Katelyn Bourgoin - Stop Selling Courses & Start Selling These
Resumo
TLDRThe video features a conversation with Caitlin Burgoyne, who discusses marketing strategies aimed at being less wrong over time by quickly identifying what works through customer insights. Caitlin emphasizes the importance of the 'jobs to be done' framework which allows understanding of the core reasons behind customer purchases. She shares her transition from running a service-based business to offering educational content for marketers. Caitlin also touches on effective marketing and product development methodologies, the significance of understanding customer motives, and strategies for audience engagement, such as leveraging viral content. Her insights into business model shifts reflect a focus on scaling through educational offerings and understanding customer psychology, which can be applied to both traditional businesses and modern content creators.
Conclusões
- 🚀 Focus on 'being less wrong faster' to optimize marketing strategies.
- 👥 Apply the 'jobs to be done' framework to understand customer needs.
- 🗣️ Use one-on-one interviews to gather deep customer insights.
- 📈 Transition business models from service to educational content.
- 💡 Highlight customer motivations over traditional demographics.
- 🎯 Make educational content actionable rather than lengthy.
- 📚 Scale learning offerings by focusing on outcomes.
- 📰 Grow newsletters through engaging, viral content.
- 🤝 Strengthen customer relationships by addressing real needs.
- 🌟 Leverage social proof effectively in marketing strategies.
Linha do tempo
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The goal of marketing and business is to focus on being less wrong faster rather than always being right. This involves identifying successful strategies and stopping ineffective ones by gaining insights from customers. Following traditional innovation methods may not be practical for many businesses.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The episode features Caitlin Burgoyne, a creator who has founded successful companies, including an agency, a consulting company, and a professional network venture. She has learned a lot and adopted the customer research philosophy 'jobs to be done', which helps understand why customers buy. This approach is applied to the creator world, traditionally used in software and product industries.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
Caitlin discusses her journey from freelance marketing to running an agency and then transitioning into building Vendive, a business network for women entrepreneurs. Despite initial success indicated by media attention, the company faced challenges in user retention, leading Caitlin to shift focus. She then started Customer Camp to help businesses understand their best customers' needs, using the 'jobs to be done' framework to design effective solutions and marketing strategies.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Reflecting on her mistakes, Caitlin realized the importance of understanding customers' real needs rather than assumptions. Despite successful user acquisition through PR and viral features, Vendive initially misidentified its users' needs, thinking they wanted skill swapping instead of networking opportunities. This insight came too late to save the company, but it informed Caitlin's future approaches.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Caitlin emphasizes the importance of 'jobs to be done', a theory that focuses on understanding the progress customers aim to make and their context, rather than their demographic attributes. This method shapes both product innovation and marketing strategies. She advocates for one-on-one interviews with customers to uncover real motivations, struggles, and priorities, thus crafting more compelling marketing messages.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The challenge for marketers is often in interpreting insights from customer interviews and making them actionable. Caitlin developed the "trigger technique" to simplify extracting and applying the most relevant insights from these interviews. This involves identifying trigger events, jobs to be done, and effective marketing messages. She illustrates this using a Barkbox example, showing how such insights can drive targeted and resonant marketing campaigns.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Jobs to be done analysis helps Barkbox identify its customers' triggers and needs, like new pet owners needing to keep dogs entertained. Such insights could inform targeted marketing strategies, focusing on customer circumstances (e.g., parents with new babies). This approach contrasts with traditional feature-focused marketing, illustrating how understanding customer context leads to more effective communication.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
Caitlin explains how creators building audience-driven businesses can apply jobs to be done. Using her own business, Customer Camp, as an example, she highlights the significance of aligning products and content with customers' real jobs to be done. This includes creating actionable resources like cheat sheets rather than lengthy courses and leveraging newsletters to attract and engage the right audience.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
Caitlin is shifting her business model to better suit marketers' challenges, focusing on delivering insights without requiring formal customer interviews. This approach supports marketers constrained by clients or teams, allowing them to independently gather insights and prove value before seeking buy-in for more comprehensive efforts.
- 00:45:00 - 00:50:00
In transitioning from a service-oriented to a product-oriented business model, Caitlin aims for scalable revenue without increasing headcount. She highlighted the challenges of transforming knowledge-based products into tangible outcomes and emphasized the importance of aligning solutions with customer needs, using practical deliverables like checklists to enhance customer engagement and satisfaction.
- 00:50:00 - 00:59:13
Caitlin scaled her newsletter by leveraging social proof and focusing on valuable, consistent content. Viral threads and recommendations significantly boosted subscriber numbers, underlining the impact of strategic content sharing and community engagement in driving audience growth. She continually seeks ways to enhance organic growth and effectively connect her offers to cater to customer needs seamlessly.
Mapa mental
Perguntas frequentes
What is the main goal of marketing according to the video?
The goal is not always to be right, but to be 'less wrong faster,' allowing rapid adjustments based on customer feedback.
Who is Caitlin Burgoyne?
Caitlin Burgoyne is a creator who has built several companies, including agencies and a venture-backed startup, and focuses on customer research.
What is the 'jobs to be done' framework?
It is a customer research philosophy that focuses on understanding why customers purchase and how to market to them effectively.
How does Caitlin view the importance of traditional marketing attributes?
She believes traditional attributes are less important than understanding customers' goals and circumstances.
What strategy did Caitlin use to grow her newsletter subscribers?
Caitlin utilized viral Twitter threads and leveraged her content to drive traffic to her newsletter.
What change did Caitlin make in her business model?
She transitioned from a service-based model to a more scalable educational content approach.
How can marketers better understand their customers?
By conducting one-on-one interviews to uncover the motivations, challenges, and desires of their customers.
What was a significant growth factor in Caitlin's Twitter following?
Her follower count significantly increased after being recommended in a Twitter thread by Amanda Nat.
What is Caitlin's view on video courses for learning?
She believes that cheat sheets or actionable content are often more effective than lengthy video courses.
How can job-oriented marketing strategies impact business models?
By focusing on the desired outcomes of customers, companies can design better products and marketing strategies that align with customer needs.
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- 00:00:00the goal of marketing and then business
- 00:00:01more broadly it's not always to be right
- 00:00:03but it's to be less wrong faster that's
- 00:00:06really what i think people should be
- 00:00:07aiming for how can we be less wrong
- 00:00:09faster so that we can figure out the
- 00:00:11stuff that is working double down on
- 00:00:13that stuff stop the things that aren't
- 00:00:15working that takes insight from
- 00:00:17customers but if you're trying to do the
- 00:00:19right way what the innovation gurus
- 00:00:21would tell you to do that model doesn't
- 00:00:24work inside of a lot of businesses
- 00:00:29[Music]
- 00:00:34in this episode i talked to caitlin
- 00:00:36burgoyne so caitlyn is a creator uh
- 00:00:39she's built a few different companies so
- 00:00:41she has uh started with an agency that
- 00:00:43got really successful
- 00:00:44she's done a consulting company that
- 00:00:45she'd sold and then she also did a
- 00:00:48professional network company sort of
- 00:00:49like a linkedin for a specific
- 00:00:50demographic um that was a venture-backed
- 00:00:53startup so she's learned a ton over the
- 00:00:55years and really that brought her to a
- 00:00:57customer research philosophy called jobs
- 00:00:59to be done so in this we dive into
- 00:01:02how you should understand like you know
- 00:01:04why your customers buy and how to market
- 00:01:06and sell to them
- 00:01:07through the job speed and framework we
- 00:01:09apply it to the creator world
- 00:01:11it's normally used most in like software
- 00:01:14and more traditional products so the
- 00:01:15creative world is interesting we get
- 00:01:17into business models uh we get into why
- 00:01:19you should be focused on selling like
- 00:01:21checklists and cheat sheets and outcomes
- 00:01:23rather than maybe the more traditional
- 00:01:24video courses and then we also talked
- 00:01:26about how she grew her newsletter to uh
- 00:01:2810 000 subscribers and got to over 50
- 00:01:30000 followers on twitter so it's a fun
- 00:01:32episode let's dive in
- 00:01:34caitlyn welcome to the show
- 00:01:35thanks for having me
- 00:01:37okay so i want to start with uh diving
- 00:01:40into a little bit of what you did in the
- 00:01:42past mainly because it informs so much
- 00:01:44of what you're doing now so could you
- 00:01:46talk about uh the agency that you were
- 00:01:48running and then how that transformed
- 00:01:50into uh running vendive
- 00:01:52sure so in a past life um i started a
- 00:01:58doing you know freelance marketing work
- 00:02:00at 25 grew it into an agency we were
- 00:02:02working with teams like holiday inn and
- 00:02:05target and it was like okay this is fun
- 00:02:07i'm doing all this service based work
- 00:02:09but i want to build a product and market
- 00:02:10it ourselves you know i want to use our
- 00:02:12own skills to build growth for something
- 00:02:14we're building so it's like how hard
