Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - Peep Laja - Your Brand is Your Value

Episode Date: December 9, 2020

Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyPeep Laja, founder of world-renowned conversion optimization c...ompany CXL and the copy testing platform Wynter.io joins the podcast to explain why every we do is a commodity except our brand. Get more: 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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Starting point is 00:02:09 the world, conversion optimization organizations that exist. They have all kinds of courses. They have consulting work. that they put on a tremendous, used to be in-person conference, I think virtual conference, but Pep has been around the marketing space on a very, very high level for a long time. And he recently started a new business called winter.io, spelled W-Y-N-T-R.io. And it is copy testing. And we'll get to that.
Starting point is 00:02:42 But the reason that I actually reached out to Pep was because of a tweet, a tweet that had to do about branding. And essentially what he said is all services in the end are commodities and what differentiate our businesses are our brand. What define us, what build value and growth into our business are our brand. And I'll be honest with you, the deeper that I get into running rogue risk, the more I believe that his tweet was true. And I brought him on to talk about it, to explain it, to talk about brand and branding. You're going to get so much out of this episode. It was absolutely a pleasure to have him on. Before we get there, I want to give a big shout out.
Starting point is 00:03:17 to agency VA. Agency VA is one of the sponsors of this show, and they power rogue risk. I actually have three different individuals that work through agency VA, each works on a part-time basis doing different functions inside my agency. And to be honest with you, I don't know that I would have made it from the summer to today without their help, helping me get things done, helping me move data between systems, helping solve customer problems, doing customer service work, pulling statements from different carriers.
Starting point is 00:03:48 It just, the amount of communications and touches that it takes to run an agency, as many of you know, is absolutely bananas. And without the help of A&CVA, I don't know that I could have got there. I think they're world class. Nat is a tremendous worker, tremendous part of my team. And I'm looking forward to growing my relationship with AgenCVA as there's many things that I want to do with Rogue. And, you know, I'm going to be sourcing.
Starting point is 00:04:14 talent from agency VA first in all cases and only backfilling where I think they or maybe they believe that they don't have a good fit. And that's a different way of looking at it, I think, backfilling into local people rather than virtual assistance. And we'll see how that goes. But I could not have a better partner than agency VA, both to sponsor the show and to help me run rogue risk. So go to agency VA today. If you're looking for VA's, go to agency, VA.com today. All right, let's get on to PEP. So the crux of, and just so you know, like super casual conversation, you know, we can just
Starting point is 00:04:56 roll. So, you know, the crux of what got me to reach out was your tweet around brand and the importance of brand. And being that this podcast specifically speaks to, so that people listening right now are insurance professionals, this is a 95. plus percent of the audience are insurance people from up and down the space. So everything from carrier staff and executives to independent agency owners to vendors to vendors in the space of all different shapes and sizes. And one of the things that I think continues to
Starting point is 00:05:37 specifically retail insurance agents. So, you know, Williams insurance of, of Main Street America, wherever you live, zero emphasis or thought put into brand. Zero. Outside of my last name is Williams and your last, and my agency's name is Williams. So we have a brand. And I guess I just wanted to dive into that topic.
Starting point is 00:06:08 And you can kind of take it wherever you want to go to start. But I really want to talk through why this is something that we should even consider when there's all these things happening. You're running a business, you're trying to manage a business, trying to use, why do we have to think about brand? Because I wholly agree with you. But yeah. Well, ultimately, I think that brand is the only way you can, is your only sustainable
Starting point is 00:06:41 competitive advantage. Because anything else your competitors can copy, can mimic. And, you know, if you think about objective differences between you and everybody else out there, it's like if in insurance, like what's the, what's like the actual practical differentiation? There's probably minimal to no difference between insurance agents, you know. There might be some differences to category connoisseurs. So if I'm on insurance agents, I can read and understand, you know, the minor minutia that's different. But if I'm just a regular dude wanting insurance and you say, oh, you sell auto insurance, so does everybody else, you know.
Starting point is 00:07:28 And I think that's what caught my eye. So I want to read the tweet exactly for everyone. So this was the tweet that caught my eye November 29th. I'll have it linked up in the show notes for everyone. And then you can go and follow Pep on, um, on, um, on, on Twitter, all the other socials as well. We'll have them all linked up. So it says, your business is a commodity,
Starting point is 00:07:49 commodity in the sense that it's fungible, quite easily replaced by another competing business. You can't really win on better. It is your brand that is your best defense against commoditization. And this is, I think in a very succinct way, you summed up my complete feelings on what is missing in our space
Starting point is 00:08:07 is that, you know, there's hundreds, hundreds of carriers. Well, I think technically there's 1,300 kind of independent carriers that exist. That's, you know, in the United States, there's 38,000 agencies. And my point is always to these guys. Out of those 1,300 carriers, do you care if it says Hanover or Safe Go or State Farm, like, so you can drive your car, right? like you want to go from your home to your office, does it, does it enter your mind even a little what the,
Starting point is 00:08:44 what the brand stamp of that carrier is on? Like, do you think there's, you know, is there any differentiating difference to a consumer? And the answer is no, they don't care. Because all they want to know is, if some dude runs into me or I run into some dude, you know, I'm not going to have to come out of pocket
Starting point is 00:08:59 for the full thing. That's what they're worried about. So to me, it feels like, it's this, it's the human, and the brand the human has is the only thing that separates who I buy insurance from. Is that what you were trying to say? Or what were you trying to say in there beyond that?
