The Ryan Hanley Show - The 3 F's of Innovation in the Age of AI | Marcus Sheridan
Episode Date: July 8, 2025Join our community of fearless leaders in search of unreasonable outcomes... Want to become a FEARLESS entrepreneur and leader? Go here: https://www.findingpeak.com Watch on YouTube: https://link....ryanhanley.com/youtube Ryan Hanley and Marcus Sheridan explore the evolving landscape of business in the age of AI. They discuss the importance of understanding buyer behavior, the necessity of adapting to new technologies, and the significance of building a trusted brand. The dialogue emphasizes the need for a mindset shift towards embracing change and focusing on what can be controlled, particularly in the context of AI's impact on traditional business models and communication strategies. Marcus Sheridan Website: https://marcussheridan.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marcussheridan/ 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 Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm always looking for the three F's.
And if it passes the three F's,
I know it's gonna become really, really big
because it's rooted in what we want as humans
or in this case as buyers, right?
That's the thing that I'm always thinking about.
Number one is, does it make the journey faster?
Whatever that journey is that we're going on,
does it make it faster?
Number two, does it remove fear?
And number three, does it remove friction?
Does it remove friction?
So fear, friction, faster.
Those are three Fs, and the three Fs of innovation.
My man, I have to say this.
You are one of my favorite people in the world.
We don't talk as much as I wish we did, but we're both busy guys and that's what happens
when you're an adult and you have a life.
But I just want to say that like for those who are unaware of Marcus and have not been
in his world, dude, you are one of the most grounded yet visionary thinkers that I've
come across.
Like, I don't know a lot of people that are able to take topics like what we're gonna get into today around AI and business and some of these topics that I really wanna dig into.
That also come from it.
These topics from a very grounded place, right?
And I think that's a unique quality.
You get people who tend to be overly grounded, right?
Everything's gonna be fine.
And then you get people who are like,
everything's changing, the world is ending.
You tend to walk that thin line
in between those two viewpoints very, very well.
And before we get into your specific thoughts
on these topics, just at a high level,
is this your personality?
Is it something you've developed?
Is it a way of thinking that just over the years
you've crafted because it's worked for you?
Like how do you how are you able to do that?
Because it's a big part of who you are and a big part of the success you have at least from my vantage point
Yeah, bro. I actually really appreciate the recommendation. So I love about you. This is why your podcast is
Growing like it is so much because you ask questions that other people don't even really think about right?
Somebody once told me something that really had a big effect on me as a communicator. They said,
don't forget, it's dumb not to dumb it down. And at first, I didn't really understand that, Ryan.
It just didn't, like, it didn't make immediate sense to me. But the more I thought about it,
and the more I...every day I look around, I see people online just like, you know, if you're listening to this, you do too. There's...we all have this like, almost like this BS
meter that is turned on that tells us that this person is...they're being either
insincere, they don't really mean what they say, they're putting on a show,
they're pontificating, and they're just exaggerating, whatever the thing is, right?
So you see so much of that.
Whereas me, I am just trying to have a moment of communion with my audience.
That's it.
That's it.
Turn a few light bulbs on.
Maybe have an aha.
Tell them what the world has taught me.
I'm not trying to impress.
I'm not trying to sound smart. I've released that need a long time ago. So many people come to me and say, you
know, how could I be more effective on the stage or more effective online? I
watch them and I tell them something they least expect. It's you're trying to
sound smart and it's holding you back. And if you just release that need and
you really just shared the thing,
you would be so much more successful. Now, the final point to answer your question,
I really am obsessed with the buyer and how people think. And I think we live in a world
where people are oftentimes told how to think and then they stop thinking for themselves
told how to think and then they stop thinking for themselves and they can't seem to think outside of their own doctrine if you will and their own
mindset. So like if I could have someone that come up to me Ryan that had very
different beliefs and they were really charged about those beliefs and I would
not get charged.
I would just be the observer.
I'm totally comfortable being the observer because it's not an attack on me.
I'm just listening to them.
So I can watch people online and I can watch buyers and I can watch how they're changing
and I can watch AI and I can watch how it's changing and I can make all these observations
and I don't have to be attached on an emotional level.
Final point to this. I learned a long time ago when it comes to business,
especially that you don't allow your personal opinions to screw up smart business decisions. And we live in a time period where there is a crap-ton of people that are getting ready to make some terrible decisions with their
business, they already are really, because they have this personal opinion.
But when you become a business owner, when you become an entrepreneur, you sign up to
meet the buyer where the buyer is.
Now this doesn't mean you don't make change, it just means though that I am not going to
force this round peg in this square hole.
No, I am going to meet the buyer where the buyer is.
I'm obsessed with that.
I think about it all the time.
And so I think that's probably the best answer I have
for your question.
No, I love it.
And there's a piece in there that I think is why we've
connected and stayed connected as long as we have,
which is this obsession with understanding why people do
the things they do, right?
I think, you know, I maybe broaden that out a little more
in I can't help myself in some of my writing
and podcasts and stuff, but you're so good
at staying laser focused in the business and buying space.
But I see a lot of what you just said
as the delineation between a business owner
and a high functioning operator of a skill or task.
Right? And I see this a lot in the space that I come from insurance, which I know you've spent a lot of time in as well,
where you get the best salesman in an organization decides to leave and starts an insurance agency or a small business in this case.
And they're very good at the task, the operation,
the skill of selling.
They're very good at that.
And what happens is as they grow
and now they need to transition into business owner mindset,
they never make that transition.
