The Game with Alex Hormozi - This Lead Magnet Strategy Will Increase Your Sales Conversions | Ep 881
Episode Date: July 7, 2025In this episode, Alex (@AlexHormozi) shares his strategy to generate more leads and convert them into paying customers without increasing your ad spend. This is a six-step process for building effecti...ve lead magnets. Alex looks at the psychology behind why they work and breaks down the types that drive real results. Why is it effective? Because it worked for him.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.Wanna scale your business? Click here.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | AcquisitionMentioned in this episode:Get access to the free $100M Scaling Roadmap at www.acquisition.com/roadmap
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What if I told you there are a way that you could get more leads than you're currently getting,
sell more of those leads overall without increasing any of your advertising at all?
And the strategy I'm going to share is something that most businesses don't do,
and the few businesses that do it, do it wrong.
And I'm going to show you exactly how to do it the right way in six steps.
Here's the best way I know to multiply the number of leads of businesses getting
without spending any more money on advertising in order to sell way more of those customers.
customers. And so most people send traffic to their website and immediately ask people to buy something
or just like submit for a quote. But here's the problem. Like most visitors aren't ready to buy yet.
And so they just leave and they never come back. I mean, if you think about it for you,
I often don't go to sites that I've just just finding out about where it says submit for quote.
I'm just like, that's a lot. Right. And so what I'm about to show you generated many millions of
dollars across our portfolio companies. And I've used it in every business we've invested in. And ones that I
haven't invested in. And so in this video, I'm going to show you what it is, why it matters,
and how to implement in your business. So what is it? So a few months back, I did a deep dive with
Ashley, who is a fashion personal stylist, right? And so when we went to her site,
she had the classic, you know, just book a call, right? CTA or just ask for a quote. But the thing
is, is that that really only works if you already have an informed audience. So if people already
know who you are, they've already gotten value from you, then you can for sure just say,
come buy my thing or come find out more, right? But if you're sending traffic there and you don't
have as much traffic or it's not as warm, then you want to have something that is a better reason
for them to give their contact information. Because if you think about like, what is the objective
of submit for a quote or book a call? The only objective of that step is to capture their
contact information. And then if you have a booking to get them to book automatically. But fundamentally,
it's a lead capture objective. And so we should then ask ourselves, well, is there anything else
we could do that would increase the likelihood that we would capture the lead as long as the way
that we're capturing the lead indicates that they'd be interested in buying our stuff right and so
to be clear what i'm suggesting is that you offer something kind of like a mini offer that's a
complete solution to a narrow problem and so it's typically lower cost or free just to see who's
interested in raises at their hand right and then once you solve the problem with that little
many offers it, it reveals another problem that's solved by your core offer. And this is important
because leads interested in lower cost or free offers now are more likely to buy a related higher
cost offer later. And if that sounded really well said, it's because I wrote it ahead of time
on page 31 in the leads book. And so I talk about this concept in the book at length. And it's because
so many businesses lack this. And I think part of it is because you can show that you have success if you just
say, hey, come buy my thing. But if you want to dramatically increase the number of customers that you have
access to, then if you have, like I said, you know, let's say you have 10 people that you say,
hey, or let's say 100 people. So you have 100 people and you say, hey, come buy my thing, right? Maybe you get
one of those people to raise their hand and say, yeah, I'll give you money. Here's my big bag of money.
Yay, right. I'll do that. But if we have those same 100 people and we say, hey, you don't have to buy
anything, I just want to help you out. And then after we help them out, we say, hey, now do you
want to buy something? Then all of a sudden, we're going to get that many people with our little
money sign, but we might get three to five times that amount of people. And that's where the real
magic is. And so the beauty of this is that you're actually not going to get more traffic. You're just
going to convert a higher percentage of it. And this is why it's such an easy strategy for businesses
to do, and you can do it immediately. You don't have to spend any more money on marketing.