Starting point is 00:09:18 Well, there's endless amount of choice for the consumer, right? And so how, like, there are two aspects. Like, how can somebody even, how do you even stand out, you know, from all these other possible providers out there? Like even if they stumble upon you somehow, how would they even notice you? So that's the differentiation. How will you stand out if you say the exact same things like everybody else? They won't even find you or if they find you to just, you know, walk right past you, right?
Starting point is 00:09:58 Yes. There's nothing about you. And two is that even if they found you and pause you and you are trying to compete them better, like let's be honest can you really be objectively better than anybody else you know like and even outside of insurance like any category like can you tell me a product
Starting point is 00:10:20 that is objectively better than competing products like software or or agency services or like cars you know so like the only only example i could come up with was that Tesla makes better batteries, long-range batteries, for now. All these other car manufacturers are making, you know, electric cars and trying to catch up. And so I think that current competitive objective advantage will erode, will go away. So then they also need to compete on brand.
Starting point is 00:10:56 I mean, Tesla is already competing on brand because they are spending $0 on advertising, zero compared to what, like, gazillions that everybody else is spending plus, but they have the biggest mind share, biggest brand value, et cetera. So think about it. So you can't really compete on better. You can't win on better.
Starting point is 00:11:15 It's like banks and checking accounts. I mean, there's all the same stuff, right? So if you can't be objectively better, stop trying to compete on better. You have to compete on other intangible things, which is your brand. And so,
Starting point is 00:11:33 So, you know, and then how do you compete on brand? I mean, obviously there's a, there are many, many, many different ways. There's, you know, your personal brand can be a reason to choose you. And even big companies play that game, you know, Microsoft and Apple, you know, used milk Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, you know, until eternity, right? Even though they were huge. Elon Musk is still pimping Tesla. Who's the, who's the representative of Ford Motor Company?
Starting point is 00:12:03 I have no idea. But personal brand can be a massive asset. And so if I like you, I buy from you, right? The classic Zig Ziglar sales thing. You know, people do business with people they like. So also then you need to have, you need to have a personal brand, you know. But that's just one way to compete by brand. I mean, we can go into all the different ways here.
Starting point is 00:12:30 So if you're, so I think the issue that a lot of, a lot of my peers in the space run into has to do with, they have a brand that they haven't put much work into. It's always a personal brand, right? Because it's, I see you at the country club or at the kids' PTA meeting or, you know, we play in the same softball league or, you know, we drink beers at the same bar. And I bump into you. And, you know, one of the one of the one universal, um, uh, consistencies of any independent
Starting point is 00:13:03 insurance agent is that if they bump into you more than twice, they're going to ask you who does their insurance. And that's basically the marketing plan. Some people cold call to start relationships. Some people, you know, do snail mail still or whatever, but it's all based on I bump into you. We both smile at each other. We seem to have something in common. And I pitch you on why you should try. And since you don't give a shit, because it means nothing to you, because to you, insurance, is a commodity and you like me, so you decide to business. So that's it. That's as far as it goes. So if you're starting there, if that's the baseline for what we're most likely working with, with most of the people that are listening, and I don't mean that to be offensive because a lot of
Starting point is 00:13:46 them are very successful, but that's as far as it goes. What has happened, and if I'm giving you too much context, I just want to kind of set the stage why I think this is such an important topic. That's doing a bad job of interviewing since I'm talking more than you are. But what's happened is, In 2016, there was a technology revolution in our industry. It's called the InsureTech Revolution, whether it was a revolution or not, isn't important. A lot of direct consumer-facing brands built more in the Silicon Valley marketing methodology than in the old traditional methodology have made their way into our space.
Starting point is 00:14:21 So now we have public companies like lemonade, you know, we have big consumer brands that have started just three, four years ago, like Hippo, like Clear Cover. I mean, all these brands. agencies who are primarily digital have started to leak in. And now you have the Williams, Stevens, and Thompson agency of Main Street, you know, wherever, trying to compete against these clearly defined well-marketed brands. So, you know, if you had to give someone in that space some advice, what are some steps that they could start to do to start to establish who they are,
Starting point is 00:15:03 are how they talk to the market how they start to build that brand if they wanted to do that yeah well first of all let's acknowledge that real differentiation it's hard but it is not enough to be just a little bit different you know differentiation needs to be big enough to tell the decision in your favor so you just you know adding a line in your your website copy here and there, just like having those small cosmetic difference is just not enough. So basically you need to give somebody a reason
Starting point is 00:15:46 to choose you over others. And competing on price, like I'm the cheapest is not sustainable, probably also not possible. But you need a structural advantage. Don't even go there, right? So small, subtle, subtle, subtle differences are not not really enough and as I mentioned like we know like where category connoisseur sees differences and novice can see now novice likely will see
Starting point is 00:16:16 similarities because a connoisse would know how to look for that differences and novice likes the necessary experience filters to find or assess those minor minor differences but it's also scary to be different You know, because there's a, there's a temptation to be a safe and boring company, you know, especially in insurance, I think. A safe and boring company, you know, like you say safe and boring stuff. Because it's inoffensive and thus beyond criticism. And like, nobody will call you out. Nobody will criticize you.
