Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Josh Braun Teaches Us How to Dominate Cold Email Prospecting

Episode Date: February 18, 2021

Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyIn the latest episode of the Ryan Hanley Show, host Ryan Hanle...y interviews Josh Braun, the Founder of Sales DNA. The Master Guru of cold email prospecting, (and all things sales), Josh Braun, explains why we don’t get the response rate on cold outreach we should be and what to do about it.Episode Highlights:Josh mentions why salespeople will typically work with him. (17:50)What has been one of the huge obstacles right at the beginning for Josh? (19:26)Josh shares the best way to understand the customers. (21:47)Josh mentions why he would highly recommend interviewing five or six customers.Why does Josh prefer shorter emails? (26:25)Josh mentions the two factors that your prospect wanted. (31:27)Can Josh define their superpower and show them in a way that they even have a problem to begin with, and allow them to make the connection? (33:28)Josh shares a story that happened several years ago with his wife when he saw a U-Haul. (40:39)Josh shares a story of a man named, Dale Dupree. (46:43)Josh mentions the visuals that he teaches to people. (51:09)Key Quotes:“So, the biggest mistake that I see people make, and it's no fault of their own, is that they've never done the job of the person that they're reaching out to. And so oftentimes, they're speaking a completely different language.” - Josh Braun“Nobody wakes up one day and just buys a product, they will try to get by the best way they know how to get by because of habit and anxiety. It's hard to glean that information a lot of times from marketing materials because there's a spin to it.” - Josh Braun“The superpower is you need to shine a light on a problem that people don't know about because every one of your prospects is running in their own sneakers today. I call these illumination questions.” - Josh BraunResources Mentioned:Agency IntelligenceReach out to Ryan HanleyJosh Braun LinkedInSales DNA--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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Happy holidays. Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at believe, have a Merry Christmas, everyone, and a happy holiday. Good laboratory in the basement of his home. Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the show. Today, we have another completely gangster episode, and it is with Josh Braun. Now, I first came in, contact with Josh Braun's work on LinkedIn. I don't know how I ran into him on LinkedIn, but I did and I was completely taken by his approach to sales. Now, Josh is a sales coach. He has a lot of videos. He puts stuff on LinkedIn all the time and you're going to hear me say this during the episode. He's an absolute must follow on LinkedIn. It's J-O-S-H-B-R-A-U-N. Just search for Josh Braun, look for a guy who talks about sales, you're going to find him. This is,
Starting point is 00:01:28 this episode is tremendous. We get hyper-tactical on cold email. Now, he does talk about cold calling and some of the other ways that you can prospect, but we didn't get into that so much until the very, very end. I really wanted to focus on cold emailing because, one, it's something I do a lot of, and I get mixed results. Sometimes I feel dialed in, sometimes I'm not. Josh takes us there. He has a guide that I bought. It's like 150 bucks. It is worth every penny. It's the badass B-to-B growth guide and it gives you scripts for cold calling, scripts for cold outreach, examples, case studies, so much stuff. It's amazing. I mean, this isn't like an affiliate dealer or anything. I just think you guys would benefit from getting it. And you can
Starting point is 00:02:12 get at all his stuff at Josh Braun.com. J-O-S-H-B-R-A-U-N.com. You're going to love this episode. Before we get there, huge shout out to today's sponsor, Agency VA. Agency. Agency VCVA.com, if you need a VA, if you're looking for horsepower in your business, if you're looking to take your business up a level, if you want to take what you're doing, the processes and procedures that you have in your agency and put someone into those who can just rocket ship you forward, who can provide that back end horsepower for your agency that you're looking for, there is no better solution for than agency VA. And it's not just because Wes and Ben are great guys. It's not just because I use them and will give you just firsthand advice.
Starting point is 00:02:54 I pay them money every month and I'm very happy with their service. If anything, I'm dialing down or doubling down more into the service. But what I want to get out here, guys, is agency VA is the solution for you if you're looking for a virtual assistant and here's the kicker. They lead the industry in the security technology that VA's work through so that they can work on your systems through a secure platform. That's next level stuff. It should give you the peace of mind that you're not going to, that, you know, you don't have your
Starting point is 00:03:31 information, your data just slung all over the internet. And plus they vet all of their VAs. These are top-notch people who want to do good work and you just can't go wrong with agency VA. So agencyVA.com, agency VA.com. Go get yourself some horsepower. Kick it up a notch. That's a chef thing, I think. All right.
Starting point is 00:03:51 This has been too long. Let's get on to Josh. You're going to love this. episode. Here we go. What's going on, man? Hey, Ryan, how's it going? I'm good. I'm good. I appreciate you taking some time and coming on the show. Thanks for having me. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. I don't know how closely you follow. I know you get a couple hundred likes on your posts, but I cyber stalk the shit out of you on LinkedIn. So I don't know how creepy that is to hear or not, but I do. And I mean that in the most positive and non-creep way.
Starting point is 00:04:27 obviously. But no, I, I've been, Is that you outside my house last night? Were you like looking? Dude, I wish. That wasn't you. All right. It's seven degrees and snowy out there. So I wish I was down south.
Starting point is 00:04:39 Right. You live in Florida or something. You live someplace down south. Yeah. Where are you? Albany, New York, upstate New York. How's it going, man there? It's getting better, uh, slowly, very, very slowly.
Starting point is 00:04:55 But, um, you go down to the city. So I'm about two and a half hours north of the city. the city is a wasteland. Unfortunately, it is as bad as a lot of the articles you've read. I know there's articles that are like, oh, you know, we're gritty and all this. And I get that. I get why people want to feel that way. But versus New York a year and a half ago, it's not even close to the same. I mean, you can walk through Times Square. You're one of five people. Wow. I mean, it's brutal. So, so because, um,
Starting point is 00:05:28 because our governor, um, he changes the rules constantly. So you can't really leave the state. If you leave the state, you're taking a chance of when you come back, you know, you can't do anything for 14 days, 10, 14 days. So, so my wife and I took our kids down there about three months ago just to get out of here, you know, just to see someplace else. And, um, and we love the city.