It literally just drops to your bottom line. Like, if you improve conversion, you just make more money.
right so let me tell you the first time i had this big breakthrough for myself so at april of 2016
i paid you know 25 000 to be in this group and everybody there told me to do a webinar
and i did a webinar and it didn't work now to be clear so let's say the webinars that work i didn't
have the skill at the time to do one and so i saw this dude just scrolling on my feed that said free case
study on how i spent one dollar and made a hundred twenty thousand dollars in a weekend right so i saw
this case study and i was like huh and so when i when i opted in and watched it the guy just did a
screen recording of like how we did it. And I was like, well, that's pretty cool. I was like,
I could do that. Right. And so I swapped out my webinar for just a video with a headline that said
free case study, how we added 213 members to a gym and $112,000 in San Diego, right, to a small gym in
San Diego. And as soon as I did that, the next morning, Layla asked me, she's like, what did you do?
And I was like, what happened? And she was like, my calendar's full. I was like, really?
Like, I was surprised that she was like, yeah, she's like people. And so my lesson on that was like,
Because a webinar could be perceived as a lead magnet depending on how it's positioned.
The thing is, is that the more advanced your audience, the moral they'll probably understand
it's a sales pitch.
So the less likely it's to convert to a more business owner audience or a more sophisticated
audience.
But when I just said, hey, here's this thing.
Consume it on your own time.
Let me just show you what I did.
A lot of people were really interested in that.
And they were way more willing to exchange their content information.
And so even if, for example, you say, you know what, I am going to give up, you know,
a little lead magnet, if you will on the front end, if it doesn't work, it doesn't mean
lead magnets don't work. This means that that lead magnet didn't work. Just like the headline for an ad.
Doesn't mean ads don't work. It just means that that ad didn't work. And so this is why I'm actually
so adamant about testing the wrapping or the packaging of a lead magnet even more than the stuff
inside of it, right? Because you can change how many people want your lead magnet by 2,310x by simply
changing the headline of your lead magnet itself rather than changing any of the contents.
And so provided the contents do clearly solve a problem for the person, it's really just by how we
package it so that they want it. So here's why lead magnets work. So,
If you ever been to Costco, right, why do they have all these food samplers at the end of every aisle?
Right? On one level, you could say there's some level of reciprocity, but I don't know if that's the main reason people then go by if they have a piece of terriaki chicken.
It's because they try it and they're like, that's good. Maybe I'll have more of that.
And so there's a number of different types of lead mags that you can employ.
That where you give someone a tester is a small piece of something that's much bigger.
It's a sample or a trial, right? That's category one.
category two would be a one step in a multi-step process right so if i say hey we're going to turn your
style around like ashley does well the first thing you're going to need in that process is going to be
like some colors that we can say these go well with you and so that's the first thing but once you
have the colors you're like okay but i don't know what tops and bottoms and how do i do it formally
and informally it's like you're going to have other problems that are coming after that so you just
solve this very specific problem that then leads to other problems or the third is what i would
is considered the assessment, the revealing of a problem, right? And the easiest example I can think of
is, hey, free website speed test and someone does the test and they realize that their website speed is
slow, in which case, your core offer is how to fix it. Right. And so any of these three things or
combinations of them can be a really effective lead magnet. So what we're changing is going from asking,
hey, just buy my thing to do you want this free thing? And so then once they've consumed it,
you can just say, hey, did you like the free thing? Then if you did, you're going to love this
paid thing. Because now you have their content info. And the main reason that this works is because
when someone pays with time now, they're more likely to pay with money later. And so we want them
to invest, but we just want to make them have an easier investment first, a lower barrier investment
so that it increases the likelihood they make a higher investment later. And again, for this,
you were like, man, lead magnets don't work. Now they do. They totally do. They totally.
