I am Charles Schwartz Show - Explosive Growth: From Zero to Millions
Episode Date: September 4, 2024In this episode, Charles dives deep into the world of business scaling and high-ticket sales with Tanner Chidester, the dynamic founder of Elite CEOs. Tanner unveils his remarkable journey from a stru...ggling athlete to a business mogul, showcasing how he transformed his fitness expertise into a $100 million empire. Tanner challenges conventional wisdom about business growth, emphasizing the power of a unique selling proposition (USP) and the strategic use of paid advertising. Charles and Tanner explore the delicate balance between rapid scaling and maintaining quality, the art of crafting irresistible offers, and developing sustainable business strategies that prioritize both financial success and personal fulfillment. Tanner's expertise shines as he breaks down his methods for creating high-converting sales processes, implementing effective paid advertising campaigns, and fostering a mindset of continuous growth. He underscores the importance of understanding your market, the strategic use of automation, and maintaining authenticity even as the pressure to chase quick wins intensifies. Whether you're a budding entrepreneur struggling to find your niche, an established business owner seeking to scale your operations, or a professional navigating the complex landscape of high-ticket sales, this episode is packed with invaluable insights. Get ready to revolutionize your approach to business growth, client acquisition, and sustainable scaling. KEY TAKEAWAYS: Uncover how Tanner leveraged his "90/10 Rule" to create a game-changing fitness marketing strategy Learn why crafting a compelling USP can dramatically increase your conversion rates Gain insights into aligning your passion with profitable business models for long-term success Understand the power of paid advertising in fueling exponential growth Explore strategies for scaling a business while maintaining quality and personal enjoyment Head over to https://podcast.iamcharlesschwartz.com/ to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode. KEY POINTS: 2:00 Tanner's Origins: Delving into Tanner's background, from his childhood dreams to his early career struggles. 4:40 USP Significance: Highlighting the critical role of a Unique Selling Proposition in business success. 6:45 Innovative Positioning: Revealing Tanner's unconventional approach to fitness marketing that set him apart. 8:40 Objection Handling: Exploring strategies to preemptively address and overcome common sales objections. 12:11 Sales Foundation: Discussing how door-to-door sales experience shaped Tanner's business acumen. 14:19 Success Metrics: Outlining the impressive results Tanner's clients have achieved using his methods. 16:06 Lead Generation: Comparing the effectiveness of inbound versus outbound marketing strategies. 20:00 Closing Techniques: Sharing insights on conducting successful sales calls with high conversion rates. 22:00 Attention Grabbing: Explaining the art of creating curiosity in marketing to capture audience interest. 25:00 Team Building: Offering guidance on hiring strategies for new entrepreneurs scaling their businesses. 27:05 Entrepreneurial Mindset: Emphasizing the importance of enjoying the business growth process for long-term success. 29:40 Growth Strategies: Weighing the pros and cons of paid advertising versus organic growth methods. 33:51 Influencer Marketing: Reflecting on the effectiveness of paid shoutouts as a marketing strategy. 36:38 Community Building: Describing the success of community-based models in high-ticket sales. 39:00 Further Learning: Directing listeners to additional resources for implementing Tanner's strategies.
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Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz Show. Today we're taking a deep dive into the world of
business scaling and high-ticket sales with Tanner, the founder of Elite CEOs,
who transformed his fitness expertise into a $100 million empire.
Tanner's journey is a testament to the power of persistence and strategic pivoting. He built a
business that not only sells high-ticket packages, but creates a blueprint for explosive growth.
Tanner is candid about his struggles, from failed football dreams to working as a server,
before cracking the code of online business.
He'll share his groundbreaking approach to creating a unique selling proposition
that led to selling $5,000 fitness packages with ease.
You'll learn about his 90-10 rule for fitness marketing
and how he leverages paid advertising to fuel exponential growth.
Tanner's focus is on building a scalable business model
that emphasizes enjoying the process as much as achieving financial milestones.
Whether you're looking to craft an irresistible offer,
master high-ticket sales, or scale your business from zero to millions,
Tanner's got the roadmap.
So if you're ready to revolutionize your approach to marketing,
create a sales
strategy that converts skeptics into high-paying clients, and build a business that scales beyond
your wildest dreams, this is the episode for you. Tanner is about to unveil the strategies that took
him from a struggling athlete to a business mogul who's as passionate about helping others succeed
as he is about his own success. The show starts now.
Welcome to the I Am Charles Schwartz Show, where we don't just discuss success,
we show you how to create it. On every episode, we uncover the strategies and tactics that turn
everyday entrepreneurs into unstoppable powerhouses in their businesses and their lives.
Whether your goal is to transform your life or hit that elusive seven, eight, or nine figure mark,
we've got the blueprint to get you there. The show starts now.
