The Home Service Expert Podcast - The Art of Building Trust in Marketing with John Jantsch
Episode Date: March 7, 2025In this episode, Tommy speaks with John Jantsch, a marketing expert and founder of Duct Tape Marketing, about the critical role of marketing in small business success. John is an expert at creating ma...rketing strategies, building trust with customers, and creating tailored marketing systems for small and large businesses. In this episode, John provides actionable strategies for generating leads and retaining customers through effective sales training and referral systems, and gives his advice on how to adapt to the future of AI in marketing. For more information about John and his company, you can visit ducttapemarketing.com Don’t forget to register for Tommy’s event, Freedom 2025! This is the event where Tommy’s billion-dollar network will break down exactly how to accelerate your business and dominate your market in 2025. For more details visit freedomevent.com Â
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You know, so many people think marketing stops when you get the sale.
To me, you know, the real opportunity is after you get the sale to, to focus
intentionally on all the ways that you can upsell and, and retain customers
and, you know, get them to be kind of your, your new lead generation Salesforce.
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.
So I asked the team to take notes for you.
Just text, notes, N-O-T-E-S 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 I got John Jantz with me.
He's a expert in small business marketing,
business consulting, and search engine optimization.
He is the founder and president of Duck Tape Marketing.
They've done a lot of stuff,
Spark Lab consulting, Tradeful, podcast bookers,
a lot of great stuff on here.
He's been a trusted advisor to small and medium sized businesses for
more than 30 years, specialized in marketing strategy, consulting and advertising.
He's also the author of seven books including Duct Tape Marketing,
the Referral Engine, and the host of Duct Tape Marketing, the Referral Engine, and the host of Duck Tape Marketing podcast.
His blog is recognized by Forbes as one of the top five for small business marketing.
Yeah, here he is. John, how are you, brother?
I'm doing great. You know, you stick around long enough,
your bio and all that stuff just gets longer, doesn't it?
Yeah, no, absolutely. You know, there's, in business, one of my mentors, Al Levy, Tommy,
there's two things that the owner should never stop doing and paying attention to. And that's
know the financials like the back of their hand and marketing and marketing by far, by
far more than sales, more than anything for me. Marketing is everything. I love marketing.
Yeah. And I'm sure you've seen it. I see it all the time. How
many business owners don't really feel like they understand
marketing. So they just kind of abdicate it to an agency or
something. And you know, they, it's really how you kind of
find yourself spending a whole bunch of money not knowing what
you're getting for it.
Yeah, no, it's interesting. Because I was talking about
Greenfield growth versus everybody and
their brother right now was talking about greenfield growth.
And I'm kind of skeptical for most companies talking about it because I asked them how
big are you in your own market?
How much market penetration do you have?
And if they're not above like 20, 30, 40 million, depending on the industry, what's the point
of expansion?
Yeah, but let's just start out a little bit, John, 40 million depending on the industry. What's the point of expansion? Yeah.
But let's just start out a little bit, John,
by you started this company in 1986.
Tell us a little bit about your history,
why you got into business,
what you're excited about in the future.
So, you know, I went to work right out of college,
actually, for an ad agency, and I really enjoyed it,
but I was like, eh, you know, I want to do my own thing.
Anybody, any, any dummy can run a business.
Uh, so I, you know, jumped out with any real plan.
I knew I could hustle work.
Uh, and that's what I did.
You know, I got some big clients, little clients, big projects, little projects.
Uh, I got a couple, uh, ironically, I, I, um, modeling contractors, um, smaller
businesses,
kind of some of the folks you work with. And I really enjoyed
working with them. But they were hard. I mean, they had the same
I don't I've been sort of classically advertising agency,
big budget, you know, trained, you know, a lot of small
businesses certainly don't have the budgets, but don't even
really have the attention span, you know, for for marketing. And
so I really said to myself, I got to figure out how to work with these guys, because I really enjoy working with, you know, the owner of the business who's writing the check, you know, to pay you, you know, it's, for me, it was just a lot more fun.
So I created at that point, I said, Look, I can't do this the traditional way. So I said, look, I'm going to create a system where I can walk into somebody and
say, look, here's what I'm going to do.
Here's what you're going to do.
Here are the results we hope to get.
And here's what it costs you wanted or not.
Um, and I found it out pretty quickly.
They did want it, uh, because, you know, still today, um, I think one of the
hardest things for a lot of businesses to do is to buy marketing services.
Um, you know, they're all over the place. There's some
new, new hot thing this week. And so they really get confused.
And so the fact that somebody was going to come in and say,
look, we're going to, we're going to install a marketing
system, it's going to start with strategy before tactics, and
you're going to know what it's going to cost. I think was kind
of music to their ears. And so I, I built my practice pretty quickly that way, and then, um, started
attracting, uh, other agencies who saw what I was doing, um, and said, Hey, we,
we want to do that as well.
That it actually coincided with my first book, duct tape marketing, where
I basically described my system.
And so, uh, today we have about 400 agencies that we've licensed the Duct Tape
marketing system to that use our methodology. And then I do still have the agency. And so we work
with, you know, dozens of small to mid-size clients, kind of almost as their fractional CMO
is what we've started to characterize it as. I love that. You know, a lot of people can't afford a CMO or even a VP of marketing and they come to me all the time. They're like, what would you do if you were going to start over again? I'm like, man, that's a loaded question. I got your book. I don't know. I think four years ago, and it's full of like gold.
