely to open it and be interested

in it.

Trent: Very good advice. And, finally if people would like to learn

more about Cadre what is your link to that?

Derek: Cadre is C-A-D-R-E-D-C.COM. CadreDC is also my Twitter handle.

I am going to be shifting especially as we look to expanding and

grow Cadre. I am going to be shifting my platform over to my

name dotcom, derekcoburn.com. That should be up in about a

month. I am going to start blogging. For people that go there

and give me their email address. It may come eventually, Trent,

after listening to all the benefits of your show. I don’t have

Infusionsoft set up right now. I am not going to be sending out

any sort of immediate emails. It’s just give me your email

address and I’ll let you know when the book is coming out

because I am going to have it available for free for 48 hours on

Amazon.

Trent: Cool. All right I want to thank you very much, Derek, for

coming on my show. Hopefully no one had to chew their arm off

because I was too boring.

Derek: Or because I was too boring either.

Trent: I’ve done over 100 of these things. I think we did a good job.

I don’t think we have to lose any sleep that anybody is going to

lose any arms today. Let’s wrap it up. Thank you so much for

being on the show and I want to keep in touch with you.

Derek: Great, man. Same here. Thanks’ for the opportunity, Trent.

Trent: Take care. To get to the show notes for this episode all you

need to do is go to brightideas.co/73. If you really enjoyed

this episode I would love it if you would head over to

brightideas.co/love where you will find a pre-populated tweet

and also you will find a link to the iTunes store. That’s

probably even more important than the Tweet. If you would take a

moment to go and leave a five star rating in the iTunes store I

cannot tell you how much I would appreciate your taking a moment

to do that. It helps the show get more exposure.

That’s it for this episode. I am your host Trent Dyrsmid. Thank you

very much for being a listener. If you have not yet visited my

blog you can get to it at brightideas.co. I look forward to

seeing you there. Make sure you become a subscriber so you never

miss another episode. I look forward to seeing you in another

episode soon. Take care.

About Derek Coburn

DerekCDerek is the Co-founder and CEO of cadre, an un-networking community for successful professionals in Washington, DC, a partner with Washington Financial Group (a wealth management firm) and author of the soon-to-be-released book, Networking Is NOT Working.

Derek is married to Melanie (the other co-founder of cadre) and has two boys and a pitbull mix.

You can reach out to Derek via Twitter (https://twitter.com/cadredc) or visit his website at www.derekcoburn.com.

Digital Marketing Strategy: Meny Hoffman on How He Built a Highly Profitable Marketing & Business Service Agency

If you want to learn marketing from someone who knows his stuff, you could do worse than to talk with Meny Hoffman, CEO of Ptex Group, a growing marketing agency with 27 employees.

Unlike many marketing agencies that haven’t reached the size of Ptex Group, Meny’s company has multiple divisions. Ptex supports their clients with everything from strategic planning and branding; to specific design, print and web development work. They even have an in-house call center that can answer phones on behalf of their clients.

Another unique offering from Ptex Group is their “Let’s Talk Buisness” conference, a one day live event that sold out of seats at 650 attendees.

There are a lot more goodies in this interview. When you listen, you’ll hear Meny and I talk about:

  • An overview of his lead generation strategy
  • How to generate leads beyond referrals
  • The details of the compensation plan for his sales reps
  • An overview of a marketing funnel, and why it’s so important to focus on the human touch
  • An overview of a ‘Project Awarded’ campaign
  • Why he has a call center division
  • An overview of their business conference, including how they generated sponsorship revenue

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Listen Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

About Meny Hoffman

11774510-meny-hoffmanMeny Hoffman is the CEO of Ptex Group, an Inc. 500/5000-ranked marketing and business services firm headquartered in Brooklyn, NY. A longtime entrepreneur, he specializes in creating strategic marketing solutions and business-boosting tactics to help small businesses achieve higher levels of success.

To learn more, follow Meny Hoffman on Twitter or email him at meny.hoffman@ptexgroup.com.

 

Digital Marketing Strategy: How Janette Gleason Used Infusionsoft to Triple Revenue and Cut Her Marketing Budget by 90%

Would you like to discover how to triple your sales, cut your marketing spending by 90% and work fewer hours – all at the same time?

Of course you would!

To discover how to one entrepreneur has done exactly that, I interview Janette Gleason in this episode of the Bright Ideas podcast.

When you listen to this interview, you will hear Janette and I discuss:

  • how they nearly went out of business before finally getting their marketing systems on track
  • what they changed with their marketing
  • how automation using Infusionsoft plays a large role
  • her 12 stage sales pipeline
  • and so much more…

More About This Episode

The Bright Ideas podcast is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to discover how to use online marketing and sales automation tactics to massively grow their business.

It’s designed to help marketing agencies and small business owners discover which online marketing strategies are working most effectively today – all from the mouths of expert entrepreneurs who are already making it big.

