Living The Red Life - Maximizing Revenue at Live & Virtual Events w/Bill Allen
Episode Date: December 12, 2024Bill Allen, a seasoned real estate investor and entrepreneur, brings a wealth of experience in event hosting, business strategy, and personal growth. Known for his company, Seven Figure Flipping, and ...his work in coaching, Bill shares actionable insights from his journey, emphasizing the importance of structured events, effective follow-up strategies, and personal resilience. In a recent discussion, he explored how leveraging data and communication techniques can maximize event attendance and post-event engagement, offering tips for marketers and entrepreneurs alike. Bill's passion for mentoring extends to his latest project, Kids Who Flip, a TV show empowering young entrepreneurs to succeed in the real estate world.In his conversation, Bill highlighted the significance of using urgency and tailored messaging to bring attendees back into the room during events, noting the impact of a simple text that re-engaged nearly 400 participants. He delved into the nuances of post-event marketing, stressing the importance of segmenting audiences based on their interactions to create effective sales funnels. Beyond business strategies, Bill shared personal lessons about balancing professional and family life, recounting a challenging period in his marriage that ultimately strengthened his relationships. Through his story, Bill emphasizes the need for entrepreneurs to nurture both their businesses and their personal lives, offering a candid look at the highs and lows of his entrepreneurial journey.TIMESTAMPS2:30 - The Key to Successful Event Sales: Filling the Room with the Right People4:00 - Why Knowing Your Target Audience is Crucial for Event Success6:00 - Breaking Down Revenue Streams from Events8:00 - Leveraging Emotional Engagement to Drive Sales10:00 - The Power of Storytelling in Event Presentations12:00 - How to Design Offers That Sell Themselves14:30 - Scaling Event Sales: Strategies for Growth16:30 - Avoiding Common Mistakes in Event Marketing18:00 - Wrapping Up: Your Next Steps for Event Sales Mastery19:15 - Using Scarcity and Urgency to Drive Attendance20:16 - Tailoring Post-Event Marketing to Audience Behavior21:21 - Maximizing Engagement at Large-Scale Events22:07 - Analyzing Non-Buyers for Future Opportunities22:29 - Rapid Fire: Bill’s Biggest Success and Challenge24:33 - How to Connect and Learn More from Bill Allen25:08 - Final Thoughts on Hosting and Learning from EventsConnect with Bill Allen:SOCIALS - Billallenrei https://www.7figureflipping.com https://intheroom.live/Connect with Rudy Mawer:LinkedInInstagramFacebookTwitter
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We did an analysis of my company over the last three years and we run a lot of events.
I found that it takes somebody on average two and a half events to buy my $15,000 above all.
And so if it's the first time you're seeing somebody, the first event you've ever been to,
you're probably a lot more cautious than if you've been to multiple different events.
And that's a way to structure your business to do a lot of different virtual events,
some challenges, maybe a webinar,
you know, a half-day master class, those kind of things to accelerate the buying process.
What are some bigger picture, like three to five big tips for making sales at events?
The first thing that I would say is...
My name is Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast, and I'm here to change the
way you see your life in your earpiece every single week If you're ready to start living the red light ditch the blue pill take the red pill join me in wonderland and change your life
What's up guys? Welcome back to another episode of living the red light today
We've got an interesting topic that you've probably not thought about its event sales and maximizing how much money you make in the room
Okay, and joining me today my friend Bill, he's a very interesting resume.
As you could say, he's split over a thousand houses, retired Navy pilot,
made many millions selling his own info products.
And he's helped a lot of big people like Funnel Hacking Live and big events
add millions in event sales.
And most fascinating I find is every time I see him,
he's flown his plane to the event and often offers me a ride home.
But feel welcome to the show.
Thanks, Rudy. I'm happy to be here, man.
You're a great Uber friend.
I can tell you not many friends have offered to...
I've been offered several times to fly home on their jet, but not with them driving it.
So you definitely stand out.
Well, there'll be a day when we fly together.
I don't know what it is, but every time I see it, I'll just be like, Hey, you got a plan for the ride home.
I'll just give you a ride.