Starting point is 00:16:58 Nobody will say weird things, bad things about you. So you won't get hit. But also the problem obviously is that nobody will care either. If you're an old established company with T-pockets, like you are like, I don't know, state farm, right? You can get away with it. But like if you're looking to grow, you're looking to build awareness around you, it won't serve you, you know. And yes, some people prefer to buy from boring companies. but people who like to buy from boring companies,
Starting point is 00:17:33 they already have one, you know, so they're not looking for you. They're not looking to switch. So, so, so I think most people get the fact that you need to be different. That's not hard, but like that radically different part. That's hard. It's, it's, it's, uh, most deem it too risky.
Starting point is 00:17:55 And it's hard to predict how it will play out. Um, yeah. So, what, uh, yeah, I think there's so much in there. I really want to. So I think, I think you've really touched on it. I think what you've touched on is, um, the idea that if you were to bump into any one of the individuals listening to this show right now and, and talk about differentiation logically, logically, I think this, they would completely either agree and and possibly even understand and be able to come up with some of what you just said logically. But emotionally, emotionally, to get past the emotions of doing something like this, I think would be beyond most people.
Starting point is 00:18:41 I mean, if you were to scroll through, if you search the hashtag insurance Twitter, there's a lot of amazing people, right? But if you were, you would find a lot of really common themes. There's not a lot of people going that far out of, bounds one way or the other in terms of their look, their feel, relatively safe, muted colors for the most part. Usually, you know, kind of standardized website theme, standardized copy. You'll probably see save money a million times. And so how do you start to make that move? Like, how do you start to crack that? Because I can, I again, this, this is what I believe.
Starting point is 00:19:30 I mean, the, the, my agency, I own an independent insurance agency. And, and the name of it is rogue risk. So the very first thing I tried to do was hopefully easily to, easy to remember, you know, rogue risk, two syllable name. The alliteration, you know, rogue risk with the two R's. You don't hear rogue with insurance. It feels like a pattern breaker. So I tried to be very deliberate with that. What's interesting is, and this is the part that I find very interesting, is that I get two responses. Oh, shit, man, rogue, that's awesome. I want some rogue insurance. Or, yeah, what, what's that all about?
Starting point is 00:20:15 That's the reaction you want to get because the worst mistake is like you try to appeal to everyone, you know, which obviously means that nobody will care about you. It's like you've turned up the vanilla and nobody cares. You will not stand out. You're just like, so ideally a strong brand is polarizing. It is repelling a certain part of the population. And it is therefore also more magnetic to another segment of people. That's what you want. Because like winning everyone over is impossible.
Starting point is 00:20:52 it's not going to happen. So you do want to figure out like what is the type of person who is, you know, who will find this appealing and you're going to go all in. And in fact, you want to turn up the repel factor. You want to drive away a certain type of people, you know. So in your case, probably these are maybe, you know, and I apologize for generalizing, but maybe like more risk-taking, younger, less conservative people. I tend to get a lot of motorcycle. People who like motorcycles tend to be. I get a lot of motorcycle people.
Starting point is 00:21:32 They'll be like, hey, I want you to do my workers' comp. And down the line, I'll find out they own a motor. Just that has been something that I've found for whatever reason. That is a segment. I've never rid of motorcycle in my life. I don't know a Harley from an Indian from a triumph, but it's just interesting how that works. works.
Starting point is 00:21:51 So let's talk about some of the ways how, you know, with brand and your communication, how you can set yourself apart. So business does not involve, you know, radically changing what you do as a company, but you might need to change the DNA of your company, meaning like, what do you stand for, right? So in insurance case, you know, so one classical move is, this is not about insurance, but like in general, it's attribute leadership. you are better in some one very particular aspect, an aspect that buyers might care about. So, you know, it might be customer service, but if you just say we provide good service,
Starting point is 00:22:31 that's, you know, nobody cares, right? So it needs to be very specific. So, like, I don't even, I don't know enough about the insurance to give you an example. Yeah, that's fine. That might be. But like, for instance, like in website hosting, if you know that there's this company called WP Engine, the WordPress hosting company, when they came out and there was already a billion hosting companies they said we are the fastest WordPress hosting
Starting point is 00:22:54 company you know like they doubled down on that speed attribute and also of course they did optimize their business also to be fast right so attribute leadership so you better in one specific aspect and then you can be the preferred provider you know this is the classic more doctor smoke camelist type of thing or you know like more and more dentists recommend this tooth-based but also so in case, I don't know if you do local insurance or yeah, it might be a market segment like more bikers use rogue insurance. Yeah, more bikers use local. Yeah. Local motorcycle gang association is recommending you. Nine out of 10 hell's angels riders prefer rogue risk over the competition.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Exactly right. Right. So that becomes that becomes a reason to choose you. You know, there might be a heritage thing. So like, oh, already my grandfather was serving these areas, you know. And then you like make it about the history and the tradition. And, you know, my father was hanging out with your father, you know, if you have that. That's a big one. That's a big one. Because a lot of, a lot of independent agencies tend to be legacy businesses. And in their strength is they have, they have generational knowledge, which is really a strength, 50, 60, 70 years into a community and it is a real value proposition. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:20 And then you can double down on that messaging, like make your design and, you know, your web design and everything about you reflect that. Yeah. The history, the safe, you know, all that stuff. You use black and white old photos on your, you know, website. I don't know, like go all in. Yeah, yeah. Love that.