Watch Now

Leave some feedback:

Connect with Trent Dyrsmid:

Transcript

Trent

Dyrsmid: Hi there, and thank you so much for joining me for this

episode of the Bright Ideas podcast. I’m your host, Trent Dyrsmid, and this

is the podcast for business owners and marketers who want to learn how to

use marketing automation and sales automation tactics to massively boost

their business.On the show with me today is a woman by the name of Janette Gleason, and

her and her husband own a small tax and accounting firm. Now, a couple of

years ago they were spending about $15,000.00 a month on marketing, and

they nearly went bankrupt. Then, thanks to deploying a new piece of

software, called Infusionsoft, which has helped them greatly with their

marketing, not only were they able to cut that marketing budget by 90%, but

they were able to triple their revenue in the process, work less and get

more dinners at home together.If you’re a small business owner, and you’re struggling with marketing, and

you’re looking for some inspiration as well as some specific tactics and

tools you can use to massively boost your business, this is an episode that

you do not want to miss.Please join me in welcoming Janette to the show.Janette, thank you so much for coming on to do this interview with me and

talk about how you are using Infusionsoft to make your business so much

more successful. I really appreciate you making the time to be on the show

with me.Janette

Gleason: You’re welcome. Thank you for having me.Trent: For the audience who doesn’t know who you are, let’s

first of all give you an opportunity to just talk real quickly about what

your business is, and then we’re going to talk at length about how using

Infusionsoft has really helped you move the business forward.Janette: Okay. My husband and I own a financial planning firm in

Surprise, Arizona, and we our target clients are retirees, people who are

50 and older, and we do their financial planning, retirement planning,

income planning, and we also offer tax preparation services.Trent: Okay. In your space, in your area, is there a lot of

competition?Janette: Oh, yes.Trent: Plenty.Janette: My husband’s name is Joe, and we joke how we’re kind of like

the Starbuck’s. There’s a financial planner on every corner.Trent: If you had to guess, how well do you think your firm is

doing relative to that all the other “Starbuck’s” that are on the block?

Are you guys in the middle?Janette: Yes, I think we’re doing really well. We’ve really worked very

hard on building a good reputation. Always treating our clients with

respect and always doing what’s best for them and not what’s going to

always make us the most money, but what’s best for them and their

retirement. I think that reputation has served us well, and we get a lot of

referrals, and we stand out from the crowd that way.Trent: Okay, so you’re doing better than average?Janette: Yes.Trent: All right. You started using, and by the way I’ve gone

outside, and I don’t know if you can hear it or not, because if you can I

might have to reschedule this, but there’s a leaf blower and the

landscapers going right now, and for me it’s noisy as heck. Can you hear it

on your end?Janette: No, I can’t.Trent: All right, so that means none of the audience can hear it

either, so we’ll keep going.[laughter]Janette: Okay.Trent: You started using Infusionsoft in 2008. When we talked

before we went on the air, the first two years you weren’t exactly using it

“properly”.Janette: No, we weren’t.Trent: I want you to talk a little bit about that, because maybe

there are some people listening to this who are using Infusionsoft, and

they might be using it like you were using it before.Janette: Okay, yes. When we first got Infusionsoft, we were using it

basically as a glorified Roll-A-Dex; a place just to keep all the

information about our prospects and clients. We were using it for the

calendar feature and also as an email blast machine. Anytime we had a

holiday greeting or an event coming up, we would just send that email out

and the same email to everybody on our list. We thought our message was so

important that everybody wanted to hear everything that we had to say.Trent: Okay, and so for the people who don’t know what

Infusionsoft is, maybe you could just very quickly explain what it is,

because we both use it, and we both love it . . .Janette: Right.Trent: . . . but before I heard of it, you know, I didn’t know

what it was.Janette: Yes, well it’s the all-in-one sales and marketing software for

small businesses. To me there are three feature modules of Infusionsoft.

It’s the CRM module . . .Trent: What’s that? What does CRM stand for?

Janette: CRM stands for client relationship management.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: It’s a place for us to just keep information data about our

prospects and our clients. We know their names, addresses, email address,

phone numbers and notes anytime anybody comes in. We have records of their

appointments, all the emails that we’ve sent to them, and so it’s a place

for us to just keep a history of our interactions with our prospects and

clients.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: The second part of Infusionsoft is the marketing module, and

it’s not just email marketing. We don’t only have the ability to send

emails. We can do voice broadcasts and we can send letters, so we can use

it as a multimedia marketing tool.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: Then the third part of Infusionsoft is e-commerce. Typically

for the typical Infusionsoft user, the e-commerce is more for an internet

markets, or somebody who has a product to sell; a book or a widget, what

have you. We’ve actually adapted that module to be able to, one, collect

invoices and collect payments for the tax preparation that we do, but also

to track the commissions that my husband makes.

The clients don’t pay him directly for his financial services, the

financial institutions do, so we’ve been able to use it to track the return

on our investment on the marketing that we’re doing, and see the lifetime

value of our clients and see which marketing methods are working and which

aren’t.

Trent: Ah, that’s very, very important.

Janette: That’s it in a nutshell.

Trent: All right, so in 2008 you were using a Ferrari to take

the trash to the curb, we’ll say.

Janette: Exactly.

