Escaping the Drift with John Gafford - Why Your Content Sucks with Neel Dhingra
Episode Date: June 25, 2025Renowned content marketing strategist Neel Dhingra joins us to share his groundbreaking insights into the synergistic world of content creation and real estate. Discover how Neel's innovative approach...es, such as playing hide and seek at property listings, are captivating potential clients and redefining engagement. With his successful Forward Event as a backdrop, Neel offers a treasure trove of strategies for mortgage and real estate professionals eager to elevate their businesses through authentic and impactful content. Passion and authenticity take center stage as we discuss their pivotal roles in real estate marketing. Learn how enthusiasm can transform even the most mundane tasks into opportunities for connection, turning cold calls into warm relationships. The episode also delves into the shifting dynamics of the Las Vegas real estate market, emphasizing the importance of timely pricing adjustments and genuine insights over sensationalist content, providing a roadmap for agents navigating these changes. We tackle the challenges of content creation in today's social media-driven landscape, exploring the fine line between success and criticism. From leveraging AI tools like ChatGPT to embracing creativity and trial and error, we unpack the essentials for thriving in this dynamic field. With humor and personal anecdotes peppered throughout, this episode invites you to embrace your unique self and harness the power of authenticity in building a loyal audience and flourishing in the real estate industry. CHAPTERS (00:00) - Content Creation in Real Estate Industry (02:51) - Finding Passion in Real Estate Marketing (13:36) - Evolving Real Estate Content Strategies (20:14) - Creating Valuable Real Estate Content (25:30) - Adapting Real Estate Content Creation (36:07) - Dealing With Haters in Real Estate (39:43) - Navigating Social Media Content Creation (50:13) - Leveraging AI in Real Estate Content (56:42) - Marketing Insights (01:08:00) - Podcast Interview Dos and Don'ts (01:12:05) - Personal Branding for Success 💬 Did you enjoy this podcast episode? Tell us all about it in the comment section below! ☑️ If you liked this video, consider subscribing to Escaping The Drift with John Gafford 💯 About John Gafford: After appearing on NBC's "The Apprentice", John relocated to the Las Vegas Valley and founded several successful companies in the real estate space. ➡️ The Gafford Group at Simply Vegas, top 1% of all REALTORS nationwide in terms of production. Simply Vegas, a 500 agent brokerage with billions in annual sales Clear Title, a 7-figure full-service title and escrow company. ✅ Follow John Gafford on social media: Instagram ▶️ / thejohngafford Facebook ▶️ / gafford2 🎧 Stream The Escaping The Drift Podcast with John Gafford Episode here: Listen On Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7cWN80gtZ4m4wl3DqQoJmK?si=2d60fd72329d44a9 Listen On Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/escaping-the-drift-with-john-gafford/id1582927283 #escapingthedrift #neeldhingra #contentcreation #realestate #marketing #passion #authenticity #engagement #forwardevent #mortgage #lasvegas #markettrends #socialmedia #aitools #personalbranding #podcastinterview #success #authenticity #audienceengagement #contentstrategies #realestateindustry #contentspace #socialmediacontentcreation
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There's a gal bro who was sitting in a room, a real estate agent, and she's
sitting, she's like, Hey, how can we make new content?
You know, she hires a Gen Z content creator, you know, to come be on her team.
Yeah.
And the gal's like, you know what?
I think we should go play hide and seek at the listings.
And now escaping the drift, the show designed to get you from where you are to
where you want to be
I'm John Gafford and I have a knack for getting extraordinary achievers to drop their secrets to help you want to pad the greatness
So stop drifting along escape the drift and it's time to start right now
Again back again like it says in the intro with the show that gets you from where you are to where you want to be and today
People live in the studio got an amazing guest for you.
This is a dude that much like myself heavily involved in the
mortgage and real estate industry and several years ago, he
decided to just pour gasoline all over himself.
And what I mean is through the form of content marketing and
not only did a lot of his business on fire, but he had now
has basically inflamed the
entire industry. He is the founder of the forward event,
which is what I think in that arena for content creation for
you know, mortgage, real estate professionals, or anybody
trying to change their business. It is the best event out there
held annually here in Las Vegas, coming up in July.
If you are someone that wants to learn
how to effectively use content,
wanna know what's working right now to help your business,
you need to tune in,
cause it's your lucky day,
cause it's live in the studio.
Welcome Neil Dingra.
Neil.
Thank you, bro.
This is fun.
Yeah, man.
Glad to have you, dude.
Always good to see you.
Friend of the show, multiple time guests.
Always glad to have you on. Yeah, man. I friend of the show multiple time guests always glad to have you on
Yeah, man. I've been seeing you at all the personal development space like I think through mutual friends for years now. Yeah
For years. Yeah, I've been lurking in the shadows a little bit. But as we all know, that's I'm emerging rapidly
It's funny. I posted the other day. I was speaking to Edmond and I always wrote
I wrote on the passion that back from my extended tour of Scandinavia and the
subcontinent,
cause I had to have some sort of excuse before I've been laying low and that
was it. Yeah.
You seem to like come in and out like you go hard for a while and then then we
don't see it for a few months. Then you come back.
Well, I try to, you know, I'm one of those,
I like to only say things when I feel like I got stuff to say. That's,
that's good.
Cause I find that the people that always seem to have to have something to say, most of us are listening to.
Yeah, especially right now.
If you think about how much noise there is,
and it's just some people saying the same shit,
you could tell they're not really into it.
I would say right now,
if you're not excited about what you're doing,
it's not gonna work.
Like just think about it right now.
There's never been this many people posting content
at a specific time.
Everybody and their mom has a podcast piece of content.
They're trying to do a YouTube channel.
And so how do you cut through the noise?
Well, one way is just being in being excited about what you're doing.
Like, so I just see people a lot of times they're just my wife says,
shouldn't say this term, but like, I just feel like it's flaccid.
I'm trying to think of what's the better term, bro.
No, that's pretty accurate.
That's pretty, yeah, that's a little something.
Would you say the content is just flaccid?
You know, the event, the business is just, your plan is just flaccid.
Like you're not even into it.
And so that's the first thing that comes to mind.
I'm like, so then it's dead on arrival right now.
So what'd you gotta do is like cut through the noise.
I almost just said, yeah, it's, you know, it's kind of floppy, but you're just
trying to shove it down their throat. Anyway, that's not probably not appropriate
But that was the analogy I was coming up with from that. This is why I shouldn't use the term but no
Yeah, you get what it goes a certain place when you use that term Neil. That's how it is
So I think I think you're right though. I think being authentic everybody talks about authentic. What is authentic mean?
You know, you got to be authentic or people can smell it.
But I think it's really believing in what's coming out of your mouth.
And so like, let's just say you are in real estate.
You want to make content about real estate. You want to be.
Do you even like what you're doing? You know, like the other day,
I was speaking to an event and half the room was like dead.
And I said to the people, I said, bro, if you guys aren't into this,
like if you hate this job, you hate this business, you guys were happy about it when rates were low, but maybe you're
not happy about it today. You don't really believe in home ownership or whatever. Dude,
just quit, go do something, go sell insurance, go sell something else because it's hard enough
for the people who are into it. Imagine if you didn't even like it, you know? So I think
that's the first thing is you talk about being authentic and be yourself. Well, what if you don't even know what you're doing?
Like you don't even know yourself.
So maybe you should look at what you're doing, find some passion and like decide.
Like I'm not one of these guys who says, go find your passion because I was not
passionate about anything until I got good at it.
Yeah.
You know, and then when you get good at it, you get good feedback.
You're like, oh, I like this all of a sudden.
So you can become passionate about anything, but I just think if you absolutely hate what you're doing,
you should look to pivot or try something new.
Or if you want to just get re, re engaged
in what you're doing.
I was driving the other day, I was joking about this.
There's a building being built next to our office.
These dudes are out there.
It's a hundred degrees outside, bro.
They're digging ditches.
They're putting shit up out in the heat.
I get to push numbers on the keyboard, bro.
I get to post videos on the internet.
Things could be a lot worse, you know?
So like get some perspective
and get excited about what you do.
Well, it's so funny, when you walked in,
I was on a Zoom, right?
When you walked in, I was on with a bunch of agents.
And one of the guys was asking, he said,
hey, you know, I think I need some coaching
because, you know, what do you think about this guy or that guy and this and that,
and it was going through some different coaches that are out there.
Well, no names. They go skin. Oh, cause I work with this job, but I hate cold call.
I hate this. I hate that. I hate that. I hate,
I hate started laying out all the things he hates about this business.
And I said, bro, um, the problem is not who your coach might be.
The problem is that you hate everything that you gotta do to be successful with this business.
And you've either got to change your perception of do you really hate this or do you just
not find the meaning behind it?
Like it's not gamified for you.
You find no satisfaction in it.
And we're talking about things like like door knocking, for example, which is really effective
right now.
The old school hand to hand combat stuff is doing very, very well in real estate.
And he's like, wow, I just, you know,
I can never, I'm not gonna be a door knocker.
And I'm like, dude, I'm a guy that I would never walk up
like the solar guys and they're like bang, bang, bang.
Hey, did you see what we're doing at Mary's house
down the street?
Yeah, I got that, no.
But if I got a good reason to knock on that door,
I had no problem doing it.
For example, if I just sold a house to my clients
and my clients moved in, you know, at this house,
I will knock 20 doors in every direction
and I'll just say, hey, my name's John Gaffer,
we're from Vegas, we just sold this house to my clients.
I just wanna make sure they feel very welcome
in the neighborhood.
So when you see them moving in,
would you mind just stopping and saying hi?
And they're like, yeah, no problem.
Okay, cool, they're moving in on Sunday.
