The Home Service Expert Podcast - Breaking Down the Science of Virality with Brendan Kane
Episode Date: December 6, 2024Brendan Kane is a Managing Partner at Hook Point. He is a digital marketing expert who has been helping top brands and celebrities create viral content since 2005. Overseeing $300 million in marketing... spend, he has worked with major corporations like MTV, Paramount Pictures, and IKEA, generating over $1 billion in revenue. His celebrity clients include Taylor Swift, Rihanna, and Adriana Lima, for whom he crafted successful digital strategies. Brendan is also the best-selling author of “One Million Followers” and “Hook Point: How to Stand out in a 3-Second World.” In this episode, we talked about social media presence, virality, content format, organic media strategies…
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business owners can kind of think about virality, be like, well, I just want to
generate more leads. I want to generate more customers, more, you know, purchases
for my brand. And they can't kind of correlate it because they think virality
is like that pesky teenager down the street that's making dance videos on
Tik Tok. But the reality is, is if you think about almost all businesses today
have some type of social media presence. And let's just say that on average,
you're generating,
let's say 10,000 views of video.
Now people listening to this,
I want you to take whatever that number is,
a thousand, 10,000, maybe some people are generating
a hundred thousand and then multiply that by 10,
then multiply that by a hundred,
then multiply that by a hundred thousand.
Like what would that do if that many people
were paying attention to what you had to say?
Now the potential of social media is only capped at how big you can dream, how big your business is.
Welcome to The Home Service Expert, where each week, Tommy chats with world-class entrepreneurs
and experts in various fields, like marketing, sales, hiring, and leadership to find out
what's really behind their success in business.
Now, your host, the home service millionaire, Tommy Mello.
Before we get started, I wanted to share two important things with you.
First, I want you to implement what you learned today.
To do that, you'll have to take a lot of notes, but I also want you to fully concentrate on the interview.
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Just text NOTES to 888-526-1299.
That's 888-526-1299 and you'll receive a link to download the notes from today's episode.
Also, if you haven't got your copy of my newest book Elevate, please
go check it out. I'll share with you how I attracted and developed a winning team that
helped me build a $200 million company in 22 states. Just go to elevateandwin.com forward
slash podcast to get your copy. Now let's go back into the interview.
All right, guys, welcome back to the home service expert. Today is a really exciting
day. I got Brendan Kane in here. He's got three amazing books, 1 million followers, Hook Point,
and the Guide to Going Viral. A lot of us have thought about going viral. I
hate the people that say they're influencers, but this guy is the
epitome. He's like the influencer. He's an expert in creative direction,
interactive marketing, SEO. He's from Chicago, lived in California,
spent some time in Austin,
and spends part of his time in Europe and London now.
Managing partner at HookPoint,
author of 100 million followers,
mentor at Techstars, growth consultant.
You know, there's a lot of stuff here,
but you're overseeing 300 million in marketing spend,
and has worked with major corporations like MTV,
Paramount Pictures, IKEA,
generating over a billion in revenue.
He's worked with Taylor Swift, Rihanna and Adriana Lima
of whom crafted successful digital strategies.
I am so excited you're here.
Thank you for making the time.
Thanks for having me.
It's a pleasure to connect with you
and everybody that's tuning into this.
Yeah, man.
I'm sure the story is amazing, but tell us about yourself.
I know this is how every podcast starts, but I want to hear the success,
what your passions are, wherever you've been, where you're going, what gets you excited.
So I didn't set out to be in marketing. I actually wanted to be a film producer.
So I went to film school to hopefully learn the business side of the industry.
Showed up at film school, quickly realized they teach you nothing about business there.
So I figured the best way to learn about business is start your own.
So this was like 2003, 2004.
So the most cost efficient way at the time was to start internet companies.
So I started a few internet companies just to learn and experiment.
And then when I moved to LA to pursue a career in film, like everybody else, I had to start
at the bottom, you know, making coffee and copies and deliveries. And people would ask me,
well, why did you move to LA? What do you want to do? I said, I want to be a film producer. I would
see everybody's eyes glaze over. So I knew I needed a different way to kind of stand out and
connect with the heads of the studios, producers, directors, and things of that nature. And I noticed
that we would spend tens of millions of dollars in a single piece of content.
And then we would invest tens of millions of dollars more into marketing that single
piece of content.
And it's not like any other product or business where you have years or decades.
You literally have months to make people hundreds of millions of people around the world to
know about this single content.
So at the time, social media was just coming on. This was
2005. So it was like MySpace and Friends are where the predominant players and YouTube
and Facebook were just launching. So I just thought like, especially on YouTube, there's
all these creators that are amassing millions of views and millions of subscribers, but
nobody's talking to them. Nobody's trying to harness that power. So I started building
digital divisions
for the movie studios and that allowed me to connect and rise to the top of that industry in
a relatively short period of time. So that's how I kind of got the bug and got started in that space
and just quickly realized that the film industry is just another corporation.
So it wasn't really fun, exciting. It wasn't really moving. Everybody would talk about
innovating, but nobody would actually do anything. So that's where I left and actually started building technology platforms on top of these
social networks.
So I've built the first ever influencer technology platform on top of my space, ended up licensing
it to Viacom and MTV and other platforms that allowed me to work with people like Taylor
Swift and Rihanna and others.
But that's kind of how I got started in this space.
I love that.
I'm going to go off script here.
We've got a lot of questions, but a lot of people want to be influencers and
Jeremy Miner, for example, the guy that made the intro eyeballs.
Jeremy was in here.
I don't know, probably a year ago.
And he said, would you rather have a billionaire in here or a
person with a billion followers?
He's like, it's a new currency.
He's like eyeballs. What are your thoughts on that?
It's a great point. And I'll kind of break down the distinction because
people think about, and especially a lot of business owners, business owners can kind of think
about virality, be like, well, I just want to generate more leads. I want to generate more
customers, more purchases for my brand. And they can't kind of correlate it because they think virality is like that pesky
teenager down the street that's making dance videos on Tik Tok. But the reality is, is
if you think about almost all businesses today have some type of social media presence. And
let's just say that on average you're generating, let's say 10,000 views of video. Now people
listening to this, I want you to take whatever that number is,
a thousand, 10,000, maybe some people are generating
a hundred thousand and then multiply that by 10.
Then multiply that by a hundred.
Then multiply that by a hundred thousand.
Like what would that do if that many people
were paying attention to what you had to say?
Now the potential of social media is only capped
at how big you can dream, how big your
business is.
And I'll give you an example.
We have two beauty influencers, both same amount of subscribers on YouTube, several
million and one does brand deals.
