Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - How to Play the Long-Game with Ron Tite
Episode Date: October 3, 2019Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyEntrepreneur and bestselling author, Ron Tite, teaches us how ...to see the world from a non-obvious and humorous angle in order to communicate more effectively.Get more of the podcast: https://ryanhanley.com/--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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Today's guest on the podcast is Ron Tite.
Ron is a speaker, an author, and the CEO of an agency, church, and state.
Ron was named one of the 10 most creative Canadians, and in general, he's just a funny, good guy.
We spend a large portion of this episode talking about the speaking business, about our beliefs around leadership and storytelling and sharing ideas in the context of the speaking business, something we both have a great deal of passion for.
And we also talk about Ron's new book, Think, Do, Say, and the core message within that book around helping people and organizations share their story.
story and their message with the world. It is my great honor to bring you the wonderful,
the tremendous Rontite. One of the things that I thought was most interesting when I was
preparing to speak to you was really your focus on an intentional inclusion of comedy into your
work. And I'm super interested in that because intrinsically, I am not a funny
human being. I'd love to say that I occasionally can drop a self-deprecating reference that will get
a few chuckles, but I am not intrinsically funny. So I'm interested in, like, is that something
you've always been interested in? Is it something that you've had to work at? And where does that
come from in injecting comedy into your work? Yeah, I think there's two perspectives there. One is
injecting the insights and perspective of a stand-up comedian, the business of the business
of stand-up comedy and the craft of stand-up comedy.
I think that's one whole area of thing
that brands and leaders can follow and entrepreneurs can follow.
There's great lessons there for people.
And I know that world because I spent 20 years
as a stand-up comedian.
And so I was on the road and I toured,
and I did corporate shows and hosted a show
called Monkey Toast right up until just a year and a half ago,
I guess, before, or two years ago, I guess,
before we had our son.
And so I've been involved in comedy,
and I know that world really well.
The second part is the inclusion of humor
into material, into speeches, into writing, you know.
And I think there's two reasons.
One is that comes naturally.
That's how I see the world.
I see the world.
I'm always thinking of like,
what is funny about the situation?
What is the unique angle,
what other people would find humorous?
And I think why I do that,
and maybe why I have an entrepreneur's brain is that if you see a toothbrush just as a toothbrush,
and you only see it that way, and you only use it for brushing your teeth, that is kind of a
metaphor to how most people see the problems in business. It's like, we've always done it this way,
this is the only way you can solve that problem, you know, that's it. And the second you can
look at it from a humorous perspective, you're actually showing somebody that's like, I know
you only see it from this angle, but what if you saw it from this angle? And they go, oh, I never thought
of looking at it from that angle before. And when they laugh, they prove that they got it,
that they actually had the ability to see that toothbrush from a completely different angle.
And so by showing them, look, you just laughed. You prove that you can see this from another
perspective. Now, now I'm going to get, I'm going to show you the perspective. I really,
really wanted you to see it from.
And this is the important one.
And this is the serious one.
And this is the strategic one.
So there's a couple of, you know, in speaking,
laughter is really powerful because it's disarming for people.
It's a great unifier for an audience who like, you got that?
I got that.
We're all in this together.
And you get to see it from another perspective, which is the power.
So it's not the laughter that I want,
but it's the silence that follows the laughter.
But if I don't have the laughter first, I never get to that more poignant silence.
There's also a really functional aspect there, which is, I don't know if you remember this, Ryan, but in kindergarten, when sometimes the teachers would say, like, when the hand goes up, the mouth goes shut, right?
And everybody repeated it.
And at the end, the reason that worked was because everybody says it, and then afterwards, it stops.
and if you give it a beat, they're silence.
So the functional aspect of using humor in a speech
is after they laugh and you let it die down,
they're waiting for the next thing.
And it's silence that you've got them.
And that's when I can deliver
and I can take them where I want to take them.
I can go with another joke and build it even more.
I can take them and be really direct
and I can be like really direct
and say, you know, like, why are you doing,
this is calling.
This is you've got to read the writing on the wall here.
Or I can be thoughtful or I can be emotional,
but it's in that moment of silence,
the power within a speech.
And the same thing in writing.
It's just, I think, you know,
for books, there's so many of us who write books
and we think they're the most unique thing on the planet.
And the reality is they're just not.
And so we have to make them more unique.
And I think humor is a way to do that.
I just, the trailer for my book that just came out or is just coming out, I was like,
I'm not going to, you know, it's thing to say when the subhead is, you know, how to seize attention
and build trust in the busy, busy world.
And that maybe, as I said, that doesn't sound so unique.
So in the trailer, I didn't talk about the content of the book.
I just said, finally, a business book that doesn't mention Apple, even one.
And I just thought that's an interesting, humorous insight that may do exactly what the book wants them to do, which is he's a tentative build trust.
Yeah.
So I want to dive into this looking at something from, so basically what I heard you say is you people look at a toothbrush from a certain angle.
And your point is I really want you to come in from this angle over here.