What was your name so I can give it to them? Oh, I'm Bob and Mary. Okay, Bob and Mary, Blue House, Big Bush, got it. Okay, cool. They're moving in on Sunday. What was your name so I can give it to them?
Oh, I'm Bob and Mary.
Okay, Bob and Mary, Blue House, Big Bush.
Got it.
Okay, here's my card if you ever need anything.
Now those people, when they shut the door,
they're thinking, honey, our realtor sucked.
He didn't do this for me.
So there's-
And also when you, I've seen you when you talk to people,
you're like excited, you know,
your presence when you walk up
and you coming in with the energy.
People can feel that, you know?
And so I think part of it is like
you told this dude, like, hey, let's get into it. But I would
just say this, like, this is actually a really good thing for
people in our industry, who want to make viral content, you
want to make viral videos. The best thing you can do right now
is to say the thing that everybody in the industry is
afraid to say, or the thing that's on everybody's mind, but
they're not saying it.
So I asked you about this the other day through DMs.
I was like, bro, why is nobody in real estate
talking about the fact that prices are cooling off?
It's like they're afraid to say it,
maybe for their listing, the listings they have,
or they're just used to saying prices always go up,
but like, yes, prices go up always over time,
but you see pullbacks, you see correct mini corrections.
It doesn't mean it's a crash by the way.
Why aren't agents talking about this?
Well, the problem is because agents,
much like consumers read the headlines
without looking at the data.
They don't look at what it really means.
So what I try to do for our people here is say,
let's look at this headline and let's look at the data
and let's see what it really means.
For example, right?
Probably seen stuff all over the place.
Inventory is up 97% in Las Vegas, 97%.
The average person sees that and what do they think?
A flood of homes across the market.
The number they started with last year
was 1.6 months of inventory, 1.6 months.
So 97% is now 4.2 months, even well padded.
Because you're coming off a very low number.
Right, but a healthy real estate market is six months of inventory.
So even with that giant number, we're still under, we don't have enough inventory still.
So I'm like, take this, take this information and use it to attack the market.
Like I told everybody today, if you want to send it, you want to send an email out today
to your entire database and get more response than you've gotten in the last six weeks.
Send this why June may be your best opportunity to get a great deal on a
house. Yeah.
Why, or, you know, taking a step further, I think specificity is what works right
now, you know, because people get a general message and that's a great
message by the way, because people are looking to get a deal.
Even I've noticed this, John, even rich people want to deal.
They always want to, you know, a deal.
Yeah.
You got a guy haggling and he can afford to buy three of the homes cash, but he
still wants the best price.
So, uh, getting, letting them know that there's opportunities out there.
But the next thing is be specific.
So one email or piece of content that would crush would be like deal of the week.
Yeah.
So just, if you committed to doing this, you would crush if you just did every, every week,
52 weeks here, you decided to put out the deal of the week on social and through your email
and pick a property, look at the property, what it was listed at versus what you could get it
for today. There's going to be a big difference there sometimes because they listed it too high.
Sure. Maybe there was, you know, they're chasing a comp that was last year. That's no longer
applicable. Um, and whatever. And then look at that deal and talk about like,
hey, here's the numbers on this deal. And then people are going to be in, in just inspired or
just intrigued by that one. They're going to look at the other one. It's not about that house. It's
about getting the wheels turning in their head. So I do this very all, all the time on social and
through email is I pick one program, one deal, one specific result,
talk about that in the piece of content,
and then it gets the wheels turning,
people ask about it for their situation.
Do you find that,
well, it seems a little difficult, right?
It's kind of difficult to do that this is available deal
because here's this house,
like you said, they're overpriced, whatever.
Would it, because this is what we kind of do, right?
And you tell me if it's right.
I'm deferring to your expertise here, my brother,
which is I like to lean into the FOMO on people, right?
Which I'll say like, look, like I did with you
in the DMs and you asked a question.
I was like, bro.
You just got a deal and you told me you got a deal.
Exactly, I was like, I told Neil the story offline,
but I said, no, one of my clients,
and we've told all of our clients a story now,
it's five identical houses almost for sale
in Southern Highlands, right?
Ranging from 1.88 million to 2.2.
We figured out which seller was the most desperate.
We went all the way vertical on them with the offer.
We just closed that house for 1.65.
Huge.
Like now I want people to hear that
because that's not like, maybe that's a this happened.
Here's a story that we told today.
That's specific.
Well, story we told today, which was one of our clients.
You know, again, we love luxury real estate here,
but we hit every pitch, right?
We're not snobs in that manner.
One of our clients, first time home buyer, using NACA,
which is a down payment assistance program,
needed all their closing costs paid.
A year ago, no chance, no chance.
This client went to escrow in a house three days ago,
decided they didn't really like it,
and got an escrow in another one, same terms,
two days later.
Wow.
Twice in three days,
a buyer that was completely out of the market.
They got the credit.
Everything, with the credits and everything.
That was totally out of the market 12 months ago,
now has choices.
So if you're a well-qualified buyer,
they can pull the trigger,
what do your choices look like?
Exactly, so talk about these scenarios.
And then the other thing that the consumer always thinks
is when they see a pullback,
they think it's just gonna continue.
That's why people miss, you know,
what's the average stat for, you know,
people who try and trade the stock market in and out?
I think they 90% plus lose money.
Yeah.
Because they just can't time it.
You can't time the market.
So what happens is when it's coming down a bit, you think it's gonna fall further and you don't just can't time it. You can't time the market.
So what happens is when it's coming down a bit,
you think it's going to fall further and you don't buy.
Then when it's up, you're like, oh shit, I want to chase this thing up.
And then you buy. So you're using emotion.
But if you look at the data, anytime we've seen one of these pullbacks
over the last 10 years since the post crash, I guess,
every pullback has been an opportunity to get in the market.
So I'll give you the same example.
We wanted to live in Summerlin in Red Rock Country Club.
Cause my wife wanted to make sure the kids could go
to the school, the private school over there.
And we were looking in that area.
It's a really nice, small community there.
And we couldn't find a house, whatever.
And then all of a sudden, this was 2022.
The rates had just spiked, okay.
From like the lows to up and the market cooled off.
Just that winter, I remember 2022 winter, things got a little bit slow.
Yeah.
And so there was a flip.
This guy had listed, it was luxury flip in Red Rock
country club where we live.
And he had listed it at the peak price, which was 2021 price based
on those comps and it was just sitting, it was like on the market for five,
six months.
And so I just talked to him.
I was like, bro, we love the house.
We can close before the end of the year
because he needed to get this deal off books.
And I said, what's it gonna take to get this?
Like, what's your bottom line number?
And we came to an agreement and it was,
just like your example,
hundreds of thousands of dollars off the list price.
And that would not have happened six months later
or six months before.
So it was like, I saw the opportunity.
And so these things happen for buyers
and most of them are just asleep
and they just missed the opportunity.
Well, when you see the stats coming out,
they're talking about like, you know, all price drops,
all these household price drops.
Think about this, I wanna know what your's is.
Think about the last time in Las Vegas,
a seller had to worry about selling their house.
In quite a while.
2011.
Yeah.
Cause the hedge funds moved in in 2011,
sort of buying everything.
So 2011 was the last time you had to kind of worry about it.
So that's 14, it's a 14 year run.
I'm just saying, you know what?
I know it's only worth X,
but let's just throw an extra 40 grand,
a hundred grand on it and see what happens, right?
Which has been the market.
So now what's going on is you're seeing this
reeducation of sellers that are having to say, okay,
I need to get realistic with what I'm doing because either I'm going to set the
market on my neighbors or my neighbors going to set the market on me.
Especially if somebody needs to get out for certain,
they got another house for closing on, they're moving to another area,
they got a new build, whatever.
And so the agents are having to come educate the client on like, look,
you need to get out of here in the next 90 days.
I want to make sure that happens.
If we list too high and this sits, you're going to be,
you know, from a position of weakness now.
It doesn't look good.
So I think that's what's happening.
People are like maybe being stubborn
and then coming along to like, okay, I got to cut the price.
Well, I want to ask you this.
I want to go back to something you just said
when you were talking about,
say the things that nobody is scared to say.
I think that one of the on vogue things to do,
and it was when the market slowed down
in that 2022 winter, one of the in vogue things to do
is to be that guy on YouTube with this face,
the, you know, oh, market crashed,
because if it bleeds, it leads, trying to get clicks.
I remember Patrick B. David did a bunch of content on this none of it came true but he went super
viral for all of it. Because if it bleeds it leads. So my question is, being the
content guy I'm gonna defer to you, in the long run I always tell people like
you got two choices when the markets get choppy right? There's people that want to
do stuff and the people that have to do stuff. So focus on the people that have
to do stuff but you got two choices. You can be the people that have to do stuff. So focus in on the people that have to do stuff,
but you got two choices.
You can be the guy that's standing on the beach,
yelling, hey, the seas are rough, you're gonna drown.
Or you can be the lighthouse that safely guides
the people that have to go through.
In the long run, is making that the sky is falling content
gonna hurt your career or is it gonna go away fast
that people just don't remember?
Yeah, so this is called being a contrarian, right?
So this is a great strategy to get more views on Instagram, YouTube, whatever.
It's to have a contrarian viewpoint against the grain.
But the other part is you need to be the correct contrarian.
You can't just be going against grain just for the sake of getting views,
because eventually you look like an idiot and they'll be like, Hey dude,
everything this guy said didn't come true. Stop listening to him.
So I think what you got to do is like, Hey, this is not a crash,
but there are opportunities.
And let's pull up a chart of like Apple and S and P 500, whatever.
Look at the best companies.
They go from the lower left to the upper right, but there's all these
little bumps along the way.
These bumps are what we're talking about.
We're in one of those bumps in your market.