Starting point is 00:05:50 We used to live there. And, uh, man, it was weird. It just was weird, dude. You know how you've obviously been in New York City before? Sure. Yeah. So you know how whether it's getting out of the taxi from the airport or coming up from the subway or however you get there, that moment where you hit the sidewalk, I don't care how many times you've been there. Something happens. This little bit of electricity just zaps through your body. You just, I didn't get it. First time in my entire life. And I've lived two hours away from the city, my entire life, basically. First time I ever, ever didn't feel that zap. And it was weird. And the thing is you've got people living there that are paying New York City money, but they're not able to experience the New York City.
Starting point is 00:06:40 Yeah. I mean, that's the thing. I have a good real estate agent friend that's in Florida. There's a lot of people just getting out of there. You know, which I guess if you have money and you have time, I would imagine it'll work itself out eventually, I would think. Yeah, like four or five years from now, I would think. Or maybe it's never the same.
Starting point is 00:06:57 I don't know. It's hard to, this was supposed to be, like, now I'm hearing like maybe it won't be this year. Maybe it'll be next year. Like, it's like, it keeps getting extended. Yeah. New York City needs a new mayor. That's the problem.
Starting point is 00:07:09 Yeah. As long as what's his, de Blasio is their mayor, they're in trouble because he, um, he just has a very, I mean, I don't want to get political, but he has a very, very specific view on what should be done. and it is to the absolute detriment of all the humans who are living there. And it's because you think it's because he's not really in it? Like it's easy to sit from an ivory tower and like do stuff when it really doesn't affect you. That's the thing. I always had a problem with people.
Starting point is 00:07:38 Again, not to be political, but I can't believe they're not going to keep their, they want to keep their businesses open. And it's so, I'm like, yeah, because you don't have to feed your family because you don't have a business, man. You got a corporate job sitting behind Zoom. Like, you know, like you can't really. relate. Like, do you think it's because he can't relate? 100%. I think I think it's that. I think that he is, um, uh, you know, for better or for worse,
Starting point is 00:08:02 uh, whatever this, I think he's a, a true liberal elite. Right. In the purest sense. I think he does sit on the 42nd floor of, you know, in his mind and, you know, technically that, you know, the mayor doesn't, office isn't that high. But, you know, I think he sits above the clouds. And he looks down and he goes, you're this, this and this because you want to keep your business open and the guy's going, wait a minute, I have two kids in a mortgage. You know, what am I supposed to do? The big issue we're facing now up here and it's just really, I mean, this is just interesting stuff. I mean, obviously it's probably, it's probably obvious which way my political views have been being a small business owner, but landlords are getting decimated because no one has to pay rent. Every political
Starting point is 00:08:50 figure in New York State. Because if you, The problem with our state is New York drives the state. So where I sit couldn't be more different than the city, right? The city is a completely different thing. If you're in Westchester County, South, out through the island, your mindset, your goals, your life, it's 180 degrees. We could be Iowa for as much as we're New York, really. And for that reason, all the rules that apply down there, yeah, I get it. Your rent is $5,000 a month and you just got canned and you have nowhere to go.
Starting point is 00:09:31 I get that some mortgage or some rent relief probably makes sense. You're paying $700 to a guy who, you know, was owned a two family, you know, in Waterville, New York. And basically the only way he pays the mortgage is if you pay your rent, you know, what's he supposed to do? So it's such a tough situation. Yeah. So there's a lot of hard stuff going on.
Starting point is 00:09:54 But, you know, I think, I think we'll be fine. I think we're going to be all right. I think everything, you know, everything has a purpose and a time. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I also, the other side of it is, man, you get a lot of amazing stories of people finding ways to pivot, to push through, to reimagine, to be creative.
Starting point is 00:10:17 And so I do this local podcast. So it's because I'm going to, I own an insurance agency. So in the people, I think I said this when I sent you the email, but everyone who's listening is, somewhere in the insurance value chain, 99%.
Starting point is 00:10:33 So, but I have a local podcast that I do. It's called the Capital Region business podcast. Because Albany calls itself the Capital Region. So this guy is pizza guy. Guy owns five pizza shops. So from 1996 until 2010, they had, him and his family, had one pizza shop, and he, in his entire family, including his father and mother and two brothers, all lived above the pizza shop in essentially what would be a flat, right?
Starting point is 00:11:09 A flat apartment and lived above the pizza shop. Then they opened a second location, a third location. And by 2020, they have five locations and they're like one of the best pizza shops in here. And they really are. They're pretty good. It's called Pison's Pizza. He's from Brooklyn. And it's this great story.
Starting point is 00:11:25 And then the pandemic hits. And he's losing $50,000 a week. 50. You know what he does? He starts hawking Dave Portnoy. Dave, I sent you frozen pizzas. Taste my pizzas. He starts this entire marketing campaign.
Starting point is 00:11:42 Who is Dave Portnoy? The guy from Barstool Sports, who, does the pizza tasting. Okay. Yeah. So he, uh, so he's like changed entire businesses because he'll go take, he does a one bite challenge. He takes one bite of your pie. And if he likes it, I got it votes it or whatever. Okay. So, uh, so this guy, his name's Frank Scavio. He, uh, he's, he's dying, right? He's watching his business die because no one, this is March. No, I mean, March here was literally the zombie apocalypse. Like, you didn't even get your car. You were triple mast in the car or someone was was pulling you over right so um uh so he sends dave portnoy this
Starting point is 00:12:24 you know he's got two million three million followers whatever um sends him these frozen pizzas and then his campaign on social and this is eventually we'll get to what you do for learning but this is just amazing stuff so he sends dave portner this frozen pizza and his entire campaign wasn't, hey man, will you try my pizzas? It was, I can't wait till you try my pizzas. He just assumed the sale from the get go. His entire campaign was, get ready for Dave to try my pizza. It was as if it was a foregone conclusion and it was just when, when was he going to release it, right? So sure shit. Dave tries the pizzas, gives him a 7.8, which is a pretty good score for him, changes the course of his entire business. Now he does as much in frozen pizza sales nationwide as he did in his five
Starting point is 00:13:14 pizza locations before. Maybe I should try this pizza. What's the name of it? Paizan's pizza. You can order it online. Pison, Paizan, Paizan's pizza. All right. From New York. All right, I'm going to try that. Yeah. Yeah, it's good. I've never had it frozen because I can get it hot. But yeah, just that story. That to me is a pandemic story on the other side that you love to hear because... Such a great story. Yeah. Because you have a lot of people that would not think that they kind of go into this downward spiral.
