The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 036 - Rand Fishkin on the Opportunity That Exists Where Capitalism Meets Humanity
Episode Date: March 9, 2020Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comRand Fishkin is a world-class entrepreneur, best selling author and one of the most dynamic individuals in the marketing and entrepreneurial s...pace, if not the world. His work has also played a major impact on the success of my own career and it was my great honor to share our conversation with you.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello everyone and welcome back to the show. Today I am joined by someone who, it's hard for me to express the gravity of the impact
this individual has had on the course of my career.
As many of you who've listened to this show or if you followed along with my work for
any period of time, you know that very early on in my career, 2010, 2011, even as back as far as
2009, content marketing and a focus on storytelling and delivering value and then a lot of the
technical aspects of that that come with SEO and building out websites, that was what changed the
course of my career. The reason that I'm sitting here in this chair,
the reason that Rogue Risk, my agency exists, all the parts in between this moment and 2009,
if it wasn't for my adoption of what was then just called blogging, but essentially is content marketing in our current vernacular, that Ran Fishkin
played a large part, a large part in the development of my expertise and skills in that space.
And I didn't know Ran personally. Frankly, the conversation that we just had is the first time that we've ever spoke in person, 10, 11 years from when I first started engaging with his content.
But the work that he did originally at SEO Moz, which then became Moz, and now he's transitioned,
published a bestselling book, lost and founder, and is now a co-founder of a company called Spark
Toro.
His work has just always been there.
From his Whiteboard Friday videos to the in-depth articles, and even in the episode, in the
interview I mentioned, it's not just his work, but then the people that he brought into the
space that he kind of put on blast,
you know what I mean?
That the platform that he originally built then allowed others to come behind him and
build upon and do even more.
It really, he is a cornerstone figure in my own career.
And we have a dynamic conversation. We go a lot of different places, business,
we go a lot of different places in this interview and it is an absolute treasure.
I want to, by far one of my favorite interviews that I've probably ever done because I had no idea where this was going to go.
And I think what you get out of this interview is the cross-section of humanity and capitalism and the opportunity that exists in that space.
And I will treasure the conversation because I think it's, it was
important and, uh, and I just enjoyed the shit out of it. So, um, with that, I want to get on
directly, no sponsor, no sponsor. The only thing I'm going to ask you is if you like this episode, just subscribe, tell a friend, whatever.
Listen to more episodes because there's lots of good stuff in here.
So with that, let's get to Rand and this absolutely tremendous conversation.
I really enjoy it.
So I do a lot of interviews with people inside the space.
But when I get to bring someone like yourself, who is infinitely talented in something that
is an insurance and share your expertise, that cross pollination, I think yields enormous
dividends for them because they kind of hear the same voices over and over.
It's not a huge over. It's,
it's not, it's not a huge community. There's only about 500,000 people in the industry.
So when you, you know, and then take that cross cut and think of how many actually share what they're doing. Um, this is a, a very, very valuable to them. Um I had Anne Hanley on in September, October, and people just went bananas. I mean,
rightly so. I mean, she's tremendous, but you know, just to hear this voice and all that from
outside the space. So, so I think I wouldn't overthink that side of it. Not that you would,
but I just want you to know that. Okay, great. Well, I'm glad to hear it for sure.
Cool.
So we'll get right into it.
And, you know, man, I just, I'm really excited to have you on.
You know, we did the little intro talk before we started recording here,
but I'm trying, I walk downstairs to my office where I record these,
and I'm sure you get this a lot,
but I just have to say it so that I can release the stress of our conversation. I'm trying very hard not to like
just pepper you with like super nerdy content marketing questions because I've followed you
for so long. Oh my God. But like I was my subscriber from way, way long ago. I fell in love first with your voice and I want to ask you a ton of questions about that. But I do think, and I know you've heard this many times, but I think it's very deserving. You are one of the jewels of the marketing leadership, entrepreneur, whatever you're talking in, you really are.
And I just wanted to say thank you for all the work that you've done.
Oh my gosh, that is so kind, Ryan.
I honestly, it's, yeah, not all of that has been intentional.
A lot of it's kind of stumbling through and just trying to be helpful to other people.
But it's always great to hear that, that that's resonated. For, for, for those of you who've ever followed my career, I can actually pin a lot of
the content marketing work and success that I had back in my early days as an agent to, to,
to literally mimicking and listening and putting into practice many of the things that,
that Rand and then the people who he, he brought to who he brought to us, to the audience, the other people who he, not just you, but your team,
and I'm just using you as maybe the focal point, but what SEO Maz and the work that you did and
the people that you highlighted brought to small business owners, small business professionals
like myself who were trying to get our message out into the world, you know, small business owners, small business professionals like myself,
who were trying to get our message out into the world. Um, it re it really has had an impact,
man. And, and, and I'm sure you are aware of that, but, uh, I would be doing your work a
disservice if I didn't let you know that, that, you know, a large part of content marketing is
what changed the course of my career. And you played a significant role in that.
Oh, well, thank you. Yeah, I'm thrilled to hear it.