And she does relatively well.
She does six figures a year off of brand deals.
But then one turns it into a multi-billion dollar company called Ipsy. That one is Michelle Phan, a friend of mine.
Like, so that is the same thing, the same type of audience, the same industry,
the same amount of views and subscribers.
One turns it into valuation of billions while the other turns it into six figures.
So it's just a tool to do what you want with it.
And some people use it to do well, six figures.
Some people do it to have millions of followers or subscribers that don't really do anything
from a revenue standpoint, while others turns it into billions of dollars of value.
Yeah.
Like the Kardashians do a pretty good job of monetizing it.
Absolutely.
And the people under that's a billionaire, Kylie Jenner, Kylie.
Yes.
All her stand in the airport for the little makeup. Yeah. And that's and people kind of undercut that and say like, Oh, well, she's
just an influencer. But how many other I think she was the at the time the youngest self-made
billionaire off of social media. This is like the most fascinating subject because you know,
at a one here, we spend about 3 million bucks a month.
We do TV radio billboards.
We do Val Pak, the little blue mailers.
I personally do a lot of social media, but we haven't really cracked the code.
But there are people I've heard that it's hard to go viral organically like YouTube,
Facebook, Instagram, TikTok have made it harder than it used to be unless it's
like a goofy reel
without really any advertising in it,
because they want you to pay.
What's your thoughts on that?
Is it hard? Yes.
But I bet everything that you've mastered
in marketing was hard.
It's like not every business can spend $3 million
a month profitably, that's hard.
Same thing with organic content.
People will say, oh, my account is shadow
banned or they're suppressing my reach on purpose in order to get me to pay for it.
That's just inherently false. In order to understand it, you have to understand the
algorithms and the algorithms control reach and distribution of the content. So what are
the algorithms fundamentally designed to do? Keep people on the platform longer because
the longer people are watching your videos, the more ads they can serve, the more
profit they generate.
Now, this isn't like Netflix where they're investing billions of dollars in original
content.
So they rely on us.
They want to see us succeed.
They want to serve our content to millions of people.
Now, the challenge and the difficult part is when I started in social media in 2005,
there's a few million people on the platform.
Today, there's close to 5 billion people on social media.
So that's the difficult part is if any one of us opened up
our favorite social media app,
whether it be Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram,
whatever we use, there's probably 150,000 pieces of content
it can see to us based on the people that we follow
and the content we've engaged with.
So in reality is you're competing for that attention
to prove to the algorithms your content
can hold attention longer than other content.
Even looking at your Instagram profile,
your most viral videos are not like silly pet videos,
they're not people jumping off of roofs.
It's really deeply emotional and educational content.
Now it's shaped and contextualized in a different way, but if it was all about getting you to
pay for it, then nobody would ever go viral.
You know, Mr. Beast, who started in his bedroom when he was 13 years old, he wouldn't build
this massive empire of 500 subscribers across all of his channels.
So Mr. Beast, I just hired the works for me full time.
One of Mr. Beast's guys that was right underneath him that was his creative guy.
And he said, what do you think we spent on a video?
I have no idea.
He goes 1.3 million.
He goes, we spent $40,000 on the thumbnail.
He goes, I've got ways to do it at a fraction of a fraction of that cost.
One of the problems we had with Mr. Beast is as he got older, his audience is not really
we made a lot of money on swag and different things like that.
I'm just curious, when you meet somebody, for example, me, I'm the home service expert.
You know, I'm just curious, like, how do you kind of reverse engineer because so many people
are like, it's so funny because I send Blake, the guy that came from Mr. Beast, I'm just curious like how do you kind of reverse engineer because so many people are like
It's so funny because I send Blake the guy that came from mr. Beast. I send him goofy videos I'm like we could recreate this it's funny, but I get off like I made each
So I'm obviously like I look at a lot of things that hit my algorithm and I'm like this will get a lot of views
But then again, it's off-brand. So I like what's the starting point when you work with somebody?
I mean, what exactly do you do when you start work?
You already need to work with somebody that's already gone viral under, like, the Actua
girl or whatever.
Like, what?
Well, how do you work?
Yeah.
So, we work with people with no social media experience.
Some of our biggest case studies are people coming in with no social media experience,
no social presence, and then they blow up.
Because sometimes it's a little bit easier to work with somebody without social media experience because you don't have to untrain bad patterns or behaviors or things that they believe to be true.
Right.
So the way that we work with people is first getting them to understand that there is a formula in science to success. And that formula in science starts with understanding what we call a format.
Other people may call it a series, but it's a storytelling structure that is repeatable.
So a lot of people and probably a lot of things that you see is trend based. So trend versus
format. Trend is something that is very fleeting, meaning they only last for a few weeks or
maybe a few months. Like if you think back to the ice bucket challenge,
the ice bucket challenge was a trend.
Does anybody do the ice bucket challenge today?
No, because it died off.
So then people are forced to keep repeating
and finding new trends.
Versus a format is a repeatable structure
that you can repeat over and over and over again.
So I'll give you an example of it.
One of our clients,
very little social media experience was starting with 2000 followers. He's a lather craftsman.
So very niche expertise, sold leather goods like wallets, purses, things of that nature.
So we helped them design a format called Is It Worth It? So it was a series where he'd
buy a $500 Chanel handbag, deconstruct it on screen and tell you whether
it was worth the money that you were paying for it. So that format, he took from 2000
followers to 2.5 million followers across all social media channels, 2.5 million. And
in some instances with his most expensive products, he can't even keep them on off the
shelf. He's selling it out. So we're using this repeatable series or structure that's tied to his specific expertise, his specific domains,
where he can monetize. So everything that we do is it's not about going viral for the sake of
going viral. Because like you said, it's like, if it doesn't translate to revenue, then what
difference does it make? And what people often think is my subject matter isn't
sexy or interesting enough, but I can definitively tell you, like our team has
done 10,000 hours of research of what causes content to go viral. Any subject
matter can go viral. Taxes go viral. Real estate goes viral. Garage doors. We
worked with a gravedigger. We helped a gravedigger go viral. Any subject matter
can. That's kind of cool. I mean, when you really deconstruct it, I think even when you start
a podcast, people like I don't know what I'm gonna start. And the best guys I know say,
who's your avatar? And how do you make it more interesting? And how do you get people
tuning in? How do you make it valuable information? I think there's some goofy stuff too, like
the guy that shakes his stomach. And he a couple million a year, I heard.
You know Dan Martell by chance?
Yeah.
I went back to your time.
I worked with him.