Starting point is 00:24:38 Then there's the leadership aspect. So you are the leader in some category. So like, I don't know. So this is similar to attribute. leadership but you're saying like most most companies or humans in this segment are using you like it needs to be true obviously like yeah most small restaurants in the you know southern Nebraska are my customers you know like if you're a restaurant you should also join something like this yeah and specialization always good so you
Starting point is 00:25:09 go after a very specific niche you know like I am insurance hey insurance agent for who are into heavy metal and orgies. You know, like super, it would dominate that category. Yes, that is, that's a wide open category. Pun intended.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Nobody owns that yet. That's a good one. So that one is used a lot too. So I think what's interesting here is, and I'm, because I'm cycling it through, what do I hear? So the legacy one locally,
Starting point is 00:25:41 so geographic, geographic preferred provider, and specialization, I see a lot. Leader in a category, I see less in attribute leadership. I don't see much of at all. Just out of the ones you've named so far, I don't see a lot of agencies using those to brand their business.
Starting point is 00:26:02 Another one that is everybody can do is you differentiate on customer experience. There's this great book that I do recommend everybody pick up. It's called Never Lose a Customer. again. It's basically how to compete in customer experience. So this is exactly when you're in commodity business. You're a dentist, right? You fix teeth like everybody else. So the moment somebody calls you or makes an appointment or something like you do something ridiculously crazy that they do not expect. Yeah. So if you think that the best type of experience is a five-star
Starting point is 00:26:42 experience, just as an exercise thing, what would a 10-star experience look like? You know, it's like, if you're, if I get insurance with you, then tomorrow, you know, you have, you know, Elon Musk picked me up in his Tesla, drive me to, you know, Disneyland, and, you know, take me on a ride. That's part of your service, you know, it's like, that will be epic. I'll sign up just to hang out with Elon. So like, of course, you can't do Elon. He's a busy guy. but like what are some of those things that are like over the top value add experience that you can add on top obviously if you have you know if you have a you know customer database and receptionist you can like maybe have a database of all their family thing you know you call on you know little jimmy's fifth birthday and you know send a cake and a clown and you know like you differentiate like you use your imagination here no I think that's wonderful. I really like that one. And shout out to Joey Coleman, Joey Coleman, keynote speaker at L of 8 2018. That's a tremendous book, never lose a customer again.
Starting point is 00:27:56 Okay, customer experience. I think, you know, that one, I think one of the things, so here's my question on customer experience for you. So customer experience is a term that gets thrown around a lot, right? And what I feel like a lot of people do is, give lip service to the term or they do like this little thing like a not not anything that actually is interesting or engaging just just they do something very small like a you know just like a a birthday card that's auto printed from thanks.i.o or something which is better than nothing but wholly forgettable so i mean card birthday cards i mean don't do anything right like if you send a postcard, like my insurance agent, I don't even know what they are.
Starting point is 00:28:47 They change every year because I'm part of old state. So I get a birthday card that I throw in something into trash. It's like so impersonal. Yeah. Or like I get a Christmas card from somebody I've never met. It's like, no, that's not. I think that's more like a waste of money. So also it's very predictable.
Starting point is 00:29:10 Yeah. So that was my next question. not it's not something i'm going to tell my you know neighbor about you know so is so okay so i'm so predictability you don't you want it to be something they don't see coming is is exactly right how do you figure out what that bar is because because i know it doesn't have to be something expensive and it doesn't have to be something overly time consuming it doesn't have to be you know so what are the characteristics that that might trigger wow that that that was thoughtful. That was something I didn't see coming. Like I didn't, what are some of the things that
Starting point is 00:29:46 people could be thinking about? Hmm. Well, this is a, you know, uh, it's a creative exercise, right? It's, it's, it's a, it's a classic Seth Godin's book, you know, Purple Cow. You know, you see, you know, a remark, he defines remarkable experience is something that is just worth making a remark about. You just pause and say, oh, that's cool. Yeah. So it needs to. So what I would do is like brainstorm 10 or more ideas on a paper and just go read them out to your friend, do your neighbor, to, you know, somebody you trust. It's like, hey, which of these things would be, would make you go, hey, that's cool.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Yeah. You know what I think is fun? This is off topic slightly, but what I think is really interesting that I feel like so few people do is just call a customer and go, hey. Also, yes. What would make you happy? Like, what part of this relationship that we have? Like, what have you woke up in the morning? You know what?
Starting point is 00:30:51 Man, I really wish they did that thing. Like, is there anything? Is it zero? You know, is it five things? Like what? Because I had an opportunity. I don't know what was going on in my brain. Because I don't normally ask this question.