Today, we've got Tanner with us. I am going to absolutely fangirl for a second. I have been
following him for a really long time, so it's kind of special. I know his girl doesn't want
me to feed his ego, but this guy is a damn superhero. So I'm really impressed. Thank
you so much for being on the lab. Yeah, thanks for having me, man. I appreciate it. That was
very kind. So for the two people on the planet who actually don't know who you are which
is embarrassing but can you give us a little bit of backstory kind of like what your story was i
knew you know you grew up and then give me a little bit of a lead in to get everybody who you
are and what's going on yeah so i wanted seven kids four sisters two brothers grew up super
religious uh you know conservative household and uh my dad was a teacher, mom would stay at home. So not a lot of cash, not a
lot of money. And, uh, at a young age, I just remember, you know, telling my mom when I'm rich,
I'm going to buy those pre-packaged meals and meal prep. And I was really into bodybuilding and
sports. Um, and then I wanted to go to the NFL, took it as far as we go, had a little stint at
D1, got hurt a bunch. Don't think I was good enough either. Um, either um but I gave it my all so no regrets and that's been like a big thing in
my life I've been really proud of and then uh I had to start figuring out what I was going to do
so you know I was in petroleum engineering I had a 3.9 GPA when football ended I realized I hated
school I was like man I was here to play football and I just went to class or so happened to and I
sat down my mentor my My mentor was David Fry
who comes from the click funnels world. He's actually married to one of Russell Brunson's
cousins, I believe. And he's taught me about funnels. And so I started learning all these
things. I didn't make any money for years, but I was learning all these intangible skills and
I did door to door sales and I was a server, but right before I was about to go back to school,
cause I wasn't making any money. I was almost 25 now.
I kind of hit it off in the online fitness niche.
Blew up.
Had tons of trainers start asking me for help.
That blew up.
And then Elite Shields was born after that.
And I've been doing that the last six years.
We crossed 100 million in sales and 50,000 clients and all these crazy numbers.
So that's kind of the long story short.
So I like that you're being very kind with it blew up. Could you give a little bit more details
of what do you mean by it blew up? Because I don't think people understand what blew up means
in your world versus my world. Yeah, blue. I mean, it grew very fast. So I went zero to a million in
a year. That was actually my slowest year of growth which is crazy to think and then we went one to
10 and then we went 10 to 15 and then we jumped to like in the 20s and um it was i'd say my biggest
craziest year was one to ten right literally 10x in revenue in a year and that's you know obviously
a massive jump uh so that's kind of what i mean by explosive growth is you know it's pretty explosive
went pretty fast i just needed to frame it for the people who are like, Oh yeah, he made 20 bucks. No,
I didn't make 20 bucks. It's a very different conversation here. There's a reason it's called
elite CEOs. So if someone's coming into this and they're like, okay, Holy Christ, what,
what, what happened here? If someone comes into the idea of scaling, if you're like, Hey,
this is the most important thing out of everything we do. This is what you have to identify first and foremost when it comes to scaling your business.
What was the first thing you would say they need to do?
Yeah, so it's going to sound boring, but it's getting a good offer, right?
Mosey has a great book on it now, right?
$100 million offers.
Most people's offers just aren't that good.
And so there's really two ways you can do it.
Either A, you have something
that's so unique that no one else is doing it like facebook right that's an example or you have to
have a unique selling proposition or usp and so typically that's going to be in the health wealth
relationship niche meaning let's say i'm a trainer and every trainer is essentially workout plan
nutrition plan and so all the trainers are fighting on price because they don't know how to position
it so the number one thing they need to start with is having the unique selling
proposition. What's the thing or the mechanism that makes what they do different. And a lot of
people, they don't really understand what a mechanism is. They don't understand like how
to make it different and they really don't know how to market it. And so that's like the number
one thing I can walk through that if you'd like, but if they didn't get that wrong, it's the base
of the pyramid. Okay. So we'll walk through it. you'd like, but if they didn't get that wrong, it's the base of the pyramid.
Okay.
So walk through it.
So for example, I'll just go, I'll just talk about when I was a trainer.
So when I was a trainer, I realized, look, at the end of the day, everyone wants a six
pack and they want to eat donuts, right?
It may not be right.
It may not be the healthy.
It doesn't really matter.
It's that's what they want.
So when I started trying to sell it to people, instead of saying what most trainers do is
they talk about the features and benefits. You get a nutrition plan, you get a
training plan, you get accountability, you'll get an app like no one cares. They just want to know
they're going to get the result and it's going to be easy. So what I focused on is I'm a big
proponent of calories, right? So calories in calories out. Some people aren't, but that's,
I'd say most trainers would agree with that. So with that being said, I said, okay,
how can I position it in a way where I'm not lying, but it sounds attractive
because most trainers would say, yeah, I'm going to put you on a diet plan or, Hey, I'm going to
teach you calorie counting boring. So what I would say for one of my pillars, like I usually have
three. So it's two are the USPs. Like what is that? I do different than one's why me, right?
So one of them was how to eat whatever you want without sabotaging results. And what I would teach is I say, look, I'm going to show you how to eat whatever you want without sabotaging results. And what I would teach is say, look, I'm going to show you how to eat whatever you want without
sabotaging results. Because as you get older, you go to birthdays and parties, you're not going to
just eat chicken and broccoli, right? On your birthday, you can eat cake, right? So it's not
about cutting out bad foods. It's about how to eat bad foods and still look good. So people would buy
that and like, oh, that sounds different. Same thing with the training. I'd say, look, 90% of your results is nutrition. 10% is training. So I don't care if you don't train at
all. It's not as healthy, but I can still get you to lose weight as long as you follow the nutrition.