And if you were to take them right there, right to that spot,
maybe there wouldn't be as much attention given to the angle you want them to look at it from.
There may not be as much trust built.
There may not be as much belief built there.
So what you do is open them up to the possibility that there are other options first.
And then you take them to the direction.
And walk me through that thought process a little bit from the psychology standpoint,
because that's really interesting to me.
Yeah, it's, you know,
I will, certainly, you know, that you spoke about building trust and then being open first off.
And humor has a great way of doing that.
So one of the very first things that I will do, there's two, there's two types of openings in comedy and in speeches.
Little people don't refer to it this way.
There's the cold open and there's the warm open.
So a cold open, do you know, have you heard of these terms before?
Am I just talking inside?
No, no, you're doing good.
Yeah, so, so, so, so the, so the, so open is like Saturday Night Live.
Like, that opening sketch is, is literally called the cold open.
And it, because it just starts, right?
Like, the show starts.
And you just go right from, from, from, from when the show begins.
And, and so, the, the warm open, though, is when a host comes out.
It's like, hey, everybody, how you doing?
Like, hey, it's Tuesday.
What happened the other day?
And so I will only use a warm open.
If you look at a TEDx talk, a TEDx talk is a cold open, right?
Like, boom, you start.
So why I like to do a warm open is I use something that's funny in that warm open.
Something I just saw, something I just read, something that just happened in the room,
something the last speaker said.
And so if I can make something funny right out of the gate,
that I obviously could not have written.
before, then there's a huge amount of trust because the first thing I think is that was kind
of funny and there's no way he could have written that before.
Oh, this guy's present.
Like he's here.
He's not calling this in.
He's not reciting the same script he's done 400 times.
So right out of the gate, humor builds trust.
Secondly, it gives credibility because if I can make something funny about the breakfast they just ate,
then it gives me comedic credibility.
because they're like, that was kind of funny,
and he obviously hadn't written that before.
So he's just naturally funny.
So it's okay for us to laugh at the later stuff,
which maybe are his more rehearsed bits.
And so then, so you build up that trust,
you build credibility, then let's say,
I open it with a story of whatever.
And the second they laugh,
I know that I've got them
because they have seen it from that other angle.
And I'll actually sometimes use a line.
If it's the beginning of the speech,
I'll use a line something like,
but that's not why we're here.
Like I'm that direct with it.
Like, yet you're laughing,
but that's not why you're here.
And that, in that moment of silence,
like, oh, where's he going with this?
But they've already, they're already open.
Their minds are already open to seeing other opportunities.
And so, I mean, I don't know,
I'm not a PhD in psychology,
so I don't know why that is.
I think you're just, if you lead with the business example going, hey, you're your salespeople
and the elevator pitch is dead, the line that people default to because you haven't given them
any reason to prove them that they're wrong, and they do this.
And as an agent, we see this in pitches.
People go like this, right?
They cross their arms and they go, I don't know.
I mean, I've been in this business 30 years.
and when someone says that in a visual I basically mentally pack up my things and leave like
all right well we lost that pitch that's because that's just somebody dare heels in and going
no you don't know my job you don't know what I go through trust me I've been in this business 30 years
I know the elevator pitch is the only way to sell so if I can show them the sales process from a
comedic angle they're like I never thought of it that way and he's actually right it's actually
pretty funny when I see it that way. So I've built up the trust. I build up the credibility.
And then when I deliver the thing that I really want them, I think they just like me more
and they trust me more. So they're just more open to hearing it, opposed to starting with,
who's this guy that my boss brought in to speak to us about this thing? And, you know,
here's another Yahoo telling me I should change the way I work. So I think that's really quick.
Because I get it, right? Like they've been fed a bunch of bullshit for years.
by senior management by other speakers, you know, and thought leaders and whatnot and people
who just who are removed from the reality of what they do. And I just want them to show that
I see it from another angle and so can they. I'll also, sorry, just to add on to that,
I'll also justify it. But, you know, like, for example, many people will say, you have to
embrace failure. And I can say that as long as I tag it,
with and I know I know it's so easy for me to say it from the stage it really is but let me give you a
practical you know and realistic implication of this and you know and I think like because I have a
business because I'm an entrepreneur and I have a number of things going on and an agency with global
clients they just they just trust me and I go like I get it it's not it's really easy to say it's
not as easy to do but that only happens because I have a moble opened them up with the comedy
first yeah it's it's interesting I
So in my own speaking career, I had to adopt a warm open.
You know what, Ryan?
I'm just going to shut a door here.
Hold on a second.
There we go.
I hope you're editing this, or if you're not,
that your listeners just had a three second break.
That's right.
We will.
We'll probably edit that part out.
So in my own speaking career,
I had to adopt a warm open pretty quickly
because I was 28 years old
trying to teach insurance agents about digital marketing.
And you want to talk about,
arms folded, Sonny, you don't understand, we've done it this way for a hundred years mentality.
