The School of Greatness - 21 The James Altucher Take Over: How I Live My Dreams
Episode Date: June 21, 2013After inspiring everyone to Choose Yourself in episode #19, James Altucher returns to take over as the host on The School of Greatness. With Altucher in charge, the microphones have been turned around... and I'm the one who is answering the questions. I share things I've never shared before about chasing my dreams of being a […]
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This is episode number 21 with the James Altucher Takeover.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
What is up, greats?
Thanks so much for checking this out today.
I finally got my voice back.
It was pretty much gone the whole week,
and it's still a little raspy,
so hopefully it don't mind too much.
But it's good to have it back and hopefully you don't mind too much but it's good
to have it back and uh being able to communicate with full energy and power with all of you guys
i hope you enjoyed james altucher i love that episode the guy's super funny and uh very wise
in these years had a lot of ups and downs but uh finally bringing it all together so if you
haven't checked it out yet if you're if you're new to this podcast, make sure to go check that out right now because it's pretty cool. However,
after the interview, James said, hey, I want to take over your show and I want to interview you.
So James and I ended up doing an extra 30 or 40 minutes where he interviewed me and kind of broke
down a lot of stuff that I
haven't really talked about with the early hustle and the early work that I did a few years back in
the beginning of my kind of business career. And it was interesting to kind of share and to have
James ask the type of questions that he did ask. So this one is all about James taking over the school of greatness,
interviewing me, and me kind of opening up more about the hustle and the greatness
that I believe in. So hopefully you guys enjoy this one. I'm going to get into a quote of the
day because I want to keep up with the quote of the show. And this one is by my good friend, Jonathan Fields, who's actually in his
book. And the quote is, cultivation of a growth mindset starts with an understanding that greatness
is largely about work. So keep that in mind as you're listening to some of the stories that both
James and I are sharing today. But a lot of what I've accomplished has been
because I've worked my fricking butt off for a long time and I met the right people at the right
time as well. So I'm going to go in and dive into that and what I had to overcome to kind of get to
where I am right now. Hopefully you guys enjoy it and you're willing to hear what I have to say.
I've got some more solo rounds that I want to come out with in a little bit,
but this one, again, is James Altucher taking over this episode.
Had a cool picture posted on Instagram today.
This is the fan of the week, Dave Conray.
I think I was saying your last name right.
Dave Conray, who is fresh rag on Instagram.
He posted a picture just with a big, huge,
huge barbell or dumbbell on the ground with his sneakers
and said bent over rows while listening to
at Lewis Howes School of Greatness.
So it's a great workout for your mind and your body, he says.
So thanks for listening while you work out.
And again, keep posting pictures wherever you are in the world,
getting pictures from all over the place from you guys on Instagram, tagging where you're listening
to the school of greatness. I appreciate you all. And I thank you so much. It means a lot to me.
And that's why I keep doing this each and every week. So with that,
hope you enjoyed this interview where James Altucher takes over and interviews me on the
school of greatness.
So this is James Altucher and I'm taking over Lewis Howes podcast. I've got Lewis Howes with
me here in the studio and we're going to talk about what makes Lewis Howes a success and how he can help you.
So Lewis, are you up for the challenge? I'm ready and willing. And Lewis, to be up for the challenge,
I'm going to ask you detailed questions. So you've got to be able to answer. You ready for it?
You can ask me anything you want. All right, good. So first of all, I know you're in the business of
helping people deliver value through LinkedIn, but I want to talk about before that, I know you're in the business of helping people deliver value through LinkedIn,
but I want to talk about before that, I want to talk about sports because I'm not an athlete at
all. And you are, and what I know you're, you're a professional football player. You're a college
athlete. You're an Olympian. You're like this mega athlete, you know, incredible.
So what lessons from athletics do you bring with you now into your daily life?
And I'm sure your podcast listeners know this, but I want to learn this for myself.