So you just have to go and that's the problem usually.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Well, hopefully we'll get you to Miami soon, but anyway, let's dive in.
So, um, let's talk about event sales, right?
So, you know, part of the, I, I hang a lot of people, part of it is like
actually launching an event and then filling an event.
And I realized after I'd done a few events, like, Hey, all the
money's made like in the room.
Right.
So can you just give a bit of an overview for people listening?
Yeah, absolutely.
So whether you're a big or small event, I don't think it really matters.
It's about the kind of what you're selling, the offer, the structure,
and who you fill the room with.
If you get the right people in the room, you can have a small room that you can
get a lot of money out of, or you can have a big room that you get even more out of.
But if you put the wrong people in the room, it's a bit of a challenge.
And then once they're in there, most people spend all the time on who bought their product
and look and see who that person is, track them back,
but they lose sight of all the people that didn't buy.
And the thing that I think is the biggest problem
is if they're not in the room to hear the offer,
they can never have the opportunity to buy the offer.
And so bigger events, a lot of times you get people
that are in the hallway or they're upstairs
or they're taking a break. They never see the offer.
They don't see the repitch.
They don't see the structure
and you're not following up with them and you don't know it.
So there's a lot of things virtual and live,
I think that we're missing.
And as an engineer,
I got background in engineering and Navy test pilot.
So I love data and numbers and most people don't.
They're great marketers.
They love to fill the room, make a killer offer,
collect the money,
but you're leaving a lot on the table by not understanding who didn't see it, if that makes
sense. Well, yeah. And I mean, just to talk about the data stuff too, I was a sports scientist, so I
and did a lot of spreadsheet and math stuff too. So I always geek out on it. And even today,
I was asking my tech guy to pull a report on a sales team and sales
by revenue category, right?
And he's like, why do you need all that?
Like so specific.
I'm like, I need it to make decisions.
That's the whole point of data.
So it goes into every part of the business.
And I think it's fascinating with events because I'm a data guy and even I probably wouldn't
think about that.
Like, hey, how many people more could we have sold to if there was, you know, a percent
not in the room at the time?
Right.
So it's pretty interesting and we'll dive into it in a minute, but for someone listening
that doesn't maybe understand, you know, the event side, like, um, what, what is, you
know, what are these people earning or generating
in revenue at events?
Because when I first learned like many years ago,
it was kind of crazy to me how much money
can be made at an event.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, we've run and helped people run events.
And just so you know, I'm not like an event planner.
We don't, we do a lot of strategy
and then a lot of like data analysis from the event
from like nerdy tracking stuff.
So, but we've helped people I've been part of events that have made 16 million dollars on the top end.
That's probably the highest earning event that we've seen.
And I would say a net of that just say is probably about 50 to 60 percent.
So those events cost a lot of money to run. And then, you know, smaller events that are making, you know, 80% net up to,
you know, three to a million, $300,000 to a million dollars.
And so what I love this, the thing about events that I think people miss a lot
of times, whether it's live or virtual is it builds trust.
And so the more time you can spend with people, the more trust you can build.
That's needed in order to buy a high ticket product.
So most of the events that to buy a high ticket product.
So most of the events that we run are high ticket conversion sales events,
anywhere from 10,000 to $50,000 offer.
And you need a high level of trust to be able to invest that
kind of money with somebody.
So, oh, we did a, we did an analysis of my company over
through the last three years and we run a lot of events.
I found that it takes somebody on average two and a half events to buy my $15,000 above all.
And so that was my money ball.
If you ever seen that movie or read the book, the money ball.
So we decided to do more events over a shorter period of time.
So if I could get somebody to usually about three events, two to three events, that's the
average, and their trust level goes up
and they're willing to buy.
And so if it's the first time you're seeing somebody,
the first event you've ever been to,
you're probably a lot more cautious
than if you've been to multiple different events.
And that's a way to structure your business
to do a lot of different virtual events,
some challenges, maybe a webinar,
a half-day masterclass, those kinds of things
to accelerate the buying process. So that's kind of what we found over a period of analyzing, you know, thousands
of people that came through my real estate coaching program.
