Marketing Secrets with Russell Brunson - Scaling with Sanity: The Anti-Burnout Blueprint from Matt Gray | #Success - Ep. 35
Episode Date: May 14, 2025What if you could build a thriving business, grow a massive audience, and still have the freedom to live life on your terms? In this episode of The Russell Brunson Show, I sit down with Matt Gray, an... incredible entrepreneur and founder who’s done just that. After exiting his first company, building HERB into a 14-million-person media brand, and now leading Founder OS, Matt has figured out how to scale without stress, attract high-level talent, and turn content into consistent growth. If you’re an entrepreneur or creator trying to build a business and a life you love, this conversation is packed with frameworks and mindset shifts that can help you get there. Key Highlights: How Matt turns one long-form video into 30+ pieces of content across platforms The structure behind his organic content engine that brings in 12,000+ leads per month Why he avoids selling directly on social and what he does instead to convert cold traffic The systems and team setup that keep his business running while he travels the world How he overcame burnout, quit smoking and drinking, and rebuilt his health and energy What a founder-led brand really is and why it’s the key to long-term growth We also go deep into personal branding, content strategy, hiring, time freedom, and the hidden cost of sedating stress instead of solving it. Matt even shares his book-writing process, his thoughts on founder identity, and what it really takes to build something that lasts. This one’s not just about marketing and business. It’s about building a company that actually fits your life. Let’s dive in! https://sellingonline.com/podcast https://clickfunnels.com/podcast Special thanks to our sponsors: NordVPN: EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal https://nordvpn.com/secrets Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! Northwest Registered Agent: Go to northwestregisteredagent.com/russell to start your business with Northwest Registered Agent. LinkedIn Marketing Solutions: Get a $100 credit on your next campaign at LinkedIn.com/CLICKS Rocket Money: Cancel unwanted subscriptions and reach your financial goals faster at RocketMoney.com/RUSSELL Indeed: Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/clicks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is the Russell Brunson Show.
What's up everybody?
Welcome back to the show today.
I'm excited.
I've got a guest who flew here all the way from Bali
through about 12 other places.
He's a world traveler.
He does a lot of really cool things.
Someone I've been watching online now
for the last couple of years. We've been talking and finally a
chance to meet each other in person like 10 minutes ago and he's here in Boise in
office and we're gonna be talking about some really cool things in his business.
His name is Matt Gray and thanks for coming to Boise man.
Yeah thanks so much for having me. Great to be here. So you're living in Bali but
you've been traveling in your world travelers. We'll talk about more but yeah
just curious the trip you're on right now. you're swing by Boise. Yeah so was yeah on a bit of a journey
twice a year we run different events and experiences for FounderOS and we just
ran one in Austin and I figured while I'm in the country might as well make an
epic trip out of it so took my parents to Wyoming to Yellowstone and Grand
Teton for some hikes and then yeah we were talking and it's like why not make
the trip out to Boise?
Yeah, no one comes to Boise.
A couple connections later, you're in Boise,
even though it's next door and you make it happen.
Wyoming to Boise would be simple, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
So yeah, no, it's great to be here.
That's awesome to have you here.
So for those people who don't know you,
like how did you get your start in this whole world?
How long ago?
So yeah, a little background.
When I was 20, I started a technology bootcamp in Canada,
the first of its kind where we trained full stack software engineers and then got them jobs at tech companies like
Shopify, Facebook, Google.
And over the course of a few years, we trained 2000 software engineers.
One month after graduation, they'd go through these like three months of intensive training
and we'd train them up, get them jobs.
90% of them were getting jobs one month after graduating and did really well. We ended up exiting the business to General Assembly.
They bought us when they were coming north to Canada. After that, I was like, okay, a
lot of things were great about this business, but I hated the fact that I was stuck in Toronto
running this in-person thing. And I knew the next business that I created, I wanted to
have location freedom. So I picked up my bags, got rid of everything and started traveling.
Went to New Zealand, Peru, came across this random website of all things called the Stoner's
Cookbook.
Some guys I had met when I was in New Zealand, I ended up buying the website off them and
rebranding it to Herb.
I kind of saw the writing on the wall of where the cannabis industry was going over the next decade and saw an opportunity to yeah like transform it into
something much more tasteful curated and there was no platform that was really reliable and
trustworthy around that niche. And sure enough, 10 years later, we kind of grew it into an
audience of over 14 million people. And yeah, so that's kind of a bit of the journey there.
Did you sell that business? You still have that business? Still have that business, yeah.
So that's one portfolio company I have.
And then about a few years ago,
started another company called Founder OS,
where we help founders with proven systems,
to scale their audience, their brand, and their community,
using kind of all the systems I've used
to build multiple profitable online businesses.
And yeah, really just passionate about helping founders,
kind of make the founder journey much more joyful.
I think we're both kind of aligned around that.
I think it can be lonely and difficult
and yeah, overwhelming at times.
And I think when I set out to build FounderOS,
I set out to build a business that was kind of
in my icky guy, like what I love to do, what I'm good at,
what I can be paid for and what the world needs.
And sought out to build something that would feel like everyday retirement,
like working on the stuff that,
even if I was retired,
this is the kind of stuff I'd be doing every single day.
And I feel like you're also, you know, in that element,
you can see it just when, you know,
you're running different events
or you're in the room with founders, you know,
you're just there because you genuinely,
you wake up and you live this shit.
And so, you know, I can feel that,
I think others can feel that.
And I wanted that for my own life to be able to wake up every day and just work on my calling.
And so that's what founder us is kind of the manifestation of that.
That's cool.
It's interesting to me because I think, again, I think we do serve very similar audiences, but we also, we call them by different names, which is interesting.
I look at like, I look at in this world, right?
A lot of people call them creators. a lot of people call them creators,
a lot of people call them entrepreneurs,
you call them founders.
They're very similar, but it's like,
like a different perspective a little bit,
even though it's, they're the same people,
people starting businesses, right?
I'm curious, like, just the definition of founder for you,
like what's, like the people you're typically working with,
like what's their, who are they, what do they look like?
Yeah, so for me, I think that things like,
you know, entrepreneur, founder, business owner,
these are all synonymous.
Founder to me is just, yeah,
someone that's running a business around, you know,
thing that they love to do and looking to scale it.
The typical person that we work with is someone
that's doing generally about 50K per month and-
Do they consider themselves,
because like when I bought Dan Kennedy's business,
those people don't consider themselves entrepreneurs,
they consider themselves small business owners.
They're like, we're not entrepreneurs,
we're small business owners.
Do your founders consider themselves entrepreneurs or?
Yeah, they definitely consider themselves entrepreneurs.
I think if anything, the bridge that's going on
in terms of maybe their identity is,
I think more and more founders these days
are merging with like the creator economy. Stuff that you've been talking
about for a decade or more now. So this idea that...
The blend between the two?
Yeah, you know this idea that you know people follow people then they follow brands and
you know I think that when you have a personal brand, what I call a founder
led brand, you know you're able to go and make sure that yeah, people like really understanding the story behind what you're building and they
can really follow you, follow your journey and that makes the brand that much more impactful
and it allows you to grow it a lot faster.
And so this importance as a founder to really be thinking about building your audience day
one.
