The Game with Alex Hormozi - Helping a Personal Stylist Scale Past $3M | Ep 811
Episode Date: January 24, 2025Want to scale your business? Click here.Welcome to The Game w/ Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormozi. On this podcast you’...ll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition
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We want to decrease the friction here for qualified people.
Right.
So there's good friction and bad friction.
So good friction is something that increases the overall quality of lead and gets out people who suck.
Bad friction gets everyone out.
A slow page load time, for example, everyone leaves.
Good people and bad people.
We want to get the type of friction that only bad people leave and good people stay.
And so if we have budget authority need timing, we have the specific things relative to the lead magnet,
then your follow up if you want like, hey, if you can send me a picture, be great.
If not, I can just go off of your Facebook profile or something like that.
Then they show up to the call.
You have your one of templates that you already figured out ahead of time.
That then sets up the sale.
This is Ashley.
She has a personal styling business.
She does about $300,000 a year.
And we're going to help her scale.
Hi, I'm Ashley Capps.
I'm founder of AC Styles.
So we are a professional wardrobe and personal styling service
that helps transform our client's confidence and save some time.
So revenue.
We make about 309,000 annually, 130,000 in profit.
That gives us about 42% in net margins.
So we've been in business for about four years,
and so far we've served over a thousand clients.
Thousand clients.
Yeah.
How'd you get a thousand in four years?
So that's over my whole career as a stylist.
So the business has been for, you've done a thousand yourself.
Awesome, super cool.
So who do you help specifically?
Right now, about 50-50 men and women, typically in their first,
40s, all the way to their mid-60s. These are folks that are stay-at-home moms. They could be frequent
flyers. They could be going up in their career into the C-suite. And it's those that really value
their time and really also value having expertise. Okay. Got it. So what do you do? How do you help
them? All right. So we transform our client's fashion style and confidence and also help save them time.
So we have two different phases in the way that we do things. So onboarding phase, phase one. So we do a
style assessment. So basically we establish baseline with their current style. So low style.
If you look terrible, like look at the mirror, you look horrible. Pretty much.
We establish baseline and then we show them where they can go. So once we show them where they can go,
that's when we go in, we gut the closet, we get rid of everything, and we get them into some new
outfits, looking, feeling good. And then from there, that's when we determine, you know,
just based on their lifestyle, does it make sense to work together on like a monthly level,
on a quarterly level.
And at that point, we have ongoing styling sessions.
We put lookbooks together.
Okay, cool.
And we have like an on-demand service as well.
Okay.
They can text us if like, oh, I got a hot day tonight.
If you will.
Pretty much.
All right.
So when you say you show what the future looks like,
is that just like here's a like looks of like other models
or something like that or like.
Yeah.
So it's putting together a style mood board.
And then we also, prior to that,
we say, hey, just based on your complexion,
here's the colors that are going to complement you.
And then based on your dimensions of your figure, here's like the silhouettes that are going to work best for you.
Oh, cool.
And then a big component of it is lifestyle.
Like, what are they doing on a day-to-day life?
Yeah.
And making sure that whatever they buy fits the life that they're living today and not just like, oh, that looks really cool on a mannequin.
How do you make money?
Important question.
Yeah.
So, onboarding package that I mentioned, $8,500.
That's over the course of 60 days.
Then it goes into either monthly at 2K a month or quarterly at 4K a month.
or quarterly at 4,500 a quarter.
And then right now we also make about 10% of our revenue
from commission from clothes.
We get about 10% margins from the vendors that we work with.
Okay.
And right now, we just actually focused on having just this luxury tier.
In the past, we had two different tiers
and we focused more on one time.
And you realize you make more money on the luxury tier,
so you do more of that?
Yeah.
Love it.
So how do you get the customers?
Where do you find them?
So right now we're doing AdWords.
We're spending about 300 months with Google,
and then we're also spending about 300 a month with Thumbtack.
We also partner, we have affiliates
with other luxury-like services,
like matchmakers and things like that.
We host events, and then also, of course, client referrals.
Do you know what percentage of customers
come from each of this, roughly?
So, yeah, about-
If you don't know, worries.
Four are coming from affiliates.
Okay.
I think about a third is coming from the other two,
and then a third.
it is coming from referrals so kind of like evenly split between referrals would you consider
affiliates referrals or now um no I kind of segment those out okay so referrals is one
affiliates is another than paid ads between Thumbtack and Google yeah okay cool um okay so
how many people do you sell a month right now we're looking at about 12 total leads
eight appointments 100% show for those appointments total sales four so close rates 50%
show rates 100% 40 clients currently and one churned in the last year okay
So you still, so these 40 clients still pay you monthly?
These are active?
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
So they're coming in from different timelines.
So some are monthly, some are quarterly, some are annually, just from different package
testing.
Okay.
So we're going to probably talk about that in a second.
The 40 clients thing, because I think you probably have a big revenue opportunity there.
So what's the goal?
What do you want to do?
All right.
So, you know, just the easy 5 million revenue.
Why not?
And really, I think what we can do is because it's easy for me to get stylists,
to train them, is to build like an education component.
Just like a totally different business.
I know.
Yeah.
But have stylists in major metros.
Okay.