Let's start here. You've been recognized as the world's most practical
small business expert.
So what do you believe sets your approach apart from others?
I mean, what's the secret sauce in the formation
of the plan for these small companies?
Well, I still sometimes wonder,
but so few marketers do this. it really still is a differentiator.
I mean, if somebody hires us, somebody comes to us and says, I need a website.
We're like, yes, you do.
But first, we're going to develop a marketing strategy.
We're going to truly understand your ideal client.
We're going to actually create a message that not only resonates, but promises to solve a problem for that ideal client. We are going to create a complete end-to-end
customer journey from the time somebody gets to know you to the time they become
an advocate and we're going to pick the tactics that make only the most sense
for attracting that ideal client. So with that kind of framework we can look out
and say okay here's what the next 60, 90, 120 days
needs to look like.
Then we're gonna move to the next stage
and we can tell you what the next 60, 90, 120 days
need to look like based on what we've got accomplished,
based on where you're trying to go with your business.
And so just coming at it from that approach
rather than what most marketers do
is they walk in and say, what do you need?
Sure, we do that. Here's what it costs. And I'm sure that your listeners are a lot
smarter than a lot of business owners, but most business owners don't know what they need. So the
idea that you're going to let them tell you what, as a marketer or as a marketing agency, what they
need is kind of silly. And so the fact that we come in and very much direct,
we bring leadership to the organization,
we bring a plan and a strategy for, you know,
what the next year of growth is going to look like
is still today, to me, it's the only way to do it,
but still today, a great differentiator.
So when you sit down with a client,
you know, let's say it's
a plumber or a check or electrical or garage doors, we're
all pretty similar. Well, there's demand versus non
demand, you know, like, like windows and gutters and stuff
like that usually is non demand. But let's say you got a demand
type industry, did they fill out a questionnaire? Like what
what do you know, SEO is important. Do they have a good website?
Does it load at the right speed?
Do they claim it for my business page?
TV, radio, billboards, mailers.
It's just, it goes on and on.
Yeah. So yeah, we, we, you know,
first thing we want to do is establish a baseline.
Where are they today?
What have they been doing?
What's worked?
What's not worked?
What do they need to keep doing?
What do they need to stop doing?
That's like phase one.
And then we have very much, we have actually, we call it the customer success track. We have stages
for that. And each of those stages have milestones. You mentioned Google business page. They haven't
claimed that. That's in the foundational stage. We're going to make sure that milestone's
accomplished. Because we know that if we get, say that foundation, all those milestones, all those things, boxes checked in the foundation stage, then we
can actually move them to the next stage.
So a lot of times people will come to us and they say, run ads for us so we can
generate more leads.
Well, your website's terrible.
If we spend money and send people to your website, all you're going to do is waste
money.
So first we've got to fix the website.
First, we have to figure out how to convert leads.
Then we can actually start spending money.
So we run people through those stages because we know that if we get their
foundation fixed, we know what the promise is now of being able to generate leads.
And then we can move to the next stage, being able to convert more of those leads.
Then we can move to the next stage, actually turning more convert more of those leads. And then we can move to the next stage, actually turning more of those, uh,
clients into repeat clients and referral clients.
And so there, there is a linear kind of process to this, uh, that we move people
through. We don't just come in and say, we're going to do SEO every month for
the rest of your life.
Is there a software that you guys, obviously there's a CRM. Sure. But is there any type of software
that you guys throw into the mix
or just whatever CRM that are on?
Yeah, I mean, we're fairly agnostic to that.
I mean, I'm not gonna come in somebody
that's using HubSpot and has spent $50,000 installing
and say, no, you gotta switch to ours.
But if somebody and shockingly,
a lot of businesses don't use a CRM
where they're using like Builder
Trend or something that really doesn't have marketing functionality in it, we'll switch
them to something like Active Campaign. I mean, they need something that will help. They can have
pipeline, that they can send emails, they can actually use forms and people can sign up for
things. So they need a basic marketing automation CRM platform.
There are probably a dozen that would do the trick.
What are some uncommon milestones?
Obviously claiming your Google My Business page is an easy GVP.
Is there any other ones that are kind of odd that you guys recommend?
I always tell people to make sure
you invest in the BBB, even though the BBB might not make a lot of sense, but it makes
your profile makes Google know that you're a real person.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm with you. I mean, the BBB has been around forever and you know,
I don't know what value it has, but frankly, that's just an example of what we call a trust marker.
So having, whether, let's say you belong to Nary or a local chapter of your chamber or
some, I mean, just having a lot of those trust building elements goes, and then just communicating
them, goes a long way for that.
That buyer today is out there, they're out there doing their own research.
They're out there kicking the tires, looking at who's out there, looking at who's got social
proof, looking at who's got reviews before they ever really call us or fill out a form
on our website. So as much as we can do to make our online and offline presence, build
trust is really, I think, one of the core jobs of marketing today.
Love it.
You got brand versus marketing.
Yeah. And I see a lot of people on the side of their trucks.