You know, there's that whole saying like first-time founders focus on tech, second-time
founders focus on distribution and I think more and more people are waking up to like,
the quicker you can build that distribution,
build that personal brand and an audience around yourself,
it sets you up for having this amazing kind of media moat
around your business for the next decade to come,
whether you're still building that business
or maybe it's sold and you're onto the next one
and you still have that brand and audience around yourself.
100%.
It's interesting because like 10 years ago,
I was our first talking about that.
Nobody, it was just funny cause people are like, no, I'm,
like they didn't want to be the ones like the joke was
always like, I don't want to dance on TikTok
or I don't want to show my face.
Like I'm a, you know, I'm starting a company.
This is like dumb stuff.
And where's, you know, it's like, it's free media.
It's free leverage.
It's free.
Like you build the brand and the personality
and it ties together and it just makes everything else
easier on top of it.
I've always found it funny too.
Yeah, you always have these people that are like,
you know, I don't wanna be famous.
Or yeah, I don't wanna dance on TikTok or whatever.
I always found it because from a decade of building Herb,
where we had a team of say 12 writers and different creators,
I learned, you know, the benefits of that,
but also the struggle of, you know,
you maybe have an idea that comes in your head of
something you want to create and then you have to kind of brief it and
delegate it and follow up on it and quality control it. Whereas for me like
building a personal brand or building a founder led brand around yourself the
speed at which you can go from just idea to creation is oftentimes like just
instantaneous. You don't need to answer it anyone you, you don't even necessarily need to manage anyone.
You can just come up with that idea, sit down,
film it, push it, and having that control over your media
I think is nice, so you can kind of control your destiny
more and you're not reliant on so many people.
I also realized when we launched ClickFunnels,
we had some competitors and I had a voice,
I had a brand, and our competitors didn't. They had a lot of VC money, but they had no voice, no brand, competitors and I had a voice, I had a brand and our competitors
didn't. They had a lot of VC money but they had no voice, no brand. It's like when we would,
you know, when we were fighting, you know, I'm very competitive, so when we were competing against
them, I was able to say things they couldn't review, they couldn't fight back because they
didn't have a voice to the market. They had a brand everyone knew but they didn't have a voice
or spokesperson or anything to be able to, I could say a lot of things I needed to say, you know,
persuade opinion, things like that,
and they didn't have the ability to really fight back.
And I think that that was another thing
when you understand that, it's like,
it gives you the ability, like,
when you need to shift narratives
or need to change whatever the thing might be,
the market's shifting, like,
if you don't have that voice and that personal brand,
it makes it so hard to be able to navigate
through a lot of the things quickly,
you know what I mean?
Yeah, no, and I mean? Yeah.
I think there's this whole kind of like 360-degree element to it that people don't think about.
Oftentimes, people, when they associate with it, they think, oh, it's to become famous
or to get customers.
But even this right now is indicative of the power of it.
We just had, I'd shared a couple things online on Twitter, I think about a year ago, and
we started chatting a little bit on Instagram around some stuff and then one thing led to another and here we are in
Boise, right?
So, you know, whether it's just like serendipitous connections and that happens to me all over
the world wherever I'm traveling, I'm constantly meeting different people and that I wouldn't
otherwise meet if I didn't have an audience.
You know, the amount of opportunities, amazing hires you're able to also get, I think probably
three quarters of our team has found me from the audience I've built and it's top talent that I don't think I'd otherwise maybe be able to
even attract. So yeah, it's insane the power of it when you get it right. I had to call the group
entrepreneurs this morning and they were trying to figure out how to do their hires. I was like,
your dream customers probably already following you. They probably love you. They're obsessed
with your mission and your message and they knew there's opportunity to leave what they were doing
to help you. They'd probably take a huge pay cut because, you know,
then like you attract these people
because they believe in the vision.
Whereas, yeah, you're posting jobs
and you're hoping that somebody shows up.
You know what I mean?
They just know who you are.
You then bring them into your culture and stuff,
which is, yeah, a nightmare from a hiring side.
So, all right, I wanna ask you a question
that's not specific to the business side yet,
but it's something that I'm really interested in
from a lot of different reasons.
And so, you know I'm Mormon,
so I don't drink or smoke or anything, never have.
And a year ago, year and a half ago,
you posted that you prior had done a lot of that
and then you were stopping it or cutting it out.
I'm just curious about that.
Yeah, great question.
Like why and how and what you've noticed since then.
Yeah, so, you know, my journey, you know, I think the only thing that's like inevitable
with humans is that like, is change, right?
And when I started Herb, when I was 24, I saw this amazing opportunity to build something
in the cannabis industry.
I believe like people should have freedom to make their own choices in life and there
are for so many other reasons like really believe in the mission behind what we're doing.
On a more personal level, probably around five years ago, six years ago maybe now, I
have been running businesses, I was running a few at the time and found myself in a hotel
room having like a borderline panic attack just from the stress, the overwhelm, there
are a couple crazy things that were going on.
And there were some things out of my control,
but then I started to come to realization
that there were a lot of things that were in my control
that were contributing to this.
Was drinking a few times a week
to cope with the stress on weekends,
was smoking probably like 10 joints a day at that point.
And yeah, had probably a pretty bad addiction
that I needed to kind of take a look at
that had kind of just been a bit hitting because I was functioning and I was in an industry
where this stuff can kind of like, you know, get by.
And so I ended up having some brain scans done, realized that on top of all that, there
were some like brain conditions, had some frontal lobe damage from too many concussions
playing hockey, of course, in Canada.
And yeah, it just kind of woke me up to like, wow, I really need to start taking care of my health. And so from that journey, reached out to different experts.
One of them actually was Huberman and learned through him that cannabis breaks the chain
between DHEA being converted into testosterone. And I found that interesting because at the
same time I was learning that testosterone is the chemical in humans that makes effort
feel good. And you know, we work so hard as founders, like bashing through walls all the time, oftentimes
fighting different fires and building things that I was like, I felt it kind of hit me
that I was kind of working backwards.
You know, I was working so hard in so many ways, but then on a health side, working backwards
in terms of like, yeah, even chemically screwing up my body a little bit.
So I decided to, I decided I needed to make a change because it wasn't sustainable the
way I was going.
And that journey led me to, you know, finding a sobriety coach, finding an executive coach,
and really going deep on the health side.
I started replacing smoking and drinking with journaling daily.
I'd read the book, The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron.
Didn't really know the change it was going to make in my life and just started waking
up every day to write my morning pages. Three pages just kind of poured out of me daily.
Did that for about 90 days. And I started bringing some of these concepts online, sharing
them on Twitter at the time and in a newsletter. Really no agenda in mind other than just,
hey, let's just put some stuff out there
and see the kind of people that are interested in this
or maybe not.
And one thing led to another and yeah,
I started attracting a lot of founders
that really resonated with this.
They had similar experiences in their lives.
They thought, I think these were some topics
that they were hoping someone would open up more about
and that kind of compounded to building more
of a audience online that people that kind of are attracted to, you know, not just building amazing systems around your
business, but amazing systems for your own, your life, your health.
So that, yeah, at the end of the day, like strong founders build strong businesses and
so you need to make sure you're taking care of yourself.
So yeah, that's kind of a bit of that.
It's really cool.
I think it's interesting in, in at least the community that I watch every single day,
like people start making more money, they get more stressed,
they get more all kind of stuff.
And they're always looking for ways to sedate the pain,
the pressure, whatever those things are, you know?