They're like, oh, okay. That makes sense. And then finally, when I would get down to their
options, I'd say, so now that you understand you have to learn these things, you can either hire
an in-person trainer who is paid for you to keep coming back to the gym and they focus on
training, which we already said wasn't most of your results. So that's not a good idea. You could
get Beachbody, but they give everyone the same program and it's just set to get as much results
in the first 30 days for their pictures. And then you go right back off because you can't stick with
it. Or you can hire me and I'm going to teach you how to do this for the rest of your life.
And you only have to pay for it once. So by the time they got that concept, I was selling three,
four, $5,000 fitness packages. And a lot of trainers that were probably better than me
couldn't do it because they don't know how to position, right? It's all about positioning.
It's not even necessarily being better. You want to be, but it's positioning. And so that's the
number one thing that most people fail at. And they don't think about it you want to be, but it's positioning. And so that's the number one thing
that most people fail at. And they don't think about it long enough to be different or they
think what they do is different, but it's not, it's just what everyone does. So they can't sell
it at a high price. I love the subtle brilliancy brilliance that was in it. You were defeating
their objections in your pitch. You're going through and saying, listen, I know you're going
to go over here and you're not going to do this. That's okay. And that's not going to work. Or, Hey, you're not
going to get it in the gym. You're, you know, you're going to just have diets. You're already,
as you're going through it, there are objections. You already know where they're going to be.
You've done the research in advance and you're like, I'm going to build my pitch in my unique
selling proposition of this. It's already going to defeat you. It's already going to go in and
it's already going to negate it. So now you're at the point where you're begging to be sold to versus having to sell.
It's a completely different narrative.
Well, yeah.
And the thing in sales is if you don't beat the objections in the beginning, they just
come up at the end.
So when you get a sales call that has no objections, all it means is you already beat the objections
in the beginning.
They just didn't bring them up, right?
But they had them.
So as you're going through a sales pitch or a presentation, the point is to beat all the
objections that they might have.
And so it's just you being aware of what they are before they even bring them up.
I'm a little upset that I can't eat donuts and have a six pack.
So we're going to talk about that later.
As you go through and you've had all the success and you've been doing this, you created something
called elite CEOs.
And a lot of people have pushed back and going, well, you're just the fitness guy. Yeah. You did it over here. Why can't you,
what do you know about X, Y, Z? What do you know about car sales? What do you know about,
you know, cardiologists? You've only done it over here. I, I completely disagree with that narrative.
Tell me why that is not the right way to come through it. When most people say, Hey,
if you can do it's fitness, you can only do it in fitness. It's not a truthful statement. Why do you know it to not
be a truthful statement? Uh, well, I mean, some of the concepts, I mean, it's a lot of the same
concepts, right? I mean, so yes, when you're selling fitness, like we'll take fitness to like
business consulting. Right. But yeah, there's differences in fitness for sure. Meaning the
type of avatar will be different. It's gonna be someone who's 30 pounds overweight
versus maybe a super ambitious business owner, right?
Certain terminology will be different.
It's obviously like different niche,
but the sales process is the same.
Like the marketing systems are the same.
The backend systems are the same.
So, you know, I do think for more people,
it takes more skill to be able to do different things. But at the, at the, in the grand scheme of things, like when I'm teaching people concepts,
it's all similar. The people who do better though, they usually have more of those tangible
tactical skills, meaning they know how to run ads. They know how to do sales calls. Like,
so all they need is a strategy. What makes it difficult is if you get a beginner who has no
tactical skills, so messaging, sales, marketing, they don't understand that plus you have to give them
strategy so it just takes a lot more to actually move the needle if that makes sense um yeah so
for me it was pretty natural progression because i didn't plan on doing this it's just i had success
in fitness then i had a bunch of trainers ask and
then i had a bunch of us so it just naturally progressed but i never really planned on doing
what i'm doing i was just going to stay in fitness forever at the time it's the same way i fell into
it i used to own an it company we sold it we had an exit and then everyone's like hey you did it
can you do this with this and this and i was like well i guess and it just progresses into it it's
the same strategy i'm like okay you're not selling computers and you're not a dork but you're a cardiologist so maybe it'll work so it does go
into those before we get into some of the higher end stuff if someone's listening to this and
they're like you know what i don't have the skills of messaging and i don't know how to do facebook
ads and i don't know how to write copy and i don't know how to build funnels and i don't know how to
do all these wonderful things where can someone go where do you where do you reckon go they go
go read this go do this maybe work for someone else what someone go? Where do you recommend go? Go read
this, go do this, maybe work for someone else. What is the best way that you found to start
building some of those core skills so that you can lay the strategies on top of it?
The best thing I ever did was nine months of door-to-door sales. And the reason was,
I didn't know this at the time, but I wasn't a really good communicator and I didn't understand
human psychology. But once I knocked on 100 doors a day for nine months, you learn very quickly how
to pick up on facial expressions, body movement, like certain rebuttals they would have. And when
you're selling door to door, they don't want you there and they don't know you're coming.