Okay, so now that the ego stroking is over, and I released that pent up stress that I had
feeling the need to say those things to you, we can actually get into some content and talk
through some of this stuff. So the very first place that I want to go is what I think is your superpower, just watching
from the outside.
And it is the ability to mix a very technical topic, whatever that topic may be, whether
it's SEO, content marketing, evaluating something that's happening in that industry or another,
or even your book, Lost and Founder, which I have a couple of questions
I want to ask you about, where you're talking very much about being an entrepreneur and growing
company, you mash up the ability to deliver technical value with personal transparency in a way that it really draws someone in. And my question for you is,
is that a skill? Do you think there is an innate sense to you that that's just something that came
out and is part of who you are? Or was it also kind of developed through the work? Like,
how did you get to that point? If you even think that's a fair critique.
No, no, I think that's a good assessment, right?
One of the things that I've always seen
over the course of my career is that,
and it's certainly something I got better at, right?
But it's a skill I've invested in
and an effort, a conscious effort that I've made.
And that is to teach people and share my experiences
in a way that's compelling and that, that earns attention. And part of that, you know, part of
that in my early twenties, to be totally frank, Ryan was just about filling that kind of personal
need to be paid attention to, you know, you know, when you to. You know, when you're just getting started in
work and in life as an adult, and you're like, look at me, look at me, look at me.
I had that, right? I had that big, I describe it sometimes as like a hole in my chest that
could only be filled by the praise of other people on the internet. And in the early days of the internet,
that was blogging and getting people to comment on my posts and getting nice emails about the
stuff that I'd write. And if I got one or two of those, you know, fueled my ego for the next day,
and then I'd try and get more and more and more. And over the course of, you know, frankly, a decade, 2001, maybe even 1999, when I started writing on the web, into the
early days of Moz as a software company, 2007, 8, 9, that worked.
It eventually turned into a great content marketing practice.
I didn't even call it content marketing back in the day.
It was just me looking for attention. And what can I say? I think that storytelling is a super powerful skill. It is absolutely something that marketers who want to reach other people should invest in. And the more compelling you can make your stories, the more attention you can attract.
Do you think that that feeling ever goes away? Or because I completely
share that sense with you, especially early on. And one question that I've asked myself
is, does that feeling go away? Or do we just get better at managing it?
That's a great question.
Certainly I would say that with age and experience comes a maturity that recognizes that it's not everything.
Yeah.
Right?
So I don't know whether I'd call that you get better at managing it
or you just start to internalize the idea
that what other people think about you
and how much other people think about you
is not the most important thing in the world.
Yeah.
And that, you know,
I think that is often why folks who are further on in their, in their careers of all kinds have a little bit less of that kind of desperate energy that you, you know, that you see in, I don't know, young celebrities, young politicians, young stars in their fields,
and just seems to be a reality of humanity, right?
I think it's why when you look at cohorts
of social media behavior from young folks, right?
I remember 10, 15 years ago, everyone was
looking at Facebook and saying, oh, well, you know, young people are never going to use email.
They're just going to be on Facebook. Now, now everyone says that about WhatsApp or TikTok,
right? And as you watch those cohorts move through, as they get into their later years. Oh, it turns out, what do you know?
Once people hit 25, no matter which generation they're part of,
they start getting on email more.
They stop using certain forms of social media as much.
Look at that. Curious indeed.
Yeah. I find it very interesting that we've stopped using the word millennials.
Thank God.
It's so nice, isn't it?
I just, in the insurance industry, it was like you couldn't get away from it.
It was almost like you couldn't hit publish on the interweb would not allow an insurance professional to publish
something without injecting the word someplace in that piece of content. Yeah. Microsoft Clippy
would pop in. Did you use millennial more often in your copy? Exactly. Oh my gosh. I'm so glad.
I just remember standing on stage and going, it's not millennials. They're 24. They don't know what they're doing.
Do you remember what you were like at 24? I could barely keep myself alive at 24.
Oh, geez. Young men are just the worst. I don't know what we were thinking. But I will say,
one of the problems I have with the generational divide lines and the markers is I think that while there are statistical correlations with behavior across decades and trends,
the sharp dividing lines that we concocted in the media, sort of starting with the baby boomer generation and then going to others, just simply makes no sense, right?
I've never seen an analysis of people born in 1980 versus 1981
and how they are remarkably different from one another.
And yet there's this huge dividing line that the media has concocted
and that we all use around it.
And I find that misleading at best.
And so I think that's really unwise to use that.
I think it's also very unwise to attribute to generations or age
what can be better explained by other phenomena.
So for example, you know, obviously
you and your listeners operate in the insurance industry, so you have a really good sense for the
financial capabilities and financial biases of groups of people the 1980s into the 1990s is that as their generation
graduated high school or graduated college, the work opportunities, while still available,
were at a far lower number compared to the cost of living in most of the
United States. And so they simply don't have as much disposable income as their parents' generation
did. And this gets media attention for like, oh, those millennials don't like homeownership or buying cars or having
children. And in fact, their behavior when they have the same finances as their parents' generation
had compared to cost of living is remarkably similar. It's just the fact that that's not
how the U.S. economy worked. The U. The US economy basically rewarded a very small number of people
with a huge amount of wealth,
and nearly everyone else kind of suffered
and did not do as well as a generation 20, 30 years before.