- 00:02:16could it be to do a tech company turns
- 00:02:18out very very hard as many of your
- 00:02:21listeners probably know um so we
- 00:02:23launched vendi vindy was a business
- 00:02:25network for women entrepreneurs on the
- 00:02:27outside things looked like they were
- 00:02:28going great you know forbes was calling
- 00:02:30us the next linkedin for women on the
- 00:02:32inside things were not going great um we
- 00:02:35were good at acquiring users and not
- 00:02:37great at figuring out how to get them to
- 00:02:39stay and continue to use the product
- 00:02:41so
- 00:02:42with that in mind when i ended up you
- 00:02:45know making a really hard decision to
- 00:02:47wind down that company i was like what
- 00:02:48am i going to do next what am i going to
- 00:02:50be when i grow up i thought i was going
- 00:02:51to be a startup founder
- 00:02:53and i was lucky because i made this
- 00:02:56amazing network of people who were in
- 00:02:59the startup world in our region and my
- 00:03:02lead vc actually came to me and said hey
- 00:03:03like you guys are really good at
- 00:03:04acquiring users we've got all these
- 00:03:06companies who are really good at
- 00:03:07building products and maybe you can help
- 00:03:09them to acquire some users and we're
- 00:03:11like okay good
- 00:03:12uh so i'd sit down with all of these
- 00:03:14teams and i'd ask them the question that
- 00:03:16we as marketers need to know which is
- 00:03:17like tell me about your customers and it
- 00:03:19was very surprising to me how rarely i
- 00:03:21could get a great answer so it was
- 00:03:24sometimes like really
- 00:03:25um you actually see the like leadership
- 00:03:27team debating like oh you're going after
- 00:03:29this audience but then somebody would
- 00:03:31perk in and go well also this one
- 00:03:33or one time a team member actually told
- 00:03:36me that their target audience was b2b
- 00:03:38companies that sold on the internet with
- 00:03:40anywhere between 10 and 500 employees
- 00:03:48and i love talking to you about this
- 00:03:50because i know that you really
- 00:03:51understand the value of starting with it
- 00:03:54with a niche audience and so i saw that
- 00:03:57this was a big challenge for a lot of
- 00:03:58companies i knew that it was something
- 00:03:59that we had we didn't struggle with
- 00:04:01knowing who our audience was
- 00:04:03we struggled with understanding what
- 00:04:04they wanted so i was like this is
- 00:04:05something i want to dig into and i want
- 00:04:07to focus on and so i launched customer
- 00:04:10camp um initially as you know a
- 00:04:13service-based business my own
- 00:04:14consultancy and then in time just
- 00:04:17learned that what was really needed was
- 00:04:18a lot of education on how to figure out
- 00:04:20who your best customers were and how to
- 00:04:22understand what they wanted and in my
- 00:04:24journey to deliver that i discovered
- 00:04:27jobs to be done which is an innovation
- 00:04:29and growth framework i think we're going
- 00:04:31to talk about a bit and that really was
- 00:04:34the catalyst to
- 00:04:36helping me to figure out how to design
- 00:04:38some really great solutions to help
- 00:04:40people with these problems and helping
- 00:04:42me figure out how to create
- 00:04:44our own internal marketing
- 00:04:46uh assets like our newsletter our blog
- 00:04:50um some other things that we're doing in
- 00:04:52the future all around helping people to
- 00:04:54get the right job to be done so that's
- 00:04:56kind of like a little bit of the
- 00:04:57backstory but if we wouldn't have made
- 00:04:59so many mistakes i don't think i would
- 00:05:00have landed here
- 00:05:02yeah that totally makes sense okay so
- 00:05:05i wanted to dive into jobs to be done
- 00:05:06but before that you said uh we were
- 00:05:08really good at acquiring users and i
- 00:05:10think a lot of people would be like well
- 00:05:11okay hold on you have to dig in on that
- 00:05:13because
- 00:05:14um i i'm curious what what channels
- 00:05:16worked well and then uh you know what
- 00:05:19you learned in the acquisition side
- 00:05:20because a lot of people are struggling
- 00:05:21on the acquisition side yeah absolutely
- 00:05:23so uh my background is in pr so we were
- 00:05:26great at pr you know we were great at
- 00:05:28getting it attention getting press
- 00:05:30coverage and that would lead to lots of
- 00:05:33new users joining and then we had a nice
- 00:05:34little kind of
- 00:05:36virality built into the product when
- 00:05:37you're starting out you know what other
- 00:05:38women need to use this product people
- 00:05:40would invite a few friends so growth was
- 00:05:42fairly
- 00:05:43strong in that way and we started off
- 00:05:45initially with a city by city growth
- 00:05:48model
- 00:05:49because our intention in the beginning
- 00:05:52which ended up shifting was to have a
- 00:05:55kind of like a service exchange part of
- 00:05:57the network and so we started off with a
- 00:05:59city by city and so we get a lot of kind
- 00:06:01of word of mouth within these small
- 00:06:03communities we'd find the facebook
- 00:06:05groups that these people might have been
- 00:06:06hanging out in we find the organizations
- 00:06:08that they might be affiliated with and
- 00:06:10we'd partner with those organizations or
- 00:06:12we'd be active in those groups so really
- 00:06:14it was a lot of
- 00:06:16working to generate word of mouth and
- 00:06:18then building in that kind of viral
- 00:06:21like sign up so that we would get a
- 00:06:23couple of people every time one new user
- 00:06:25signed up still we had a wrong problem
- 00:06:27getting those users to come back because
- 00:06:29we didn't build the right solution
- 00:06:31because we weren't really
- 00:06:32we at the time i didn't have the
- 00:06:34language to describe this but we weren't
- 00:06:35focused on the right jobs and
- 00:06:38we were kind of
- 00:06:40building out what we thought might be
- 00:06:41cool versus really understanding what
- 00:06:43people needed
- 00:06:45yeah so what um
- 00:06:47what were the jobs you were focused on
- 00:06:49would you it sounds like didn't know or
- 00:06:50use that language at the time no i mean
- 00:06:52i thought when we started out like to
- 00:06:56kind of go back a little bit in the
- 00:06:58story it started as a as a skill
- 00:07:00swapping network for um
- 00:07:02people more broadly and then i did what
- 00:07:04you're told to do when you're starting a
- 00:07:06new company and you go through an
- 00:07:07accelerator program they say go out and
- 00:07:09do customer discovery and i had no idea
- 00:07:11what that meant or how to do it well so
- 00:07:12what i did was talk to 300 people and
- 00:07:15showed them what we were building and
- 00:07:16asked them what they thought which as it
- 00:07:18turns out is not the way to do it at all
- 00:07:20which is why i'm so passionate about
- 00:07:22teaching what we do now but of course
- 00:07:24what happened when i would do that is i
- 00:07:25get oh that's so cool and like you know
- 00:07:27like i'm already kind of doing this in
- 00:07:29this way and like what i saw a pattern
- 00:07:32was it seemed to be that women were
- 00:07:35really more excited about this and they
- 00:07:37said that you know we're already i'm
- 00:07:38already skill shopping in this way you
- 00:07:40know i do my friend's nails and she does
- 00:07:42my accounting and like so i was seeing
- 00:07:44that this trend would be happening with
- 00:07:45women at the time and i think this is
- 00:07:48probably still true although i don't
- 00:07:49have the data on it now because it's not
- 00:07:51as relevant to what i'm doing but at the
- 00:07:53time women were starting businesses at
- 00:07:55the fastest rate in history so i was
- 00:07:56like okay we're going to focus on
- 00:07:58building a skill swapping platform for
- 00:07:59women specifically and i thought that
- 00:08:01the job if i
- 00:08:03didn't have that language to describe at
- 00:08:04the time but i thought it was about you
- 00:08:05know swapping skills to get the skills
- 00:08:07you needed to grow your business when
- 00:08:09you're in the early stage
- 00:08:10and we launched with kind of that model
- 00:08:14in mind
- 00:08:15and
- 00:08:16with
- 00:08:18within like a matter of a year and a
- 00:08:19half
- 00:08:20pivoted because it was like okay what's
- 00:08:22really what they really want here
- 00:08:24they're coming
- 00:08:25yeah the promise of being able to
- 00:08:27deliver services grow their kind of
- 00:08:28experience grow their network but really
- 00:08:30what they're looking for is to
- 00:08:33build a network of people who might be
- 00:08:35customers for them clients up there and
- 00:08:37so it's like well we need to give them a
- 00:08:39platform where they can showcase their
- 00:08:41expertise and
- 00:08:43that's when the the um product took a
- 00:08:46bit of a pivot um
- 00:08:48and that pivot we never we we're kind of
- 00:08:51like just gasping for air with just a
- 00:08:53little bit of like runway left at the
- 00:08:55time that we decided to make that pivot
- 00:08:57but the thing that i learned
- 00:08:59that led to that pivot was like okay
- 00:09:01like skill swapping is not actually what
- 00:09:03they want what they want is to
- 00:09:06connect with people who could be clients
- 00:09:08and because they don't have a lot of
- 00:09:09experience yet they want to be able to
- 00:09:11offer something of value so that they
- 00:09:13can get get that experience but in
- 00:09:16you know with the end goal of growing a
- 00:09:17business and getting paying customers
- 00:09:20and so that's what led to the pivot but
- 00:09:22again i didn't have the language to
- 00:09:24understand what it was they really
- 00:09:27wanted it was like well they want to
- 00:09:28kind of showcase their expertise so like
- 00:09:30maybe we can start like a network that
- 00:09:32allows them to do that or in credibility
- 00:09:33and points within a system they get more
- 00:09:35visibility because of that like i was
- 00:09:37thinking all around like the features
- 00:09:39and like what might be needed but not
- 00:09:42really understanding the right solution
- 00:09:44to solve for which was this idea of like
- 00:09:47going back now it's like what they
- 00:09:49really wanted was to
- 00:09:52be able to with within the beginning of
- 00:09:55their entrepreneurial journey to have
- 00:09:58to have credibility and there was a
- 00:10:00million we could have delivered on that
- 00:10:02that was not what we built
- 00:10:04yeah it's so
- 00:10:06interesting especially when you have
- 00:10:07experience in the market uh in some way
- 00:10:09right like a lot of what i've built is
- 00:10:11based on my own experience and you know
- 00:10:14what i wanted but
- 00:10:16i've realized for me at some point that
- 00:10:18only takes you so far right and then
- 00:10:20another transition that i made for
- 00:10:22example was like being a creator to
- 00:10:24being a software founder and i'm like
- 00:10:26okay let me make software for me as a
- 00:10:29creator and then you get to the point
- 00:10:31where you're like wait actually
- 00:10:33i'm like i've like stretched out this