Starting point is 00:31:01 So this is kind of me talking to myself. But I had a customer on the phone and just something popped in my brain. I was like, hey, man, like, how's it going so far? Like, we've been doing business together for eight months. How's it going? He's like, it's going great. I said, well, was there anything I haven't done? He said, well, you never followed up on this thing I need you to follow up on.
Starting point is 00:31:22 And I, and what he did by asking that question, what he did was find, he found a gap in my follow-up system that I didn't know even existed. And I wouldn't have known it was there if I hadn't asked him. And I made a note and am now starting to build reminders to do this because I was like, holy shit. I just asked randomly, for whatever reason, just popped in my head. How you doing? How's it going so far? I don't even know if that's the right question asked. And it, it helped me plug a gap in my business that wasn't there before. And he then gave me all his personal insurance as well. So I ended up selling them just by answering this stupid question.
Starting point is 00:32:00 Yeah. Totally. I mean, calling people, I'm part of a gym or used to be before Corona hit. And so they got a new trainer and the trainer called me and had a really nice experience. And I was more motivated to go back into the gym, you know. So definitely personal touch. Just to see how you were doing. The trainer was just calling to see like how you were getting by. Basically, yeah. Yeah, that's nice.
Starting point is 00:32:33 Yeah. How I'm doing, you know, what are my needs? And it was also like, I hadn't been in for a while. Yeah. Like, hey, what's going on in your life, man? And I had the shoulder injuries. Oh, man, we have this, you know, whatever rehab class and blah, blah, blah. So, you know, the old saying, like, people remember how you made them feel.
Starting point is 00:32:55 Yes. So that made me feel real good. Like, oh, they care. I mean, yes, it's a capitalistic organization. But I felt like somebody showed interest in me, you know? Yeah. I believe that it is possible to be both ambitious and capitalistic and also do the right thing at the same time. I know that that's maybe not the norm or the perception by some, but I do believe that that's very possible.
Starting point is 00:33:22 I think it is. I think it often gets, I think a lot of people, I think sometimes we get lost in believing that you either have to be high growth, high ambitious, kind of leave, you know, your customers are you. users or whatever, and we don't really think of them as anything more than a number in a database, or we're hyper hands-on, we know everything about them that ever existed, we know their entire life story, but we can only grow this fast. And I think you can be both. I don't know that that's, I don't think it's easy or everyone would do it, but I do think that it's very possible. And I think what you're talking about, and again, this is why I wanted to have you on and have this conversation was I think brand is the method to do that. I think by focusing on brand
Starting point is 00:34:08 and making it a core part of what you think about day-to-day interaction by interaction, you can be both of those things. You can be both a scaling business and a business that cares about its people at the same time. I think it's that to me, I guess you, I saw your tweet at like the perfect times this has been going on in my head
Starting point is 00:34:25 and I was like, I feel like brand is the keystone to this concept that connects these two pillars. is brand done right. Does that seem crazy to you? Yeah, I mean, what is a brand? You know, so also we need to like be on the same page about the definition here. Brand is not what you say you are.
Starting point is 00:34:46 It's what they say you are. Yeah. But you can, brand management is helping to control that perception. So it's not 100% in your control, but you can influence it. You know, you can influence the perception. of you through you know visuals the communication the words you use all those things yeah and obviously it's a sum of all the experiences uh somebody has had with you like if you're
Starting point is 00:35:14 you've been addicted to somebody you know for years and now you're suddenly i care about you and like it's no right yes i do i do know and it's it's a it's a weird feeling i think um it's a weird feeling that you get when you see messaging that does not match your perception of the brand. It's a weird, you get a very, it's almost like it's a, we have some sort of sense or instinct to, you know, when you see, like you'll see it, you'll see a message, a brand message that does not match what's actually being delivered or what your experience isn't delivered. There's a clear disc, I guess what I'm trying to say is you can't lie about it. You can't actually, you know, if you're saying that your customer service is world class,
Starting point is 00:36:07 and it's not. It's just run of the mill at best. When you put, we have world class customer experience on your Facebook post. Everyone just goes, if anything, it creates a counter negative reaction to it. It almost is the exact opposite effect of what you wanted to have because of how disconnected it is from what reality is. Mm-hmm. Yeah. You're absolutely right here, yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:33 Yeah. So I want to adjust course a little bit, and I want to talk about your company. And when I first came across your work, and I've been following your work for a long time, I'm not going to fanboy or anything, but obviously from conversion Excel days and stuff. And a lot of the chops that I use on my own website, I guess learned reading some of the tremendous content that you have. I actually became friends to a certain extent with a lot of people that used to contribute because you had a very high quality contributor network that was producing content on Conversion Excel's website. And now, you know, tell me, you know, so I was looking through
Starting point is 00:37:17 the site and getting kind of reacclimated to what you were doing. And this idea of, you know, and I kind of found it right on your about page was, you know, achieving message market fit. That is something that feels really difficult, I think, for a lot of people. Totally. Tell us a little bit about the business, what it is, what you're doing. And then that's kind of the concept. I want to try to get into that concept and how we help maybe the takeaway from this podcast at the very end is, here's what you're helping people do. And if they can't do it on their own, they know where to go. Yeah. So the company is called winter,