And it's interesting because I always,
I see people who, you know, I'm a big,
I think one of my superpowers,
I see someone I see their divine potential,
like what they could do or they could become.
And there's like the pressure and the stress and instead of like allowing that to be the
thing that helps them get to the next level, they sedate through other things and take
the pressure off.
And it's almost weird to not do that, you know what I mean?
Like people are like, anyway, and so it's been hard for me to have a, to be able to be in that conversation
because I'd never done it.
So I can't be like, oh, we shouldn't do it
because of this or this.
And I thought it was really fascinating,
especially since you have a company doing that,
around that kind of thing, but then for you to be
to one side and then go to the other is really fascinating.
And-
It's super weird.
Yeah, it's super weird.
But it's really cool and I think that,
I just wish more entrepreneurs would look at it that way
because they, again, it makes you feel good,
it takes off the pressure, it gives you,
because we're dealing with so much stuff,
there's so much pressure all the time,
and it's an easy way to get out of that,
but I think it's like what keeps people
from actually hitting their potential.
I had some of my best employees, designers,
who, you know, there's times when they're just amazing,
but then there's times that they,
maybe it's a creator thing, we all have pain,
whatever comes with the art or the ideas we have,
you know what I mean?
And then they would sedate with these things,
and then you could tell it's just like,
oh, they're more creative for a little bit,
but then they don't push, they don't drive,
they don't do anything, and it's just like this thing where,
anyway, so I was just like this thing where, anyway,
so I was just really curious on your takes on that.
Because it's interesting.
Well, I think as founders, as entrepreneurs,
we're constantly evaluating our businesses, right?
Auditing the finance area, seeing how that's coming along,
looking at your marketing, what's performing best,
what's not, stopping the stuff that's not doing well,
doubling down on the stuff that really works.
And oftentimes, we let ourselves get off on an easy street
and just not reflect too much on the stuff that really works. And oftentimes, we let ourselves get off on an easy street and just not reflect too much on, you know, what stuff that may have been serving us when we
were 25 is not serving us at 30. And it could be anything, right? Like your diet, your exercise,
whatever. It so happened that my vices were drinking and smoking, but other people have vices
of sugar and bread. I don't know, right? So, you know, I think it's just important to just be honest
with yourself and at the same token to whether it's, you know, rebranding your business,
rebranding yourself, you can always change, right? Like just because something's been
a certain way doesn't mean you got to keep doing it. Right? And for me, yeah, it was
kind of weird. I'm running this cannabis company. Now you're like, Whoa, you're not smoking
weed. It's like, I'm not against it.
I mean, I think everyone should be able to do whatever they want to do, right?
That doesn't change at all.
That my belief in freedom, my belief that adults can make adult decisions, nothing's
changed there.
In terms of like what's right for me and what I think I should be doing going forward, I'm
going to experiment with a new me.
So yeah, just always being open to reinventing yourself and I think is something that can
be a superpower.
Yeah.
Super cool. Thanks for sharing that. I appreciate that. Okay, so I wanted to dive
more deeper into the founder side of your business. That's what you're passionate about.
And I'm a framework guy, I like seeing the framework. So I'm curious, like, when someone
comes into your world, they're a founder or they want to be a founder, like, what's the process?
Where are the things you start taking people through? And I'm also curious just for you,
when people come to my world,
I'm obviously very marketing and sales focused.
Like that's what I teach my people and train.
I never teach operations
because I'm not a good operator, right?
But that's the direction I focus on.
So I'm curious for you,
like what's the direction you focus on with your people
and then kind of what are the processes,
what are the things that you're,
the frameworks you take people through
to get their brand and their personality out there.
Yeah, so everything at Foundress is pretty customized.
You know, we've got hundreds of systems
that I've used over the years
to help me with different things.
I think at the end of the day,
I'd say 90% of founders fall into
the following kind of buckets.
There'd be people that are looking to scale their audience,
people that are looking to grow their offer,
those that are looking to get more of their time back,
or people looking to build a team.
Now they oftentimes get mixed up,
but there's one general instant priority
someone's looking for, right?
So we're trying to assess, you know,
is this a person that has a really successful business
and now is just trying to get their time back
and that's their real currency?
Or is it someone that, you know,
has built a great business maybe
and now they're looking to scale their audience really fast?
And so depending on what sort of avatar they fall into there, we're then going to kind of customize
the journey they should be going on from there. But you know, the kinds of things that we help
folks with at the core of it is like a content GPS. And what that is, is helping people grow an
organic audience across social platforms. So whether that's X, LinkedIn, if they're more writing first,
or YouTube and TikTok, if they're going more video first,
as well as Instagram.
From there, driving people to a newsletter,
to workshops, maybe webinars,
and then actually owning that audience in their email list.
I think a lot of founders, they move from social
and they just think that they should be selling
directly from social.
And I think what ends up happening is you're way too salesy.
And that may work for six months, but I think that eventually you kind of burn your organic happening is you're way too salesy and that may work for six
months but I think that eventually you kind of burn your organic audience if you're just selling
too much just from social and I think a lot of people too want to go and build a brand and want
to be more active on social but they don't want to come across as salesy and that becomes a blocker
and if they knew that there was actually just a way to drive people from your audience to an email
where then you can sell I think it then opens up a range of possibilities.
And so we kind of help them with that organic content funnel and then driving people to
whether it's a product sales page or a sales call, depending on the industry they're in,
helping them set that up.
And then the systems along the way to make sure they're doing this efficiently so that
the hope is that they can scale it without their involvement for the most part.
So, you know, I've been able to scale an audience now
of about 3 million folks over the last few years
around my own brand.
And, you know, we're only filming generally around
like once every couple months, we batch all the content.
It's done in like a few days.
I can delegate it to my team from there
and then just get back to living my life,
traveling, enjoying things.
And so trying to make sure that at the end of the day, when you are both a founder and a creator,
it kind of doubles your chances of burnout. And we were just talking about some of the things I used to cope with
for that burnout or those feelings of overwhelm. The last thing I want to do is set founders up for that same issue.
And so as much as you're sort of ramping things up in terms of the content in the audience side, I think you also need to be ramping up the systems to make this
whole journey sustainable so you don't burn out.
Yeah.
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For you, what's your team look like personally?
Because you, you socially are amazing on all the platforms across the board. I'm curious what your team looks like.? Because you're socially amazing on all the platforms
across the board.
I'm curious what your team looks like.
How many people are running it?
What does that look like?
Yeah, so we have around 25 people on the team.
Just on the content team or the business team?
On the total team.
It may be a little more now, but let's just say it's 25, 30.
So on the content side, I work with like we have a producer.
On the video side, I'd with like we have a producer on the video side, I'd be like
the creative director, and then we have three long form editors, three short form
editors. And so that allows us to do one long from YouTube video per week to IG
reels per day to YouTube shorts a day to tick tocks a day. That's kind of that
whole department. So like the video side of content. On the written side, I have like a social writer, I'm writing, and then I have a newsletter
writer. So that's the whole written side of the business. And then we have, you know, operations,
probably eight people on the sales side, 10 people on founder success. And then I have a chief of
staff who's my sister. Yeah, something like that. Okay, very cool.
So for you, walks through your personal strategy,
you're doing social, you run paid ads as well,
you 100% social.
No, so the story there quick is like,
I actually really don't know how to run paid ads
to be honest with you.