You know, I feel like I'm very blessed to have grown up as an athlete,
transitioning into just the rest of my life in the business world
because there's so many lessons
I learned in sports that I've been able to translate. And being completely ignorant about
business and making money, I had no clue how to make money after playing pro football. I was
pretty much training my whole life in the summers and the off season and spring break. I never had
to get a job because my dad was just like, go train. If this is your dream, I'll support you.
So I didn't know how to make money
and it was very scary to me in the beginning.
But some of the things I learned,
specifically belief.
I think belief was probably one of the biggest things.
Believing in myself that if there was anything I wanted to do,
I could make it happen.
If I just took the right steps to make it happen, if I found the right team, if I learned enough, if I worked hard enough at it, that I could do it.
And it really helped me with building confidence because the more I learned, the more I failed in sports and then succeeded and won and continued moving up to the next level, the more confidence I gained.
And it taught me a lot about flexibility.
But, Lewis, let me ask you about that, though.
So you're a professional football player in arena football.
What happened?
You didn't make it to the pros.
I'm going to call that out as a failure.
Now, I know it's not, and you took your lessons from it,
but how did you feel that moment
when you knew that that dream wasn't going to come true? It sucked. It was, uh, it was very
depressing because I'd put all my eggs in one basket and I said, this is my life. I have to
play in the NFL or I have to play some type of major pro sport. And, um, yeah, when I, I had a
couple of tryouts in the NFL and didn't perform as well as I should have at the tryouts.
So I played arena football and thought I was going to move up after the first year, got injured, and really didn't have a chance to go back due to this injury.
I had to have surgery and recovered for about a year and a half.
And it was really low for me because I didn't know what to do next.
I barely went to school, let alone get any good grades at school.
I barely passed class just to be able to play football.
So I didn't have like a skill,
uh,
experience,
a job,
nothing.
And my whole passion was gone playing sports.
It was,
it was gone.
So for me,
I was just depressed for a while.
But I always imagine,
and this is kind of like the nerdy fantasy of what happens in sports and semi-professional sports and so on,
that once that part of your life is over, there's all these big shots at investment banks who are willing to just hire you to have you around.
That didn't happen?
You know, some of that happened.
There was sports sponsorship companies and things like that that wanted to bring me on but i couldn't get myself to work
for anyone there was something inside of me that would not allow me to like every time i'd get an
interview or someone would say yeah let's offer you something in this sports sponsorship job or
sports marketing i just couldn't move forward with it it was like this I felt like I was killing myself a little bit if I did something like
that because it wasn't what I was passionate.
Working for someone else wasn't what I ever wanted to do.
So what was your first step into kind of the entrepreneurial world?
Actually, a step back further, my dad had become a pretty successful life and health
insurance agent.
And he had this big book of clients.
And he was about to retire in five or six years. And he's like, he said, when I was done,
he's like, I'll just give you my book of clients. You can work with me for a few years. And then
when I retire, you take it over. And I remember, and I remember thinking to myself, man, this
sounds like a great opportunity. I could be making a lot of money right away, you know,
have it pretty easy, but it was just, I couldn't even,
I don't know. I couldn't go work there. I couldn't do any of it just because I felt like,
oh, it's not mine. It's not something I've built. It's not anything I'm passionate about. Dealing with insurance every day sounds so boring to me. And I just knew I couldn't do it. I knew I had to
figure out a way to make money on my own. I wish I had a dad like that, actually.
That sounds pretty cool. So what did you do? So yeah, I was sleeping on my own. I wish I had a dad like that, actually. That sounds pretty cool.
Yeah.
So what did you do?
So yeah, I was sleeping on my sister's couch
for about a year and a half
while I was recovering from surgery.
And that whole time, I had a laptop,
a guitar, and a couple bags of clothes.
So I was there eating her macaroni and cheese
and leftover food, whatever she had.
Wasn't paying any rent. Was pretty much worthless around the house, wasn't even helping clean up after myself,
really. I was pretty much a worthless piece of crap. And I'm super grateful that my sister
was just loving and supportive of me. And after about a year and a half, she was like,
all right, isn't it time you go get a job? But until then, she was just very supportive.