I just got back from Kelowna.
And he said, here's the secret.
You start with YouTube and you nail it on YouTube because YouTube pays for everything
once you get enough followers, once you get enough viral videos.
And it goes, he goes, you want to deconstruct your YouTube and feed the algorithm on his meta and
LinkedIn and
X Twitter and this is his philosophy and I don't know if it's what you think and there's a different audience for every single
Different thing and a different algorithm, but he said you nail YouTube correctly
It pays for every everything because you want to get people don't understand. They're like, why do you do this stuff? Well, the whole goal is to make enough money to pay for a bigger more sophisticated team
It's not I mean I do well in garage doors. This is where my pride and joy is
This is what put me on the map
I want just so you understand that and I don't know what you would say to this
I'm actually gonna use this as a consulting thing
But I want to make like a video where I'm connected with guys like Robert
Kiyosaki, which can't forget.
And I could get into Richard Branson.
I go to Necker Island, but why not make over?
Why not get all the doors donated and talk to the best designers in the world
about just the curb appeal.
And a lot of it could do with garage doors and then have five minutes.
Like I had the guy come out that, uh, you kid it says how much money do you make he goes up to
cars yeah and like just quick tidbit from all these great smart best-selling
authors and say hey listen I'm gonna do a little podcast but it's gonna be in
your garage we're gonna make over your garage and I get it all donated from my
sponsors which are the garage manufacturers and we talked about the
product a little bit how good it looks on the home. I don't know, but I know I'm getting a car done for like 500 grand from Richard Rawlings
that is going to cost him like 80, but he's got 26 million followers. And it gets my brand A1
on 26 million people watch my car that's going to get all A1 garage door designed on it. It's
sprayed in. It's my dad's favorite car. It's kind of sentimental. It's a ride out. It brings it's going to be at every home
show. This guy's got 26 million people. I'm paying kind of to learn from him. And he's
going to build a badass car. I'm just curious, how would you even start? Like, if I wanted
to blow up the garage door, what would be the thought process? How does the process
work? There's anything and everything from spraying for bugs to gutters.
And there's a lot of businesses that listen to this that aren't in home service.
And we can use this as a coaching session. I'm fine kind of doing that.
So the first step that I take you through is we've got to define what is the format or series that we're going to go after.
Like you mentioned the young kid that approaches people in their cars and asks, what do you do for a living?
So that is a man on the street format.
It's a clear format where you approach a random stranger
on the street, oftentimes it's casted.
So it's kind of set up.
Yeah.
So that is a format.
Now, man on the street,
there's 10 different versions of this.
I have a good friend that we've worked with named Alex Stemp.
He's a photographer that approaches random strangers
on the street and offers them a professional.
No, he approaches them and offers them a professional photo shoot and then reveals the results. So he's built an audience of 20 million people doing it. But that's a format. So we've done analysis on over 220 of these formats. And we have a team of researchers are doing new analysis every week. So it's not like you have to pick from three to five of them. But there's different formats that stick gotta stick to your format. Until you master it.
Okay.
Because the reality is,
so the example is I started in the film industry.
And if you think about any movie that you've seen
over the past 50 years, they all use the same format.
It's called the 3X structure.
So if you think about like Steven Spielberg,
every time he makes a movie,
he's not reinventing that 3X structure.
He's using it over and over and over again.
And that is what allows him to become one of the best storytellers in the world. Now, the issue
is most people in social media, what they're doing is they're reinventing the wheel every
time they create a piece of content. And thus they're not mastering the art of storytelling
on these platforms. So you have to really master the nuance of executing on a format.
And the reason is, is most people think success in social media is about
the content, what you're saying. It's not, it's about the context of how you're saying it. And
that is the major difference here. So if you keep changing up your format every time, or if you're
jumping from trend to trend to trend, you're not mastering it. And same thing in your business
expertise, you built a massive garage door company. Now, when you were first starting out, if you were trying to start 10 other companies
that were all in different industries or sectors at the same time, horrible, horrible idea. It's
the same thing with social media. How do you go viral, build a massive audience so that you don't
have to rely on other people's eyeballs? You choose a format or a series and you master that. So you
may ask, well, how do you master a format or series?
What does that look like?
So what we do is we take that specific format,
let's just say it's the man on the street.
There's many different examples of it.
There's another one called the school of hard knocks.
I don't know if you've seen.
Yeah, so school of hard knocks.
I came in and interviewed me and Jeremy.
Generated millions of followers
and hundreds of millions of views off of that. Okay, so what we would do is most people look at that on the surface
and just say, Oh, I see what he's doing. He's just approaching random strangers on the street
and asking them about their success. But if you look at his hit rate, there's certain
videos that generate 10s of millions of views. And there are certain videos that generate
less than 100,000 views. So how we really understand what drives that format
is we have a qualitative analysis process
called gold, silver, bronze,
where we'll open up a spreadsheet.
We'll take 10 to 20 of the highest performers
in that format, which is 10 million views plus,
10 to 20 of the average performers,
which is like 500,000 to a million,
and then 10 to 20 of the under performers,
which is like under 100,000.
And what we're looking at is not the content, but the context of what is happening. What is the difference that's happening
in those high performers that's showing up there that's not showing up those underperformers so
that we can get a deep understanding of why they are so successful. Cause I guarantee 99% of people
that try the man on the street format fail. We just don't see them because the
algorithm doesn't serve up to us. So the best place to start is to first understand that there is this
concept of a format and series, and then understanding which one you want to do because
it excites you, but which one also is best for your business or brand. And then diving in
to the contextual elements. So again, tying back to where I started, I went to film school.
So what do you do in film school?
You see this in movies, you sit down and watch classic movies.
You read screenplays.
Yeah.
I've took all the cinema classes.
Exactly.
The reality is though, in social media, nobody does that.
Why?
Because anybody can just pull out a phone, press record and publish something.
So they expect it to be so easy.
And that's where all these frustrated people come in and say, Oh, the album just suppressing my
reach on purpose to get me to pay for it. Facebook and YouTube and these companies don't make
money off the person paying 10 bucks to boost a post. They make money off of businesses
and the people that are spending millions or tens of millions of dollars a month. Like
that's where they make their real money. It's not off the average person paying 10 bucks to boost it.
But that's in a nutshell, where to start is first understand
that there are storytelling structures out there.
There's a lot of them,
identify the one that you want to go after
and then dissect the nuances that allow you
to successfully use it versus unsuccessful uses of it.
I think the right answer is how to become an influencer to help this revenue.
Like the leather guy is a perfect example.