So the rebuttals you would get, I mean there's a i mean you couldn't possibly memorize everything so you'd have to
have frameworks so once i moved into high ticket sales or like online business there's only four
objections time spouse need to think about it or they have a belief issue that's really it
because you pre-framed and they want to be there and so if you someone does door-to-door
sales they almost always excel in business unless they're not willing to learn some of the technical
side like mark like you know setting up ads and funnels but they usually do very very well because
one they face a lot of rejection and two it's just an easier sell like they actually want what you're
selling so there's a million things people could do but if someone just wanted to go take three months you can even do two months just go sell
for a security company it's 100 commission they'll let anyone do it just go sell alarms or go sell
like pest control even and i'm telling you like that will be probably worth four years of college
right right there it's that's like one of the best things i ever did it's the hardest but it's
probably one of the most beneficial things i ever did. When I was learning human behavior,
I volunteered at a suicide hotline. Taught me more in the months that I was doing that than
anything else. Any of the books, any of the stuff I was exposed to, because you're in the fire.
And luckily, there was people to help out, but that's how I learned it. So very similar process.
So you've got someone who, again, we don't help people grow their initial businesses,
we help people scale them. So if you're coming to this environment and they want
to be an elite level CEO, they want to be at this high enough level that they're like, Hey,
we're doing this. And I've already got the basic skills. I understand that.
I've already understand a basic idea of my product. It's somewhat successful.
When they get into your environment and they start doing this high-end coaching with you,
and they do this, what are the things, what is the process of the life cycle that someone goes through?
So like if a client, if they come in as like a client, for example.
If they come into your client, what is the result they normally get?
And then what are the things you make them do?
Because everybody has their different strategies and their techniques.
I mean, like, okay, first we do this and then we do this.
What are the things that you make them go through by default?
So, yeah, I mean, in terms of results,
obviously they're going to vary per person.
But, you know, I would say like 80% of our clients
will make their first 10K in like 45 days.
It's pretty high because, you know,
especially if you're selling something for three grand,
we're only talking three sales.
Like, I don't think it's that crazy of a claim. It's just people got to be willing to do the work so when they come
in first we assess where they're at um i think one of the key things i've learned over time is
making sure that the strategy stays not consistent like it you're you're able to adapt based on where
someone's at so for example if someone comes in they have no sales skills no social media
no messaging they're starting from scratch like we got them. Like, let's just get you a
basic offer. Let's get you like doing outreach. Let's get a couple of sales. If I bring somebody
who's got 2 million followers on Instagram, I can monetize that immediately. So I'm gonna have a
totally different strategy. They don't need to do any outreach. We just need to monetize what they
have. So the first thing is like we assess where it is. They come in, they fill out a check-in
form, client check-in form. I'll assess it it i'll do it like a 10-minute loom my
account manager sees it and they implement whatever that is from there let's say they're a beginner
we're going to come up with their pillars and there's usually three pillars so kind of like
i said the fitness one it's like how to eat whatever you want how to train however you want
and then the la the third one i called lifestyle recalibration which was like who do you hire
we'll figure that out for their offers so they can use it in their marketing,
they can use it in their sales pitch, they can use it in their emails. That's really the core
message they have. So for years, one of the things we used for Elite Sales was
conversion conversations, which was when DM ads were new. It's not new anymore, but at the time,
I was like, yeah, I'll show you how to get 50 more conversions uh doing conversion conversations versus a webinar and like we crushed
for like two years just running that angle it was just like same angle over and over um so that's
gonna be number two and it's usually gonna be health wealth the relationship niche right like
if if the offer doesn't fix one of those three things people usually are not very interested
they got to make more money have have better relationships, we're getting better health. Once that's done, if they're starting
from zero, then we got to start doing outreach. So like you obviously have inbound or outbound.
Inbound is going to be what I would call, if you go to my Facebook profile, you can see like a two
step I did today. So the two step was, hey, most business owners stuck at below or 20K a month,
they can't get to 100, they have the wrong
strategy. I did a 45-minute call with someone. They doubled their revenue in 26 days. Here's
the document. Comment down below. That's inbound. And you can go see... I told people to message me,
but they're still commenting. But there's hundreds of comments already and people are DMing me. And
so that's a lead gen strategy that we can teach clients how to do. The other way is outbound.
Outbound is the worst.
So it's like direct cold DMs or followers or likes or comments.
The only reason you would do that is if you're low skill and you don't have money for ads,
right?
Because that's usually the fastest way or you don't have a big following.
So we'll go through that process.
Once they get a couple of sales, two or three clients take that cash, we'll put it into
ads, whether it's boosted post, DM, straight to page. And then we start scaling from there, right? And then it's just rinse and repeat
that process until desired income level. Along the way, as they start to scale, we start teaching
them like hiring, training, interviews, back end systems, I would say most clients, they don't
really understand hiring and training. And they don't understand back end systems, like the highest
level clients, that's usually what they need help with lower level clients, it's, I don't really understand hiring and training and they don't understand backend systems. Like the highest level clients, that's usually what they need help with. Lower level clients,
it's, I don't know what to say in a message or like, I don't know what to say on a sales call.
So it's more of the tactical as they make more money, it gets easier to coach or consult because
you're just telling them the strategy and you know, they can implement it. So it's like telling
Michael Jordan, Hey, do five layups in a free throw versus you tell like a five-year-old like shoot a layup like the five-year-old can't
even get the ball off the ground right so that's kind of that's kind of our process i can go into
more detail but that's how it would possibly look like a beginner and then someone is a little more
experienced yeah i'd love to have more of the beginning tactics where they go through because
most people's messaging is horrible and most people have never made it to the 20k month
again they're not either they're not willing to do it or their messaging is garbage sure when when you talk about
you know there's only three areas to do health wealth you know you know we get into that
environment health wealth relationships when you get into that environment if you have someone that
comes in and says hey i want to sell grandma's cookies do you have that how do you have that
honest conversation with them going no one cares about your grandmother's cookies when do you have that? How do you have that honest conversation with them going? No one cares about your grandmother's cookies. When do you meet with them and say, listen, you're just not my fit or
Hey, I can't, do you say you can't scale it or what do you do in that environment?