So have stylists in other metros and then the long term is to be able to create a training
program for them.
Like super long term.
Like super, super long term.
Like next lifetime.
Oh.
I'm just messing with you.
But fundamentally for this business, the goal is $5 million doing what you currently do or a scaled
up version of what you do.
Is that correct? Okay.
And in other major metros.
Yeah, yeah. No, that's cool. That makes sense.
What's the problem? What's getting in your way?
Leads.
Okay.
We need lead flow. We need more of them consistently, and we need more at-bats.
So that's really what it is.
And also, I haven't been able to be as consistent with content creation, and I think there's
opportunity missed there.
Okay. All right, so show me the numbers.
So 309 in total revenue, 130 in profit, 42% net margin.
Blended cack of 600.
LTV is 10K annually, so that gives us a 16 to 1 LTV to CAC ratio.
600 in marketing spend, show rates 100%, close rate, 50.
Okay, got it.
There you go.
Okay, so Google, we're looking at $3,400 for the year for 2024.
Costs per click, $1.89.
Total clicks, $1,800.
Do you know what words you're bidding for?
Yeah, so like personal stylist near me, Los Angeles personal sales.
Do you have prices on the site?
What do you-
When they click, where they click,
does it show your prices?
Or is it just like an opt-in page?
I do not show prices.
Okay, is it just like an opt-in page?
It's just an opt-in page.
Do you know how many leads you get from this source?
I know you get eight sales, right?
Oh, how many leads?
Yeah, and I'll tell you why I'm asking.
I'm asking because when I see 1800 clicks, I'm like,
that's a lot of clicks.
So your cost-per clicks, great.
Yeah.
And so I'd be like, okay, and especially with intent-based search
rather than interruption-based marketing,
like social media ads,
it's like interruption,
looking for a stylist you see an ad then you click versus like I am looking for a
stylus and intent-based click is usually much higher quality I would be surprised
if you were getting I mean unless there was a massive mismatch in terms of what
you're asking people to opt in for between 1800 clicks I would guess you're
getting somewhere there but at least you know 250 to 500 opt-ins that would come
does that sound is it is that so 250 just for context so divided by 12 so you
be looking at what is that 20 a month
month-ish. Okay. Does that sound realistic or does it sound like less than that? Well, so that right now
that's leads. Yeah. The funnel is they, it's just like book a call and I think that that's,
straight to book a call is the opt-in. Okay. So I think that that's, there a video. That's being
implemented right now. Okay. Okay. But I think that that's the big problem. It's just like, hey,
and you don't give them right now. And you don't give them anything, right? There's no reason for them
to opt-in. All right, we're going to make you so much money. It's a lot of fun. Yeah. Nice thing is like
So these, yeah, it'll be fun. Okay. So despite like basically no incentive for someone to actually
book a call, you're still making eight sales. And so I think that what's happening right now is that like
the show up rate and the close rates you have are, like, you're just basically skimming the absolute
people who are like are in such a dire pain. And they don't, and you don't know them because
they're coming from ads, right? Right. Right. Like if you're in that situation, then like,
this may sound exciting for you, but like you could probably five to 10 X the sales of the business just
by fixing this.
Like we can do nothing else and you could just do that.
Just the phone.
So we'll get into that in a second.
But okay, the good news is that even with the massive amount of inefficiency that's there,
your LTVD CAQ is so really strong.
So it's really good and I think we're just losing it.
We're just leaking a lot in this process.
Okay, show me the thumb tech one.
Okay.
Also people that are in pain right now because they know that they're searching for it.
Yeah.
So 6K total spend.
So we have leads here.
Okay.
58 leads, 38 bucks a lead, total sales eight.
CAQ 750, same LTV.
Okay.
Thing is,
Thumbtack is like 90 to 95% unqualified in terms of purchasing power.
So we were able to, you know, rank higher for SEO.
Okay.
Through this page.
Uh-huh.
Through your Thumbtack page that you then pay extra to promote.
Yeah.
On Thumbtack.
Okay, cool.
Got it.
I mean, $38 at least not bad, given the price point that you have.
Right.
But the issue is that they are unqualified.
And so the nice thing here is that it might just be changing the headline of whatever the page that you're promoting is.
And again, adding some qualifications to the lead form so that you can immediately see.
So like underneath of this as you get like, I'd say more advanced, there's total leads.
And then you'll have something called MQLs and SQL.
So MQL will be marketing qualified leads and then sales qualified leads.
And so an MQL is like, okay, in order for somebody to be an MQL, they must meet these requirements.
So it's like I got 158 opt-ins of the 158 opt-ins.
50 of them have an income above $100,000 a year or are, you know, a man with a corporate job.
Like we have to just figure out with the fewest basic benchmarks.
The fewest, yeah.
And we'll cover that.
So do you actually do have a minimum income requirement?
So I would say for this new model, a million.
A year in income?
Yeah.
Okay.
So yeah.
So this is definitely a top 1% 1% 1%?
Because 8,500 plus.
Plus, what is, like it's about 25K all in for the service.
The other, the thing is they have to have money for the clothes as well.
Yeah.
So you're looking at about a 40, 50K, well, let's just even say 25K year spend and clothes.