- 00:10:34creator experience as much as i can and
- 00:10:36i actually have to go back out and do
- 00:10:38all of this user research and like i can
- 00:10:41no longer just rely on like my
- 00:10:42experience because now it's like eight
- 00:10:44years old you know or that kind of thing
- 00:10:46so often we start with
- 00:10:48one idea of how it's going to go and
- 00:10:50then we and we have these ideas and you
- 00:10:52like kind of milk it for all that it's
- 00:10:53worth and then realize wait i don't
- 00:10:55actually know how to do
- 00:10:57user research i don't know like i don't
- 00:10:58understand jobs to be done
- 00:11:00um
- 00:11:01so yeah it's a fascinating uh a
- 00:11:03fascinating problem that i think i'm
- 00:11:05living right now well i think the thing
- 00:11:07that the biggest thing so jobs to be
- 00:11:10done if we want to kind of do we want to
- 00:11:11get into job a little bit let's do it
- 00:11:14okay
- 00:11:15so jobs to be done is this amazing
- 00:11:18and challenging um
- 00:11:21i would say that it's it's like the
- 00:11:23people who are behind it would call it a
- 00:11:24theory and it's a theory for what drives
- 00:11:26people to buy and essentially the idea
- 00:11:28is that for a long time we as marketers
- 00:11:31and also people who are innovating and
- 00:11:32trying to build new products we would
- 00:11:34think about people from
- 00:11:36a kind of like attribute perspective we
- 00:11:38think about like you know they share
- 00:11:40these common attributes like maybe
- 00:11:41they're all women they're 36 they live
- 00:11:43in this particular city and we would
- 00:11:44think that's what it meant to understand
- 00:11:46our customers but the attributes that a
- 00:11:49person has or your buyer perspective
- 00:11:51buyer has it really doesn't matter what
- 00:11:53matters is what are they trying to
- 00:11:55achieve and what's the circumstances and
- 00:11:58what other solutions have they
- 00:11:59considered or tried and why didn't those
- 00:12:01work for them and why is what you're
- 00:12:02doing better and
- 00:12:04really the what they came up with is
- 00:12:06it's like people seek out products
- 00:12:09because they're trying to make progress
- 00:12:10in their lives they have a specific job
- 00:12:12they're trying to get done and they
- 00:12:14essentially hire products or service
- 00:12:16providers to help them do that job and
- 00:12:19there's particular criteria that matters
- 00:12:20to them and so when you stop focusing on
- 00:12:24the person and start focusing on the
- 00:12:26progress that they're trying to make and
- 00:12:28the struggle that they're having and
- 00:12:30making that progress you start to see
- 00:12:33the
- 00:12:34context of their situation with a lot
- 00:12:35more richness and nuance and then you
- 00:12:37can decide
- 00:12:39you know these people have this
- 00:12:41particular challenge and we maybe we can
- 00:12:43help those people or
- 00:12:45we're hearing you know we're hearing
- 00:12:46different things from people that look
- 00:12:48like this and maybe that's a solution we
- 00:12:49can solve better and so really it's when
- 00:12:53you understand the job they're trying to
- 00:12:55get done and the circumstances that
- 00:12:57surround it can help you to figure out
- 00:12:59where you as a product company can can
- 00:13:03innovate but it can also from a
- 00:13:04marketing perspective be incredibly
- 00:13:06powerful and from a marketing
- 00:13:07perspective the tool
- 00:13:09that i learned that changed the way that
- 00:13:12i thought about marketing and changed
- 00:13:13the way that i approached marketing is
- 00:13:16this interview a one-on-one interview
- 00:13:18with somebody who has bought your
- 00:13:19solution
- 00:13:20if you're new to the market it could be
- 00:13:21somebody who's bought a competitor's
- 00:13:22solution but really what you're trying
- 00:13:24to do is you're not trying to ask them
- 00:13:26about their experience with your
- 00:13:27solution like you can get there you can
- 00:13:29spend some time there but what you're
- 00:13:31really trying to understand is what was
- 00:13:33happening in their world that led them
- 00:13:36to seeking a new solution in the first
- 00:13:38place what other things did they try
- 00:13:41what other things did they consider why
- 00:13:42did they choose the thing that they
- 00:13:44chose and in getting them to tell you
- 00:13:47their story and really digging in on
- 00:13:49all of the nuanced details you can start
- 00:13:52to get this really clear picture around
- 00:13:54what matters to a buyer what pains
- 00:13:56they're having with other solutions one
- 00:13:57of their selfish desires like how do
- 00:13:59they see their life actually being
- 00:14:01better and them being better and that
- 00:14:04can lead to just such
- 00:14:06more compelling and
- 00:14:09like
- 00:14:10marketing that really resonates compared
- 00:14:12to this kind of more high level stuff
- 00:14:14and so
- 00:14:16the tool of the one-on-one interview
- 00:14:18it's the thing that for me
- 00:14:20marketers are rarely doing and it's so
- 00:14:22powerful when it comes to understanding
- 00:14:24how to be more effective in your
- 00:14:25marketing
- 00:14:26yeah i i love that and
- 00:14:28you learn so much from it i mean it's
- 00:14:30true in in both sales and
- 00:14:32you know customer research like we all
- 00:14:34want to sit behind you know an email or
- 00:14:37a survey or you know any of these things
- 00:14:39so it's like oh let me reach people at
- 00:14:41scale let me um
- 00:14:43you know not have to get on calls no one
- 00:14:45wants to get you know any of these
- 00:14:46things right and then you realize like
- 00:14:48oh no if i actually talk to people and
- 00:14:50ask them directly
- 00:14:52and go beyond the questions actually go
- 00:14:54beyond that's the wrong idea it's gonna
- 00:14:55say go beyond the questions of like
- 00:14:57would you like this would you buy this
- 00:14:59and it's like no no scrap those entirely
- 00:15:02and
- 00:15:03and start in a you know in a different
- 00:15:05way
- 00:15:05i'd be curious to hear uh an example
- 00:15:08like is there one that comes to mind of
- 00:15:11either some interviews that you've done
- 00:15:12and a pivot
- 00:15:14yeah well you've brought up a really
- 00:15:15good point around
- 00:15:16you know marketers are often afraid to
- 00:15:18do this and in my experience teaching
- 00:15:21this to as many you know thousands of
- 00:15:23students at this point and understanding
- 00:15:25where the hang-ups are like the
- 00:15:27oftentimes people will do this interview
- 00:15:30and they will just be like whoa blown
- 00:15:32away so much great insight but they're
- 00:15:33not sure what to action first how to
- 00:15:35action it they're not sure what
- 00:15:37information necessarily
- 00:15:39really matters and how to share any of
- 00:15:41that with other people on their team
- 00:15:42that could benefit from it and so i
- 00:15:45created a kind of complementary
- 00:15:47framework to jobs to be done which is
- 00:15:49called the trigger technique which
- 00:15:50essentially helps people to
- 00:15:52gather from a qualitative conversation
- 00:15:55you know an interview with a customer
- 00:15:56the kind of four pieces that really
- 00:15:58matter and how to use those to design
- 00:16:02marketing campaigns and ideas and
- 00:16:04because there was this missing piece in
- 00:16:06my experience it was like you can go out
- 00:16:08and you can have these conversations but
- 00:16:10you still need to be able to distill
- 00:16:11that down to the most important bits and
- 00:16:14then you still be able to think about
- 00:16:15well how do i actually make those
- 00:16:17obviously actionable and that was
- 00:16:18missing so
- 00:16:20we can maybe include it in the show
- 00:16:21notes but i've got a
- 00:16:23webinar where i talk about the trigger
- 00:16:25technique i've got a tweets uh thread
- 00:16:27that kind of went viral talking about it
- 00:16:29but what i would say is the pieces that
- 00:16:31matter so the example that i gave my
- 00:16:33twitter thread i talk about barkbox and
- 00:16:35so i had interviewed somebody during one
- 00:16:37of my workshops i do a live workshop
- 00:16:39where i demonstrate an interview and i
- 00:16:42get the people that are watching to
- 00:16:44listen and to learn what they should be
- 00:16:45listening for and the person i was
- 00:16:47interviewing had recently subscribed to
- 00:16:50barkbox which is a
- 00:16:52subscription for dog owners it'll
- 00:16:54include things like little treats and
- 00:16:56toys and different odds and ends for
- 00:16:58your dog and what i learned in that
- 00:17:01interview with her
- 00:17:02was that the trigger event well she
- 00:17:04didn't realize it at the time that had
- 00:17:06led her to begin the journey to
- 00:17:08considering barkbox was that she they
- 00:17:11had gotten a puppy he was about four
- 00:17:13months old and they found out they were
- 00:17:15pregnant and it was not a planned
- 00:17:17pregnancy but they were very excited but
- 00:17:19now it's like oh my goodness in her mind
- 00:17:21she's going i have a baby already this
- 00:17:23baby puppy and now i'm going to be
- 00:17:27having a real baby and that was this
- 00:17:28moment where the journey whether she
- 00:17:31knew it or not to getting bark box began
- 00:17:34and so she ended up having the baby and
- 00:17:36she's home on mat leave and of course
- 00:17:39her puppy is now feeling a bit envious
- 00:17:41because all of this time and energy that
- 00:17:43used to go into spending time with the
- 00:17:45puppy
- 00:17:46is now going towards this new tiny
- 00:17:48little creature and so she looked at
- 00:17:51different solutions to try to
- 00:17:53appease the dog she started to have what
- 00:17:55she called was dog mom guilt which from
- 00:17:57a copywriting and marketing perspective
- 00:17:59so good right the dog mom guild um and
- 00:18:02so she looked at other solutions and she
- 00:18:04was like well i can you know i can take
- 00:18:06the dog to the park but it was winter
- 00:18:08when her son was born and
- 00:18:10it was cold and trying to get the baby
- 00:18:12in the car and the dog in the car and
- 00:18:14like get off the dog
- 00:18:16getting a baby in a snowsuit a lot of
- 00:18:17work right not a good solution she's
- 00:18:20like well i can take the dog for walks
- 00:18:21around the neighborhood again stroller
- 00:18:23one hand dog that's pulling you in the
- 00:18:25other hand something's gonna give and
- 00:18:26she didn't want it to be either of them
- 00:18:28so that solution wasn't working well and
- 00:18:31so she actually got her brother to bring
- 00:18:33over his dog thinking that i'll put them
- 00:18:35in the backyard and they'll play
- 00:18:36together and at least the dog will get
- 00:18:38some satisfaction double the work not a
- 00:18:40good solution and ultimately she saw a
- 00:18:44friend
- 00:18:45post something about dog about barkbox
- 00:18:48on instagram and she reached out and
- 00:18:50asked that first what they thought and
- 00:18:52her goal really the job she was trying
- 00:18:55to get done was she wanted to keep the