From being in the cannabis industry for that long,
you can't run ads because the schedule one drug in the US.
And I didn't realize like we had just, you had just built that business all organically over the years.
That was kind of what you had to do.
When I started to take a look at building my own brand and using this for founder, I
realized this was kind of a superpower because I just sharpened that sword so many times
by publishing like 38,000 pieces of organic content over a decade.
And I was like, OK, shit, like this is this.
This actually really does work for other brands and my personal
brand, it can work for others, brands. And, yeah, and my
belief is kind of when you have a superpower, when you have an
edge, like exploit that to the fullest degree possible. So I'm
definitely not opposed to ads or anything like that. But anytime
I've looked at, you know, should we run ads? Or should we post
another YouTube video per week? It's like, let's do that YouTube
video another week, or, you know, should we run ads or should we post another YouTube video per week? It's like, let's do that YouTube video another week or, you know, should we do
ads or should we, you know, ramp up Instagram in this way?
It's like, let's just do that for now.
So we haven't, I don't think max out on organic to the point where I'd move to
ads yet, but definitely not opposed to it.
So fascinating.
My world's the opposite.
Cause we're very, you know, obviously funnel driven, paid advertising driven.
Everything we do is through that lens.
And so we default the other side where it's like,
okay, how do we spend a million dollars this month?
And we can track it, we see the numbers,
everything's the funnel, you know,
and the organic side we're posting,
but we don't have, definitely not as good of a strategy
or consistency in that, right?
So I'm curious for you,
this is me just like asking for myself, honestly,
more so is just like, because obviously you're posting organically
You're pushing to a thing but not the potion always pushing you have in the bio
Like just what's the strategy and like from they can a typical month?
Like how many how many leads are coming from each platform or things like that just so I can understand
What organically really well can look like you know, so I'll summarize it as best I can so, you know
You have the core, say five platforms, right?
X, LinkedIn, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok.
Across those platforms, you're driving like this ocean
of attention essentially from maxing out
the highest quality content you can possibly put
and maxing out the quantity that you can,
that each platform can kind of take, not in a day,
not in a week,
but like what that platform can take
like over the next decade to build a sustainable brand
that you don't just burn out your audience.
And so, you know, as an example,
I think Instagram can take a couple posts per day,
YouTube up to three long from a week,
but we just do one per week.
And so in each of those pieces of content
across all of the different platforms, you
can put obviously call to actions in these pieces of content.
Now the wrong way to do call to actions is first off to do none at all.
The second thing is then to do them where you're driving people right to your product.
Again I think that over time that could work for six months, but when you're talking about
building something enduring for a decade or two,
it starts to just burn people out
because they just feel like you're just
constantly selling them, constantly selling your shit,
and not there to actually just provide value.
So across each of those platforms,
there are sustainable ways to do CTAs, or call to actions.
So on Instagram, as an example,
that's like your link in bio.
The key thing on Instagram right now is many chat.
And so the way that I generally like to use CTAs across any of the platforms
is always by giving people an insane amount of value.
My whole thing and the way that our team works is that we're almost trying to compete on generosity.
Like these days, there's just so much stuff out there that if in a YouTube video or an Instagram
reel, you can give away something
that most people ideally would think that they would charge like $10,000 or something
like that.
You make it just such a no brainer for those people that have viewed that piece of content
to then go and enter their email in to go get it.
So tools like ManyChat on Instagram make this easy on X, you know, auto plugs under your
posts make it easy. And there's about 17 of these different areas that you can drive people from your
content to these CTAs and then capture their email.
So it's about having the right pieces of content with super valuable customized basically,
you know, lead magnets for those different formats, and then driving people from them in the right way
to get their email, and then inside of your newsletter,
that's where you can be more kind of leaned in
on the sales side.
Not saying that the whole newsletter strategy
is just selling, but on a Saturday newsletters example,
a tell a story, kind of a hook story offer going on,
and then yeah, on the offer end,
you can have your couple CTAs,
maybe one leading people to a sales call
and another leading people to your YouTube
or another platform to kind of cross pollinate things.
So that's generally how I look at it.
In terms of the amount of leads we're driving per month,
it's currently around 12,000
across all these platforms per month.
And you know, our top platform right now, surprisingly, is YouTube.
So with only about 150K people there,
it does more than Instagram and LinkedIn combined,
and those two have two million.
So pretty insane, and I just think that right now-
But YouTube doesn't have a version of many chat, right?
You just push in the description, or how do they?
Yeah, so I, in YouTube, the strategy that we use,
and this is all subject to change.
I don't think necessarily what we're doing
is the best thing ever.
That's what's really worked well for now.
In a given YouTube video, there's,
oftentimes we'll talk about something maybe in a video.
And this one, maybe it's like paid ads or organic content,
and then giving away like a whole checklist
of say how to maximize paid ads and organic content, right?
And then drive people to that in the link in the description where they can go get it
for free.
When they're in that, obviously they enter in their email, maybe even their phone number
and now you have captured that person.
So yeah, simply in the description is the way that we do it.
Yeah, very cool.
In on Instagram with many chat, one problem we had before is we were trying to,
we would push people to ManyChat and then we have a whole conversation open up and there's
this whole process we take them down. But then what happens, we would be posting multiple times
a week and then people would be in like 12 conversations at once because your hyperactives
respond to everything and it was just chaos. And so we cut it down to where basically we just have
ManyChat push one link out and then it stops. I'm curious for you, like how do you run yours?
Or do you have yours complex or pretty simple when you're pushing lead magnets through that?
Yeah, so I think how we do many chat right now is we have, you know, maybe three core CTAs per week
have maybe three core CTAs per week that lead to three different flows, three different really generous lead magnets.
And then from there, there's probably only a little bit of back and forth, like a few
automated messages before then it's picked up by someone that's actually managing those
DMs.
So that number one, yeah, we don't need to make it too complex.
We can kind of just keep it simple.
And then two, there's someone there that can then,
if there's something wrong or whatever,
can quickly go and edit the sequences
and make sure that there's no chaos there.
So yeah, I think the lesson for a lot of people
is like when you're trying these things,
don't try to over-engineer it too fast.
You know, like simplicity is genius, right?
And yeah, I think the more simple you can keep things like
if you're just getting going a couple platforms,
getting the CTAs right on there,
really monitoring it and putting in the reps
before you just over engineer it and then just let it loose.
And sure enough, you know, issues come up.
Yeah, yeah.
It's so much, it's funny.
I got started in this game before there was any social
media at all. Like, I remember I was in college and Friendster was the social platform of
the day. And we were trying to figure out how to hack Friendster to get leads and all
sorts of stuff. And then MySpace came after that. And then, and so it's just fascinating
just how much now it's like, the majority of traffic online is coming from social where when I got started, there was zero social at all. It's just fascinating how now it's like the majority of traffic online is coming from social where
when I got started there was zero social at all. It's just fascinating how much it's evolved
and shifted you know to that direction then how many multiple platforms and then you know
it's all you know around five or six platforms now which is interesting. Now I've never,
in fact I think the first thing we connected with her, something was you posted something,
I think it was on Twitter, it must not have been on Twitter because I'm not on Twitter,
but it was about Twitter, about the algorithm and stuff like that.
And I remember seeing that, I was like, oh my gosh, this actually makes sense to me.
I think it's when I first reached out to you.
But for your business, how much, like, I'm curious about the written side.