So that behavior is explainable with data,
but instead we rely on these lazy media tropes.
I really hate that. I think it's bad
for business. I hope everyone listening takes to heart. I'm going to give one, absolutely.
As a supplemental factor, who expected the baby boomers to continue on for another 20 years in
the leadership positions and retaining wealth that had normally
been generationally transitioned down at this point.
Right.
So, you know, there's, I couldn't agree with you more.
Um, and that aspect and one that's often pushed around the insurance industry is loyalty,
right.
Where, you know, they, they jump from carrier to carrier, from provider to provider, agent
to agent,
and there's a distrust in big business.
And to the same kind of idea that you said, if you had to live through the 2000 stock market crash as a child
and watch your parents, either their careers or their fortunes be obliterated,
then go through 2007, 2008, then live through hyperinflation and
everything that's going on in our economy today and the massive move of jobs overseas,
how would you be loyal to large enterprises? Would you naturally just say, oh yeah,
they have my back? right? Like it makes
no sense. And then we're saying, well, you know, it's the internet and it has nothing to do with
internet and everything to do with the cultural ramifications of the last 20 years of our economy.
And yeah, yeah. And I think that's, I think what, you know, I think that has interesting political
implications, interesting cultural implications, but also really interesting business implications.
Because if you successfully identify these trends, and if you can mentally remove yourself from the, well, I don't believe it because it doesn't fit with the political reality that I want to believe
in or how I want to think about things. Just take that away for a while and instead focus on
the reality of how financial success has been distributed across the spectrum of,
we'll use just the United States because i think uh it's a little tougher
worldwide yeah but you know if we look at the distribution of where wealth is going and where
it has been uh historically right essentially post-world war ii you have this very large
middle class and for for several generations that wealth keeps growing and getting distributed more and more up until, you know, essentially the 1980s,
when, again, people can argue the politics of what happened or why it happened exactly,
but essentially that distribution stops going to a broad middle class.
Folks who are low-wage earners, that group starts to grow,
the middle class starts to stagnate. And it is the upper and even the upper echelon, right,
the sort of top nine of the top 10% stagnates in terms of their wealth growth. And it's essentially
the 1%, and really the 0.1%, and the 0.01% where almost all of the
economic gains from the last really 35, 40 years have gone. And so if you're recognizing that as
a business, I think you can be very wise about how to play your products, right? And how to do your marketing because you can essentially
target your products to, hey, we need to pay attention to how much people can afford,
what they worry about and don't, what they care about and don't, who has wealth and doesn't,
who can afford our products and doesn't, where to reach those people, how to market to them.
And that tends to have a lot more success than sort of
burying your head in the sand and hoping that everyone's going to behave the same way that
their parents did.
Yeah.
I, you know, how I usually attack these types of issues, because I don't know that, um,
I don't know that I'm smart enough to understand the, you know, even, even just cultural
ramifications of all the factors that go into decision-making, but I know that mass market
marketing, mass media marketing tends to do silly things. So I watch what they do and then do the opposite.
So when I see everyone going, millennials are unloyal and all they care about is price
and the product means nothing to them. What I say to myself is that sounds like someone who
really wants a good product at a competitive price and wants to work with someone who's going to take care of them.
You know what I mean?
Like it sounds like someone who just wants to be petted on the head and say everything's going to be okay.
Like you're not going to get hosed and not placated to. that's where how I tend to, to engage people is to say, you know, to me that, that, that action
is not a, does not necessarily mean that, that that's what they want. Just because someone may
jump around from provider to brighter or carrier to carrier. Um, it doesn't necessarily signal
that that is exactly the experience that they want. Right. I think there's two ways to play that.
I think you can lean very heavily against the trend to say, hey, we are going to provide
a premium product that has relationships at the core of it that looks for the most relationship
driven customers, identifies those based on their behavior based on where we reach
them all that kind of stuff and then um you know gets that share of the market even if that share
of the market is smaller than it used to be yeah but we're going to appeal to them or we can go the
other direction and basically say hey let's remove the hands-on touch, the heavy relationship aspect.
Let's have a much more cost-efficient product
by digitizing almost everything that we do,
by removing a lot of need for customer service,
for salespeople, for people costs, essentially,
and then make that product really compelling
for folks who are not relationship-driven, but instead are price-driven and are looking for the
best value that they can get, right? And then we make that available in a self-service kind of way.
And you can see, you know, you can really see the U.S. economy bifurcating in sector after sector on these two vectors.
Essentially, you get more high touch, more relationship driven at the higher end and
more mass market self-service at the lower end.
And companies that have done this well have done extraordinarily well over the last 20 years. And there's not really, and what I hear you saying and would agree with is either option
is not necessarily right or wrong.
Where you could get yourself in trouble is if you try to have one foot in one bucket
and one foot in the other bucket.