What I did though- But what were you doing during that go get a job? But until then, she was just very supportive. What I did, though...
But what were you doing during that year and a half?
What I was doing was a mentor of mine said...
I was reaching out to a bunch of people that I felt were successful that I wanted to be like.
And a mentor of mine said, why don't you check out LinkedIn?
There's a lot of people on there.
There's about 15 million people on there at the time.
I'm hearing about a lot of people getting business opportunities and job opportunities.
Maybe you can meet some people in your local, in Columbus, Ohio, and see if there's any
opportunities for you.
So I just did exactly what people told me to do that I trusted.
And I went on LinkedIn for about six to eight hours a day for the next year.
And all I did was look up people in different companies that I thought would be interesting
to meet.
And I connected with them one-on-one on LinkedIn. I would do research about them. I would send them
personalized emails. And I asked them if I could meet them in person somewhere in Columbus or
around Columbus. And for that year, year and a half, I met with hundreds and hundreds of people
one-on-one or talked to them on the phone and literally just interviewed people
and asked them about how they got to where they are in their their career or their their business
and just met successful people and asked them what they did to get there okay so let's let's
dive into that for a second because at some level like if you write to the ceo of ge he's not going
to respond to you sure at what what level were you. Sure. At what level were you writing?
And at what level were you getting resistance?
Yeah.
Not everybody understands the idea of the personalized and the research letter.
Yeah.
I get a lot of emails, hey, can I buy you a cup of coffee?
If I had all that coffee, I would be drinking coffee 27 hours a day.
Exactly.
People don't normally respond to messages.
I think I had a couple things working for me.
I had mastered the art of crafting my profile
to make it look really good.
I tweaked it a bunch.
I'd researched.
I was always updating it,
trying to make it look better
so that I could get responses.
So I looked interesting enough to other people when I'd reach out to them.
And I had the pro athlete cards.
Okay, so tell me how you made your profile interesting.
What are like four tips to make the profile interesting?
Well, most people just put like, I work at XYZ company or looking for a job or new opportunities
or CEO of this or whatever it may be.
But really, it doesn't tell you anything about them.
It just tells you where they're working.
So I started thinking, well, how can I tell a story better
so that people are more intrigued?
And what I would do is my headline,
I would tell people more who I am, who I help,
and how I help them.
So there's two things you can do on your headline,
which is do that, tell the story of who you are,
who you help, and how you help people. Or you can just listen. And what did you put? What did you put back then?
And so I put like former pro athletes, world record holder, and two sport All-American or
something like that, like early on. So I was going for the like, let me make it look really
interesting effect, the kind of the wow effect initially. And that worked for
me. So I started like telling a story in my profile. I just really made it look really pretty
and professional, but kind of had more like a wow factor with my summary and everything,
with everything I had accomplished, I guess. I used that to my advantage. And I was reaching
out to former athletes, people in the sports world world so it was easier for me to connect by kind of playing that I'm a world record holder I played pro football
even though I wasn't in the NFL I still played and whatever so I just kind of played along that
and it would get me responses and I was reaching out to you know the former the founder of ESPN
uh responded to me and we're now good friends and I've, you know, connected with him many times and other big presidents and CEOs, uh, they're responding to me. And what I was doing
though, I was making very personalized emails and I like to break down three barriers. Um,
so when I, when I would reach out to them, I would say something very personal in the first line,
like, hi James, we don't know each other, but I noticed that we've got 13 different connections,
and I was just speaking to Tim Sykes last week about you.
So initially, I would break down the barrier of connections, even if we didn't know each other.
The second thing I might say, I noticed also that you're from New York City,
and I used to live in Union Square, actually.
So I'm sure we've eaten at the same restaurants or something like that.
So you talk about location.
And the third thing could be hobbies, interest, or education.
So I might say, oh, I noticed that you write for the Washington Post.
I wrote for them as well.
Or I noticed that you went to Ohio State University, which I'm from, whatever it may be.