How does that work?
Like the Twitter and what's the one that Instagram has now?
Threads?
Like do you guys do a lot over there?
What's that?
That's what the internet looks like because I'm not playing in that at all.
I'm curious.
So at a high level, how I look at all content is what we call like a content waterfall.
So a content waterfall is essentially like a system that you can use to go and turn like
one core piece of content into like 32 or more other pieces of content.
And so what this may look like in my business
is we would have say a YouTube video
that we've created a concept for
and flushed it all out into say 3000 words.
That YouTube script can become obviously a YouTube video.
That YouTube video can also be posted onto Spotify and Apple music
and Apple podcasts. It can then, you know, become one or two newsletters in like say four weeks and in eight weeks.
Then on platforms like LinkedIn, like say you had five core lessons that you go over in this YouTube video, that could become five long-form
LinkedIn posts. It could also become five long form X threads,
as well as maybe another 15 little sentences
that you end up using for like 15 tweets as an example.
So at a high level, I'm always trying to look
to like maximize the content that I've already put out there
so that you've quickly are able to be as efficient
as possible and get off of a content treadmill, right?
Where you're just constantly trying to output stuff.
Meanwhile, you've got this amazing bank of stuff
you've already made.
Just making sure that you've maximized that, right?
And I know that you're even doing this
in your book project right now,
like leveraging like these thousands of presentations
you've done and thousands of podcasts, right?
Like how can you leverage all that material
versus defaulting to new, right? These days I try to, as much as possible default to like, what have I already said around podcasts, right? Like how can you leverage all that material versus defaulting to new, right?
These days I try to as much as possible default to like,
what have I already said around this, right?
Cause I'm pretty sure I've said the things,
I've done the things,
I don't wanna just default to having to do it all over again
and just trying to reduce the cognitive load.
And again, just keep things as simple as possible.
So specifically on the written side,
we will do four longer form X posts per week.
Those tend to drive the most growth.
And then about two short form tweets per day,
which seems to be like a solid cadence on the platform
to get your stuff out there without overdoing it.
And then on LinkedIn,
we typically do one long form post every morning at 8 a.m. And again, that's what's allowed us to scale to about 800,000 people there.
And yeah, so I think with all these platforms, it really comes down to,
number one, like having an amazing hook, a ton of long form value, again, really just trying to
compete on generosity. So I think people sometimes overdo like just thinking about growth, growth, growth.
Meanwhile, like I think if you can just focus on like what are all these things that I'd almost be
scared to give away, right? Like give it away, right? Inevitably people, if you're making
something, they'll still pay you to have it all packaged up to get to know you to for a more
seamless delivery, for more support. So I don't think you need to worry about giving too much away,
at least most people. And then, so that's like X and that's LinkedIn and then off of all those posts, about 100%
of the posts on LinkedIn and around 50% of the posts on X drive people then to subscribe
to the newsletter.
And so, that's just constantly driving people to an audience that we own that's helped
to scale a newsletter to about 200,000 people in the last couple of years.
And yeah, as a power of those written platforms.
Then in terms of threads, honestly, I don't even understand
like, you know, really what's going on with that platform.
I don't use it personally, so I don't spend any time on it.
Our team posts my stuff that's already on X there.
I think we've gotten some good growth,
but I have no idea what's going on there.
That's how it was the first day I signed up
and like imports all your Instagram followers. I'm like,
I'm a genius. I got it. And then reserve like a week and we post a couple of times and it all
disappeared and stopped working. I still remember those days where people thought it was like taking
over the world and like, it's like two months later. Yeah. It's like, uh, I remember clubhouse said
the same thing when it came out and like, I was actually really excited for that one. So I was
like, it's exciting seeing a new social platform pop out and then blow up and then it just dried out so
fast. It's always interesting what's going to have longevity in people's minds. Yeah. Do you guys have
outside social platforms? Do you pull people to communities? Like do you have a like a school
community or you know something like that where you're pulling people separately off platforms
besides just newsletter but like an actual community or do you just keep all the communities kind
of happening on social?
Yeah, so with Founder RCI we have everyone about 800 people in a school community and
yeah that's where like all the systems that we have are all nicely organized depending
on you know content, audience growth, all the different platforms and their operating
systems and then yeah I think similarly from my experience,
founders I think overthink the tech side sometimes.
Like especially when you're getting started,
it's just like just pick something that feels good
that maybe someone you admire is using that platform
and it feels right to you or maybe you've enjoyed using it
just on the other side of the equation
and as a community member and just get up and going,
get running with it.
So yeah, most of the tech on what we build is pretty simple like, you know, yeah, school
is what we use right now for the community.
But I think that there's a lot of platforms that are really solid there.
Yeah, for sure.
Okay, transition a little bit.
So one thing is really fun about watching you as a person in your life and your business
and stuff is how, I don't is how free you feel.
Like you are traveling, you are seeing the world,
you're doing a bunch of stuff versus most founders
or creators or are not.
And me included, I'm a homebody,
so I like being around here,
but I'm also very, very,
I'm doing a lot of stuff constantly, right?
And you feel like you've created a lot of time
and freedom for yourself.
I know you focus on that in your content as well,
but just curious, like, I guess first off,
your beliefs around that, because some people, yeah,
I think you have different beliefs than me,
and I really look up to what you're doing and you in this way.
I'm just curious kind of your beliefs around that,
like giving yourself more freedom
inside of your business, you know what I mean?
Yeah, so my current philosophy on this,
which again is subject to change,
is that I think freedom comes down to four things,
like the freedom to control where you work,
what you work on, who you work with,
and when you're able to work, right?
And when you have those four W's,
you can do whatever you want basically.
And so whenever I'm building a business,
that's the core of it for me is freedom.
And I think that's a reason why a lot of founders
get into business is to have freedom and to obviously help a lot of
people.
And so when I was younger, my dad's a dentist stuck in New
Market, Ontario, retiring any day now, hopefully.
And when I'd ask him for advice on what I should do in
life or what he wished he had done, trying to understand maybe what some regrets were
that I could maybe avoid.
Nearly every time it would come down to just go travel,
just go travel.
So I think hearing that as a young kid,
and I enjoyed it a lot, I was like,
okay, travel, travel, right?
So I have a goal in life of going to all 195 countries. And I think when you go and you future cast this stuff, I think I've only been to like
58 countries or something, not that many, like not that that many in terms of the you
need to make to get to the 195.
And so you're like, damn, I still have a long way to go.
And I think it becomes really easy with a lot of things in our lives to just say someday.
And you think you'll do these things.
And then like, you know, you're 40, you're 50, you're 60, you're 70, and you think you'll do these things and then like you know
you're 40, you're 50, you're 60, you're 70 and you're still saying someday and so I try to just
default to like if you're serious about doing these things like just get after it and so you
know I've architected my business in a way that allows me to do that with all the systems that
we have with the talent that we have and oftentimes figure just like why not. Anytime I travel like I learn a bunch, you
know we're both writing books right now. If I'm writing a book personally like I'd
love to be like at some like artist cabin in like southern Italy or something writing
it just to be inspired and enjoying myself. And yeah I find travel is like you know it
fuels my creativity, it's inspiring. I always tell myself like I should slow down a little
bit hence like why I've gotten this home base now in Bali.
But that said, I still find myself wanting to like just being pulled to the next spot
like, oh, I got to go see Russell and Boise.