Trent: Then in 2011 you became one of Infusionsoft’s Ultimate

Marketer of the Year and 2011 finalists.

Janette: Yes.

Trent: There’s kind of a big gap between not having a clue what

this thing will do to really, really killing it, which is one of the

reasons, the primary reason, why I asked you to be a guest on my show.

Let’s start going through, well actually, let’s kind of get to the

conclusion. Now that you’re using it really well, how important is it in

the growth of your business? How tightly round into that marketing, lead

attraction, client acquisition . . .

Janette: Right, it’s the hub of everything we do. I tell people that I

don’t know how our business would survive without Infusionsoft at this

point. We’ve been able to centralize everything in our marketing, our

office procedures and systems, the sale process, our billing, everything is

in Infusionsoft.

It’s really an integral part of our business, and we were really struggling

a few years ago and didn’t know from day to day whether or not our doors

were going to stay open. We had Infusionsoft at the time. This was the time

we weren’t really using it correctly, and when the bills would come in,

we’d have our bills, and say, “What are we going to pay? We have this much

money,” and Infusionsoft was always number one on our list, because we knew

without it we would be done, and we’d have to close up shop.

Trent: Okay, wait a minute, I want to go back. In 2008, I don’t

know if you’re comfortable discussing revenue numbers that your firm does,

if not we can go about this a different way. Do you want to talk about

specific numbers at all, or should we just talk about percentage change?

Janette: Well, with the seminar marketing, I can tell you the marketing

cost was astronomical for us.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: We were spending $15,000.00 a month on direct mail, on hosting

these workshops, and in the beginning of 2008 we actually had two months in

a row where we were spending this amount of money having to use the line of

credit on our home and using credit cards to pay for this, because everyone

says marketing always pays.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: We kept doing this. We were kind of that one-trick pony that

used that one form of marketing, and for two months in a row it failed us.

That got us thinking that we need to market in a different way, and we need

to find software and companies that can support us in marketing in a

different way and give us different ideas.

In that year it was really tough, but it actually ended up being our best

year. We started doing some basic email marketing, and this was even before

Infusionsoft, and had the best summer that we ever had.

Then, in 2009, the economy tanked, and things went really south for us. We

just couldn’t afford paying lots and lots on marketing anymore. We went

from bringing in maybe $400,000 of revenue, down, cut in half.

Trent: Wow.

Janette: My husband’s commissions were cut in half. Our marketing

dollars were still increasing. Our rent for our office was increasing. The

cost of living goes up, but what we were bringing in was going down.

Trent: Okay, so that’s a pretty tough time. My very first

career, as I may have mentioned to you, was in your space, so I do

understand your business well, and $200,000 gross commissions coming in is

not enough to pay anywhere to all the bills.

Janette: No.

Trent: You were bordering on going out of business. You were

probably losing money at that point in time would be my guess.

Janette: Yes, we worked for free for a couple years. For nothing.

Trent: Yes.

[laughter]

Trent: What you’re saying is because you learned how to use

Infusionsoft – hello person in the background.

[laughter]

Janette: That’s Joe on his way to the office.

Trent: Okay. You learned how to use Infusionsoft, and now you’re

doing, and again I know what the number is, and you can say it if you want

to say it or not, but it’s a lot bigger than the $200,000 number.

Janette: Yes, definitely. In the high six-figures and really, onwards

and upwards.

Trent: Yes. All right, so hopefully for the listeners, if you’re

wondering at this point, “Why am I listening to this interview?” that’s why

I ask those questions, because I want people to understand that you’ve had

a profound change in your business as a result of your marketing practices.

I don’t imagine you’re doing those, well, I know you’re not because you

told me before, $15,000.00 a month seminars.

Janette: Yes. No.

Trent: You’re not doing those things anymore. Are you still

spending $15,000 a month? Now, your revenue obviously is a lot higher so

I’m sure you can afford to . . .

Janette: Right. No, the range we spend on marketing per month is

between $500.00 and maybe $2,000 a month on marketing.

Trent: Wow.

Janette: Advertising, sending out direct mail pieces. We’re much

happier with that.

Trent: That’s phenomenal.

Janette: Yes, a lot less stress.

Trent: From $15,000 down to $,1500, let’s call it, on average,

and yet your revenue is over three times what it used to be.

Janette: Yes.

Trent: Now, the economy, the markets, the stock markets, have

gone up and things are a little better, and I’m sure that doesn’t hurt your

cause, but still, I was in that business long enough to know that even if

the market is going up it doesn’t mean all these people are suddenly

running to your door, saying here take my money. It just doesn’t work that

way.

Janette: Right. No, and right now they’re very gun shy because people

are really frozen right now with wanting to make financial changes.

Trent: I’ll bet.

Janette: We really have to focus on that trust-based marketing and get

people to trust us. Again, that’s where our reputation comes in, and the

type of marketing that we’re doing is more educational for our existing

database and our new prospects.

Trent: Okay. All right, here’s what’s coming up next in this

interview. We are going to talk about Janette’s sales funnel, we’ll call

it, the ‘life cycle of a lead’, and we’re going to talk about, as much as

time permits, what she’s doing to stimulate referrals.