- 00:18:58dog happy and occupied while she was
- 00:19:01busy with other things right that was
- 00:19:02the job to be done
- 00:19:04from a marketing perspective okay so you
- 00:19:06know what the trigger event is right she
- 00:19:08had a young child now a baby and she's
- 00:19:11got this dog at home you know what she's
- 00:19:12trying to get done well you can
- 00:19:14triangulate those things like well who
- 00:19:15could be the target buyers right well
- 00:19:17obviously people with young children and
- 00:19:20dogs that's a good trigger event right
- 00:19:23um and then you think about the what she
- 00:19:26was trying to achieve well she really
- 00:19:28wanted to distract the dog right so how
- 00:19:30cool would it be for a company like
- 00:19:31barkbox to create an introductory offer
- 00:19:34where sign up for three months and get
- 00:19:35the doggy distraction box for free right
- 00:19:38um so there's all these now you can
- 00:19:41think about who we target well don't
- 00:19:43target like there's they're obviously
- 00:19:44probably thinking about all of the the
- 00:19:46dog influencers what about the mommy
- 00:19:49influencers who all of these new moms
- 00:19:51are following who are trying to learn
- 00:19:53about sleep training their baby and all
- 00:19:54these other things those people probably
- 00:19:56have dogs too and imagine if they were
- 00:19:58to do a
- 00:19:59a
- 00:20:00you know sponsored post around relieving
- 00:20:02their dog mom guilt and how great it
- 00:20:04felt to be able to
- 00:20:06you know take away that dogma guilt
- 00:20:08right in your target audience right
- 00:20:10so
- 00:20:11one interview when you're pulling out
- 00:20:13the layers and the pieces that really
- 00:20:14matter are really compelling but also
- 00:20:17this is what makes jobs to be done so
- 00:20:18great when you think about the job as
- 00:20:21you know help me to keep my dog happy
- 00:20:23and occupied while i'm busy with other
- 00:20:25things well what else happened in the
- 00:20:28last two years where suddenly everyone
- 00:20:30was home and dogs were home and they
- 00:20:33were confused because now they're busy
- 00:20:35with other things you're not giving me
- 00:20:36the attention and you're sitting here in
- 00:20:38front of me all day long right like that
- 00:20:40dog mom guilt that same language works
- 00:20:44whether you have a new baby that's
- 00:20:45distracting you or whether you're now
- 00:20:47suddenly working from home and your
- 00:20:50dog's not getting to go out as much
- 00:20:51because walks are regulated in your city
- 00:20:54which is true in a lot of cities think
- 00:20:55about all the people that were in that
- 00:20:58had that new trigger event that new job
- 00:21:00to be done so like when you start
- 00:21:02thinking about these stories
- 00:21:04you can kind of extrapolate beyond there
- 00:21:07and start to really see opportunities to
- 00:21:10be really targeted with your marketing
- 00:21:12and messaging and
- 00:21:14when you look at what dark uh barkbox is
- 00:21:16doing i'm not a consultant for them i
- 00:21:18haven't done work with them they're not
- 00:21:20capturing these opportunities they're
- 00:21:22talking about here's you know here's how
- 00:21:24strong our toys are and you know here's
- 00:21:27how delicious our chewy things are and
- 00:21:29they're not they're talking a lot about
- 00:21:30the product they're not seeing the
- 00:21:32bigger opportunity which is to really
- 00:21:35understand why people are buying their
- 00:21:36product in the first place and how to
- 00:21:38get in front of those people with a
- 00:21:39compelling offer so you can learn a lot
- 00:21:41from even one interview when it's done
- 00:21:43well
- 00:21:44yeah i mean i just see that so often of
- 00:21:46companies talking about the features of
- 00:21:48their product right that's exactly how
- 00:21:50strong their chew toys are or something
- 00:21:52else whereas really no one cares how
- 00:21:54strong the chew toy is
- 00:21:55they care about how long it keeps the
- 00:21:57dog entertained 100
- 00:21:59so imagine the language you can shift
- 00:22:02right so it's like hours of doggy
- 00:22:04entertainment instead of you know
- 00:22:07really strong durable toys that doesn't
- 00:22:09matter hours of doggie entertainment is
- 00:22:11what matters
- 00:22:13yeah that's good okay so there's if we
- 00:22:16think about who often listens to the
- 00:22:17show right we uh i definitely have some
- 00:22:20you know software founders and people
- 00:22:21like that who may have heard of jobs be
- 00:22:23done before um but there's also you know
- 00:22:25the whole community who are building
- 00:22:27like creator-focused businesses um
- 00:22:29you know like they have their own email
- 00:22:31list maybe it's 10 000 20 000
- 00:22:32subscribers
- 00:22:34and they you know usually aren't
- 00:22:36monetizing one product in the same way
- 00:22:38of like oh barkbox or convertkit or
- 00:22:41intercom right uh might be but it's much
- 00:22:44more of you know how can i build an
- 00:22:46audience you know grow it on twitter and
- 00:22:49email and instagram um and then sell a
- 00:22:51range of products usually courses it
- 00:22:53might be coaching it might be um
- 00:22:56you know ebooks a whole bunch of
- 00:22:58different things i'd be curious how you
- 00:23:00would adapt or how you would encourage
- 00:23:02these types of creators to think about
- 00:23:04jobs to be done as they're
- 00:23:07you know turning what started as you
- 00:23:09know maybe a simple newsletter into like
- 00:23:11a thriving business
- 00:23:12absolutely so i can use my own business
- 00:23:14as an example because this is the style
- 00:23:16of business we have so
- 00:23:17customer camp at our core weird training
- 00:23:19company we have a few um products that
- 00:23:22are available to the general public and
- 00:23:25we are in the process of launching a new
- 00:23:27uh course uh prior to
- 00:23:30uh near the beginning of i i myself
- 00:23:32recently had a baby and that triggered
- 00:23:34me to make suggestions thank you um so
- 00:23:37i'm making some changes in my business
- 00:23:39i'm working on something new but prior
- 00:23:41to that my
- 00:23:43primary customers were accelerators um
- 00:23:46and incubators and business support
- 00:23:48organizations and they would hire me to
- 00:23:50come and deliver live training to their
- 00:23:52audience but now i'm bringing more um
- 00:23:55courses and
- 00:23:56and resources that are available to the
- 00:23:59general public so with that in mind i
- 00:24:01knew that i was going to be making that
- 00:24:02transition and i knew that the audience
- 00:24:04that i wanted to serve were marketers
- 00:24:06because in my experience in doing this
- 00:24:08work and understanding
- 00:24:10jobs to be done initially i actually
- 00:24:11started by targeting um founders
- 00:24:14founders of software products for the
- 00:24:16most part and what i learned was that
- 00:24:18when you are in the very early stages of
- 00:24:20your product journey you think you've
- 00:24:22got it all figured out right like you
- 00:24:24don't you know you don't really think
- 00:24:25you have to do a lot of discovery you're
- 00:24:27like no i just want to focus on building
- 00:24:29the product that's the exciting part for
- 00:24:30me and by the time you get that product
- 00:24:33to market and oftentimes realize that
- 00:24:36there's not this hot demand for your
- 00:24:38solution you're often
- 00:24:41so busy and inundated that and like so
- 00:24:43resistant to going off and doing more of
- 00:24:45this work and you don't often have a lot
- 00:24:47of money to pay for this work meanwhile
- 00:24:50the
- 00:24:51you know marketers marketers just by
- 00:24:54kind of like the nature of how they work
- 00:24:55they really resonated with these
- 00:24:58concepts they could apply it to their
- 00:25:00work so easily like and so my focus
- 00:25:03became i'm going to help marketers to
- 00:25:05better understand their customers
- 00:25:06because then as they do like you know
- 00:25:08it's the number one thing that we care
- 00:25:09about as marketers is understanding the
- 00:25:11buyer and a lot of the work that i was
- 00:25:13doing this um
- 00:25:15focus on understanding the job just
- 00:25:17wasn't happening for marketers so with
- 00:25:19that in mind i defined what was the job
- 00:25:21we were trying to get down to customer
- 00:25:22camp and ultimately what it was is we
- 00:25:24help marketers to understand what
- 00:25:26triggers people to buy so they can
- 00:25:28market smarter and with that kind of as
- 00:25:31the high level job that we're trying to
- 00:25:32get done i started thinking about well
- 00:25:35what solutions can we bring to the
- 00:25:36market and also how can we make sure
- 00:25:39that we're building an audience for
- 00:25:40future solutions so the first product
- 00:25:43that um we launched was a tool called
- 00:25:46the clarity call cheat sheets and
- 00:25:48essentially it's like a bundle of
- 00:25:49documents that help you to learn how to
- 00:25:51do one-on-one interviews and it's we've
- 00:25:53done
- 00:25:55it's been out for just a little over a
- 00:25:57year now it's does great sales on its
- 00:25:59own i'm not actually doing nearly enough
- 00:26:01to market it but
- 00:26:02it's what i love about that product and
- 00:26:04the way that we designed it was i was
- 00:26:06going out and i was talking to marketers
- 00:26:07i'm not trying to understand why they
- 00:26:09weren't doing more of this work in the
- 00:26:10first place and trying to understand
- 00:26:13what they would want to see from us and
- 00:26:14what i learned from those interviews is
- 00:26:16marketers are incredibly busy they don't
- 00:26:17have a lot of time they have a
- 00:26:21bias against courses because a lot of
- 00:26:24times they've spent a lot of money on
- 00:26:25courses that didn't deliver the outcome
- 00:26:27or they just didn't have time to
- 00:26:29actually do the work and so they didn't
- 00:26:31get the value that they were buying and
- 00:26:32so they're kind of like their course
- 00:26:34budget has become very small
- 00:26:36yet they still want to deliver value to
- 00:26:38their clients to their teams they still
- 00:26:40want to up level um but they basically
- 00:26:43sat like this like no no more courses
- 00:26:45budget
- 00:26:46um and so i was like i'm not going to
- 00:26:48build some long video based course i'm
- 00:26:50going to build something they can as
- 00:26:51quickly as possible take a marketer from
- 00:26:54i don't know how to do a customer
- 00:26:55interview to
- 00:26:56i figured you know i know how to reach
- 00:26:59out to the right people i know how to
- 00:27:00get them to say yes i know what
- 00:27:01questions to ask i know what to listen
- 00:27:03for
- 00:27:04all with me being able to skim as
- 00:27:06opposed to having to sit down and watch
- 00:27:08four or five hours of content and that
- 00:27:11works really really well marketers love
- 00:27:12this product they tell people about it
- 00:27:14like it's it's almost every
- 00:27:17week i'm getting somebody like
- 00:27:18mentioning it on social telling somebody