Or I noticed that you went to Ohio State University, which I'm from, whatever it may be.
So you're breaking down three barriers of connection points in a very brief email where you don't ask for advice or for help at all, where you more ask them about their success.
And I think people are turned off when you ask for help or advice, or can you look over
my resume, or can you make an introduction or anything like that.
But when you make it about them and their success, people are more inclined to respond.
At least that's my experience.
But then how would you bridge the gap to get like an actual meeting?
Usually from there, I would just say I'm really interested in hearing about your success for the ESPN thing.
What I did, I started a blog
and I started saying
I would like to feature you
on my site
for some of these successful people.
So some of it would be
I'd want to feature them.
Other people,
it was just I wanted to meet them
and hear about their success.
And for whatever reason,
people would take meetings with me.
I don't know if it was
because I had the pro athlete card
or whatever it was,
but I did it in a way that, you way that didn't take up a lot of their time, and I wasn't asking for anything.
So I think I didn't turn people off that way.
And the more I did this…
And you were offering that.
You were offering to feature them on something, which is always good for people.
Exactly.
Offering to feature them.
And the more I did this, the more I realized that…
And I want to never ask people for advice or anything.
I just want to ask them questions about their success.
And people love to talk about their success.
If I asked you, how'd you make millions of dollars?
Of course, you're going to like sharing about your success.
And the more I did this, people would always ask me at the end.
I would never ask for anything.
And then at the end, they would always return with, oh, you're like a great guy. I appreciate the time. Is there anything I can do for you?
And I would never ask them to do anything for me. I would never say, yeah, you know,
I'm looking for an introduction here or this and that. I would always put it back on them and say,
no, I'm just really looking to connect and I just want to add value in any way. And I would always
finish with what's the biggest challenge you're having right now with your company or with this or with that?
And people would really open up and say, well, my biggest challenge is we're looking for
a web designer or a new person in sales or we're looking for whatever it may be.
We're looking for someone to help us grow this or someone with e-commerce experience.
And I'd be like, I just met one of the top web designers in the area last
week, actually.
Here's what he's done.
Here's what he's worked for.
I'd love to make the connection for you right now if you're interested.
And he'd say, yeah.
And what I would do is I'd get on the phone with that person right then.
I'd call them and say, you got to meet the president of this company.
Here he is.
I just want to put you guys in touch really quick.
I'm going to follow up with an email and introduce you guys.
And I think the more I actually took action as
fast as possible to connect people when they had a challenge, that's when things started to flow.
That's really interesting. So you were doing like permission networking.
Yes.
By essentially getting permission on both sides. And then would you grab value in the middle? Like
would you essentially take a part of the fee if somebody did a website for somebody or a service?
I never did that in the beginning.
I do sometimes now with different things like coaching and different introductions like that.
But for a number of years, I didn't.
And really, there's no need to now because it's got to come back one way or another in the future.
I don't think I need to take the referral or the commission, but I can if I want to.
But yeah, I would never really ask for anything. I was just saying.
So what's next? How do you translate that then into value for yourself? Once I started creating products, I was able to get a lot of sales from my network. People were
just buying because they wanted information from me.
People would always ask me about LinkedIn, social media, online marketing, things like
that.
As my skills started to develop, all these connections were like, man, you're doing some
great things online.
I'd love to learn this stuff.
So I started-
Who would say that?
So obviously the head of ESPN or the head of the web design company wasn't saying that.
Who would actually say that to you?
Mostly small business owners, entrepreneurs, freelancers, things like that.
So these were people who you were connecting with in the same way as the ESPN people, but they were...
Yeah, these were more people that I would be like, I'd host these kind of LinkedIn networking events all around the country.
And this was more that audience.