You know, try telling independent insurance agents that they should sell insurance online
when you look like you're about 18 and you haven't even crossed 30 yet.
So early in my career, I learned, you know, if I didn't, if I didn't yank these guys in quick,
get them laughing, getting them thinking that I'm not here to impact them.
or not here to just tell them the way that things should be and that they've done it wrong,
despite the fact that they're all probably millionaires for the most part.
You know, that went over, that was bad.
I mean, I had people literally walk up to me after presentations.
This is way early in my career when I just went up there and started hammer around people.
And I had guys walk up to me and they're like, so I make $400,000 a year.
You're telling me that I'm doing something wrong?
And I'm like, you want to make five?
No, I mean, it's like, that didn't go so well.
So that means, yeah.
Well, that's a great lesson, right?
Like, I think so many of us, when we approach problems like that,
we present our thinking as if it's the only way,
instead of presenting it like it's another way.
You know, there's a, I think one of the best examples is that yellow pages still
is in business.
Yeah.
You know, I think the numbers are 65% of yellow pages,
at least in Canada, 65% of the Yellow Pages revenue,
you still comes from the book.
There are still consumers who look at a yellow pages, who see an ad, and who book,
order a pizza.
And so we can't flip the switch on anything.
And that if you're a $400,000 insurance salesman and you're making $400,000, yeah, maybe because
of your ecosystem, that's totally cool.
Cool.
This is not the only way to do it, but you should look at it from another perspective.
And maybe eight of you will want to try that perspective because the current approach isn't
working for you.
Yeah, yeah. So I can I can testify from a lot of hard beats that
that you that connecting with them very early and kind of bringing down that wall is of the
utmost importance. Oh my gosh. I mean I just I've that that shoulder that arms
crossing thing is there's another great lesson there in comedy which is any great
comedian knows something called you know you never ignore the reality of the room. So
if you're in a comedy club and somebody yells out you suck everybody heard it everybody heard it and it's your show
and so you have to address that person you have to call it out and you have to respond and get and interact
so when i see somebody in a room with their arms folded going who the deep is this guy what's he saying
i go straight for them yeah and i go you're not buying it are you i know i see the look on your face
and then they will open up a little bit
because now I've called them out
and I will consciously then look to that person
because I think the first thing I need them to do
is I just need them to like me, that's it.
So I can't ignore the reality
that there are people who think it's bullshit
and I go to those people
and I get them on side right away.
In comedy there's something called
there's an active heckler and a passive heckler.
And the act of heckler is the person who says, you suck.
And in a business meeting, there is the active heckler, which says,
I agree with your budget forecasts, or I disagree with your budget forecast, and here's why.
And you can engage that person and you know what they, they don't like the line item
that's been associated for distribution.
You can debate that and anything else.
In comedy and in business, the far more dangerous heckler is the passive heckler.
The passive heckler in a comedy club is the person who doesn't even know you're on stage.
They're consumed with their phone.
They're talking to their buddies.
They got something else.
They don't even, not that they don't like what you're talking about.
They don't even know you're there.
And in business, the passive heckler is the person who doesn't say anything in the meeting
and then kills your IP in the hallway.
And in both cases, the first thing you need to do is get them paying attention.
that you need them elite like they can disagree with you but they first have to hear what you're saying
and have to understand what you're saying so in a comedy club you i would you know walk right up to
the person to stand beside them so that they know that i'm right there or i would i would point to them
and make a comment that would get them listening in a business meeting you go hey mary uh you haven't
said what you think of this proposal and you get mary on the record so that mary can and even
she disagrees with it at least she's on the record for what she disagrees with and allowing
you the opportunity to change it or fix it or address your concerns. Yeah, I, um, I used to,
I did, I had a little bit when I knew that I knew, uh, we used to do early when I could tell I had
either like an early morning audience or an audience right after lunch when people had kind of maybe
been away from their phones and we're now trying, we're going to check during my session,
um, that I would do about what it looks like when you stick your phone in your crotch and you
start playing with your phone because you're trying to hide it from me under the
table. So I had like this little thing that I would write a little sketch and I'd have the phone
down on my crotch. I like I don't you know I did I had different versions of it. But like by
attacking that like and I'd just say just pull it right out and like hold it up in the air and just
text like I don't care. At least I know what you're doing. Like it's all good. Yeah. That's awesome.
You was texting and and and and but again it took me a long time to get to that point where I was
willing to do that. I guess just very tactically I'm interested in like what size audio.
would become too big to do crowd work like that.
Like if you're 100 people, 200 people,
are you still going to move out into the crowd?
Obviously, if you get into the thousands,
it's probably more than you can really handle.
But obviously, if you're in,
I think sometimes it's almost even more difficult
to do it if it's 10 people because it's so intimate.
And I've just seen that from both directions.
I'm just interested in your take.
