The Ryan Hanley Show - He Started Living on Purpose (and how you can too)
Episode Date: October 10, 2024Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.com What if a single moment could transform your entire life trajectory? Join us as we explore the incredible journey of Matthew Hoover, a fo...rmer minister turned purpose-driven branding specialist and CEO of Message Masters. Connect with Matthew Hoover Website: https://message-master.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matt-hoover-4571248b/ Sponsors: Get a FREE trial of unlimited access and an additional 20% discount on Shortform through my special link: https://shortform.com/ryanhanley Take your podcasting journey to new heights. Get booked on high-influence podcasts with That 1 Agency: https://bit.ly/that1podcasttour Episodes You Might Enjoy: From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delk From One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymello Is Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9 Get in Touch: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanley
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The worst possible like feeling you can have about yourself it like hit but at the exact same time
it was like Jesus like said hey I'm gonna give you a hug anyway and like this like ridiculous
unfair unmerited undeserved love just hit at that same time. I broke as a human being.
It was like, it happened in that moment
where all of a sudden, like, boom,
everything about me just completely changed.
I fell to the floor.
I just started weeping and weeping and weeping and weeping.
Let's go.
Yeah, make it look, make it look, make it look easy.
The Ryan Hanley Show shares the original ideas, habits, and mindsets of world-class original thinkers you can use to produce extraordinary results in your life and business.
This is The Way.
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the show.
We have a tremendous conversation for you today with Matthew Hoover. Matt is a former minister at
Omega Church turned purpose-driven branding specialist. He's the CEO of Message Masters.
This is an episode that is going to take you through a dynamic journey. Matt's origin story is incredible. And it's necessary to understand
how he got to the point where he is helping entrepreneurs, leaders define their purpose
and convey that message through how they communicate and his thoughts on communication
in general, what makes good communication versus bad communication are all battle tested through his time as a minister.
This is an emotional roller coaster.
It's an incredible story.
And I am just can't be more excited to share it with you.
Being so excited that I can't even come up with a good way of describing it.
That being said, I love you for being here.
I love you for being here. I love
you for sharing this show. I love it when you guys leave us a rating and review. I read them all.
I appreciate the hell out of you. And it is my great pleasure to bring you Matthew Hoover.
Dude, so I was incredibly excited when our mutual friend, Sailor Hirsch, introduced us.
And then we started rapping about some business stuff,
except we talked for like an hour plus.
And I'd say less than 10% of the conversation
was actually even about like what we were,
you know, quote unquote, supposed to be talking about.
And it was real life stuff, man.
Talking about manhood, talking about manhood talking about life talking about faith
yeah it's awesome yeah and I was like dude you gotta come on the podcast so so first and foremost
I love like what you're wearing and for those who are listening at home you got the built-on
purpose sweatshirt with the built-on purpose hat that that the intentionality that that implies is to me, uh, something that has been a struggle
in my own life.
And I love it.
Like I really come to that message because for so long I felt, I felt like, you know,
maybe I have some talents in certain places.
I certainly have energy, drive, ambition, but I was like, I was reacting to things that were pressed upon me versus like like your
slogan built on purpose like here's what I'm gonna do and I'm gonna focus that energy in an
intentional way to get to a goal so that's right in getting there you have this amazing origin story
and I would love to start with in that place, start wherever you want,
take it from there. We'll head on. Sure. I'll try to consolidate this because there's a lot
of wild things that have happened throughout my life. So I was born and raised in California,
Central Valley, Modesto, California. If you happen to know where Modesto is,
chances are you're addicted to some type of methamphetamine. No, literally,
it was like the meth capital of California. It was crazy down in the valley. Anywho,
grew up in Central Valley. Parents got divorced when I was eight years old,
which really served to mold and shape the next like 25 years of my life.
So dad really wasn't in the picture. He was in and out. We were on welfare, section eight housing.
We had to, we didn't have a working washer or dryer at our house. We had to like take all of
our dirty clothes on a city bus and then go to like a laundromat. And then sometimes you'd see
people that you know, like you're carrying your dirty clothes and like a black hefty trash bag. And they're like,
what the heck are you doing, bro? Are you homeless? And you're like, kind of, you know,
and, uh, in so many ways, um, I felt like education was my way out of that lifestyle.
Right. And, uh, so I did really well in school and I originally was going to focus on sports medicine, but I had this crazy
encounter when I was 17 years old. So my family really wasn't like religious growing up. I think
after the divorce, my mom was searching. She was searching for maybe her next husband. I don't know,
but she was searching for something. And so we bounced around to all these rando churches,
all these different denominations. I didn't have a fat clue was searching for something. And so we bounced around to all these rando churches, all these different denominations.
I didn't have a fat clue what was going on.
And honestly, once I became a teenager, had my sense of independence, my parents weren't really, or my mom in that regard,
really didn't have a lot of supervision over us kids because she was working.
She was trying to go take herself back through school. So there was a lot of things that were distracting her.
So we kind of got to just be wild.
And so we definitely ate that up.
We loved it.
Got into a lot of trouble.
And then when I was about 17 years old, this crazy situation happened.
So I had befriended this kid.
His name was Derek.
And his dad was actually like a deacon at the church.
And he invited us to go to this youth event now most
times when he would invite us to church or any type of churchy related thing we'd be like hey
no bro like we ain't doing that uh but this time like he paid for it and i don't know if it was
just like my my poverty upbringing i don't know if it's my relationship with money but the fact
that the dude actually paid money for us to like attend,
I felt like an obligation to go. And so sure enough, me and my buddy, we took a couple of
girls and, uh, and we showed up to this rando church event. Right. And we showed up late.
We were kind of like, we, we didn't even know what was going to happen. Wasn't Uber familiar
with church, especially the type of church that we about about to walk into and so we sit in the very back row and I remember they're singing their songs and you know kids are
like on their knees and the band's playing and there's kids crying and I just remember the only
thing I was thinking about the whole time was like the music ain't that good but the music is
seriously not that good like what are y'all doing but obviously there was something else happening
in that room that I was totally unaware of and And so sure enough, they wrap up the music
and then this guy gets on the stage and he starts preaching, right? And he's like this thin Mexican
guy that had like these eyes, man, like, like his eyes would like bulge out of his head and he had
like the veins going on. He had the sweat going on. He was like screaming and yelling. And honestly,
like for the first like 10, 15 minutes of this dude talking i was like what a phony this is all bs dude
this i have heard about these type of guys and i can't believe i'm actually seeing one like
firsthand for myself but then like this crazy thing happened it was like okay i started looking
around and all the like church kids that i was surrounded by there's like 200 300 kids in this thing it's like this big auditorium i kind of
looking around they were like passing notes to each other they were like cracking jokes it didn't
really seem like anybody was actually paying attention to what this dude was saying and that
struck me i was like man like either these kids are totally missing like the gold that this dude is like trying to drop
into their life or this dude just full of crap. And so like my little like curious brain said,
man, I gotta figure out, I gotta answer that question. I can't just keep sitting here.