Without me yapping too much, let’s just dive right into that. Let’s talk

about the life cycle of a lead. Describe what you do who don’t know who you

are or have somehow interacted with you to becoming a client, what happens

first?

Janette: Okay. When somebody shows interest in working with us . . . do

you want me to get even before that?

Trent: Yes, because I’m going well how do they even know you

exist?

Janette: Right. Our lead attraction really comes from this tax base,

this base of tax clients we’ve built.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: Last year we did taxes for over 800 people, couples, in the

area. During that time, which used to be a lost leader for us, we used to

charge $49.00 per tax return as a way to get people in. Two years ago we

nearly doubled the price of our tax preparation, and now we’re up to $99.00

for the base price. Some extra schedules are additional fees.

In that process, when they come in, we have them filling out

questionnaires, doing some intakes, and we’re getting lots of information

about them. We legally can’t get it from their tax return. They have to

give that. We can’t use their tax return as a way to market ethically.

By giving them intake questionnaires and doing surveys after tax season,

we’re able to gather a lot of data from them. They give it to us

voluntarily, and we’re asking things about them, such as what worries you?

What concerns you about your retirement? Are you worried about outliving

your assets? Are you worried about paying for long-term care expenses in

the future? By asking these questions we’re finding out those

psychographics, what makes people purchase and what we should be focusing

on for our marketing.

A lot of people are concerned in retirement about having enough income that

will last them throughout their retirement and being able to leave a legacy

to their loved ones. A lot of our marketing, then, focuses on that

information.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: We get them in as a lead for the tax preparation. We’re able

to capture their information, get to know them better through, again, those

surveys and questionnaires and just our interactions with them. After that

we do a lot of educating. When tax season is over and their taxes are

completed, we send out a whole sequence of emails that talk about tax

planning for their retirement.

From those emails we have links to articles and just educating them in the

same time about what we do, the services we provide and how we can help

them. When they are ready, when they’ve raised their hand that they would

like to come in and meet with Joe for that initial consultation, we put

them into our sales pipeline, which is over 10 stages long. We’ve really

thought about, what are the steps that the ideal person will go through as

they meet with Joe?

First they come in for an initial consultation, then the next stage, and we

have all this in Infusionsoft, we use the opportunity module to keep track

of this. After we have a new opportunity, our job then is to call and

schedule that initial consultation. During that initial consultation, we’re

gathering lots of information about them and getting that information into

Infusionsoft.

Then, after that appointment, my husband does his research and planning and

puts together that financial plan for them in his recommendations. Then

after that we get them to come back in for what we call a second

appointment, or a recommendations meeting, where he presents a plan to

them. After that, they give us a thumbs-up or a thumbs-down, or the “I need

to think about it.”

We have tracks for people who say no, we have a track for people who say

yes, I’ll go ahead with this plan, and we also the a track for people who

are the “I need to think about it” we like to call them, the ‘undecided’s’.

Trent: What are the percentages when someone comes in for that

second presentation to receive the plan, what percent say ‘yes’, what

percent say ‘no’ and what percent say ‘I want to think it over’?

Janette: We have a really high percentage that say “yes”. I don’t know

the exact numbers. Joe, my husband, could tell you that better, but I would

say the people who come in and have gone through this process, we probably

have more than 50% chance, perhaps more than 75% chance of them becoming

our client. Those undecideds happen may 3. . .

Trent: A 5%?

Janette: Yes. Some people just say, “No, this is not for me,” and we

always give them that we want to make sure this is a good fit, that you’re

a good fit for us as a client and we’re a good fit for you as your

financial planner, but we have a whole sequence of not only emails, but

cards that we send.

We use send-out cards, and we’ve integrated that with Infusionsoft to be

able to send them a card with a little bag of maybe coffee grounds, and we

can say, “We know you want to think it over. Here, brew a cup of coffee,

and we’ll be here when you’re ready.”

Trent: Okay.

Janette: Then we continue on with educational emails and being in touch

with them that way.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: Go one.

Trent: I want to back up a little bit. This life cycle is, you

get a tax lead, they answer these questionnaires, you learn about them,

they start receiving emails, there’s a 10-step pipeline, they have an

initial consultation.

Joe does the research, they have a second meeting where the information is

presenting, and a large portion of the people say yes and become clients.

Let’s back up a little bit.

Where does Infusionsoft, and maybe you can describe how Infusionsoft is

used throughout the steps we just described.

Janette: Okay.

Trent: I want people to understand. It’s one thing to do all

this stuff, but it’s a totally different discussion to do it efficiently in

such a way that people don’t fall through the cracks and your labor costs

aren’t going through the roof because there are too many hands touching too

many things, and it’s all manual, and it’s not cohesive.

Janette: Right. Well, the cornerstone of Infusionsoft that helps us

with what we call our pipeline is the opportunity module. It’s the sales

pipeline, and you can identify the sales stages in a linear way. We know

that people can maybe jump over a stage, and they don’t have to always go

into each and every stage. Then we put all this on our dashboard.