Why not?
This would be fun.
And then, oh, we go to Brooklyn and see some friends there.
And then I think I'm going to go to Lofoten, Norway and probably end up going through Italy
for, yeah, Italy and through Europe through the summer.
And so I don't know, I just feel called to do it. And I think no one's freedom is going to look the same,
but I definitely think it's important for founders
not to give up on their definition
of what freedom looks like.
And for some that's wrestling tournaments,
you know, and getting back into that
and just like going for it, right?
Which is amazing and inspiring in its own way.
And I think it's just important for us
not to give up on that part. Like the same way that we've created these businesses and created so much impact, it's like lean into that in its own way. And I think it's just important for us not to give up on that part.
Like the same way that we've created these businesses
and created so much impact,
it's like lean into that in your own life.
You know, do it on your own terms
and just be okay with being fricking weird, you know?
The amount I travel is like really weird,
probably to a lot of people.
And like, that's okay.
Like find your weird and double down on it.
Yeah.
Do you take personality profiles?
I think I have maybe one time.
Okay.
E-E-M-T-J or something, I think.
And that's wonderful. Yeah. EENTJ or something I think.
That's one of them.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I love, anyway, we have a whole side business.
It's all about personal profiles.
I'd love to learn that stuff from you.
I feel like that's a key to like hiring and really dialing it up is really knowing that
stuff.
And understanding people and humans.
But what's cool is one of the tests, the disc profile, there's a secondary test that usually
take it, it gives you the results.
It's called either values or motivators, The list like what your core motivators are,
like top to bottom.
And I get, I'm assuming, I would bet
your number one motivator is probably freedom.
We have a lot of guys in our program who,
I make all of our coaching clients take
so I understand them, but a lot of them like
freedoms are number one.
That's where they optimize everything
in life towards freedom.
My number one value in that is,
it's called utility or ROI, so like return investment,
what's return investment of every situation,
which is like why I struggled in school,
because I couldn't see the ROI, I was confused,
like I don't understand this, you know,
or things like that, but if I understand ROI,
like I'll kill myself, because I understand
this whole thing, and so I'm, anyway,
just assume ahead of time that that's probably
your number one, seems like you build a lot of what you're doing around that motivator, which is always
fascinating when you see someone and how they optimize.
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Are you... so when I travel travel I can't work on the
road. I don't know how to do it. Like I have my officer. I got three huge monitors. I have
like tons of monitors. My laptop. It's like this little thing I can't figure it out. Do
you able to work while you're traveling? How do you? How do you do?
Yeah, that's the part. I mean, I'm not comparing myself to this person at all, but I used to
think it was like really weird. And then, you know, you look through history, there's
actually some some interesting case
studies on people that actually, they're actually
better on the road.
Jordan was famous for saying, I love away games much better.
Like the crowd taunting you.
You're in this foreign environment
and you're still going to show up and show them what's up.
So for me, I think I left my house at a pretty young age.
So I think there's something to that probably, just being more independent.
How old were you when you left?
Probably around 17, 16.
Oh wow.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, just kind of like having to figure it out on my own.
I remember just like always when I was younger, just like, I just
wanted to like get away, like just being able to like travel.
I came up from a really small like just being able to like travel. I came up
for a really small town it's kind of boring I just like oh man there's just
so much out there can't wait to do it and so now when I'm an adult I'm just
like seizing it so in terms of the system though to get it right because I
am super productive on the road I think like a few things like I have a rule as
an example like right when I land in a new spot, I go
like straight to the gym and like figure out like where, like where's the gym, where's
like these days like a cold bath sauna, hope it's in the same spot and like just get that
rhythm going right away because like health is first and if I don't have that rhythm down,
everything kind of like slips from there. In terms of my travel approach too,
it's like what I'd call like slow travel.
I'm not generally trying to go to places
for like less than a week.
So like I'm about to go to Brooklyn,
I could be there for just a week I'm sure
and hit up all the things I needed to do,
but instead I'll go for a month.
Or when I'm gonna go to Norway or to Italy,
like I'll go for at least a month probably.
I was in Japan snowboarding,
it didn't just go for a week there, we went for six weeks. So trying to just like slow it down a little bit so you
can like rest. You're not just like firing your cortisol at all levels.
Hitting everything and then bouncing.
Yeah, exactly. Just bouncing around too fast. And it gives me the ability with the business
and with other priorities in life just to like take my time and not feel like I got
to just like unpack and then leave to the next spot. So yeah, that's kind of the philosophy around it.
And yeah, in terms of like, I really like the diversity of work environments.
Other people are different that way.
Even I've had places, obviously, that I've lived for six months,
and I've had an insane work setup that I invest all this money in,
like this dope desk that has a button that you can like, standing desk,
and these insane screens and all that.
And I'm like, I'm just going to go to a cafe.
And I like just a change of scenery,
because I get a little ADD, I think, in a spot
and like to just be in a new cafe with a nice new cup
of coffee there that I'm trying out and then just lock in.
So that's just, I don't know what that is brainwise,
but that's just my productivity formula.
That's so that's really cool.
Is your team mostly remote?
Everyone remote?
Everyone's in room.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's cool.
How about you?
What's like your, like when you're most locked in, like you're writing this book right now,
like what's like the ideal scene there?
Oh yeah, for me is an office with a hundred books around me to research and look at.
And for me writing, I have,, whatever, ADD or HD,
whatever it is, like if I'm sitting in trying to work,
it's hard because I get distracted.
So like when I'm in a writing zone,
I'm literally on a treadmill, on my desk, walking,
and like with headphones on, so I try to stimulate,
because like the more, when you're, it's hard to focus,
the more stimulus you have,
the easier it's to focus on one thing, you know?
So for me, it's like i would be walking
listening and everything and then i can zone in on like actually writing and so
that's yeah these were all written on a
treadmill for the most part um or some version that so that's kind of
more so for me um we were just talking before this too i'm just curious you have
like all these references of like these like talks you've done and
things you've written and presentations you've done or podcasts you've done like
like thousands of these things right?
When you like lock in around a given book maybe you've like determined the
table of contents I'd assume at that given part how are you like synthesizing
those references into like an organized way? Yeah. Like I'm kind of doing this
right now I'm like do I print all this stuff out and like paste it on walls and
like a beautiful mind or like what do you do here exactly and I'm like gradually getting into a flow but I find myself wandering and like paste it on walls and like a beautiful mind or like, what do you do here exactly? And I'm like gradually getting into a flow,
but I find myself wandering and like sometimes it's just so much stuff.
I might organize chaos though. So it's, um, uh,
I do start the table of contents, but it changes,
like rewrite table of contents almost every day. Cause as you're going through,
you're like, that doesn't make sense anymore. And then you keep going in.
So like that's, it as you're going through, you're like, that doesn't make sense anymore, and then you keep going in. So it's a guide, but the table contents
from the first draft to the end is so funny.
I go back to the first time, what was I thinking?
But you don't know, at least for me,
I don't know what it's like getting into the deep work.
And my favorite thing about writing,
well, there's the joke that reading a book
is like writing a book,
except for the book's trying to kill you, right?
It's a painful, it's a lot of work
But my favorite part about it is like when you're in the deep work of writing like all these weird
Connections show up that don't show up
otherwise
I think that's why I'm not a big fan of people to write AI books or things like that because like all my books like the most
Profound things didn't come from me knowing it and writing a book
It came like while I was writing the book trying trying to connect, like, why does this work?