Starting point is 00:13:43 No. Because how do you even know how to freeze a pizza and ship it? I mean, that's a whole different set of skills. I would imagine on anything about pizza, but I would imagine if you've never done that before, it's not like you just put a cook, like, there's a lot that goes into that probably. Yeah. And that was a thing. He had literally, so he, well, I don't want to, I'm telling this entire story.
Starting point is 00:14:00 And you can go, anyone who actually cares about this story can go listen to the other podcast. I'll check it out. I'll check it out. But it's just funny. I shouldn't say funny. It is very interesting and intriguing to me that, and this kind of takes us into why I want to talk to you, but it's intriguing to me that some people see things like the pandemic and they turtle up, right? They, you know, the world's out to get me. You know, I lost my job. It's tough. I'm stuck home, all these things. And I think probably all of us dealt with those feelings to a certain extent. And then there are other people who are like, fuck it, I'm going to find a new way to do this. I'm going to let's try this.
Starting point is 00:14:41 Maybe this will work. You know, let's push the chips in here. You know, I had another guy on whose restaurant went under by April. Toast. Finished. 56 years that restaurant had existed in Albany. By the end of April, it does not exist anymore. He now has one of the top 10 hottest condiment brands in the entire country.
Starting point is 00:15:03 Hot crispy oil. It is one, it's delicious. But this dude just, he's like, I'm out of business. What am I going to do? I'm going to start a condiment business, hot crispy oil, which is, which actually is amazing. Check it out. Yeah. Pizza, pizza and crispy oil.
Starting point is 00:15:21 All right. I already got two things out of this podcast. If you put the crispy oil on the pizza, you will drastically increase your cholesterol, but it is also delicious. All right. I'll give it a try. What the hell? Yeah, okay. So let's actually talk about you. I apologize for all that because I can obviously go on tangents.
Starting point is 00:15:40 So I haven't been intrigued. So to lay the foundation, what ultimately brought you to me and everyone that's listening, you've heard me mention some of Josh's stuff before. I found you because I went from, I was an insurance agent for eight years. I then kind of was in a situation where there was a ceiling. So I took a job as a chief marketing officer for an insurance technology company for five years. Fortunately, I had a family member that got sick. I was forced to move to not travel for that job anymore. I didn't move back, you know, kind of not travel from Albany. I lived here the whole time.
Starting point is 00:16:20 And in that transition, I decided to take everything I had learned, both as a salesman and as a tech, you know, marketing slash technologist and start my own insurance agency, which forced me back into a heavy, you know, kind of retail sales role. So I was kind of relearning skills that I had, you know, just had gone dormant a little bit from whatever from the last few years. And I struggle with call reluctance. I have to get myself pumped up and I'm getting better. I'm absolutely getting better. So, but my natural way, I'm just not one of those guys who goes, oh, here's a prospect. Okay. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:17:01 I've had to work through it. And I'm a member of your badass B2B thing, which is freaking awesome. We're going to plug the shit out of that at the end. You guys, it's like ridiculous value. I use it all the time. You'd be silly not to get it. And that's not just like a heavy plug is Josh on the show. I actually am in there all the time.
Starting point is 00:17:20 looking at it. It's a tremendous course and the value is ridiculous. So I got into that and then that got me more into your stuff and just your way of repositioning how we speak to our clients is to me the way. And that's my intro. Thanks for having me on. I appreciate it. I would like to play that every morning. If you could send that to me as a wave file, that would be great. I'll just send it as my alarm clock and it would be a great positive affirmation for the morning. makes me feel really good. Love getting a compliment every once in a while. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, so you deal with, you know, I guess I guess give everyone the broader background just, you know, as much as you want to go. It can be two minutes, it can be 10 minutes,
Starting point is 00:18:03 whatever you feel comfortable with, but just kind of set the stage and then I have a bunch of places I'd like to go with you. Yeah, so salespeople typically will work with me when they're sending lots of cold emails, but they're getting little to no responses, or they feel like the phone is a cactus or they are picking up the phone and they're hearing, I'm not interested far too many times. And what I help them do is to be a red X and a C of White Circle sales messages so that they can start more conversations with people they want to get in front of. But in a way that actually feels good on the soul and doesn't make prospects feel sold or manipulated. I love that. That red X thing, when you started talking about that, I was like, that's freaking brilliant. It just makes so much
Starting point is 00:18:49 sense. So, you know, you, you talk about Chris Voss a lot. You talk about your approach to cold email. And I use a lot of cold email. I would say very mixed results. Sometimes I feel like I'm dialed in. Other times, you know, it feels like you're shouting into the Grand Canyon and wondering why no one's shouting back. You know, where do you think, just as a starting point. So salesman, sales, salesperson, saleswoman, whatever comes to you. And, uh, and they're struggling with cold email. There's, you know, are struggling to make connections. They're struggling to connect. Um, what is usually the first thing that you see them, you know, what's, what's one of the most glaring things? Like just, man, nine times out of 10, they're doing this. And it's just a, it's a big
Starting point is 00:19:43 obstacle right at the beginning. Yeah. So much like building a house, there's some, foundation that has to be built before you actually start to build it and paint it. And because it's so easy to step on the gas and send emails and it's fun, people have a tendency to want to paint the house before there's a good foundation. And so the biggest mistake that I see people make, and it's no fault of their own, is that they've never done the job of the person that they're reaching out to. And so oftentimes they're speaking a completely different language. By way of example, if you're using words like streamline, optimize, 360-degree view, increased conversion rates, these are all language and phraseology that everyone uses.