It's like kind of the mainstream small business owner audience that I was bringing together. I'd built up these huge groups in this
large network on LinkedIn during this whole time as I was meeting people one-on-one. I was
connecting with lots of people, thousands. I think I have almost 25,000 direct connections on LinkedIn
plus a couple hundred thousand in different groups that I've built up. So I was like,
it was hard for me
to do one-on-one connections so much. There's only so many you can do. And so I started saying,
well, why don't I just bring everyone together in these cities and let them meet each other
and connect and grow their business? And so I did 20 of these around the country. And
that was the audience that really needed my advice. They were like, can you help me? Can I,
can you hire as a consultant for this online marketing
or this LinkedIn or social media stuff?
And I did a little bit of that early on to make some money,
but I realized that wasn't scalable for me,
and it wasn't something that I really enjoyed
as like one-on-one trading my time for money.
And then I started creating these products,
writing books about it, creating products,
and that's when I started to realize
the value and the importance of building a strong network. So let me ask you this,
your first event that you did. So you're like a networking superhero. And what always got me into
comic books when I was a kid was the secret origins of the superheroes. So what was like
your first networking event? were you nervous how many
people what kind of people like what happened i was extremely nervous because i was 24 and i was
hosting an event in st louis missouri because i had built up kind of this group there on linkedin
so i i hosted i saw other people were doing like tweet ups around this time. This was back in 2008, like end of 2008.
Everyone was doing like tweet ups or meetup.com was popular.
So I was like, I could throw in these events.
These are like the events that people are doing are pretty bad.
I was like, I can do a better event.
But I was young.
I was 24.
I didn't have a job.
And everyone that I brought in was like late 20s, late 30s, late 40s.
They all had careers, jobs, and I was a nobody.
So I was really nervous.
I was not sure if people were going to show up.
I made the first one free,
and I hosted it at this bar and restaurant in St. Louis, Missouri.
And I remember getting there an hour early.
I put on my nicest suit jacket and was trying to look really good.
And I knew what I was doing.
Got there early, and there was about 350 people that showed up.
And it was a huge hit.
Everyone was super grateful.
People were doing deals.
People were connecting.
People were making introductions for each other.
And I was getting emails left and right the following weeks from people saying, when's the next event?
This was amazing.
The people here were great.
A lot of great prospects for me.
When's the next event?
amazing. The people here were great. A lot of great prospects for me. When's the next event?
And I bet you when this was happening, you were feeling so good about the value you were creating that you did not once, this is just my guess, you did not once think about money.
Well, I was broke. So I thought a little bit about it, but I was more excited about
the experience people were having and seeing results for them.
It made me feel good knowing that I was helping them more. And I knew the money was going to come.
I just didn't know how to make it happen yet. So the first event, I sold like four tables of
sponsorships or something for like 250 bucks each. i made like a thousand bucks i pretty much broke even and i remember i was like i wonder if people will show up if i charge five
dollars because i made it free the first time so i was like i wonder if they'll show up i'll charge
five dollars so i do it again the next time i charge five dollars because there was like probably
10 or 20 people that were just kind of riffraff that weren't were kind of like sleazy and i was
like ah these people are kind of lame so i was like i wonder if this will scare away this riffraff
and you know maybe we'll get 100 people hopefully it won't scare away everyone and it ended up being
more people i think it was like 400 people paid five dollars it was more quality people and there
was like very few riffraff and uh i sold sponsorships and i sold five dollars a ticket to
get in so I had all this
cash now this time and people loved it even more. Now there's this buzz around it like,
when's the next one? Let's make it bigger and better. And I'm going to bring these people
and invite these people. And they were promoting the group for me that I had built on LinkedIn.
So I was building this huge network by just cultivating a great audience.
You were almost building a mini LinkedIn within LinkedIn.
I was building a mini LinkedIn within LinkedIn. I was building these different groups all around
the country in various cities that I could help connect people and bring them together.