I gotta know what the answer to that question is. And sure enough, I started listening and Ryan,
I'll tell you, it was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You hear about people like saying they go to church and like God's talking to them or like
they get this like, Ooh, crazy feeling, bro. Like all of that was happening like at level 11.
Right. And so all of a sudden I'm like, Whoa, this dude's like reading my mail. This dude like
knows what I'm thinking about, knows what I i'm going through and he's actually speaking something that is encouraging and so like the whole time like
again i have no church etiquette i don't really know what i'm supposed to do and this dude just
kept he kept saying this rhetorical question like i didn't realize it was rhetorical at the time
but he kept saying who's gonna stand if everybody in your generation were to bow down to all the
idols of this world who's gonna stand you don't everybody in your generation were to bow down to all the idols of this world, who's going to stand? You know, and his eyes were like, you know, popping out of his head.
And I remember he kept saying it, saying it, saying it. And I remember I was starting to get
like pissed off. I was like, dude, this guy's been up here for like 25 minutes. He's sweating,
he's screaming, he's yelling, he's like doing all of these things. And not a single one of these
church kids are doing anything.
Like no one's standing up.
Like is everyone, am I missing something?
Are they missing something?
And so sure enough, like all of a sudden, like I'm sitting there and this crazy thought comes to my mind.
It's like, maybe you're the one who's supposed to stand up, Matt.
And I'm like, oh heck no, man.
Like, no, dude, there's no way I'm going to do that.
No way.
I don't know these people.
I don't even know what's happening here.
But dude, that voice just kept getting louder and louder and louder and every time he'd say who's gonna stand who's gonna stand i just felt this like impulsion to just
stand up so sure enough in the middle of this dude preaching to serve i just stand up i stand up i
don't know if i like felt bad for the dude, like stop yelling at everybody, man. Like I'll be the guy like, dude, all right, I'll stand up. And, uh, and so sure enough, I stand up and
he's, you know, kind of talking to this side of the auditorium. And then when he like looks back
over to the side that I was sitting on, the dude just stops dead in his tracks. And he's like,
young man right there in the white polo shirt, man, God's been highlighting you in my heart and
my mind, this entire service, God's going to do something radical in your life he's going to use you to like impact
people and all this kind of stuff i'm like ain't no one standing behind me so i guess he's talking
to me right and so sure enough like what ended up happening at that moment is every kid in that
auditorium turned their eyes straight to me and which made me feel like this big. I went from like
bold and confident, like, yeah, baby, I'm gonna stand. I'm gonna show these churchy kids how this
is really done. Right. And, uh, and sure enough, all of a sudden they started looking at me. I just
feel tiny. I felt so insecure. I felt so like, oh my gosh, I've just made a horrible, horrible mistake.
Uh, but this preacher guy, like, dude, he must have been tapped in with the supernatural
or something because he said something that in a moment seemed a little strange, but when it
happened, it like made complete sense. He's like, young man, I want you to look at me.
And when I did, Ryan, I will tell you, I felt like I could do anything. I felt like I could
stand there confidently. I felt like my life could do anything. I felt like I could stand there confidently.
I felt like my life could be different.
I felt like maybe I didn't have to keep repeating the stuff that I was born into,
that maybe my life could make a difference.
And so sure enough, he's like, hey, I'm going to ask you to do something brave.
And I'm thinking in my head, is this not brave enough, man?
Come on, I already stood up in front of all these people.
He's like, hey, I want you to come down here to the front.
I'm going to pray for you.
And I'm just like, oh, dang, dang, dang.
Now I'm in it.
Now I'm in it.
And literally like the exit door was like four feet away from me. We were in the very last row.
So I could have easily just been like, I'm out.
And just exit the scene super quick.
But man, something told me I'm supposed to walk down there.
So I start walking.
And bro, it was like I was floating, man.
It was like, I don't even remember how I got there so fast. It was bro it was like i was floating man it was like i
don't even remember how i got there so fast it was just like yeah all the way there and then this dude
he reaches like he crouches down to talk to me and he says hey i'm about to put my hand on you
and pray for you and when i do you're going to experience the power of god like you're going to
feel all of god's power just hit you.
So my first thought was like, dude, should I get a helmet on or something?
What does that mean?
Is a freaking meteor going to hit me?
I don't even know what that even means.
And sure enough, I'm like, all right, cool, whatever, let's go.
So the dude puts his hand on my shoulder.
And, dude, the only way I can describe
what happened to me was when he put his hand on my shoulder, simultaneously, I felt kind
of my absolute worthlessness, like all the things I'd ever done wrong, all the ways I'd hurt people, all the ways I'd hurt myself,
all the scary and embarrassing and wrong things that I was hiding in my heart and all the things that I had done.
And I just felt like absolute crap.
I felt like, dude, I've screwed this life thing up.
I'm a mistake. You know, like the worst possible feeling you can have about yourself,
it like hit.
But at the exact same time,
it was like Jesus said,
hey, I'm going to give you a hug anyway.
And like this like ridiculous, unfair, unmerited, undeserved love just hit at that same
time. And what happened, right. Was like, I broke as a human being, right? Like, like, and it wasn't
like, because someone was like beating me. It wasn't because somebody had like brainwashed me. It was like, it happened in that moment where all of a sudden, like, boom, everything about me
just completely changed. I fell to the floor. I just started weeping and weeping and weeping and
weeping. Well, like, I don't even know how much time goes by. I finally like get off the floor
and there's like this puddle of like, uh uh boogers and all this kind of stuff tears
and everything like i'm like what in the world just happened my friends are gone like all the
people in the conference are gone there's a couple people in the back like cleaning up trash but they
just left me laying there i was like this is the craziest thing that's ever happened and so sure
enough the first thing i'm thinking about is like yo man like i need to go wash this junk off my
face so i go to the bathroom and now this is the part of the story
I didn't talk about until now.
So I don't really.
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Bad case of acne, right?