Yeah, I'll do, I think it's more about the,
the physical makeup of the room for me not because like I just did a speech on Monday for I think
it was 650 or 700 people and I totally did crowd work I wandered right in I didn't care and so if it's
a massive room and the stage is elevated a little bit like sometimes just physically not pop not
possible to leave the stage going to the crowd and get back on stage in a way where you're not
ripping your pants or something I think
if it's possible, I think because even if
1,000 people plus 2,000,000, 3,000 people
you know, I've done 1,000 people
where I went into the crowd. And the reason you can do
that is because you're typically an IMAG.
Like you're actually
they're actually not watching you on stage at all
but the whole crowd is watching
you on the video screen. And as long as
the camera can follow you into the room
and so if you know, sometimes look at the crew
heads up like, hey, I might go into the crowd so
be prepared with the lights so you can pick it
up on camera. And then
if I'm talking
to somebody in the room, like I actually came up with a bit where I was going to go into the room.
And it was like before the speech started.
And I saw that there was a guy that was really tall.
And the bit was something about me being short or whatever it was.
I literally went to the camera guy and I said, I'm going to do this thing, I'm going to go in.
And I think the visual of me standing beside this guy who's like six, nine,
is really funny. So if you can just frame the shot near the top, so you actually cut his head off,
like I think that's really funny. If he's so tall, he's out of the frame. And so in doing that,
I turned and faced the guy because I knew where the camera was, and so that I was looking at the
camera. So you have to act like a TV, like an anchor. You have to deliver to the camera in a really
large room because that's where most people are watching you. They're watching you on screen.
What I love about the size of a room like that, too, when you're on IMAG is that everybody thinks like, oh, 4,000, 5,000 people, you need to play it really big.
No, it's the exact opposite.
Yeah.
You play it really, really small because everyone's watching you on camera.
So the only thing they see, they don't see the stage, they only see you from the waist up.
Yeah, you can cock an eyebrow.
Yeah.
You can cock an eyebrow and somebody in the last row will, they will see it.
So it's such a joy to perform to a room that size because you can go, you can actually play it really, really intimately.
There's a great line from Bill Clinton when Elvis Costello asked him on Elvis Costello show,
what did Bill Clinton learn from jazz, from playing jazz that he applied to politics?
And the line was, yeah, I learned that when you're playing to,
one we play like you're playing to a million and when you're playing to a million you play like
you're playing to one and i think that's so true for speaking yeah yeah that's really really good
that's really good it's funny you know um when i think a lot of people who don't speak professionally
or or in any capacity like that um how versatile you have to be in order to consistently perform
um i had back-to-back shows where um i had a 400 person audience
where the mics went out and I had to yell to them and talk about like being animated.
I mean, literally I had to project over 400 people for almost 60 minutes.
There was no audio.
I mean, or they just wouldn't have been able to hear me.
And to an IMEG, it was about 700 people, but they had the IMEGs and it's,
and now all of a sudden you're like bringing yourself all the way back in.
Now it was a dream that it was the screaming one first and the IMA one second because then
I could be, I could save my voice a little on the second.
but it was it was really interesting.
And I think, you know, I'm hearing you talk about how before you go on stage,
you're setting up, you know, you're scanning the crowd,
you're finding the guy who's tall so you can set the shot and you're talking to the crew.
And to perform really well, it's these details in my opinion.
You know, like as I got into my career and though I've kind of had to put it on pause for a while,
as I've taken the CEO job here at Metabolic, you know, I probably, you know,
I got paid to speak for about 10 years.
And it wasn't until maybe the latter third of my career that I really started to understand.
Yes, the content is important.
But the content from you to a bunch of people, you know, it's, you know, unique points.
But the content is the content.
And then it's it's the little details that you're discussing.
You know, you're not saying, well, I got this great thing in the middle where I talk about content marketing.
You know, you're saying, hey, there's this little detail where I want to stand next to this guy and cut his head out.
And it's, I feel like far too often we get so consumed in the, the thing that we forget about all the edges and where the edges are where things are really interesting.
Those little details on the edges are what make me, I think what really define our differences when we present our product.
And I feel like over the course of my career, speaking is where I've seen that stand out more than in other aspects of my life.
But I think it transcends.
Yeah, I think, I think, you know, mistakes give us the opportunity to do that.
And this is the difference, I think, between somebody who gets it and somebody who doesn't.
So somebody who gets it goes, the mics went out.
Like when you told me that the mics went out in front of how many people was it?
About 400.
So 400 people.
The first thing in my brain was, oh, what an opportunity.
Yeah, it was fine.
Right, like, oh, wow.
Because the first thing the group is going to say is the mics went out and that dude still killed it.
Yeah.
And he used that to do a thing.
And it became, but then it becomes the thing to talk about.
So I was doing a speech in Niagara Falls and to, I don't know, 800 people or something like that.
And I came out and realized that after the first 15 minutes,
my fly was completely down fully zipper boxer underwear exposed kind of you know thing
and um some people who maybe who don't speak that often would would freak out and they'd lose
their mind and they're all nervous and flustered and they can't think they did it the first thing in
my brain was oh it's going to be good yeah um and so i just embraced it and i went to the front row
and I said, has my fly been down the whole time?