Starting point is 00:37:56 winter.i.l and it's a messaging research service, if you will. So what it does, it helps you achieve message market fit, as you alluded. What is a message market fit? So message market fit is that you're sending out some messages on your website or landing pages, you know, whatever web properties. And does that message that you're sending out, does that resonate? with your target audience? Do they find it appealing? Do they find it? Yes, I want that. You know, like there's a, it helps great buying intent. So how do you, how do you know, what are the target, people in the target audience, what do they think of your pitch, your sales pitch, your copy on your website? That's what it's about. You cannot achieve product market fit
Starting point is 00:38:55 where people just want to buy your stuff without message market fit first. So your messaging needs to land on them. So it's kind of like, excuse me, the way I think about it is, you know, one-to-one sales situation, like if I'm trying to sell you insurance, there are certain arguments that I'm going to be making that are more powerful than others. you know so over a period of time i'm testing and tweaking i'm selling a bunch of people and then i'm like finding like all these three key arguments are really that's you know driving it home these are the main arguments of work so that's when you achieve you know message customer fit
Starting point is 00:39:40 basically like i know that this when i say this they go ah yes yeah um and you find that either through experimentation in a one-to-one sales situation but also you know you don't scale so you can't sell to every customer on a one-on-to-one basis so you need your website and marketing is sales at scale right it's scaling you now if your messaging is boring if it's like me if it's like me too if it's like you know You sell car insurance. Well, I mean, I already have one. So like, if you still say this boring things,
Starting point is 00:40:23 it's just not gonna resonate. So you don't have a message market fit, they're not gonna buy. So winter helps you, lets you know what people think about your messaging. What about it resonates and what actually turns them off. Yeah, I love that. So here's what I found so much in our space.
Starting point is 00:40:44 What's funny is the example that you just gave is a great one. you said, hey, hey, can I quote your insurance? And you said, I already have one. Now, to an insurance agent, they're going, well, of course you do. What I'm asking is, can I provide you with a quote for my insurance? You know, my, whatever I'm providing to you. And but your mind, you're like, bro, I don't need your thing.
Starting point is 00:41:09 I already got mine. And that is a complete disconnect that happens a lot. A lot of times with struggling salespeople in our space. struggling marketers in our space. This is one of the concepts that is a huge disconnect in terms of what they're saying and what the customer actually wants. So however, I feel like one to one, it's easy to overcome. So how do we take, how would someone in our space take what they know and can do
Starting point is 00:41:41 unconsciously one-on-one and move that to their website? because that to me is an enormous disconnect in our space. When I look at insurance websites, I'm like, God, this person doesn't know what they're talking about. When I meet them at a conference, I'm like, wow, this person is brilliant and is a killer. Completely disconnected. I just feel like for some reason there's a huge gap from getting it from them being on the ground to them being digital. Right. So, I mean, buyers are different, right?
Starting point is 00:42:11 So some are more price sensitive than others. For me, I'm not particularly. particular price sensitive buyer myself obviously I have insurance but if somebody would tell me that they you know get a quote maybe it's cheaper it's a hassle for me like I don't want to I mean happy it's a you know I've been with the same company for many years I don't want to rock the boat because I don't have a problem to solve yes and so if you're gonna pitch me and say you have this problem this problem I might even get defensive right so
Starting point is 00:42:45 the way around that is that instead of you telling me, you know, like I either get a quote or that something's wrong with me, open my eyes to look at the situation, open my, yeah, to look at the situation with new eyes, essentially. So I would see that there's a problem without you telling me. And the way you, I mean, there are multiple ways to do it, but like one good way to do it is you talk about a change that is happening in the world. So me becoming aware of the problem is me adapting to this change. So, so for instance, I've been an old state customer since, you know, I don't know, like many years. But you can say, hey, Allstate is an old school insurance company. You know, like there are things that have been changing.
Starting point is 00:43:41 and you're locked into this. I don't even know what argument is about. You can say that things have changed dramatically sense. And like, you know, you can say that something has changed. And now I'm like, oh, really? I've never considered this aspect. And then it's like, oh, so what has changed? Oh, so what should I be aware of?
Starting point is 00:44:02 And then now I start asking questions. And now you might feed me with some information that might make me might make me reconsider my choices, you know? Yeah. Yeah. I think that I love that. I think that's really, really interesting because this is a major obstacle for new business growth for a lot of agencies.
Starting point is 00:44:27 So what we find is referred agencies that grow oftentimes have just fallen into, many times because of their generational nature, referral sources. you own a mortgage company. I'm an insurance agent. We've become buddies over playing Little League together and going to college together. You send me all your business. It's teed up.
Starting point is 00:44:49 It's in a moment of change. There's not really a heavy pitch. I don't actually have to sell you. I just have to provide you with a product because you're coming in on a tee and I grow my business. For the agencies that don't have those relationships who need to go out and actually engage with customers
Starting point is 00:45:05 and get them to and create that emotional differentiation, this becomes a major pain point because get a quote, if it ever did have power, is losing power every single day, almost at a logarithmic scale. Me coming to you and saying, hey, man, can I quote your stuff? It's going to be the answer you just gave, which is that sounds like a hassle to me. And the last thing in a post-COVID world that I need is another hassle. And this is a major problem that the industry is facing right now.