My mom's got rosacea.
I had an overactive oil pore that was overproducing
vitamin A. And so like when I would get zits and stuff, it wasn't just like those little white ones
that pop up. I mean, it's like under the skin, pockets of oil, dude, it freaking sucked. And I
had them on my chest, my back, my face, my arms, my legs. And it made me incredibly insecure,
incredibly insecure. And so what um, what I did that
day, standing up in front of everybody, that was like the boldest thing I'd ever done in my whole
life because I really just kind of wanted to blend in and I just wanted to kind of lurk in the
shadows and not draw too much attention to myself because I 100% believe that when people were
talking to me, they weren't really listening to what I had to say. They were just looking at my
face and looking at how jacked up it was. And so I was carrying that as a 17 year old, super insecure
on top of all the other stuff, the poverty, not having a dad around like, dude, it was, it was
crazy. It was a lot of stuff happening. So sure enough, I go into the bathroom and I start washing
my face off and I look up and my skin looks just like it does right now when I looked up. Obviously,
I didn't have a beard, but it was clean. There was no acne. There was no issue. Everything had
been completely healed. As a matter of fact, I was on this experimental drug for the type of acne
that I had that actually could cause liver damage and kill me so I had to take a supplement on top of it called Retina A, which replenishes your
vitamin A supply.
And so like all the little cracks in your finger, the reason why those little cracks
of skin happen and they allow that flexibility is because your body is producing vitamin
A that moisturizes and causes nourishment for those things to bend.
Well, when you deplete your body of vitamin A,
you have to replenish it or really bad things will happen.
So all of these things started cracking and bleeding.
So in between my elbows, behind my knees, under my arms,
anywhere that there's folding of skin,
we were depleting all the vitamin A supply.
So I was in pain, dude.
It freaking sucked.
It was embarrassing.
But let me tell you something.
That day, I washed my face in that church bathroom, and I looked at myself.
It was the first time I'd ever seen my skin clear.
I'm like, what the, what is happening here?
And this is like, you know, people talk about like hearing a voice from God, right?
This was like my moment, I guess.
This was my moment.
And I'm sitting there looking at myself in the mirror.
And Ryan, I am not that smart of a guy,
so there's no way I could have come up with this.
But I'm sitting there looking at myself in the mirror,
and I hear this voice say,
what is your excuse now?
And it was like he took away every excuse.
He took away the hindrance of my skin.
He put a new heart in me. He helped me view the world differently. He put new passions and dreams and desires in me.
And so I really had no excuse to hold back from this new life. And so sure enough, I jumped in
and started getting involved with the local church. I became a student leader. Then when it
came time to select college, I actually got a full ride scholarship to any California state
university I wanted to go to because I graduated top 5% of my class and I was also low income.
But I walked away from all of those scholarships to go to a non-accredited Bible school at that
church to become a pastor because I was so deeply moved. My life was so radically transformed. And when I
thought about making a difference in the world, nothing could top maybe helping other people
experience the same thing that I experienced. So that's really how the journey began right there.
Because up to that point, I was just this obscure kid that really had no direction,
that was just really trying to escape his past. But for the first time in my life, I had purpose.
I had a purpose.
And what's crazy is as I built ministries and traveled all over the country
and built different churches and all these different things,
that message stayed with me everywhere I went.
I'll be honest, as a pastor, I didn't really like preaching sermons.
I didn't really like doing weddings.
I didn't really like doing funerals.
I didn't really like doing counseling sessions. I didn't really like doing weddings. I didn't really like doing funerals. I didn't really like doing counseling sessions.
I didn't really like most of the things that a pastor does.
But the one thing that I absolutely loved more than anything else is sitting down and hearing people's stories.
And then helping them find purpose, even in the pain.
Even in the dysfunction.
Even in the setback.
Even in the temporary trial or circumstance that they may be in.
Just pointing them towards, hey, there's always hope. God's always working. And you never know
how this circumstance or situation, although painful and tough right now, might actually be
preparing you for something greater in your future. And so those types of conversations,
I just naturally gravitated towards. And so when I left the ministry in 2021 and started what I'm
doing now with marketing and branding, I knew without a shadow of a doubt, we needed to build
it on the most firm foundation that we could, which is this idea of purpose. Because if you
have someone shoot video and photos and write copy and create all these design stuff, but you don't
even really know what you're trying to accomplish or what image you're actually trying to put out there into the world, all that stuff is going to fall flat.
It's all going to fall flat. But if you take the time to do the hard work, to look inside and say,
hold up, why am I really here on earth? And what am I supposed to be doing with the talents, the
personality, and the unique worldview that you've given me throughout the course of my life.
How am I supposed to be using that to help the human species survive? Not just my own survival,
but all those around me as well. And when you start to zoom out of your life and really begin
to look at it from that particular lens, all of a sudden what begins to happen is either you're
completely overwhelmed because you don't know where to start or number two you begin to feel this sense of empowerment and you become
like this unstoppable force once you discover and put some words to the question of what is
my purpose and so now that's that's what I get to do every single day now every client that I work
with we always start with let's discover your purpose let's start with the foundation of, and then we can build all kinds of cool, creative stuff after the fact.
But if you don't know your purpose, number one, you're going to struggle as a human being.
And then you're also going to struggle in business or whatever endeavor you're trying to move forward.
If you can't connect it back to something bigger than yourself and something that actually helps other people solve problems or helps point them toward a purpose of their own.
So that was like my story in like a super tight window,
but that's where it started and that's where we're at today.
Why did you listen to that message?
What message?
The church service?
What is your excuse now?
I think a lot of people might have heard that and gone right back to the same lifestyle they were living before.
You decided to listen and keep pushing forward.
You know, Ryan, if I'm being totally honest, I was guessing, man.
I was guessing at life.
And again, I was a teenager, so you can't really have that much expectation for a teenager that really had no father figure, had no real leadership throughout their life.
But I just was guessing.
I was rolling the dice.
I was hoping that maybe education, going to college, that that would somehow better my life and better my future and maybe change the trajectory of my family.
And so, really, I was wandering.
I think I was lost. I was
looking for leadership. And that was like the first time in my life where I felt like something
had happened to me that nudged me and led me and pulled me towards a destination as opposed to like,
good luck kid, good luck figuring it out. And so, yeah, there was like a tremendous amount of
direction. There was a tremendous amount of hope. And I think for the first time, um, and we can talk about this a little bit too,
is I was chasing validation. And I think that was the first time I actually felt validated as a
person, as a human being that like a God in heaven would care enough to like get my attention at this
crazy church thing, like invade my heart, cause it to radically change, heal my body and not
just be like, yo, good luck. But then like the cherry on top was like, I ain't done with you.