Yeah, I mean, this is like the is like, uh, the core of product and marketing
strategy, right? Is that you want a strategy that makes sense all the way through the path of, uh,
how the product is designed, how the product is sold and marketed, how the product is, uh,
served and serviced, how the customer is targeted. And if that strategy doesn't make sense all the way
through, right? If it, oh, well, we're going to serve it in a self-service way, but it's going
to be a premium product. What? Right? That's not the expectation that the premium customer has,
right? Premium customer expects relationships. They expect sales. They expect, you know,
potentially high touch. They expect extreme customer service, right? Very, very high levels
of customer service. So you've got to play that. A good way to look at it is like the credit card
and banking industry, right? There is your American Express Platinum customers, right? And then there's your, I have a visa from my local
credit union. And both of those are doing well, but right, it's the in between stuff that gets
really messy. Yeah, I think that, so for you guys listening, where I see insurance, insurance, both carriers,
large and small, and agents getting in trouble here is that right now we're stuck in a transition
period where our business, and Rand, you probably are tangentially aware of this, but it is a,
it is an incredibly traditional business. I mean, we still have highly the issue with it,
with independent, I shouldn't say the issue and interesting business slash marketing problem in
the independent insurance industry space in general is that you can still be 90% paper and be highly successful, highly successful.
Now you could not start a business that way today and be successful, but you can maintain
and even grow an agency using very, very old school tools. The problem is the next wave, right? Like we
talked about the, the millennial agent who is trying to find their place, um,
is struggling because the industry is set up for these, uh, larger, well-established, in some cases, 100, 120-year-old agencies that are paper
and they're completely okay with telling their clients
it's going to take them a month to turn around a proposal.
And I don't want to necessarily say there's anything wrong with that
because they're doing business.
I mean, you can't necessarily fault them for that.
But if the up-and-comer, the upstart,
were to make that same value pitch to a customer,
they would have no shot. It would, you know, they would go out of business. So they're pushing,
they're trying to make their value proposition digital, but the industry is not ready, right?
And we're talking like, we still have conversations about basic API connections.
Like literally we have conferences about basic API connections and whether or not we should have them.
It's a whole different world.
And I feel like that's where a lot of people are stuck.
That's what I'm trying to get to is I feel like a lot of people
are stuck in the middle between being taught traditional
but trying to go digital and they get caught in the middle between being taught traditional, but
trying to go digital and they get caught in the middle there and their value proposition
really gets lost.
If you just, not living in our space, but hearing what I just said, what kind of advice
or what are your first thoughts?
I mean, it does not surprise me.
I think there's huge swaths of the economy and tons of industries that are similar. I think that my advice would generally be if you are one of the folks who embraces change
early and can provide the product that your customers, whether that be at the top end of
the market, the bottom end of the market, if you can, if you can serve your customers better than your
competition and you can market it in the right way to those right folks, you're going to have
a competitive advantage and that, that is what you should be seeking. So I want to shift our
conversation a little bit. And I really, I really just have one question on this particular topic, and then I want to talk about SparkToro.
But so I saw you sent out a tweet a couple – to be honest with you, I have no idea when it was.
A couple weeks ago, at some point in the last few weeks.
And it was basically – your tweet was – and I'll give you just the context here before you respond, but, um, it was basically, if you hire me to speak, you know, I'm going to come with my opinion slash
politics or whatever. Right. And I don't necessarily know if you meant politics,
like actual politics or just your general perception on the world that, that that's not
really the point. Um, what I was so interested in and, and, uh, and this is kind of my impetus for this question is coming
off of yesterday or the day before, a very good friend of mine, Marcus Sheridan, gave the closing
keynote at Social Media Marketing World. And he was crying on stage and was very vulnerable and was 100% him. That's who he is, right?
So, and my perception of you
is that you're very much who you are.
And I'm just interested in your development of that
because I effort to be the same way as often as I can. I think it's a struggle for all of us
to always be maybe exactly who we are. And I'm just interested in the pushback that you get on
that, like your, your experience, because to me, I, you know, I think in some ways our politics
are different, but in certain aspects and in particular, your openness with exactly who you are is something
that I want to encourage in everybody, whether it's working in your local communities. I think
my industry in particular, we get caught in feeling like we have to be a certain way because
of a perception of us. And I'm constantly trying to encourage people to be the, be exactly who they want to be
and allow others to come to them who are either interested in that, uh, agree or disagree or, or,
or relate. Does that make sense? Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. So I'll talk about this first from
the, from the strategy side, right. Which is essentially, um, I was not strategic about this in the early part of my career, right?
I was very transparent about who I was and how things were going and those sorts of things.
But I think I was, you know, what you might term asleep in terms of awareness about the broader world, how institutions and government policy
and law and power impacted all of the world around me. Why was it that when I went to college, I could work a $4.85 an hour job and pay for my tuition
and my rent. And then only three years later, that was totally impossible. And five years later,
it was impossible to the tune of, you know, five times as much, right, to go to the same state
college.
It's not that I didn't care, I just didn't pay attention.
It wasn't on my radar. I didn't think about how when I went to go pitch venture capitalists
in Silicon Valley and would drive all, going to these offices and try
and raise millions of dollars for my company. I didn't think about how horrible it would have
been if I were a woman, right? Because a lot of these meetings, frankly, were, hey, let's go to
this bar and I'll meet you this night or like, come over to my house and let's chat about it. That, you know, Ryan, if you or I
are invited to some 40, 50 year old dude's house, uh, to have a glass of wine with him and chat
about our business, we don't have to think twice about that. We're like, yeah, hell yeah. Put me
in coach. Right. Let me go wine and dine this guy and like get him to invest. And, but if I were a 29 year old woman,
who knows, like, what is that like?