And yeah, it was basically a mini LinkedIn and I was just cultivating it very well. I was
sending them content, I was sending them articles, videos,
helpful tips to help them grow their business. And then I was bringing them together.
videos helpful tips to help them grow their business and then i was bringing them together well then was it hard to kind of jump to the next city and start fresh uh with the with the
meetups again or was it the same experience after the first one it was pretty much like
i kind of had my own system down and i knew what to expect it was just a matter of like figuring
out logistics of location and restaurants and things like that but it was it's pretty much the same thing in every city okay so what's what's the most you made on
an event you know during this period like you were getting bigger and bigger and you were charging
more and more so now you were making a living or somewhat of a living yeah um what what what
were you making i probably made you know around like five thousand dollars from events it wasn't
you know for me it was a lot of money but it started to become a lot of work this was all cash and i was like 24 25 at the time hadn't made any money
before that and was living on my sister's couch so finally i was like okay i'm making enough money
to like give my sister some money rent money and uh so but it was very it started to become very
like emotionally draining and energetically draining because I wanted to shake every person's hand at every event and talk and listen.
And you do that for four hours a couple times a month.
It gets exhausting.
And promoting it and planning it every time, I was just like, after 20 of them, I wanted to move on.
I couldn't really scale it any bigger.
I didn't know how to do it.
And I needed to make some more money without having to work as hard. I started doing webinars. I had a book out because
people were like, I need to know this LinkedIn information. I wrote a book. The book wasn't
making me any money, obviously. I mean, it was making a little bit, but I didn't make that much
of a LinkedIn book, but it gave me the credibility. And it wasn't until I did my first webinar,
a guy named Joel Calm, who wrote a book about AdSense, actually, he invited me to come on a webinar. He said, you know, this information you've been
teaching about in your book is amazing, and no one knows about LinkedIn. So I'd love for you to
come on and talk about how people can grow their business using LinkedIn with your strategies
on a webinar to my audience. So I get on there, talk for 45, 50 minutes, and just give away tons of free content.
It's all free.
And at the end, I offer a three-day live webinar boot camp training about LinkedIn.
I just give them more advanced strategies.
And I'll never forget, this was the moment when I realized that I wasn't going to have
to worry about money again, that I knew that I could turn my information,
my advice, my expertise, my network
into an amazing lifestyle, an amazing living
if I add the right type of value.
And this is when it all shifted,
was at the end of the webinar,
we closed the webinar down,
I offered the training,
not sure what was going to happen.
And I remember I opened up my email
and my entire inbox,
I think the first 50 lines or whatever, everything said, you've received payment and all the
different lines. And I remember just being in shock about how fast money came in within 60
minutes of doing a free thing for people and giving them value. All these people bought my product, my live training, and I made $6,300 in basically 60 minutes. And I was screaming,
running around the apartment, freaking out. I felt like I was rich making that much money in an hour.
That's great. So how many people showed up for the webinar, for instance?
I think there were around 500 people on that webinar.
And they were like asking questions
online there was some software you're using i gave a presentation yeah it was like go to webinar i
gave a presentation at the end they were asking questions i was answering the questions and then
i did a horrible job presenting and i mean i was giving a content but like as a presenter i was
really bad i was really nervous stumbling stuttering everything my slides were ugly
but the content was still good and i
didn't sell really that well at the end i was just kind of like here's my thing like hope you guys
enjoy this and see you later you know i was really timid and people still bought and i remember
thinking to myself holy crap i can do this every single day for the rest of my life if i want to
make six thousand dollars in an hour i was like this is great I'm gonna be rich and I just remember saying if I continue to give value and give away stuff for free
then the money's gonna come in and that's what happened over the last three four years I've
probably done like 700 live webinars and we've probably done well over 5 million in sales in the last two, two and a half years alone by giving free content to on a free webinar.
And then at the end offering some type of advanced training course,
if they wanted more,
they could sign up for more.
If they didn't,
then they could leave for something for free and still take action on the free
content.
Okay.
So,
so what would you give,
what kind of stuff would you give away for free?
I would give away some of my best strategies.
So if it's a link, if it's a LinkedIn presentation, we talk about a lot of different social media topics,
online marketing topics.
But say it's LinkedIn, I would teach people how to increase their ranking on LinkedIn
so that if any time someone typed in sports marketing, I could get them to the top of
the search engine, let's say, in LinkedIn.