Maybe every market's different by the way, like I'll say this and then San
Diego's like, dude, we're not seeing that.
Okay.
I'm not like, you know, whatever,
but it's just crazy because people think how it is right now is how it's always
going to be. So I would make a,
a piece of content about this gal of yours or client of yours. That's like, Hey,
she got all the seller credits she needed to make the deal happen. Yeah.
First time buyer couldn't get credits last year. Now she got the credits. Cool.
And then people would tell me that that's not happening in my market. You know,
that's, you know, good
luck with asking a seller for that. Like, well, you know,
it's possible. It just depends on where you're at. So the
national headlines don't really help anybody. And like you
say, it says freaking Zillow says prices are going to cool
off 1%. Well, that's nothing. You just got that client 200
grand off their property. 200 grand sounds a lot different
than 1% pullback, right? So every deal, every listing,
every property is different.
So I think you can put that message out there
and then let people know like,
hey, the data changes, I'll update you as it changes.
But I think it's like,
it goes back to the part about being authentic.
If you're gonna say the same thing
that everybody expects you to say all the time,
regardless of market conditions, bro, you're just noise.
It's just noise.
Like when are you gonna tell the truth?
Like let's talk about what's going on in politics.
You don't have to get into that whole thing,
but like say something comes out that affects our industry,
give your opinion on it.
You know, I'm always talking to agents and they're like,
dude, I'm scared to give my opinion
because it might piss somebody off.
I'm scared to give my opinion because I could be wrong.
Well, imagine you work at freaking Microsoft over here
and I come to John
Gafford has been in the industry for decades and I'm like, Hey, John, what do
you think's going to happen to market?
And then John says, you know what?
I don't have a crystal ball, man.
Your, your guess is as good as mine.
And I'm like, dude, I was hoping you would have some opinion.
You've been doing it.
You got to have some of it.
You have to.
But these are what agents do.
They're like, dude, I don't want to say the wrong thing.
So I think you have to have an opinion.
If you're not stand for something, you stand for nothing.
And you can give your opinion even on stuff that comes politically
from, from, uh, the administration.
And you don't have to take a side.
You can just be like, here's what happened.
Here's my opinion on it.
And, uh, you know what I think?
I respect people now, bro, that, that disagree with their
political party from time to time.
If you're just saying the same shit that we would expect you to say always,
then you're nothing more than a, it's like an NPC, it's like a robot.
I think you're seeing more and more of that.
You're starting to see like if some dude, I'm a Republican, but then if they do some dumb shit
on tariffs, I'll say it. Hey, I don't agree with this.
I think you're seeing on the, I think you're seeing on a lot of my friends that I think,
I think it's almost like the Republican label is, is going away from a lot of my friends that I think, I think it's almost like the Republican label
is going away from a lot of my friends
and now they're just identifying as conservatives.
Yeah, same thing on liberals.
Like you can't just agree with everything blanket.
It's wrong with the disagreeing with your party.
But it's like, hey, this doesn't sit well with me.
That would crush on social
because you would at least start a debate.
It's that tribal need.
People need to belong to something and they feel like they need to win.
I know several people on both sides that have something they don't agree with,
but they would never say publicly. I'm like, so I guess, you know, maybe that's pushing the
envelope for them. Start small, start with something, you know, easy, but then let people
know. And then what you'll find is if people,
Cardone told me this, I was on a podcast with Grant Cardone.
He goes, if people know you, they'll flow you.
And so people know him, he gets opportunities because of it.
But if they don't ever get to know you,
then what's gonna happen?
Nobody can even decide if they like you or not.
Well, I'll be the first one to say it here.
I think the military parade is stupid.
I think I never thought I would see something like that here.
It's stupid.
It makes no sense.
Anyway, let's get back to content creation.
Cause that is a, that's the politics here.
No, no, no, we're not.
We're not, we're not going to do that.
So let me ask you this.
What content right now?
Cause obviously this shifts a lot, dude.
And I wake up some days where I'm like, whoa,
what happened?
Like Instagram's like, I no longer like you.
And I know that this not works.
What's working right now?
What's not working right now?
So if you want to do talking videos,
it just, you have to be the bar for information has gone up.
So if it's something that you could just simply Google,
there's no real value in it.
It's better than doing nothing,
but you need to, we just need to raise the bar.
So I'll give you an example.
Last year you might've said,
hey, here are three tips for selling your home for top dollar.
That's just a general video.
It's better than nothing.
It's good, but it's probably not going to get
a lot of views today.
So the better result would be like,
here's how I got my client this amount,
or here's the specific story of this,
or you know what?
We were struggling. This, this, uh, this guy was struggling.
My friend John was struggling to get this price for his home until we discovered
this. And then you tell them what you did.
And those those specific stories work way better than the general stuff.
And so people say save this, share it, you know,
and so that sticks with people a little bit more.
So that's the first shift with talking videos.
The other part is just teaching people like some real shit,
like, you know, what are the real tips?
I think you got to give away your secrets, you know,
like what are the things you do to get people a deal
on the buy side?
What are the things you get on the sell side?
This is crazy, but I've told a few agents this
and they think I'm crazy, bro,
but I'd love to hear your opinion.
If an agent really wanted to blow up on social right now, you know with all this NAR stuff, so if you're in
real estate you want to go viral, what if you made content that said here's how you buy a home without
a real estate agent, here's how you sell a home without an agent. It's counterintuitive right?
You would tell them the steps, you would tell them the shit, but you know what know, here's what happened. You would be like, dude, that's career suicide.
They're going to do it on their own. Well, what'll happen is bro, the guy, the electrician who gets
the most views on social tells you how to do the work yourself, the plumber, same mechanic.
Yeah. It's DIY. Everybody thinks they want DIY till you get home with the box from,
and you actually have to figure it out. Yeah. Then you don't want it. So,
but what you have to realize is today's generation
on social, they all think they can do everything themselves.
They think they would love DIY.
So you just give them the info with no sales pitch.
And then what happens is people start to like really trust
and gauge and then in your guides or in your emails
and in your stuff, you're like, hey,
you want me to just handle all this for you?
Or if you want, run it by me, here's the link, book a call,
and you'll get way more people that way.
Yeah, I think it's funny.
I do agree with that.
Show people, most people don't wanna make the sausage
they just wanna eat it, I agree with that.
But there was a guy, I don't remember his name or his handle,
and very, dude, very rarely do I see something
and call it out on social media.
I don't need to be anybody's lifeguard.
I'm too busy to monitor social.
I don't need to be the social media police.
I got enough people trying to monitor what I do.
There was a dude in Denver that had like,
I hate realtors.
Realtors hate me.
Whatever, right?
You know the dude I'm talking about.
And he did this, I'm gonna sell my house myself,
let's show you how easy it is, blah, blah, blah.
And then right at the end of it, it's like, oh, because it was so easy, I'm gonna sell my house myself, let's show you how easy it is, blah, blah, blah. And then right at the end of it, it's like,
oh, because it was so easy,
I'm gonna create a company that'll ask like, okay, dude,
like that's not the most transparent sales pitch.
Like it was all done with the end in the beginning.
And that's, it became off totally disingenuous.
He got slaughtered as he should have.
And it was, cause it just, I think like, yes,
but be honest about what you're doing.
So if you want to do the thing where let me show you how to not use me and how to
not need me, that's fine, but be honest about it. Hey, I'm doing this.
You could say, Hey, I'm an,
I'm an agent and I've gone through this stuff and I'm going to give you the
steps. I have a guide on this. Here you go. Now,
my goal is that some of you through me sharing all my expertise will want to
work with me and I'd love to work with you.
But if you want to take the information and use it on your
own, that's fine. So what you have to do on social is you have
to realize most of the people will never do business with you.
Most of the people will just watch your videos and never talk
to you, never DM you. Some of them don't even engage with your
stuff, but there's value to just having them in your audience.
Yeah.
Nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd.
So like if I told you to come to my event
and there was three dudes over there,
they're just sitting in there
and there's no music on and it's boring.
You'd be like, dude, Neil.
Yeah, I've been to that club.
Yeah, yeah, you've been there.
Nobody wants to go there.
But then if you come to this club or this event
or this thing, and there's people there
and there's engagement.
Now, it doesn't mean that everybody there
has to be my customer,
but it's the same concept even in our event. There's a thousand people there. There's a few
people who end up working with us on the coaching side or in our masterminds. But not most people
just come there, have a great time and go home. That's cool. So same thing with the content.
You just need people in the tent. So that way when the guy who is going to be your client comes
across your video, there's a little bit of engagement. There's people watching it.
There's some likes, there's some comments.
Nobody wants to be the first comment.
So now you look at it, there's a conversation going on.
He might feel more comfortable engaging with you.
So it's just taking that social proof
and trying to make content that would appeal to more people
than just your customer.
But as a result, you cast a wide net
and now you have an opportunity to get your customer.
Yeah.
What's your process for seeing the trends in social media?
What's Neil's process?
So, you know, you can look at what's trending in general.
So you can look at answer the public
and they will tell you what are consumers
searching for on Google.
What are the trending searches in real estate, housing,
whatever industry, your insurance, type it in
and it will tell you
Actually in real time what people are searching for you can make content about those topics. That's great
The other thing you could do is literally just if you're here's the thing that people don't realize if you're on social media
And you're in business your content creator. You shouldn't be just doom-scrolling if you're on social you should be researching
So when I scroll for an hour, you know, I'm like,
my wife's like, hey, put your phone on.
I'm like, dude, I'm researching.
Give me a minute.
But I'm looking-
I'm researching.
Yes, but like it's market research.
What are the videos that are getting a lot of reach?
That's how I literally stay on top of it.
Cause you'll see in real time,
hey, these videos are starting to take off.