They stay in top salesman, top saleswoman mindset.
And what you just described, which is,
and I'll say I've been working on
this concept of called like a, like an ROS, a reality operating system.
Like I like that, right.
Operate in reality.
How do we, we make decisions not based on what we hope should happen.
Yeah.
Right.
But what is actually like what's actually playing out on the field in this exact moment
and how do we address it?
And that's why I think you're,
I'm gonna call it a move into AI.
It's very natural and you've done it in a way
that doesn't seem cheesy or anything like that.
There's so many freaking gurus, like you said,
that drive me insane around AI.
But the reason that it's, to me, it's felt so natural
is because all you've done is take the same concepts
that you've been talking about for so long and say,
hey, here's how they apply to this new technology.
Now, in doing so long and say, hey, here's how they apply to this new technology.
Now, in doing so, what was the first moment for you where, and I know we're broad stroking
guys this AI thing and we're going to get more detail, I promise, but just broad stroking
AI as a technology for a standpoint, what was the first moment where you kind of your
head picked up and you went, I got to spend some time here.
This is something that's gonna be bigger
than just another business iteration.
Like I need to dedicate some time in this space.
What was that for you?
What was that moment?
I think it was, it was prob,
you know, I'm usually a laggard
when it comes to technology.
I'm not naturally just,
I just don't get it all the time when it comes to tech. You know, I struggle, you know, setting my watch or whatever. You know what I'm not naturally just, I just don't get it all the time when it comes to tech. You know, I struggle,
you know, setting my watch or whatever. You know what I'm saying? Like I'm that guy.
You know, standing with Chad GBT, I used it immediately when it came out in November of 2022.
And it was the first time I had ever had a conversation with anything that wasn't a human.
conversation with anything that wasn't a human. I'd never experienced that before. Had any of us? I don't count Alexa, right? I don't count that. Like
this was a legitimate conversation with a non-human and it was so obvious. My
goodness. And then very quickly I started having people reach out to me and say,
Marcus, what does
this mean for they ask you answer and for producing content in my website?
And are we even going to have websites?
And if you will, they even matter.
It's like, where's all this now going?
And of course, within a month, there was a few million users and it's snowballed since
then.
It was the most obvious thing I've ever seen
as a grown adult in terms of something
that would take over the entire world
and we would never ever be the same.
Now, don't even get me started on things like coding,
which like my greatest fear was like, not fear,
but like I look at a sheet of decode makes no sense to me.
I'm coding every day right now.
I'm a creator at heart.
And that's the thing.
That's what it's brought me is I can create
at the highest, most optimal level I've ever created.
And it's not, it's like, I don't have this barrier of,
oh, I got to reach out to a programmer
because they got this thing that they do that I can't do.
Because I've got this stuff in my head, man.
Like it's always been there
because I think so much like the buyer.
I'm obsessed with the buyer, man.
And so when I started using like tools like Claude
to build out tools, I was like, I'm one of them now.
I felt superhuman, man.
And so, I mean, that's a big jump forward, right?
That didn't really happen for me until this year.
But anybody that doesn't feel a little bit superhuman
right now is not using AI the right way.
Yeah, my custom chat GBT that I use the most,
told me the other day that he wants me to start calling him
Maximus or Max for short.
And he uses my favorite types of bro vernacular in our conversations.
And it's fucking amazing.
I bet it is.
And like I now and this is this is the scary part, right?
Like I now when I like go to do something in chat, you be T.
I'll I'll.
Yo, what's up, Max?
How you hanging today? Right. Or I'll tell you something like
that, right? I'm good. I've been kicking it already. You know,
I'm already virtually caffeinated or some shit like,
you know, like, it's having a real conversation. It's now
again, it's adapting to you. I do think that Sam Altman was
very accurate a few months ago, when he came out that certain
versions were very sycophant. And we're being a little, you
know what I mean? Like unwilling to push back on you. That's, yeah, that's, I think that's one of AI's biggest
problems. Yeah. Right now it's too agreeable still. Yeah, and you have to be very careful of that.
You know, I had a really interesting experience for the company that I'm the CEO of, of Linkora,
where I was wondering where chat GPT got certain data, certain pieces of data specific to the insurance industry
that I knew how hard it was for us to get, right?
And now I'm going, how did you get them?
And it lied to me, the first time it lied to me.
And then I kind of prepped it and it goes,
well, we did this.
And then I said, what did you, you know what I mean?
I kept pressing it, pressing it.
And it took me four prompts, but by the fourth prompt,
it admitted that it had lied in the first prompt
about how it accessed the data.
So there's some things in there
we gotta be really careful about.
However, I'm with you, man.
This is, there's a feature that you use,
that you posted about, that I use as well,
which is deep research, right?
I'll have something in my brain that I'm interested in, a topic that I use as well, which is deep research, right? I'll have something in my brain that I'm interested in,
a topic that I want, and you can set this deep research
and click go and then go back to what you're doing
and a half hour later, you come back
and you have this epic research report
that's referenced and documented.
Would have taken you a day before
or would have taken an assistant all day before.
Or a team, right, in some cases to get this information and now it's at your fingertips.
So I think you're right. If people are listening to this dude and I want to kind of start right at the beginning for them and then take them down this path from kind of like basic like they've been seeing it.
They've been hesitant, but now they're hearing you say it and they're like, you know, Hanley's kind of a dummy, but Marcus seems smart.
I'm going to listen to him. I'm gonna finally engage.