do bad lead magnets don't work. And the problem is when you're starting out, you just don't know
that you suck. And so then you think this didn't work. So kind of like the example I gave with webinars,
webinars totally work. It was just I didn't have the skill to make a webinar work. I had the skill to make a lead
magnet. And so much easier skill to just say, hey, let me screen record and show you how I ran this
campaign. And these are the results. Not very difficult for me to do. Trying to figure out this magical
box of like how to get these people to show and then how to do this whole razzle dazzle to get someone to
take out the credit card and buy it. It was like, oh my God, this is impossible. But just getting
some to opt-in so I can just call them up and say, hey, how'd you like that thing? Do you want me to do
that thing at your place? And I'll give you a risk-free offer. So if I don't perform, we don't have
to pay. Not that tough, right? At least significantly easier than what I was trying before.
And so you're like, okay, well, maybe you're half sold on this. Because right now,
if you don't have one of these, you were making less money than you otherwise could.
And you're making less money than you otherwise could because you're getting fewer leave than you
otherwise could get. Now, some of you may be like, well, I don't want freebie seekers and tire kickers.
Okay. Well, guess what? You don't have to give the lead mags to everybody. You can only give to people who are qualified.
Crazy. You just add a drop-down that makes somebody qualified and then redirect the people who are qualified to the good thing and directs people who are not qualified to the other thing that they might be qualified for.
Now, what other objections did you have around this? Well, yeah, I don't want freebie seekers. Well, we can qualify the leads.
Duh. Well, I don't want to give away too much value. This is a real thing. Sort of.
So we don't want to solve the problem our core product solves with the free thing.
That should seem obvious.
But we do absolutely want to solve a problem that leads to our core issue.
And so, let's see if I can think of a different example besides what I always use because that was just such a good example.
Basically, we want to make sure that the person is deprived of the thing that we sell and that that deprivation is triggered by solving the first issue.
Now, that sounds super complicated.
But if you go to a restaurant and eat a big entree and that after you eat the entree, they say,
hey, do you want another entree?
You might say no.
Not because the first thing was bad, but because you already satisfied that need.
Real quick, guys, I have a special, special gift for you for being loyal listeners of the podcast.
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It's breaking scaling into 10 stages and across all eight functions of the business.
So you've got marketing, you've got sales, you've got product, you got customer success,
you've got IT, you've got recruiting, you've got HR, you've got finance.
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Once you enter the questions, it will tell you exactly where you're at and what you need to do to grow.
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down so that you only have to watch the part that's relevant to you, which will probably
be about 90 minutes. And so if that's at all interesting, you can go to acquisition.com
forward slash roadmap, R-O-A-D map, roadmap. And so what you might not have sat aside
was your dessert desire. And so at that point, they could sell you the dessert. Now, in a business,
we would just want the dessert to be significantly more expensive than the entree,
and the entree would be able to give away for free or at cost. And so that's the big misunderstanding
that people have is you want to sell at the point of greatest deprivation.
When someone hasn't drank water in a while, that's when you want to sell them the water, right?
But the moment after you give them the water is no indication of whether your water was good or not.
They're just not thirsty anymore.
But maybe after they're thirsty, they want some food.
And so at that point, you would then sell the food.
So you might be thinking, all right, I get it.
And give away something up front and hope that people will likely buy after.
Got it.
But what do I actually give away?
So I briefly touch on those three.
Let's dive into them in more detail.
so you can actually do this. All right. So type one is reveal a problem. All right. I personally
love these type of lead magnets. Like if you ever have the opportunity to build one of these for your
business, like exceptional. It literally creates deprivation. So you just say, hey, here's a problem
that you didn't know existed or you knew it existed. Let me tell you how bad it is. Right. And so just
immediately you just increase the deprivation of where they are versus where they could be. Now,
bonus points for not only saying you have a problem, but also saying this is what,
it could look like if you had it solved. And here's the delta. And so my favorite B2B example is the
website example I gave, which is, you know, if I'm offering free, you know, free website speed test to business
owners and they didn't know their site was slow. And then I say, hey, on average, for every second of
load time, you lose 3% of your conversion. And so right now, we know that our services could take you
from a 9 second load time to a 3 second load time. That's 18% increase. So what could you do with an
increase of 18% of your business? They might be like a lot. And I'd be like, now, relative
to your revenue, the 18% increase compared to what I'm charging for websites is nothing.