When we log into Infusionsoft, we can see our dashboard, and we know these

three people are new opportunities. We need to get on the phone and call

them today. Then we can move them manually, but then all the automation

happens once we move them.

Trent: You move them manually by just changing a tag?

Janette: There’s a way to view the opportunities, and we can look at it

with the inline editor. There’s a way to hover over the stage so we can see

the person’s name, their phone number, what stage they’re in, and there’s a

little pencil that appears when you hover over it.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: You just hover over, it pulls up a drop-down menu, and we just

move them to the next stage, hit save, and then all the magic happens. All

the sequences we’ve built behind that happen behind the scenes.

Trent: Okay. Let’s talk a little bit about that magic, because I

know this is one of the areas where, for me, because my business is all on

line. I’m so fascinated because based upon the links people click, I can

alter the path they go down through the sales funnel. Let’s talk a little

bit about that for you. What happens in this magic?

Janette: When somebody goes into a stage, and we’ve built all this in

with the new campaign builder.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: We have all the stages going as our goal method. When you pick

a goal, you have to choose the goal method, and the goal method that we

choose is the opportunity stage movement.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: When I built this in Infusionsoft, that’s the goal method

maybe that we’re going into the research and planning stage. Then what

happens is we apply a note template to their record, and that’s one of the

first steps in this sequence. We tag them so we know that they’re in this

stage, and then we can maybe send them an email saying, “Thank you for

coming to meet with us.”

Or, have it come from Joe saying, “I’m really glad you were able to share

your retirement goals with me. I’m going to be working hard on putting

together a plan for you, and we’ll be in touch to schedule your next

appointment.” That’s kind of the magic in that particular stage that would

happen.

Trent: This is all, and I just want to make sure people

understand, it’s not like you’re sitting down and typing out this email.

You created it one time, but all this stuff happens on auto-pilot.

Janette: Yes. We created it once.

Trent: When you move them from one stage to the next, everything

else you just described after that, it just happens. Correct?

Janette: Exactly.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: We create it once, and then, exactly, it just happens behind

the scenes.

Trent: Correct, correct, so it’s a very consistent process is

what I’m really trying to drive towards. I think what a lot of, I know I

struggled with in my early years as an entrepreneur, is we’re so busy

chopping down trees, we don’t take time to come up with a plan to

effectively chop down trees.

Janette: Exactly.

Trent: Systems to chop down trees with the least amount of labor

because you’re just chop, chop, chop, chop, chop.

Janette: Right.

Trent: I’m hoping that people are getting from hearing this

interview an understanding that Infusionsoft can help them become so much

more efficient and turn the onboarding of a client, or the conversion of a

prospect to a client, into a very, very consistent process.

Janette: Right. Everybody who comes in or is indicating interest to

meet with Joe, everybody goes through the same steps and the same process.

It’s systematized, and that helps our office stay efficient and allows us

to really communicate in a very professional way to our customers. Then we

have less people falling through the cracks.

Before we had this system, people would say, you know in Arizona in the

summer it gets really hot – so a lot of our retirees, they leave. They go

north, they go back home, and they’re out of here. They might say in May,

“You know we’re interested, but we’re going back home, and we’ll be back in

November. Give us a call then.”

Maybe write it on a little post-it note and put it up, and it gets lost. We

would forget about that person. By the time they came back, we saw them the

next year to get their taxes done, and they had rolled that money with

somebody else. That really was an eye opening to us. We had a case where

somebody rolled $1 million with another firm.

Trent: Ooooh.

Janette: That lost revenue hurt. We could have really used that money

at that time. We used to get mad at those people and say, “Well why did you

do that?” and, “You’ve got the nerve to come back?”

Trent: It’s not their fault.

Janette: Yes, then we said, “It’s our fault. We weren’t keeping top-of-

mind awareness”, and we needed to figure out a way to do that.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: Now with this system, those people are falling through the

cracks anymore.

Trent: Okay. How’re we doing for time? We’re doing pretty good.

Let’s now shift into, because obviously we don’t have enough time on this

call to go into absolutely granulated details of ‘here’s how you do this

and do that and do the other thing’.

There’s an army of Infusionsoft consultants out there that will help people

do that. Infusionsoft has truckloads of training videos and a great support

team that will help you to figure all that stuff out.

Janette: Yes, they do.

Trent: That’s not the purpose of this interview. Let’s now talk

about when someone becomes a client, and I know from experience that when

you get a client, you don’t get all their money at the get-go. They have

money all over the place.

Janette: No.

Trent: You have a lot of selling left to do to collect all that

money? You may never get it all, but of course it’s the goal.

Janette: Right.

Trent: How are you guys using Infusionsoft to make sure a client

remains a client, clients refer other clients and clients bring you all

their money? Those are three very important steps, so let’s talk about

those.

Janette: Yes. That’s really one of the most important things to us,

rolling out the red carpet to our new clients. Letting them know they’re

important to us, we value them, we know them by name, we know about their

interests, their families, and we’re able to use that using Infusionsoft.

One of the first things we do when they become a client, actually even

before that, the whole rollover, or the bringing the money over to our firm

has even completed, we welcome them as a client because this processing

stage can sometimes take six weeks to two months.