Hey, I noticed these videos are starting to go better.
That's how I noticed that a lot of these talking videos,
the trend had changed from these highly produced, colorful captions and perfectly edited videos to
more raw videos that are shot on your phone. That changed over the last year, but you would know
that if you're watching it, because you'd be like, Hey, I'm seeing less of those and I'm seeing more
of these. What's going on here? You know? And so I saw this with graphics as well. Right now,
if you want to reach a ton of people on social,
people think all you can do is post videos.
You can post carousels, which are just graphics.
I see a lot of Cody Sanchez doing that,
a lot of Hermosy doing that.
And these are blowing up right now.
You reach new people.
So those would just be shown to your followers.
Now those carousels are shown to strangers.
So you can grow your account, your following,
your email list, all through carousels, images.
You don't have to be in the video or shoot a video.
So what I've seen on those is like people sharing
more real, raw thoughts.
You can do, I've done this both ways.
One that I've had blow up is literally taking my tweets.
So I tweet on X, screenshot it,
and those are the slides of the 10 slides on the carousel.
The other one, which is kind of crazy,
is Cody
Sanchez. I saw I did this. She wrote something ugly on a note,
just like kind of scribble, shitty handwriting. I was like,
Oh shit, that's a trend. So I just started writing my
thoughts, taking a picture of it, bro, putting as the
carousel, those ones blew up. So there's like, I would only
know that if I had been watching social, just researching like,
hey, I noticed less Canva
Pretty graphics and now more raw graphics. So maybe I should try that. So do you think that I mean again
Which came first the chicken or the egg are are a certainty are a certain
Handful of influencers driving the algorithm or is the algorithm driving them? Yeah, that's a good question
So I think what happens is Is driving the algorithm or is the algorithm driving them? Yeah, that's a good question.
So I think what happens is the algorithm is basically
what people will watch.
So people try new things all the time, creators try,
and you can try new things all the time.
There's a gal bro who was sitting in a room,
a real estate agent, and she's sitting,
she's like, hey, how can we make new content?
She hires a Gen Z content creator to come be on her team. And the gal's like, you know what?
I think we should go play hide and seek at the listings. And the agent's like,
what, what are you talking about? That's a, and she's probably, you know,
poo pooing the idea, I'm sure. And the girl's like, just please,
just give it a shot. And she's like, fine, let's go do it.
So she goes to the house, holds up a mic and says, Hey,
you want to come play hide and seek in our new listing? Let's check it out.
She goes in and then in each room, she's hiding somewhere. And then she pops out and they get to show the listing.
Bro, millions and millions of views.
Her account went viral.
Over the top.
And then there's all of her other boring videos started to get more views too.
Why? Because they just tried something new.
So part of this whole process is, you know, people will try something and then it takes off.
So you got to do some flops before you get a banger.
Just try some shit. Why? Because they just tried something new. So part of this whole process is, you know, people will try something and then it takes off. So you got to do some flops before you get a
banger. Just try some shit. It's like, what happens if you fail? Nothing.
I'll tell you why I'm laughing. I was, I literally, I had this idea popping in my head.
I think it got like 30 million views. It's insane.
I had this, I had this idea popping in my head this morning and it's like, you know,
where those ideas were like, that's too far. Like that won't work. I'm like,
You never had those ideas where like, now that's too far, right?
Like, that won't work.
I'm like, I wonder if anybody's ever done home tours
on OnlyFans where you put like naked women in every room.
And then all of a sudden like, I'm like,
I'm like, yeah, that's too far.
You may have gone too far, but yeah.
But you could do some crazy shit, you know?
And so people have tried this.
And by the way,
this was all shot on the iPhone.
No, no production crew, no drones.
And so-
I've been to weddings recently where the cinematographers
at the weddings are running around with iPhones.
Yeah.
On gimbals.
There's a place and there's a time and place
for highly produced videos.
Yeah.
And then a lot of people view those and they think,
oh, this is produced, he's trying to sell me something.
And so it's better.
Sometimes you just pop on the phone and you can still make a clean video with
the phone. You just have to wipe the lens and get a mic. Yeah.
People need to clearly hear you and see you.
Dude, it was funny the other day I just, cause there was this guy had posted this
video and I did my standard thing. You know,
saying the Vegas market was going to crash back to 2008 eight levels.
And whenever I see somebody do something,
this guy doesn't live in Vegas,
he just somebody who's chasing clicks somewhere else
and had his data to support his hypothesis.
So I did what I always did when I said,
hey, look, you know, I'm a broker in local market.
We did about 4,000 transactions.
Tell you what, I'll bet you 10 grand.
I'll put it in escrow.
You put 10 grand in escrow,
you pick the date of the next 365 days that we were going to turn to that,
to those values. And uh, yeah, winner take all. And of course,
you've been doing this for years.
Years I do this. I love calling people. I love calling people.
They lose the bet every time.
They don't, they, nobody takes the bet, Neil.
They they're never going to take it cause they have no interest in being right or
giving correct information. It's just how many clicks like,
is somebody's being a contend just for the sake
of getting for just for the sake of you get,
eventually get exposed just for the sake.
That's bullshit.
You should just do it for the sake of helping clients.
You know, the last,
the only guy I ever had that actually engaged with that,
that was telling, that was the same old tick that bet,
blah, blah, blah, was that bull dude.
That's in jail in Utah now.
Oh yeah.
That guy, yeah, him.
But I turned, anyway, back to the story,
I turned on my camera,
just sitting on the front deck of my house,
someone's going down, I was like,
I'm gonna go live on Facebook, which I never do.
I'm like, I'm just gonna do 14,
and I talk for 14 minutes just about the market
and what I think people should be doing, blah, blah, blah.
And that video blew up.
It went everywhere.
And I was like, and it was grainy.
I mean, the quality was terrible.
Cause it was live.
People probably just felt you were being real. I trust the guys,
probably telling the truth.
And so that's probably what attracts more people these days.
You still need to be like, like it needs to be understood.
It can't be like so grainy that you can't see it.
But I think if it's so clean, like sometimes these agents still get,
and there's a place for this.
Like you'll have a nice listing.
They get a whole crew out there with the drones
and they make a beautiful video.
That's actually really good.
It's a good piece to have.
For YouTube.
Yeah, it's good on YouTube.
And it's also good to just to have in your repertoire.
So when you go to your next list,
you could show the type of quality marketing you do.
But then where are the other videos?
Like, why aren't you in there with your phone
talking about this room or that room?
Like you know every house or every property has the best piece of it
You know like and this is this is a way that every agent could improve their home tour videos
Instead of just starting off with welcome to blah blah blah. Let me what let me let's check it out
And this is what everyone does same shit that everyone else does which is I guess better than nothing
but what if you went into the, the best part of the property?
Like I, this is the, this is the best kitchen, or this is the best view.
One of the best views I've seen in Las Vegas.
And then you go into the other part.
So the big piece of content that people need to shift right now is taking the
best part of the video and putting it up front.
So a lot of times you'll go on a rant on social 20 seconds into the rant.
You'll say something that really
impact like you say what the kids will say is a bar like that
was that was it right there. Move that to the front of the
video. Like even in editing, you don't have to reshoot the
video, just have your editor move it to the front. That
video is going to blow up now because you're starting with
heat, you know, rather than warming up to it, people don't
give you a chance to warm up.
Did I was before my time and remember, remember the show
Survivor Man? Do you remember that that show? They dropped that dude off.
I did a video one time with one of my lip,
but I had a blue hair and this thing called surviving luxury, right?
I didn't, I didn't, we shot it backwards. I didn't shave for like,
I didn't shave for a while.
So I had like a beard basically going on and like tie my tie around my head and
rip my sleeves. And it was all about surviving in the super luxury house.
Like, I know what it killed it with us today. Absolutely luxury house. Like I was the surprise. I know I would have killed it with this today.
It would absolutely crush.
I wish I had that video.
Cause everyone's trying to be Ryan Serhan
and then you come out, you know, like, look at me.
I think it would just stand out.
Dude, that was my only viral clip
when I had Ryan on the show.
I said, you know, I blame you for ruining real estate.
How do you feel about that?
Yeah, that's funny.
But you know, like, let's just, my brother,
he loves wearing suits. He gets them made, tailor-made. But you know, like my brother, he loves wearing suits.
He gets them made, tailor made.
So if you are a suit guy, you want to be like, all right,
Sarant, do that, do you.
But if you are deathly uncomfortable in a suit every day,
don't freaking wear a suit in your video.
Just be yourself, you know, like be.
And I think like there's a, you can, you know, go on a scale
depending on who you're meeting with or the clients you're with.
But I think the people who are not being themselves eventually just comes through
in the content. That's what the audience has gotten really good at.
Yeah.
People scroll videos really quick. You ever watch someone scroll?
They can scroll like 30 videos fast.
Yeah.
And then they stop. Why do they stop?
Sometimes it's the way somebody said something.
It's what their vibe, their energy.
You never know. Like it could be that they're jumping up and down and doing
something crazy. But a lot of times on talking videos, it's unknown.
It's like, why'd you stop on that?
Well, I don't know.
I just, I kind of liked the guy.
Or girl.
It just, it looked like you had something to say.
Or the, yeah.
Which makes me next question though.
Yeah.
Are we seeing people, are we seeing the shift away
from the welcome to my garage with my Lambo and this?
Are we seeing a shift away from that stuff working?
The flex.
Yeah. So I think there's a, you know, the influencers of before were like, look at me, look at me.
I got these, you know, look at my house, look at my cars, whatever. That really only would
work today on dumb people. You know what I mean? Like you think about someone with below average
intelligence is like easily, easily impressed by that today. Anybody who is the people you'd
actually want to reach, they're not impressed by that anymore. So who is the people you'd actually want to reach,
they're not impressed by that anymore.