Do I even get that invitation?
Is that dude like, well, I don't, you know, I don't know.
I don't want to be, I don't want to have any impropriety.
So better if I don't invite her, you know,
it's not going to work for me this week hey let me know if
you're back in Silicon Valley some other time or do you get that invitation but it means something
else or do you get that invitation and it means the same thing but you have to spend tons of
cognitive processing to try and figure that out right so I just didn't none of this stuff I didn't
think about the unfairness or the changes in the world or how who I was and who I wasn't affected me.
It just wasn't part of me, right?
And so I didn't talk about that stuff.
And even though it affected me and affected the world around me, I just wasn't aware.
And then, you know, over the course of, I don't know,
the last decade or so, I've become aware of that, right? I have more of a diverse friend group,
right? Lots of folks in my personal and professional networks who have been through all sorts of experiences of all different kinds in whatever, in the political field,
in the financial services field, in the venture capital world, in startups and raising money as
entrepreneurs. And I can see, right, I can see how that stuff changes. And so, like I was in my
early days at Moz, right, where I refused to be quiet about how search engines
worked, despite the fact that Google and Microsoft and whatever didn't like what I was publishing.
I was like, no, screw you guys.
I'm going to tell it how it is.
I'm going to show people what works in SEO.
And that's how I built the Moz brand.
Nowadays, when I see injustice or unfairness or how things work in a field, I want to share that too.
I'm just unwilling to be quiet about it.
So I think I've always had this predilection for transparency.
It's just that now I'm not asleep on this other stuff.
I'm awake and my eyes are open and? I'm, I'm, um, I'm awake and I can, you know, my eyes are open.
And so I share what I see. I like the idea of not being asleep. Um, you know, one of the major
issues inside the insurance industry is, is diversity. It's a, it's an, it mean it's,
we live in a white bread world, um, here. And when I used to put on, I, I, I used to put on i i used to put on a conference um called elevate and
i you know one of my one of my one of the things i used to say to my team is like i can't have any
more white guys on stage like i need a different voice like if they're a white guy they need to
come from a place that like we haven't heard that story 20 times you know what i mean like it's got
to be i need something different.
Not because, you know, I always fight the idea of diversity for diversity's sake,
but I think that.
Ryan, can I ask, why is that?
Yeah.
Why do you fight the idea of diversity for diversity?
No, no. And here I have, I have a, and I'm super interested in your thing,
but this is, I don't want to diminish the,
I don't want to diminish the person who I put on stage
because anyone could ever say
the only reason they're on that stage
is because they're not a white guy.
Yeah, so I have found two things to be true, right?
So we did, I did the same thing at MozCon.
It wasn't early and MozCon was, so for folks who are listening who to be true, right? So we did, I did the same thing at MozCon. It wasn't, it wasn't early in MozCon was so for folks who are listening, who might not know,
right? Moz is this company that I started used to be called SEO Moz started because he became
an SEO software company. Now it's a $55 million a year revenue business with a couple hundred
employees in Seattle and Vancouver. You know, it's made a few
acquisitions along the way. I stepped down as CEO and left the company a couple years ago, but
during the course of that company's history, we built up this conference called MozCon. It
happened in Seattle every year, grew to about 1,600, 1,700 attendees, right? So not dissimilar from your Elevate event. And it was over the course of three days, sometimes two.
We had somewhere between 20 and 35 speakers, depending on the year.
And early on, it was almost all white dudes, right? And then, you know, I started paying attention to
these other voices, right? Reading stuff online, making friends in other communities and hearing
from folks like, yeah, there's no representation. I remember, I remember so distinctly hanging out
with a friend of mine. I won't, I won't say who it was, but black guy.
And, and he's like, yeah, man, you know, when I, when I got into this field, I, I was like, oh,
you know, these conferences are pretty cool. I learn a lot, but I guess speaking is not for me
because I don't see anybody like me up on stage. Right. It's all, it's all you guys. It's all,
it's all you white
guys yeah he's like so there's no there's no room for me and then and then i saw will reynolds who's
who's a black guy and a tremendous yeah awesome awesome guy right he's been speaking for a long
time he spoke at miles county he's like i saw him and i was like, oh shit, that could be me. I could do this too. And that had a powerful
impact on me. That was like, oh my God, if I don't, as the organizer, put diverse people on
this stage, this will never get better. This problem will never fix itself until I fix it.
This is my obligation now, right? I have the power. I get to choose who goes on the MozCon stage.
That means I have the responsibility to make sure that the next generation has fair opportunity because the fundamental core truth is talent is equally distributed, but opportunity is not.
We are wholeheartedly agreed on that.
I guess when I said, so I agree, you have a responsibility as the organizer.