Trent: Weeks.

Janette: We’ve had it where people have changed their mind during that

time. It’s taking too long. Once that paperwork is done and we submit it,

we welcome them to our family of clients. We send them a gift. We send them

a card with a box of brownies.

We begin giving them our monthly newsletter that’s tailored for just our

clients. They really feel as part of our family. We do annual events. Last

January we held a Gold Rush Party. We started offering precious metals as

part of one of the services that we provide. We thought we’d blow this out

and let everybody know that we’re doing this by having a party.

We call it our ‘Gold Rush’, and we had everybody come out to a local

restaurant. We had line dancing instructors there. We had a good time. Joe

just gave a brief introduction and speech about what the changes are, and

all our clients were able to bring their friends. We asked them and said,

“We’d like for you to come to this event. The cost of admission is to bring

a friend with you.”

Trent: Perfect.

Janette: We had over 100 people come and half of them were brand new

leads for us, and we were able to get many of their friends to become

clients as well. We used Infusionsoft to send out emails and invitations to

track who had registered for the event and then a follow-up afterwards as

well to our clients and communicate differently to their guests that came

as well.

Trent: Fantastic. Do you happen to know of the 50 guests how

many have become clients?

Janette: I don’t know off the top of my head. I know we got one very

large client out of that event that more than paid for it. She actually

came back this week and is ready to invest more money with our firm.

Trent: Terrific.

Janette: Yes. You know, making it fun. Financial planning is not always

something you can tell your friends about.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: People are a little skittish about doing that. Being able to

make it fun, and offer coffee talk, come on over, we’re having an open

house. Bring your friends, and let’s just make this a fun and

nonthreatening way to get together and meet them.

Trent: I really want to keep tying in how Infusionsoft helps you

to streamline all this, is that a point you can speak to? Is there a bit

more detail you can give on what you just talked about and how Infusionsoft

supported that?

Janette: Definitely just keeping in communication and being able to

invite people to these events. Once that event is over, we can email them.

Sometimes at our events we have a sheet of paper that our guests can fill

out.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: What are you interested in? They can check boxes. Based off

what they check, we follow-up with them in a different way.

Trent: Okay.

Janette: If they’re interested in tax preparation, well then we tag

them and we know next year we’re going to market to them when it’s time to

schedule our tax appointments. If they’d like to come in and meet with Joe

for a financial planning appointment, we can apply a note template and get

that ball moving, get them in as a new opportunity right into our sales

pipeline.

Trent: Okay, you said a phrase there that I know what you meant,

when you say you tag someone, I just want people to know what that is.

Infusionsoft at its heart is a database, and these tags are like sticking a

sticky note to someone to say, “This person is interested in blue, and this

person is interested in red, and this person is interested in red and

blue.”

Janette: Exactly.

Trent: Infusionsoft’s automation oftentimes is very, very

tightly related to these tags, so when tags are applied, Infusionsoft can

then fire off a sequence of emails or actions or any number of things. I

just wanted people to understand that the tagging is not just like sticking

some little paper note on their file or typing something in.

Janette: This feature helps give our database, it helps it to live and

breathe. We can say, “Okay, I want to find somebody who’s this age, who has

this much in assets, who’s worried about this”, and I can pull up a list.

It might not be 1,000 people, but maybe it’s only 50, but I want to target

those 50 people and spend my marketing dollars on them because they’re much

more likely to respond to those marketing pieces we’re sending to them.

It’s laser focused.

Trent: That is a perfect segue into what I put a star beside in

list segmentation. At the beginning in 2008 you said you were using

Infusionsoft as an email broadcaster because you thought everybody would be

interested in everything you were saying, which is not the case.

Janette: Right. No people were opting out and we’d get spam complaints.

Trent: Correct.

Janette: When you spend all this money to build up a database, the last

thing you want them to do is opt out.

Trent: Correct. With Infusionsoft you can actually send them an

email, and it drives them to a form, and it says tell me what you’re

interested in, and they can fill in the little checkmarks and the dots, or

whatever, hit submit, and then Infusionsoft will apply those tags. You can

really allow your customers to self segment themselves.

Janette: Definitely.

Trent: The more information you collect, and I know that

Germaine Gregs with “Hear and Play” is the czar of tagging . . .

Janette: Yes.

Trent: My point is, the more tagging that you do, and I think he

uses like 9,000 tags or some ridiculous number like that, the more you can

laser target your list.

Janette: Yes.

Trent: I hope the people understand that if your message is

extremely relevant to your audience because you’re able to target so well,

what does that do for your conversion rate?

Janette: Oh, it goes through the roof.

Trent: Absolutely.

Janette: During the past year or so, we’ve really been collecting a lot

of data about our tax clients. Now we know, again, who has maybe more than

$250,000 in investible assets and who needs social security planning. Who’s

worried about social security? Now, when we have an idea to do a marketing

campaign of direct mail or email, a combination of the two, we’re able to

select just those people and send it just to them.