The fast and loud, the guy Richard Rawlings is fast and loud, the YouTube channel, it's
beefing up cars, man.
It's like everyone wants to see what is put in under the hood.
And it's really cool.
But he had a live TV show.
And a lot of these people, I think they're doing it backwards
Everybody wants to do a national you look at bar rescue or you look at the prophet with Marcus limonis
It's probably easier. I
Can tell you his show the Richard Rollins show is bigger on YouTube than it was
It's got more viewers on YouTube. Which way would you start?
If you had a really compelling type of format or I guess you would call it a structure, would you
try to pitch it? It's kind of gets it. Do you want to do self publishing or do you want to get
published by? How do you look at that? Well, obviously if you can get on TV,
that's great. Yeah. But most people can't get on TV. And also, let me just say this,
being on TV is great
like there was a
Journalist I work with Katie Couric and she came to me after going to Yahoo
And she was getting lost because she was going after 30 years of being on the Today Show and I first thing
I told her to go back to TV
It's a lot easier because you get this habitual nature built up
Right, but TV is also challenging once you get on there
It doesn't mean that they're gonna hold the show or you own the underlying IP. Your destiny is not in your own hands. Social media, you're
in control of everything. But as we mentioned in the beginning, it's challenging. It is
not easy. The process is simple to follow, but it's very difficult to really break through
because of all of this noise. Now it can be done with the right approach, the right mindset and the right strategy.
From my perspective, social media presents
a much greater opportunity,
a bigger opportunity from television,
just because the numbers are so much bigger
than you get with traditional television these days.
So that's like, again, I'm never gonna tell somebody
not to go to TV if they can do it.
But I think that the real question is, am, you know, am I going to be successful
on social media? It seems so daunting and challenging.
Do you think if you're successful at social media, because I've seen a lot of
these people that the show does want to pick you up, that they're like, man, you
bring this massive following already.
Do you think that that gives you kind of a hundred percent?
It does. Look at Mr.
Beach just got paid one hundred million dollars from Amazon to do a TV show with them.
So yeah, there's a lot of examples.
So if you write Sir hands got a Netflix show out of it too.
Freaking awesome.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love this stuff.
You don't even understand how much this made my day.
Just you being on here.
If you're going to pick something to go after, and I, this might not be a one
size fits all, but if you had to say, cause LinkedIn is becoming like, if you
look at, I met Gary Vanderchuck, we, we talked for a couple hours and he's all about paid
ads. He's like, it might take a hundred tries. It might take a thousand tries to AB test,
but you'll strike gold eventually. But he was just talking to me about virality and
all these different things. But where was I going with this? He started out with the
wine industry, but he would tell you LinkedIn is a good opportunity
right now for the bank for your buck on paid.
Within one of my buddies just started going viral on X.
I feel like TikTok is really cool.
And I feel like there's a way to monetize it.
It just seems like to me, like you're selling products.
You got like an Amazon store that you're just kind of,
everybody's saying I make $3,000 from home and I don't do a thing.
I just kind of buy it here, sell it there,
this arbitrage game.
But if you had to pick a social media
and you wanted a business following,
what would you look at?
How do you pick what social media platforms
you're going after?
You just hit all of them.
Definitely not hit all of them.
Typically, it depends on if you're B2B, B2C. Typically,
the way that we look at it is understanding what are the business goals and objectives?
What type of product are we selling? Is this high ticket? Is this low ticket? Things of
that nature. But what we kind of look at is like, we always start with what is the format
or series that we want to go after and that typically dictates the platform. Now LinkedIn and X are very different than TikTok, YouTube, YouTube shorts, meta, Instagram.
As you know, LinkedIn very business audience, definitely smaller in aggregate audience size
than the others. X more text-based, they're going heavier into video, but again, much
smaller audience size than kind of the bigger ones. So if you're like strictly
like a B2B play, and it also depends on kind of, do you want to create the content? Are you willing
to create the content? Do you have a team to create the content? It kind of dictates where you go.
I can definitively say that there's no wrong way. I would never say no, don't do that. If you're
like really, I want to master this platform. And there's a solid kind of business
reason or content reason behind it. If you master any one of
these platforms, you're going to have more business and leads and
revenue than you know what to do with because economies of scale
at this juncture are so large.
Do you care about getting paid back from YouTube at all? Does
that even factor into anything when you're thinking about
I think it depends on the business.
I think it's a definite bonus.
I think what you said about Dan Martell saying
that if you master it, it can pay for everything.
I think that's a great bonus.
I focus on how you actually master it
because it's one thing he's a hundred percent correct.
And like, if you master it, it can pay for anything
because their revenue share program is far more mature than any of the others because it's longer form content. They can do interstitials and it's
very easy to do the revenue share where all the other platforms, it's short form content.
You can't do interstitials. So it's difficult to kind of share the revenue with the specific creator.
I'm more focused on what is the underlying business goal and objective that you're trying
to achieve with the platform?
Because if you master YouTube, for example,
and let's just go back to Ryan Serhan.
You know, you said you knew him.
Luxury real estate agent,
sells properties in Manhattan
that are anywhere from 15 million to $250 million.
So he's playing a completely different ball game
than most people.
Specific niche audience
with the top 1% in the entire world in terms of kind of their net worth and what they're
willing to spend on a property.
So what he does is he plays the game of what we call the general's principle of, I'm going
to reach millions and millions of people with my brand and my message on YouTube.
And if less than 1% is my core ideal audience,
I'm killing the competitor
because he's generating millions
and millions of views a month.
He's even said he has sold a $30 million property
off a single YouTube video.
So if you think about that,
the commission off a $30 million property
compared to what you're making on YouTube AdSense.
And I'm not saying, I'm not diluting the adsense.
It's great.
But then like when I mentioned Michelle fan who built ipsy into multi-billion dollar corporation,
do you think at the end of the day, she's kind of measuring how much adsense she's generating
off of?
No, no, it's relative.
Yeah.
So Jeremy Miner says, I only post videos about sales.
That's what I'm known for.
That's what makes the phone ring.
You got a guy like Andy Elliott saying,
if you don't have a six pack, I'm not hiring you.
His stuff goes viral.
And Dan Martell is like, I like to tell the personal side.
I like to talk about, you know,
my fiance that left me cause I work too much.
I talk about my kids and they measure every single piece
of content they put out.
They measure when you talk about this, it gets this many views.
When we talk about this, it goes down.
When you talk about this, and he almost uses podcasts.
He likes going to smaller podcasts because they ask weird questions.
The big podcasts, where did you come from?
What are you doing?
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And he uses that as content.