Like you are going to do things in your life. I've just removed some of the limitations that
is preventing you from even thinking like that, but even dreaming like that in your life. So don't allow an excuse or your previous past excuses to define your future. And
I, yeah, I don't know. I honestly, there was probably so many psychological things that were
happening in that moment. Um, that caused me for the first time to have hope about my future.
And that hope was so strong that again, it altered the course and trajectory
of my life. You know, it's interesting, um, different context, different scale, but, you know,
I do a lot of youth coaching, coach basketball, coach baseball, and you know, everyone, you know,
you get, you hear, you hear parent, parents are the worst.
Except for the ones that I coach.
But they just – you hear all these things.
They're only 11 years old.
Don't put expectation on them.
Don't put pressure.
It's supposed to just be fun. And I listen to that and I understand where they're coming from.
I think it's coming from a good place, but there's another part of me that's like, okay,
when is the arbitrary time that we start putting expectations that we start holding people
accountable, holding these kids accountable to doesn't have to be things that we'd hold
a 25 year old accountable for.
But when does the, they're just kids excuse go away? When do we
start saying, look, you know, you've been doing this for five years. I expect you to act classy
in every situation. I expect you to show up on time. I expect you to, you know, and for someone
who had lived so long, as you said,
without expectation to me, you know, what I hear in that story is that the fact that there was,
it was a different kind of pressure on you. It went from the pressure of how do I stay alive
to the pressure of time to get something done. And that expectation, you know, allowed you, you, you,
you know, and again, and I'm, I'm reading into your story, but all of a sudden you started to
feel worthy. You started to feel like you had value and now you get direction. And I think,
you know, this is one of the things that drew me into Jordan Peterson's work, which I came in
contact with back in 2016, 2017, when he
published 12 Rules for Life.
He has a previous book, Maps of Meaning, but that is a difficult one to get through.
Amazing, but difficult.
12 Rules for Life is all about purpose and meaning, purpose and meaning, purpose and
meaning.
And when we find these things, all all of a sudden that job that maybe
didn't feel you know isn't what you expect i work in the insurance industry right um
there's no little kid who who grows up and goes i want to be an insurance agent when i grow up
nobody no there's not a single person that that does that right yeah but when you get in and you start to find purpose in the work
regardless of what the work is all of a sudden you start to love what you do and love the people
and it becomes fun and interesting and engaging yeah what you know and i want to i i don't want
our entire conversation to be about um maybe religion and these types of topics, though I do think they go hand in hand.
It feels today like, and I'm not the first one to say this,
it may have been Jonathan Haidt or someone else,
I think he wrote a wonderful book,
The Coddling of the American Mind,
but there's a God-sized hole in people's heart today
and we're filling it with the wrong things.
Why do you, from your place, from doing as much work as you've done with individuals,
both as a pastor and as just a friend, as a family member,
where did that hole come from, and how do we start to fill it with purpose and meaning?
Man, that's a fantastic question.
Kind of dabbles in the realm of, you know, what's the meaning of life type deal.
So I've got my own unique theological perspective and my own philosophical perspective of that
question.
If you have a different one, it doesn't mean that you're wrong.
It just means you have a different perspective on these things.
But my unique perspective is this, right? The Bible outlines kind of this
creation story, right? Where God creates the heavens and the earth, creates man and woman.
And then there introduces this kind of adversarial character, the devil, the snake, right? The
tempter. And the tempter, you know, obviously gets the woman alone and says,
yo, God didn't really say that you couldn't eat this stuff and touch this fruit. Like,
what does he know, man? He just knows that if you eat this, man, you're going to be better than God.
You're going to know more than God. You're going to be wiser than God. You're actually going to
be God's God. So like, bro, he's just trying to keep you from all the good things. So have at it.
Go be God's God.
And so sure enough, like any human person, we have flaws.
We have insecurities.
We have aspirations.
We have all of those things.
And really the snake manipulated our natural tendencies to get us to overstep a boundary that unfortunately brought in a ton of consequence.
Right? a boundary that unfortunately brought in a ton of consequence, right? So the moment that Eve ate the
fruit and then obviously shared it with her husband and then got confronted about that,
that was like when this idea of sin, S-I-N, right? Missing the mark, whatever you, however you want
to define it, it's just this, it's this mortal flaw of the human race that we now have. And again,
according to Christian theology and according
to what I've researched and identified in myself, I see it in my children. I've seen it in all the
people that I've ministered to is that this, this sin it's we're born with it. We're born with that
hole. So I don't think it like you were like, good, good, good, good, good. Then you got punched
in the soul. And all of a sudden there's this massive hole that you need to get filled no no every single person is because of what happened with adam and
eve's path to the bloodline so and why did god set it up like that i don't know i don't know i don't
know why he set it up like that but but the way he set it up was that every human being from that
point on would then inherit the consequence that happened in that garden. And so the consequence is this idea of sin. Now, sin isn't like, yo, you're bad. You're a terrible person. You've got
no value. You're worthless. Oh my gosh, you're such a heathen. Get up out of my church, right?
Like, it's not that. What sin basically is, is the separation, the gap between who God created you to be and who you are right now.
Right?
And again, there's a lot of people who may want to disregard like, oh, God didn't make us a certain way.
He doesn't tell us how to live a certain way.
Well, then, dude, why the heck is there this like 5,000 page book that's outlasted every other book?
And if it went away today would it would completely destroy all literary
understanding all civilization it will literally destroy the point of human life if this book goes
away right if if he didn't give us a manual on how to live then then through that book then man
i don't know what you're not seeing but anyways through the bible they outline all these different
things that we should do to be a good civilization and to ultimately close that gap between God and where we are currently with our
sin. And the reality is, Ryan, like that gap is way too far. And the people in the Old Testament,
the way that they thought that they could close that gap was that I just do enough good things.
I just become a good enough person. Don't make any mistakes. And like somehow if I be achieved perfection, then somehow that gap has been
traversed. And now I'm like one with God and I'm holy and I'm accepted by God and whatever. I get
all the benefits of the God stuff, right? Paradise, living forever and all these, these things, right?