It's got everything they do.
There's no real message that pops.
Yeah.
You know, it's like.
They're the worst wraps you've ever seen.
They're lettering if you're lucky and then then of course your manufacturer will pay for them if you put their brand on the side of them.
You're literally marketing their brand. They're driving around their belt billboards basically.
How important is the brand being correct?
Well, I think it's really important. Frankly, I mean, you know, a lot of people can, you know, take that maybe too far, but just having something that says, here's who we are. Here's, here's who we are consistently.
You know, we've been around for a long time. Again, a lot of the brand component really just goes towards building trust.
trust. The fact that they've seen your trucks around, they see your yard signs, you know, those are all things that go a long way towards somebody saying, well, yeah, we should just call them because other people seem to, you know, be calling them reviews.
Another great example that, you know, for home services businesses, absolutely crucial, you know, you've probably made a decision about whether or not to call somebody based on, you know, they got 3.4 stars as opposed to 4.5 stars. A lot of us are making that decision every single day.
Yeah, I agree. I see this all the time. Yeah.
Many small business owners are looking for the ways they can scale without overextending themselves.
And I see this all the time and they ask me if radio works.
I say, yeah, yellow book still works. I go, but you got to be consistent. And you know,
I've worked with the Wizard of ads before I went and visit him and Roy Williams and his whole notion
is you got to, you know, that is Roy Williams. Oh yeah, sure. Sure. So you got to spend a,
So you gotta spend a, it's a small fortune to hit.
His belief system is if you hit the radio with 50% of the population,
men and women, boys and girls,
doesn't matter your race or gender or age,
they gotta hear you four times a week.
And if they do, over the course of six to nine months,
your brand will
be the number one in your category. What is your thought on TV, radio, billboards? Those are more
of a branding play. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's tough when somebody's just getting started,
you know, because you need to hustle and get some business. But particularly as an organization
grows, starts to grow and, you know, because as you said, those things cost a lot of money.
There's no question you can dominate your market
by just the fact that people see you everywhere.
That goes a long way.
I mean, especially in the home services businesses,
you know, we're not filing away, you know,
that person that could fix our roof
until we need our roof fixed.
And, you know, at that point, it's like, who have I heard?
Whose trucks have I seen?
Whose billboards have I seen?
What direct mail have I received?
That all just keeps us top of mind.
And it's hard sometimes because you
don't have a lot of people driving or calling
your business saying, yeah, I saw your billboard.
And I want you to come on out.
So it's hard sometimes to measure the impact
of that spend. But I think there's no question increasingly having a sort of an omnipresence
in the market is how you really build a lot of trust, but it's also how you stay top of mind.
Love it. You mentioned that being a self-reliant entrepreneur isn't about isolating yourself,
but about trusting your own judgment. So the question is, how can entrepreneurs balance
self-reliance with seeking advice or inspiration from others without losing their own sense
of direction?
Yeah. So just for context, I wrote a book called The Self-Reliant Entrepreneur, which is
essentially, it's not a marketing book.
It is a kind of an entrepreneurial, almost self-help book.
It has daily readings about kind of what it's like to, you know, it's easy to have a lot of self-doubt to get down on yourself, to listen to or watch what you see
everybody else doing and try
to follow them.
The idea behind that book and really all the messages and that is that you got to be true
to yourself.
You got to do what you believe is the right thing and not try to...
Obviously, there's going to be a lot of people in business that are going to help you, that
are going to be a part of your success.
But you've got to really, you've got to have the vision and kind of mission for your business.
And then you got to stay true to it and, and not, you know, not sit there and worry every
day is this going to work.
Yeah, I think, you know, someone asked me this morning, like how many consultants it
took me to be successful.
I'm like, I met the right one pretty early on.
But my gut feeling wasn't always the right feeling because when I was younger in business,
I was like, grow, grow, grow, grow, grow.
I was more worried about revenue than profit.
And profit really is what's the machine that allows you to reinvest into the company?
No question.
No question. No question. So in your book, the duct tape marketing, you emphasize
the importance of making small business simple, effective and affordable. I'm just curious,
what's what's the you kind of went through the the milestones a little bit, but when
you're starting and you've got attribution, you've got the right setup. The first 90 days, I'm going to throw stones a strategies to make the phone to start to ring? Or is it just a culmination of everything kind of an omni approach?
Well, I think ultimately it is but you know, you can't do
everything right away, right? As much as you'd like to. So
ultimately, you want to build momentum by adding this one and
then this one. I tell you what I've done with a lot of
businesses getting started is you go out there and find a
couple players that are that are serving your same market. So for instance, I had a painting contractor, the guy had been around for a long time, but he started
his own practice or his own business. And so I had a couple other clients, electrical contractor
and an HVAC contractor. And so I went to them and said, look, these guys do great work. Why
did you guys co-market together? So what we did, what we did is we came up with a flyer
for lack of a better term that every technician
when they went into a house would actually pass out
this flyer and it had all of their,
all three of the company's info on it and a coupon,
for giving them a call.
And so what happened was, this painting, this, this painting contractor went out and
really, um, hustled and got that flyer into a lot of places and started making
not only his own phone ring, but the other guy's phones ring.