Average Joe Schmo cannot do that.
And then is there a specific like life event or something that happens that triggers people
into like getting into this buying cycle?
Yeah, so it is typically a transition moment.
I had a baby.
My body has changed, none of my clothes fit.
That's for women.
I got divorced, both men and women.
Or I'm just, I'm getting, I want to start dating, period.
My image doesn't match my status as a C-level person or even VP.
Yeah.
So that, those are, those are the typical triggers.
Okay.
Yeah.
I feel triggered.
No, you're good.
Okay, so that's the thumb-dack data.
Is that the last slide?
Oh, there's a bonus.
Is it for later?
Any other numbers, questions?
Well, I have already a handful of ideas around what we can do.
Tell me more about the affiliate side, the match, because I get both of these, I understand
the referral side, I understand both your paid acquisition parts.
I think the continuity is lacking.
We can work on that.
I think whether there's inefficiency ad funnel, we'll talk about that.
But I think affiliates is kind of the last piece before we dive into figuring out what we're
going to do.
Okay.
So affiliates, that's what you're asking.
Basically, it's just like a lead pass-through.
So they make the introduction, and we offer a complementary style assessment
to help them get their dating profiles ready.
And it's really just a glorified sales call.
Okay.
Yeah.
And so you have these, how many matchmakers do you have who refer you customers on a regular basis?
So combination of private social club and matchmakers, we have about six.
Okay.
How did you find them?
Googling them and reaching out to them. But you reach out and did it that way? And what percentage
did they send you? What's that? What percentage of your business is, do those six kind of
affiliates send you? So as of this year, it's about a third.
Ooh. Hmm. Yeah. Interesting. Okay, cool. It's because it's like very aligned audiences.
They're literally already buying the types of services related to what you want.
Yeah, pretty much.
Yeah, I feel like I'm pretty clear on what you said.
Okay, yeah.
Probably very simple for you.
No, no, it's good.
No, this is great.
So you want to make $5 million, right?
Yeah.
And we're at 300.
So that's a 17x from where you're currently at, right?
If we were to just triple and get to a million this year, would you be okay with that?
Totally down.
Cool.
Because then going from a triple to a 5x from there is like a little bit, I think, I think.
Because the thing is the business will usually change.
There's something called the Chinese rule of three.
and 10, which fundamentally just means the systems break when they triple.
And so I like to think in triples in terms of, unless there's some massive order of
magnitude change that we can do.
But the things that we have right now, a handful of these are triples independently.
First thing I want to talk about is going to be the avatar, is getting clarity on who you are
going to serve because right now you serve a lot of people.
Not to see that this is a bad thing, but I think over time we are going to get narrower
so that we can make our value proposition a little bit more compelling for them.
Okay.
The next is going to be paid ads funnel, which we're going to look at the pages.
And we're going to look at the offers so that we can see, okay, can we tweak something?
We add a lead magnet here that would get the right people and ward off the bad ones.
And is there kind of some process things that we can do that just will stop the leakage.
The third piece is still acquisitions.
It'll be affiliates that I want to cover.
And then the fourth, what I want to hit on is continuity.
And so those are the big four that I want to hit on.
We can talk about the corporate thing that you mentioned in between.
My initial gut reaction is not yet.
But because the thing is, if we can get to a million, we can probably give them the things that I think that we're going to
uncover here, you could probably get to like two-ish, two to three, just from some of the single
we'll show you in a second. Cool. Okay. Then maybe you get to there, you're at three,
you might be like, wow, what if I just kept doing this? Yeah. Rather than the other thing.
Okay, so Avatar Clarity. Do you have any idea if there are some customers that are like,
way better than others or that you enjoy working with more? Like, what's your dream customer?
Who are the people who spend the most money with you that you help the most? Can I just like ramble
off who they are? Okay. So stay at home mom. Okay. Frequent travel.
kids with many social events.
Mom, who has kids with many social events?
Yeah. Okay.
Like one daughter just got married,
son is having a baby, that kind of thing.
So usually mom, so it's mom, right?
So there's kids, obviously, because it's a mom.
Okay, got it.
There's a few of these women.
Plus money, got it.
And they just want to have new outfits
for all of their trips to socialites.
Socialites.
Okay, got it.
But private, not public people.
Yeah, yeah, I understand.
Okay, so mom socialites.
Is that the number one, your favorite?
avatar and then men CEOs okay by percentage of revenue is it 50-50 yeah it is
interesting okay see oh man huh do you ever get cross-sells CEO men gets wife wife
starts or husband starts typically wife starts interesting okay that's that's
split okay okay this is good this is good for me to know for now okay now now now
Dad's photo. First thing that we can do on this one is, and obviously this isn't, I mean, you could,
okay, there's a lot of things here. But wherever you're driving your traffic to, so whether it's
the homepage or it's this page, you should probably have some big lead magnet that people are
going to want. I would imagine that what's something that somebody like that would want a lot.
So that's been my thing after reading offers and thinking about a lead magnet. It's like what appeals
to these people and they don't want to sit there and get a checklist of how to go through their
closet themselves. So the only thing I could think of, and this isn't very
scalable, is the complementary style assessment. But that's one-on-one with
somebody. And that's okay though, because I mean you're still getting them to
more of them too often. But right now is the assessment the thing that they're
booking on the Google ads page today? It's just a call. Okay. So it's not
being positioned as that. So for like the the the 1.0 version is style
assessment is what you can basically promise them
on the landing page.