And so what God did was like that, that chasm between
where you are now and where God wants you to be is just too big. And so that's why he sent his son,
Jesus, right. To be, to be the filler of the gap that we could never be for ourselves. And so you
want to talk about God's eyes hole, the God's eyes whole really isn't like something in us. It's the separation between us and God.
That's the God's eyes whole.
And the way that God chose to solve that and bridge those two worlds was through his son, Jesus.
And again, a lot of people probably have a bunch of different beliefs about Jesus.
But the cool thing about Jesus is the story goes, right?
Like the theology goes that he lived a perfect sinless life.
He was a completely innocent man, but yet he took on the penalty of everybody. Like we were the
guilty ones, so we should have been penalized. But instead, a dude who did nothing wrong,
who pointed people to Jesus or pointing people to God, had to lay down and sacrifice his life to pay a penalty
that we owed. Like what the heck, dude, what kind of freaking logic is that? Right? Because this was
like in a day and age where it was like eye for an eye. You'd like, you punched me in the eye,
bam, I'm gonna knock you out. Right? And we still live in that, in that world, right? That's the,
that sense of justice, right? If you do me wrong, then I get to do you wrong. Or if you ruin my life, now I get to ruin your life. And really what happened when Jesus came to the earth was like,
he upended the entire model of justice in our mind. Like, wait, hold on, wait, an innocent
person is dying for the guilty and they're like choosing to do that. Wait, that doesn't,
that messed with my head. And so really what Jesus introduced through his sacrifice was this idea of sacrificial love.
Up until that point, there really wasn't this idea of sacrificial love in the human race.
It was, dude, I will sacrifice my child to keep my kingdom.
You see that all throughout, like all the book of Kings and all the Old Testament.
Like even Abraham was willing to kill his own son so he could become the father of many nations. right? And a lot of people say, oh my gosh, that must have been so hard for
him as a father. Well, in that custom, like it might not have been as hard as you think, right?
Because again, that was kind of common practice. You were always thinking self-preservation. How
do I build my kingdom and how do I keep others from taking it away from me? Whereas what Jesus modeled
was you can take as much as you want, but it's not going to make you happy. It's actually when you
flip it and open your arms and invite others in and sacrificially give for others, that's where
you're going to find true fulfillment and true purpose. And that's why I fundamentally believe
that purpose is the most
important thing that any human being should understand. And at the root of purpose, it is not
self-preservation. That's the root of selfishness. That's actually purposelessness, is only caring
about yourself, only absorbed in your own things, only trying to make sure that you survive.
The true purpose, the kind of purpose that God put inside of us,
is actually when we lay our lives down, when we give,
when we are willing to work and sacrifice and do everything we can
to elevate the lives of others.
Just like what you're doing right now with this podcast, right?
I get it. Podcast is a thing. It's a medium. It's a platform. But I guarantee the reason why you're
bringing in all these guests and the reason why you're having these interviews and these
conversations is that you hope that someone will hear this and it will bring some sense of
fulfillment or betterment or enhancement or hope or encouragement to their life. And why do you care about that? Right? Because you want that human to survive. You want
that human not just to survive, but you want that human to believe that they can actually do
something in the world and make a positive difference. And so even through something like
this podcast, you are living out your purpose, which is finding a way to serve others with your life. And if you don't approach life from that,
uh, view, then you are, you are always going to have a hole in your heart.
And a lot of people say it's God sized hole. I'm going to challenge that a little bit. Like
it's a fulfillment sized hole, right? We all want
fulfillment. That's what we all want. We want our lives to matter. We want to be able to put our
head on the pillow at the end of the night, knowing that we did something good for somebody
else, that we actually did something to better the world. Like all of us want that, right?
But the problem is the only way to find it, the only way to attain it, the only way to grab hold
of it is when you're actually helping other people survive and finding ways to help them thrive, not just looking for
ways to feed yourself.
And when you just feed yourself, you're not going to get anything.
So I'll share this one really cool story and then we can move on to whatever questions
you have next.
So this Jewish rabbi was once asked to define heaven and hell, right?
He said, let me start with hell.
He said, in hell, there's this big, long table.
As far as you can see, massive table.
It's got all this food on it.
The most beautifully prepared, the most decadent, the most delicious, flavorful, savory, sweet,
every possible thing that you can imagine.
But in hell, everybody sitting around this table are starving.
They're weeping. They're gn gnashing they're in constant turmoil they're in constant point of torture and torment because
they have one problem their elbows don't bend so they can reach the food but they can't they can't
get it into their mouth so they have everything they could ever want. It's all right there,
but they can't get it to themselves. He says, now let me define heaven for you. He says,
in heaven, there's this big long table with the most beautiful decadent food you can imagine.
There's people sitting all around this table, but all the people around this table are joyful.
They're celebrating. They have more than enough.
Oh my gosh, every single person is having a blast.
They're enjoying themselves.
They're enjoying what's happening around this table.
But their elbows also can't bend.
How is this possible?
They're feeding each other.
And if you don't understand that concept,
fulfillment will always be out of reach for you
when we think about fulfillment
and you really think about it
in the moments where you felt the most fulfilled
I would guarantee
for 99 plus percent of the people listening to this podcast,
it was in the moments where you participated in someone else's joy.
That's right.
Where you felt the most,
your kids getting the hit,
your spouse doing something amazing or,
or,
or taking on a challenge and achieving it.
A coworker,
a friend,
someone who's in need that you just see on the street,
you feel the most fulfilled always
in the moments in which you participate
in someone else's joy.
But today, it's so easy to forget that
with the messaging that comes through to so many of us.
My kids ask me, my kids go to a Catholic school.
I shared that with you, I think, last time we spoke.
Yeah.
And they asked me about hell.
I said, Dad, you know, does hell really blow us?
And I said, I don't know, maybe.
Honestly, I don't think so.
I said, I think, you know, I would go so far as to believe
that hell isn't even a real place.
I think it's an experience that you have.
And that experience is you meet God and you pass away.
And God shows you who you could have been.
And you have to see that thing.
Hell is how far away from that thing you are. Wow. Right. And I said, that's, that's
what I think it is. You know, I, you know, I said, I'm, you know, definitely a sinner. I make mistakes
all the time. I constantly am, you know, fighting the inner demons that we all have. Right. But I'm
trying to figure out, become the person, whatever it is that I believe God created me to be.
He puts you on this earth and he says, if you find your purpose, if you work through fulfillment, joy, love, sacrifice, hope, compassion, caring, all these things, you can become this thing, this amazing thing.