Yeah, I love that a few things I want to just highlight for everyone listening out the gate,
like number one, you know, I often say like podcasting such an awesome way because you
get someone listening to you for hours, you know, over a year, it's like it warms them so days right and they're spending 16 hours in a room over a two eight hour period so super warm plus
there's this like whole energy thing right where they're like you know ready to take on the world
and they love you and you're on stage and a rock star so and just to you know give context in my
experience I'm yet to run like a big thousand person event we know they did one during covid
and never did but we've you know done 20, 25 more smaller events where we're talking 50 to
a hundred people and buyers and, you know, we'll make anywhere from on the
low end, a hundred thousand to our best one. We did 900,000 and obviously my
results aren't typical and, and, you know, I have a captive audience and a big brand, so I'm not saying you'll do that, but that
really opened my eyes to the power of events.
Yeah, absolutely.
The, and I love what you're, what you just said.
You said smaller events.
We've never done these thousand people, people events.
What I would say to anybody listening is run the event that you want to run.
Like what do you want to do? Maybe you want to get an Airbnb and have 15 people that pay
it's 5k upfront and then you sell them a high ticket offer on the back and you do like you love
the managing the Airbnb and like nights out and maybe a party or a VIP experience for them and
then the content is during the day. or you want to run a huge event.
That's, you know, a thousand people, 2000 people in person, or you want to run
like a virtual masterclass where you just teach for, you know, four hours, five
hours, interactive, things like that.
I would just structure what you want to do, what's best for you.
And, uh, and I can tell you, you'll be a lot happier that way.
Don't look at what everybody else is doing.
There's not one size fits all, you know, structure it the way that you like to
engage the way that you teach the best, the way that you network the best.
Like I'm, I'm a big introvert.
So I don't really like, you know, the events where I got to spend all the day,
the night, the evenings, all weekend, all that stuff.
I like to go on stage.
I like to give my presentations. I like to give my presentations.
I like to shake some hands and socialize and network.
And then I like to go to my hotel room and crash.
So I think a bigger live in-person event,
because I think it makes a big impact on people,
builds trust really fast.
But a live in-person event is also a big challenge
to fill the room, to, you know,
there's an upfront cost to it,
where a virtual experience is incredible to do, where I can actually do all that stuff.
Go home to my kids.
I can be here in my studio at my, at locally in Nashville and not have to travel too.
So structure it how you want to structure it.
And there's a way to maximize the profitability of any of those.
Well, and especially the smaller sub hundred, like, I think you definitely have,
like you get diminishing returns as you do get bigger.
So for like smaller people, 50, a hundred people, you make a lot of money.
Like it's crazy.
Like I've had some clients make a month of revenue in a weekend, right?
Or even two or three months.
So it's, and it's more realistic.
And I mean, you know, every time we've sat to plan a thousand person event, it's
like, I've sat with event organizers like nine months.
I'm like the opportunity cost is like millions of dollars for effort and energy.
And so now I just speak on other people's big stages and it's easier for me.
But let's get into the nitty gritty.
So, you know, maybe people are listening, right?
They're hosting their own little events now, 20, 30, 40, 50 people.
And some people are hosting bigger events.
What are some, before we get into the more tactical stuff, bigger picture,
like three to five big tips for making sales at events?
Yeah.
The first thing that I would say is
design everything starting with the offer.
So most people like design the content,
then they like, who am I gonna have there?
Who's they gonna do that?
Oh, but then like, oh, the offer will just like,
we'll figure it out.
Like, we'll offer something or something we've always sold.
So the first thing that I do is I look at the offer.
I designed the offer like an irresistible offer, and then I build all the content,
all the speakers based on that.
So almost like reverse engineering the event
would be my biggest tip that most people miss.
Yeah, I just jump in because I actually did this
and I sat with like Jason, Flattelama,
and Bill, another friend, Bill, does real attorney events,
and a couple of other friends and they really broke it down properly for me.
And I went from making like a hundred, 150 K in events, same amount of people.
The next one I did like, uh, you know, 600 K because I, you know, I was always just
teaching what I wanted to teach.
And then I was trying to like fit a square in a circle.