They’re not getting something in the mail, “Oh, why are they sending me

this about social security? It doesn’t apply to me.” It definitely speaks

to them, and we’ve been doing some lumpy mail and creative marketing

pieces, and it’s been a lot of fun, and our database has really been

responding well to that. That’s because we’ve been able to collect that

information, tag them, and segment our database. [phone rings] Sorry about

that.

Trent: That’s okay. Let’s go back to before you go so good at

using Infusionsoft, and I kind of think I know what the answer to this is,

how much easier is your business to run now than it used to be and how much

less stressful is your business now than it used to be?

Janette: Oh, a lot less stress, and we’ve systematized so much that in

the years prior, during tax season, I never saw my husband. I never got to

see him. He was working. He got to the office before I even woke up, and

came home super late at night.

This last year we were able to have dinner together as a family most

nights. There might have been a night or two he had to stay late. One day

he came home, towards the beginning of tax season, and he said, “You know,

we’ve really got this systematized so much that I had some time in my

office today where I was looking around thinking, I don’t have anything to

do!”

[laughter]

Janette: That, to me, was so gratifying. He’s less stressed and I work

from home, so I’m not there in the craziness of tax season, but to be able

to have him come home and have those family dinners and not lose him for

four months out of the year has tremendously increased our happiness as a

family. Words can’t even express that.

Trent: Yes. I’m just kind of choking up as I’m hearing that

right now.

Janette: Yes.

Trent: I don’t know what better testament, and I know this is

sounding like a huge Infusionsoft commercial, but I’m a passionate user of

  1. It’s a monstrous part of my business, as it obviously is for yours. As

business people we’re always like how can I grow my business and make more

money.

I don’t know that so often that “it’s making us happier”, and “we’re

getting more dinners together” finds its way into the discussion, but I’m

sure glad that you brought that up.

I’m sure there are some people listening to this, and I know I’m in that

camp, that we think that’s pretty darn important stuff.

Janette: Yes, definitely. The reason we wanted to be small business

owners was for freedom.

Trent: Yes.

Janette: For lifestyle, and then you get in the thick of it, and it

consumes you. You can’t go away for the weekend. You can’t go away for a

week because everything would fall apart. Now, having systems in place, we

know everything is still running even though we’re not there, and we’re

still nurturing our leads even though we’re not there on the phone with

them and having to remember all of these things. Sleeping better at night

and having more fun is definitely a big plus.

Trent: Absolutely. Did you guys ever read the book “E Myth” by

George Gerber?

Janette: Yes.

Trent: Is that kind of what got all this started for you?

Janette: Yes, more so for my husband than for me. I went to college,

and I became a teacher, so I was an elementary school teacher, and that was

my mindset. You get up, you work hard, and it was very stressful for me

once we started having a family that I couldn’t handle everything. I

couldn’t be a teacher and a good mom and a good wife. I gave up my career

while we had little ones.

Now being an entrepreneur allows me to still be mom, but also be able to

have my career and support my husband in his small business. My husband was

really good and showing me there’s a different way. He read the “E Myth”

book a long time ago.

Trent: Okay. For those of you who haven’t read it, if you’re an

entrepreneur listening to this, and you’re chopping down trees all day long

every day . . .

Janette: A couple of weeks ago, I had the absolute pleasure of getting

to meet Michael Gerber at an event. He was the keynote speaker, and I

presented on a panel that day. I got to meet him and sit next to him, and

that was such a treat for me.

Trent: Yes, I’ll bet. I think I called him George, didn’t I? My

apologies.

Janette: I think so. Yes, Michael.

[laughter]

Trent: It’s a long time ago that I read it, but it had a

profound impact on me, as well, when I was running my last technology

company. I was ‘Hammered Home’, systems operation manuals, documented

procedures, and it really does set you free. I’ll just finish on this.

If you’re running a business, and you’re busy doing all this stuff

yourself, and you think I don’t have time to create that, I would encourage

you to go ahead and get his book and read it, and he may change your

opinion.

Janette: It changes everything.

Trent: It does. Okay, we’ll wrap it up here Janette. Thank you

so much for making some time. . .

Janette: You’re welcome. Thank you for having me.

Trent: . . . to share what’s working for you in your business.

For those of you who are Bright Ideas members who are listening to this,

whether you’re a premium member or not, thank you very much for being a

member. Without you I don’t have a business.

For those of you who are premium members, plenty more master classes are

coming your way so. Thanks very much everybody. We’ll talk to you again

soon.

All right, if you want to get the show notes for today’s episode, all you

need to do is go to brightideas.co/11. The other thing I wanted to mention

to you is if you go to brightideas.co/massivetraffic, you’re going to get

access to my Massive Traffic Toolkit.

What’s that all about? All the smartest traffic generation experts that

I’ve interviewed here on Bright Ideas have contributed to the Massive

Traffic Toolkit. The really great thing about this tool kit is all the

strategies that they have proven to work are easy to replicate, and you

don’t have to be some SEO ninja guru to do it.

To get free access to that, just head over to

brightideas.co/massivetraffic.