But I was thinking more something like really tactical,
like the perfect outfit for you,
like one perfect outfit or something to match their skin type,
like your idea of colors.
Like that would be a cool one.
Because like that doesn't,
you don't have to like put a whole thing together.
It's just like, oh, this skin cone,
you know there's like 10 tones
and you just pick the one that's appropriate for them.
Yeah.
Okay.
So we were going to do that next.
And also something else.
We were going to do the one perfect outfit,
but it's kind of so nuanced.
But then we were thinking, okay, what if we just share with them,
hey, here's how, what are some of the steps
that they do to prepare to, if they were to work with us?
How are they invested?
So we're thinking, like taking their measurements,
having them do some of these steps, like creating a mood board themselves.
So we want them, so for a lead magnet to be really valuable,
we want it to be risk-free, easy, and fast.
And so those things require effort.
And so we don't want the avatar to work.
to work to get the value.
We want them to just click and get the value.
And so I think what we think about is like,
I think this is actually really interesting.
This is just me personally, so maybe I'm a CEO man.
But it's like there are some skin tones,
that combination, basically it's like,
you have a combination of hair and skin tone and eye color
that is unique to you.
And between all these different permutations,
there's 100 different variations people can have
and they have a different color palette
that would be unique to them.
Now, you'll know behind the scenes
that there's probably like eight different,
you know, color style or whatever.
I think either doing color, because that feels like the easiest, one degree more nuanced and that would be a specific style, being like, you know what I'm saying.
Like, you know that better than me.
Professional, casual.
Yeah, exactly.
And so I think that this is like, you could do this tomorrow.
I don't have to change anything just by repositioning a lead magnet.
But I think this one would be really attractive, especially if you, like when you push them there, I would experiment with the different headlines there.
And then we need to measure the conversion rate of the page.
I know that you've turned them down.
The interesting thing here is like 1,800 clicks, I think we could be able to get somewhere
in the neighborhood of like, if we're doing this right, like 500 leads from that amount of
spend.
Oh.
And just if literally we just need to nail this.
Because on a Google ad intent, like high intent search like this, you should be able to get like 30% of people to opt in.
So from a benchmark perspective.
To this.
To something that is right for this audience.
So if someone's looking for personal stylist near me or personal stylist L.A.,
then it's like what is the first piece.
And like I always think about like our offer is you've got all these steps that
someone has to take.
Can I peel off the first one?
Even though it's something that I normally charge for, what's my actual cost?
It's going to be time.
Can I template some of these things out so that I can still provide a lot of value but not
have it take too much of my personal time?
And the cool thing with these like kind of like more costly or unscalable lead magnets is
that you only have to give it to people who are qualified.
So you are not obligated to like you can choose to do this only if someone who meets these
qualifications and you just say that in the landing page.
Okay. So it's like, hey, if you're a mom with kids and a socialite or you're a
CEO guy and you're not getting what you want, then schedule one of our style assessments
where we'll go through personally your skin tone, your hair color, your eye color, and
find the things that will immediately make you look better just within your existing closet.
Okay.
Because that's like, again, they don't have to do anything and they'll immediately look better.
That's like immediate value, not a lot of work.
Okay.
So I'll be like, okay, that's what we're going to offer.
So now I can get more people to apply.
Now they're going to fill out their stuff and again, if they're not quite,
qualify that it's like well you didn't read the headlines so don't worry about it so you don't feel like you're and then for them I would probably just send them some free things so they feel you know they still gave them something but that would be like the thing that I would do to improve the funnel right off the bat without really even seeing the funnel is a clear headline around what they're going to get subheadline is either an image of like almost like a before and after of style or some sort of image that shows you know white skin brown hair don't do this okay and then they're like oh shoot
I do that.
And so just like a simple thing that they're like,
shoot, I do that.
And then they're like, oh my God, I need help.
And so all we're doing is increasing deprivation
so that they take the next action.
Okay.
So that would be the lead magnet component
that I would do for these paid ads.
Now, I think that you have the scheduler.
So they apply it, then they schedule.
Then what's the follow-up sequence?
Like, how do you, like?
Because there are so few,
I just manually say, hey, and I try to like.
Do you read jobs them?
but they self-schedule on the page, right?
Well, that's if they apply for more information.
If they schedule the call, then I send them,
hey, here's our services, looking forward to speaking with you.
Got it.
So I know you're going to put the video together.
There's the video before the call that gets them to book,
and then I would probably consider sending them a second video
between booking and showing.
And then that does a little bit of the pre-sale for you.
and I think about this in terms of like,
what are those things that you repeat on a regular basis on the call?
So there's usually like, in every call,
there's kind of like a little bit of a sales pitch that occurs
where you're like, okay, so let me tell you about what we do.
I just try to put as much of that before the call
so that I can spend the majority of the call on the person,
the decision-making process,
rather than basically have this like pre-recorded script
that I have to keep reading over it because it tires out you,
tires out your sales team eventually.