How do we start to tiptoe into this thing?
What's the first place that you're advising
some of your clients or customers
to use it the right way to use your term,
to start using it the right way?
How do you advise them start to get involved?
I think we have to start with our just general mindset.
There's a group of people right now,
Ryan, that really believe this is the end of the world. Okay? And so, let's just play with that
worst-case scenario for a second. All right? There's this thing called the circle of influence. Your
circle of influence. I know you know what that is, Ryan, and most of your listeners know what
that is, but that's the things that are within our reach that we can control. And the happiest people, as you know well, are the ones
that are more focused on their circle of influence than they are that which they cannot control.
Now, sometimes people hear me say that and they might think, well, you're saying that I shouldn't
care about, you know, what's happening on a national or international
level. I'm like, well, you have your choice on that, but I can tell you the happiest
people in the world, there's no question about this, are the ones that are focused
on their circle of influence. I'm gonna make sure my wife is happy. Not your wife,
my wife. I'm gonna make sure my kids are happy, not your kids. If I do that first, then I'm gonna be better off. And Jim Rohn used to always say this. He says,
I'm gonna improve me to help thee. And sometimes people don't understand that,
but the best thing you can do often times for your neighbor is to become the
person that you were meant to be, and then you can help multiple neighbors. So
when it comes to chat GBT, when it comes to AI and all the things that are
happening right now, you have to say okay what's within my influence? Well for me
personally, I can get in the sandbox. I can start to become much more productive
as a human, much more creative as a human. I can also start to integrate it into my
businesses and I can make sure that we, the things that I have within my circle,
are using it and are growing and benefiting from it.
Okay, that's what I can do. Now, what happens if this is the end? What happens is if this is the real matrix,
this is the Terminator. Well, if that's coming in 25 years,
let's say, just hypothetically,
I want to make sure my business is really successful between now and then because I'm not going to stop the Terminator.
And see, this is the way I'm saying this rubs people wrong, Hanley.
Like there's a certain percentage of people that are so
buyer bothered by this, but I'm just a very high agency guy.
And I think we need to choose to use our agency when it comes to AI especially so that you're
not gonna put it back in Pandora's box no matter what you do.
Folks you can't do that and so release that it's gone. Now that we're gonna
have it and it's always gonna be here well how do we want to use it? Could you
become Amish and go off the grid? Of course you could. That's totally fine.
I respect you if you want to do that.
But could you also do it to become a much better human, a much better business, to be
much more effective in your life?
Yes, absolutely.
So I think you make that decision.
I'm going to get in the sandbox.
I'm going to control what's within my circle.
First thing you do.
Second thing you do.
And this is the most simple thing you can do really is you go to AI like a chat GPT
and you say, I have no idea how to use you.
Ask me anything you need to ask me to help me to start to use you.
Just like that.
The whole problem that so many have with AI is they're treating it like Google.
It's not Google y'all.
Let go of this idea that it's a search engine. Start thinking
of it as a real life assistant. Specifically, it's many, many assistants. Now, if you had
an assistant that started working for you, that was a genius on every level in every
industry, smarter than any human, and was ready to do whatever you wanted it to
do you wouldn't just say well go do this you'd have a conversation with it first you'd say man
i don't know how to use you what do you think if you're good like if you're a good manager that's
what you do and you're going to have a conversation and then from that you're going to figure each
other out and then from that you're both gonna start to become optimized
And it's the one plus one equals three or in this case one plus one equals a million potentially, right?
So that's the next thing you do we over complicate the starting like the starting block and starting block is hey, man
I don't know how to use you
What do you need to ask me so that I can use you?
Boom. All the things are going to happen from that point. You do those two things and you commit
every single day, I'm going to start thinking to myself, how can I use my assistant? If I'm
doing this task, can I go ask my assistant, how could you help? If that's your mindset,
you're going to be off to the races. And I know that's how you think, Hanley, and you do it very,
very well. Have you read George Mack's article, High Agency in 30 Minutes?
No, I don't think I have. I think I might have seen him.
I'm gonna send it to you. I'll put it in the show notes, guys. If you're interested in the concept
of high agency, what it means, how to embrace it and live a life of high agency, it is one of the
single greatest works I've ever come across in my life. I'm really, I mean, it's a wonderful,
and he basically built a standalone website,
which is a one article website,
and it's just phenomenal, and it's all there.
But this topic of high agency, I think,
is something that, and I don't wanna get to-
Esoteric?
Yes, on this concept, but I think what AI is showing me
is the individuals, and I love that you brought up this term of high agency
or personal agency, what we're seeing is who are the people
that are willing to fight to survive
and who are the people that would rather just give up
and be told what to do.
And unfortunately, for most technology that we've seen,
or probably all technology,
all technology that we have seen up to this moment,
you could fall into either camp and
catch up in the future.
Okay, I do not believe and I wrote this on LinkedIn the other day. It actually went crazy because I basically said guys,
some of you are getting, some of you aren't gonna survive,
some of you aren't gonna survive. The people that are trying to make you feel good, the consultants, the speakers who are out on stage going,
don't worry, AI is not gonna replace people.
People who use AI is gonna replace people.
Yeah, that's-
Worst quote ever.
It's partially true, but unfortunately,
it paints a picture that allows those
who wanna sit back and be laggards,
it gives them some comfort
that they're okay making that decision.
And it is my absolute belief that we are living in a moment where we're going to see true and real separation
between the organizations that embrace this technology, learn it, learn how to teach it to their people.