And I remember the front row.
I was like, mm-hmm.
And I said, your job as the front row is that if a speaker comes out and there's
zippers down, you tell them.
And then I just went off and just improvised some bits of what the rest of the audience
was thinking.
Like, I'd love to understand what he's talking about, but I can't move my eyes from this
gaping void in his crotch.
You know, like, and I think it's.
It's just such a great opportunity.
Every mistake, everything that goes wrong
is such an opportunity to kill it even more
than the crowd would ever expect you to.
Yeah, I did.
It's so funny.
I love these stories.
I don't get to speak to speakers as much as I should.
But I had the night before, I carry Zit cream.
If you get a Zit, you know what I mean?
Like you wanna try to relegate.
as much, you know, it's just big, a sick red thing on your face.
So the night before I had put, or whatever, I'd put some, it was an afternoon thing.
So the morning, I'd put some Zick cream right here just to kind of like have something go away,
just so it's not like a big red flashing light.
And then I figured I just, before I left the room, I'd wipe it off.
Well, nope, I completely forgot to do that.
So I have this big splotch right here of white stuff.
And no one says a word to me.
I mean, I do.
I go out.
I'm talking to people.
I'm getting set up with the crew.
I'm getting miced up.
talking them about, you know, what I'm going to do when I'm on stage. I mean, the whole is like an
hour's worth of pre-work, probably 25 different people speaking face to face with me. No one says
a word about this big white spots that's right here. So finally, I turn, I had the, I did this like,
I made my point in the crowd reacts and I kind of turn a little. I kind of show them in my back just
a little second to give them like a breather. And I look and like the, they had a still that they
had taken on the I meg, like they hadn't whatever. I could see that I had.
had the Zick cream. Let's just put it that way. Like, or it was like, no, it was like a Twitter thing or
something I could see right here. So I stop and I come back and I asked, I asked the audience.
I was like, who do any of the women in the audience or men, you know, have a compact,
of one of those compacts with a mirror? So then they give me the compact and I'm doing this whole
thing where I'm washing it off and I'm licking my finger and I'm going like and I'm talking to
them about whatever. I can't remember what I was talking about at the time. But like that,
that took a you know that took this presentation which was you know i mean i would love to say good and then
everyone's like asking me what you know busting my chops the rest of the time now we're like bros right
the whole audience is bros because now they're like what kind of zick cream is it how many zits do you get why
you get right right right 40 you know like all the you know all this stuff but but what they're also
doing and this is just to reiterate and maybe just for people who don't speak at home and are kind of
following along still um what it did was it made that or it's almost
like it unhardens their brain and softens their brain. It becomes very porous at that point.
They're like, now that you've like let your guard all the way down, like with your fly thing,
everything you said after that, I bet they were way, way more receptive to. And I bet they also
retained it. They retained it more. That's what I found. And the biggest like, I don't want to
call them mistakes, but like, you know, things happen. Whenever there's something like that,
an instance, a situation, everything.
after that seems to really stick in the audience's brain afterwards. It's very interesting.
Yeah. Yeah. It's an opportunity for you to show that you're a pro, I think. Yeah. And the worst thing
you can do is fall apart, I think. So, all right, well, we've talked to, I can talk about speaking.
I can talk about speaking all day. It's literally my favorite thing in business to do. But there's
some things with your book and some of your other work that I wanted to, just some questions that I,
that I found that I wanted to talk through with you.
You're kind of in the second half of our show.
So in your first book,
I'm trying to find where I want to go first.
So everyone's an artist.
And everyone's an artist.
You had a line.
I think it's everyone is an artist.
You had a line.
People no longer vote with their wallet.
They vote with their time.
And I'm assuming you also mean they're at,
tension as well, or at least if that's part of it.
And if it's not, please correct me.
I think I would really love for you to dive into that a little bit because I don't,
I don't think, I think there are a lot of people who, if you say that to them,
they're like, oh, yeah, that makes sense.
But they're not really grabbing hold of it and, and embracing the power in that,
in that statement.
And I just like you to dive into that a little bit.
Yeah, I mean, you know, before the transactions were pretty easy, right?
I mean, you, you, you didn't have to vote, you didn't have to choose to spend time with things.
There wasn't a selection.
So you, you didn't choose to watch commercials.
You didn't choose to look at ads.
You were fed up.
And based on that ad, then you chose with your wallet.
You said, I vote for Toyota.
Or I vote for Lexus or whatever.
which I think are part of the same kind of company.
But then when the media landscape completely changed,
and people have talked about this, you know, I don't have to watch that.
I mean, whether it's, you know, software plugins,
it allows me to, you know, have any ads,
or whether I'm skipping ads or whether I'm PBRing stuff,
whether I'm choosing to go to cable or to streaming services that have no ads.
So now I get to choose which things I spend my time with.
And in order to get to the point where I have to decide what my wallet is going to purchase,
I first have to vote with, I would like to pay attention to this message.
I would like to seek out this message.