That's how I would try to do it.
Okay.
I think that if we can do the lead magnet,
we can capture way more leads,
I think if we add the video to the landing page.
So do you think it makes sense to put the pricing?
No.
No, I don't think so.
I think that if we ask for qualifications and we describe the services,
that'll give us 80%.
And then basically you just want to find it.
Because the thing is, you don't want to just,
because there's some people who will be in,
who have a smaller income, but really want this.
Yeah.
And so it's finding kind of that sweet spot,
which is like, if someone then says like,
I want to start immediately, I'm super open and their budget's like medium,
then you probably take the call, right?
If they're like, my budget's zero,
then like, okay.
well, it doesn't matter how mad do you want it, it's not going to work, right?
I think that on your qualification question, which you'll have on your scheduler,
we just ask for the fewest amount of questions that are required for us to make the decision
of whether or not they should stay or not.
What would you, so the way I would think through this is that I'm going to have like 10
templates that I know they're color palettes that work for these 10, you know,
characteristic of people.
And if I have asked their skin, hair, whatever, up front, then I know what I'm going
into the call, which template I'm going to be using when I talk to them.
So it's like, hey, oh, you're a blah, blah, blah, blah.
Actually, you know what, I would describe you more as olive than, you.
white, and I think this might actually be a better thing for you.
Cool, okay, and then you go into your normal sales process,
which obviously works.
I don't even want to talk about sales care of closing,
50%.
Okay.
Does that make sense?
I want to make sure you get it.
Well, I just want to make sure that they,
because right now it's like book a sales call, basically,
and that's like obvious what I'm speaking about.
But then this feels like, oh, just have a call about skin tone.
Well, this is sales.
Yeah, and then it's not an issue
because they're already qualified.
You're only taking the calls of people who have the income.
Right.
That makes sense?
Yeah.
So you're going to take more calls.
You're also going to hear more nose, but you're going to make more money.
Hey guys, real quick.
This podcast only grows from word of mouth, quite literally.
There's no other way to grow a podcast than word of mouth.
If there's some element of this that you think somebody else should hear or be relevant
to them, it would mean the world to me if you shared this via text, via Instagram, via DM,
feel whatever way you like to share stuff with the people you love.
Thank you.
Like fundamentally, I could just say, like, I could run an ad that just said,
hey, I have this really expensive thing, book here if you want it, and this is the price.
And the people who hop on those calls will be incredibly qualified.
But if I just said, I have this really free, amazing thing that I'll help you with the first
problem, let me help you with that.
And then people are like, oh, but do you do any of, ah, you know what, I do do that stuff.
It's so funny you ask, and I get 10 times the calls.
And so if I close 30% of a 10x number, I still close three times the deals.
Okay.
So that makes sense.
Yeah.
And so there's a little bit, now part of it is because you're selling out of your own wallet
in terms of time.
Yeah.
And so it's because you're like, I have my time and I understand that.
But all we have to do is just tweak these things.
If you have somebody who you have the information about them, you have the income.
I mean, I can really just train somebody to just do it live.
As many things as possible you can do.
Like, we want to decrease the friction here for qualified people.
Right.
So there's good friction and bad friction.
So good friction is something that increases the overall quality of lead and gets out people who suck.
Bad friction gets everyone out.
a slow page load time, for example, everyone leaves, good people and bad people
people. We want to get the type of friction that only bad people leave and good people stay.
And so if we have budget authority need timing, we have the specific things relative to the lead
magnet, then your follow-up if you want like, hey, if you can send me a picture, it'd be great.
If not, I can just go off of your Facebook profile, something like that.
Then they show up to the call. You have your one of templates that you already figured
out ahead of time. That then sets up the sale, which is for you, it's like, oh, you don't
have this, this, this, this, and this. All we're doing is expanding the gap of like,
you're here, you're missing all this stuff. Oh, you know what? So,
funny. I think it'd be perfect fit for we have. Can I tell you about it? And then you're in.
Got it. Does that make sense? Yeah. Okay. So, um, this is what I would do to change the paid ads funnel.
Um, and I think this will probably apply for both Thumbtack. And can you spend more on this?
Yeah. Well, I'm like, dude, if you, if I had a machine in front of me where you, and this is
without you doing any of this, that's the crazy thing. That's without you doing any of those.
Right. So if I said, okay, um, instead of paying $3,400 a year, what if we paid like,
$3,400 a month.
Yeah.
Well, that would 12 extra business.
That would be chill.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, it beats the S&P 500
where you put a dollar in
and get $23 back
within the next week.
It's not bad.
Right.
So the next thing that I want to go over
is the affiliates,
because I think that's really important.
And you would not touch Facebook ads.
Well, you already have an acquisition channel
that's working and super profitable,
so I'm less likely to want to do that now.
Okay.
So, because you can spend more if you wanted to.
All right, let's talk about affiliates.
So matchmakers.
Yes.
Okay.
So you have.
have six matchmakers right now. Four matchmakers, two private clubs. Okay, so I'll go. I mean,
whatever. It doesn't matter. Yeah, you're good. Okay. So you got six affiliates. How much time did it
take you to get each of these affiliates? Not much time. Okay. And each of these sends you people
on a consistent basis. Yeah. What was the process that you did to integrate with them? I met with
the owner and explained. So you did outreach to get them? Manual outreach. Okay. Is it like phone calls,
text, email, DMs?