Um, so I just wanted to emphasize how key that is.
Yeah.
I think this is like, if I gave only one tip on this whole show, it would be that.
Like, uh, and then it's, it's not even like price point structure inside of
the offer, take your non-negotiables.
So the thing that you're like not willing to do and ahead and map out my entire event and strategy and speakers
so that I give them like a small taste of that, but not enough that they, I
created like, I gave them what they need to kind of go right into the, into the
business, into the business, into the business, into the business, into the
business, into the business, into the business, into the business, into the
business, into the business, into the business, into the business, into the
business, into the business, into the business, into the business, into the the entire event and strategy and speakers. So that I give them like a small taste of that,
but not enough that they, I created like,
I gave them what they need to kind of go,
like give them enough content and enough tactics
and those kinds of things,
but they're gonna get to the point
where they're so overwhelmed that they're saying,
hey, we can do this together for the next,
three months, six months, year, whatever it is.
But if there's any ever deliverable inside my offer, I'm usually
seeding that at the event.
So if it's maybe a coach that I'm going to have be coaching with me along the way,
they're going to be one of the speakers of my event for sure.
Versus just having anybody come in and talk and present about something, or
I'm there talking the whole time.
So that offer is number one.
And then number two is map that out of like, who's the right fit client?
Like who's the ideal customer and client for this offer?
And then where are they?
And I'll mark it to them.
I'd rather have a smaller event of the right buyers and have them make
that up the wrong buyers.
So I see a lot of people, they just want numbers.
And usually what happens is when you, when you make an
offer to the wrong audience, you're not getting as many takers.
And what happens is people will see that they'll feel that even the ones that are
on the fence decide not to buy because a lot of people aren't, you get a small
event, Rudy, like you talked about maybe 50 or a hundred people in there and 60%
of the room is buying, you know, they're taking you up on the offer.
It just starts to, there's a domino effect that you will knock down way
more of those buyers for that.
So those are a couple of tips that I would give folks is put the right people
in the room, even if it's a smaller amount of people, because you're going
to have a higher, higher return on your, on your money, on your offer, and then
build the offer and reverse engineer.
Yeah.
Love that.
And let's just add, I know we didn't plan to talk about it, but I do want to just
do one minute on virtual events because
that's how I started. We've ran massive virtual events now. The biggest one is 50,000 people registered and we had 10,000 people live, which is crazy to think still. I've done very well with
those, but I think since COVID, live events, virtual events have taken off, right?
What's your thoughts on live virtual events?
Totally agree with that.
So I love that you said live virtual event
because it is definitely a challenge
to get a recorded event to convert really, really well.
You'd seen the webinars and people know kind of
whether you're live or you're virtual
or live or like pre-recorded.
So a virtual event doesn't mean it's not live.
So I would definitely call it a live event
and virtual events, they're low,
is a low overhead, low cost and high margins.
So I highly encourage you to, and I would start there.
If you haven't started doing events,
I would start on virtual.
I would do the same thing.
Think about the offer, reverse engineer the event
and the structure, put the right people in the room. Same thing, market to the right people.
Because the chat is really important in a virtual event.
If the chat is really busy, it's really excited,
people are buying, people know like the momentum
and the feeling of a lot of, you know,
getting people active in the chat,
getting them to turn their cameras on,
engage with them, call their names out,
really have more of a live feel, but it's a virtual events are.
It's like, I would absolutely start there.
The high margin.
They're great.
Um, the one thing I'll say about a virtual event is I wouldn't treat
it any differently than a live event.
I would map out my live event and really think about the process and the feeling
that all those people get on that virtual event and, uh, and you're, you're still building trust.
Keep in mind when you're marketing for a virtual event, usually we get our most
opt-ins like seven days before the event.
So I wouldn't spend like months and months marketing it because your show
rate is going to go down about seven to 10 days before the event is when I can
earn ads on and I really start running traffic and you will three days for us.
We spend like 40% 50% of our budget now because we tested that over like 10 of them.
Totally agree.
I was just going to say that about 60% of our opt-ins usually come from about three
days before the event.