Starting point is 00:20:29 And because everyone uses it, you're a white circle. So step one in this process is to understand at a very deep and crispy level what I call the before version of the infomercial, which has nothing to do with your product. So you can imagine there's somebody in the kitchen and they're trying to make French fries for a family of five with a knife. They've got all their rustic potatoes, and they're slicing them into half inch pieces. They blanch them, they put oil on them, they put them in the oven, they put them on the table, but because some are crispy and some are burnt because they were slightly different shapes and sizes. Half moon end up in a garbage can doesn't make you really feel
Starting point is 00:21:06 good. And on top of that, you have to spend two hours cleaning up the kitchen, and on occasion, you nick your finger with a knife. Now, when I was telling you that story, you probably visually saw it in your head. You have to visually see that same exact thing when you are reaching out the prospects. If you can't see that movie, clearly, meaning you can't observe it. So I can't observe streamline. I can't observe optimize. I have to see it. It has to be specific. They're slicing the potatoes into half inch pieces. And it has to be language that your customer would actually say over coffee. And usually when I give people this test and I tell them to give me the black and white infirmary, commercial, give me the before version, they start launching into what we do is we help people
Starting point is 00:21:51 optimize the supply chain. Your product doesn't have any value until you understand the problem. So the question becomes, well, how do I get closer to my customers to understand their specific black and white version? And the best way to do that is to actually interview customers that recently bought within the last 35 to 40 days using an approach called jobs to be done, which is an interview technique, the only one that I know, that helps you understand the events and circumstances that led people to start to struggle and eventually start shopping because nobody wakes up one day and just buys a product. They will try to get by the best way they know how to get by because of habit and anxiety. It's hard to glean that information a lot of times from marketing materials
Starting point is 00:22:34 because there's a spin to it. And when you're lifting the information for marketing materials and the marketing material says streamline, that language makes it into your emails. And that's contributes to you being a white circle. But Josh, insurance is a non-visual, sophisticated product that is very highly technical. So how can I boil this down into words that my clients could actually use? You just don't understand. Our industry is different. So this has nothing to do with your product.
Starting point is 00:23:05 So people don't buy a product. They buy what the product allows them to do better. Your product is no different than any other product. People buy any product because they want to move away from something they don't want or they want to move towards something they do want. They want to make progress. So you have to call your customers that switched. They were not doing nothing before they called you.
Starting point is 00:23:26 They were getting the job done the best way they knew how with their current solution. And then all of a sudden something wasn't working anymore. Something changed in their environment. They were not able to solve the problem the same way. They were educated on something that was different or new. And it caused them to say, hmm, I can't make progress anymore. I better start, I better switch. I want to know how the customer describes that struggle.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Because they'll give you the language that you can use in cold calls and in cold emails. It doesn't matter what product you sell. Because it has nothing to do with your product. We're not talking about the color version of the infomercial yet. We're talking about getting to know the problem at a very deep, crispy, specific level. A lot of people skip this step. because it's not as much fun as sending out 10 emails. There's also an opportunity.
Starting point is 00:24:16 When you understand your audience really crispy, you can be a red X. When copywriters like myself get together in a group, we rarely talk about copywriting techniques. We mostly talk about how do we get to know the audience better? What techniques can we use? We go on sites like G2 Crowd, where they review, this might not be applicable for your audience, but there's review sites where they're reviewing software. How do customers describe the before state?
Starting point is 00:24:41 Go on Amazon. How are they describing when they buy these books? You know, how do they describe what they liked about the book? What was missing? Customer interviews are great. Testimonial videos are great. You know, getting closer to your customer. If there's listeners out there, I highly recommend interviewing five or six customers
Starting point is 00:24:57 using jobs to be done and getting that language because you've probably never been in their position before. Yeah. And you don't have to make up the language to answer your question. You don't have to make up the language to explain. it. Your customers will. They'll give you that language if you interview them and then you will take that language and you'll convert that using some copywriting techniques into cold emails and cold calls scripts and voicemails. Yeah. One of the things that I, um, one of the largest tactical takeaways that I've gotten from your work and the training is brevity. Um, and how powerful
Starting point is 00:25:41 mixing what you just described, which is using your prospect slash clients target market words, their language, language they understand problems that they actually experience with brevity. That, you know, obviously using fewer words is not my specialty, if that's not really obvious by this interview already. So working on dialing back, you know, instead of a seven sentence cold email, describing everything you do and how amazing you are you know i've seen you share some stuff on lincoln and guys josh absolute must follow on lincoln um uh one sentence one sentence and a simple question like very you know kind of counterintuitive to i think how a lot of people use an introductory email what what is
Starting point is 00:26:31 the power of brevity why you know aren't they missing what i really do and aren't i missing an opportunity to explain myself like you know why why I go shorter. What's the power in that? Well, let's go back to a couple things that you said because there was some big sort of red flags. And a lot of people make this, they kind of get into this because you're so excited about what you do. Let me tell people how awesome I am. Let me tell you how great my product is.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Nobody cares about how great and awesome your product is. They want to be more awesome. Nobody cares about what your product does. They care about what your product can do for them. those two things might sound very similar, but they are two completely different approaches. I don't buy braces. What do I buy?
Starting point is 00:27:20 Better teeth. Well, why do I want better teeth? What is a better teeth? What are better teeth allow me to do that I can't do now? Look better on camera. I want straight teeth. So I want the confidence that comes from having straight teeth. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:38 Right. So I don't buy a bike. I buy the wind in my face. To use a example that I do when I teach, I don't know if you remember the legend of Zelda. It's a video game back in the 80s, but there was a point in the game where he, the character Zelda, who the purpose of the game was to rescue a princess, walked into a cave. And there was an old man in the cave that sold him a sword for five rupees. Luke did not buy the sword because it was made of steel and because it shot. energy beams. He bought the sword so that he could rescue the princess faster. So people don't buy swords. They buy what the sword allows them to do better. So in your copy, one of the first copywriting principles is, are you talking about swords or superpowers? And so that's principle number one is make sure the language you're using is superpower language. What is it that this thing can do for me? And the litmus test is, is this what I do or what it allows someone to do. So it's not about your product and its features. With regards to brevity, we'll talk about that now. You've probably been in this situation where you've opened up your
Starting point is 00:28:45 email and you saw a big email long. And you probably, if you're like I am, said, I'll put that one aside for now. Because of the calories you have to burn to read it, even though it might be a great email, it's just the way it looks. We are used to TikTok, short form videos, 30 seconds, one minute. We are used to SMS messages. We are used to Facebook messages. We are used to texting. And yet when we go to work, we see things that are four or five, six paragraphs sometimes from a salesperson that we don't know that has commission breath. We're already starting at a deficit because salespeople are biased. They have a vested interest. So the approach that I teach is very much based on emails that look like tweets. They are, as you said, three or four sentences.