Um, and consequently, you know, he was getting calls now because the HVAC
contractor had like six guys going in 10 houses every day.
Um, and so, you know, all of a sudden it it's like, you know, I trust my HVAC contractor,
if he says this painter is fine, I'm going to call him. So doing
that kind of stuff doesn't really cost much, you know, take
some relationship building. But that could be a great way for
you to really, you know, kind of hit the ground running.
I love that. I love that.
I love that.
I've tried doing some stuff, but I never leave behind.
Is the question always, is there you guys really going to leave it behind?
Sure.
And then it's got to be checks and balances for that.
We could see what they're calling afterwards, checking to see if they got the brochure.
Well, a lot, you know, I've done this more than once and you know, we
finally started incentivizing them.
So the thing would have the coupon would have codes on them and it'd say, you know,
what was the code on your coupon? And it was like, oh, that's, that's Bill's code.
And so all of a sudden he got, you know, 50 bucks. So now he's like, I'm going to pass these out.
Yeah, no, that's the hardest part is attribution. I've got 7,000 call tracking numbers now.
Yeah, yeah.
But you know, technology's changed a lot
over the last 10 years.
It makes it easier to track where people are calling from.
No question, no question, yeah.
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All right, back to the episode. So let's see here. The concept of getting to know, like, and trust you as central to
your system. What are some actionable steps small business owners can do to get this,
this trust with their audience?
Yeah. So the idea is that the people, when they're getting ready to buy,
they typically go on a bit of a journey, especially even now.
I mean, that trend of kind of the buyer doing a bunch of research on the front end,
because they can, you know, the technology has made it easier for them to get info,
is that, you know, we want to guide that person, you know,
because you've probably done this before.
The more somebody trusts you, the more willing they are to pay a premium.
If you trust, like I know everybody trusts these guys, everybody uses them.
I'm going to pay more, but I know it's worth it.
I mean, we've all kind of done that or we know it's going to be a better experience.
The idea is instead of just running ads, we've got to link all three of
these things together. Let's say you run an ad, first thing somebody's probably going to do is
go to your website. What do they see when they get there? Is there a message to solve their problem?
Are there, you know, trust markers like banners and testimonials and reviews? You know, so you've
got to realize that people are doing their own research.
And the more we can do to intentionally guide that and build the trust,
having case studies, having portfolios, those kinds of things,
have to be a part of the journey.
A lot of people stop at, oh, we just need to run an ad.
Well, you run an ad and you're probably going to attract that person that says,
I'm looking for the cheapest deal out there.
But you run an ad and you send some of your websites, you have lots of, of
reason, lots of resources there to build trust.
Then all of a sudden they're going to be less price sensitive.
Yeah, a hundred percent.
And I'll tell you I
Used to be very price sensitive as a consumer
Yeah, and now I'm definitely looking for something I can get out there the same day
and and what are the reasons why they
They compete and I started to realize it more from a consumer and I'll tell you without owning a house with stuff going wrong all the time, it's a bigger house.
Now I'm starting to learn how to make ourselves like, man, I saw the plumber just in the
last six weeks, seven times.
And I'm like, dude, some of this stuff.
I'm like, come on.
Like, like everything I feel so nickel and dime.
Then I'm like, I wish you just charged me for everything.
Give me all the options up front. Check everything. Tell me everything you think is going to go
wrong. Yeah. Because now I feel like, you know, it's 1200 bucks here, five grand there, two
grand there. It's like, what the heck? I don't know. I like to buy the best now. I will say
that and I'm like, give me an option for everything instead of just telling me what's wrong today.
Yeah. So that'll be everything I can possibly get.
Well, and I know you teach us, um, as well, but certainly the folks in your
industry that you serve, I mean, the ones that are really excelling,
that are really profitable, they spend as much time, you know,
teaching their techs and their sales folks how to upsell, um, in, you know,
the sales environment than, than they do on their, their marketing. Cause quite frankly, there's a whole lot more profit in that upsell in the sales environment than they do on their marketing.
Because quite frankly, there's a whole lot more profit in that upsell quite often than
there is in the come out and fix my leaky faucet.
Yeah. So let's dive into that a little bit.
Marketing a little bit versus sales, because I would argue people need to know who you
are and you need to book the phone call first.
But then as the technician gets out there, I mean, you've worked with so many companies in the past, how much do
you talk to them about sales training and the art of the sale and all that stuff?
Well, it's a big part of it because, again, the customer journey doesn't just end when
somebody says, I want to buy. The's, you know, the profitability in an organization
is, you know, in some cases, you might lose money. I know some companies are getting better at it.
You might lose money on that first call. But you know, you spend all that money to get
in the home. And now it's, and you don't do anything to say to make sure that you're going
to come back next year or next week or next month.
You don't give people make it really easy for them to refer you and incentivize them
to tell other, you know, their friends, neighbors and colleagues about you.
That's part of that's part of the whole journey.
You know, so many people think marketing stops when you get the sale.
To me, you know, the real opportunity is after you get the sale, to to focus intentionally on all the ways
that you can upsell and, and retain customers and you know,
get them to be kind of your your new lead generation sales
force.
When you're asking for a referral, what's the best way
that you've found to do that?