What would be, he loves the interview style for his videos.
And the book put them on the map,
buy back your time. It's right there. What do you think, because their strategies,
a little bit you get to learn about who I am, you get to learn about me as a person,
you get to meet my dogs, you get to see what I do at home. And then we talk about business 30%
of the time. Or does your structures really just fall into one category for most of the time.
So everything that you said of what they're doing, there's nothing wrong with it.
What I'm focusing on is how you be at the top 1% of social media.
So everything that I'm saying is from that lens of how do we become the top 1%
in terms of people following us, in terms of the views, the engagement and things of that nature.
What I would suggest, at least in the beginning,
is focus solely on that format and structure
and mastering every nuance of that.
Because just that exercise in and of itself
is gonna allow you to master that art.
Same thing with your business.
You spent years mastering all the other disciplines
of marketing to allow you to spend $3 million a month.
You could take that knowledge into any other business
because you spent the time harnessing that knowledge.
The same thing here is focus on mastering a single format
or series.
And through that, you're going to become
an expert in content creation.
And once you've become an expert in content creation,
then you're going to understand how
to layer in those different elements.
But if you're starting out that way, and I'm going to do 30% personal stories and 20% business
and 30% podcasts, it's just kind of like percentages that you're kind of throwing down there without
any real kind of understanding of when something works, why does it work?
Or when something doesn't work, understanding why it doesn't work? Which is so interesting this notion of
Can you just go a little bit deeper?
Context not context. Yeah, because
Some of the stuff if you ever you've seen this but I'll watch a guy mow a lawn
It'll go to the ugliest frickin landscaping and it's just kind of pleasing or a guy clean a carpet. You know, that's just visual.
And then there's other things that I'm like,
it's goofy and it's funny.
I'm just curious, can you kind of go into that
a little bit more context?
Yeah, so there's different,
so when we look at content,
we're looking at what we call performance drivers.
So these are contextual elements
that either increase the virality
or decrease the virality. So there's over 200 of these performance drivers that we break
down. So these can be things like pacing, tonality, facial expressions, body cues, the
environment, what's happening. So I'll give you some examples. Like one of the big mistakes
people make with their content is happening in the first three seconds. So
if you think about short form content on Tik Tok, Instagram, Instagram reels or YouTube
shorts, when you're scrolling through content, one of the biggest mistakes people will make
is they'll have like a little meme card title card at the top, they'll have captions below
somebody talking and potentially moving. What's happening there from a subconscious level
is you're you don't know what to focus on. Am I supposed to be focusing on the title card, the caption or the person speaking and the subconscious feels like it's being left behind. So it all already moves on to the next piece of content or scrolls the next video. So in that instance, it's not the content of what the person is saying or what's written on the top or written on the bottom. It's the context of how it's being delivered. So having a clear visual hierarchy
of how it's being delivered is critically important.
Now I'll give you another example.
There's an amazing content creator called Dr. Julie Smith.
She's a clinical psychologist,
millions of followers on TikTok and Instagram,
and she uses a format called a visual metaphor,
where she's breaking down complex topics like PTSD,
anxiety, panic attacks,
things that typically you wouldn't wanna consume,
but she has millions of people viewing that content.
So the way that she's doing it from a contextual element
is she, one of her most viewed videos,
there's a waste paper basket on the desk
and it's filled with paper, it's overflowing.
So with that visual
metaphor, automatically with the first few seconds from a contextual element, it's showing that
there's going to be an implied interaction with this waste paper basket, and there's some issue
with it. So automatically in the first few seconds subconsciously, it's getting people to stop.
Now the way that she explains anxiety through this is it's the waste paper basket overflowing the paper.
So how do you do that? You go through trauma therapy, you take each piece of paper out
at a time, which is a painful memory or an experience, you fold it up nicely, you put
it on the side of the table here until all the papers are folded up. And then you put
it back into the waste paper basket and it's no longer overflowing. So what she's doing
is taking a very heady complex subject matter, tying it to a
visual metaphor where there's plenty of clinical psychologists or therapists on
the web that will talk about the exact same subject matter.
Again, it's not the content, but they're just spewing facts or data or information
that would get 10,000 views instead of 11 million views.
Love this stuff.
You ever hear of Dr.
Pampa?
No.
So this guy is one of, um, Joe Polish's buddies.
He came to one of the hundred.
Joe Posh has got this big group.
He lives down the street.
He's a great guy.
And what is that shot that you take to lose weight now?
That's really
was Zempic.
Oh, Zempic.
So I knew a couple of people, they're not on it now that's really big. Ozempic. Ozempic. So I knew a couple people, they're not on it now, that were on Ozempic.
And I said, I sent this to them.
I'm just going to play this for you and for the audience.
So how do you tell if people were taking Ozempic?
They have Ozempic butt.
No, it's a real thing.
Most of the weight loss with Ozempic is actually muscle loss and you lose the big muscle groups
Unfortunately, your butt are one of the big muscles men and ladies the butt goes away and it is called Ozempic butt
New study just showed when you lose weight on Ozempic you're losing mostly lean muscle mass matter of fact
Two-thirds of the weight loss is lean mass instead of the one- that is fat. Fact is, if you lose...
So I just want to...
This is Dr. Pompa.
Yeah, I've seen his content before.
He has 1.2 million followers.
And he just goes in, he'll go into like Kroger and he'll go, look at the nutrients on this.
And it seems like the same format.
It's always him.
He's dressed differently.
He's talking to somebody that's a specialist or he's going through like health things.
It's amazing. I mean, I really specialist or he's going through like health things. It's amazing.
I mean, I really think that he's probably got some writers.
It's his two sons that are doing the research
and he's got a team.
How important is it that you do deliver on content?
You've got the research, you show the stats.
I know you probably don't overproduce,
but what is important about that?
In terms of frequency and volume?
What is the right, that's a great other question,
but I'm saying how much research needs to go into the content you should you have writers kind of doing some research going on?
What's like I've heard like state current like you could talk about Ukraine or Israel
I don't know if that works for everybody, but what's the current? Obviously, you don't want to do what's a trending only?
Yeah, the current affairs maybe I don't know 99% of businesses. You don't have to do what's trending only. Yeah. The current affairs maybe. 99% of businesses, you don't have to do current content in terms of like what's
happening in the world. Okay. And oftentimes that can kind of work against
you. Obviously, if you're like a news journalist, or like a podcast, so see
where you cover current events again. But I would say 99% of businesses, it's not
needed. You can do it if you want. If you want to look at another person
that worked with Mr. Beast, a guy named Dylan Page,
who is basically beating out all the news outlets
on TikTok and Instagram,
because he's mastered the art of covering journalism
through kind of these principles
that we're talking about today.