- 00:27:20else that they need to go and buy it and
- 00:27:22that's really nice because then you know
- 00:27:23that the the solution is delivering so
- 00:27:26it's like okay so i've got this product
- 00:27:27that helps people to understand their
- 00:27:29customers through customer interviews so
- 00:27:31what kind of people do i want to get in
- 00:27:33front of right i want to get in front of
- 00:27:34the kind of people who are curious about
- 00:27:36buyers who want to understand their
- 00:27:38buyers better and what should that what
- 00:27:40should i do from a content perspective
- 00:27:42to try to attract more of those people
- 00:27:44and that's what led me to create our
- 00:27:46newsletter
- 00:27:47so i find our newsletter is this really
- 00:27:48great introductory offer to the cheat
- 00:27:51sheets or some of our new stuff that's
- 00:27:52coming because the newsletter is all
- 00:27:55about why people buy and but it's about
- 00:27:58buyer psychology cognitive biases
- 00:28:01heuristics
- 00:28:02people in your audience have probably
- 00:28:03heard of scarcity or social proof these
- 00:28:06are all these cognitive biases right so
- 00:28:08like i was like this is perfect because
- 00:28:10there's this broader spectrum of like
- 00:28:12what like you know how buying decisions
- 00:28:14are made by regular people but then
- 00:28:16there's the context of your audience so
- 00:28:18it's like i can attract people who are
- 00:28:20going to be really excited about
- 00:28:21learning about buyers and they are going
- 00:28:22to be excited about learning about
- 00:28:24buyers in like the higher level and then
- 00:28:26i can sell them on well this is great so
- 00:28:28you know that scarcity works you know
- 00:28:30that social proof works you know that
- 00:28:31it's you know it can be valuable to come
- 00:28:33first in a list of things versus in the
- 00:28:35middle i can teach them all of these
- 00:28:37things but you still need to talk to
- 00:28:39your people you still need to understand
- 00:28:41your customers specifically because they
- 00:28:44are unique and the context is unique and
- 00:28:46your solution is unique so there's this
- 00:28:48nice bridge but it's all about that same
- 00:28:50job to be done which is essentially for
- 00:28:51marketers like help me to understand
- 00:28:54buyers help me to understand what
- 00:28:56motivates those people so that i can
- 00:28:58design
- 00:28:59better solutions for them i can design
- 00:29:01better marketing messages i can design
- 00:29:03better campaigns so like it all fits
- 00:29:04under that one umbrella and what i love
- 00:29:07about job speed on is like we're not a
- 00:29:09company that teaches people customer
- 00:29:10research if something happens in the
- 00:29:12future where there's this new amazing
- 00:29:15eye tracking technology that can give
- 00:29:17you 90 of the answer we'll tell people
- 00:29:20about that right
- 00:29:21so that's kind of like our example but
- 00:29:24yeah you have such a great connection to
- 00:29:26the audience uh through having the
- 00:29:28newsletter whereas if you you know
- 00:29:30there's another world um and there's
- 00:29:32other people right who teach jobs to be
- 00:29:33done entirely through workshops right
- 00:29:35and so their their thing is
- 00:29:37um you know pay us some number of
- 00:29:39thousands of dollars to come to your
- 00:29:41marketing team in person and we you know
- 00:29:43we will teach this technique to you
- 00:29:45um
- 00:29:46and that can work well it's a very
- 00:29:48referral driven business um it can be
- 00:29:50quite profitable uh in another world it
- 00:29:52means getting on planes a lot you know
- 00:29:54and that may not be uh everyone's
- 00:29:56favorite thing
- 00:29:57oh this is interesting i'm like getting
- 00:29:59a full on like wind storm here as part
- 00:30:02of the podcast
- 00:30:05like windows shaking a little bit and
- 00:30:07all that we'll see if the power goes out
- 00:30:09um
- 00:30:10so let's see what i guess thinking about
- 00:30:12business models what i love about yours
- 00:30:14is you've identified a really good top
- 00:30:16of funnel right um actually the
- 00:30:18newsletter is not even quite top funnel
- 00:30:19we we can get into what what's top of
- 00:30:21funnel above that right of how people
- 00:30:24discover the newsletter
- 00:30:25but it's this interesting trade-off uh
- 00:30:28and i think a lot of creators
- 00:30:30wonder about what should be free and
- 00:30:31what um
- 00:30:33what should be paid and so i like in
- 00:30:35your model you talked about you know why
- 00:30:37we buy the psychology the broad concepts
- 00:30:40and all of that right that's all free
- 00:30:42and that you know you're giving away a
- 00:30:44ton for free and then it's like okay but
- 00:30:46when it's specific to your business the
- 00:30:49tactics that you need to learn about
- 00:30:51your business and why your customers buy
- 00:30:54that's a paid product and i think that
- 00:30:55that's um a good distinction
- 00:30:58can i share something with you too
- 00:30:59around like so i'm working on something
- 00:31:00new and again it comes back to this jobs
- 00:31:03we've done you mentioned that there's
- 00:31:04other jobs we done practitioners out
- 00:31:06there many of whom will charge tens of
- 00:31:08thousands of dollars if not hundreds of
- 00:31:09thousands of dollars one of my mentors
- 00:31:11it costs a hundred grand to get him
- 00:31:13four or five days
- 00:31:15and it's definitely worth it for
- 00:31:17companies that are at the stage where it
- 00:31:19makes sense to make that investment
- 00:31:20because i know companies that have had
- 00:31:22insane results bob newest is one of my
- 00:31:24mentors and he's worked with companies
- 00:31:26like intercom ford snickers like he's an
- 00:31:29incredible product innovator and he's
- 00:31:31one of the um pioneers of this concept
- 00:31:34but the thing that i learned again about
- 00:31:35the audience that i want to target what
- 00:31:37makes them unique i'm not going after
- 00:31:39the snickers and fords of the world
- 00:31:41right i'm going after marketers who
- 00:31:43typically work with early stage
- 00:31:45companies that are still probably not
- 00:31:48necessarily fully into the like they
- 00:31:50probably don't necessarily fully have
- 00:31:51product market figured out um but they
- 00:31:53need to get more demand so that they can
- 00:31:55work on figuring it out and most of the
- 00:31:57marketers that i'm working at working
- 00:31:58with and i'm going after
- 00:32:01like they're getting resistance around
- 00:32:03doing customer interviews they're not
- 00:32:05getting access to customers they're not
- 00:32:07getting access like it's hard for them
- 00:32:09to sell a client on a big engagement up
- 00:32:12front because the client hired them for
- 00:32:14specifically they hired them to write
- 00:32:16sales copy for the new landing page or
- 00:32:17they hired them to design the new email
- 00:32:19sequence or they hired them to do some
- 00:32:21conversion rate optimization and so what
- 00:32:23we're working on now knowing the
- 00:32:24audience i'm going after and how their
- 00:32:26needs are different than the ones that
- 00:32:28maybe bob is working with is we're
- 00:32:30creating something called clarity camp
- 00:32:32and it essentially is scrappy research
- 00:32:34techniques that you can do without
- 00:32:35getting approval so it's this whole
- 00:32:37concept of like don't ask for approval
- 00:32:39like just go and do it and then wow the
- 00:32:42[ __ ] out of your clients and team by
- 00:32:44presenting back what you learn so
- 00:32:45everything we're teaching them they
- 00:32:47should be able to do without having to
- 00:32:49ask clients or teams for the approval to
- 00:32:52run surveys for the approval to
- 00:32:53interview customers because that side of
- 00:32:56it was really slowing them down or was
- 00:32:57becoming a block that just wasn't wasn't
- 00:33:00movable so it's like if i can show them
- 00:33:02how to go and get a bunch of customer
- 00:33:04insights using these other methods and
- 00:33:06they can then show their teams the power
- 00:33:09of this then they can run a few
- 00:33:11experiments i call them trigger tests
- 00:33:13you know test the
- 00:33:15trigger events that are happening inside
- 00:33:16of their buyers lives and they can show
- 00:33:18value quickly which is what so
- 00:33:21oftentimes marketers need to do to gain
- 00:33:22trust and then are they going to be able
- 00:33:25to get buying from their team for this
- 00:33:26larger engagement probably right but
- 00:33:30this is where they were struggling so
- 00:33:32it's like i can go off and only work
- 00:33:34with companies that are committed to
- 00:33:35spending 30 000 with me for like a
- 00:33:39customer research engagement which is
- 00:33:40what i have been doing on the service
- 00:33:41side
- 00:33:42but that's a very small not a very small
- 00:33:45number of companies but that's a very
- 00:33:46particular type of business and there's
- 00:33:48this whole other category of businesses
- 00:33:50that can benefit so so much from this
- 00:33:52and doing a bit of it is better than
- 00:33:53doing none and i want to serve them so
- 00:33:56it's just this kind of
- 00:33:58example of when you understand who
- 00:34:00you're going after and what their
- 00:34:01challenges are you design the right
- 00:34:03solution the right solution for the
- 00:34:04marketers that i want to teach this to
- 00:34:06isn't for them to try to go off and sell
- 00:34:08their clients on a thirty thousand
- 00:34:09dollar engagement that's not the right
- 00:34:11question the solution is for them to
- 00:34:13enough information about their clients
- 00:34:14buyers quickly to be dangerous and to be
- 00:34:17able to design some pretty great stuff
- 00:34:19and then to be able to continue to kind
- 00:34:21of do this iterative flow of learning
- 00:34:23more about buyers as they work with
- 00:34:24clients so it's a it's a different
- 00:34:26output but i think that it's going to be
- 00:34:28really really meaningful for the
- 00:34:29audience that this doesn't exist for
- 00:34:31them
- 00:34:32yeah oh that's good i just think about
- 00:34:34inside of convertkit you know we're a
- 00:34:3670-person team uh we have all kinds of
- 00:34:38things going on that we're we're working
- 00:34:40on and focus on and whenever someone
- 00:34:42comes to me and it's like here's this
- 00:34:43idea
- 00:34:44that i want to take two to three months
- 00:34:46off of what i've normally been doing and
- 00:34:48we're gonna go try it out and it's
- 00:34:49unproven but like these articles that i
- 00:34:51read on the internet said it's great
- 00:34:53like that's a tough sell that's hard to
- 00:34:55do
- 00:34:56but if instead someone is like
- 00:34:58yeah i did this five hours a week
- 00:35:00without telling anyone here are the
- 00:35:02results from here's what i've learned
- 00:35:04and now here's what i want to do for
- 00:35:05phase two and that's going to require
- 00:35:06more time and money but like
- 00:35:09you know here's the momentum that we
- 00:35:10already have like that's an easy sell