Starting point is 00:45:39 is people just don't want to they don't need another thing to spend brain cycles on even if it could help them yeah so so it's yeah i love that that's really really interesting so there's this there's this um classic copywriting technique uh when it comes to like writing headlines is a question that makes you go how do you do that so let me give you an example so The other day, I landed on this website called, I think it's FastSpring, FastSpring.com. And on their homepage, they say, hey, you are missing out of 30% of sales. Basically, and it's a merchant account service. So I'm using Stripe.
Starting point is 00:46:32 I'm happy with Stripe. I don't want to rock the boat. You know, I don't have a problem. But now when I read that headline, they didn't say, oh, merchant service. accept credit cards. I'm already accepting credit cards. They say you're losing out on 30% of sales. And that makes me go, oh, really? How's that? And now they cut my interest and I'm going to read and I'm actually dive into their pitch. And then that particular website fails to deliver on the promise. Like they never actually answer how I'm losing out. So it's a dud. But like you can do
Starting point is 00:47:06 better so like you you know I don't know what the equivalent is but like you could be paying 30% less for your insurance yeah although if you just about the cost I think it's hard yeah because then then there's a demographic that for sure that every year is switching insurance you know like who is cheaper this year for sure and you know it's better than I do but so I think ultimately competing on price is uh is uh everybody wants everybody's competing a price you know so you need something else yeah um can i hit you with the headline on my website and you tell me how it grabs you as a little example so i say um insurance is confusing time consuming and costly we fix these problems
Starting point is 00:47:55 i feel like it's close but it's not there that's if i had to give you my thing i think it's close, but it's not there. So my first reaction is, you might be right, but I have it solved already. I'm good with Allstate. Yeah. Right. Like, I don't have those problems. You don't find a confusing time consuming or costly because you feel good about where you're at. I've already dealt with it. I like, I don't know how I even shows Allstate, but I have them for whatever reason. Yeah. So they're just, you know, and I've had a couple of, you know, incidents where they, they were good to me. So I got like some minimal brand. and loyalty.
Starting point is 00:48:35 So it's not a not a problem that I. So you say it's complicated. Maybe if I were in the market to choose one, I would agree. But I'm not on the market. So obviously, I don't know. I'm different in that case. Like you have different personas you're selling to somebody. It might be actively looking for one.
Starting point is 00:48:54 And maybe maybe you aren't the consumer or it's the right time because maybe it does become time consuming for you. I guess how would you, I don't want to pitch you on why I think it's right. I'm tweaking it, but I felt like it had some of the elements of actionable, differentiated, but it also doesn't feel all the way there to me for some reason. I guess that's why I'm asking you. And I know I'm putting you on the spot here, but, you know. Yeah, so obviously, you know, there are multiple reasons why somebody might buy anything.
Starting point is 00:49:31 And I'm just not actively in the market for insurance. Yeah. So that headline, I think, is not speaking to my kind of passive person. Gotcha. I will say, though, because I asked another friend and he, he sits on a little different, but we were talking through different scenarios. You would never come to my site if you didn't have an insurance problem. That is true.
Starting point is 00:49:58 Yeah. Right? Like, you're not going to go. Hey, you know what I'm going to do for the next hour? I'm going to go take a stroll through rogue risk.com for some light insurance reading. Totally, totally. So even if I would see your ads, I would not click because I'm not in the market for one. But those who would come to your site, you're absolutely right.
Starting point is 00:50:23 There's some sort of a lead qualification, you know, however you want to do the lead scoring there, but it will be a signal. It's signaling some level of interest. For sure, there are some people who randomly somehow happened there, but like most majority would be, would have some level of interest, you're right. Yeah, interesting. So, okay, so I want to ask you a question about winter,
Starting point is 00:50:49 and I want to be respectful of your time. So I'm, I mean, I think this looks super cool. I'm probably going to do one of these tests. So basically I'm looking at, you know, you can either get business to business or consumer, which I'm assuming if you're going like B2C. So you have actually. Exactly. If you're selling to individuals, that's a consumer panel. Cool.
Starting point is 00:51:09 And then you can target them by different psychographics. Gotcha. And then you then you guys go out, send some consumers through and they give you feedback on. This headline doesn't make sense. I never saw this button. Talk, talk me through with what. So it's not about usability. It's not like user testing.com where it's got you.
Starting point is 00:51:28 It's all about the messaging, the copy on your website. Yep. And so it's asking the consumers, if that's your audience, research questions. So it's not what do you think. It's more like, what about this is unclear? What about this is off-putting? What about this is, do you find compelling? And also like you can do likeard scales on a scale of one to five.
Starting point is 00:51:58 you know so after after reading your headline on a scale of one to five how how much do you want to keep on reading because you know like the classical thing is like your goal of the headline is to make them want to read the next line and so on so you can measure that by asking and you'll get the score reading the headline it's 3.5 or whatever right and then you can change the headline and test it again and see if the willingness to read more goes up And so people will rate you on clarity. They will rate you on, so the likeer's possible likers scale is how badly they want to keep on reading, how clear it is, because clarity is most important in copy. If it's like vague or uses, you know, complicated big words, jargons doesn't resonate for sure.