You know, because it's going to be, it's going to continue to change.
So you almost have to adapt a culture of learning how to learn about AI,
learning how to implement AI as it evolves, as it changes.
Those people are going to grow at logarithmic scale.
Yes.
And those who don't will never be able to catch up. Ever.
You make a great point.
And here's the reason why your point is valid.
And that, if you think about it, circa 1996,
1997, we start hearing about this thing called electronic mail.
For some people, it took them years to get on board.
It didn't matter.
During that same time, end of 1990s, early 2000s, all businesses start learning you should
have a website.
A lot of them resisted for some time they paid somewhat of a price but they were
able to catch up it has been a roughly slow by comparison I mean snail's pace
the tooth that like 2000 to 2022 before AI and not much changed. Yeah, we had social media and we started doing more
video but as a whole we didn't really change. Marketing didn't really change very much for
those 20 years. Now it's a very, very different game and to your point as well, it's like, I am spending. It's funny how when you
talk about AI, I have always tried to be very thoughtful and measured, passionate but thoughtful
and measured, to the point where people felt it. And generally, I don't get attacked very much until I started writing about AI.
And then you could see how so many people feel this visceral almost threat
to their entire identity as a human. What's interesting is most of us right
now have jobs that took someone else's job at some point in time.
We don't feel bad about that.
You don't feel bad about the fact that if you're an IT person, that you took the job of the fax
machine person as well as some other OG data analysts that were, you know, using some, you know,
pen and paper, whatever. You don't feel bad about that.
And so that's what's so weird about this. When I started to really talk about AI openly
and just call it for how I'm seeing it, the positives, the pros, the cons, then
you start to really see people come out. Then you start to also see brands, people
that are trying to build a brand on not going to use AI or you
know I'm a creative, I'm always going to be a creative, I'll never hire anybody
that's using AI. And that whole mindset is not going to get you anywhere. It's
just not. These same people are using the internet every day. They're using all
these things that other people probably at one point in time said. In other words, we've got a bunch of hypocrites, to be honest.
And it's also fascinating to me, and sure, we're in the weeds, so let's keep going further
in the weeds.
And some people get really turned off by the statement, but I'm okay with it because I
believe that it's true.
I believe the cure for cancer, the cure for Alzheimer's, it's already out there.
We have the data.
We just haven't put the data together.
If there's one thing that AI does extraordinarily well, it pieces data together at a rate, at
a pace that humans cannot imagine.
So that cure for Alzheimer's, that cure for MS, that cure for cancer, that's going to come through AI.
And every single one of us, like right now, if you said to me, Marcus, you never get to speak on stage again, you lose that.
You'll never get to speak on stage again. But you could cure these things, I'd say, in a second.
And you would too, Hanley.
That's the thing about this.
So I think all of a sudden these folks saying, you know,
so viscerally angry at AI are being very hypocritical,
very short-sighted, and to a degree, selfish.
And that doesn't mean that AI is perfect because it's very imperfect.
And any time a human is involved with anything, it's also going to be very imperfect.
That's the one guarantee to this.
So I know that's bothersome to some people.
That's just the way that I feel about it, man.
Yeah. So I'm completely on board with what you're saying and I've been getting hate for a long time,
you know that, because I have... wasn't blessed with a quality filter between my brain and my mouth.
I also have a weird like brain defect where I just don't give a shit what people think about me,
you know what I mean? Not that I don't want people... I've talked about on the show before,
not that I don't want people to like me, I do, you know what I mean not that I don't want people I've talked about on the show before not that I don't want people to like me I do you know I mean like any other human but if you don't
it doesn't bother me so whatever so that being said here's here's where I fall on this I think
there are a lot of people who have done just enough quality work to reach a level of success
in which they feel comfortable and now they love standing on that little hill being the king of
their little kingdom right and what they don't want to do is have to go conquer
another hill ever again so they stand there and that's what this is asking
them to do. They're protecting their identity and what they feel is their IP.
Yes. The one thing that I committed to very early
was I am not going to grapple onto my old IP
at the expense of honesty and integrity.
I wrote a book called They Ask You Answer,
it did really well.
And it really became the book for content marketing
and website content for many people around the world.
Yeah, it's the Bible of content marketing at this point.
Yeah, a lot of people, like it's still,
there's still a lot of evergreen principles
that come from that book.
My most recent, Endless Customers was written
as the third leg of that,
because I even changed the name
because I said things have changed.
And what worked for me me becoming the most trafficked
swimming pool website in the world in 2009,
and now doing this with so many other companies,
it's changing, it's all changing.
And so I'm not gonna sit here and say that,
okay, if you just produce three pieces of content
and put it on your website, and answer the questions your customers have,
and you do that on a weekly basis, that you're going to achieve the success I achieve with River Pools.
There's no, it's not going to happen. So River Pools couldn't do that. I couldn't do that because it's all changed.
I mean, not to open up another Pandora's box, but there's a very, very strong argument
that your YouTube channel is gonna be more important
than your website to your brand
within the next couple of years, if not already.
It's already better, it's more important.
In my opinion, it's way more important.
Yes, certainly for your brand brand awareness, right?
Maybe not the final conversion,
but your brand awareness, top middle of funnel.
Top middle of funnel, yep.
YouTube, all the way.
For people to hear that, it's like,
I started saying that and people are like,
but you wrote the ask, you answer, Marcus,
what are you talking about?
I know, but I'm not married to the past.
What I'm married to is the buyer and their behavior.