Well, it depends in a lot of environments. I don't think there is one best way.
One thing that we do a lot of training on folks is to present it upfront.
Hey, we know you're going to be so pleased with what we did here today that,
you know, we're going to call you up,
make sure that everything worked out and then we're going to ask you if there's
any, you know, have any friends that, that would need this kind of result.
So, so setting the table, the expectation early on
is one simple thing you can do.
Staying top of mind, you know,
all your past customers sending them something,
send them a gift certificate says,
hey, here's $100 gift certificate,
one for you, one for your friend.
If you pass this out, you know,
you're not only referring us, but you're helping them.
You're giving them something. And by doing so, you know, you're not only referring us, but you're helping them, you're giving them something. And by doing so, you
know, you're going to get something in return as well. So
that's something you could do, you know, quarterly, every past
customer, you know, just quarterly getting the habit of
mailing them. Because, you know, the thing about referrals is
they happen when people need them, you know, not when we need
them. And so, you know, just staying top of mind and asking for referrals,
making people know that there's a reason for them to refer you is part of what happens with
then when somebody, when their garage door breaks, it's like, oh yeah, I was just talking to my
neighbor about that. Love it. There know, there's this everywhere you look,
I mean, I just had my guys out in town, the private equity guys, private equity,
basically deep pockets are getting in and they don't play it around, man. They know
the one thing I think they have that most people don't is they got the bucks and they got the
analytics. They've got a proven tried tested methodology.
They got the best relationships with Google.
They're willing to put beaucoup bucks in this stuff.
They're willing to pay for team endorsements
and the best wraps and the newest trucks
and the latest technology.
What's the best way to compete if you're smaller
and you're worried about that?
Yeah, I mean, there's no question that's tough,
because we talked about, they can flood the airways
and that kind of thing.
But one of the things I think the smaller business
probably has to compete on experience.
I'm guessing that those folks also
don't always hire the best technicians,
don't always do the best training.
It's all about getting the phone to ring as opposed to the experience.
So that's really going to be your, your competitive advantage is that you go
into the home and you've got a trustworthy, uh, trained, uh, you know,
gentleman or woman that is, uh, you know, able to represent the brand, um,
effectively, and that, that a lot of people really underestimate that.
You look at a lot of Google reviews and a lot of times
they don't even mention the company name, you know,
they mentioned Rusty, you know,
who came in and fixed my boiler, you know,
cause that's to them, that's the face of the company.
Yeah, you're giving me all kinds of good ideas here.
I love this stuff.
Yeah, so that's the funny thing is we leave reviews for people that
not companies necessarily.
And I think it's important for the technician to ask.
Yeah.
And, and asked for that review.
And we had, uh, I had a garage door, um, a couple openers put in recently and,
and the guy, um, as he was wrapping up, he did a great job, really
personal guy and he, uh, as he was wrapping up, he said, you know, my company does
this kind of goofy contest.
If I get reviews, you know, they're going to buy my wife and I
dinner at this fancy place.
And, you know, so if you, if you, you know, wouldn't mind giving us a review,
I mean, he made it so personal.
I was like, what kind of schmucks not going to give this guy a review?
Um, you know, again, like I said, he did good work.
He was a nice guy. Um just that little twist of I can
help this guy get dinner rather than I could care less about the
big company. But I can help this guy get dinner. I just think
that kind of making it real personal was really effective
approach. So I gave him a review for sure.
approach. So I gave him a review for sure.
Taking more notes. Um, I like, I let, you know, I, I there's a couple of ways to do it. I had Jeremy Miner in here and he's like,
you know, he, he kind of laughs and he goes, you know,
I want to be back and go into the office and I'm going to be talking to my boss.
And if I don't have a review, I might be fired.
I don't have a review with my name in it from your call.
Would you mind helping me so I don't get fired?
And it's kind of like a playful little joke, but sure, that works.
What are all the mistakes when you when you talk to somebody and you're like, oh my gosh,
you are bleeding.
Where is the biggest stakes that you see at marketing?
Probably the one I see the most is because a lot of small,
mid-sized businesses, they're really strapped for people,
for time, for resources.
And yet they're trying to spread themselves.
Oh, I got to be on TikTok and I got to be on this,
and I got to be on that.
So they're just kind of spraying stuff everywhere.
And there's really no focus on you know
A couple areas that are gonna make a big difference. So I always I quite often try to get people to say look
You need to be on Instagram and you need to be on LinkedIn
And you need to be you know going out there and really working for reviews
For example and just put a whole bunch of effort into those three things. I'm just throwing out as an example, you
know, as opposed to, you know, trying to do everything and not really doing a
very good job with any of it. What do you think is social media, have you
found, does it compete like Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, LinkedIn, X, all of them?
Do those compete with traditional TV radio billboards, do you feel?
Oh, I think they do in a different way. I mean, just like everything, there are people that
don't go to Facebook ever, and there are people that are on it every day who don't watch television
or don't listen to radio. I mean, so it's tough to just say this is better than that. You're going
to reach a different market. And I think the real key is, are you tracking the results?
Do you have a plan?
Are you tracking the results that you're getting
from one channel or another?
And continue to double down on what's working
and at least experiment on something or cut,
something that's not working.