I would like to choose to watch this message.
And, you know, people think that, you know, that skip ad button in the beginning of pre-roll,
like when you like it counts down,
like you can skip this ad in five, four, three, two, one.
What typically happens, I do this, I'm sure you do,
we see that that come up and we're like,
how fast can I, is it, is it down to zero yet?
Can I skip it now? Can I skip it now?
We've got our mouse hovering over the little part
where we know it's going to say skip out and we can click right there.
And so the second it hits zero, we're clicking to get out of that.
And people think that's just a, that's just a mechanic or a tactic within pre-roll,
but it's not.
This is skip ad exists in every piece of business communication.
You get on stage, you do a speech.
There's somebody going, can I skip this now?
Can I skip this now?
You send a pitch slap email on LinkedIn.
They're going skip, skip, skip.
You're putting content in front of them that you say is really great.
You're putting a white paper in front of them.
All that shit.
Every single last bit of it.
And I think people are chasing tactics.
And they're going, I hear that Facebook is really great.
So we need to invest some of our money.
Facebook ads. No. I mean, yes, sure, fine. But if you don't look at the stuff you're putting
on the platform and say, is this good enough and interesting enough and relevant enough
and compelling enough where someone would choose or would seek it out, then they're just
going to go skip ads, skip ad, skip ad. And, you know, there's people like, well, our big
strategy for the years, we're going to now start to invest in Instagram stories. Nothing makes my
my blood boil faster with that, not because the platform or the media choice isn't appropriate,
but because more focus has been put into the distribution mechanism than into maintaining
the quality of the thing that you are distributing.
Because that's the hard part.
You can't win the – well, it's the hard part.
It's the risky part, right?
It's the part – I mean, it's pretty easy to go and look at a media plan and go, yeah,
those numbers make sense.
I like the CPMs on that and checks out and sure buy, you know, spend two million in that area.
It's another thing that goes, should it be blue or should be red?
I don't know.
Let's debate this.
And I think it's so much easier to say we're going to try something new to approve a media plan than it is or a tactic than it is to say,
do we really want to change the tone of our language?
Do we really want to change that messaging?
Do we want to change the art direction?
And that's the part that wins the battle for time.
in conjunction with where it is.
Yeah, this actually is a perfect segue into something that I was,
I found an interview that you did.
And in that interview, you said,
you know,
people have forgotten how to play the long game.
And this is in context to your new book,
Think, Duse,
everyone who's listening,
want to have how you get a hold of Ron,
how you find him,
and links to his website and his books and stuff,
will all be in the show notes,
or you just Google, Think Do Say,
or go to Amazon, you'll find it.
coming out in October, which this should be released before then.
So pre-order when you can.
People have forgotten how to play the long game and we're chasing short-term tactics.
We're trying to gain the system.
We've lost the organic pursuit of success.
There's two things in there that resonated with me.
One, I completely agree with your short-term tactics thing.
That's like a psychosis that many people have.
But the idea of, I guess for people to have forgotten how to play the long game,
there feels like there's an assumption that at some point they were playing the long game
and I'm interested in your take on that.
And then I really want to know this idea of the organic pursuit of success,
what you kind of mean by that statement.
I like it.
I just, I'm super interested in it.
Yeah, I mean, your first question of the long game, have they forgotten?
I think so.
But I think you raise a good point and a good insight.
I don't know whether they've forgotten or whether I don't know.
I just, I, whether they just refuse to do it and maybe they always did, but it's more, it's more obvious now.
But because everything is new, you know, whether it's Moore's law that it's an 18-month time frame for computing power,
or whether it's just the natural life cycle of platforms and tax.
tactics. It'd be an interesting thing, actually, is there a Moore's law for advertising
tax? It's probably 18 months is going to be a new platform. Yeah, Moore's Law for advertising
is 18 seconds. Yeah. So I think, you know, it's because our previous point that it's really
easy to do that. It's like, we're just going to play the short game. And so within advertising,
you know, there's other acquisition or there's retention. And we know that when you want to
want to play the short game, when you want to meet those quarterly numbers, and you need to
drive call response or click response or whatever, there are always tactics that you can do.
You can do a buy one, get one.
You can do a price savings.
You can do a never, you know, it's a sales event.
You can do all those things that dial up the urgency and you do it at the cost of long-term
brand affiliation.
And you get your little bump and calls.
And the problem is that stuff is like crack because you get a little bump and you go, I just
want another bump.
I just want another bump.
I just want another bump.
But the bumps are getting harder and harder and harder and harder to get just as,
and I've never done crack, but I don't know.
Assuming this happens that the crack starts to wear off faster and faster, right?
So I think that's what happens is that you don't play the long game.
And so you just chase these short-term things and you're in this constant panic cycle
of new things, new things, new things,
because you need the short-term tactics to pay off
because you've never invested in the long-term tactics.
And there's no greater difference in this than the world between Apple and Dell.
And I used to, you know, I was the creative director on Dell for many years.