And that doesn't mean you're the. And that doesn't mean you're the
billionaire, right? It doesn't mean you're the president. It doesn't mean you're some
powerful whatever, right? Influencer with a huge audience or a Hollywood star.
There's a thing that you're supposed to be in which you live every day in a massive amount of
joy. And our job is to get as close to that thing as we can.
And hell is when you pass away and God says,
this is what you could have been, but you chose this path.
And you look at that difference.
And that's the best way that I can frame it in my head.
I'm not nearly as scholarly, but I just, I honestly believe,
and this is why we connected so quickly.
I think within 15 minutes, I was like, dude, you got to come on the podcast.
All right, we can keep talking.
Because I just aligned so much with what you're saying.
And then I want to kind of take this out of the theological sense and put it into the business world.
Absolutely.
I guess my first question is what was, you know, with all this experience and everything that you just shared with us,
all these emotions and challenges that you overcame and work that you just shared with us, all these, um, uh, emotions and,
and, and, and challenges that you overcame and work that you did. And you've, I don't want to
say moved away from God, but certainly moved away from being a pastor. Yeah. What was,
what was the impetus for that? Um, what was the impetus for that move?
Yeah, no, I appreciate the great questions. Fair question.
So it's kind of two-pronged, right?
I wasn't healthy, and the environment I was in was not healthy.
So when I first got into ministry right out of high school,
I'm sorry, right after Bible school,
I had these big dreams of working for these you know, these big churches, multi-site
mega churches, tons of influence. Um, because I guess I saw that as like success, right? I saw
that as success. You know, the more people you can pack in a room, the more desirable you are
as a communicator. Um, that is what made you valuable and that's what made you successful as,
as a pastor. And I chased that for
a long time. Um, so I started with a church plant, then I went to a midsize church, then I went to a
large church and then ultimately landed at a multi-site mega church where I was part of the,
uh, part of the leadership team, um, and overseeing massive amounts of responsibility and ministry. And I think what happened during that time was,
like I said, I don't think I was healthy. So we had mentioned this a moment ago in my story,
I was chasing validation. Even though I knew God, even though God had given me this like,
hey, no excuses, go get after it, go change the world. I was taking steps towards that,
but man, I didn't go through any counseling. I didn't go through any processing of my past and
how it altered my mindset, how it altered the filter that I was looking through all of my
decisions and all the relationships that I was having. And it's only recently, probably within
the last three years, that I recognized, holy cow, the whole time that I was in leadership over other people, I had a love for God, but I was really chasing the affirmation of my leaders.
I wanted the leaders, like the lead pastors, the guys who are leading the projects, I wanted them to look at me and say, Matt, you're a good guy.
Man, God's using you.
You're doing the right thing.
I'm proud of you.
Like I was looking for these leaders in my life to say that.
And I will tell you, like they can say it one day and then not say it for a couple days and I need it again.
It was like a freaking drug.
It was a drug. And so because of that, it motivated me to work harder, perform higher,
hold myself to a higher standard. When everybody else was sleeping, I was working. But it wasn't
because I had this crazy work ethic. I think I'm a pretty hardworking guy, but I was chasing their
validation. I was chasing their approval. I wanted them to say,
Matt added value to what we're doing here. Look at how hard this guy works. He's great. He's
awesome. He's amazing. Let me tell you something. It doesn't happen that often.
Nor should people have this obligation to make sure that you are affirmed? That's just a deficit in
you. That's an insecurity in you that you need to personally go on a journey to uncover and discover
why you're longing for that so badly. So I got to a point where in ministry, where I got to where I
wanted to go. I pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed.
Didn't advocate for myself.
Was seeking approval, seeking to please people,
seeking to be accepted and affirmed by my leaders,
which is a terrible position to be as a leader.
That's a very unhealthy place to be.
Because guess who I was thinking about last?
The people I'm supposed to be leading and caring for. It was all about me me me me my my my what do I get out of this what do I get it
why do I rarely thought about the people that I was actually supposed to be serving even though
I was a pastor even though I was under the guise of the shepherd of the flock oh the servant of all
now let me tell you all something there was a point in my life where that shifted to where I really just started caring about me.
And so I started recognizing that tendency
and the problems it was creating on the team
and the problems it was creating for me relationally.
And then on the organizational side of things,
so you don't get paid a lot. Well, depending on who you are, I guess.
Most pastors don't really get paid all that much.
They're not in it for the money.
They're in it to serve God and honor God and things like that.
There are some that are probably in it for the money, right?
Because we all have different needs and we all have different ways that we believe in taking care of our family, whatever.
That's someone's personal decision. So we were really struggling financially after the birth of our fourth child,
which was unexpected.
And I knew the only way for me to make financial means work for our family
was I had to go down the road of the celebrity pastor.
I had to start self-promoting.
I had to start running conferences and writing books and basically telling people, hey, if you
really want to get to know Jesus the right way, you got to come talk to me, which is a complete
farce. It's freaking terrible that people do that and then profit on top of it. And so I guess I had
a shred of morality left, even though I had served so long
within the church. And I said, you know what, that's a line that I'm just not going to cross.
And I saw that that was the only way for me to financially take care of my family. So I said,
holy crap, the church isn't going to give me enough to take care of my family. And I'm not
going to go down this road of self-promotion in the name of Jesus. I'm not going to do that.
And so I only had one other option. And with how unhealthy I had become as an individual the
choice was really clear I got it I got a step away step away from my post because
I'm sure if I kept going I probably get fired or I'd probably get caught up in
some scandal or there probably some other residual impact negative impact if
I didn't take ownership, take responsibility for myself
and exit a situation that just wasn't healthy for me. And so it was funny though, like when I,
when I resigned, we had some conversations. This is the only thing that I'm going to say
about money, right? I was asking for raises and different augmentations to my salary. They're
like, no, no, no, no, no. Your wife's got to work and all this kind of stuff and it was terrible during covid it
was awful and so when i turned in my resignation um the last words they told me was how much do
we need to pay you to keep you oh in which i was just like oh my goodness okay i knew i made the
right decision and i peaced out and moved to Texas and started my life over.
Well, there's an incredible amount of awareness in what you just described because many people get caught in that trap
and don't come up or don't make a change until something really bad does happen.
So there's a lot of awareness in there.
And I think it's a very good point and something that needs to be called out, that validation is an addiction like any other.
A hundred percent.
Oh, my gosh.
It could be deadly.
Yes.
We have a much more crass way of describing that on the show.