Starting point is 00:52:47 Also, do they care about the arguments you're making? Like there's a we would call it care score. So on a scale of one to five, how much do you care about this? So you maybe came up with this idea for a differentiation where, I know, maybe you're eco-conscious. You know, like for every dollar you invest, you know, spend with us, we give five cents to homeless dogs. And then does that gesture actually resonate with people? And maybe yes, but maybe they don't give a, you know, rat's ass. And so you get all the feedback you get is answers to research questions.
Starting point is 00:53:26 and you can choose and you can ask different questions about different sections of your website. So maybe you have different one set of questions for your headline, one set for your, you know, the service description, things like that. Guys, if you're listening at home, go W-Y-N-T-E-R-W-W-N-T-E-R-W-T-E-R-W-E-O. And if you're selling personal insurance and your website is important to you at all, I mean, $99 to have vetted consumers walk through and be able to give you feedback on your messaging to me is a fucking joke. Like, and I mean that in a good way. I mean that good way.
Starting point is 00:54:08 Like that is absolutely something you should do. Like you are going to get immense value out of this. Like, you know, I'm absolutely going to do that. I mean, I obviously checked it out before you came on and everything. But I mean, it to me, you know, this is the difference. And I've even, I do a lot of testing on my site and I'm bad because I don't use all the, all the tools I probably should use. But, but I do do a lot of testing.
Starting point is 00:54:33 And, you know, right now I'm testing a video and in a very small headline versus real text. And it's interesting, the feedback that I'm getting. But, you know, this to me as a way to start to craft a message, it's actually going to get people to grab to grab onto your brand your agency brand um i i i think this is a no brainer this is absolute no brainer to add some context so another company run is called cxel that you mentioned that we have we do online courses on all this things and we have like 50 plus products like courses and then we have pPC landing pages and webinar pages so well like hundreds of pages that are very copy heavy a lot of words so in order for me to increase the
Starting point is 00:55:26 conversion rate on those pages get more people to buy sign up etc I need to improve the words I need to make the copy better copy is the number one thing that gets people to take action now how do I improve the copy on all these pages you can't improve the copy if you don't know what's wrong with it I like I can just have an opinion and you can have an opinion and But like, we are not the buyers. We know our products so well, we have forgotten what it's like to not be the expert at our thing, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:00 So it's rather, it's like impossible for us to see our product the way our customers see. And we should not underestimate how little we might actually know what customers think about our pitch. Yeah. And that's the power of this data. So now you know, oh, this stuff that I'm writing here is completely not resonating. I need to like, and maybe it's unclear. Maybe it doesn't communicate value. And I want to take everyone back to your reaction to your own.
Starting point is 00:56:35 You were kind of talking to yourself in this scenario, but your honest reaction to the question of, can I quote your insurance was I already have insurance. And I don't think that that is the reaction that most insurance professionals would necessarily think and that's not a knock guys that I just think this is a blind spot for anybody in any industry particularly for us is you would not your your reaction I don't think people would expect your first reaction we were to rank them we were to put seven reactions on a list and say which one do you think would be first I do not think I already have insurance as it would be would be even close to the top because the insurance professor is like yeah no I know you
Starting point is 00:57:13 already have it I'm trying to get I'm trying to show you something different that disconnect I think is powerful as much as I might not be articulating it in the best way. That might be an interesting headline to lead with. You put it in quotes, but I already have insurance and people like, oh, yeah. Yeah. You're now connecting with the conversation in the head of the customer. Like, oh, yeah. So why should I, you know, but now you're, you're addressing the elephant in the room right up front. And you might actually get me. Obviously, I don't know, but I'm going to start running ads with, but I already have insurance in Austin, Texas, and we'll see what happens. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:53 No, I'm an upstate New York. So you won't have to, you won't be Facebook stalked by me. But no, dude, I want to be respectful of your time. This has been absolutely tremendous. I really appreciate you coming on. I know, like, the insurance industry is not your primary niche, obviously. But I do think that the work you've done, both at CXL, which, you know, I kind of came in contact with us, conversion Excel and all that. And, and now with winter. And particularly, these are, this is a very, you know, guys, I think a lot of times tools like what we were talking about, they tend, you know, they feel outside our reach, right? They're $500, $700 a month. I mean,
Starting point is 00:58:32 we're talking about very manageable, reasonable, reasonable prices for, for, for service that could drastically improve. I mean, just, just your headline being more, uh, grabbing someone can improve. what's going on, you know, can get them going down further. And then, you know, maybe they catch a video or another set of copy or whatever. That really pulls them in. But if they're not getting past that headline, just that alone. Just being able to dial in your headline alone is worth what you'd spend. And so I just want to push everyone there.
Starting point is 00:59:02 And I want to say thank you for your time, man. Where can everyone get at you besides these websites? Any of the socials? What's your favorite social? Twitter and LinkedIn. Those are the two where I'm active posting daily. Gotcha. Well, hey man, this has been great.
Starting point is 00:59:17 Thank you. Appreciate you. You have a great debt. Thank you, Ryan. Yes. Smoke a joint bubbles. This time next week. Sound impossible, it's not.
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