And maybe the way that I positioned it wasn't the way what I actually meant
no no I but I get where you're coming from right like so I have heard I have heard many times
exactly what you heard right which is the only reason that person is on stage is because you
know whatever uh you needed more women speakers right like well that you know, whatever, you needed more women speakers, right?
Like, well, you know, that talk, whatever, it didn't resonate with me.
And so rather than saying, oh, that was a shitty talk,
you say, oh, well, woman speaker, right?
I have heard that before.
What I can tell you from my experience is those people who think in that way are not going to change their minds because of an awesome talk.
Right?
Not quickly, anyway. Maybe slowly over time, right?
Over years and decades and generations, those attitudes change. But those voices, to me, they just,
they kind of don't get to have an impact. Yeah. So I have a different opinion on that part of
what you're saying. Because I think, and not the part where the person shouldn't be up there,
but the part where I think that the steadfastness of positions
that people are currently in is as much an exposure and a construct of their social circles,
right? And when you can break someone out of their social circles and show them a world
of people where exactly what you're describing exists, I think those minds can change a heck
of a lot faster. I think the problem is not putting them, not finding situations to inject
them into those places, right? Because oftentimes that person feels like just as much of an outsider.
And, and look, I'm, I'm not, uh, I'm not going to, to try to play in any way, like some, like,
um, uh, you know, fat or white guys with tons of money have been, um, discriminated against in any
way. That is certainly not my position, but, but the understanding is like, as much as, you know,
to get people to the middle, we have, everyone feels like an outsider, right? And inside all
of us individually, we all feel like tiny little people, right? Like just when we're-
Yes, yes. Imposter syndrome is universal.
Yes.
Which is a wonderful thing, right? Because I think it can help give you empathy.
Yes.
Depending on how you process it, it can help give you empathy for everyone else, right?
You can have empathy for, you know, my friend, right, who's black and was like, gosh, I don't
see anyone like me up on stage.
Yep.
Right?
And you can have empathy to being like, oh my God, that could be me, right?
Like I can imagine myself not, you know, seeing only whatever, right?
Going to an event and it is all black women speakers.
And, you know, I'm one of the few white people in the room and it just feels weird.
It feels so awkward.
Right.
And gosh, I'm, I'm uncomfortable.
I don't know why I'm uncomfortable.
It's just like, I don't fit in here.
It doesn't, it's not me.
Right.
And how do I become part of this world?
Cause this world clearly has lots of opportunity for me.
And if you reflect on that awkwardness,
you can then realize how important it is
to have faces like yours,
representation like yours up on stage, right?
And that might not be purely tied to identity.
It might be tied to you're someone in a wheelchair and you're like conferences.
What do you talk?
What,
what,
what,
how am I going to get up the fricking stairs?
What are you talking about?
Right.
How,
how can I participate in that?
Um,
and,
and,
and if conferences don't,
you know,
use accessible spaces and if they don't invite folks like that up on stage, right, who are also in those blindfolded because to me, all I want is the
max value. And if you're telling me that, you know, whatever we have to do to re-rig a stage
to get a person or whatever they look like, or their background or their sexuality, who gives a
shit? Like if you are, this is the thing I never, I've never understood about an exclusionary mentality is you are purposefully choosing
a lower value, like providing less value in exchange for being exclusionary. I've never
understood that mentality. It makes no sense. Well, I mean, I think that's the core of racism and sexism and bias, right? It's that, you know, you want an in-group who is like you
to be the ones in power so that even if you as part of that in-group are not as good,
you still get opportunity. Yeah. Right. And you're artificially inflating your market value.
Yeah, exactly. Right. I mean, what else is institutionalized, you know, racism, sexism,
stereotyping bias, if not those things. But I will say this, one of the things that we had to
realize when we were building MozCon, I remember having conversations about this with other
organizers of other events in technology and entrepreneurship and marketing was that your scores, right?
So we did what most conferences do, which is we had the audience score speakers, right?
They could go online to do that or they'd get a survey at the end or whatever it was.
And your speaker scores will technically suffer, right?
So you have to be aware. And we saw this somewhere in the 20 to 30%
range that women were, it's almost always lower, right? A woman could deliver the same talk that
a man delivered, right? With the same quality, the same content, and it would be scored on average
20 to 30% lower by the audience. That's why I always put those speaker score things in my round filing cabinet
that goes out the back door.
I put them out because I know the audience wants to be placated.
And anyone who came to Elevate, this is exactly what would happen
because I don't trust you guys.
I would watch all the presentations, And I didn't care what anyone thought,
because I knew it, whoever the person was, I knew, you know, I knew if they were bringing it,
and that's all I really cared about. Everyone's going to miss or a point's not going to hit or
a joke's going to flop or a story isn't going to be exactly what they wanted. You know what I mean?
Like I knew whether they were bringing it or not. So I would send out the surveys,
the surveys would come back and I would slide them right across the desk
and put them right into the trash can.
Well, so here's what we found though.
Here's what we found.
That was true in 2008, 2009, 2010.
But fast forward six, seven years later,
those numbers got to be more like two, three, 5%.
Because the audience-
So this happens though.
Oh, well, maybe this doesn't happen in the marketing industry.
I'm super glad that those are the numbers because that makes me feel happy as a human,
as a citizen of the United States.