But I would say 99% of businesses,
I wouldn't go there because you want
to have evergreen content that you can use.
And also I feel like you're trying to force things a little bit too much in terms of current events.
But in terms of your question of how much research and script writing and things go into it,
a lot of the research comes in at the beginning.
And this is where we spend most of our time.
We have a team of researchers that's dedicated to spend 10,000 hours just dissecting kind of different
series or formats. But a bulk of the work is really coming up front of like
identifying the series or format, and then doing that breakdown of understanding
what is the difference between the successful uses of that format versus the
unsuccessful uses of that format. So that it gives you a blueprint to benchmark
yourself against so that once you start producing
Content if your content ever falls short
All you have to do is to take your video on one side of the screen
The reference of a high performer on the other side of the screen not paying attention to the content the context play them side by side
And see what the difference is and if you're honest with yourself
You'll see differences and these differences can be subtle they can can be your pacing, your tonality, what happens in the
first three seconds. Maybe it's the lighting that's off, or your background is off. Things
of this nature, you can start picking it up against that element. You'll see literally
success these clues. Yes, let's put it against if this is what's the clinical studies you're
going to have your Yeah, you're just testing against the call, whatever. Can't remember. But how often should
somebody be posting? And there's all this research, some people say you got to do
three a day, some people say it's something we'll pull one down and test
it again, pull it down and test it again. Well, what's the right way to kind of go
about how you post in the frequency?
Again, the the answer that I'm gonna give is like how do you be at the top 1%?
And if you want to be the top 1% has nothing to do with frequency
Has to do with your ability to master your content quality. Yeah, like in
quality over quantity
Yes, and what you'll see is frequency can tend to potentially lead to more followers.
But if you look at somebody's followers versus kind of the views that they're getting, they
haven't mastered their format, then they can be generating 10,000 views a video rather
than generating 500,000 views a video.
And you're just having more kind of impact with it.
The other challenge with frequency is it often causes people to throw learning out the window,
meaning they're so focused on how do I get three posts out today without trying to focus on what
is my hypothesis with each post I'm doing and what am I learning from it, whether it works or doesn't
work. Because you'll see a lot of people that can go viral, maybe it's one out of 50 or one out of
100 videos by doing that volume model. But when they get that one to work, they have no idea why it worked
compared to the other ones failing.
And thus they go through that cycle again
of producing another 50 or another 100.
So frequency can come into play once you've mastered
your format like Mr. Beast started doing like a video
like every month or every six weeks.
Now he's trying to do a video every week.
He's mastered every element of it
and he has a team to support and things of that nature. But if you want to be at that top 1%
of really driving massive growth and eyeballs in your content, I would highly advise of doing
quality versus quantity. When you look at Instagram, there's shares, there's likes,
there's comments. I was with Joe the other day and he goes,
this guy's got more followers than God,
but he never gets one comment.
I think they're all fake.
And there are people that pay for like,
you can look at someone that could be in the year.
Yeah.
What do you think sets up the algorithm to say?
Is it share, what's the highest signal?
Instagram specifically, and they've outright come out with
this is they're really prioritizing shares right now.
Because they see that as a massive benefit versus other
platforms are always looking for that extra edge and the way
that they like it is it sparks conversation. So you see a video
you share it with a friend or a spouse or a loved one and a
communication starts in the DMS around it. So for Instagram Instagram specifically, it's I would say shares is number one
But retention is a close second. So why watching the whole thing as much as possible. Yes, so retention means watching
Yes again
The share element plays into retention because you're sending it to a person and that's likely going to spark a conversation
Every decision any of these platforms make is all about how they can get people
to spend more time on the platform versus going to another platform.
Yep.
Because if they're spending more time on their platform, they can serve more
ads and generate more profit.
So I've noticed that YouTube and Instagram and Facebook, I think.
TikTok is spending a fortune, I guess, because it always, there's always
TikTok videos that come up on their
platforms. Like go to TikTok and escape from TikTok. Is that just they're spending spending the money?
Why would they even I guess they don't want to gate that stuff. Why would they allow their
competitor to say go to TikTok on their platform? It should pay to play. I think so you're you mean
in terms of somebody sponsored ads all the time or like I just feel like it feels like
So if they're running ads
It's hopefully because they have a self liquidating model going on the same thing in your garage business you spend
X-Dollars to acquire a user, and you know what your LTV is the LTV is profitable, right?
So you hope that's the case I can't definitively say that that is the element, but there's always kind of this arbitrage going on, uh, where
each platform has really mastered the nuances of behavioral psychology to keep people on
that platform longer. So I would suspect that let's just say TikTok's running ads on Instagram
or Facebook or YouTube to get people to download TikTok and use it.
They know if they're spending to get that person to download that app, that their models
are trained to get them addicted to that platform and thus increase the likelihood that people
start going to TikTok rather than another platform.
My biggest pet peeve in the planet is these influencers who have never made it in the
real world.
And I made a joke the other day with a post.
I said, the 20 year old life coach, the guy that's marriage coaches on his fourth divorce,
they rent a Beamer or a Ferrari.
They go to this place in LA and I'm still in the game.
I don't coach a lot of people, but I have this podcast and I talk about real life scenarios. What's the economy?
You know, we're growing very very rapidly
When there's less than 20 of the companies growing in home service
80 are actually declining. I know that because I know the crm data because I know the largest crm's
and
Do you feel like there's a like responsibility of moral obligation that if you're going to make someone go viral, it needs to be real information, if they're informational?
I mean, if someone's putting out bad content, I don't know.
I don't even know if that makes sense.
But it feels like to me is like someone's going to be a coach and they're going to start
selling products like real estate.
Their stuff used to work, but now it doesn't.
So they had to switch to like sell courses.
What are your thoughts on it?
Yeah, I agree 100%.
And if you look at the dedications of all three of my books are the exact same.
And it's all about that.
I feel that there's people that have the ability to transform the world in a positive way,
but their voices aren't being heard because they just don't have the knowledge and the expertise.
But I think that there's definitely a lot of that issue.