So I'm a pretty straight shooter. Uh, fortunately, I think that's why a lot of people maybe listen
to me and I'll just tell them, I say, Hey, so this is terrible. And the reason it's terrible
is it's not unique at all. Right. Um, I just got off a call with a guy, for example, and he, he has a really good offer actually, but the way he was presenting,
he's like, I'm going to give you accountability. So you'll get one-to-one coaching. I'm like,
every business consultant says that it's not unique. It doesn't even matter if it's true.
The issue is when someone's on a sales call, they think you're lying or they're looking for where
you're trying to be dishonest. So saying I give you one to one, every coach says that it's not
unique. His next one was, you know, all what was it? It was trying to think set up. He set up their
funnels, which was kind of OK. But then he had another one, which was all I do. I'll give you
like a good portal or it was something kind of weak. I can't remember what it was. So what we
did is I said, what's what's unique about what you do? How do you help clients
get sales? And he's, he has something pretty cool where he said, so what I do is I teach them how to
set up, um, these called an RPV, but it's like an interview. And then somehow, I don't know what he
said in the call and so forth, but from the interview, they then would, uh, get them on
another call and close. And so I looked at his stats, he tracked it.
16% of the outreaches his clients did, these are brand new beginners, booked a sales call.
Well, for anyone who's listening, 3% from paid traffic or cold, you're killing it. You're
getting 3%. You're freaking making tons of money. So I was like, man, you're getting a 500%
increase. You're not even talking about it
at all. So that's like a great example of now that I spoke with him, I was like, look,
this needs to be your mechanism that you talk about in the ad. So his ad headline could be
book 400% more sales calls without ads or like book 400% more sales calls without a cold DM or
whatever. Cause that's what he was pitching. So that, for example,
that's like an easy example,
but that's what most people miss.
And so if they don't have that,
I just tell them like,
look,
this sucks.
You're not going to sell it.
Just period.
And then if they,
if they don't suck and they actually have something decent,
do you help them?
Which most of them do.
Do you help them write their copy?
Do you help do their funnels or how do you,
and then how do you write good copy?
Because there's so many people out there like,
I'll just chat GPT at it.
I'm like, no, it's not going to work.
So how do you get in the situation where,
you know, where do you get good copy?
Do you outsource it?
Is this something just experience?
How do people get to the point where they do good copy?
Yeah.
So in terms of what we do for our clients,
I mean, we can do anything A to Z
depending on the package they pick.
So we have an in-house copywriter.
We have media buyers. We'll set up the funnels. We'll do the pixels. I mean, we can do anything a to z depending on the package they pick so we have an in-house copywriter we have media buyers we'll set up the funnels we'll do the pixels i mean we'll do
it all like and we've just had to over the years because um it's not only just giving them strategy
but it's trying to help them implement right like people need that help so that's number one in
terms of writing copy where i start is what's the biggest thing i'm trying to get across, right? So if I'm writing an ad or a headline or whatever,
it's the number one thing is what am I trying to show
or what do I want them to understand?
So for example, I just showed you,
or I just spoke about the last guy,
how to book 400% more sales calls using the RPB method.
Creates curiosity, it's unique.
One we use for years.
Yeah, yeah. It's usually the result from it
right um how convergent conversations books me 57 more sales calls or um how to like how to use the
uh what's one we're running uh recently it's like um get x amount more return using the boosted
funnel and then it's like well what's the boosted funnel and stuff like that?
So I think the first thing is what's going to draw attention and it needs to create curiosity.
You don't want it to be so weird where it's like, you know, aliens are running across
the earth at light speed, but you don't want it to not be too simplistic.
So one that I always use as an example is bulletproof coffee.
They don't say coffee with butter. They say bulletproof coffee. So it's like, well, wait, what's bulletproof coffee? And it's
like, oh, you put the butter in and then use it to keep whatever I don't care if it's true or not.
That's not the point. The point is, like, it works in terms of driving curiosity. Once I have that,
the first line, if I'm writing the body is then who it's for. So it's like,
if you're, you know, if you're this type of person with this
type of struggle this is for you so i just call it out immediately and then i go right into the
problem right then i'll relate back to them so like hey you're this type of person i used to be
here too until i started you know whatever i started xyz method and then this is the result
and then a cta so that's usually how i this is the result and then a CTA. So that's usually
how I'll structure the copy. And, you know, part of it for me, I think over time it's gotten easier
because the more you do it, the more you kind of know what's going to drive curiosity and attention.
But to be frank, what's like, it's all the same. And something I get away from sometimes like my
organic content is I get lazy. And so we're just like throwing reels out there
but whenever i get feedback from a consultant he's like bro like just like treat it like an ad like what would you say in the first two seconds to get someone like to click on your stuff i'm like oh
yeah of course so as long as you have like a catchy hook a good headline and then if it is an ad just
for anyone listening people are looking at the ad then their eyes go to the headline then the copy
so it's in that order of importance where the image or video needs to be like
immediately catches attention and then the headline, then the copy. So if you have a follow
up, let me know. Hopefully I hit all the cylinders. No, that, that hit a lot of them. So if you've got
the people who are like, okay, clearly my message is garbage. I need to make it more unique. I need
to sell the result. Shit.