- 00:35:12and it's like oh i had no idea that was
- 00:35:14happening wow it's amazing what you
- 00:35:15learned like yes let's absolutely double
- 00:35:17down or they're like hey i did this on
- 00:35:18the side it didn't work like we move on
- 00:35:20it's like okay cool so it's a very
- 00:35:23different thing to pitch
- 00:35:24well the thing is like what
- 00:35:26in my talk with the trigger technique i
- 00:35:28describe it like you know there's like
- 00:35:29people are getting stalked by a hungry
- 00:35:31bear and the hungry bear is like you
- 00:35:32know there's if you're a venture back
- 00:35:34company you've got investors that want
- 00:35:35to see x number of growth and that means
- 00:35:37that the ceo is stomping on everyone's
- 00:35:39head saying how do we get there and if
- 00:35:40you're not you still haven't have a team
- 00:35:43you want more leads and like there's
- 00:35:44this hungry bear that's stalking
- 00:35:46marketers and marketers need to be able
- 00:35:48to throw the hungry bear a hunk of meat
- 00:35:50and maybe that will then buy them the
- 00:35:52time to be able to go off and do a bit
- 00:35:54more of this in-depth research but they
- 00:35:55can't show something it's hard to gain
- 00:35:58that trust and what i found about these
- 00:36:02the style of interview is that or if in
- 00:36:04taking you know review mining for
- 00:36:06instance which is another way to learn
- 00:36:08from your customers it's not as you
- 00:36:09can't get us in in-depth insights but
- 00:36:11going off and reading reviews that
- 00:36:13people have written about your products
- 00:36:14versus your competitors and digging in
- 00:36:16and finding kind of like when they talk
- 00:36:18about what might be trigger moments when
- 00:36:19they talk about their pains with their
- 00:36:20solutions like all of that stuff can get
- 00:36:22you smarter right and the goal of
- 00:36:24marketing and then business more broadly
- 00:36:26it's not always to be right but it's to
- 00:36:28be less wrong faster right and that's
- 00:36:31really what i think people should be
- 00:36:32aiming for how can we be less wrong
- 00:36:34faster so that we can figure out the
- 00:36:36stuff that is working double down on
- 00:36:38that stuff stop the things that aren't
- 00:36:41working and
- 00:36:42that takes insight from customers but if
- 00:36:45you're trying to do i what i've seen is
- 00:36:47that when companies try to do it kind of
- 00:36:49like the right way what the innovation
- 00:36:51gurus would tell you to do
- 00:36:53that model doesn't work inside of a lot
- 00:36:55of
- 00:36:56businesses and it's great in theory but
- 00:36:58if you can't deliver it in practice then
- 00:37:00it's that it's not valuable
- 00:37:02yeah that's good okay i want to uh dive
- 00:37:05into your business model pivot a little
- 00:37:06bit going from service to um
- 00:37:09you know much more productized
- 00:37:11but before we do that something i want
- 00:37:12to point out that you said and just to
- 00:37:14reinforce is talking about cheat sheets
- 00:37:17and
- 00:37:18right something much more actionable and
- 00:37:20tangible than of course
- 00:37:21i think a lot of creators are looking
- 00:37:24you know out there what's at what's
- 00:37:25selling right we're in a mastermind
- 00:37:27group or we're we are listening to a
- 00:37:29podcast and someone's talking about a
- 00:37:31course they made they're generous enough
- 00:37:33to share the numbers they're like oh
- 00:37:34this made fifty thousand dollars it's
- 00:37:35made a hundred thousand dollars twenty
- 00:37:37thousand like and it's like oh i can
- 00:37:39make something like that for my audience
- 00:37:40and so we end up
- 00:37:41doing a lot of
- 00:37:43um
- 00:37:44like copying business models from
- 00:37:45someone else which is it can be really
- 00:37:47effective but it results in like endless
- 00:37:50video courses that we've all taken you
- 00:37:52know and we go through a lot of those
- 00:37:54and what you were saying with cheat
- 00:37:55sheets of having it be actionable
- 00:37:59right because i have a course right now
- 00:38:01that i'm slowly working through
- 00:38:03and it is a very actionable course but
- 00:38:05it's like this you know i'm putting in i
- 00:38:07don't know 30 minutes every few days to
- 00:38:09try to get through it um
- 00:38:11and something that i've found is that
- 00:38:13the actionable side of it is what really
- 00:38:16uh
- 00:38:18like can push people over to buy because
- 00:38:20it's getting them so much closer to the
- 00:38:21outcome so for example someone else i've
- 00:38:23had on the show is rachel rogers who is
- 00:38:25an attorney turned business coach
- 00:38:27and her big hit uh as a product you know
- 00:38:30when she was making that transition is
- 00:38:33was something called a small business
- 00:38:35bodyguard
- 00:38:36which wasn't so much a course as it was
- 00:38:39all of the contracts and worksheets and
- 00:38:41everything else that you need to run
- 00:38:43your business it was very very practical
- 00:38:45and that like exploded and she sold
- 00:38:47millions of dollars worth and so it just
- 00:38:48made me think of what you're doing with
- 00:38:49cheat sheets
- 00:38:50yes so i had a um woman come through one
- 00:38:53of my training like my training programs
- 00:38:56and she was building something very
- 00:38:58similar to rachel's small business
- 00:39:00bodyguard but specifically for canada
- 00:39:01because of course legal contracts vary
- 00:39:03from canada to the u.s and so she was
- 00:39:05trying to do this in canada and she was
- 00:39:07following the model that you know the
- 00:39:09course creators tell you to follow which
- 00:39:10is do launches and you know like and i'm
- 00:39:13like well i sat there i talked to her i
- 00:39:15was like why would you do launches like
- 00:39:17i'm like there are particular times
- 00:39:19where people need to get these contracts
- 00:39:21it's when they've launched it's when
- 00:39:22they're building their product when
- 00:39:23they're launching their new website and
- 00:39:25they need that privacy statement i'm
- 00:39:26like and they don't want to sit through
- 00:39:28your video course i want to be able to
- 00:39:30copy and paste that privacy statement
- 00:39:32input the right things for my business
- 00:39:34and put that into the footer of my
- 00:39:35website that's what i want and so like
- 00:39:38you making me wait to get that like
- 00:39:40there's a lot of people that's not even
- 00:39:41going to be top of mind for them at all
- 00:39:42the trigger event has not happened right
- 00:39:45and so in chatting with her but of
- 00:39:47course she was
- 00:39:48listening to kind of the gurus of the
- 00:39:50course space which tell you to create
- 00:39:52these video these signature courses and
- 00:39:54they should be video based and they
- 00:39:55should and you should launch them
- 00:39:56because it's easier to market them when
- 00:39:58you can create scarcity through a launch
- 00:40:00i'm like sure maybe that's true for a
- 00:40:02particular type of course but maybe you
- 00:40:05shouldn't build a course at all right
- 00:40:07maybe you should have downloadable
- 00:40:08templates that are customizable like
- 00:40:10with fill in the blanks and so i don't
- 00:40:12know i haven't actually checked back
- 00:40:13with her to see
- 00:40:15if she
- 00:40:15took that advice or not but again
- 00:40:17thinking about the job to be done just
- 00:40:19because you want to find a way what her
- 00:40:21job to be done is is she's a lawyer who
- 00:40:23doesn't want to do law she doesn't want
- 00:40:25to do law in the traditional way she
- 00:40:27wants to build a more scalable business
- 00:40:28that gives her more time freedom and so
- 00:40:30she sees the solution being of course
- 00:40:33but her customers she doesn't know that
- 00:40:34they don't want a course they want the
- 00:40:36templates like rachel's right
- 00:40:39and so this is the thing that i really
- 00:40:42love about jobs we've done and for me
- 00:40:44i got on this kind of like
- 00:40:45um
- 00:40:46horse what do they say get up on your
- 00:40:48high horse like i've been talking about
- 00:40:50this for a while like so many courses
- 00:40:51when they talk about what you get
- 00:40:53they're like seven hours of video
- 00:40:55content and it's like i don't want seven
- 00:40:57hours of video
- 00:40:58i want you to help me to do the thing
- 00:41:00i'm trying to do the fastest i can
- 00:41:02possibly do it and so cxl it's funny
- 00:41:05years ago when i first closed down my um
- 00:41:07my startup i had this idea and i never
- 00:41:09acted on it but i had this idea about
- 00:41:11creating basically like workflows for
- 00:41:13marketers common workflows because like
- 00:41:15what they really want to know is like
- 00:41:16how do i do this right the first time
- 00:41:18like what are the actual steps to
- 00:41:19achieving this thing and cxl recently
- 00:41:22came out with these i think they call
- 00:41:23them playbooks but it's like okay you
- 00:41:25want to create a persona like what do
- 00:41:27you need to do like what research you
- 00:41:29need to do where do you go to do it who
- 00:41:30do you need to talk to like and like
- 00:41:32making it like a checklist as opposed to
- 00:41:34let's watch this you know eight hour
- 00:41:36video course on personas which cxl also
- 00:41:38has by the way and i've gone through and
- 00:41:41like you're listening to it on 3x speed
- 00:41:44and you're like this is not helping me
- 00:41:45to achieve the thing i want to achieve
- 00:41:47give me a sexy template show me where to
- 00:41:49go find the information how to get
- 00:41:51what's going to go in it like that's
- 00:41:53what people want and so i think that
- 00:41:54there's
- 00:41:55i'm of the belief that there's going to
- 00:41:57be this
- 00:41:59revolution almost in the
- 00:42:01content creator world and i think that
- 00:42:03the next thing that people are going to
- 00:42:05want isn't necessarily going to be a
- 00:42:07course where i as this person on a team
- 00:42:09go and watch the course it's going to be
- 00:42:11almost like a guided facilitation where
- 00:42:14you allow that person to be the hero on
- 00:42:16their team that can help the team to get
- 00:42:18that thing done so like for instance my
- 00:42:20friend april dunford has an amazing book
- 00:42:23and she has on the other end this
- 00:42:25incredible business where she goes off
- 00:42:27and does
- 00:42:28she works with teams to help them figure
- 00:42:29out their positioning work and she kept
- 00:42:30getting asked for a course and so she
- 00:42:33has created one in in a partnership with
- 00:42:36section
- 00:42:37section seven i think it's scott
- 00:42:38galloway's company but when her and i
- 00:42:41talked most recently i was like all
- 00:42:42people want from you like it's not for
- 00:42:45like somebody to go and sit down and
- 00:42:46watch the course people want is to
- 00:42:48basically be able to have you
- 00:42:50facilitate them the way you would if you
- 00:42:52were there in person but you empower
- 00:42:54somebody on the team to step into that
- 00:42:55role with the trust