So the new vibe should be, come with me,
not look at me, come with me.
Right?
So you, it's okay to be successful.
So come with me and see this house,
come with me to check this out.
Or like, I'm successful and inspire people.
So for example, like you ever see people shoot their video
in their Rolls Royce?
And I can say this to you cause you have one.
I did it this morning.
Yeah, yeah. But you'll shoot it. I was just driving to work.
But you just happen to be in a Rolls Royce Wraith. Yeah. Now there's another
influencer, you know out there, who's gonna do it and he's gonna go like this
selfie style and he's gonna move his head to the side. Oh, so you can see the dog.
We already got it, bro. Like you're in a Rolls Royce. Yeah, I don't do that. So it just
it's like you're begging for attention.
So then all of a sudden the vibe is off. It's like, dude, you're trying to show off.
So I think there's just an energy behind. It doesn't mean you can't.
One little head lean. And you know exactly why they're doing it.
You know, they, and people do it all the time. Nobody's riding around like that.
Yeah. Nobody's like this. And so they do. Scoliosis in the rolls.
Yeah. And then all of a sudden they're
cured. Right. So it's just, this is the problem is, you know,
if I shoot a video from my backyard, people like, Oh dude,
it looks like you guys live in a golf like what golf course
that that's a nice view. Yeah. And I'm like, it's not like
I'm saying, Hey, check this out. Look at, I have a nice home.
Yeah. You just happen to be in one. That's where you are. So
people start to just recognize, Hey, this guy's putting in the
work. A lot of people, people are scared to show their success because they don't share the
work. Right? So if you ever on vacation and you're like in a five star resort,
you're like, dude, I don't want to post this cause people are going to think I'm
flexing.
Why don't you show the freaking when you're at the office at 10 o'clock at
night, putting a deal together. Why don't you talk about this week was a rough
week, bro. Two deals fell through wife's
people like dude my life's amazing bro everybody's got problems even the most successful people i
know are depressed sometimes like be real and then when're on, like what happens is if you show the work and not just
the ups, but some downs as well, talk about some struggle.
Then when you're on vacation, you know what the comments are, dude, they're
like, dude, enjoy the time with your family.
You know, good for you, bro.
That's what the comments are like because people have been around, right?
So it's not showing off anymore.
So I think it's just showing people like full vision being, again, going back to
it, just being real rather than trying to show off.
How do you deal with that?
So obviously, cause you're not showing off,
but you still look, you can literally post a picture
of like a purple circle, nothing but,
and somebody's gonna be like, whatever bro,
like in the comments, how does Neil deal with the haters?
I did last week, I had a video go viral
when I just talked about the tax bill.
I said, here's the tax bill, here's what I like,
here's what I don't like.
People are calling me retarded, you know,
look at this fucking guy.
And there's some good comments, there's some bad ones.
Dude, eventually you just stop, you just ignore it.
Like what are you gonna do?
The only person who is talking shit to you in the comments
is somebody who is beneath like your level. Nobody hates up. Yeah, it comments is somebody who is beneath your level.
Nobody hates up.
Yeah, it's just somebody who's upset with themselves.
Hates down rather is what I'm saying.
Nobody hates up.
They're already, it's never from someone you admire.
It's always from someone who's probably
in their mom's basement.
Many times if you click on these profiles, it's faceless.
It's just some random account.
It's a bot sometimes.
I think they're just trying to rally up.
So you never heard of a guy on his deathbed
that he's saying, you know what Neil,
I wish I would have spent more time arguing
with strangers on the internet.
Yeah, on the internet.
Nobody gives a shit.
So eventually you just stop caring.
But I will say, I did the video the other day
and I posted like, here's my journey in education.
I started teaching these classes, no one would come.
And I started-
Yeah, we talked about it.
Yeah, I kept doing it, kept doing it. And then now we're doing it at a high level, finally got good at it. It started teaching these classes. No one would come. And I started, yeah, we talked about it. Yeah. I kept doing it, kept doing it.
And then now we're doing it at a high level. Finally got good at it.
It takes years, whatever. Yeah. But I showed the pictures of the journey and me
sitting in an office wearing kind of a collared shirt and no hat.
And, and, uh, I put that in there. And then in the comments,
there's like 90 comments and all of them are like, dude, good for you.
I'm so glad you stuck with it. Proud of you. And there's one comment, John,
it's like, dude, now I see why you wear a hat. And I was like, what? Why? Yeah, why?
Why? I go to the page, it's some faceless account. So whatever, I don't care. But what's crazy about
this is why do I only remember that one comment out of the 90 people who are nice? So it's just,
your brain is always going to remember negative people. So that's why I empathize with people where they're like, dude, I get some hate and it pisses me off. I'm like, ignore it. Well So it's just your brain is always going to remember negative people. So that's why I empathize with
people with like, dude, I get some hate and it pisses me off.
I'm like, ignore it. Well, it's hard. Yeah. Because you just
remember the negative feedback.
Trust me, I had a point in my life where when I was on the
apprentice, coming off of that show before this is back before
social media kids, we didn't have social media back there was
a new site called Friendster
and it was just coming out.
But anyway, there was a website called television
without pity and it was just forums about reality shows
where people could go on and talk about it.
And dude, you know, when it first started,
somebody sent me a link and it was just,
I mean, you're talking about thousands of people
cause it wasn't like you had social media.
They were just a handful of things
you could talk about online.
And this was one of them.
And everybody was talking about The Apprentice
and dude, thousands of people talking about you, right?
It became like addicted to me at that point
where I was like, and when things were going good
on the show and I was doing well,
I was like, this is great.
Everybody thinks I'm amazing.
And then I took what they call the greatest, you know,
nose dive in reality show history.
And it got a little different and bro,
but it consumed me all the vitriol that was being spilled on that thing. what they call the greatest, you know, nose dive in reality show history. And it got a little different and bro,
but it consumed me all the,
all the vitriol that was being spilled on that thing.
So maybe I had a little bit of an earlier start to it,
but these days, man, I just tend to be like,
you know, somebody says something terrible.
I'm like, bro, you got me, man, you win, man.
Here's what you should do.
If somebody talks shit to you,
this is what gets them every time.
Just reply to their comment.
Their rude comment, sometimes really rude, just reply, LOL,
nothing else. And they'll be like, what, like, why are you laughing at me?
They're like, they don't know what to do. So, or you can be done.
What to do with my hands. What just happened?
Or what I've found a lot of times is somebody will say something super nasty.
Like, Hey, you're an idiot for saying this. And you go, well,
you can respond with some facts and be like, actually,
I was just reading the news. Like this is actually what's occurring. Um, you know,
sorry if it offended you. And then they reply back and they're like, Oh no, no,
no, yeah, it wasn't offended. But, but, and they walk it all back.
So it's so weird how people are so,
they would never say this to your face by the way. Yeah.
Nobody walk up to you and curse you out, but they'll do it in the comments.
You know, of course, of course, they're keyboard tough guys.
Yeah. So, but it just, you just have to ignore it. And then what happens also is, uh, you'll
have an overwhelming more positive and then these will just be the few things that, you
know, kind of, yeah, they get outnumbered by the good ones.
All right. I want to ask you this question because I asked John Highland this, who was
a guy that was behind the liver King asked him this question as well. Um, cause you're
your dad. Yeah. Okay.
Because you're in the business of content creation and teaching people,
other people to do content creation. Do you wrestle with,
do you ever wrestle with any type of moral responsibility about ADHD, short attention spans,
because we are feeding the animal that our kids are clicking? Yeah, I think, uh,
ever wrestle with that.
Sometimes I think it's like you could. So here's the thing.
Social media and all these apps,
they are highly addictive.
People are, they have world-class PhDs
working on how to keep people on the app,
especially TikTok.
TikTok is one of the most addictive things
and it's frying people's brain all the time, right?
So you have to limit your use,
but at the same time, look at how
every single person, bro, is addicted to this, right?
So when you walk outside,
there's gonna be a guy who can't even walk
from the door to his car without looking at his phone.
Can't take a shit, you can't eat
without looking at your phone, right?
People trip, they literally will hit a curb and fall
because they're looking at the phone instead of looking.
So I was telling my son the other day,
dude, don't walk down the stairs looking at your phone.
Like you're going to fall.
And that's going to, you look real dumb, you know? So knowing this,
knowing that everybody and their mom is addicted and people's backs are permanently curved because
they're looking at the phone. How could you use this for good? Could you put out a good message?
Could you help people? Could you blow up your business? Could you build something that you can
help a lot of people like use it to your advantage. So social media either is something that is going to kind of ruin you or you can
use it to help. It's like to pick which side you want to be on.
Yeah. I think that's,
that's something that I struggle with sometimes where it's like, you know,
am I making content that I want to go wide or am I making stuff that I
genuinely think is trying is helping people like this podcast? I mean, you know,
if this doesn't go viral, I'm okay with that.
But if it really helps a certain amount of people,
then great, that's wonderful.
Yeah, and then there might be clips that do go viral.
But then overall, you're just reaching more people.
So yeah, like sometimes I wanna make a piece of content
to reach more people, but from a standpoint,
it's like, hey, how could I get this message across
and not get crushed by the algorithm?
It's not necessarily like,
hey, how can I get people addicted to the app?
It's more just like, Hey dude, I have a really good message to share.
The way this algorithm works is you got to be pretty good at this to get more
people to see your video. So what can we do to make more people watch this?
Yeah. I love this because I know you coach a bunch of people, right?
And I think people would tell content creators or people that are making videos,
you have to be charismatic for them to work.
So how do you work with people that are just flatlined?
And where are those people?