You know, Apple will never do a price reduction.
You've never seen that ad.
They have focused on building products.
And I hate using Apple as the example.
But, you know, they would never do that.
Whereas Dell, we looked at the short-term numbers and that we would look at the ad and go,
That ad delivered so many calls or a cost per click at $75 or at $12, whatever.
And how do we do that again?
It was like, oh, we reduced the price.
We made the computer bigger.
And we just started chasing those tactics.
And they became more and more difficult.
So that's what I mean by the long game.
The organic pursuit of success is that advertising, and I don't remember who said there's somebody that advertising is a tax.
It's just a taxed on the stupid or it's a tax.
on shitty products or it's the tax on services that that aren't as good as they say and and that if you
organically build a product that is phenomenal if you organically develop customer service over time
that you hone and you perfect and you deliver it and you never stop you're just trying to make
it better and better and better word gets around it just it just does and people trust it and then
when you lead with messaging, people trust your messaging because they know you put so much time
into the product. And, you know, I see this with speakers a lot where people are like, you know,
I'm not getting the speaking gigs, so I need to develop the website. I need to change my speaker reel.
I need to do all these things. And my first question is, did you look at the product?
Maybe it's not that you're not tweeting relevant stuff, but it's that the product sucks.
That's why you're not getting booked.
So double down and fix the product first.
Because in speaking, gigs get you gigs.
And the only way to do that is to kill it on stage.
And every second you're not focused on improving your product,
on your research, on your preparation, on your customization.
Every second you're not doing that and do those other things.
means you're weakening the product.
And so I think, but that has to happen organically.
That takes time.
That takes patience.
That takes flexibility.
That takes a little bit of failure.
All those things.
And if you just make it better every single time, then, you know, that will happen.
I do something in speaking where some people go like, I've got a whole new speech.
And I'm like, really?
You sat down and you wrote an hour of new material and now you're going to deliver it.
for the first time at a conference.
This is my world of comedy.
Nobody writes an hour of comedy
and then performs it for HBO in the first take.
No way.
Does not enable.
What they do is they develop bits along the way
and they'll do old bits, old bits, old bits.
Here's a new bit that I'm working on selfishly.
And then pull it back.
And over time, the speech changes over the course
of a 12-month period,
opposed to doing the same speech for 12 months, stopping, writing an entirely new speech in one sitting, and then perfecting it.
That's not any way to do it.
It's organic.
It happens every single time out, every single day.
You know, some of the best speaking advice that I ever got, I think this applies to just about any business, was modulizing your bits.
I think a lot of times we think of presentations or speeches or whatever you want to call what we do on stage as this.
the whole thing is the thing. And actually it was our shared friend, Marcus Sheridan, who sat me down.
He followed me at a gig one time. And he said, which one of those pieces did you swap in or
out for this particular event? And I was like, I have no idea what you're talking about. And he's,
and he's like, what I'll do is I have nine modules. And if it's a 30 minute presentation,
I'll take three of those modules.
And if it's an hour, maybe I'll be able to fit seven in.
And then I'll do another hour the next day and swap two of them out and two of them in.
And then I can build a new module.
And it's a whole new speech because by adding one new module or just rearranging the modules,
I've added.
And I think both in speaking that completely changed my career when I did that.
That was a game changer for me.
because I became, I could be laser focused on one part of the presentation that I felt wasn't
working instead of trying to rework the whole presentation every time, which in saying it back
to you seems silly that I thought that way. But until he had shared that with me, I had never
thought about it. And I think the same thing goes on with our business, right? Like we, we think,
well, this isn't working. So I have to flip this thing over. And now instead of tweeting, I'm going to
go Instagram stories and I'm going to be this thing. And I'm going to start doing SEO.
work or whatever the heck people want to do and whatever your job is and instead it's just what is the
one little piece that isn't working let's spend some time and really fix that piece and let everything
else be what it is uh it that was a game changer for me that was an absolute game changer and it has
transcended um even now that my my work in life is more of just as an executive than it is a speaker
um it's i apply it to what i do every day here and and it's it's huge
Yeah, I think, and there's another way to look at that, right?
That's that, so I take the same approach, but I also add a layer to it, both in leadership and in speaking.
So, so I am a certain type of leader with our team here at the agency.
And the reason I am that type of leader is because of the successes and failures I've had in 25 years or whatever in this business.
And so all those other people that I led or that I,
followed or whatever, all those other people subsidized the leadership that I now have.
And so the current people, just as on stage, every audience where I tried out a new thing
that maybe didn't work, those audience subsidized the delivery of the great material that
the people get to hear today. And so what are they doing for the next group? What are they doing
to pay it forward? What are the current team doing to subsidize the leadership traits that I'm
going to have for the next generation of people that I will leave. And that is a very selfish thing.
And I don't communicate it that way. But I know in speaking that if I do 95% of the speech,
which is gold material, and this is great stuff, and they love it, and it's relevant, and it's funny,
and everything that's insightful, then there's 5% that I don't know how it's going to go.