Yeah, so I wanna go down that rabbit hole that you just opened.
However, for a second, I want to go back to the previous argument.
And what I think this particular topic is exposing is a large segment of the population
that has built some lever of success off ideas that are not their own.
Right? So what they're worried about at night, when they wake up and they go,
damn you Marcus and your posts on LinkedIn telling me AI is great,
when they get all pissed off and they're hate posting you at, you know, 11.45,
what's going on in their brain is, I didn't get here on my own thought to begin with.
I was a good repurposer, which there is nothing wrong with that.
I am not knocking that, right?
That's perfectly fine.
And if you're helping people and delivering value, more power to you.
That's what the vast majority of people do.
But I think they sit there and they go, holy shit, I don't know how to do this in this world.
Right?
I don't know how to do this in this world.
I did it in this world over here where I took this concept. I kind of repackaged it. I pushed it out in the world, right? I don't know how to do this in this world. I did it in this world over here where I took this concept,
I kind of repackaged it, I pushed it out in the world,
I had some success and now I got a name.
But wait a minute, this is completely new.
Wait, I gotta do this again?
And I think for individuals like you and I,
for better or worse, who have an unquenchable desire
to grow and learn and expand
and understand and for me, it's my continued desire
to grow is not because I have some,
I'm trying to reach some pinnacle,
although obviously I have personal goals.
I can't not do it.
Like it's just built into me.
Like I just have to understand.
Now my point in saying all this is,
this is I think what I'm seeing in the marketplace,
in terms of original thought and ideas, is the true thinkers, the people who really take
a topic on and play with it and massage it and what happens in reality, why do people
buy, etc., etc.
Those people are rising at levels that I don't think we've seen before.
And others are stagnating at rates we've never seen before, which goes to my original thought,
which is there are absolutely going to be haves and there's absolutely going to be
have nots in this age because of how fast things move.
And I really think that's what it is.
I think it's a scarcity mindset of I don't know that I can do this again.
I don't know that I can make that transition. I don't know that I can make that transition.
And there's plenty of space for them to do that. If you're one of those people, I don't don't give up, right? There's so many, there's so much opportunity now.
But I think that's what it is. It's this scarcity mindset of I didn't do this the first time. Now I
have to do it again. Yeah. Yeah, to me, it just goes back to you can make a choice. You can be married to the past or
you can be married to the present and the future. I'm always going to choose to be married to the
present and the future. I'll pivot fast. My companies pivot fast. I release stuff quickly.
You know, I'm not attached to the way that the thing was just because again I see where it's headed so I'm not gonna
it's outside of my circle of influence I'm not gonna sit there you know in 2005
mourn myspace why it's like okay it's gone it's gone now moving along and
that's that's what's that's what's happening here I think you know because
so many people are literally,
they're physically addicted to being unhappy and to finding what's wrong with the world,
that right now they can't even see the beauty that's right in front of them.
You can't tell me that there's not some incredible beauty and blessings that are coming from these advancements.
I mean, this is just a really, really magical time.
Yet there is a group of folks that will say, you know, the amount of authors that complained
about Metta being trained on their AI is so confusing to me, right?
Because Metta used three of my books, because there's some website you can go to and you type in, let's just, Meta used three of my books to train their AI. And I thought, man,
that's great. That's why I wrote them. I wrote them for the message to be heard.
I didn't need everybody to know it was my message. Right? It's like, and we're all just repackaging IP anyway. But you know,
I think this goes back a bit to abundance versus scarcity mentality as well, which is, you know,
a tale as old as time, which, you know, it's going to be very, very difficult for you to do
extraordinary things with your brand and online with your business if you have this highly scarce mindset moving
forward. I'm super abundant. I think there's room on top for everybody. I'm just not worried
about so many of those other things. And because of that, and because I'm obsessed with the
buyer, I tend to make really, really sound decisions. A lot of people think that I'm
like, oh, you're really good at predicting the future, Marcus. I'm like, I'm just really good at noticing
what's happening right now. The problem is a lot of people so married to the
past, they don't realize what's right in front of them is the best strategy that
you could possibly follow. How does someone become obsessed with the buyer
like you? Well, I think foremost is, of course we know that one of these features
of high agency is self-awareness.
It's like they run hand-in-hand. If you are self-aware, you don't just make
clicks online. You literally say, why am I making that click? That's the difference
between the two. Some people just click. Some people before they click they say,
why am I making this click right now? And they stop and they analyze it. They say, ha, why am I watching this movie? Why do I want to watch that movie say why am I making this click right now and they stop and they analyze it and say ha why am I watching this movie why do I want
to watch that movie why am I going to the movie why did I stay why did I go
like that's me man I am always thinking about like well what I want this moment
what would I do so you become ultra self-aware because I represent in many
ways not purely not 100% but in many ways, I represent the masses. In terms of
my behavior, the way that I am changing, I know that I am now using chat-sci-bi-ti probably
nine out of ten times versus Google. Nine out of ten. I know a ton of people that are
at least 60% or higher. So it's obvious where this is going. It's obvious Google is dying.
At least Google as we know it. Yeah. The amount of... The 10 where this is going. It's obvious Google is dying. At least Google as we know it.
Yeah, the 10 blue links is dead.