So keep that in mind if your events not filling it's just the fact is probably too far out
that you're marketing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we had to, again, being a data guy, we had to track close rate based on the day they
registered.
And as you would expect, the close rate was higher when they registered close to the event
and obviously show rate was a big difference.
So day seven to 24 hours before, the show rate was almost off,
like seven days out and beyond because people forget about it. But anyway, back in the room,
when I say room, I mean event room. How do we maximize the nitty gritty, right? Give us some
of these juicy tactics that you've been using at, you know, some of the biggest events like
Funnel Hacker's Live and Out the Box things to maximize conversions out of it.
Yeah, I'll use the live in-person events.
And you can duplicate the same thing for a virtual event.
Just think about all the data that you get from ins
and outs of the room.
So on Zoom, you can see when people logged out, they dropped.
And you can see who that was and their email address and things.
So live in-person events, we're spending a lot of time trying to track
who's actually in the room physically.
Because like I said, in the beginning of the podcast, if you don't see
the offer, you can't buy it.
If you don't see the repitch, you're not going to buy it.
And what do we found is we, I look at all the people that bought last event.
I had, we had about 500 buyers.
Only one of them didn't see the offer in the repitch and the guys
white was in there for the repitch.
So that's how they, you know, I can actually tell you that you have to see
the offer and it makes sense, right?
You're not just going to like hear about it in the hallway and go by it.
It's about trust.
So the way to do that is to figure out how to get people back in the room for the
offer.
And so we use text messaging, emails, things like that to be able to see who's not in the room and then be able to text them to get back in the room for the offer.
And just real quick numbers, we had about a thousand,
it was a little over a thousand people that weren't in the room about a minute into the offer at FHL.
And, uh, I was able to get 393 people back into the room that by the way, had
never stepped foot in the room that whole day to come in and it was in the
afternoon to actually see the offer.
And 93 of those people bought it.
So, you know, 25% of the people that weren't in the room that
would have never seen it.
And so I can track, you can track all this stuff.
I think the way to do this is to, is to, to make your presentation inside of the
event room and event space so intriguing that people don't want to be in the
hallway, they want to be in there.
So this is like a pitch to help you make the content good and the atmosphere
good so that they want to be in the room, not out of the room.
And we've seen it at these big events, like, you know, they're texting and stuff like that,
you know, someone's about to chop someone's head off in a magic trick or something, right?
And it's, you know, like, it's a lot of like the curiosity slash scarcity and urgency all baked into a cake.
And don't overuse that, by the way, if you've got a three or four day
event, don't be texting nonstop the whole time that every single presentation
is the most exciting one that they have to see, even if you, if you don't know
who's not in the room, text everyone and say, Hey, you know, I'm sharing my best
stuff here, make sure that you're in the room.
And that's the message I sent last year.
It was, uh, Hey, Russell here.
I'm about to share my best stuff. Make sure that you're here the room. And that's the message I sent last year. It was, uh, hey, Russell here.
I'm about to share my best stuff.
Make sure that you're here.
And that was it.
That thing got, you know, 393 people to come back in the room for the first time
that day and probably a bunch of others that have been in earlier.
Um, and so, and then keep in mind, if you have this data of who didn't see the
offer in the repitch, which you do on every virtual event, you could in person.
Then you can set up different email strategies
and text message strategies after the event.
My salespeople talk very differently
to the people who didn't see the offer
than they do to the people who did see it and didn't buy.
So that old email sequence,
the way your salespeople are talking to them
after the event, can you imagine calling somebody
and be like, hey, I noticed you didn't buy this program.
Why is that?
They're like, what program?
I was in different conversation.
And so we have different marketing sequences for them post-event,
depending on what they saw.
Do they see the repitch?
Did they see the repitch, but not the offer?
Did they see neither?
And they go down different funnels afterwards for marketing.
And I think the marketers that are listening to would love that.
Yeah.
I mean, it's like, it's just like, you know, we do all that kind of sexy stuff for
like, you know, our big live virtual events, right?
Everyone segmented it, if they were on or did the show.
And, but it's really cool to kind of see it bro.