- 00:42:57that this is april's method of how april
- 00:42:59would approach it right so it'd almost
- 00:43:01be like one of those like you know those
- 00:43:03like motivational like tapes back in the
- 00:43:05day like if you could have like just
- 00:43:07like press play now
- 00:43:09and like april could explain you know
- 00:43:11here's the thought exercise that you're
- 00:43:12going to do as a team and like here's
- 00:43:14what you want to watch out for and
- 00:43:15here's the conversation to make sure
- 00:43:17that somebody's going to be the
- 00:43:18moderator and this is what they need to
- 00:43:20listen for go right and then you would
- 00:43:22do that piece then you'd start the next
- 00:43:24piece with april like and it'd be like
- 00:43:25so you could have
- 00:43:26basically a facilitated session without
- 00:43:29her being live in the room and
- 00:43:31empowering somebody like putting that
- 00:43:33power to somebody else i think that
- 00:43:34would be really really cool and i think
- 00:43:36that oftentimes that's not what people
- 00:43:38are delivering they're delivering these
- 00:43:40here come and watch this long video
- 00:43:41based course and then you figure out how
- 00:43:44to translate this into action on your
- 00:43:46team when there's more than one person
- 00:43:48involved and that's
- 00:43:49that's hard so i think there's probably
- 00:43:52room for something new which empowers
- 00:43:54somebody to be the facilitator as
- 00:43:56opposed to them having to figure out all
- 00:43:58those pieces on their own that's what
- 00:43:59we're working on with clarity cam like
- 00:44:02it's like how do we help them to go off
- 00:44:03and do that research kind of scrappy and
- 00:44:05secret like a vigilante on their team
- 00:44:08but then most importantly how do we then
- 00:44:10enable them to deliver that feed that
- 00:44:13like information back to their team so
- 00:44:14that they look like a badass and they
- 00:44:15can sell it internally because if we
- 00:44:17just teach them how to do the research
- 00:44:18and we don't actually enable them to
- 00:44:20then sell it internally we're not
- 00:44:21helping them to get the job done
- 00:44:23yep oh that's so good so i'm just
- 00:44:25thinking about
- 00:44:26what we're trying to do ultimately is
- 00:44:28sell outcomes not knowledge right
- 00:44:30courses are usually structured around
- 00:44:32selling knowledge and
- 00:44:34you know we're trying to sell outcomes
- 00:44:36and so getting to that point where it's
- 00:44:39like you know really tangible and
- 00:44:40practical is a great way to stand out as
- 00:44:42a creator uh one one last quick thing on
- 00:44:45this is when i had my book right i still
- 00:44:47have it but when i launched my book
- 00:44:48authority which is about you know how to
- 00:44:51write and self-publish um an e-book
- 00:44:55the i had a few different packages just
- 00:44:58the book and then i had one that was a
- 00:44:59book and courses and all of that and the
- 00:45:01most popular thing in the higher package
- 00:45:03was the 90-day launch checklist and it
- 00:45:06was basically 90 days out from when
- 00:45:08you're going to go live here's exactly
- 00:45:10what you should do every single week
- 00:45:12just walking you through and everyone
- 00:45:13was like
- 00:45:15i'm on this package but i really like
- 00:45:17the thing that would tip them over to
- 00:45:19buying the higher package which was
- 00:45:21double the price was this checklist like
- 00:45:23of how do i take this abstract knowledge
- 00:45:25and turn it into something concrete and
- 00:45:27actionable that i should do on a
- 00:45:28specific day so whenever you can do that
- 00:45:30it's amazing
- 00:45:31well i think it's a neat time because i
- 00:45:32think that as course creators with a lot
- 00:45:34of people in your audience being in that
- 00:45:36world you're right it's not about
- 00:45:37selling information and while people
- 00:45:39in may know that kind of in an
- 00:45:41intellectual level they often spend way
- 00:45:44more time talking about why
- 00:45:47and what in their courses and not
- 00:45:49showing you how and not making the house
- 00:45:51simple right and oftentimes including a
- 00:45:54template or including a
- 00:45:56you know a cheat sheet of some sort can
- 00:45:58allow that person to skip 90 of you
- 00:46:02talking and telling them what to do and
- 00:46:04actually just start and that's what they
- 00:46:06want right yeah i'm imagining i haven't
- 00:46:08done this but now
- 00:46:10if i were to go back into that world
- 00:46:11that the way that i would do it is the
- 00:46:13cheat sheet or template
- 00:46:15that leads with and then any step that's
- 00:46:18confusing or people might get stuck on
- 00:46:20they can click on and it has a video
- 00:46:21walking them through that exactly so
- 00:46:24back when i closed my other company i
- 00:46:26was thinking about creating this like at
- 00:46:28the time i kind of envisioned creating
- 00:46:30something very similar to like a notion
- 00:46:32or like a coda where it was like you
- 00:46:34have the checklist live inside you could
- 00:46:36have like your videos you could play
- 00:46:37another time like i was envisioning
- 00:46:39creating this kind of like what i would
- 00:46:40at the like at the time i was thinking
- 00:46:42with these like
- 00:46:43you know like actionable documents now
- 00:46:45of course i wasn't thinking nearly as
- 00:46:47big as like this is before notion came
- 00:46:48out or before code came out like they
- 00:46:50have this they're like oh [ __ ] you could
- 00:46:52actually apply this to
- 00:46:53so many use cases i was thinking into
- 00:46:55this very narrow use case of like you
- 00:46:58know creating workflows to teach people
- 00:47:00how to do things and i was like how cool
- 00:47:02would it be if you could create a
- 00:47:03document where like the video and it was
- 00:47:05like divided in sections and like then
- 00:47:07these tools came out like oh [ __ ] like
- 00:47:09you can do so much more with them than
- 00:47:11this narrow use case that i had but i
- 00:47:13think that that's another thing i think
- 00:47:15a lot of course creators again they're
- 00:47:16thinking around the course software so
- 00:47:18they're like i'm going to create videos
- 00:47:20i'm thinking about how do what how can i
- 00:47:23reduce the number of videos that they
- 00:47:24need to watch and how do i make sure
- 00:47:27that they can take action as quickly as
- 00:47:28possible like you said starting with the
- 00:47:31the template or the output and then
- 00:47:32working backwards to the content like i
- 00:47:35think not enough people are doing that
- 00:47:37yeah i love that okay one thing that
- 00:47:40stood out in your example with your
- 00:47:41friend who's the lawyer who's creating
- 00:47:43that product right she had a an outcome
- 00:47:46that she wanted the outcome wasn't to
- 00:47:47have a course uh or you know even a
- 00:47:50digital product of any kind the outcome
- 00:47:53that she wanted i imagine is much more
- 00:47:55control over time and not having to
- 00:47:57uh like show up in a courtroom and sit
- 00:48:01with clients directly or any of those
- 00:48:02things that a traditional lawyer would
- 00:48:04do
- 00:48:05i'm curious as you switched business
- 00:48:07models of going from you know the
- 00:48:08service based business uh to you know
- 00:48:11the cheat sheets and and uh the content
- 00:48:13style of business like what what outcome
- 00:48:15were you trying to create and then how
- 00:48:17is that actually played out like has
- 00:48:18that
- 00:48:19you know how does it show up differently
- 00:48:20in your life
- 00:48:22so i i always knew that my goal would be
- 00:48:25to
- 00:48:26divorce i wanted to be able to grow
- 00:48:27revenue without growing head count and
- 00:48:30so
- 00:48:31for me i knew that what that looked like
- 00:48:33i knew that there were certain models
- 00:48:34that um would allow me to do that and
- 00:48:36i'm actually exploring
- 00:48:38one now that i didn't anticipate which
- 00:48:40is the creator model of sponsorship and
- 00:48:43i've gotten sponsors for the why we buy
- 00:48:45newsletter i'm talking up to
- 00:48:47a potential partner that would like i've
- 00:48:49got some things kind of hopping on that
- 00:48:51end that i didn't foresee as an option
- 00:48:52so i was trying to figure out how do i
- 00:48:54grow revenue without growing headcount
- 00:48:55and looking at different business models
- 00:48:57so initially
- 00:48:58i was doing the service work because i
- 00:49:01don't think you can sell people on i
- 00:49:03don't think you can create training and
- 00:49:05make it as good as it deserves as your
- 00:49:06audience deserves if you're not actually
- 00:49:08out there doing the work every day right
- 00:49:09like i was like i need to be doing this
- 00:49:11work so that i'm refining my process and
- 00:49:14when i teach the process i feel
- 00:49:16confident that this is the process that
- 00:49:17works because i've seen it work and i've
- 00:49:19made it work myself i'm not just
- 00:49:20researching how other people are doing
- 00:49:22it and teaching people like that was to
- 00:49:24me
- 00:49:24um not what i wanted to do so i was like
- 00:49:26i need to go off and do the service
- 00:49:27based business to refine the processes
- 00:49:29because that's going to allow me to make
- 00:49:31sure that what i'm teaching is actually
- 00:49:33useful
- 00:49:34um
- 00:49:35so the service-based work was for that
- 00:49:36purpose um and i knew that it was going
- 00:49:39to be the that my long-term goal wasn't
- 00:49:42to have a service-based business where i
- 00:49:43was doing the work i did envision kind
- 00:49:45of like a multi-pronged business where
- 00:49:47it would be like i would train marketers
- 00:49:50on how to do this research using our
- 00:49:52particular methods and i would have an
- 00:49:54insights agency where i would have these
- 00:49:56contract marketers that basically i
- 00:49:59would get the leads i would get the
- 00:50:00clients i would outsource the work to
- 00:50:02them and that was initially because i
- 00:50:04was seeing it kind of be
- 00:50:06the model of like i would train
- 00:50:07marketers but with the intention of i'm
- 00:50:09eventually going to have this insights
- 00:50:10agency where i'm going to leverage the
- 00:50:11people that have been trained
- 00:50:13similar to what um
- 00:50:15storybrand has done so they have their
- 00:50:17certified guides and then you can hire
- 00:50:20you can choose to work with those people
- 00:50:22or you can come to the training yourself
- 00:50:23so it's looking at something like that
- 00:50:25and did some soul searching and i was
- 00:50:27away in italy at a retreat with a bunch
- 00:50:29of other marketers and one of the people
- 00:50:30there was april dunford and i was just
- 00:50:32talking to her about how she's built her
- 00:50:33business and she had this thing that she
- 00:50:35kept saying that really stood out to me
- 00:50:37when she's like if i was younger i would
- 00:50:38have screwed this business up and i was
- 00:50:40like what do you mean she's like well i