Once we get that rocking and rolling, the next question I get asked all the time, especially by my clients, they're like, well, how much do I have to be involved?
And I'm a systems guy.
I'm going to automate someone.
And whenever I'm scaling businesses and brought in, I'm going to fire the person as quickly as possible. I'm like, you're on my way.
You're the business owner.
Get out of my way.
You've been in my way.
I can't scale it with you being here.
But my businesses are significantly bigger than most people.
I'm guessing some people who are these, Hey, I'm just a coach or I'm just a, I haven't
made my first 20 K yet.
Yeah.
What do you tell the person?
Can they bring in VAs?
Can they bring in staff?
Or do you say, you know what?
I'm going to put your face against the grinder and we're just going to hunt and I'm going
to make you work 80 hours a day. Let's go. Yeah. So full transparency, I think it
depends on the person. So let's say someone who's had prior sales experience or business experience
comes over here and they're like, I want to start this new business. Well, they can move a little
faster, but they already have experience, right? Like it may not be the same business, but they
have experience. The issue is if someone comes in and they're brand new and they want to hire everything out to start,
the problem is they don't know what it should look like. And so the issue is like, you don't
have to know how to do everything, but if you don't even know what it should look like,
and you don't know if someone's within KPIs or doing a good job, you can't do it. And so typically
at the beginning, if it's a beginner, I don't like them to do that because
I say, look, think about it.
You're going to bring someone on who's not as skilled as you because you're going to
pay less money, right?
So you're wanting them to do something that you've never even done before and they're
not as skilled as you.
You see the issue there.
And so obviously not in every business, but I would say from like a mom and pop or a startup or, you know, something starting from zero, that's not a great idea because, you know, people get
the wrong idea. They go, Oh yeah, I'm going to build a business and not have to do anything.
It's like the people good enough to be able to run your business that way, usually run their
own businesses or they get paid a ton of money to do that for other people. And so you're trying
to get someone to run your business for two grand or four grand. It ain't happening, man. So usually no. If I start a new business now, yeah, I could just
start day one, obviously hire, hire, hire, do all that. But I have the experience. And I think a lot
of people, there's nothing wrong with wanting to make a lot of money. And I think most of us
actually start business to make a lot of money. I don't think we start to help people. I mean,
it sounds nice, but I started a business to make a lot of money. Yeah, I like helping
people now, but it took me a few years to get to that higher level of purpose, realizing that
chasing money was stupid, right? It wasn't going to fulfill me. So I think a lot of people at the
beginning, if I could go back in time, I wouldn't believe it now, unfortunately. But if I could go
back and talk to my younger self, I'd say, dude, like, enjoy the process because the process is the reward. But I didn't understand that. And so
I think if people would stop having the mindset of, well, I just want to build this and get out
of it as fast as I can. The thing is, those are those people are never as successful because
they're just working to get to a benchmark and then they stop. The most successful people,
they enjoy the game. And that's why they always win because they never
stop no matter what result they get. And so I know that's not everyone's goal in life. I know
not everyone wants to be like a, like a me or like, you know, Hermosy gets brought up a lot,
right? He works all the time. But there is some truth in it where if your goal is just to get to
a certain point and stop, I feel like those people have a harder time being successful
because they're always looking to do the least
versus someone like me is I'm doing the most,
but I'm always worried what else I can do.
Like I'll do a 16 hour day.
I'm like, oh, what else could I have done, right?
These people are doing like four hours
and they're like, oh, that's enough work.
It's just a totally different mentality and mindset.
I also think getting to that mindset's
a little challenging because I talk about this all the time. You can sing happy birthday,
but if I put a grenade in your hand and take the pin out, you're going to have a much longer,
harder time singing happy birthday. So step one, get the pin back in the grenade. Then we can talk
about all the other stuff. And for most people, it's like, how do you just, how do you eat? How
do you get to the point where you're like, okay, I got my rent paid for the next year. I have a
wealth ratio that exceeds a year. Now I can start playing the ball game and I can start moving things around in a
very different thing. So someone comes into elite CEOs, you've already told them that their message
is caca and you're going to help them get their message better. You're going to help them with
their copy. You're going to help them do outreach. When it gets to the point where they're like,
all right, we've got this done. They're working in it. They understand it well enough. They're
hitting all their KPIspis what is the systems that
you normally say these are the ones that result really really well and these are kind of our next
steps like okay we've done this we fix your stuff now we're going to talk about systems we're going
to systematize this so we can scale it what are some of the things that you normally go into so
hey you know what facebook ads are great or instagram posts are great or selling underwear
is better whatever it is yeah well so something that really simple, but a lot of people don't know how to do is,
so we have our own white label version to go high level, right? We call it elite 360.
Same thing as go high level, except obviously like our service behind it and like the funnels
and templates anyways. But the point is that a lot of clients, they don't know how to set up
like simple automation. So if I do a, what I consider a two-step, a two-step is where I say, you know, Hey, I helped this client,
you know, double their revenue in 30 days, comment down below to get the document.