I want to finish off and ask you a small favor. If you would go to iTunes

and give the show a five-star rating and leave some feedback, that would be

a really huge favor. It helps get the show out in front of more eyeballs,

and the more people that become aware of it the more people we can help

here at Bright Ideas.

Thanks very much for tuning into this episode. I’m your host, Trent

Dyrsmid, and we’ll see you in the next episode.

Here are some of the things you’ll discover in this episode:

How to Use Infusionsoft to Create a Laser Targeted Marketing Campaign that Cuts Down Marketing Costs by 90% while Tripling Revenue

An old adage that most entrepreneurs adhere to states that “Marketing always pays.” This is an oversimplification of how things really are. When entrepreneurs don’t know how to market their businesses, products and services efficiently, they tend to waste a lot of time, energy and financial resources that don’t quite increase revenue. Watch the episode to hear Janette talk about how she and her husband Joe cut their marketing budget down by a whopping 90% while tripling their revenue, all with the help of Infusionsoft.

Of course, there are always going to be some pitfalls. Janette and Joe experienced many during their first couple of years in business as they worked for free just to make ends meet. In 2008, they were already using Infusionsoft but they were not using it properly, to say the least. Janette recalls that in the beginning, they were using Infusionsoft as a glorified Rolodex. Janette took it upon herself to discover and take advantages of the many features of the software, and it was only three years later that she became a finalist of the Infusionsoft Ultimate Marketer Award. That’s a pretty impressive achievement.

Learn what Janette’s secret is and how she used the features and the capabilities of Infusionsoft to pull this off.

With the use of the automated systems that they have developed for their marketing processes, Janette and Joe brought their company to new heights. Back in 2008, they really didn’t know if they were going to stay in business long. The price of their old direct marketing strategy was already about $15,000 and growing but their revenue was shrinking. And, Joe’s commission had already been cut in half. This was about the time that they decided

Automated systems helped slash Janette’s marketing budget.

Image source: 123rf.com

that they needed to do things differently. They discovered email marketing and the full potential of Infusionsoft to solve their marketing dilemma.

With the automated system in place, they were able to slash their marketing costs from a staggering $15,000 to a very manageable $1,500. During the process, they not only cut down their marketing spending, they also tripled their revenue.

Janette describes her strategy in detail, and it’s clearly something that can be replicated by others.

Listen to this interview to learn how you too can cut down on marketing time and money.

Janette and Joe’s company, the Gleason Tax Advisory Group, now enjoys very healthy revenues from $200,000 up to the high 6 figure range.  Janette credits their strategically targeted marketing. Listen to the show to discover her formula for an efficient and targeted marketing campaign.

She also reveals the life cycle of a lead within their financial consulting firm. She details how their firm treats their clients to build trust. Trust is the real key to success in this business, and the success of their business is proof that they are well trusted and even beloved by their clientele. Learn the little things that they do to add something special to their marketing campaign.

Listen to the show to discover how Janette and Joe get new clients and how they keep them loyal over time.

Janette details how they created the process that systematized all of their marketing. This system runs in autopilot, nurturing leads and communicating with clients on a consistent basis. This allows their company to stay in touch with leads and opportunities that would otherwise fall

Unique marketing, like coffee and brownies, made Janette and Joe memorable to their customers. Image source: 123rf.com

through the cracks. If you are having a hard time keeping in touch with your leads, you’ll want to hear all the goods on creating a targeted, personal marketing system with far less time and effort.

Your clientele need to be treated well in order for them to want to continue to give you business. The Gleasons have perfected this with their uniquely effective marketing and referral methods. A box of brownies, a packet of ground coffee and a referral dinner party are all things that the Gleasons have incorporated in their marketing campaign, to excellent effect.

Listen as Janette explains how they managed to incorporate these clever and highly effective marketing strategies to boost their relationships with current clients and generate new clients in the process.

Janette’s targeted marketing is key to her success.

Image source: 123rf.com

Classifying and segmenting your clientele is a crucial step to creating the best targeted marketing that will work wonders for your business. Before you can tag and segment your customers, you first need to solicit information from them. Listen as Janette describes her own method of collecting freely-given information from her clients. She then explains the tagging and segmenting procedures that help create a laser-targeted marketing campaign. In the end, Janette is clear that their products and services that are offered to the right people.

If you want to learn more about target marketing to your current clients, you’ll want to hear Janette’s experiences.

About Janette Gleason

Janette went to Augustana College and majored in Elementary Education and Spanish. She received the Sam’s Club “Teacher of the Year Award” and taught education professionals how to use technology in their classrooms. Janette stepped back from her teaching career to raise her children and to help her husband build his financial planning and tax preparation firm, where she is Janette-Gleason-236x300currently the Director of Marketing.

Janette had the honor of being a finalist in Infusionsoft’s Ultimate Marketer Contest 2011. Janette continues to share her success story by speaking at various events such as Infusionsoft’s Success Course, training events/webinars for service professionals, and national marketing conferences.

Before their new marketing system with Infusionsoft, Janette rarely saw her family because she and her husband Joe were just too busy with work. In her free time, she loves to scrapbook, sew, travel with her Joe, and spend time with their three young children.