And all of a sudden, because you're so deep in it,
with so many things, like these things appear, right?
And so the book keeps rewriting itself
as you're moving through it,
because these things are showing up
that you don't get unless you're that deep into it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, and I'm just curious, one last thing on the process
is like, when you have your table of contents, right,
or maybe you've written the first manuscript,
do you involve people at certain stages of the book?
So I know people, as an example, that have a table of contents
nailed down.
And then they're going to go and talk to, say, 10 beta readers
or 10 founders in their audience or whatever,
and get them to look at it and get some live feedback on it
to kind of sculpt it more.
And then people that also will do that on a manuscript maybe
once, maybe even twice, getting like 10 beta readers each time
to kind of help them get it right
and see where people are blocked.
Like what's your approach there?
So a little bit, the one thing I've noticed is for me,
when I figure out kind of the table contents and the order,
I've tried to write a book prior,
like before I ended up doing that,
both times with Thought Come, Seekers, the Expert, Seekers,
I ended up deleting the entire book.
And then I ran an event.
So I like brought in my top level people
and for two days sat in a room
and I just taught through all this stuff.
And that helped me to connect
because a lot of times you have a table of contents
and you're explaining something
and you're happy with your office
and you're like, you guys don't understand this
because you don't have contacts.
I'm like, crap.
But in your writing you forget that,
but when you're in a room,
people are looking at you like,
what are you talking about?
And so for me, before every book,
I did an event prior to actually doing the work and that was my testing of like the
ideas and the concepts and making sure that like the sequential order was correct because
again you get that the weird look when they have no idea what you're talking about. Then
from there I go and for me writing such a, they always say writing is like it's personally
you're by yourself and then the, you give it to people.
And so there's always this weird fear of giving it to people.
So for me, I finished the manuscript all the way through
before I let anyone in, and then I put it into Google Docs,
and then I have people come that I trust,
and I have them read, not for like,
not like an editor would read,
like I don't want you to edit anything,
but I want you just conceptually, like,
and so I'll have people I know or trust,
probably usually between five and 10 people,
and have them read through the Google Doc,
and I don't want them to edit, but I want them to comment.
So it's like, comment like, this doesn't make sense,
or this is confusing, or like,
remember that time you told a story about this,
wouldn't that be better here?
Like, I'm looking for concept editing,
and so I have a dozen people just go through
concept editing, which is really fun,
and then from there I'm like, oh, I forgot about this.
Or yeah, that doesn't make any sense.
Or that part was boring, probably could cut that.
And then from there, I go back, clean up the draft,
and then I get it to an editor to start editing.
So that's how I've done it.
And the average book took you how long to write?
At least a year.
Yeah.
So it's like three or four years of thinking,
and then a year doing the work.
And it's funny, like when I got,
when I shifted to Hay House, I signed the contract for Traffic Secrets and they sent me,
I didn't read the contract, I just signed it and they sent me an advance, this check, I'm like, and I was so confused, I was like, what's this for? They're like, oh, well most people when they
write a book, they take a year off to write the book and that's so you can live while you're
writing it. I was like, oh my gosh, because I'm still running ClickFunnels and you know, so it's a year,
but it's not like a writer's year where it's a full year. You know,
it's like I'm doing this with one or two hours a day for, for a year. So.
It's tricky that balance. Um, yeah, I think I'm a manuscript like six or seven now.
And I feel like I'm in that like learning phase of like,
I'm sure every book after this will be a little bit easier.
But that first one I'm like, man, this thing is, this is something.
Yeah.
How long, how long ago did you start it?
Probably it's probably almost like two and a half years ago.
Now I feel like just thrown out different versions.
Cause I'm like, ah, this isn't quite, I think what it needs to be.
And it's been useful.
I feel like now I have a really good editor.
That's a great soundboard.
And so that's, it's more of a team thing attacking this beast.
Um, versus just me in a dark room, trying to figure it out and going out. No, no, no, that's not it. So that's cool. What was the thing that
made you decide to write the book? Like what was the pivotal point? Like I'm going to
do this. I'm actually going to do it. Maybe I thought about it, but I'm going to actually
write this book.
Well, I mean, at the first part, it's similar to like the bucket list of travel. It's like,
I just want to write a book before I die. So this is something I should do and why not
do it now. I felt like a good time just to get after it. And then from there,
I think this like idea of like founder led brands are like largely misunderstood. The
kind of stuff that we hear all the time like, Oh, don't want to tick tock dance or don't
want to be famous and these things. And it's like, I don't think people totally get it.
So I want to kind of,
is that the name of the book, right? Yeah. Founder led brands. Yeah. At least that's
the running concept.
So we'll see where it ends up.
But yeah, just trying to peel back the onion a bit there and give people like the details
as to why this is a thing, why it's important to have your own media company and the systems
that make it all sustainable and profitable.
Yeah.
Very cool.
Two and a half years.
Do you know when's your plan?
Do you have a pub date?
This year.
No, this year it's happening. Yeah, it's being self-published. So I don't, no one's really telling me what to do.
That's awesome, man. Well, I'm excited to read it and to have it out.
One of the best feelings I've ever felt in this, in my entire life so far is like,
when you get the first box of books and you open up, you need to hold it the first time. It's like there's something,
there's something magical about that the very first time.
You're just like, I can't believe this is.
It's done.
I wrote a book.
It's insane.
Yeah, I'm really excited for him.
So what's the future for you?
Where are you going from here?
What's the plans with your business?
What are you trying to get to?
Yeah, so on the business side,
the dream there is to create the greatest founder community
of the 21st century.
I see an opportunity kind of like on the brand side,
what Nike did for athletes in the 70s,
Apple did for creatives in the 80s,
is what I'm trying to do for founders in the 20s.
Create this really aspirational, beautiful, tasteful,
inspiring brand that helps founders build their own
really special brands.
And so we have dreams of opening a retreat center in the
Dolomites in Italy, which is like my favorite place in the world. You know, was there mountain
biking last year for a couple months, we'll be there snowboarding this year. I just have this
idea of kind of bringing amazing founders together for peak experiences together. And so, yeah, just
trying to like lean into the community, really just listen to them. I'm really patient with this,
like I'm running something I'm going to run until till I die and that was the whole genesis of even creating founder OS in the first
place so we're just being patient we're being you know really intentional about
it building an amazing community helping founders with the systems that were
asked they're asking us for and really just trying to create the greatest
founder content out there for the specific stuff that we do which is
largely around like systems and founder led brands. And then on a personal level, yeah, looking to finally get a home base for real
this year. So hopefully, you know, stay in Bali a little longer than like five months,
maybe a Boise, maybe we're gonna move here. Yeah, maybe Boise, you know, exactly. And,
yeah, just keep traveling, get this book out. keep putting great content out across platforms and meeting other great folks like yourself
and just having fun.
I think, you know, my 20s, a lot of that was like a lot of a
good grind at times on the business side.
And now, you know, with the systems that we have and with
Founder OS and Herbal running on autopilot, I feel like it's
more of a time just to, you know, enjoy things.
When I look back, I'm sure in my 80s,
I would just tell myself like, hey, dude,
it's going to be all right.
Let's just have some fun.
So trying to lean into that more.
It's cool.
How about you?