So if you look at my content, I show people,
I was the worst, you know, like I'm not a extrovert,
I'm an introvert, I'm a nerd, I don't wanna be on video.
And then I was the last guy to do it.
But what you'll find is if you have information to share, you can do it.
Like you don't have to be the polished, you know, charismatic guy. And what I found out actually is some of those people aren't good because they they're overthinking everything.
They want it to be perfect and they want to like come across a certain way and they're they're just in their head versus the guy who doesn't care.
You know, he's putting out there. I saw this agent who's blowing up right now in Vegas.
I'll have to find it and send it to you.
Dude is just like seriously overweight and he owns it.
And he's just throwing the videos out there
and he doesn't care, you know?
And he's just like everybody's vain and trying to be perfect.
And he's like, you know what?
Eff it, I'm just gonna do the content.
And he's building an audience, just being himself.
So there's room for everybody,
but it's just like you have to be okay with yourself first.
I think, I think the flawed humans do better now than the per well,
obviously if you're trying to link people again to only fans,
the better you look, the better off it is.
But I think just like the normal,
like look at the people in Vegas that have built these huge followings.
You know,
Brandon from Vegas is a realtor that does a lot of restaurant stuff that has nothing to do with real estate.
But you know, I, sorry, Brandon, but I don't think he was calling.
He's not calling himself a looker, you know, model or anything.
No, he's not a model. He's not self and he's putting out the content and he's,
and at some point it's just a game of attrition, bro.
Who's going to stick with that? Who's most people brought,
they'd try something for a month or two
and then they say this doesn't work and they quit.
That's the common person.
The people who are winning are like that guy
who stuck with it for years
and then figures out a way to funnel his traffic
into business so that you actually monetize it.
The platform's not going to pay you much.
You know the deal on YouTube.
Yeah, you get a million views,
you get a few dollars from AdSense.
It's nothing, it's not going to change your life.
But if you can get clients, like we're in a high margin business,
each client is a, is a big lift to our bottom line.
If you do a piece of content that reaches a few hundred people and it gets you
one client, that's viral. Like I would say that's,
I would say this VFM viral for me. You didn't get a million views,
but you got a client that's viral. If you got a new relationship, that's viral.
I want to talk about this because this is, this is point. It just happened not too long ago here in Vegas. Um, you had the,
the content creators get in the fight on the strip and then one of them shot the other two.
Oh yeah. I saw that.
Is that's crazy. That's yeah. So I look, I obviously,
there's probably some mental illness involved there.
For sure. But I'm just saying it's like,
now you got content creators beefing like the 90s
East web rap games, right?
Like, is, is this where we are now?
Are people?
I don't know. That is crazy.
I saw that video and I'm like,
and everything's being captured on video this morning.
Crazy. A plane, just huge tragedy, by the way,
like a plane just crashed in India
with 250 people on it a Boeing Dreamliner and
Everyone's dead and somebody caught it on video and the videos are going viral everywhere and it's like this is crazy
Everything's being documented
You can't hide from anything, you know, so but it is wild to see
Content creators people putting out weird crazy shit, people doing all kinds.
It's almost like they have a new sense of courage.
It's ego.
Ego and courage.
Well, it's, it's, it's people's ego is being driven so much by clicks and likes instead
of anything of actual value.
Did you ever see a video where somebody's getting attacked or injured and then everyone's
just filming it?
I'm like, why didn't anybody help?
Put your, yeah, put, put your phone down.
Help somebody. Like, or change your phone down, help somebody like,
or change your phone to somebody else and go do something like,
it's just weird that everyone would rather capture it on phone. So, um,
do you see this? Is it Kevin Hart? Uh, he's, you know,
he does the show in Vegas all the time at resorts world.
And so he was talking at one of the events and he was like, dude, I love the fans.
They come up to me,
but it's getting crazy where a fan will just walk up to you with the,
put the phone in the face.
Let's take a photo. He's like, dude, can we shake hands like nice to meet you?
Love your work, you know, talk first and then yeah, you want to take a photo? Cool.
But people are just the only care about is the cloud. They want a picture so that you can post on Instagram.
They don't even care about meeting the person they want to capture. But you but you go to concert. Like, yeah, I'll go to a concert.
I'll film some clips.
I'm gonna give it,
because I want to post about it and I'm excited.
Unless it's a tour concert,
then you take your phone out, you get kicked out.
Yeah, exactly.
Thanks Maynard.
But I'm not like trying to film the whole dang thing.
You know what I mean?
Like you put your phone away at some point.
So it's just weird.
It's a weird environment
where everybody's trying to document everything.
Do you think, I saw a stat the other day
that said that 67% of Gen Z doesn't drink alcohol.
That's good. So you look at how addicted we are to our phones. Now,
do you see a time when there's backlash in this?
Do you think this is here for good or is this kind of way?
So there'll be something I'm sure it's already coming out where people are,
there's more ADD, there's more, you know, just health effects
because of scrolling and being addicted to this.
It's just, you can't keep kids' attention.
And now with AI, it's even worse, you know?
So yeah, I think there'll be something, it'll change,
but at the same time, bro, I remember being a kid
and playing video games for all night,
playing Nintendo or freaking whatever, Xbox. And before that, or freaking whatever Xbox. And before that it was something else.
And before that something else. So like, yeah,
I guess there's always some villain of the day, you know,
right now it's cell phones and the internet,
but people eventually come around to like responsible use or not, you know?
Yeah. We, you talked about AI. Yeah.
How, how is AI currently impacting content creation and how will it and how will it do you see
it affecting in the future?
So it helps right now.
If you suck, it'll get you to like a place of average.
So like if you don't know what to talk about, you want some ideas, you can just prompt chat
GPT.
I'll give you some ideas.
But what I found bro is if you are actually smart and you actually know a few things and
you prompted, you can get crazy output from AI.
Like if you have a conversation with it and really get,
what you put in is what you get out essentially.
So anytime I ask AI for anything, it's a huge,
it is a great tip for anybody who's using ChatGPD.
This will improve your prompts
and what you get all the time.
Before you get a result, so you ask it a question,
say, before you give me your response,
what questions do you have for me? And it'll go
back and forth with you. And then the output gets 10x better.
So like, you you're not giving it all the info it needs to make
a really good output. And if you just tell it, give me something,
it'll give you some trash. But if you go back and forth, it's
crazy.
Well, it's funny, I think the one thing I see people don't do
enough with it is train their own GPTs
to have a specific GPT to do this.
I mean, I have a Nevada broker now
that I've been training for like six months
and she's right every time.
Bro, this is crazy on the mortgage.
Every time I ask her a question, she's right.
We just, I went to New York to speak to this group
and then they previewed, they're on the mortgage side.
They previewed, they have a AI process that will close a transaction,
an easy one.
So like a simple purchase for a guy who works at MGM.
Got his stocks, no problem.
Simple deal.
You don't need people anymore.
From start to finish, they'll complete the deal.
Can read his stocks.
Underwrite it, everything.
You've been cut.
So for the basic stuff,
it's gonna replace a lot of these functions. It already has.
I'll give you another example. We have a,
we were getting a small event space studio here in Vegas.
And so we found a place and I needed to negotiate the lease for the last 20
years in business. I was give my lease to my attorney guy, corporate guy.
He reviews it, gets it back. We pay,
I probably pay a couple of grand for that service, dude.
I just dropped it into GPT said here, please review the lease.
Let me know. It did the whole thing.
Where do I have a problem?
Bro. And then it said draft.
I said draft to the email to the broker to tell them what revisions I need.
Here you go. Copy paste into Gmail. You're done. Like this is pretty crazy.
It just replaced a couple of G's worth of, uh, basic attorney work.
So for those basic functions in all jobs, real estate,
it's going to take it away. So that's if you are in a business where you sell fulfillment,
you're like, dude, I'm really good at the job. I'm really good at the paperwork. We have a great
process. That's not what you should be focused on. You should be focused on just making sure you can
meet as many people as possible, build your brand so you can connect with people. And then you use
AI to just handle way more business. Yeah. I think the human connection is the one it will be the it'll be the last thing to go.
Right. It may be here forever because at some point you'll be tired of dealing with bots.
So when you see content when you asked about content, yes, right now there's a lot of content
being generated by AI. There's videos being generated by AI. And at some point, you're going
to people will be looking for the signal. Is this a real human or is this AI? And the real stuff will cut through.
Do you think that is the platforms see the AI stuff
and they knock it down?
No, so what it is, is they'll allow you to,
but they have a button when you post, it says mark
that this is generated with some AI,
either all or some AI.
And you're supposed to self, it's like on the honor system.
You're supposed to click that button.
Yeah, good luck with that.
Yeah, good luck.
It doesn't limit your reach.
So I have some videos where I generated an avatar of me teaching and it looks
pretty good. It's like 98% there. Yeah. Pretty close.
It'll eventually be a hundred percent accurate. And I posted it and I put the,
yeah, but it still gets the same reach. So it's,
it doesn't hurt you by doing that.
I have a video that we made because you know,
obviously digital fraud within the title industry. I have an AI bot, I made it with Vidyard.
I think it's me, it's an avatar,
talking about digital fraud and like how,
why you've got to call and verify
with actual humans and things.
And the video-
Yeah, or have a password.
Yeah, well, in the video with,
the reason you want to do this is
I didn't even make this video.
This is a completely generated thing.
This isn't me.
So if I can, if you're watching this thinking this was me,
this was all done.
Yeah, just to a lot, just to-
Super deep fake. Yeah, to let people know. Yeah. Just to a lot, just to let people know.
Yeah. And I'll give you one more piece of content
that's crushing right now.
Oh, what is that?
Is if you can pick, so this is,
this is going viral every single week for people
in our group and then you can translate it
into business as well.
But you pick what's going on right now in terms of trends.