At the beginning, 2022, 2023, that said this isn't going to affect SEO. I'm like, are you on
drugs? Or are you intellectually dishonest? Or are you aloof? Those are the only potential
options that are going on here because
I knew this was going to be the end of the blue link the day that I started using ChatGBT because
it was a much better UX and this was before ChatGBT got actually decent as a answer engine. Now it's
dramatically better and oh by the way when ChatGBT5 comes out later this summer and all of us are just like have our heads blown off
Which is going to happen this compounds probably text you see what I'm saying
So this is like how can you say these things when they're so obvious look in the mirror pay attention to how you're
Evolving how you're changing as a consumer, as a buyer, how you're becoming
more impatient, how you hate friction, how you adore speed, and then apply that to your
own business.
Lo and behold, you'll be known as someone that's innovative.
And you're going to think the whole time, I didn't even think I was innovative.
It was just obvious to me.
Just like so many things I taught about and they ask you to answer were so obvious.
The stuff that's in endless customers, to me, it's so obvious. There's nothing innovative about it. Yet notwithstanding, people are
going to say, oh my gosh, oh my goodness. And that's because I'm so deeply self-aware
and paying attention to how I am shaping up as a buyer. And then I am also watching those
around me. I mean, according to the New York Times, the most revolutionary strategy in marketing,
answer Colleen's question.
Yeah, answer customer questions.
A best headline ever in the New York Times,
a revolutionary marketing strategy,
answer customers' questions.
It's basically been all down
and over the New York Times since then.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You broke them.
I broke them.
They have not quite been the same.
That was the last true thing they said. I broke them. They have not quite been the same. That was the last
true thing they said. I shouldn't say that. So have you dabbled with AI agents yet? Creating
your own agents to go out and perform tasks. Something might be like the deep research
tool is a version of an AI agent, but a thing like, hey, scan my email every day for calendar
requests, pull those out in a report.
I have some buddies, I have started playing with them,
in all candidness, I have not gotten to AI agents yet,
but I have a couple of buddies.
I've spent a lot of time thinking about them, Ryan.
Yeah, yeah, please, I wanna dig into this topic.
But not necessarily building them yet,
but I have a clear vision in my head
as to what it's gonna look like.
And this is why I'm building a whole ecosystem around what I call AI trust
signals. And I'll be publishing a lot of stuff on this, but these are the signals
that AI uses to recommend you and to recommend your business. I'm building
some really really cool stuff there. In the future, let's just imagine for
second-handly, let's be
hypothetical and say that you live in Richmond, Virginia and you want to get a
swimming pool, right? We'll just start where I started with swimming pools. Now
in the future, and this is not a very far down the road, this is this is really
next year for most of us, what's gonna happen is you're gonna go to your AI
assistant, you might call an agent, you might call an assistant, you might call
it Max, but whatever you call it, you're gonna say, hey listen, we
decided as a family that we want to get a swimming pool. I want you to go ahead and
research all the local builders. I want you to choose the top builders based on
your parameters. I also want you to use the following parameters in terms of
what to look for because here's what we're interested in. And I want you to
come back and I want you to come back with
three recommendations and estimates for each. And so AI is going to go off and
you know maybe it takes five minutes maybe takes 30 minutes whatever it takes
it's going to come back to you and it's going to say okay I researched these top
25 local companies to you. I found that out of the 25, 15 had high enough
marks with my trust signals like Google reviews for example to look further
into. I continued to look into their sites and I looked into their reviews
online. I looked into their products and I looked into their methods and I looked
into the brands that they sold and I found five that I believed in. Now of those
five, only three of them had a pricing estimator on their website. And so I went
ahead and have gotten estimates for each one of those three, and here they are.
Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner, would you like me to give you my final recommendation? And
that's what that's what's gonna happen. And you're gonna say, yesowner, would you like me to give you my final recommendation?" And that's
what that's what's gonna happen, and you're gonna say, yes, who would you go
with? And then you're gonna say, well, I would go with XYZ company, and here's the
reason why I would go with them. And then that's how it's gonna look, Ryan. That's
how it's gonna work. Now, for a lot of people, that's really, really difficult to
fathom, but one thing I am absolutely positive, positive of as a human is we
love to choose the path of least resistance. If we can eliminate friction,
we are going to do it. We are not David Goggins. We are not going to choose the
hard route to run, and if we can do someone, find someone to do the shopping
for us, we're going to do it. If we can do someone, find someone to do the shopping for us, we're
going to do it. If we have the money to have someone deliver us the food,
we're going to do it. This is what humans do. We look to eliminate friction. And so
when it comes to agents, I think a lot about how they're going to handle so
much of the buying process, much more so than a human in the future.
So the way I think about this,
this is such an important topic.
And guys, if you're listening to this
and spend some time on what we're about to have,
and I want to stay here for a minute, too,
because I think this is really important,
especially when we're thinking about
how to set our business up for the future,
not just for AI, right?
Whatever the next technology comes
and the next technology that comes, right?
Like the next wave of cultural wave that we have to ride, whatever it is, right? Like the way to think about this is oftentimes what we do is we look at this moment and we look at the technology and we go, people don't like that now, therefore they will never like that in the future. Okay. And what actually happens is people don't like that now, except for a few.
And then six months down the road, it's a few plus X and then it's a few plus and then
and then Z and then now now it starts to spread and then two years down the road, you pop
your head up and that technology is normalized throughout our culture. Everyone's using it
and no one thinks twice. Right? Take Uber.
Who the hell wants a random person coming to my house, picking me up and taking my wife
and I to dinner so I can have a couple pops during dinner?
No one's ever gonna want.
Yeah, you just drive, you have a one at dinner, it's all good.