Starting point is 00:29:34 Five at the most, written in a very specific way that will give you the best chance of being able to start a conversation with a prospect. But you can't skip step one, which we talked about at the beginning of the podcast. Yeah. So as you're talking, I sent five cold emails this morning. As you're talking, I'm walking through my sentences. and I'm saying to myself, I definitely, I feel like I have, well, I know I have work to do. I have no, I would have said that before we got on the phone or whatever, but just simply by my
Starting point is 00:30:15 contact rate. But I definitely, I definitely am selling swords still a little bit. I'm still selling swords. Yeah, that's interesting. So one of the things, so let me ask you this. This might, and I apologize if we're weaving in and out of tactical and theoretical, and if there are any places you want to go or don't want to go, just let me know. But so one thing that I started doing to try to be a Red X was keeping the text very short,
Starting point is 00:30:50 but then I embed a loom video in, personalized, loom video, not a, not a, like, just standardized one, but like, you know, I'm speaking directly to them. I try to keep it under 90 seconds if I can, if I can get it even under a minute. it that's great. Really just as a way to introduce myself and it loom embeds the image of me so they can kind of see the picture. And I have been surprised at how few people have watched the video. So now I will say I probably sent 20 of these and two have watched 10%. You know. I'm not surprised at all. You are. Okay. No, because nobody cares about introducing. I don't want to know who you are. You say, I want to introduce myself. Well, that's a very selfish reason to send someone
Starting point is 00:31:40 a video. Your prospect doesn't want a relationship with you, and they certainly don't want to be introduced to you. Your prospect only cares about two things. They don't care about you or your product. They don't want a relationship with you. They want to move away from something that they don't want that can hurt them, that they may or may not know about, or they want to move towards something they desire. everybody that you reach out to is getting the job done today. But what they might not know is what they are doing that can hurt them or cost them a lot of money if they stay put. Those things get attention. And I'll give you an example, just to make this a little more specific.
Starting point is 00:32:18 Yeah. Okay? I'll give you a couple of real life examples. A few years ago, I was in the mall with my wife. I did not need anything. I was merely killing time and walked into a store call fit to run. If the store associate said to me, what brings you in today? What do you think I would have said?
Starting point is 00:32:41 No, no, I'm good. If she said, can I help you? What do you think I would have said? Nope. If she wanted to introduce herself to me, do you think I would have been interested? You would have put your headphones back in. Probably, but she didn't do any of those things. She looked down at my sneakers.
Starting point is 00:32:56 She said, are you a runner? I said, yes. She said, what distance? I said, Marathon. she said, have you ever had a running gate test? I said, what's that? Moments later, I'm on a treadmill. I have video on this.
Starting point is 00:33:07 She stops the frame, and she says, notice how your feet are pronated. And did you know that if you run in sneakers that are not made for pronated feet, you can get injured on long-distance runs? And if you'd like, we could take a look at your sneakers to see if they're made for pronated feet.
Starting point is 00:33:21 And five minutes later, I'm spending $90 on insoles. What's the moral of that story? She sold She sold saving the princess Not sneakers There's another moral Did I have a problem When I walked in there?
Starting point is 00:33:40 No What did she do? She showed it to you Right That's the superpower The superpower is You need to shine a light On a problem
Starting point is 00:33:51 That people don't know about Because every one of your prospects Is running in their own sneakers today I call these illumination questions Let me burn it in And I'll give you another example I love to wash my car on the weekends. I buy my car wash supplies from this place called Adams Car Wash supplies.
Starting point is 00:34:08 I wash it with a bucket, sponge, soap, just like a normal person would. I get an email from Adams, and there's a sentence in there that says this, Josh, what are you doing to ensure your car washment doesn't scratch your car? I'm like, what? It turns out that if you're using a normal bucket with soap and water, if you dip your sponge into the water and there's dirt in the water, and you have a dark car, colored car like I do, you can get swirl marks on their hood. And if you're a car nut like me, that sucks because I have to take it to the body shop and get that buffed out. It's $800. On top of that, if I ever get rid of the car, they're going to run a paint thin meter on it, and I'm going to lose value on the car because they can see it was painted. And Adam sells a new
Starting point is 00:34:49 kind of bucket. It's got a grate on the bottom of it. And you rubbed your sponge on the grate. The dirt settles to the bottom of the bucket and off your car. And I bought the bucket. same exact moral of the story they shined a light on a problem i didn't know i had that can hurt me every one of your prospects is using a bucket to wash their car today your value proposition doesn't matter if you're saying we help you wash your car better i'm already washing my car i don't care what is it that's meaningfully different about what you're selling that can help me be more awesome or can help me move away or get less hurt from something that's around the corner. You have to start with that, not a loom video.
Starting point is 00:35:33 Those are delivery mechanisms. You're already painting the house. You've got to clarify the message first. If you're starting a loom video by introducing yourself, you're already kind of skipping a bunch of steps. What's up, guys? Sorry to take you away from the episode, but as you know, we do not run ads on. this show and in exchange for that, I need your help. If you're loving this episode, if you enjoy this podcast, whether you're watching on
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Starting point is 00:37:02 All right, I'm out of here. Let's get back to the episode. So here I'll tell you where the Lume video thing came from. Because I think this is an important point, what you just said is a delivery mechanism. So one of the ways in which, so let's say you called me for home and auto insurance. See, we're talking.
Starting point is 00:37:19 And I was going to deliver to you, my proposal. Before we get off the phone, before I deliver that proposal, I say to you, Josh, the next step in this process is once I'm doing my job, I'm going to package everything up and into what I recommend for you. There's three things you're going to get. One is an email. That email is going to allow you to log in and see my recommendations inside there. You're going to get the ability to download specifics. You're going to get the high level. And there's going to be a video explaining why I did that. I did that so that you come from a position of power when we get on the phone again. We're talking on the same level. I'm not just dropping something on you
Starting point is 00:37:55 out of the blue. I set that expectation at that point. I have gotten 95 plus percent people go, holy shit. This is amazing. I've never seen this before. People just text me back. I'm sold. Just send me the thing. We don't even need to talk. It's crazy. It's increased my close ratio 20%. Right. So in my mind, I'm going, wow, moon video seems to seems to be a, you know, that seems like there's something there maybe. So I tried moving that to the front to the cold email section. And as you described, and I think this highlights, I think some of the things that you're saying, and I'm trying to prove a point here. I'm seeing now why moving, why in that part of the process, the loom video is a differentiator. In the beginning part of the process, it's an annoyance or, as you said, selfish,
Starting point is 00:38:47 and I can, I can see it now. Well, it's a completely different context. Yeah, yeah. I mean, one of them, they don't know who you are. There's no trust. There's no credibility. In the first example, they've been talking to you for a while. So it's a completely different context. Things like loom and email and call calls or voicemails, those are all delivery mechanisms, holograms, whatever the next thing is, delivery mechanisms are going to come and go. The reason I think you are successful with the first example isn't so much that it's a loom video. It's that it's in line with helping the other person be more awesome. The thing that never changes is the person in the middle.