- 00:50:42would try to like create an agency and i
- 00:50:44would try to teach other people the
- 00:50:44method and i would like try to scale it
- 00:50:47and she's like
- 00:50:48she's making an obscene amount of money
- 00:50:49right now just her the only person she
- 00:50:52has on her team is a va that books
- 00:50:53travel for her like she has a business
- 00:50:56model that most people that enter you
- 00:50:59know want to build a startup or want to
- 00:51:01do courses they're trying to hit the
- 00:51:02revenue targets that she's already
- 00:51:04hitting and she's still selling her time
- 00:51:06and she's but she's doing it at such a
- 00:51:08premium that she has this amazing
- 00:51:10lifestyle and i was like
- 00:51:12maybe i don't want to build this
- 00:51:14insights agency so that's sort of what
- 00:51:16has shifted gears for me i've got my
- 00:51:19cheat sheets my cheat sheets do well
- 00:51:21i've sold a thousand copies of them
- 00:51:22without really putting a lot of effort
- 00:51:24into trying to grow traffic to that page
- 00:51:26so my priority is growing awareness of
- 00:51:28those and then working on this new
- 00:51:30program that we're gonna launch but i
- 00:51:33knew that this i always knew that the
- 00:51:34service-based business wasn't my end
- 00:51:35goal
- 00:51:36but i thought that it would make sense
- 00:51:39to have it as this kind of like tool in
- 00:51:42our tool kit because and then i was like
- 00:51:44why who who am i serving with that like
- 00:51:46yeah people want the work to be done for
- 00:51:48them but i don't need to be the one to
- 00:51:49do it and deliver that so it was uh kind
- 00:51:53of a picking point for me yeah
- 00:51:55i mean it's just fascinating once you
- 00:51:57have
- 00:51:58um an audience you can you can monetize
- 00:52:01that audience through so many different
- 00:52:02business models and often we
- 00:52:04you know copy and paste someone else's
- 00:52:05business model or um you know see
- 00:52:08something that's our first idea and i
- 00:52:10love it when people take a step back and
- 00:52:11go wait actually i have the attention
- 00:52:13and there's like 25 different business
- 00:52:15models that i could choose or different
- 00:52:17variations of it and i actually need to
- 00:52:19find the one that's right for me so i
- 00:52:20love that you're experimenting with that
- 00:52:22and i'm excited to see this this next
- 00:52:24thing come thank you for people
- 00:52:25listening like start off with a
- 00:52:26service-based business because it's way
- 00:52:28easier to make money selling your time
- 00:52:30than it is to build demand for these
- 00:52:32digital products so start there so you
- 00:52:34can get the lights on and like that's
- 00:52:37it's okay to have that be your
- 00:52:39short-term plan i see so many people
- 00:52:41that like want to go and break into the
- 00:52:43course creating world and like don't
- 00:52:45have anything else that they're selling
- 00:52:47and they get really deflated very
- 00:52:49quickly because they're like well how am
- 00:52:51i ever gonna make a living at this i'm
- 00:52:52making like you know 300 bucks a month
- 00:52:54off this thing and it's like it's okay
- 00:52:56to start with the service business make
- 00:52:59sure that you're doing enough and then
- 00:53:02to slowly transition away from taking on
- 00:53:04clients that's fine
- 00:53:06yeah i think that's great in my i
- 00:53:08have an article called the ladders of
- 00:53:10wealth creation which is like one of my
- 00:53:11flagship things that i've ever written
- 00:53:13and it has a whole section on when you
- 00:53:15should trade time for money and it is
- 00:53:18exactly about that because early cash
- 00:53:21matters
- 00:53:22okay so you've grown the newsletter um
- 00:53:24to almost 10 000 subscribers
- 00:53:26i'd love to hear what's working in that
- 00:53:28and maybe we can roll newsletter and
- 00:53:30twitter growth and all that
- 00:53:31into one because i was also looking at
- 00:53:33your twitter growth
- 00:53:35and
- 00:53:36december
- 00:53:37of last year you gained an astonishing
- 00:53:3916 000 followers in the month
- 00:53:42was that the uh
- 00:53:44was that the thread that went viral
- 00:53:46no that well i had a couple threads go
- 00:53:47viral that month but you know what ended
- 00:53:49up happening that month which is crazy
- 00:53:51um i i shouldn't even tell you this but
- 00:53:52i feel like everyone's hammering her now
- 00:53:54but amanda nat who's another marketer
- 00:53:55friend of mine and also really
- 00:53:58active on twitter she put together a
- 00:54:00thread of like you know top account she
- 00:54:01should follow and i don't know what
- 00:54:03happened i was the first one she listed
- 00:54:04i got 10 000 new followers from that one
- 00:54:07read of hers it was astonishing
- 00:54:10but like what it shows amanda i think is
- 00:54:12one of the
- 00:54:14most giving people on twitter that there
- 00:54:16is she's always interacting with people
- 00:54:18she's always giving advice and tips
- 00:54:20she's she's great at twitter but she's
- 00:54:21also just a genuinely amazing human
- 00:54:24being so i think people really trusted
- 00:54:25her and they trusted her recommendations
- 00:54:28and so
- 00:54:30uh that that one post from her had an
- 00:54:33astonishing number of followers come
- 00:54:35from it and then kind of every month i
- 00:54:38i'll have a few things that might
- 00:54:40go a little viral um you know 2000 likes
- 00:54:43like like 5 000 likes and then those
- 00:54:46posts tend to help me grow too
- 00:54:48but that was one thing from amanda which
- 00:54:50is astonishing
- 00:54:52that's that's amazing also from a just a
- 00:54:55psychology perspective and all of that
- 00:54:57like going all the way back you got
- 00:54:59listed first and that definitely helps
- 00:55:02me later and she said she's like i
- 00:55:04intentionally put you first because i
- 00:55:06want i like i knew that you deliver
- 00:55:08amazing value and she's like i knew that
- 00:55:10the first person that was listed would
- 00:55:12get the most attention
- 00:55:14so it was a very
- 00:55:15intentional thing on amanda's part and i
- 00:55:17was very grateful yeah that's amazing
- 00:55:19okay so what's been working for you to
- 00:55:21grow the newsletter because 10 000
- 00:55:22subscribers is a lot like that it takes
- 00:55:24a lot of time to get to that point you
- 00:55:26know what 5 000 of those have come
- 00:55:27through in the last three months and so
- 00:55:30there's been there was one thing that
- 00:55:32was the biggest growth um thing that
- 00:55:34ever happened and i've got a thread
- 00:55:36tagged uh pinned to my twitter profile
- 00:55:39that i wrote about um buyer psychology
- 00:55:41and it was 19 different things that
- 00:55:42marketers need to know and that thread
- 00:55:45has i think it's 6 000 likes at this
- 00:55:48point and that thread
- 00:55:50drove 2400 signups and so
- 00:55:53that i and i haven't yet done another
- 00:55:56one
- 00:55:57that
- 00:55:58it's on my to-do list but i'm like
- 00:56:00trying these other things like one i
- 00:56:01every week i
- 00:56:03post a
- 00:56:04um the day before the newsletter is
- 00:56:06going on the day of i'll post a real
- 00:56:08snapshot of some feedback i've gotten on
- 00:56:11the newsletter it's somebody saying that
- 00:56:12they love it somebody recommending it on
- 00:56:13twitter or mentioning you know sharing
- 00:56:15it on linkedin i'll just take a
- 00:56:17screenshot of that because it's much
- 00:56:18more
- 00:56:19real feeling than me kind of designing
- 00:56:21some pretty thing on canva um and then
- 00:56:23i'll just remind people to sign up for
- 00:56:25whatever the week's the topic is that
- 00:56:26week and just that one post on linkedin
- 00:56:30and twitter usually brings in 150 ish
- 00:56:33new new followers um
- 00:56:36new subscribers rather so that's been
- 00:56:38working but the biggest thing that's
- 00:56:39working is other people sharing it
- 00:56:42without me intentionally trying to get
- 00:56:45them to do that and so i'm again it's
- 00:56:47like my priority now is like how can i
- 00:56:49get that happening more intentionally
- 00:56:51i've just started um i've just added
- 00:56:54spark loop to
- 00:56:56our kind of suite of things they haven't
- 00:56:57designed our referral program yet but
- 00:57:00it's on my to-do list but i would say
- 00:57:02that the biggest driver of growth for us
- 00:57:04is me consistently reminding people to
- 00:57:06sign up the day before and the day of
- 00:57:08and using social proof as part of that
- 00:57:10post and other people talking about it
- 00:57:13and that's happening quite organically
- 00:57:15and so i'm i need to work on actually
- 00:57:17growing that
- 00:57:19i love that
- 00:57:20um okay well
- 00:57:22where should people go to sign up for
- 00:57:24the newsletter and follow everything
- 00:57:25that you're doing online
- 00:57:27go to
- 00:57:28um check me out on twitter i would say
- 00:57:29that'd be the first place i would go and
- 00:57:31i'm kate bohr k-a-t-e-b-o-u-r
- 00:57:34and you'll see there i've got a pinned
- 00:57:36uh thread talking about 19 different uh
- 00:57:40buyer psychology hacks that marketers
- 00:57:41need to know so check that thread out
- 00:57:44and if you like it which i'm confident
- 00:57:46you will then you'll know that you want
- 00:57:47to get on the newsletter list you'll see
- 00:57:48the type of value you're going to learn
- 00:57:49each week so and you'll see an option to
- 00:57:51sign up for my newsletter from my
- 00:57:52profile i love how like twitter to the
- 00:57:56pin tweet like naturally flows right
- 00:57:58into the newsletter and then i imagine
- 00:58:00the newsletter naturally flows into the
- 00:58:02checklist and then
- 00:58:03we'll go from there well the final
- 00:58:05people i know that your audience knows
- 00:58:07lots about finals like when you sign up
- 00:58:08for the newsletter on the thank you page
- 00:58:10it says do you know why your customers
- 00:58:12you know do you really understand why
- 00:58:13your buyers buy and there's a link to a
- 00:58:15short webinar and that webinar talks
- 00:58:17about why people really buy and then
- 00:58:19after that web on the webinar page is a
- 00:58:20link to the cheat sheets and like since
- 00:58:22i created that little flow the sale of
- 00:58:24the cheat sheets has gone up
- 00:58:25considerably so you know connecting your
- 00:58:28offers so that it's you know the offer
- 00:58:30like the offer becomes the obvious next
- 00:58:32step and that next step takes them
- 00:58:33closer towards their goals right as
- 00:58:36opposed to this i often see disconnected
- 00:58:38offers it'll be like here's the
- 00:58:39newsletter where we talk about x and
- 00:58:40also sign up for y because they're not
- 00:58:42related
- 00:58:43right
- 00:58:44it doesn't flow nicely together well
- 00:58:46that's perfect thanks so much for coming
- 00:58:48on the show and uh i i'm a subscriber to
- 00:58:50the newsletter and i'm excited to read
- 00:58:52more of it
- 00:58:53awesome thanks
- 00:58:57[Music]
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