Because I'm exploring new things, and it may suck. And it's okay.
because 95% of it is gold.
And the 5% that sucks, A, they don't really notice.
But B, I think that's okay because that's them paying it forward to the next group.
Because I'm going to find something in the stuff that I think might suck that doesn't.
And that becomes another piece, which is more relevant or more interesting for a future audience.
So, you know, and the team here, we're going to try some things out from a process standpoint from an innovation.
standpoint, whatever. We're going to try a new software. We're on Slack now, and this may suck,
but let's just try this out. That's them subsidizing the leadership trades for future generations.
Slack doesn't suck. It's amazing.
Yeah, no, I'm, well, with you on that point as well, I will say that the way I kind of look at it
is, you know, you had talked about someone taking a whole new hour and bringing it out to a
to a paid gig. And that to me shows almost a lack of respect for that.
audience because you you you you're not delivering material to them that you know
guaranteed is going to hit. I think that delivering something over and over and
over and over and over again the exact same way also shows a lack of respect for
the audience because it says I'm not willing to evolve my material as the as the
world changes and I think what you just described to me is the sweet spot whether
it's 90% or 98% or some percentage of your material being new says, look, I'm going to make sure
that you get what you paid for in either the time or the money that it took for you to sit in the
seat that you're in. But I'm going to have enough respect to you for you to say, I'm going to give
you something a little new. And there's a chance that's going to be terrible. And that's just
kind of the price we pay. But I'm going to have enough respectable, give you something worthwhile
and give you something a little different too. And I think that speaks to your process about the
warm open. And what it shows me is that, and I hope people listening at home take away from this,
is that I think they're as someone delivering, you whether it's speaking or if you're the leader or
whatever, having respect for the people, for the audience, call them clients, call them,
whatever you want to call them, is of the utmost importance. We can't and respect for them if we're
not willing to give it first. And that to me is the thing, when I see leaders fall apart, when I see
speakers fall apart, salespeople, marketers, it's that they don't have the 180 degree respect.
They want it for themselves.
Look at this great piece of content that I created.
Why don't you sign up for my newsletter?
Why aren't you sharing it?
Or why aren't you hiring me?
And you can tell when you really dig into it.
What's missing?
Isn't the quality of the work?
It's not the insights.
It's the fact that that work didn't display respect back to the audience in which you were providing it to them.
And I think the way that you described that was spot-off.
Yeah, I think too, I think that people, and we see this with clients, right, as well, or with leading people, that you actually, you think you want to show respect by claiming that you know more than you do.
And in speech form, you go in and you're like, so this is your sales process, you know, and you try and use their terms and all that kind of stuff, opposed to never ignoring the reality of the room that you're in.
outside perspective.
And just going to go like, I actually don't know what you go through on a daily basis.
I maybe have an idea.
I have a superficial understanding of what you do.
But there are things I'm never going to appreciate that you have to do with.
Why?
Because I'm an outsider.
And there's some value in having an outsider.
And that's why not all my things are going to be exactly as what they are for you
in your daily life.
For us as consultants to our clients, you know, we're the agency for Walmart Canada,
for the social and digital agency for Walmart Canada,
I actually don't know.
I can't appreciate what somebody working in the camera department,
you know, at the Dufferin Mall in Toronto,
the Dufferin Mall, Walmart goes to on a daily basis.
And I'm never going to have that insight.
And so I shouldn't sell my ideas as if I'm the all-knowing
or we are as the all-knowing organization that does.
But we should frame our perspectives and saying,
this is an outside perspective.
And you need that outside perspective,
but this is your responsibility to call us on it or to agree, disagree,
or to add some color to it so that we get it better.
But there's this believer like, they don't know my business.
No, that's the whole point of hiring an outside body is we don't know your business.
We can understand your business, but we'll never know your business to the extent that you know your business.
And that's exactly why you hire us.
Guys, if you are looking for a speaker, I highly recommend.
I'm part of one of the foremost speaking Facebook groups.
I ever got invited into this group.
I don't know.
I feel it has been a generous gift to just voyer it most times.
I don't even, I do add occasionally to the conversations,
but mostly I just read the insights of tremendous people.
Ron is one of them who consistently shares his own thoughts and beliefs and experiences with
that group.
I find it incredibly valuable.
And I can tell you that if you're looking for a speaker, you cannot miss with Ron.
Also, his book, Think, Do Say is coming out in October.
Make sure you pre-order it.
Ron, it's been an incredible pleasure.
Where can people, like, the best place to get at you
if they're just looking for more information?
Yeah, it's just Ron Tite everywhere.
It's just R-O-N-T-I-T-E.
Twitter at Ron Tide.
You know, Instagram at Ron Tite, ross.com.
And the agency is ChurchState.com.
Awesome, man.
Thanks so much.
Thanks, Ryan.
And thanks, thanks everyone.
everybody for listening. I really appreciate that. We are in a battle for time. And thanks to all your
listeners for choosing to spend it with us. Well said.
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