How soon do you want me to start? And so this works great for problems that get worse while waiting,
right? Posture analysis, right? If you're like, oh, man, your posture's bad, but it's only
going to get worse, right? Termite inspections, like they're already active, but it's only going to get
worse. Financial audits. Hey, you're back on taxes or your cash flow is bad. It's only going to get
worse, right? Is that you want to have things because that builds in urgency. So the deprivation actually
increases with every second after they find out. I'll give you an example. So one of my highest converting
ads of all time for Allen, our software company, was four reasons while you'll never have a million
dollar agency. And what was crazy about that is just increased deprivation for the outcome that
most of the people wanted, who we were selling to, which are small S&B lead gen agencies. And so once we
listed out the reasons, many of them were like, shoot, all four of these reasons I'm also suffering from.
And so if you can be very clear about the reasons that they're not going to achieve it, they
also will assume that you can help them solve it, which hopefully you can't. And so you're going to be
incredibly specific on the negatives. And then what that allows you to do is be significantly vaguer
on the positives, which allows you to market more compliant, but also set more realistic expectations.
If I can perfectly nail all the problems in your life and you're like, oh my God, this is me.
I can just, and I just said, I can help you with that. You'd probably be like, yeah, I believe you.
Right. Rather than trying to increase and promise and set these crazy expectations, just nail someone
where they're at. And so that's why the reveal a problem is so important because,
One, it exacerbates the existing problem.
And two, you just show how much it's going to continue to increase and they will lose over time.
That increases deprivation for sale.
The second is a free trial.
This is the classic taste test.
This is the classic try before you bought.
Now, this is as old as time.
And I think that there are better and worse ways to do this.
My next book talks about amazing ways to do free trials.
But for the purpose of this, I'll just keep it on the lead magnet component.
This is the Costco sample.
This is the terriaki chicken.
This is the trying room.
you will at the clothing store. So many businesses have free trials. And they do that because they're the
lowest barrier. Like, are you going to want it? And so what we actually have to do here, and this is where it
gets a little bit interesting, is that we want to give them something and then basically have a
full loop to the end of the trial where they will be deprived if we remove it. So it's almost like,
hey, let me like, let's say we take a normal person. And then we say, hey, here's crack cocaine. Right. All of a sudden,
they might not have had deprivation around crack cocaine, but let's say they try crack cocaine.
And then as soon as you remove crack cocaine, all of a sudden they want crack cocaine.
And let's see how many times I can say crack cocaine.
All right.
And so the point here is that the free trial just makes the barrier so low that people can try something.
And then the idea of us removing it is what then gets them to convert.
So it's like we give them the solution and then take the solution away in order to create the deprivation to get them.
to buy, right? And so typically here, you're going to be limiting some aspect of the product or
service. You're going to limit the number of uses, the quantity, the time, or some combination of those.
So it's an X day trial or you get this number of hits, if you will, and all of those things kind of
combined. And sometimes you can combine them together to make it even more compelling. So when we own
gym launch, one of the things that we would do in order to get people to basically roll into our higher
level services is that they would, you know, basically buy the system that we had for monetization,
and more profitable. But then along that time, we'd say, hey, we'll actually give you agency services
for free for four months. And then after that four month period, once they were kind of like,
okay, wow, this is great. I get these leads and I have a system for monetizing them. After that point
in time, you're like, well, I still want leads. And we'd be like, yeah, but now you can pay for them.
Right. And so it's basically a built-in upsell on the back end because they'd had four months of
getting used to having this leads just dropped into their doorstep. And so that created the deprivation
where at the end, they're like, well, I want that to keep happening. Right. So that's the second one.