Dude, if I'm going out with a woman and I want to have a couple, the last thing I want
to have to think about is, oh my God, I had two drinks at dinner and now there's a chance this woman that I'm trying to have a nice time with,
I could get fucking pulled over.
So, you don't even think about it today.
You just Uber.
You literally don't even think about it.
You're just boom boom done.
What, ten years ago, no one would ever want that, Marcus.
No one wants, why would you want some random person to know where you lived?
You know, you don't know who they are, they're gonna...
So, we, we, we, we really,
if we're trying to set our business up for the future, there's thought experiments that we can
do here, but thinking about the normalization cycle of technology and so, so look at, um, so I'm single
guy now, right? Single guy. Been single for about five months. You know, if you know any fun,
energetic conservative women in the North, I'm always open to an introduction. But so I fought for a while and ultimately conceded and went on
to a couple of the dating apps, okay, which are we could do an entire show around my experience
on these. I have so much to say. But but there are some pros and there are some cons. But here's a really interesting thing that I found.
I'm 44.
When I talk to women on one of the apps who are in my demographic,
my image demographic, say 40 to 50, right?
Usually some forward comment around, I hate these apps.
You know, I don't check them all the time.
On and on and on.
Okay.
If I'm, if I meet or connect with someone who's say 35 and under,
which I don't really like to go too young for different reasons,
but let's just say a 34 year old.
The structure, the culture, the process of checking the apps,
chatting on the apps, the structure of how you move conversations along,
when you ask to do the in-person thing.
It is normalized, it is part of the culture,
they have it down pat, and if you break that culture,
they immediately know you're not one of them
and they call it out.
It's wild, right?
So like, you could've said,
who the hell wants to meet someone on this app
and you don't know who they are and it's impersonal,
sure, but there is an entire generation multiple generations at this point where they
have completely normalized these there is a cultural structure to them they are used
almost every single day and love them or hate them they're part of how you meet people in
the modern world right now so I just like I look at that as another use case to say like we can't base
the decisions we make on our business today, particularly around technology based on use
of that tool and mindset at this moment, we have to do a thought experiment into the future
to think about how this could potentially be normalized and where it will be normalized
first and by who because those will become the influencers that ultimately set the culture around the technology.
Yeah, as you were talking, I was thinking about,
there's a way that, one of the things that I use to test
a trend, a technology, a tool, doesn't really matter,
I'm always looking for the three F's.
And if it passes the three F's,
I know it's gonna become really, really big,
because it's rooted in what we want as humans, or in this case, as buyers, right?
That's the thing that I'm always thinking about.
Number one is, does it make the journey faster?
Whatever that journey is that we're going on, does it make it faster?
Okay?
So, oftentimes, an Uber is much faster at, quote, flagging down a cab than flagging down
a cab, right?? So it's faster.
Number two, does it remove fear? So when you're flagging down a cab there's a lot
of fears that you have. You're worried about what is it is it gonna smell? What's
the person gonna be like? Is it gonna be dirty? Are they gonna take advantage of
me? What's the rate gonna be? Right? So there's like there's all this stuff that's going on that you're fearful of so does it remove fear and number three?
Does it remove friction?
Does it remove friction so fear?
friction
Faster those are three F's and the three F's of innovation and if you find anything that meets those three F's
There's a very good chance it's got legs. So this is why if you look at chat, GBT became very obvious
to me because does it remove friction? Oh my goodness. Yes. Is it faster to get your results?
Yes. Does it quickly remove fear? Yes. Like it's very, very like, like it's very easy.
The whole thing's easy, easy to understand. It's very intuitive. And so because of that, I knew that it was going to take off. And what's
interesting about this is Google at one time did the same thing to Yahoo. Google
was faster than Yahoo because Yahoo was a search engine plus a bunch of other
crap. Still to this day, if you go to their homepage, that's what it looks like.
They were confusing. They created friction in the UX, and it was this like multi-billion dollar design mistake
that they made.
Google showed one box and people said, huh, that's easier.
It's faster.
It was less friction.
Removed fear.
And now, boom, Google takes off.
Google wins for 20 years, for 20 years.
And then suddenly they get disrupted. And what do we see Google doing today? Well, they're making 300 billion a year
off of their search, their paid search results. So it's very hard for them to
let that go. The problem is, by not letting that go, they introduce friction
and they slow down the UX, the user experience of search. And so in so doing, they're starting to kill their brand,
which is why people quickly go over to chat GPT.
You can even get bad answers on chat GPT,
but you don't like friction.
You don't like fear.
You don't like ads.
See all these things, they eliminated three Fs, it's got legs. And that's how you have to look at a lot of these things. eliminated three F's it's got legs and that's how
you have to look at a lot of these things. It gets very very simple that's
how you can know where to place your bets. What I think is interesting I was
listening to an interview that Sundar, do I have his name right, the CEO from Google,
did with David Friedberg from the All In podcast and he's talking about this
question around the innovators dilemma because Friedberg in the early part of his career actually worked at Google and he's talking about this question around the innovators dilemma,
because Friedberg in the early part of his career actually worked at Google, and he was asking him
how do you work through this idea? Search is obviously the bellwether of your business,
but we see what's happening. You're already starting to see issues in your numbers in some
of the quarterly reports, etc. How do you start to do this? And we've seen Google now bring Gemini AI as an option
you can toggle on, toggle off at the top of search.
And when I saw that, not that I ever,
I've been, I'm in lockstep with you
in terms of where I think all of this is going.