Starting point is 00:39:29 The person in the middle always wants a better superpower to achieve what they want. That never changes. Delivery mechanisms come and go. it's never the delivery mechanisms. I've seen movies that are awesome. Movies of delivery mechanism. I've also seen movies that are terrible. Same thing with videos.
Starting point is 00:39:47 If you're starting with the video and you don't know how to clarify the message, you're not going to have as higher response rates as you can. Again, it's not the delivery mechanism. People ask me all the time when you think of Lumen. Like, what do I think of books? They're great. Some are.
Starting point is 00:40:02 Some suck. It's the message, not the mechanism. So at home, and I'm just going to clear, clarify this one more time for everyone listening because I think this is really, really important. Because in the insurance industry, and I'm sure this is every industry, but I've operated insurance for 15 years, so it's all I know. Shiny Object syndrome is an enormous problem in our industry because the barrier for tech, right, like things in the copywriting industry that you would take
Starting point is 00:40:34 for granted as a technology tool, just a function. Don't understand. Don't operate well in our space. So the barrier for tech is very low. So as soon as something comes out, you know, we all focus on it. And, and I think what I hear you saying is it doesn't matter. What matters is can you define their superpower and portray it in a way, show them in a way that connects that, you know, that they even have a problem to begin with and then allow them, allow them to make the connection that you're the answer. Is that, am I, am I phrase that right? You have to understand. It has to start with the following. What sucks about how people are getting the job done today? And why does it suck? So let's go through just a simple example.
Starting point is 00:41:24 What sucks about washing your car with a bucket and suds is that you can get dirt on the sponge. That's a problem. What's the implication of that? Because problems always have implications. The implication is I get swirl marks on my car, got to get it repainted. It's $800. and my car loses 10% when I sell it. I call that twisting the knife. What's meaningfully different about Adam's car wash bucket? It's got a grate on the bottom. Why does that matter? Well, it allows you to get the dirt on the bottom of the bucket and off your car so you don't scratch it. It's not meaningfully different because they sell a purple bucket and I have a white one. It's not meaningfully different because their bucket is made of pliotex and mine is made of plastic. That doesn't help me be more
Starting point is 00:42:05 awesome. What helps me be more awesome, why it's meaningfully, meaningfully different, is that the dirt settled to the bottom of the bucket and off the sponge and off your car. I'll give you another example. I was driving on the freeway several years ago with my wife, and I saw a U-Haul, and this will be a question for you, Orion, saw it as a U-Haul. At the back of the U-Haul, as it's driving, a line down the middle, and on the left-hand side, it said, our loading docks, easy loading docks, and it showed how low they were to the ground. And then on the right hand side, it said competitive loading docks. They're about four feet higher.
Starting point is 00:42:41 Now, why is that meaningfully different to me? Why is a loading dock that's lower meaningfully different than one that's higher? How does that make me more awesome, a lower loading dock? Seems like less work. What happens if I have a high loading dock and I try to move my furniture? You got one of those ramp things. What happens if I try to load stuff and the ramp is higher off the ground? You got to lift it.
Starting point is 00:43:07 If I lift something, what could happen? Get hurt? Right. So it's not that their competitive trucks are yellow. It's that the loading ramp is lower, which means it's easier for me to move stuff. So I reduce the chances of me getting injured. Where most people go wrong is they're like, let's talk about my value proposition. I help you move stuff faster.
Starting point is 00:43:27 I'm already moving stuff. What's meaningfully different relative to how I'm getting the job done today? So the first question you got to answer is, what sucks? because if nothing sucks, and I mean really sucks, there's no reason to switch. Give you another example. I have a TV in my back bedroom and has a pixel out on it, one pixel, two pixels maybe. It's a problem. But I rarely watch that TV and I barely notice the pixel when I do.
Starting point is 00:43:55 So I'm not switching TVs because I have limited resources, so to use, so to your prospects. So you have to have a sucky problem that you got to shine a light on. If you don't know what that is, you can't pick up the phone. You can't send out a video. You can't write an email because who cares? You know, so I have a product called Athletic Greens. It's a product of powder that you mix in water and you drink it, health drink.
Starting point is 00:44:22 Their tagline, which is amazing, is this. What sucks about eating 73 vegetables is what? It's hard to eat 73 vegetables. They don't taste good, not into like celery. it's hard to digest broccoli, it's not enjoyable. So athletic greens, their tagline is get your 73, get the nutrients from 73 vegetables without having to eat them. The without part is the interesting part,
Starting point is 00:44:47 because I'm getting my greens today, but now I don't have to eat them? What's that? There was a guy, Alex Solo, he was a rock climbing guy on Netflix. I don't know if you saw this guy, climbing rocks, high rocks with no rope. like Al Capiton.
Starting point is 00:45:05 It's high. Yeah. Free climber, right? Yeah, free climber. So if you said, watch this guy climb El Capiton. So what? But it didn't say that. It said, watch this guy, Alex, climb El Capiton, the highest peak in this part of the world,
Starting point is 00:45:20 in Yosemite, without ropes. It's the without ropes that makes you want to tune into that. Yeah. So what's your without ropes, people listening? Because if you don't have that, really hard to. to reach out. I mean, I'll give you an example, something commoditized. This was two nights ago. A pillow. Imagine you sell pillows. One of the most commoditized things in the world. So this company called Pillow Cube, I see this amazing commercial. It said, hey, do you sleep on your
Starting point is 00:45:49 side? I happen to. So stand up and take a look at the shape between your shoulder and your head. What shape is that? It's like 90 degrees. I'm like, it's a square. And so, well, how do you know if you're sleeping on a rounded pillow that you're not messing up your back? And it showed a picture of your head position when you're sleeping on a rounded pillow and your rustles, it's bad for your back. It can throw your back out of alignment. So you can now get a good sleep because you're sleeping on a square pillow. But they pointed out a problem with the rounded pillow.