The third one is one of my favorites personally, which is the one step of many, right?
One step of a multi-step process.
And so this is particularly effective when you have more complex products and services.
Classic examples, like if you have multiple coats of paint that you're going to be putting
on a garage, you could sell the first one.
It's like, well, you're going to need these other ones, right?
A classic one would be like if you're doing hair removal for like laser hair for, you know,
a med spa.
It's like, well, it takes six to eight sessions to actually get completely removed.
And so you doing one session is kind of worthless on its own.
So when someone comes in, they come in for one and then you upsell the rest of them, right?
If you give the first two videos away and a comprehensive course, those are things that would also function the same way.
One step of many, right?
And so hopefully now you know what a lead magnet is, why is important, and the three types of lean magnets that work.
And so now how do you actually deliver it?
Real quick, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You guys are awesome.
This podcast continues to grow.
We had our highest month ever last month.
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heart, there's somebody who could use this, then please send it. Lots of love. Enjoy the rest of the
podcast. And so there's four ways to deliver a lead magnet. So number one is software or tools, right?
you give them a tool that they can use that does a job for them right and so examples of these are like
spreadsheet that calculate things assessment tools templates or just like software itself so i'll give you a
good example so neil patel has a really awesome one on his site where he basically has a little tool that
you put in your URL and then it tells you you know it does a little assessment of the site based on the
URL that you give it right it's a little tool and then obviously on the back end it can collect your
information right and so there's tons of these examples but that is one of the most classic
one. So if you have ways that you can say, hey, you're going to be in one of these four categories.
And so you answer this information, you want some sort of tool that that can assess or give them some
sort of answer to a question, right, or does a job for them. All of these things are ways to fulfill
the other three things. Like you can use software to reveal a problem. You can use software to do
a free trial or you can use software to be one step of many. All of those things work.
Now, the second is information. All right. Now, this is a very classic one and it's because it
costs nothing to do and can also be very valuable. This is where I think information is really
exceptional as a lead magnet is because it's infinitely scalable. It provides tremendous value.
You can create deprivation and there's basically no operational drag to do it. Fundamentally,
all we're doing is teaching them something valuable. And so examples of this would be like
mini courses, guides, interviews with experts. And again, templates, but that are not a dynamic.
Templates that just work. I'll give you my classic example here is my scaling road map.
So this is maybe a combination of the tool and the information. So you go through the tool and
then it gives you the assessment, which will then be information. But again, these are not static
concepts like you can combine them. And so, for example, if you would like to figure out what stage
of scaling you're currently at, the problems you're dealing with right now and exactly how to solve
them, we created this $100 million scaling roadmap after studying all the businesses that we looked
at for 200 plus hours to find those common themes. And so this is my free gift to you. You can enter
information. And if you want my team to actually look at your business, you can book a one-on-one call
where we'll help and then we'll invite you out here if it makes sense for you to come out to
our headquarters. So you can go through mine as an example.
And I think it's pretty good. It's not pretty good. It's fucking awesome. We spent really a lot of time on it and you will get a lot of value from it.
So with that being said, that leads me to the third way of delivering this is services. Now, I think that people sleep on this so hard, right, from a lead magnate perspective. Do work for free. Create lots of goodwill. People again, get really bent out of shape on this free services one because they're like, I don't want to do work for free. All these freebie seekers. Again, only do the free work for people who are qualified. That's it. So let me ask you something differently. Let's say, I'm
want you to imagine your head, your perfect lead, right? The perfect time customer. It's like they'd
have the budget, right? They have the authority to make the decision. They clearly need it and they want to act
now. Right. Well, if you just only give the services away to people who agree to those things up front,
that's probably a good idea. What's not a good idea is giving it to somebody who's broke who can't make a
decision who doesn't really need it and is kind of like not sure if they want to do it now or not.