But what I found was there's just so many, like not even white guy on white guy,
bias baked in because he's from Montana.
And what do people from Montana know?
You know what I mean?
Or like, oh, I couldn't understand his Alabama accent
or people from the North are pricks.
You know what I mean?
Like it's stupid stuff.
I just was like-
Oh, you know, we did find, I will say this,
the English accent, those crush.
Oh, yeah.
Well, they're just smarter than us.
Americans just love it, right?
They're like, oh, he's so smart.
Listen to that accent.
But no, so the more diversity that we put on stage year after year, the more diversity
was expected, the more, this is also awesome, right?
And for those of you who are thinking about like, how does this have a positive business impact for me?
We sold more tickets and over time,
our average speaker scores rose, right?
So the average collective score that everyone was given,
regardless of the fact that in the early days, right,
there was this scoring deficit i was never
able to look at it across um uh racial or or or other kinds of diversity but you know i could
look at it on gender diversity because we had a 50 50 um policy basically we joined this 50 50
project early in moz cons i remember when you did that. Yeah. Yeah. Sort of a commitment to like, Hey, we'll always have, um, you know, 50, 50 split between men and women, uh, on stage. And, and
that, uh, led to more ticket sales. And we found that in fact, it led to more women buying tickets,
right? Because no, no surprise, right? If you see people like you on stage and who are going to be
headlining, you are more likely to want to go
to the event. I know that HubSpot had the same thing with inbound. It's one of the ways that
they grew that event to, what is it now? 30,000 attendees or something that go to Boston in the
fall. Just incredible. As an event planner, that just like gives me, that just like makes me want
to curl up into a ball. They have a whole team who works on it all year round. But yeah, that,
you know, I think you have to be willing to make that sacrifice early on, recognize that,
you know, hey, I don't, I think there's a mentality in the United States that like,
I don't want to have to put my finger on the scale to tip it unfairly in one way or another.
But when there's historical injustice and historical bias,
that's what you have to do in order to get to a fair place. And then over time,
the scales balance themselves out. I had this amazing experience recently where
I did an event for entrepreneurs, invited a bunch of folks, and did not, failed to, forgot to pay attention
to diversity.
And then when I looked at it, I was like, oh my God, we have 14 women and 15 men.
Oh, look at that, right?
And multiple black women and multiple women of color from other groups and multiple men
from diverse backgrounds.
And like, oh my gosh, this is so cool.
I didn't even have to think about it.
It just happened.
How cool is that?
Like that is where you eventually get to
and that's where we all ideally want to be,
where we're not selecting based on these other traits.
But sometimes you got to tilt the scales. So I don't want to monopol where we're not selecting based on these these other traits but you got sometimes
you got to tilt the scales so i don't want to i don't want to monopolize the conversation with
just this i know there's no i i find it that dude life to me is is fascinating and in in every aspect
of our lives we can pull out um pieces and frankly i'm i'm just glad that we found a topic that you
were incredibly passionate about um i love it that's we found a topic that you're incredibly passionate about.
I love it.
That's my job. One of the things that, you know,
going back to your early question about like transparency
and authenticity and all that,
like one of the things that I have found
is by having conversations like this,
which I think frankly for many Americans,
for many like white dudes, it's uncomfortable.
This shit is uncomfortable to talk about, right? It might
even be uncomfortable to listen to. I don't know if some of your listeners are like, oh.
Yeah, probably some of them.
This is a little tough, right? It's a little tough to process.
I have found that when you dig deep into those uncomfortable conversations,
there is incredible value. When other people are not talking about something,
when other people are thinking about something
but not talking about it,
there is huge amounts of marketing value,
content marketing value,
because people pay attention, right?
It busts through the sort of noise
of our usual day-to-day lives
and how many Mike Bloomberg ads we're bombarded with. That's, that's all I see now.
My mailbox is just filled with YouTube. No, not for long, probably my YouTube.
But, but like it breaks through that that barrier. And so that, you know,
that's another piece of advice. If you know that there are subjects,
topics you know, areas, people that are not being covered
in your space. That is a, it's a pretty killer way to, to get an audience. Yeah, I, I, I agree.
I think I also, you know, and I, and I want you to feel, and not that you wouldn't, but incredibly
comfortable with the fact that what you've shared so far, because this is a major issue in our industry. I mean, this has been a bugaboo of mine, you know, and I, you know,
I've tried to use this platform in particular to put as many, we'll just call non white guys on as
possible. You know what I mean? Like, we got enough white guys. I love white guys, but we got
enough. I want more. I want more different people.
Because you find interesting shit out.
Like, I know what most white guys know.
I'm in, you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know what I mean?
I want to know what other people know.
You know what I mean? Diversity of background often dictates diversity of experience.
Yes.
And when you get diversity of experience, you get diversity of perspective.
Yes.
Right?
Which is what's so valuable in learning.
And so valuable in a room.
Dude. And, and, and I know we're running short on time, but this is the thing that drives me nuts.
Take a pure capitalistic standpoint on this, right? Purely capitalistic. If you're racist,
sexist, um, if you're a homophobe, if you, if you're biased against anybody, all you've done is decided to take a
market segment out, cut that out completely. You've now, you now can't talk to that group.