And I think the issue expands beyond that of people looking at even just celebrities
or people that are successful and looking at this kind of service level view of their
life and automatically deeming that those people are happy just because they're showing this lifestyle
They're showing these trips and things of that nature in some ways
I think that's even a bigger problem because people are aspiring to look at
You know the wealthiest people or most successful people and just say well
I'm not good enough because I don't have
That Ferrari or not flying that private jet or I'm not dating that model or things of that nature
When both you and I know a majority of those people are miserable. They're not happy. They're on drugs. They want to commit suicide
I know that money ruins
95 probably 99 percent
I mean I'm making up stats here, but the majority of people that make it and get that kind of money
They're not ready for it. They can't trust their friends. They get the fame. They can't go anywhere
They got the paparazzi phone and I know they're not happy. I've met these people. They're literally depressed
Yeah, so I think that there's a lot of problems with social media at the flip side
I think that there's a lot of positives, you know
There's a lot of there's a but it's like any type of media outlet that's been even since the the printing press was invented
There's very successful uses of it and unsuccessful uses of it.
The guy at School of Hard Knocks, he said, hey man, your video went very, very viral.
He said, would you be willing to come on, I got about 100 entrepreneurs, to pay me a
monthly fee to ask some of these people questions?
I said, yeah, I'll do a session.
And it was so quick.
I just answered a question. I love Q so quick. I just answered a question.
I love Q&As.
And I've got a lot of the answers,
so I've been through it.
Not because I'm a special man,
because I failed so many times.
And he's like, I think his goal was get the views,
get very big and then monetize.
And is there a way to monetize through the process
or do you wait to get?
There definitely is.
I would say, and you'll get this,
there's a very big distinction between organic content
and paid content.
So paid content, you can go right for the pitch,
right for the sale, right for the conversion.
Organic content serves a completely different purpose.
Organic content is to get people to know, like,
and trust you.
So again, going back to the leather craftsman,
Tanner Leatherstein, is it worth that format
deconstructing the $500 Chanel handbag? There's no calls to action in any of his content.
What he's doing is he's sharing his expertise and breaking down whether these expensive
leather goods are actually worth the amount of money that they're paying for it.
And what he's doing is the numbers are growing so big because he's just focused on how do
I build a connection with that audience?
How do I get to know who I am? Trust me, like me,
and they automatically want to take that next step. So for him, he just has a link in his bio,
and the traffic numbers are so big. But at the same time, as you know, with paid traffic,
the larger your organic audience goes, the bigger your retargeting audience builds off of that so
that you can remarket to those people with direct response content. Now, in terms of calls to action
and content, organic content, you can definitely do it.
But my recommendation is master the organic without the call to action, because then you're
removing a variable that can drive down performance.
Master the performance, get the performance up, and then layer in the call to action,
because then you'll know how to test different calls to action to ensure that it's not driving
down performance.
But if you integrated into the beginning, you don't know if that's the reason that the
content's not succeeding or if it's another variable.
So I love this stuff. If you're a home service company, you're ABC plumber, where do you
get started? You want to drive business. You know, there's a couple of things I want with
my garage door company. I don't want just clients I want great people to apply what I noticed is if my social media gets bigger
Really good people half the guys that are in our right now
I got 43 guys training
Haven't them said we found you online and we wanted to work for you
Like you seem like a real dude, like we thought it was too good to be true
We thought it was a Ponzi, but it's real and so the question I have is I guess you figure out what's your goal
I mean, where does someone get started?
Well, I think, like you said, it's really understanding what your goal is.
And I think depending on the size of the business, and I'd love to hear your perspective, but I would say a lot of business don't really understand the metrics that drive the business.
Right. You know, what's your cost per acquisition?
What's the lifetime value of your customer?
You know, just kind of know what's for the lead, your booking rate, your conversion rate and your average ticket.
Yeah, that is the first place to start.
That's if you need to know those numbers and then you can start different levels
of how you want to engage in that space.
Hey media, as you know, is the easiest place to start because you're basically
buying reach to get in front of eyeballs.
That doesn't mean that people are going to stop and pay attention, but at least you're not having to fight
against an algorithm from an organic perspective.
Well, you can turn that up or down.
That's as nice as you can go.
Capacity's filled up.
There's no minimum.
Yeah.
Scale as quick as you want to, you can do it faster.
Organic is, I would say, organic is earned
and it's more of an advanced play,
but there's much larger upside to it in terms of beating out
the competition.
You know, because paid, you're basically just bidding against your competition to see, you
know, who can acquire that user versus organic.
When we look at companies, competitors, nine times out of 10, they don't have a single
competitor in their space that's doing well with organic because they just don't focus
on a lot of the nuances and things that we talked about today.
So organic is major upside, but it's a little bit more kind of nuanced versus to get in.
It's time.
I tell people how to rank organically on Google.
I'm like, listen, Google's got to trust you that you got to get links.
You got to actually get like I'm on Forbes.
I'm on Huffington Post.
I'm on Inc.
I get edu backlinks. I get dot gov. I get links all you got to actually get like I'm on Forbes, I'm on Huffington Post, I'm on Inc. I get EDU backlinks, I get.gov. I get links all the time. I've got great content.
My metadata is right, my schema data is right, my H1 tags are right. I'm putting out great
content with videos. I'm doing all of it and it's still I'm a 63 domain authority. It's
pretty good for a home service company. I want to get to 70. I'll outrank all my competition and I know they can't outrank me fast.
No one could come on and say I'm gonna outrank you tomorrow.
It's gonna take years and as long as I keep doing my stuff, right, I'm gonna continue to climb the ladder.
So what you just wrote down for search is the almost the exact same thing of looking at organic is
that you have to build trust of the algorithms. You have to prove
that you can put content
in front of millions of people and hold their attention.
So if you watch MrBeast and you watch a video
that he just publishes, in the first like two hours,
he's got 10 million views already.
Why?
Because the algorithm trusts him implicitly,
so they're gonna cede it to that many people.
Versus if you're just starting out,
or you're one of those people that has bought followers
or has found another way to gain that audience
without fully understanding how to communicate effectively,
the algorithm, the way it works is it's gonna see that
you're gonna post something, it'll see it to 100 people.
It'll measure how effectively you are at stopping the scroll
and holding attention.
If you're good at it, it'll see it to another 100,
another 100, another 100.
However, if that first 100 people, people don't stop and watch it, it's
going to kill it right away.
So in the same way that you've talked about mastering SEO and building that
trust with the albums that way, you have to do that the same thing with social
media.
I love this stuff, man.
If someone wanted to, uh, reach out to you, I mean, how do you work?
So basically we have a team that develops the research
so we do all the research for our clients,
we develop the strategy,
and then we train them in our models.
So we work with solopreneurs with no social media experience
or shooting content on our iPhone,
all the way up to multi-billion dollar corporations.
Why would you work with everybody?
Why not pick an avatar?
Why not find, I mean, you're just so good at it
that you said we're gonna be able to do it for the masses.