You know, it's GNF, give no fucks, right?
And the idea is not that I've described described it before on the show but it's
a it's a mindset that I that I remind myself often of and actually you can't
see it probably because of the camera but for those watching on YouTube but I
have a wood piece of wood behind me that was made by one of the audience members
and it's the letters GNF and it's a reminder that – actually, it's right off my shoulder here.
It's a reminder that we cannot live our lives based on what other people think or say about us.
That's right.
And how I describe it to people because they'll be like, wow.
And I've had people say, well, if you say that, then that means you really do care or whatever.
And my point is it's not that I don't want you to like me.
I want Matt Hoover to like me.
I want you to like me.
But if you don't like me, it has zero impact on my life.
Bingo.
That's what it is.
It's I want to do a good job for you in this interview.
I want to put your expertise, your story, your experience,
what you have to share with this audience on display.
I want you to have an amazing time, and I want the audience to pick up insights, opportunities, thoughts, ideas, little tidbits
that they can apply to their lives. I want that all to happen. But if every single person listening
to this hates me, if you hate me, I literally will go upstairs after this podcast is done and
make lunch for my kids and I won't give a shit. It will mean
nothing to me. It's a superpower, man. It's a superpower for sure. Cultivated. I'll say that
it's something I've cultivated over many years, but I will say it's also a blessing from God
because I've also always had this in me. I've always been an outsider my entire life. I went
to a school with, went to a very large high school for, especially for
the part of the country that I live in. But I came from a town of less than 900 and we were 30
minutes away from the school. We were the smallest town associated with this school. So from the rip,
I was, you know, me and the five kids from my town, you know, cause there just wasn't that many
of us, right? Like we were always outsiders in everything.
We always had to fight to get on the team, fight to get in the club, fight to move up because we weren't part of this crew that had grown up together in the neighborhoods together, gone to the biggest elementary schools, then, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
You know, we were all poor.
That's why we lived in this tiny little town.
So there's that, you know, that thing.
And, you know, through all that, I was never, you know, I always had this,
and this is kind of why I promote this idea as much as I possibly can to people because I do feel like it's a blessing that I've had
and many other things that I struggle with immensely.
But, you know, this particular thing, it bothered me,
but not in the way that, like, it kept me, but not in the way that like it kept me ever from
doing anything.
It was more like, it was more of, okay, I got to figure this out on my own.
And I think when we search for validation, oftentimes what we're looking for is tell
me the answer and I'll do that answer.
Not that I think it's the right answer, Not that I've put the time in to figure
out whether this is the right path or it's, I'm going to do this thing regardless if I think it's
right or wrong, because it's what this person over here that I need validation from wants,
which means we're living askew from going all the way back to what the core concept of this podcast.
It means we're not living our purpose with intention.
We're living someone else's purpose.
I always say you either dictate to the universe or the universe dictates to you.
Woo! Preacher, brother.
Yeah, there's no in-between area.
So kind of coming off of that,
and I want to spend the last few minutes that we have together,
I want to pull all this big, huge, amazing competition to the business world, right?
So now you're helping people with a message, with a business.
You're helping them get that out, find their purpose.
And you had something you said to me off air before we went live.
And this is where I want to start this transition.
Sure, sure.
Communication is meant to solve problems.
I 100% agree with you.
But why, what does that actually mean?
And what is the difference between most communication,
which I think does not,
especially communication on social media
and the communication that actually does?
Yeah.
So I was recently asked to share about communication
to an entire district of mayors, city mayors. And as I was preparing for that, I obviously went
through, you know, my presentation checklist as far as like, okay, who's going to be in the room?
What subject matters appeal to them? and how can I add value?
How can I just deposit something that they can all walk away with and say,
okay, this was worth the cost of admission, right?
And so I started looking at the idea of communication and started digging and digging and digging into it.
And you've heard all the different things.
You know, communication is talking and listening.
Communication is sharing a belief or, you belief or connecting over a similar idea.
But if you actually dig a little bit further than that, what do all those things have in common?
And what I discovered was the core purpose of communication is to solve a problem or avoid future problems. That, that, like,
if there were no problems, we would never have to communicate. We would have never developed
that skill. It would have never become part of the human experience. But because we have problems,
both societal, internal, uh, in the environment, like we have all of these challenges
that we need to overcome in order to survive, communication became an absolute necessity.
And that necessity was born because of problems. And so when you think about any type of communication that you are trying to deliver,
at its core, you are attempting to address, solve, or avoid a future problem.
Like some people say, okay, all right, give me some examples of that. All right, so why does a manager at a company have team meetings?
Everyone hates meetings.
Everyone thinks it's a waste of time.
But why does that manager have some sense of passion and intentionality
and they see some great value in those meetings?
Well, guess what?
They're trying to solve problems and they're trying to prevent future problems from happening. That will cost them their job, cost them their livelihood,
or cost them the culture of the team, right? You think about a sports team. Why do they have
practice? Why do they have huddles? Why are they talking to each other? Well, they're talking to
each other because there are problems all around them and they have to find a way to
navigate the problems to come out victorious. And without communication, you can't have that
happen. And I'll even break it down to like human relationships. Like why do we as friends
have to talk to each other? Well, because we're trying to prevent losing that friend
and losing that relationship because that relationship gives
us fulfillment. It gives us fun and care, care, love, support. It gives us all these things that
we need as human beings. And if we were to lose that tomorrow, that would be a problem.
And so the reason why we actually communicate with each other and stay up with relationships
is because we're actually trying to solve the problem of loneliness, but then also avoid the
problem of future loneliness.
So it doesn't matter if your communication is widespread and global, like a world leader,
or in a one-on-one conversation, the ethos, the purpose, the whole reason why that interaction is happening is to solve a problem. Now, you can tell very quickly if someone's communication is
effective or not. Do they have a clear problem that they're trying to solve? Do they have a
clear plan on how to solve it? Do they know how to motivate people to do it? And do they actually
have action steps that a person could do to participate in solving that problem? And in the
business world, your problem might be we have low sales. Okay?
So if your problem is low sales, how can you leverage communication to solve that problem?
But if you never acknowledge that that's the real problem, you don't want to look at any of the
evidence that's contributing to that problem. You don't even want to consider how that problem is
affecting those around you. And you don't want to put any time to actually thinking through how,
what is the best approach to solving that problem,
then you should keep your mouth shut because your communication is doing nothing
unless it's directly anchored to you solving a problem or avoiding a future problem from happening.