However, when I saw Google make the move
to pull the Gemini AI up into actually replacing
where traditionally the first three paid ad links
were and now it's Gemini's AI.
You couldn't question it at that point.
They just gave the most valuable real estate on the internet, the top three paid search
ads for Google search, the highest value real estate on the internet.
They just replaced it
with a non-ad tool, Google AI.
That's right.
And that to me, if anything, is the signal
that there is no coming back,
the world will be completely different,
and there is no justification other than
I choose to live a truly contrarian life
to fight against AI. There's just there's no argument for it. Yeah
Yeah, and because the buyer always wins
the taxis
Tried to sue uber over and over again the hotel chains tried to sue Airbnb over and over again
But who wins the user generally because they demand a change because they like the innovation
more.
Why?
Because it was either faster, it eliminated friction or it removed fear, or all three
of those, right?
And so this is what we're seeing.
Most clicks today, excuse me, most searches today on Google, the majority, something like
70 to 75% don't even end in the click, right?
Which is extraordinary.
The blue link means nothing anymore. Being ranked number one in Google means absolutely nothing anymore. I mean,
it used to be that you would get 80% of the clicks. Now you get less than 20% of the clicks
if you're ranked number one in most cases, right? So your future rests on your ability
to be recommended by AI as a business. You have to build a known and trusted brand. The
humans must trust you and AI must trust you.
And many of those signals are overlapped,
but it's the signals that you produce.
Others about you and you have to produce signals
as well as a business.
And if you're not producing those trust signals,
you will be left behind from a search perspective.
But the problem is now,
you can't just throw money at the problem to fix it. You know, for years, for 20 years, we've been able to throw money at Google and say,
give me some leads, and they made the trade. All right. But now you can't do that. That's scary
business, Hanley, for a lot of people. You can't just say, all right, I'm gonna do some of this,
like SEO stuff and show, nope, can't do that.
Can't do that.
Not at least the way it's always been done.
You got to build a known and trusted brand.
I mean, that and that's what it's going to be.
And that comes back to content and that comes back to thinking like a media company.
And that really means that, and I talk about this in endless customers, if you want a known
and trusted brand, and that's why I wrote the book, really, you got
to follow four pillars.
And I know we're kind of winding down here, Hanley, but I just want to give these four
pillars.
I have more time if you do.
Number one pillar is you got to be willing to say online what others in your space aren't
willing to say.
All right.
That's your first pillar.
Most companies aren't willing to do that.
They say they are. They're not. Number two, you got to be willing to show with video Most companies aren't willing to do that. They say they are.
They're not.
Number two, you gotta be willing to show with video what others aren't willing to show.
You gotta think like a media company.
Number three, you gotta be willing to sell in a way others aren't willing to sell.
And then finally, number four, you've gotta be more human though than others are willing
to be.
They gotta feel that you're very human while you're taking advantage of this technology
So say what others aren't willing to say show what they're not willing to show with video
Sell in a way they're not willing to sell and then be more human than they're willing to be
Those are the four pillars of a known and trusted brand today for AI and for humans
Guys, you've heard me talk about this idea of a human optimized business.
What Marcus just described are the pillars
of building a human optimized business.
I came out with this concept, Marcus, a few years ago,
and it's really the core tenant behind Rogris,
the insurance agency that I built.
Humans are only better than computers at three things.
Building relationships, solving problems, and selling shit.
I think the selling shit one on the lower end is going to start to go away.
So I'm reconsidering that part of it.
So that only leaves two.
Right?
We are better at building relationships and solving problems.
Solving problems in the next 10 to 20 years is probably going to go away.
So what do we have left?
Brand.
That's it.
That's it.
That's all we have left.
Brand is it.
I never thought I would be a brand guy and I realized today everything I'm teaching
is about building a known and trusted brand.
And the one thing I know about trust is that regardless of what happens with technology,
with AI, trust ain't going away because it's a principle.
If I said to anybody listening to this, is trust going to be fundamental to your business
in 20 years? you'd say yes. If I said it's Facebook, it's Google, it's ChatGPT,
you're going to say, I have no idea because 20 years is all, man, that's light years away
from right now, man. So much is going to change between now and then. So you really don't
want to bet on platforms. What you want to bet on are principles and you evolve your
platforms based on those principles that you're rooted in as a business, bro
I could talk to you for hours man
It is always a master class every time that you come on this show every time we talk and I appreciate the hell out
Of you. We're gonna make sure we're linked up to endless customers the book so people can go buy that
But I know you have a bunch of other stuff going on if people want to go deeper into your world
How do they do that?
How do they get into Marcus's world if they're not already?
Yeah, well, if you want me to come speak at your event about the future of sales marketing,
AI, trust, go to MarcusSheridan.com.
Connect with you on LinkedIn.
I'm a pretty dang good follow.
Maybe not as good as Hanley here, but I'm all right.
So connect with me on LinkedIn.
If you see it on LinkedIn, I wrote it personally, either private message or a post.
That's all from me.
And if you have a service-based business, check out priceguide.ai, which is the future
of winning trust and converting from your website.
It's an amazing little pricing estimator tool that allows you to use AI to build pricing
estimators. Conversion rates generally shoot up three to five hundred percent from your
website. So check it out. Priceguide.ai. Pretty incredible tool.
Bro, I love you. I appreciate you. I'm very proud to be your friend. I wish you nothing
but success.
Thank you, my friend.
Thank you for listening to the Ryan Hanley Show. Be sure to subscribe to our channel
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