I mean, that's the tough thing. You get a lot of folks that are doing eight things, they have no idea that's not working. I mean, that's the tough thing.
You get a lot of folks that are doing eight things,
they have no idea what's actually working.
Business might be good,
but they're not sure why necessarily.
And that's the real crime, right?
You're wasting a bunch of money on stuff that's not working
that you could be doubling down or tripling down
on a channel that really is working
if you just had the metrics.
you know, on on a channel that really is working if you just had the metrics.
You know, a lot of people, I feel like there's a pendulum
swing and it goes.
I've got great leads coming in. Yeah, I just I'm not booking
the phone calls. I don't have the right technicians. I got a
top grade and then sometimes it's like I got all the great
technicians. I need more leads when I do need more great
people. I feel like the biggest mistake is people just,
they go, let me run an ad, one ad on Craigslist or Indeed or Glassdoor or
ZipRecruiter or Monster or CareerBuilder.
Is there a way to figure out the way to market for consumers as well as market
for great people to come in?
I don't know if it's radio or social media or what,
but do you know what I mean?
It's like, we're trying to hit both.
Yeah, so one of the things that we try to do,
and you know, after the pandemic,
a lot of home service businesses
just really were struggling to get people.
And so there's a couple things there. You need to think about
demand generation or pipeline of people the same way you do of customers. So it needs to be
something that you don't just go, Oh crap, somebody left, we need to hire somebody.
And then, you know, like you said, you run the ad, it needs, you need to constantly be talking
about how, what a great place it is for you to work at. You need to get your team involved in talking about the fact that your brand is a great place for them to work.
And so that kind of messaging all the time about top company to work at in this city, all the employees sharing awesome time they had at the company picnic.
That kind of stuff just sends subtle messages to folks that are out there.
There's a lot of people out there.
They're not really happy where they are right now.
But they're not necessarily looking at ads, but they might be paying attention to what's going on out there in the market.
So the key thing there really is just constant.
Even if you don't have an open position, you should be,
you should be trying to attract, you know, the a players at all times.
Do you like endorsements?
Is that something that you've seen? Any of the people you've worked with successful?
It's almost like you're borrowing their credibility. Yeah. I mean,
I think it can work in a lot of industries.
You know, I think that people can go overboard too.
I mean, you know, you get these,
they pay these supposed influencers on social media
to talk about their product or service or something
that people don't care about it.
They're just getting paid.
I think it's pretty obvious to people that that's the case.
Um, but I think that, uh, the, the, the right kind of authentic
endorsement, you know, so somebody, uh, let's say you're a modeling
contractor, you know, does great work for somebody on the local football
team, um, and that person's like, I love these guys, I mean, they,
it's amazing what they did.
You know, I would have them back into my house, you know,
anytime I need something fixed. I mean, that can be a,
that can be a super powerful endorsement if it's real.
Yeah. My buddy, I was just at his house last week.
He's got this snow whitening and he had a Rob Gronkowski as his first kind of,
he got him to invest in his company. Then he had the Kardashians and now he said he's got 26,000 TikTok influencers
that post every day about his product.
And they're doing, I think he's doing like 150 million a year with the
sure teeth, braiding stuff.
But yeah, you're right.
Is, is it authentic?
Are they just getting paid to be an influencer?
And look, I'll listen to influencers if I could see the products real.
I mean, it's not necessarily buying it because this guy's got it. But if I'm going to buy like,
fitness, like, like products, hopefully the people are in shape. You know what I mean? Like,
it's got to fit the brand. Yep. Yep. Yep. No question. How do you usually like to,
the question I get this question probably 10 times a week
is how do I pick an agency?
You know, there's a lot of different agencies out there.
What's the best way they bill me the more I spend?
So they're kind of incentivized to build me on paperclip.
They're going to take 15% of whatever I spend.
So like, when you think about it, how do you qualify an agency?
And then what's the right way to expect them to build?
Well, so there's a couple things to that.
The first one is, I always tell businesses you need to be talking to agencies that are at least talking about developing a strategic plan,
as opposed to just saying, yeah, we do this. We're the best at it. And that's what we're going to
do for you. So you know, is that the right thing? Right? So
somebody who's going to take the time to actually research your
market research your industry, and have a plan that that they
can show you how they're going to execute. Clearly being able
to demonstrate, we have proven results for other people like you as going to be a
piece of it.
And then the last one is, and I don't know about you, but we run into lots of folks that
work with agencies and they said, yeah, they sent us a traffic report once a month.
We had no idea if it meant anything, if we were doing anything.
So you definitely want an agency that's going to tie metrics to what your overall business objectives are.
And I think that's one of the knocks I have with a lot of marketing agencies is they really just want to do the things they know how to do.
And the first thing we try to do is understand like, where are you trying to go from a business growth standpoint?
How can we measure your cost to acquire a new customer?
How can we measure your cost to acquire a new customer? How can we measure your repeat business?
Because that's, to me, that's the only true way to see if you're being successful.
And it's when we've been able to work with organizations and they let us have that kind
of almost P&L access, they never fire us because we're actually able to demonstrate to them
exactly what they're getting for the money that they're spending.