Starting point is 00:46:17 Well, I'm interested and I ordered it. I didn't have a problem with a pillow. I didn't have a pillow problem. But all of a sudden I did because they showed me what's meaningfully different. And P90X did this really well back in the day. If you don't know what that is, it's a popular workout program. their infomercial failed 17 times. They couldn't sell it.
Starting point is 00:46:35 They were talking about how great the workout was. Probably like how you're talking about how great your insurance is. Until Tony Horton, who created the workout, had this great idea. He invented two words. Muscle confusion. He said the problem with traditional workouts is you hit a plateau because you're doing the same workout over and over again. What you need is muscle confusion.
Starting point is 00:46:58 You need to do different workouts to be able to get your muscles to grow. And notice he's not talking about his product. Eugene Schwartz calls this a delivery, a unique mechanism. If you buy in the muscle confusion, you're buying P90X. So again, this is about creating problems that people didn't know they had. And that's where it starts. Yeah. Because if you're the same, if you're selling better insurance, if you're saying we,
Starting point is 00:47:26 and you sound like everyone else, you're a white circle. Yeah. Oh, shit. I am definitely a white circle right now. I don't mean to buy me out there. No, no, this is, well, one, one, I, this is why, this is why you do podcast, man, right? I mean, free consulting. No, kidding.
Starting point is 00:47:48 But the thing about, yeah, man, what's, what's driving me nuts about what you're describing is it feels so obvious when you talk about it. And then I think about what I actually do and what I actually say. And it's, you know, like it's just, it's not not awesome, you know. Well, we could also talk about, there's lots of ways to differentiate. I mean, I'll tell you a great story. Guy the name, his name is Dale Dupree. And this guy came on my.
Starting point is 00:48:26 radar because I saw that he was the number one copier salesman in the state of Florida for 10 years, stealing copier accounts. And I couldn't think of a more commoditized thing to sell than copy machines. So I called them up. Dale, how are you the number one copier salesman? And he said, I'm not a copier salesman. I go, what are you? He goes, I'm a copier warrior. I go, what? Show me his business card. He's got like a sword. And he fights against jammed up copy machines. He sends his prospects a brick It's actually a sponge that looks like a brick with a note on it. And it says, if you've ever wanted to throw a brick at your copy machine but didn't want to get in trouble or get fired, throw this brick instead. Here's instructions. Put it in your right arm, aim, fire, and call me. I'm Dale DePree, the copier warrior.
Starting point is 00:49:12 He's the only copier salesman that made his own commercial. If you go to copier warrior.com, you'll see it. So he's differentiated himself just by nature of branding himself as someone that someone's going to see and just feel good. and when you make people feel good there's a biological reaction that happens just like you laughed. People like, that's really fun. That made me feel good. Who is that?
Starting point is 00:49:35 I want more of that. And he won a tremendous amount of counts by differentiating himself. Yeah. He was the differentiator. Yeah. He's really selling the same copy of machines. But he gets, you know, service,
Starting point is 00:49:49 you know, his commercial is phenomenal. If you go to copier warrior.com, I wouldn't do it justice by, trying to imitate it. But you'll see what he did. He talked about the problem, but did it in a very funny way. One of the shots in the video is, have you ever had to wait on hold for a copy or support person? He's got the skeleton in the cubicle, like on the phone. And so you watch this stuff and you're like, who is this guy? Yeah. And when he calls, he doesn't say, hello, my name is Dale Dupree with Acme. He says, hey, Bob, this is Dale. I'm the guy who thought it was a good
Starting point is 00:50:23 idea to send you a brick in the mail. And the reaction that he gets is, Dale, that was so creative. He's already starting had a huge advantage because he's making people feel good. And that's a red X. That's a red X moment. Yeah. Yeah. It's funny. So you bring up that example and then one just hit my head. I was talking to an agent the other day from Indiana, Andrew Darlington and for for the folks at home. And he does bouncy balls. big like the ones that you give to your kids that are like $2 when you're walking through dicks and you're like, God, I just have to give them something to keep them quiet and you grab one of those balls. And he hand writes and marker on it. We're having a ball over here helping contractors
Starting point is 00:51:06 with their insurance and he puts the ball in the mail, like just the ball. So you literally get a bouncy ball in the mail. And he's like half the time, they're smudged. And he goes, it's not the best delivery mechanism. He goes, but the ones that get through, I've never, they've never not taking my cause. It's, you know. Yeah, it's the thing to me about the stuff like bouncy balls and cusses and all that. To me, to me, for me, the red brick is more clever. Yes. Like it's just, it's just, it's clever. I don't know how else to say it. It's just clever. A lot of people will send, you know, Rubik's cubes and with hokey things. I've seen people, people send one shoe. I'm just trying to get a foot in the door. Like those things to me seem lowbrow. This seems like it, this requires
Starting point is 00:51:46 a little more creativity. But, you know, it's kind of, that's the right idea. Yeah, yeah. So I want to be respectful of your time. And I had a couple questions for you about, I don't know, some amount of time ago in the last year. I saw you start testing and doing some stuff with visual, visuals, simplified visuals. Like Jack, I think Jack Butcher was the guy that you said you were learning from. And talk a little bit about, I'd love for you to talk about how you've taken your methodology
Starting point is 00:52:22 and mashed it in and worked and refined it around some of these visuals and what you think the impact is. Yeah, so this came from the infomercial example, right? Like the example that we did before, before and after. And so the question becomes, how can I visually show somebody in an email with a simple graphic how their life could be better relative to how it is today? And so these visuals that I teach people how to make use very simple graphics that you can mock up in PowerPoint or keynote to be able to do that. So by way of example, one company is called connect and sell.
Starting point is 00:53:00 And let's talk about the problem. So the problem when salespeople often will call businesses is they'll call for an hour and maybe they'll get to talk to one or two people. They bump into voicemail messages. They bump into gatekeepers or executive assistants, but they really rarely talk to. to their prospect. And that's a problem because the fewer people that I talk to, the less opportunity I can create. So Connect and Sell allows a salesperson to have a conversation with their prospect every six minutes. So the graphic that we did on the left-hand side was a bunch of circles saying attempts to call a prospect before Connect and Cell. And on the right-hand side
Starting point is 00:53:43 said after connecting cell, and there were green lights every five or six, you know, dots. So visually is able to show people how many more conversations they were able to have relative to what they were doing before. And again, the reason that matters is because more conversations lead to more opportunity, ultimately more revenue. So being able to articulate the before and after story and make that graphic, you know, under 100K, so it slips through filters, is another way to communicate with people. and the brain loves visual images, sometimes even more so than text.