You can set it up where when they comment, it'll just fire the sheet immediately to everyone. And
so for some people, they don't know how to do that. So they'll get 200 comments and it takes
them two days to have to go through it, or they have to pay VA. And I'm like,
you just automate it. So that's like, number one is just super simple. Like just get little
automations out of the way or like an email campaign. You'd be shocked how many people
they don't have email campaigns or text campaigns. Like just one time you do the work and it's done.
You don't ever have to do it again. So that's, that's number one from there. Once they have a
sales process that's working, then we just want
to continue to drive leads with whatever methods better. So if it's Instagram ads, great. If it's
YouTube ads, if it's like they can just do it organically, that's fine. I'm not, I don't care
if clients use paid ads. I mean, I've ran about 30 million in paid ads. So people know like I'm
a paid ads guy, but that's only because it works really well. If it doesn't work
well or you can do it organically, there's no point because 60% of my expense in a month is ads.
So if you take away 60% of my expenses and I could just do organic, great. It's just
you need enough traffic to sustain that. So those are really the two, I'd say, biggest things. It's
just most people don't have very basic automations. And then once they have a consistent sales process, they're like, well, Tanner, I got to keep,
I want to keep this going. I want to start over from zero every month. So whether that's organic
or paid ads is fine. It's just, most people don't have a big enough following. So they have to go
more of the paid ads route. And when it comes to getting a bigger following, how important is
social proof? There's some people like, Hey, I've never, nobody knows who I am. And there's other
people who were like, I was on dancing with the whoever's how important is social proof? There's some people like, hey, I've never, nobody knows who I am. There's other people who were like, I was on Dancing with the Whoevers.
How important is social proof?
And if it is important, what's the best recommended way to get it?
Yeah, so I have a unique perspective on this.
So for years, I did like paid shout outs, which is basically just a bigger page on Instagram.
It's like, hey, follow at Tanner Chittister, blah, blah, blah.
And it worked probably two, three years. And now they don't work at all. We don't do them anymore.
And so I'll give you two sides of the coin. It's been interesting because part of it,
it was funny, is it's just a money game. So I would pay, let's say I paid 10 grand and I make
270. Massive returns because you could get followers for like 50, like 10 cents. And on Facebook, if you get a
lead for 10 bucks, right. It's like, that's great. So for years, that was cool. I would say the
benefit of that was as your number goes up, like some people look at like, oh, he has a bigger
number of followers, but do you need that? I mean, and is, and if the engagement's not there,
it's not as good, right? Like if you have a high number, but your engagement's not as good, like I don't think it helps you
in the long run.
It might be a short-term thing.
But to answer your question, do you need a big social media presence to make money?
No.
Like I started from scratch.
Most of the followers you see either came from like shout outs or like paid ads.
Like I'm pretty transparent about it.
It didn't come because like I have this, you know, great organic presence and stuff. That's actually something I'm
trying to work better on, but there's, there's two paths you can take. You can take the organic path,
which is you have really good content. You get very high engagement and you drive a lot of sales
from that. Or B you do the paid ads path, which is when I opted for, which is a little faster,
but it takes a little more skill.
Because I didn't care about being popular.
I was like, I just want to make money.
I was like, whatever is fastest way A to B.
When you merge both those two, that's where you get Alex Ramosi.
Where you take someone who's really good at paid traffic and you take someone who's really good at branding.
And those are the people who become billionaires.
So the next step for me personally is I want to get much better at organic. Like I want
to get a lot more traffic organically, but I'd say most people, 80% are going to be better off
running paid ads because building an organic audience takes time and you don't know if it's
ever going to take off. And so I didn't want to build a method or teach people something where,
okay, like, you know, you got to be good on video and you got to be good on camera because some people just aren't.
And so it feels like better advice to teach people paid versus organic, if that makes sense.
But that's kind of my view on both.
Yeah.
And when I originally, I hated everything that came to social media.
I own an IT company.
I was like, I worked very hard to make sure no one knew who I was and then sitting down at dinner someone bet me 10 grand that i couldn't
grow 100 000 followers and i was like okay that's what it was it's like a bunch of 10 grand you
can't grow 100 000 followers in 90 days and he was right we did it in 39 days and we did the exact
which was you just you just do shout outs and pay that like this is a complicated stuff
luckily i've been on stage for years so i
could turn the camera on like that was simple for me to do the problem was once i did that i became
the instagram guy and i was like and i literally went dark on my gram completely and then we
started the podcast and the first week we were top 10 there's there jesus didn't walk on water
he just knew where the rocks were so this is kind of the joke that we always say there's ways to do this but what doesn't happen very often which is one of
the reasons i wanted you on here was most people don't show up authentic most people no no i i
never ran paid ads i'm just special because my fart in a different direction it's like no come
on be honest let's get into this let's really get into it so we've gone through you need to better
have you know your usp we've gone through the idea that you've got to work it and we've done that we've gone through some of
the systematization processes as you're getting into it and as you're someone who's like hey you
know i've gotten this far and i want to scale and i really want to take this to the next level
what is elite ceos why does it work versus all the other stuff that's out there specifically for you
well yeah i think first thing is there's a million things out there that can work.
In terms of what I've done, I mean, it's been pretty simplistic and straightforward.
I mean, it's hard, obviously.