Email. Okay.
Manual outreach explained that we can offer a complimentary service their new clients.
Oh, cool.
And, you know, that we could close them.
Love this.
Almost like it's directly out of the affiliate section in the book.
And that's it.
And what percentage do you close to the people that you talked to?
That's been the hard part is like talking, getting them.
Okay.
Do you know how many outreach attempts you did to get to the six?
probably about 40.
Okay, and I want to paint something for it
because I think it's going to be interesting.
Okay, so you send 40 emails
and you were able to close six, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
Now, how much money do those six?
So it's a third of your revenue, right?
So it's $100,000 a year roughly.
Okay, so think about this.
So every one of these emails
you $2,500.
That feels like a pretty good turn.
Yeah.
For sending emails, probably copy and paste.
Right.
Hmm.
Hmm.
Do more of them.
I have a wild idea.
What if we sent 400 emails?
Yeah.
I don't even want to mess with the affiliate process that you have right now.
Yeah.
You're reaching out manually is obviously effective.
You sent out 40 emails, so I'd be like, okay, how do I send?
And that, like, if you did that for four hours every day.
Right.
I mean, you'd probably be able to send, even if you did them completely personalized, completely manual,
the way that you probably did.
You don't have to buy any software.
Like, you can just send the emails.
You'd be able to do that in, like, a week.
or two weeks. Do you want to spread it out? It's like not a lot. So 14 days, what's 400 to buy by 14?
You know, we'll give you, we'll give you, we'll give you the weekends off. So it's 40 emails a day.
40 emails a day. I'll give it to you in a month. How about that? So we'll do 20 emails a day.
That feels like, that's, that feels reasonable. Yeah. Okay, cool. Let's do that.
Best place to like pull.
Data? Good question. Because I think it's, it's, um, the matchmakers, but it's also could be executive coaches.
could be high-end fitness trainers, people going through a transformation, weight loss, weight
weight gain.
Yep, they need, yeah, for sure.
I would think about, I think you have these in segments, right?
And so you've got high-end trainers, high-end PTs, you've got exec coach, you've got the dating people, you've got, I'll give you one, divorce attorneys.
So that's four lists.
Now, the thing is, is that you can actually find all of these.
These ones you can find probably from Google.
this you can find also from search and Instagram
and there's also like list brokers
so you just like Google list broker
whatever city and then you can usually they'll have this
massive nationalist and then you can let it down to
a localized area
can you do any remote services?
Yeah we definitely
I'd say 50% up in like especially during
COVID we only work virtually
but I prefer
you prefer a person that's fine that's cool
okay so this obviously makes money
and doesn't require any financial risk.
Yeah.
And is also a compounding way of acquiring customers
because you did this work, think about this,
you sent 40 emails one time,
and then you got six people to send you business for good.
Not bad.
Now, what do you do to continue to reactivate them?
Host events.
Okay, so do you do events, okay?
So for the affiliates?
Yep.
Okay, cool.
I mean, like, especially for like the matchmakers,
they're happy because their clients are getting paid over.
they get better pictures, therefore they get better matches.
I love that.
Yeah.
Really good.
So I think, do you do that regularly like it's on a calendar?
Or it's just like, okay, good.
Because obviously that's part of it's work.
So normally one of the things that falls off with affiliates is that they don't stay activated,
they don't keep referring you.
And so you have to work them like customers.
Like it's another set of relationships.
But if you can put them all together an event on a regular cadence where like all of the dating
coaches bring all of their people and they all look good and they all get to meet
each other like that's value for everybody it hasn't quite turned out like that okay
but just like more one-off okay like hosting events with just one of them
company okay well so that works yeah yeah and I think if you do like one or two of
those a year or three of those a year I think that's like more than enough to keep the
right and I would I would try and figure out a way to put them in the same room just
because I think it'd be like I would be pitching on collaboration rather than
competition which is just like hey you have single people so do they maybe
that's true actually yeah they're all single
Yeah.
They're all single and obviously looking to mingle and trying to look for their best life.
Like, it would also be Desperation City.
But anyway, so that's the affiliate piece.
Okay.
And so in terms of lists, I would go list brokers and then I would sort social media and Google first.
That'd be like my first thing.
And then I would look at list brokers once I ran out of this.
Okay.
But between like these four sources, you need to send 400 emails.
It's not bad bad.
And then what's crazy is like if you send it and then they don't respond, you can send it again.
Next one's continuity.
So let's talk about that.
Okay.
So this is about increasing LTV.
So you already have pretty good LTV,
but I have this feeling like there's something
that we can do better.
Okay, so right now LTV is $10,000, right?
So walk me through, so if someone comes in,
so I come in, I'm CEO, $8,500, I pay you for my whole lookbook, et cetera.
Transformation, yep.
Okay, and so the delivery of that transformation
is like a look book primarily,
and then like, walk me through it a little more.
No, so this assessment,
figure out where we're going to go with your style,
your look, then going through,
your current closet, getting rid of all the old stuff.
So you actually go to their house?