So news trends about AI news from politics,
whatever the news is.
Remember the fires in, um, in LA, that was national news for people.
So in my group of people we coached, there was a few creators who started making content about what happens to your home when the house burns down.
What happens to the mortgage? What happens to like, how does this all get covered?
Like what happens to the, uh, does the insurance just rebuild it?
What's the process like?
Because what happened is the entire country
was now worried about what would happen to our house
if it burned down, right?
So not only covering the news of like,
here's what's going on in LA fires,
but also coming, here's how it affects you
as the average homeowner.
Maybe you should take a look at your insurance policy.
Yeah, note to self, make videos,
what would happen to my mortgage
if my house got completely looted by riders?
Exactly. Yeah. Same shit. Yeah. Same thing.
Bro viral all over the place because people were,
it's just surfing on what's going on right now.
Here's how this new tax bill affects you, the homeowner.
Here's a new bill that came out that could affect your ability to buy or sell a
home this year. Here's the thing.
And what I found is the audience today wants to be in the know.
They don't want to be on the outside. So when you start off a video by saying,
Hey, did you hear about this?
Bro, people just want to watch it.
So it's not me saying I'm the expert.
Watch me, Neil.
Is that your best hook right now?
Bro, have you guys heard about this?
Did you see this shit?
That is crushing for me right now
because people want to be in the know.
And I'm not saying I'm the expert.
I'm just, so this is a, it's a psychological thing,
not to get too nerdy, but when you make an observation,
it reaches more people than when you say you're the expert.
When you're the expert, they have to psych,
they have to decide in their head,
should I listen to this person or not?
And even if they don't say it out loud,
they're thinking to themselves, is this guy good or,
you know, I don't know him.
Cause any video that goes viral,
it's mostly new people, strangers watching your video.
So if you take that off the table and you're like,
here's an observation, here's a headline,
here's what's going on.
You already know the news exists.
And then you give your opinion in the video.
Do you find that like what Jefferson Fisher does
when he says, this is why, who I am, what I do,
and why you should listen to me having that little blurb?
Yeah, that's great.
And then what happened was he started
for doing those videos in his car.
He's everywhere. And then he just stuck with it for doing those videos in his car. He's everywhere.
And then he just stuck with it. So he found a format that works and he just stuck with it.
That's what a lot of people miss. You know that dude who does the ice, puts his face in ice,
Ashton Hall, and does the whole work? Dude, he did that for years, I think,
posting those types of videos. And then they started taking off. He found a format that works
and he just stuck with it. Same thing, Jefferson Fisher.
He gives these communication tips from his car
with a quick pace.
He started doing them and then eventually
they started blowing up.
And then he is known as the expert, right?
And he says it.
So when it's a new person watching,
he's like, dude, here's who I am.
Here's why you should listen to me.
Yeah, I love that.
So speaking of listening to AI,
this is something I did with everyone McManus last week
that I loved and I'm gonna do it with you today.
So what I did was I asked AI to write me
20 lightning questions for you that were pertinent to you.
They're not just stupid, like what's your favorite animal?
They're actually pertinent to you.
And I said, you can feel free to throw
some strange things in there.
So here we go, you ready?
What is this like, is this a
Rapid fire, we're going rapid fires.
Okay.
Bam, we're going rapid fire.
This is, this is where we're building our clips, Neil,
as I like to say, you ready?
Here we go.
Question number one, video written content,
what converts better in 2025?
If you suck at video written content is way better.
Okay.
Number two, last DM you got that made you laugh out loud.
People send me memes all the time. Was it? Yeah. I think it was, uh,
it was just one of these ones of, um, it's a,
it's one of these ones where somebody did something crazy. Like it was like a,
a prank,
like one of those prank ones where these guys are throwing shit at each other
and doing some crazy shit.
So he would drop a bunch of like a bucket of water
on his buddy.
And then another guy did something else
and just crazy pranks.
I love the two Asian guys that put the kazoos
in their mouth and smack each other with the,
I don't know, I guess I'm not.
These are viral videos, they make you laugh.
They are, okay.
Number three, what would you rather,
would you rather sell out an event
or have all your videos go viral?
Go viral. Okay. Number four,
what's the biggest waste of money in marketing today?
The biggest waste I would say is a traditional media,
meaning like buying billboards and static image,
cause you can't target people and it's, you could do it for way cheaper on
social.
Okay. What's the bit I'm sorry sorry. Uh, Instagram stories or TikTok lives.
I would go Instagram stories cause that's my jam.
One creator who actually walks the walk. Oh, there's a lot. Like we just talked about Erwin.
He's a, he's an older guy, but he's, he's the real deal. You always say the real thing. You know,
so many people I know who are just being themselves, they're not bullshitting you,
but then there's a lot of people you've seen lately too where it turned out everything they were saying was a scam
some of these people are in legal problems now, it's crazy a lot of I think I think the day of the
Flex influencer join my coaching program is is rapidly going by the wayside rapidly going by the wayside
Okay, if you lost everything today, what business would you start?
So if I lost everything today and I had to start from scratch,
I would get into helping small businesses and, and, uh,
medium sized businesses with social media marketing. Like I think it would crush.
What's the most overused word in personal branding right now?
Um, overused word in personal branding right now?
Overused word.
I guess, yeah, be authentic.
Yeah.
Everyone tells you to be authentic.
Authentic?
Yeah.
What does that mean?
What does that even mean?
What's the biggest red flag on someone's content?
When they show that, that, uh, headling.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The Lambo or the Ferrari, the double R headling.
What did you say?
You call it scoliosis. Yeah. The Rolls Royce scoliosis. Yeah. That's what that is. that headling, the Lambo or the Ferrari, the double R headling.
What did you say you call it? Scoliosis?
Yeah, the Rolls Royce Scoliosis.
Yeah, that's what that is.
We'll name it right here.
Yeah, it's a Scoliosis Royce.
Over there like show their watch or you know, whatever.
You see the moves.
The flags.
All right, you're forced to choose funnels or followers.
Well, I think you would need, if you want, it's two things.
If you want to build an audience, long-term build brand,
followers and subscribers, but if you wanted to make a bunch of
money, the funnels were you need to be, then you can just run
paid ads to it and make more money.
Okay.
One event speaker you'd book cause you thought it was funny
just to piss people off.
You know, I think we were gonna get Dana White
last year to come by, and I think half the people
would be happy, the other half would be pissed.
But there's a lot of people who are known
to one political side or the other,
and I would wanna get them, but I'm worried
that it would piss off half the audience.
Who's the number one person you'd pick?
That would be one of them, who else is there?
You know what, I think it would be cool to interview Donald Trump.
That'd be dope.
Like how Grant Cardone did.
I think there'd be a lot of people upset,
but there is some really, like he is a good marketer.
He used marketing to get the most powerful position
in the world.
Oh dude, he's the best.
You know, it's funny.
He was on podcasts.
They came up with the best marketing ever.
I saw a story about him the other day
and it was, I don't remember who was telling it,
but they said, you know, I had this opportunity
to go to dinner.
I had to go meet Trump in his country club for dinner.
And he would take it out there or somebody.
And he was like, I went out there
and the first thing he said was,
you gotta try the clam chowder.
It's the best clam chowder in the world.
Okay.
So he brought the clam chowder and he goes,
I ate it, it was okay.
And then he goes, I had to go back out there again. And right on the side of the side, you gotta get the clam chowder and he goes, I ate it, it was okay. And then he goes, I had to go back out there again.
And right outside, he said,
you gotta get the clam chowder,
you gotta get the clam chowder again.
You got the best clam chowder in the world.
And he was like, okay.
And he ordered his table.
It was this time, the second time I ate it.
I said, you know, I said,
you know, this is really good clam chowder.
And he goes, see if I say it enough,
you'll believe anything.
Yeah, that's funny.
And he goes, man, how scary is that?
It's like, that's gonna, well, it's what I thought it was. Yeah, that's funny. And he goes, man, how scary is that? It's like, that's gonna out what's what I thought was good.
All right, next.
What's the best investment under $500
you've made in your brand?
Under $500 would be, well, it costs a bit more,
but if you can get a used one, I would get a new iPhone,
or like a used iPhone.
And that would be the best investment you can make
in your brand because you could, now, if you already have a phone,
it would be a mic for that, a wireless mic for that.
A wireless mic for the phone.
And a light, like a light, you can get a simple light
and mic for your iPhone for under 500 bucks.
Okay.
True or false, the algorithm hates honesty.
False.
Yeah, it does, it would actually reward it.
Okay.
Which forward speaker surprised you the most good or bad?
You know what? Gary Vee is a buddy of mine. And it was kind of like, it was not a surprise,
but he just never has a talk. Like he just comes there and just speaks his mind. And so you would
think this guy is one of the highest paid well-known speakers, influencers in the world,
but he just comes out there, says his thoughts off the top of his head.
And he may not be the best speaker, but people love him. And so I realized that. And I was like,
dude, I think Gary's way better in it, in a conversation, a fireside chat.
So we did a little bit of keynote and then switched it up to us chatting like this.
And it crushed, but that was a surprise. Cause you would think that he's going to come prepared.
He's going to come with the freaking,
he's going to have it dialed in and he just shows up.
He's like, Hey, what do you want me to talk about?
Oh, not expecting that.
You should figure that out by now, right?
But he's great. Like he's awesome.
It's just, he's just, that's how he rolls.
That's funny. All right.
What's your guilty pleasure app when you're not working?
When I'm not working, I pretty much spend time on YouTube
or Instagram, TikTok sometimes, but mostly social.
All right.
How long does it take?
How long does it take you to decide
if somebody's full of shit?
Oh, I think like, I was talking about this
with Urban the other day.
I think I could detect fairly quickly.