Probably a terrible waste of your time. So all of these things, you want to use them, just use them for the right prospects.
And so this is where free audits with some level of implementation, same day service delivery, any sort of
done for you component. And the way that you have to think about this, I'll give you some math-minded.
So let's say it costs you one hour of labor, right? They actually pay somebody else to do in order
to give something valuable away. Now, let's say that $25 is your hard cost, but what people would
realistically charge for this, and this happens all the time in services, you could probably charge $250
plus for something like this. Not a bad, like pretty decent offer. $250 for free.
where there's real service, real person does work, that's fairly compelling. Now, let's say that we get
one out of four of these people who you give this $250 thing away for to do it. Well, what does that
mean our cost to require our customers? 25 times four. And so would we be willing to give away a lead
magnet to four people to get one to buy? Would I be willing to pay $100 to get a customer? Well,
provided I'm making a lot more than $100 in the customer, probably. So not a bad idea. And so for my
very first business to give you an idea, I trained people for free for a year. I call the free
training project. And I did that because I wanted to get a bunch of testimonials. And then once I got
a bunch of testimonials, then I showed the world the testimonials, more people did it and they did
in exchange for money. In fact, it worked so well that after the year of time that I work with
these people for free, I said, hey, I have too much demand. Do you want to pay me now? And almost all
of them said yes. That's what like people like, oh, they're all freebies. It's like, no, they
actually, they were all happy to pay. And that was that.
Right. So if you get the right people, they will continue to stay and pay, provided you do a good job.
So that leads me to my fourth way to deliver a lead magnet, which is physical, right, physical products.
What's interesting again here is that you can combine these things. So what do you think, what do you think these are? What do you think these books are? And the next book that comes out?
These are lead magnets, right? Fundamentally, now, obviously they're incredibly valuable. And after you solve your offer problem and you make something that way more people want and you make more people want, what are you going to want?
You're going to want to figure out ways to advertise that and get even more people to find out about it.
And if any time you're like, hey, I would love help to just speed this process, you can call us, right?
And if you're like, hey, I've done all of your stuff and I went from, you know, one million to 50 million a year, I'd love to, you know, have you guys invest with us and partner, then that's why we do all this stuff, right?
It's a very long game.
And so you can absolutely have something that's a physical product and information, right?
Or the scaling roadmap is software plus information, right?
You can combine these as many times as you want, but these are fundamentally kind of categories that I think are when I'm like, okay, I get what I want to do.
Now how am I going to do it?
But I'll give you a completely different example.
So if you wanted to give away, let's say, you go to a conference and you give Pat away to
anyone that says that there's a CEO that says CEO, right?
CEO is pretty ego-driven or our shirt that says CEO with lots of O's and zero-dollar signs
afterwards.
A lot of people would do that.
It's like, hey, but in order to get the shirt, you got to prove that your CEO.
So now I get an incredibly qualified list of CEOs that I gave a physical product to, right?
And so the idea here is like, just think what would somebody who is the type of person that I'm looking for want?
And then can I just give that to them?
And how much does it cost me for a T-shirt?
Three bucks, four bucks?
Fine.
And maybe I convert only one out of 20 of those.
$100 for a CEO feels like a good idea.
So once we figure out what problem solves, four ways to deliver that thing.
The next is how are we going to name it?
So this one is so slept on.
People underestimate the value of this by a mile.
And so I'm going to have you not underestimate it and appropriately.
value this, which is name your lead magnet the right way. And I'm going to tell you the real secret
of this. You ask your audience. All right. So this might seem minor to you, but it's massive, right?
How you name your lead magnet will determine your gauge rate more than anything else, right? When I ran
my first gym, I had something called my big booty boot camp, right? Now, why would I call it that?
Because six-week deadlift and squat seminar doesn't really convert with chicks, who was my primary
audience at the time, right? And so, again, was it the same thing? Yes.
all we did was deadlift, squat, and hip thrust.