Yeah, because again, it's not about the content. It's about
the context. So for us, it's content agnostic. And also
because of how well the book sell, we have people from all
over the world working with us. But you know, we typically work
best with the people that are doing hands on with the content
because they kind of need to understand that those
foundational elements, right.
And if you want to get a hold of you
How what's the best way to do that? They can just go to hook point comm to learn more
Also, just for your audience my new book the guide to going viral if they go to hook point comm
Forge slash your last name mellow me. Oh, oh, they can download a free version
PDF version or kindle version of the book. This is awesome, man
I love this if you had any book that really influenced you outside a free version, PDF version or Kindle version of the book. This is awesome, man.
I love this.
If you had any book that really influenced you outside, so you wrote 100 million followers,
how I built a massive social following in 30 days, growth hacks for your business, your
message, and your brand from the world's greatest minds, hook point, how to stand out in a three
second world, and the guide to going viral.
And this one's just basic, cover I love it so the what other books inspired you
you know like for me it's the Emit revisited and the richest man of Babylon
and I've got like probably 20 books that I can name that maybe even people don't
know like go for no but is there any books that really change
the way you think about things?
I think one of my favorite books is
How to Win Friends and Influence People.
Yeah, Dale Carnegie is my top book of all.
Yeah, I think it's so simplistic,
but so deep in so many ways.
And I really love the writing style.
We tried to adapt the writing style for my books.
The five hour work week, more from a hook perspective.
I'm just, he just nailed it with the hook and the content.
Four hour.
Yeah.
Four hour.
Four hour.
Yeah.
Tim Ferriss.
Yeah.
Influence.
Yep.
Robert Chidini was just in here.
Yeah.
Robert Chidini was in here three weeks ago.
He's 79 years old.
I'm having dinner with them.
We're buddies.
I've had dinner with them three times.
His books are amazing.
Yeah.
So persuasion, he's the goat. Yeah. So those Pre-Sway-Zion, he's the goat.
Yeah.
So, those I think are the top ones.
Breakthrough Advertising, another one.
Yeah.
You know Alex Ramosi?
He did pretty good on 100 million offers.
Yeah.
I don't know him personally, but yeah, he's done really well with his books.
So you said I got more business because of my book.
Yeah.
Do you feel like a book is the right way to start to do like just curious?
What's your thought are did you get published or do you do self-publish first book? I did publish worst experience ever
Second book kind of hybrid I did through my literary agent third book. I just self-published
Yeah, cuz you're watching the following it's easier to self-publish. It's also like it's also it's just like we're marketers like you like
Right. We, we eat and
breathe data. That's all we do. We optimize, we break things, we try things.
Publishers don't work that way. So it's like, you're getting data like every six
months, if you're lucky, it just doesn't make sense. Like for the average person,
like they kind of publishing is good for somebody that's getting a seven figure
advance, because then they're going to put their marketing PR engine behind it
But for the average person the only thing that they're doing is helping you, you know with the editing process the cover design
Getting it on shelves and things which for some people is a big benefit for somebody that just lives and breathes marketing
We want to control every aspect of it
We want the data in real time and the publishers just made it more difficult.
They didn't add value to the process. I would do this 10 times over again. There's so much
I learned through this. Guys, I'll just tell you this. What Brandon's putting out here, you got to
get his books, the new one, the guided going viral. I highly recommend you download that. There'll be a
link under here in this podcast. Watch the podcast, listen to the podcast. If you
don't think social media is the craziest, most best opportunity
out there. I love Google, but I love everything. I love
everything that drives leads. And I measure the affluence,
I've got my avatar, like Like I take this down to a science
and this is my next frontier.
That I will figure this out.
And I'm actually gonna ask for Brendan's help.
If someone wants to get ahold of you,
so you go to HookPoint.
What is it? HookPoint.com?
Yeah, HookPoint.com.
And usually what I do to close this out
is we talked about a lot of stuff
and I didn't ask any of the questions.
Here's how you know I have a great podcast guest
is none of the questions on our we do a lot of research there's lots of great questions
but my questions are better but we talked about a lot of things I'm going to let you close us out
and we've got a lot of business owners that listen to this show anything there's no no holds bar
anything you want to talk about however long you want, but any final thoughts? I would just say definitively going viral or building an audience on social media is
not luck.
There is a science to it.
And the best piece of advice I can give you to start seeing that science in action is
when you're using social media, no matter what channel you're on, is just start looking
for this concept of a format.
See a viral video, click on the link of the bio of the person
and see if they've done that same thing at least five or 10 times. If they have, then
you're starting to see a pattern of a format that can be used. If not, move on to the next
one and find the next crater until you've identified that format. And the other big
thing that I will say is when you're doing that research, don't look for an apples to
apples comparison to your brand or your business,
because oftentimes your competition
is not being successful with organic.
So don't be afraid to look at a thought leader
or an influencer that is in a different industry or sector,
because it's not about the content
that's driving that performance,
it's about the context of the way they're talking about it.
So often people make the mistake of saying,
oh, I'm looking at this finance expert,
but I'm in garages,
I can't learn anything from that finance expert.
You can learn a ton from it.
And that's where you can be 99%,
or beat 99% of the people out there in social media
is just adopting this new mindset
as you're consuming social media content.
I got one final question about that. Do you feel like you got to go through several different
structures or formats before you find the one that's right for you? Or do you guys kind of figure
out this is the format we're going to make this work? So typically, the way to answer, there's two
ways to answer that question. There's, are you being successful with the format or you're not enjoying that format?
If you're not enjoying the format, then you should get rid of it right away.
But if you're enjoying that format and you just haven't mastered the performance,
stick with it because you will master it.
As long as the research proves that there is an upside to it, it's just, you know,
kind of science of manipulating all the contextual elements for the formula to add up.
I love that.
Well, listen, dude, you are a rock star.
I'm sorry I was late today.
Thank you for listening all the amazing home services and business owners out there.
That's a wrap for the home service expert.
Hey there, thanks for tuning into the podcast today.
Before I let you go, I want to let everybody know that Elevate is out and ready to buy.
I can share with you how I attracted a winning team of over 700 employees in over 20 states.
The insights in this book are powerful and can be applied to any business or organization.
It's a real game changer for anyone looking to build and develop a high performing team
like over here at A1 Garage Door Service.
So if you want wanna learn the secrets
that help me transfer my team from stealing
the toilet paper to a group of 700 plus employees
rowing in the same direction,
head over to elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast
and grab a copy of the book.
Thanks again for listening and we'll catch up
with you next time on the podcast. Music