So there needs to be a little bit of transparency as well on the company side.
There does. There does. But you know, if you've got a company that's not asking for that, that's
not asking you strategic questions, that to me is probably a little bit of a red flag.
I see it feels like everywhere I look there's like white hat labeled SEO companies that the white hat out to India, the
Philippines or Ukraine or somewhere. Yeah. How do you spot
those guys?
Well, there isn't anything necessarily inherently wrong.
With that, I mean, that they're definitely, you definitely want
to know what they're doing. And that's one of the the challenges,
I think, especially at SEO, a lot of people look at it go, oh, it's really technical. I don't get it. And so
then they don't know what people are doing on their behalf to get them results. So I definitely,
you definitely want to know exactly what somebody's doing. The fact that they have a team in the
Philippines is not necessarily a bad thing. In some cases, they can actually get you more output for your money,
working with folks in other countries. But you definitely want to make sure that the work is
quality and that they can tell you exactly how they're getting you those results.
I talked to some of the largest companies in North America. Yeah, we talk about return on ad
spend, ROAS. And some of them that it's so high, but SEO pulls their numbers down dramatically.
And SEO is one of those things where it's earned media, it takes time, effort and energy.
It's like, yeah, my domain authority right now is a 64 on ahrefs. That's A-H-R-E-F-S. It's website
ranker. You type that in, it's free. You can see what your website is. And you
know what? My major goal is that I hit the number one spot for the search
words that matter. And it's hard to believe that I can get pulled down to
below 10% with how much money we spent. And some of it's hard to believe that I can get pulled down to below 10% with how much money we spent.
And some of it's going after general search terms, and some of it, what we found was, is our trucks and our billboards and our yard signs and our TV and our radio and those things start to multiply people start searching us by name, which is a much search.
Yes, but when they are searching a search term, I mean,
for example, the private equity company I work with works with this company called Little Sleepies, and they're just kids sleeping pajamas, and they generate an ungodly amount of money.
But they're so good at ranking number one. And is that some people say SEO is dying. What is your take on that?
So it's going to be around for a long time, especially for local service businesses,
you know, like the folks that are showing up in the Google Maps.
But there's no question it is dying for general kind of information types of searches
because the search engines are giving the answer.
So, you know, it used to be, you could write an article about, you know, the
five best types of air conditioners to install in your home and people who were
trying to find out like what kind of brand should we be looking for, what kind
of unit should we be looking for would find your content.
Well, now Google is just saying, here's the answer, as opposed to
sending you to that
blog post.
So for those kind of, that kind of general information traffic is almost dead.
I mean, you've seen people having 30, 40% drops in their organic search, but for that
high intent, who is the best HVAC contractor in Seattle?
Because I'm getting ready to hire one of those.
There's no answer to that that Google can give other than showing them, here's the companies
and showing them the Google Maps listing, showing them the rankings and reviews.
So the most high intent searches are still going to, especially for local businesses,
are going to be with us for a long time.
But there's no question we're losing a lot of that, you know, long tail kind of educational
search organic traffic.
Yeah, that's another question.
I just joined you here with tons of questions.
One is, I get this a lot from on the stages, will ChatGBT and some of these AI,
will they become a major platform for search engines?
Like I use ChatGBT all the time to make tables
and do all kinds of like, what I mean by tables,
like I'll say, I wanna see $200 million at 20% IRR
over the course of 10 years
and we'll spit it all out real quick.
Right. But I never used it to find a local brand or a local restaurant per se, maybe a local recipe,
maybe like a recipe. But you know, people are always, what is AI going to do? And is it going
to destroy SEO? Is it going to destroy pay-per-click? Is it going to destroy what Google is today?
Is it going to destroy SEO? Is it going to destroy pay-per-click?
Is it going to destroy what Google is today?
Where do you see AI going right now?
Well, I don't think it's going to destroy pay-per-click,
but it's already eroded general search traffic.
No question.
Because if you do a search on Google today,
there's a good chance that it's going to return an AI result in the top result that is going to give you the answer.
What it used to do is give you, here's three websites that we think have this answer.
Knock yourself out and go to them.
Well, now it's just giving you the answer.
All that traffic that used to go to those websites that spent a whole bunch of money
and time ranking for general search terms, that traffic's going away.
I won't say it's dead, but it's going away.
And so being in some of the places, what's also happening is it's changing search behavior.
So it used to be Google was it, right?
But now a lot of folks are going to the perplexities of the world and chat GPT has searched now.
They're going to TikTok.
TikTok is actually a huge amount of traffic
that is people searching for how to do stuff on TikTok.
So what it's really going to do, I think,
is it's going to require us as marketers to spend more
time in some of these, figure out where our clients are searching, where they are getting
their answers now, and spend more time in some of those places. Reddit is another one that, you know,
that I'm afraid, you know, people are going to have to, you know, invest in spending some time
on because a lot of the, you know, a lot of questions that people have
are coming out of Reddit content.
So it's a
It all really leads to marketing is just going to get harder.
That's what I believe.
What are your thoughts on Quora?
You've ever heard of Quora?
Yeah, sure. Quora's good.
You know, again, the problem with a lot of those sites is you got to invest a lot of time and energy
to have any kind of impact on them.