Like, that was primarily what I did over that six-week period for them and taught them as main moves.
But if I had made my marketing about that, they'd have been like, ye.
But if I said, hey, who wants big, beautiful round glutes?
They were like, I do.
And I'm like, cool, this is just the way we're going to get you there.
Like, I'm not going to advertise the vehicle.
I'm going to advertise the result.
And so now, Big Booty Boot Camp might have been something that attracted a certain type of one.
If I said, tight and toned, booty, tight and toned glutes.
Before I said, bubble butt.
Right?
bubble butt boot camp that might have attracted a different person the thing is is that you can just test these names out so you can figure out which one not only attracts the most leads but ideally the highest quality leads and so this is how i actually test them so i get super clear on who my avatar is and then i run small ad test comparing the headlines now if you don't have the capital for that or the money you can just pull your audience so if you have a hundred people who follow you you can put it in your stories and say hey help me out here i'm trying to name my lead mate let me know which one sounds better for you now again you want only you
the people who are the type of person they are advertising to to respond. So you could say,
before you introduce it, by the way, if you're not a business owner, please don't answer, right?
Or that would be what I would say. Right. Now, if you're like, I don't even have an audience,
don't worry. I got you. The next thing you can do is just open up your phone and then you use this
amazing device and then you text. So you just text people and they say, hey, which one do you want?
Or you just make a post and say, hey, comment A or B underneath of it. Right. There's all these
different ways that you can do it. And maybe you combine two or three of those.
those ways in order to get a close enough directional response. This book, $100 billion leads,
I split test six different headlines for this to get $100 million leads because I looked at
advertising, I looked at promotion, I looked at marketing. And here's a cool part. I actually show the
results of the test inside the book. So I split test the names, I split test the image that I was going
to use, and on top of that I split test the sub headlines. And so I did that because I want to make sure
it's going to be a winner out the bat. If I'm going to spend two years writing the book, I
can spend two days testing the headline, which is sadly going to influence how many people
buy it more than anything, with one caveat in the short term. In the long term, it's the stuff
between both of the front and back cover that's going to be the thing that does it over the long term.
Because word of mouth, especially in the book world, is really the only thing that matters
long term. Anyone can launch a book, very few people can launch a book that continues to sell.
Next, I'll give you four different easy headline variations that work really well. So number one
is number plus outcome plus time frame. So that'd be like three emails that can turn cold leads
into clients in 24 hours, right? The second would be something like how to do X or how to yay without
boo even if you greatest in security. So yay means good thing, boo means bad thing, right? So how to
build a funnel without hiring copywriter even if you've never done it before, right? Or even if this is
your first time. Next would be, you know, the adjective type that good thing. Right. So the lazy funnel
template that converts like crazy. The next one would be X mistakes. Now there's a bunch of
different ways you can do this one. I gave an example of it earlier, like, you know, four
mistakes that are keeping your business under a million dollars a year. It works great, right? But
another version of this could be like three mistakes you're probably making, you know, five ad copy
mistakes that are killing your conversion rate. Just put X mistakes that are cool. See, they're
killing your KTR. It's killing your business. It's preventing you from getting this goal, whatever
it is. It's like these are the mistakes that keep people broke. All right. So now that you have a
lead magnet, you know the objective. You know how to deliver it.
And you know how to name it. The last step is, how do you make money with it? So now,
you just got to ask him to buy. And so this is where most people fail, right? They create the
great lead magnet, but then they forget the call to action. Right. So we want people to do
after they consume your lead magnet. And so the formula for call to actions is so simple,
the only thing simpler is not doing it, which is what most people do. And not only do they
not do it, they don't do it often enough. So even if they do it once, they forget to do it again and
again. And I'll give you a fun little stat that they found about salespeople is that the
salespeople who ask the most times get the most deals. And so in your marketing, you want to ask
as many times as you can. Here's the caveat. How do you ask so many times without turning someone
off? Right. Because if all you do is ask, then eventually they're like, they'll stop giving you the
opportunity to ask. So you want to maximize your ability to ask times the amount of times you ask.