And I was saying to him, my wife's even faster.
She'll decide fast.
She had empath?
Does she recognize herself as an empath?
Probably, I don't know.
I haven't ever looked into it,
but she's like telling me gut feeling right away on somebody
and what was the time she was right?
But it takes me a while to catch up to that.
Yeah, I talked about that with everyone.
My wife is a super empath.
So she could tell you,
does she ever tell you like right up front?
I've had two seven figure business deals go south.
I lost seven figures on them, two separate deals.
Both times my wife was like,
I don't like these people, don't do the seal.
Both times, up front.
And I was like, no, no, no, that's how it is.
So now we have an agreement.
I will not do business with anybody.
And we've been at events where like,
I'm cutting a deal with somebody just to do something
or look at something, blah, blah, blah.
And I'll say, you know what, hang on a second.
And I'll go grab her because she travels with me
and I'll go grab her and I'll say,
you gotta meet this guy.
Why?
Because I just, I need to read on him
and show me to him be like,
oh yeah, he's good people, he's fine.
And I don't do anything with, unless she's like in on it,
I'm out.
So yes, I love that you use your wife for the same thing.
I love that.
It's important.
I love it.
One thing most people misunderstand about you.
I think they would think that, you know,
anything I do right now that it's like,
it just is easy for me.
But all the things have been taken,
like taken a lot of like struggle
or a lot of work or consistency.
So a lot of times people see a success,
but they don't realize like,
oh shit, I struggled with that for five years
before it worked.
You know, so it's just like the whole thing
of the tip of the iceberg
and you don't see all the shit below it.
So I think I'm guilty as just everyone else.
It becomes a highlight reel.
You only show the good stuff
and you don't talk enough about the shit.
Speaking of which, number 18,
what's the biggest flex most people don't know about you?
So like anytime I would say,
when I talk about flexing and I say,
hey, I have this property or this, you know,
financial success or this,
they don't see that before we did any of that stuff,
we built our wealth through just buying rental properties.
So like before I ever got a luxury, like a exotic vehicle,
I made sure I own five or six homes.
Yeah. Something else is paying for it.
Yes. And so doing that first.
And so people see the flex,
but like a lot of times people flex and they don't have any money or somebody
will be like, Hey, what's the payment on a Lambo? I'm like, I don't know.
I just bought it cash. You know, like I don't use the title. But like, um,
so I think that's the flex is doing things where you're buying something that
you could afford 10 of cash. Like not just doing it,
stretching your budget so that you could look cool on Instagram.
How am I going to figure this out? Yeah, that's not cool. Yeah. Would budget so that you could look cool on Instagram. How am I gonna figure this out?
Yeah, that's not cool. Yeah, would you ever run for office? Yes or no? Oh
All right, what is the Neil ten years from now look back at the Neil today and cringe about
Ten years ago. No, no, no, what is the Neil ten years from now?
Look back at the Neil sitting on that couch and cringe about. I think, so this is a good question for everybody to ask,
including you.
If you were the main character in a movie, right?
What would the audience be screaming
that you should be doing, that you're not doing?
And so I think for me,
I do so many different things in business
and there's a lot of shit I have to deal with,
but the number one thing that moves the needle for my brand is doing more media. And so I was like,
anytime somebody is talking with the coach, like, do you need to be doing more of that?
Unless of this, this, this, and this, and this, I'm like, yeah, but this pays the bills or this
does this, or I'm still doing this. And so I think it would be, dude, you should have been getting
focused on what is your level 10 opportunity. People have level 10 opportunities in life all the time and they give them like
level three effort. If you gave it level 10,
you'd be like in a totally different place, five to 10 years from now.
But the problem is you can't do that because you get your hands in so many
different other things. Running this mortgage business, you're doing this,
education, you're doing coaching, you're doing this media.
What if you just went all in? So this guy, Louis Howes, you know,
probably one of the better known podcasts.
He was doing coaching.
He had a mastermind.
He had something else and he was also doing the podcast.
And he talked about this in some conversation.
I don't remember where he said at some point he talked to his business
coach and he said, you know what, what if we just dropped everything
and went all in on the podcast?
And then you say what happened?
Blew up.
So level 10 opportunity he saw gave it level 10 effort. And most of the time we. Yeah, blew up. Blew up. So level 10 opportunity he saw, gave it level 10 effort.
And most of the time we don't do that shit.
So there's probably something
that you have an opportunity right now
that if you went all in on it for the next five years,
it would take you, it would set you up.
Here we go.
It would be crazy, but we don't do it.
We don't do it.
Yeah.
All right, last question in this, I love this question.
What's the one question you get asked on podcasts
all the time that you wish
they would stop asking?
I think people waste time, but this is the worst question on a podcast is they
ask you for like your, your like upbringing or I don't think people give a shit.
Maybe they do once they get to know you, but I think most people will listen to a
podcast. They want to know what you could teach them. What is your story going to
inspire them? Do you have some knowledge for them? What's the value?
And it could be funny.
Like there could be others value, not just education,
but I don't think anybody gives a shit
where I went to school or what I did this or this.
Like, and people will ask you a bunch of that stuff.
And I'm like, dude, let's just skip to the good stuff.
You know what's so funny about this?
Last week, which I have asked people that give me back up.
No, no, don't do anything though.
But this is why I love this question.
It's like I asked Erwin and he goes,
oh God, they just keep asking me
if I could give advice to my 27 year old son.
And I'd probably ask that question to people a hundred times.
And I was like, bro, I love this
cause I've never asked you that again.
And I'm never talking about people's childhood again.
Yeah, I think like there's probably a place for that.
If it was pertinent to the story. Yeah. If it was like, dude, I would love to know how you came from like this
place to this place, then your upbringing or if it was about psychology or some shit.
But if we're talking about marketing, do people really? They don't give a fuck. Well, then it's
so funny. Like when I, when I innovated again, we talked about Sarah earlier, but when I first
started with him on, on the, on the,
on the podcast, you know, we're talking to him,
I tell him about your guy.
And he was just like, I could tell he was just so bored
by the question and it was just, ah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
And that's what I'm like, oh shit, I gotta break.
I gotta pump some life for this, which I was like,
so I tell people all the time that, you know,
million dollar listing ruin real estate.
How do you respond to that?
And he was like, what?
It's like, yeah, it's like, yeah.
You guys yelled at each other on the phone. That's not how deals are done. Like, what
are you doing? It's funny. Is it, is it actually like those deals, then they do it. Did he
tell you, is this all staged or real conversation? No, no, no, no, no, no. So, so New York doesn't
have an MLS. Oh, really? So they have to kind of go to like those open houses and do all that stuff.
And there's no MLS. Not really. Not this cohesive that has everything. So they have to understand
that the inventory, they have to know that, which is why it works so well in New York because,
you know, now every time you list a house, the owner wants a broker's open, right? Cause they see
it on TV. Dude, I've never seen any high, high, like there's no high net worth agent going to
those broker's opens in Vegas.
Cause we have the MLS with every property on it.
Everybody knows what's out there.
It's fine.
There's nothing, there's no, you know, I know that,
you know, Robert Refkin is trying to change that
with what he's trying to encompass
and send us backwards a little bit in my opinion.
But that those things change that,
but like them yelling each other on the phone,
he's like, no, you guys, you understand in New York,
that's how we do it. Because then the attorneys have to drive the contracts.
There's no like boilerplate contract that gets sent over back and forth like
your market. Like here, somebody calls and says, you know, Hey,
let's talk about this offer for this house. I'm like,
I can't negotiate an offer I don't have sent it to me.
Send me something I can execute and I'll let you know either with the signature
or counter. That's what we'll do.
Well, what's the deal with people?
I was just in New York and people are just assholes in general. Yeah.
It's just a different world, man. I'll never forget again. We're just rude. AF.
I don't know what's going on.
We were filming the apprentice.
We're sitting there and they were doing an interview with me one day and we're
sitting on the stoop in Brooklyn and they'd be sitting there interviewing from
like an hour and a half because his interviews ran fairly long.
And this little old white haired lady kept popping
into the, into the doorway.
You could see her, she lived in the building
and I was seeing her there until finally she kept popping
up and the producer's like, ma'am, I'm really sorry.
We're going to be done in just a minute.
And she opens the sweet little 80 year old woman
opens the door and she goes, you've been here four hours.
Fuck off already.
I was like, I just met my first real New Yorker.
There she is. There she is.
There she is.
Well, dude, I'm excited for the Forward Event.
It's gonna be massive.
If they wanna find you, obviously you're everywhere,
but how do they find you now?
Just DM me on Instagram, it's Neil Home on Instagram,
and then Forward Event, we do every year in Vegas.
Sometimes it gets sold out, like right now it's full,
but occasionally there'll be a few seats that open
because somebody canceled or something.
So you can go to forwardevent.com.
Cool, I love it. Well, man, if you listen to that today, if you didn't get something out of that open because somebody canceled or something. So you can go to forwardevent.com. Cool. I love it.
Well, man, if you listen to that today,
if you didn't get something out of that,
something's wrong with you.
But again, I think the key to this is,
hey, if you learned anything today,
I think it's gotta be zero in on what makes you you.
Don't try to be somebody else.
Everybody else is taken.
And then let the world get to know you
because the more that people get to know the real you the more
opportunities gonna show up for you we'll see you next week
what's up everybody thanks for joining us for another episode of escaping the
drift hope you got a bunch out of it or at least as much as I did out of it
anyway if you want to learn more about the show, you can always go over to
escapingthedrift.com, you can join our mailing list, but do me a favor,
if you wouldn't mind, throw up that five star review, give us a share, do something,
man, we're here for you, hopefully you'll be here for us.
But anyway, in the meantime, we will see you at the next episode.