You've insulated yourself into a group of people who may be the repeat purchasers. Maybe they're
not. And, and frankly, you've created negative energy in your space and you've created a whole
structure of value creators that could potentially
be part of your organization who now won't work for you. So, I mean, if you just want to take all
the actual humanity out of the topic from a capitalistic perspective, to live on in 2020
with this type of mentality is bananas to me. It's absolutely bananas.
I mean, it's definitely giving your competition
an advantage over.
Yes.
Then layer in actual humanity and, and, and, and, you know,
and now we're talking about a whole different world,
everything you've talked about before.
But I, we have just a tiny few minutes together.
I actually pitched you on coming on the show
because you have a tremendous new tool out that, that I'm,
and I want to give you the
30 seconds on how I'm using it to put it in context. And I'd love you to just talk a little
bit about it before we sign off here. And that is SparkToro. Everyone who's listening to the show,
go to SparkToro, S-P-A-R-K-T-O-R-O.com. And this is, I'll share with all the agents, how I'm using this tool. So
as I launched my insurance agency, rogue risk, um, one of the market segments that I'm going
after is fitness professionals and what spark Toro has allowed me to do. And then, uh, you can
fill in the blanks, but what I'm using in particular for is I can target people who have, and just as some of the one
microcosm, but I put the word fitness in, and then I can target people with fitness in their profile.
And then what it's giving me is what YouTube channels are they're following? What podcasts
are they listening to? What other channels are they following?
So now I can start to use those both from a research perspective and from a, I'm actually going to do some targeted YouTube ads and stuff to some of these channels that I know
a lot of people who I want to go after are watching.
And I can find ways to add what I'm trying to do for their business into that marketing mix.
But otherwise I, I, there's no other single point that I could derive all that information from.
Um, and, and I've found SparkToro to be an incredibly valuable tool, um, especially in
the research phase of, of launching, uh, this business. So, uh, I just wanted to give that
caveat so people knew what I was talking about and then ran any, any additionals that you want of launching this business. So I just wanted to give that caveat
so people knew what I was talking about
and then ran any additionals that you want to add.
Yeah, yeah.
So I mean, the idea behind this was,
my sense is the duopoly of Facebook and Google
are really expensive, right?
They're really expensive.
It's hard to show ROI.
You spend a ton of money with Facebook advertising,
ton of money with Google search ads. And frankly, where I was seeing a ton of marketers have
success was when they looked at alternative channels, right? Hey, let me go pitch this
podcast to see if I can be a guest on it or go pitch this event to see if I can be a speaker or go get a booth at this event or sponsor this website, pitch a guest
post, right? All these different kinds of tactics, right? Let me try and sponsor that podcast or
advertise on this. Maybe I can do some influencer marketing, whatever it is.
But that is so, so hard if you don't already know what your audience pays attention to. And anytime you're
going after a new market segment, right, what you want, what you should be able to do is say, all
right, you know, go give me all the profiles of people who's, who have public, you know, social
and web accounts who say that they're an architect, right? In their bio. And then give me a bunch
of information about them. And there was just no tool to do that. Like it didn't exist, right?
That's like impossible. So what would you have to do? You'd have to like go survey
a thousand architects and try and get them to tell you which podcasts they listen to and which
YouTube channels they subscribe to and which social accounts they follow, what websites they visit and share.
That takes months of work and it's crazy expensive. And so Casey and I, my co-founder and I,
basically decided to build this thing, right? So we crawl tens of millions of web and social profiles, well, billions actually, and then we aggregate them up to, I think we have around 70,
80 million profiles in our database. And so you can search those, right? You can search for
architect in New York, right? And we have, I don't know, you know, 1700 architects who are in New
York in our profile database. And we can tell you that 22% of them listen, share, follow this
particular podcast, right? 21% follow this other one,
19% follow this next one, 16% follow that one, and on down the list. And that, yeah,
for a lot of our early customers and beta users, and Ryan, I know you're one of our, you know,
one of our early customers, first hundred customers, which is awesome. Yeah, that's been
super useful for them, right? To be able to do that market research at the snap of a finger.
Yeah. Well, man, uh, I, I, I want to be respectful of your time and we're over. I,
we just got into so many other topics, but, uh, I would highly encourage everyone who's listening.
Um, SparkTor is a tool that is going to separate, uh, many, especially my, my friends in the
industry.
If you're doing program business, if you're writing super regionally or nationally on
a particular program, uh, a particular industry or a line of business finding, I think some
of the podcasts, some of the YouTube channels that you could partner with and do some targeted average app, like legit advertising into those spaces.
That is where I'm extracting incredible value,
being able to find real thought leaders in that space,
partner with them, crafting a message. Uh, and, and, and when I said, I,
there does not exist another platform which pools all this stuff, uh,
pools all this data into one place. It's, it's well worth the
look. And, um, and Rand, I, man, I, I, I appreciate you as a person. I appreciate the work you do.
And, uh, I very much appreciate you, uh, taking so much time out of your day to, to,
to share with my audience. It was my pleasure. Thank you for having me, Ryan.
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