Yes.
Okay.
Get rid of all the old stuff.
Reorganize the closet so that it works for their life.
Okay, so closet tear down.
Yep.
And then we document, we do an inventory of everything in their closet.
So that way when they text us or they say, hey, I'm going to Turk St.
Kikos, hey, great, pull this, pull this, and we can give it to their housekeeper or whatever.
Here's your packing list.
Okay.
Then we get new outfits, new clothes.
Right now our promise is about five to ten new outfits.
Okay.
We don't want to get the whole new wardrobe.
Right.
But, you know, enough to like, okay, I'm excited.
I feel good.
And then that's when we make the determination, okay,
does this make sense, given your lifestyle,
you travel all the time on a monthly level or a quarterly level?
Yeah.
Yeah, in terms of the continuity.
Yeah.
Well, do you have turn on the continuity?
Do a lot of people, so people stay and they keep paying?
If it's in front of these people,
not the one-time people,
these people they don't.
And what was the one time thing?
So it was priced at 3,500.
Uh-huh, and you just did this, but then didn't have anything else?
Yeah.
Okay.
And it was, it could be all virtually.
Okay.
Or it could just be like a one-day shopping.
It's way better to do in person.
It's a different relationship.
Yeah, yeah, no, I like that.
I'm a fan.
Okay.
So, and then the ongoing price point is what, on the back end?
2K per month.
Per month?
Or 4,500.
So $8,500 and then $2,000 per month.
So we should be at.
Now, I'm guessing that you have a lot of grandfathered people
of those 40 customers that are paying less than that.
Okay, what are they paying?
$1,500 monthly?
Yep.
For week or per month?
Month.
Okay, so it's like, wow.
Okay.
Summer on like 1,500 quarterly.
Okay, got it, got.
I'm guessing the majority of the number of 1,500 quarterly.
Yeah.
Okay, got it, because it's 500 bucks a month.
Because this just all transitioned in September.
Got it.
We only have like two people currently on the new system.
Okay.
So most people are at $1,500.
So if you have, call it 38 customers who are at,
I'm just going to say in general, right, $500 per month
because it's $1,500 per quarter.
I'm just looking at revenue.
Yeah.
Okay, because this now makes sense with the revenue that you're doing.
Okay, cool.
So the vast majority of the money is actually in a recurring revenue base.
That's not bad.
That's good.
Yeah.
That's really good.
And the churn's low, all that stuff's good.
I actually don't really want to mess with this that much
because you have a low churn.
What's the percentage people go from here to here?
Now that I've just said, hey, we're only working with you on a reoccurring basis, it's good.
The thing is, I'm almost wondering if I did you say that?
I'm almost wondering if we kill this and just do the quarterly, because this seems to be not most people.
Do you think that it's better to simplify things or just still keep it?
No, I think you can have it.
What happens is it serves as a price anchor.
Okay.
So even if only 10% of people take it, it increases the people who take that one.
Okay.
So I don't think it's actually a mistake that it's there.
Okay.
Because if you're like, because they have the reaction I did.
I'm like $6,000 a quarter.
Like, or just do $1,500.
Like, oh, no, that works.
I'll do the $1,500.
No, no, no.
It's $2K a month or $4,500 a quarter.
With this one.
Yes.
Okay.
So you're saying at the new price point, it's at this.
Okay.
But this is brand new.
And here you have all the retention that you have.
All people.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay.
But you haven't had any issue of sending people into that
into the $4,500 a quarter either.
I mean, the few.
that we've had, no.
But it's the same take rate.
Yeah.
Okay, yeah.
So I'm fine with quarterly billing.
Okay.
So if you have monthly and quarterly, that's fine.
Okay.
I'm good with that.
Yeah.
So if it's now $2,000 slash $4,500 per quarter.
But even if like 90% opt into this versus this, it's still.
Totally fine.
Totally fine.
That's great.
No big deal.
I feel comfortable with that, but I always let the market tell me.
So like, I just keep, I jig up the price until people stop saying yes.
And then I'm like, okay, that's about right.
And then you kind of back down a little bit.
And you're like, that's my price.
Now I know that for these.
for these types of people,
that's the number that they're willing to pay.
Unless we change the avatar,
the marketing, or the messaging,
that's gonna track these people
and they're willing to say us at that price.
Okay.
So from continuity perspective,
I don't think we changed that,
because then we just changed it.
So that stays the way it is,
I think the $8,500, I know LTV's $10,000,
but $8,500 for the tear down,
and then you have the quarterly.
And so this LTV that you have here
is probably gonna go up.
It'll just keep going up over time.
Right.
Okay, great.
So I mean, honestly, the actual business is strong.
Okay, so you have goodish marketing,
convergence, 42%, continuity has almost no turn, that's great, LTVACCAC strong.
And so the real leverage with this business is that we just need to do more.
Now you stopped spending money on ads, why?
Because we were adding the video and we're adding in the lead magnet.
You're fixing that stuff first, yeah.
Okay, cool.
So this is what we're gonna do.
Video sales letter plus lead magnet plus the Bant qualifications, so budget authority,
you need timing.
So that's number one.
So once we fix that, that's a conversion mechanism.