But, you know, again, you just take my methodology.
You're starting at zero.
You have no cash.
I made a few first sales organically.
Once I had that cash, I dumped it into ads.
And then once you learn how to spend a dollar and make two, you just rinse and repeat. And the more I made, the more I spent, the more
I made, the more I spent. And it's kind of been that cycle for the last six years. Um, I think I
make, I think I make some of it look easier because I've been very experienced in sales and I was a,
you know, former athlete. And so I've, I learned how to do a lot of hard things. So I'm pretty
resilient compared to the average person. Um, but I mean, to be honest with you, it's how all businesses grow. Like
you're either going to grow for free or you're going to grow with paid and the free could be
social media or referrals or affiliates, or the paid could just be paid traffic or paid shout
outs or whatever. So, you know, most of the times when you see people talking about different
methodologies and strategies, it's, it's a different method, but it all comes down to the same thing.
Like you need X amount of eyeballs for certain costs.
And in return, you deliver the service and whatever the difference is, is the profit.
And so I don't think I've done anything quote unquote revolutionary.
I just think I just think I'm a little more tenacious than most people and I'm willing
to do a lot more.
And, you know, I did a couple of things right.
And then, you know, it's the other thing, too, like in, you know, some people's defense is once you're successful, it's easy to keep being successful.
Because, you know, like you'll see celebrities like the more money they make, the more free shit they get.
It's backwards.
And so, you know, as you make more money, it's easier to win and you have more opportunities, more people want to meet you and collaborate. So I'd say the hardest is the beginning because no one knows who you are.
No one cares. You're by yourself. But if you can get out of that hole, you know, going zero to 10
is as hard as 10 to a hundred and a hundred to a million, right? A lot of people, they don't
understand. I would say zero to 10 is the hardest. Yeah. Because once you get the ball moving,
you start building confidence and then you have more opportunities.
I know what works.
Zero to 10 starts showing you what works
and what doesn't work
because you're going to fail a whole lot more
in the first zero to 10.
Correct.
What is surprising right now?
What have you found that surprised you
that's working really intensely?
Like, holy crap, I didn't expect in 2024
that this was it.
Like we talked about before,
doing paid ads and shout outs.
We're like, holy shit, this worked great. Three years three years ago doesn't work anymore it's dead what works now
that at least in the instagram world what works now that really surprises you and you're like holy
shit yeah so the the jury's still out because we're in the early stages but what i've noticed
that isn't working to answer that question first is like the high ticket space, it's gotten much more competitive, like cost of acquisition is much higher, people are less receptive, more skeptical,
you know, back in 2020, 21, whenever a pandemic happened, I mean, I didn't even realize at the
time, like it was easy pickings, like people were just like looking to move online. So with that
being said, what's working now, ironically, is kind of
the community model has been working really well for us. And I think the reason it's been working,
and I was a little surprised at how well it's working, even with cold traffic. And the reason I
think it's working well is they come in, they're skeptical. So you're giving them something,
you know, lower priced. And as they come in, and they see value, it's been easy for me, especially if like, they can see me on a call, or they can see me giving value. And as they come in and they see value, it's been easy for me, especially if like
they can see me on a call or they can see me giving value. And so I've always like, you know,
I always like going straight to high ticket if I can, but I've been a little surprised at how well
it seems to work right now and how receptive people are once they build a little bit more trust.
I just didn't realize how low trust has been. So that's what is working really well for us right now. And our cost of acquisition is like way down. We're getting a
lot more sales. It's even funny too, they'll buy certain packages and then it can kind of almost
turn into a sales call and they'll buy more stuff. It's very interesting. So how do people track you
down? How do they find you? How do they get access access to you how do they learn some more of this stuff yeah uh leetco's.com is our main website um we have a couple other links but i
can't remember them off the top of my head so you just go there you can check out yeah you take out
a bunch of testimonials and you can read more about me and so forth if you want to book a call
you can do that but that's our main website and has most of our information.
I appreciate you coming on and giving really tactical stuff. Been a fan for a really long time.
So I really appreciate your time, man. Yeah. Thanks for having me as you ask great questions and I'm glad to be here. As we bring this episode to a close, we hope Tanner's remarkable journey
from struggling athlete to business scaling expert has inspired you to rethink your approach
to marketing sales and business growth. We extend our sincere thanks to Tanner for his candid insights. Your
open discussion about the challenges of building a multi-million dollar business and the power of
a compelling USP is truly invaluable for entrepreneurs at every stage. To our listeners,
your dedication to scaling your businesses and achieving your dreams motivates us to continue bringing you these game-changing conversations.
We're deeply appreciative of your continued support.
For those eager to revolutionize their marketing strategy and master the art of high-ticket
sales, you won't want to miss Tanner's comprehensive companion guide.
It's a goldmine of practical strategies, including a detailed breakdown of his USP creation process,
tactics for leveraging paid advertising for exponential growth, and tips for scaling from
zero to millions. Don't miss out on this resource. Head over to our website at podcast.iamcharles
schwartz.com to access the companion guide. It's your blueprint for crafting irresistible offers
and scaling your business to new heights. Remember, your unique selling proposition is your ticket to standing out in a crowded market.
So go forth, create an offer that resonates and watch your business soar. Until our next session,
keep innovating, keep scaling, and never stop enjoying the journey of entrepreneurship.