Starting point is 00:54:19 And so it's a way to just mix up the messaging a little bit and communicate how you can potentially help someone in a different way. Because you have to do like five or six, seven touches as part of these campaigns. And so this is just another communication mechanism. How does all this mash into cold calling? So cold calling is another delivery mechanism. You know, so when you are tasked with reaching out to people you don't know to start conversations with, you have to send a series, you have to start with message clarification.
Starting point is 00:54:51 You have to then be strategic in terms of who you're reaching out to. But then you have to send them a series of emails, six, to be exact. You have to make some calls and you have to leave voicemail messages. Send LinkedIn if they're on LinkedIn images if you'd like, if you're into video, whatever. But call call is one of those, is eight. channel. If your prospect can be reached on a phone, to me, it's a really good channel because you're actually having a conversation with somebody if you would in fact know how to make a good call call, which I know it was probably a topic for another podcast. Yeah. Yeah, which is, you know what,
Starting point is 00:55:32 if you're interested in Josh's feelings, or not feelings, just feelings is the wrong word. If you're interested in his thoughts and some of the things that he does, again, I'm going to put the hard sell on both the LinkedIn follow because that's where I first found Josh's work. You put a lot of stuff out there. You put some snippets of calls. And then I want you to tell how do people get to? I'm looking. It's academy.
Starting point is 00:55:58 Yeah, just go to Josh Braun.com slash badass. Badass slash badass. Perfect. I'll have it. So go there directly. or if you forget that because you're driving in the car, just go to this episode on my site, Ryanhaling.com,
Starting point is 00:56:14 and I'll have it linked up as well. I highly, I'm not just spokesman. I'm also a client. I highly recommend the badass B2B, whatever. Fold name is because I'm in there all the time. And you wouldn't know it by some,
Starting point is 00:56:35 of the things that I've said so far, but I promise I am efforting to get better. Look, man, look, look, the knowledge and doing, look, we're learning how to ski down the mountain for the first time. And so it's a process. And knowledge and doing aren't the same thing. It feels really good to listen to stuff like this, satisfying. It scratches an itch. But it doesn't change outcomes. It's the doing and the experimenting and the tinkering and getting feedback. That's going to change the outcome. So it's like, you know, I do over IQ. So it's a process, Ryan. Don't be so hard on yourself. Yeah. Well, so it's interesting is you said six emails. So I did know that. Actually, I thought it was seven, but it doesn't matter. That's,
Starting point is 00:57:16 you know, me forgetting you. But I will eventually, you know, one, I am going to cut the loom video out because I wholly agree with your breakdown of why that's inappropriate at that stage. but I do have in the sequence in my CRM or whatever with images, with some images that I've created. I use Canva. It doesn't matter. It'll be interesting to see. I do want to clarify one thing that I said earlier and I just want to make sure I drive
Starting point is 00:57:46 at home. It's not images and it's not loom video. It's how you're doing it. Yeah, yeah. The delivery mechanism is not the thing. So it's not that loom is bad. And I haven't seen your video. I have no idea.
Starting point is 00:58:01 It's that it's perhaps the message in Loom. I mean, I've seen. I think it's the message to get to the Loom. I've had. What I'm missing is out to me via Loom and I booked meetings with me. Got it on my podcast. I've been Red X's.
Starting point is 00:58:13 I mean, Jason Bay is one of recent example. Guy sent me a Loom video and within two minutes I responded because it was so well done. So it was focused on how he could make my audience, you know, more awesome. Yeah. I think, you know, if I'm being. I'm breaking down my own performance, I think my issue is the text I have leading into the video does not say this is worth watching this video. You can't tell people, right?
Starting point is 00:58:42 You can't tell people things are worth watching because they know you're biased. I can't tell you I'm the best salesperson because I'm biased. Prospects know salespeople are biased because they have a vested interest. So we can't get into this on this podcast, but you have to know how to lower the defense mechanism. It's an anti-persuasion shield that prospects have because they don't want to be sold or manipulate it. And so you have to know how to lower that shield so that they're more open to listening to how you might be able to help them. So telling people you need to watch this because it's the best or I'm the best doesn't work because, again, of course you're going to say that. Of course you're going to say this car is awesome.
Starting point is 00:59:28 You're a car salesman or a salesperson. Yeah. You've got commission breath. So the question is, how do you now lower the anti-persuasion shield? And the answer to that is really simple. Stop persuading people and let people persuade themselves. You provide unbiased information. You highlight and illuminate things and let them decide their own reasons for change
Starting point is 00:59:56 rather than you giving them your reasons. And we'll end there. Now you got me reading my damn cold email. God damn you, Josh. All right, hey man, this has been tremendous. Thank you. I'm going to give another shout out. Josh brawn.com.
Starting point is 01:00:11 Go check it out. Get on the badass guy thing. I promise you guys. I do not push you to a lot of things, but this is going to be worth your time. I literally have it. It's one of my favorites been my menu bar.
Starting point is 01:00:21 I'm always back in there. And you wouldn't know for my performance today. But I am working on it. And must follow on LinkedIn. Dude, appreciate you, appreciate the time. All the best. Thanks, Ryan. I appreciate you having to be on.
Starting point is 01:00:34 Close twice as many deals by this time next week. Sound impossible, it's not. With the one call closed system, you'll stop chasing leads and start closing deals. In one call. This is the exact method we use to close 1,200 clients under three years during the pandemic. No fluff, no endless follow-ups,
Starting point is 01:01:06 just results fast. Based in behavioral psychology and battle tested, the one-call closed system eliminates excuses and gets the prospect saying yes, more than you ever thought possible. If you're ready to stop losing opportunities and start winning, visit masterof-theclose.com. That's masterof-theclose.com. Do it today. Happy holidays. Want to give your host a gift? Consider subscribing, rating, and reviewing the show this holiday season. It really helps the show grow. From all of us at Believe, have a Merry Christmas,
Starting point is 01:01:42 everyone and a happy holiday. If you like the show, please take a moment to rate, review, and subscribe. It really does help the show to grow. Thank you for listening.

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