You know, and I think it's not quite as needed, maybe, maybe I'm
long, but for when I've got 50 or 100, it's like,
you know, my hour event location is they're pretty much all in the room,
but definitely I can see when there's, you know, you're talking 3,000 people and it's like, yeah,
1,000 are in the hallway, right, and doing work and digging little holes, like that's a massive difference.
You close a million, well, you could add a million and a half if you just got those
other thousand people in the room.
So totally.
Yeah.
Smaller events, 50, 60 people, a hundred people.
Doesn't make sense.
What'd you go over 500 people or so having that actual data of like, and the
other thing is tells you what speakers are good.
If you really think about it, you can do, you know, a post-event webinar with the
best, the speaker that retains the most of the audience, you know?
You can see, you know,
how much time do people spend in the room?
When did they drop out?
All kinds of stuff.
But just think about that,
even if you do a smaller event,
think about the people that are leaving a day early,
or, you know, structuring your offer in the right spot
where you're gonna have the most people show up there.
And then using the data of all the negative,
who didn't buy it, spend time looking at that.
We spend a lot of time on all the people that bought,
what do they look like, how do we reverse engineer that?
But 80, 90% of the room doesn't buy.
So what can we downsell them?
But maybe they just didn't see it.
As you wanted it, they just don't know about it.
So figure out how to do it.
Good. So last Fibla questions, rapid five for the last minute.
Um, I would love to put you on the spot and hear from you.
So first one, uh, biggest success that you're proudest of in business.
Oh man.
Um, you know, we just, uh, we just filmed a TV show called kids who flip.
And I, there were six kids across three houses flipping houses all
across the country, ages 12 to 17.
I think the thing that I'm most proud of right now is being able to impact the,
the youth, like the next generation.
These are like my kids age and just giving them, they're looking forward
to business, making money, that kind of stuff.
It's just the coolest thing ever that I feel like I'm a little like micro
celebrity to these kids that are looking up and they don't have maybe a business
role model and mentor in their life.
So, uh, that's probably the thing I'm most proud of now is seeing these
kids make more money than, than most adults do in their life.
So it's been really cool.
Cool.
And opposite of that biggest failure or hurdle that you think.
Uh, yeah.
So in, um, in 2020, I'm pretty vocal about this.
My, uh, my wife and I, our relationship over a few years, just kind of like a few
degrees of separation over a long period of time, um, got to a really breaking
point in 2020 where she asked me for a divorce, she went to a facility. She was thinking about suicide and depressed and things.
And I think I could have done better over probably the three
or four years leading up to that of keeping her in the loop
and the decision making and stuff of all the business
and entrepreneurial stuff that I did.
So I think that had the opportunity
to be my biggest failure.
We got through it.
We reconciled.
It was amazing.
We're back and probably stronger than ever right now.
So it's probably both sides, but I would say to all the entrepreneurs out there, we get addicted to what we do, making money, running the business.
Don't forget to run the business that you have at home.
And that could have been my biggest up all and almost was, and was a really challenging one year of my life.
So.
Good.
Well, I'm glad you came out the other side.
And, um, last question, then easier one now it's a social media and where
people can find you if they want to learn.
Yeah.
My personal, uh, social media is our Bill Allen REI, like real estate investor.
Uh, that's a good place.
I spend time on there on Instagram and, um, uh, YouTube and stuff like that.
So, uh, and then seven figure flipping is our, Bill state coaching company and
in the room dot live is our, is our software business, the event software
business.
So.
Great.
Well, Bill, it's been a pleasure next time.
Hopefully we can record some content on the, on the flight that we'll take
together.
Guys, I hope this, you know, pushed you,
maybe it's your first event, thinking about it,
getting started 15, 20, 25 people,
maybe you're already running them,
not structuring them properly,
and you got some nuggets from today.
And at the very least,
maybe you're at a Funnel Hacker's Live or another event,
and now you can start to watch these things going on,
because that's also a great way to learn.
Like once I really learned this, it's kind of fascinating to see it happen you know and you can learn so much
from that too. So Bill pleasure thank you so much and guys as always keep living the red life I'll
see you soon. Bye!