So then what I want you to do is increase your
spend and so currently you're spending 600 was it $300 a month so why don't we just go to
600 how much actually let me ask the question how many can you handle like how many more leads could
you handle than you currently are more like how many more like that convert into new clients
yeah well like how many calls basically it's a call thing so how many calls can you take
um you're currently taking 12 right something like that yeah easily could double or triple that
okay so let's go with uh 600 to 900 per month because sometimes the lead cost might go up a little bit
that's okay. Just like, so basically you might get a little bit less efficient, but that's fine
because you're still, you have really strong LTPACs, it's not a big deal. All right. Number three is we need
to send the 20 emails per day to affiliates. So this is a big three. And then I don't want to mess
with the continuity. So we had eight sales this year. So it's like one, like a little bit less than one a
month. Right. So I just wish I knew how many leads were coming from Google. I just really wish I knew
that number. And those eight sales, were those just like phone calls and closes? So 16 calls
created eight sales kind of thing? Yeah. Okay. And they weren't from the ads. They were from
search. Got it. But then they clicked on your ad. All right. So you'll fix the funnel.
Yep. You with the attribution of tracking in place, I think the funnel lift could very well,
like this is going to sound wild. This could somewhere in the neighborhood of like two to five X the
leaflet you have, just doing this, especially with a good lead magnet. Okay.
Now, the next piece is that each of your affiliates were a third of your revenue.
And if we were to 10x that, then we would 10x one third, which would be a triple.
And so the result of a 2X, a 2X and a 3x would be a 12x, which would take us from 300K per year to 3.6 million.
Yeah.
Okay.
Questions?
Yes.
One thing we didn't talk about is brand.
Okay.
Well, content creation.
Okay.
So I have like, I only bring this up because Ed was mentioning, like, I should consider transitioning the page from AC styles to Ashley Caps.
Okay.
And going more of the personal brand route as for like the big top funnel.
Or do you think that doesn't matter?
I mean, it's not doing anything right now because I haven't invested into it, but I was planning on investing.
Well, like your Instagram and like all that stuff.
Yeah.
Well, I see, I see your Instagram because yours is such a visual craft in terms of what you do.
that it makes sense to post,
I think it's like these things
just like will all immediately make you money.
I think that that's absolutely a long-term plan.
Think of it, this is like your paycheck,
this stuff like you do this,
you'll immediately make more money.
That is more like a 401K,
like an investment plan.
So it's like I'm going to put this money into this
and it's going to take time to snowball.
But over time it'll eventually become so big
that it'll be bigger than all this stuff.
But you'll have to measure that in like a couple years
more than a couple months.
So I'm all for it though to be clear
because what a lot of people don't know
is that like when you spend this money,
when you do these emails,
the first thing they're going to look at is your social media stuff.
And so I see that as like more lead nurturer.
And so like some that it's like the invisible hand
that all of a sudden like more people respond to emails.
Like one of the things I didn't realize like when I,
because we do outbound for our own stuff too
for like looking at deals and whatnot,
me having a personal brand just increase the response for me.
People are like, oh, I've seen your stuff.
Right.
Or they take a look and like,
oh, I've never heard of you,
but this stuff looks really interesting.
Yeah, I'll hop on a call, whatever.
And so that's kind of like,
it's a rising tie that lifts everything
in terms of how brand works.
But yeah, I think it's totally fun to do that.
I just want you to get obsessed with it.
I want you to just make sure that you spent
just basically block, I'd call it a half a day a week,
that you're like, I'm just going to do content this morning,
plan out my week, get the pieces that I want out,
and then like the rest of the week, you've got to run the business.
Run and focus on this.
Yep.
Now, the only reason why I was like nervous to transition it from Ashley
focusing on personal brand versus business brand
is because, you know, I was running into issue
in the beginning of like, oh, well, I'm not going to be working with you. I'm working with
somebody else. So that's the only reason why. I mean, that's not a big deal. That's like a one-line
overcome. All right, fine. So like if you go to Wells Fargo, you're not expecting Wells Fargo or
J.P. Morgan. You're not expecting J.P. Morgan. You go to Bain, McKinsey, B.C.G.'s
Boston Consulting. But like many professional firms, look at every law firm, Kurtz, Kurtz, and Wilde, or
whatever. Like, they, it's not uncommon for a business to be named after its founder and have many
people underneath of it.
So I wouldn't like, you know, Dyson.
Like there's just like so many brands are built off of the name of the founder
and it doesn't necessarily mean that you have to work with them.
If anything all it does is just allows you to have a premium on yours.
Right.
If you want to.
So it's more like you can price here.
And then if someone's like, well, I want to work with juice like, oh, I'm premium.
I only have a few private clients that I take on.
And the people who have super money will just pay whatever.
And then you can just add a zero to your price tag and make that yours.
Okay.
That makes sense?
Yeah.
But yeah, I think if you go AC versus Ashley Caps, I'm not.
You don't feel.
I'm okay either way.
I'm okay either way.
I mean, AC people probably know if it's actually Caps.
That's probably what it stands for.
You probably have the same issue now with AC.
Then you, then you, like, I don't think the name change is going to change anything.
Okay.
Yeah, but I do think branding personally is good idea.
Okay.