What do you think about Upwork and Fiverr?
And just finding a pro at a source.
I mean, we have a-
I haven't really done much with Fiverr,
but we have used Upwork to place a lot of marketing folks in our clients.
And if you do a good job of writing the job description, writing the requirements,
analyzing the people, we've had really great luck finding some very talented
people who in a lot of cases wanted a certain situation.
They wanted to be able to take their kids to school and pick them up from school.
So, you know, a traditional job wasn't going to work for them, but 20 hours a
week, they were, you know, very, um, very experienced, very talented, um, not that
expensive. And so we've, we've had a lot of luck.
If you, you got to spend time, uh, investing upfront in finding the right
person and, uh, interviewing in finding the right person and
interviewing and hiring the right person and then training the right person but
that's like any you're not gonna have success probably in any position without
doing that. You know there's just I've done some stuff on Upwork and you get
everybody from three dollars an hour from Bangladesh up to like $280 per hour.
I guess it depends on the project.
Is it a one-time project?
What are you trying to do?
And I don't know if there's a right answer here,
but is there any specific guidelines you have
to kind of figure it out?
Because I say, look, sometimes depending on the result,
they tell you, because people will rate them
and they'll tell you, the people will rate them
and they'll tell you how much they spent with them.
And it's, I think it's verified.
I don't know if there's a way to get around that.
It seems like they do a good job
of keeping it into a closed loop,
but if I need a project that's gonna take 20 hours
and it's 200 bucks an hour,
I might just spend the four grand
and just get it done right away
instead of having a nightmare.
I don't know. Your first point is absolutely correct. I mean, if it's just a one-off thing,
you probably can find a lot of people to do it. And if cost is a big factor. But if you want to
have any kind of long-term relationship with somebody because you're going to have this need over and over again.
We hire a lot of people there part-time
that we have probably half a dozen folks we've hired off of Upwork
that are now full-time employees.
So it's a great place to actually do, you know, it's kind of like,
start part-time, we'll try you out.
So it's actually kind of nice way to do that as well.
I love it. Well, we're coming here near the end here. Is there
a couple books that really changed your life in home in the
home service or the marketing or, you know, a lot of us talk
about Michael Gerber or, you know, even Rich Dad Poor Dad or
even books like Napoleon Hill, Think and Grow Rich.
There's a lot of great books out there,
but is there any of them that really stood out
to you over time?
Well, you mentioned the E-Myth.
That certainly was one that I read early on in my career
and had a lot of impact.
I'm a big fan of Peter Drucker.
He doesn't necessarily write for the home services.
He was a management consultant
that worked with very large companies,
but he was very systems driven.
And I'm a, you know, that's really been a big influence
on me is the idea that marketing's a system.
And, you know, we've got to think about it that way
and not as just some, you know, group of random acts.
I love that, Peter Drucker, yeah.
group of random acts.
I love that Peter Drucker. Yeah.
And then what if someone wants to reach out to you John obviously
you'll buy your book duct tape marketing, but what's the best
way to get a hold of you?
Sure.
I've got tons of resources as well as just descriptions of
what we do how we work with folks.
It's all at ductapemarketing.com.
That's D-U-C-T-T-A-P-E, marketing.com.
That's the best place to go.
Awesome.
And last but not least, we talked about a lot of stuff here.
Lots and lots of stuff.
We were all over the place.
And that's a good thing because this was really,
I think marketing is the lifeblood of any company. Go ahead and just anything we didn't talk about,
anything that just you feel compelled to close us out with and let the audience know about,
I'll give you the closing. So we talked a little bit about AI. And I'm not a fan of just like,
oh, AI hype, it's going to change the world, but it is going to dramatically impact how we
go to work, who we hire, how we manage, how we lead.
And so, don't take a nap on it and say, oh, I'll figure it out once it gets here.
It's here and it's changing how you bid, it's changing how you manage all the processes
in your business, it's certainly changing marketing.
So look at it, study it, take some lessons,
take some classes, not because you want AI
to run your business, but so that you can actually
understand the full potential.
I got one follow-up question.
Do you think the people that lean in the best
and dominate AI, do you think there's gonna be
very few winners and a lot of losers?
I mean, is that where we're looking?
I mean, maybe initially people will feel that way,
but I think ultimately AI is gonna be plumbing.
I mean, it's gonna be built into everything.
You know, everything that we do in marketing
will have an AI interface.
You know, every bit of software that we all use to run our companies today will all be
run by AI.
Half of it will go away, quite frankly, because there's a lot of redundancies in that.
So it's just going to be baked into everything.
So you know, I don't think there's this risk that if you
don't master AI and be like a first mover that you're you're toast. But but I think
initially, there will be some pretty significant strategic advantages to folks that are out
front.
Awesome, john. Well, I've got pages and pages and pages of notes here. So I know this was
a great podcast. I really appreciate your time today and look forward to connecting
in the future.
Awesome. Appreciate it, Tommy. Thanks.
All right, my brother. Thank you.
Hey there. Thanks for tuning into the podcast today. Before I let you go, I want to let
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The insights in this book are powerful
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It's a real game changer for anyone looking
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like over here at A1 Garage Door Service.
So if you wanna learn the secrets
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