What's your big, what's your one main thing, big domino this
year?
Main thing this year, I'm building an event center
and a museum next door here.
I collect old books, and so we're
going to be building a huge thing.
And I have really long-term
Like my legacy visions all gonna be happening out of what we're building over there and we're almost
Almost a spot. We have everything done except for the last approvals from the city
And then we can start building it and by this time next year we'll have
Yeah, I have an amazing place people come around the world got
last three years so about over 18,000 books like rare
manuscripts and things like most of my money I've invested back in old books and so it's been cool
to have a chance to show everybody what you know the collection but then the goal with it is to be
something so exciting that the greatest minds in the world will be willing to fly to Boise, Idaho
not direct to get here to hang out to come and teach me and so I can learn from the smartest people in the world and
then capture it and share it with the world. And so that's kind of my, what I'm
working on, which I'm really excited about.
One last thing on that. I'm curious, like all these books you've gotten and that you've read, and I know this is like a real
obsession on your side from following you for some time. What's like that one
secret you feel like that a lot of these guys kind of talk about that's like at a
core that a lot of people maybe don't think about or is a little more non-obvious or novel.
Yeah, it's interesting. I think the problem is people do talk about it, but they miss
the point of it. But you look at the common thread amongst the people I'm collecting,
it's like from, you know, 1880s to 1920s, 30s, like that window.
And it's called the New Thought Movement.
These people were all talking about the subconscious mind.
And before we knew what it was or before we had any research or data or whatever, and
what they were doing and figuring out back then, it's weird because nowadays we can
prove it.
There's ways to prove all that kind of stuff.
But almost it's like nobody, I don't know, like what they were doing is actually more
efficient and more effective than what we're doing today even though we know more now.
And so I actually spot subconscious.com and like we're going to go really deep into that
because like that's the work that when people understand like the rewiring of your subconscious
mind is I think the secret to happiness, to success, to fulfillment, to all the things.
That's what my book's about.
It's just like, you know, a lot of times people want success and they,
the question obviously like what is success? I'm like, well,
I think success is two things. It's like it's achievement,
but it's also fulfillment and there's two separate things.
And like how do you get both of those? How do you find happiness?
How do you overcome the things or like all those things come back to like
understanding your subconscious mind and all these authors back then they're all talking about hitting for areas of
Aspects and they didn't know it they were just testing things and finding things out and discovering the writing books about it
they're kind of freaking out like we just did this thing look how this works and so
Yeah, that's what's really fascinating to me is like kind of coming back into that even though people talk about nowadays
I don't think they I still think as the as a like the
world really understands it you know is there one core practice that you have
that like really helps you program your subconscious mind for your core goals
values all that um it's not such one core practice I'm a process guy so
there's a couple things but a lot of it is just is understanding like what most
people talk about is our thoughts,
which is a big piece of it,
but the feelings are actually the key,
because your feelings are the response
of your subconscious mind to whatever is happening.
And so I was thinking and thinking and thinking
versus stopping and understanding feelings
about how you feel about all the different things,
because that's the treasure map of,
I spend all the time with coaching entrepreneurs, people come and they consciously make a decision, I'm
going to make, I'm going to hit a two-combo club award, I'm going to make money, I'm going
to, or I'm going to lose weight, or they have these conscious things, right?
And then they start racing towards it and then all these things are blocking them and
they can't figure out why.
Whereas reality, if you stop at the very beginning when you ask the questions, like what are
you actually feeling?
And like a lot of times they're consciously excited, but then there's like this gut feeling hurting
or something like it's physically in the body
and like finding the feelings.
And then reverse engineer that is like,
what's the subconscious actually believe?
Cause if you can, like subconscious,
what you actually subconsciously believe will be,
will be the thing that actually ends up happening,
not what you consciously want.
And so it's like,
make the subconscious so much stronger than the conscious. So I was like, when you understand that, can you consciously find. And so it's like, the subconscious is so much stronger than the conscious.
So I was like, when you understand that,
you consciously find it and then rewire that,
then the path becomes easy.
So some people, they start business in three months
and they've made a million dollars,
and other people will spend 20 years
and they can't figure out how to make their first dollar.
It's just like, it's not the skill sets,
not consciously desiring it.
It's like their subconscious beliefs
that they've gained over in a lifetime, right? From their parents, from the TV or from radio or music or like
all the different things. And so it, the things that are hard become really easy when you
just learn how to change that. So anyway, it's nerdy and fun.
No, I wouldn't even guess that. No, it's something that's big for me too. It is like, yeah, I
oftentimes like before I go to bed, like read like a one pager that I've made for myself around
like my like dream life and dream sort of scene and kind of
really feel into it and then go to sleep at night.
And so yeah, all about this kind of stuff.
I think it's interesting.
It's so much fun.
Yeah.
Okay, my last question for you is,
is there a story of someone in your community that you've
been involved in their journey that you're super proud of
or excited or just, just to kind of show the show the fruit of what you guys are doing right now?
Yeah, we had a gentleman named Sammy that had come to us. He had previously exited the company and was
now working on a new idea but it was still kind of no offer around it, no really idea
what he was going to build per se, just
a rough idea.
He joined Founder OS.
We went and helped him with his offer.
So yeah, his name is Sammy Hassan.
And his idea was to create this company called Dev Signal, which is all around helping tech
companies find amazing engineers.
So we helped him formulate the offer around that.
He started creating content while reluctant at first, Started seeing like it was picking up, doing
well. And it was driving a lot of companies to go and hire the engineers that he was training
at DevSignal.
Fast forward just six months later, his company was actually acquired for around $600,000
by a firm that had actually found him through the audience that he had built. So yeah, between like the offer systems that we'd gone over, some of the content and audience
growth systems were like a small part in that journey that Sammy was able to find success
with.
So yeah, there's stories like that and then other stories from folks like Leon who had
a, has a couple kids and was building a successful business and agency at the time but hardly
had any time to actually go and spend with his kids and so from putting in a bunch of systems across hiring people, content,
ops, you know, was able to move from around 50 hours a week of work kind of like I was
working a decade ago to just a few hours a day and be able to enjoy like amazing summer
vacations and such with his family.
So yeah, those are the kind of things I find most rewarding.
So cool.
I'm curious if you feel same way, but it's
like, when you have your own success, it feels great. But
then like you pass out on somebody else and they have
success, it feels like 1000 times better, you know, I guess
why we all get addicted to this game because it's just like,
yeah, it's it's exponential because it's not just your
success is all these other people's. Yeah, no, I tell
people in the community and others like we have in our slack
a channel called founder wins. And I know that every single person that works at founder
us like the highlight of their day is when there's just like an awesome could be a message
someone got or a post that was in school or a message on social media, whatever about
a founder. Yeah, having anything from a massive when they just closed some huge deal or a
smaller when that they just got, you know, another 1020 hours of their week back. So
yeah, I think we're we're both united in that.
Like nothing better than just seeing founders win and get joy in their life.
Yeah, so cool.
Awesome, man.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for coming out.
For those of my followers who don't know yet, where's the best place for them to go plug
in and see all the stuff you're doing?
Yeah, you can just find me, Matt Gray on any platform, YouTube, X, LinkedIn, Instagram,
all that and founderus at founderos.com.
Very cool.
Well, thank you, Matt, I appreciate it.
Thank you.
And we'll see you guys on the next episode.
Let's do it.
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