And so maximizing your ability to ask means that you're continually providing value between your
asks. And so you need to increase your value per second so that people are like, I'm willing to hear
this ask because I just got value. And I will probably get value after.
for this. The formula for CTA is very straightforward. Number one is you want it to be clear,
not clever, be very clear. This is exactly what I want you to do. Clear direct CTA. Then exact
next action. And then three, reason to do now. So in all CTAs, you can still use scarcity,
urgency or both in order to incentivize someone to act now. Now, I'll be straight with you.
It's great if you've got it. But if you don't have scarcity urgency, you just at least want to make the
CTA. So I'll give you a simple example. So I have within this book, or all the books,
I've turned to a magic page. How about that? At the end of every chapter, I have right here a CTA.
Free gift, everything you learn from XYZ. And then they click that, or you can click that,
and you go to my site to Acquisition.com, where you can watch more stuff about that. But on my site,
You were getting one step closer to becoming a portfolio company or coming out for a workshop that we have every month.
You can do any of those things.
Right.
But we want to start walking them down the process.
And so I will give you a little tidbit on number three is that the reason you can always have.
The urgency is just an additional great reason to do it now or the scarcity is an additional great reason.
But having any reason is better than no reason at all.
Right.
So there's tons of research on this.
But like people were trying to cut in line at a university and they say,
hey, can I cut you? And people were like, no. If you said, hey, can I cut you because I'm late
for class, people would say yes. If they said, hey, can I cut you because I have a dog, people would
still say yes, even though it made no sense. Wild. So we want to use that same logic to get more
people to respond to our thing. Ideally, we want the reason to make sense. But even if it doesn't
make sense, it'll still work better than no sense. So it's my one year anniversary of being in business
and this is the promotion. So do this thing. Hey, my daughter just lost her first so I'm running a
promotion. Here, go get this thing. Hey, it's National Dog Day. If you have a dog, you should do this
more than anybody else. It doesn't matter, right? So I'll give you an example. If you were in the
fitness industry, obviously, I mean, if you can't tell. If you're a fitness coach and you only
have like so many spots, which you probably do, then tell people that they have to sign up now or
they'll have to wait for until the next spots open up, right? And so here's the cool thing about anything
that's a service business. So this is unique to service, but 78% of businesses are services.
this probably applies to you, which is that you do not have a limited capacity. If I said,
okay, can you take a thousand customers tomorrow? You're probably seeing no. So you do actually
have a capacity limit. It might be four, right? If four more customers would get you to capacity,
then say so. Because the thing is, is that you assume that they know how bigger business
says, and they don't. So if you're a small business, leverage that so that you have scarcity
based on your existing small constraints. Not a bad idea. And if you're a big business,
you're like, I have a huge amount of capacity.
Then what you can do is you can have cohorts that roll.
So you can say, hey, I can only start this many people per week.
And then you still back into some sort of capacity.
Or if you want to get into this group of people, you should do it this Friday.
And so what do we do here?
How do operationalize this?
So one is we give value first, which is the whole spirit of the lead magnet.
Now, we give value by revealing a problem, giving a free trial, or giving them one step of many.
We then have four ways to deliver that magnet, which is software information.
services, physical products, or combinations of those. We name it in a compelling way,
which you can use any of these for, or just ask your audience what they would find interesting,
which is a great way to test this. And then finally, make sure that you embed CTAs within your
lead magnet and before and after lead magnet so that you increase the likelihood that they
buy your stuff. And any business right now, if you don't have one, you don't give people a solid
reason like a lead magnet in order to exchange their contact information on your site or in your
promotions, you're leaving leads on the table. And to make sure that you're not getting
tire kickers, just only give it to the people who are qualified. That's it.