What is the number one sales killer?
Make this hyper-tactical.
The number one sales killer is barfing features and
benefits. Oh, yeah. Barfing features and benefits onto a customer. The reason that barfing features
and benefits onto a customer put in the context of what you just said is because you have no idea
if any of those features and benefits actually solves the problem that that potential customer
has. Now, what happens is occasionally you get lucky and one of those features and benefits actually solves the problem that that potential customer has. Now, what happens is occasionally you get lucky and one of those features and benefits does solve a
problem and the person is able to connect the dots and they go, okay. But when you look at the great
salespeople, the people who actually get things done, they, you know, call it consultative sales,
call it listening sales, call it empathy, empathy you know put whatever adjective or whatever on top of it right they're they're listening for the problem
yep and then they solve the problem that the person actually has bingo because that person
because you could have 17 features and benefits associated with your product but there's only
there might only be one of them that actually solves a problem that customer has and if you haven't listened and aren't able
to articulate and you aren't able to explain how it actually solves it the
sale never happens you know this this idea of framing communication is solving
problems I absolutely love and will 100% steal give give you credit for it, but steal, because I think this is dialing in on why so many people struggle on social media
to build an audience, right?
So say you're growing a brand and a business.
It could be a coffee shop on Main Street.
And why is everyone still going to Starbucks?
You're local.
You source it from these crazy places and all this flavor and bop, bop, bop, bop, bop.
And it's amazing.
It's amazing because you're not explaining,
you're not solving a problem in the way you're talking about your product.
You're taking pictures of your coffees or doing dances on Tik Tok and none of
that is actually solving a problem for the customer.
And it to me is it's wild. Um, I, I'm, I'm gonna,
you know, just, I'm gonna show one more example with you yeah
I work on two separate occasions have grown insurance agencies at a massive
rate by doing one simple tactic I open up my phone and I answer a common
question associated with a problem that insurance customers that literally I've
done this twice I've grown to YouTube, more than 400,000 views in a year about insurance because I did one simple thing.
Hi, my name is Ryan Hanley, and today I'm going to answer the question, what is general liability?
So if you have a problem with general liability, I just gave you the exact answer to that problem.
Exactly. That's what they do. They go, geez,
if he knows the answer to the problem i
have maybe he's the guy i should call to solve the problem and what's insane to me is that
this simple tactic i mean i know we're going we've gone from we've gone from god to tactical
marketing it's all connected baby right but it's it takes you all the way there to the idea and
to bring it all the way back to the idea and and to bring it all
the way back to to to to what we were talking about earlier with god in the bible you know
again bring bring jordan peterson in here just because i think from a from a from a secularist
viewpoint jordan peterson in my opinion is the best conduit to the bible from a secularist
viewpoint right sure absolutely even god but as a conduit for people who tend to be more secular Jordan says act as if these stories that are told in that particular book solve problems that's right
that's what the book does so even if you're like I don't believe there's this guy up here and he
set his kid down and he brewed you know he had this uh flood and all the crazy shit that's in the Bible, right?
If you can believe none of it, if you just listen, appreciate, and internalize the stories,
they will solve problems in your life, which is why the in-book has been around for so long
because it solves so many problems, which is why – and this is where I'm going to pass it back to you and we can wrap up.
Sure.
This is why I believe all these new age, postmodern, wokeism, and stuff on the right too, right?
Some of the stuff that comes out of the MAGA stuff, right?
All these new concepts we have to be so careful of.
They haven't been tested by time. You know what I mean?
It's okay to contemplate them. It's okay to even play with them a little bit
But we cannot base our belief structure on concepts that are 15 20 years old
There you know what I mean, and it doesn't have to be look if Christianity is not your thing
Right look into some of the ancient Eastern religions.
What you're going to find is the stories are pretty similar, right?
I always say this to my mom, who's a devout Bible purist.
So every Japanese person before 1823 is fucked.
Like, I don't understand, right?
But when you dig into their culture and you go way back, the stories are very, very similar, right?
So pick whatever, pick an ancient, these the stories are very very similar right so pick whatever pick an ancient these
ancient stories are there believe don't believe that's your decision i ultimately think that when
you start to embrace some of these things you will start to believe but but the stories are there to
help you solve problems associate yourself with people ideas that are battle-tested, that, as you said, are solving real problems.
My friend, I could talk to you for hours, hours and hours.
You both have things to do.
The audience has things to do.
I appreciate the help out of you.
We will absolutely have you back on the show.
If people are digging your vibe, if they want to find out how to work with you, how to help find their purpose, how to get their purpose out into the market, how do they do that?
Yeah, so the name of my company is called Message Masters. you, how to help find their purpose, how to get their purpose out into the market. How do they do that? Yeah.
So the name of my company is called Message Masters.
You can find us online at message-master.com.
You can follow me on social media at Master Your Message.
And then I actually have a resource that in four prompts, I can help you discover your
purpose. Like literally the ethos
of your existence. I can help you do it in four prompts. It takes about five to seven minutes.
And many of the people that I've taken through this particular resource, they're like crying.
They're like, holy crap. I've never seen my life through this lens before. I never thought I could
do something like this. I never put the pieces together.
Because here's the deal.
Like many of us are living out our purpose, but we're just doing it blindly.
So there's no real intentionality to it.
And so really when I hear someone's story and I take them through this exercise, it's
putting words and some direction to what you're already doing and showing you just how valuable
it really is to the greater whole.
So, yeah, we have our focus in brand development.
We do video production services.
Really, our bend in business is your business has an incredible purpose.
It has an incredible story.
It's incredibly valuable.
And if you're not telling your story, you are missing, missing, missing so many opportunities to make the world a better place.
And so that's our whole goal.
Where can people get that prompt resource?
Is that something on your website or is that something they can recruit you for?
You know, the way that we've primarily distributed it is through a one-on-one conversation.
I'll sit down with you for 30 minutes and then we'll kind of go through the process.
I have thought about making it more easily accessible.
But the problem is it takes a level of coaching.
You can't really do it on your own because there are a lot of things that you have to think about and consider.
And I haven't taken the time to consolidate it down into, I guess, like kind of a how-to step-by-step.
But that might become soon.
So they will go to your website and reach out to you through contact form and go through the process that way.
Awesome.
My man, appreciate the hell out of you.
We will absolutely have you back on the show.
This has been incredible.
Thank you so much.
Right on, brother.
Take care.
Peace.
Let's go.
Yeah, make it look, make it look, make it look.
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