And that way, they're going to be attracting more clients, more customers, more leads by being kind of number one, number two spot on the LinkedIn rankings.
So any keyword you have, I would teach that live on a webinar. Let's say you're a web designer or
you're a realtor in Columbus, Ohio, or whatever it may be you want to be ranking number one,
I would teach them that for free. And people would be blown away by the results they were
getting. And people were getting $5,000, $10,000 customers
from just this one thing that they would do.
So I'd have a lot of success from just teaching this free stuff.
I would also talk about how to optimize their profile,
how to get more connections, how to do all these different things.
In the advanced course, I would teach them even more
about how to build up a huge group and build an email list
and all this other stuff.
So I'd really show the value.
In the advanced stuff, it's almost like you were showing them what you did.
Exactly.
So then what do they do with that?
Like once they have an advanced group, how do they then, or do they monetize it in the
same way that you monetize it?
Or like how do you suggest that they monetize it?
Most small business owners and entrepreneurs that are on these webinars want more leads,
traffic, and sales.
That's what pretty much everyone wants.
If they have a business or website, they want more traffic.
They want to convert that traffic into leads, and they want to convert those leads into
buyers or customers or clients.
So with having a LinkedIn group, you're basically building a mini LinkedIn, a network of people
that are your potential customers, your target audience,
you're turning them into a group. And there you're able to send a message out once a week to this
group, to their actual email. And so it's like free email marketing from LinkedIn. And you can
put links in there, videos, you can send them to a sales page, an opt-in, you can send them to a
webinar, whatever you want to send them to, but you can get traffic, leads, and sales from building
a free group, free marketing, and sending emails to that group. Wow. This is really interesting. I'm going
to, I'm going to do this. I'm going to build a LinkedIn group. You should, everyone should.
And so now, so, so like this week or this month, how many LinkedIn webinars did you do?
I, I've kind of scaled back from doing it. I used to do, I probably did like 700 live in the last three, four years, but now I'm doing where I publish people to, to give the presentations
as opposed to me doing as many live. So I would do about one a week now that's live
and it's on a different topic every time. And sometimes we'll do automated webinars
where we're just driving traffic to a webinar that we're just having on autopilot
so we don't have to show up anymore.
So I've kind of learned how to maximize my time, leverage my time more.
So I don't have to always show up.
It seems like that's actually a theme.
So at first, you were sleeping.
You were sleeping on your sister's couch.
Then you wanted to make money while you were sleeping.
So you would invite people to these events.
And so it's not like one-on-one, but you can make money all at once in four hours at having
an event in different cities and stuff.
But you wanted to abstract away from that.
So you started holding these webinars where you would then sell products out the back
end.
So again, you're making money.
You're sleeping more and making more money.
And now you're you're
you've abstracted away from the concept of you holding the webinars but you almost like uh
curate uh what you think are good webinars and that has value because you're you've become an
expert in the space yeah so it's that's kind of the path or the career arc that that you've been
taking and i imagine you know it's going to keep on evolving.
Who knows what will happen next?
But I imagine it will be along the same type of arc.
Do you have any plans for the future?
I'm just trying to do bigger and better things and leverage my time and energy more effectively
so that I can become a better human being, do things that inspire myself, and then in return, inspire more people
on a larger scale.
So my goal is to figure out how to scale everything in a larger audience and keep offering value,
whatever that may be.
And maybe LinkedIn is going to be done in six months or two years.
Who knows?
So the goal is not what it's going to be, but how it's going to be.
You teach people also like you have Facebook webinars, Twitter webinars?
Everything, yeah.
Twitter, Facebook, Google+, YouTube, pretty much email marketing, blogging, affiliate
marketing, pretty much everything about online marketing.
We bring in the top experts.
We curate their content.
We teach them how to give live webinars.
A lot of times we publish their products for them and then we'll promote them for them.
So kind of become like a little publishing house now.
So when you say we,
how many people do you have working with you?
I've got a business partner for that specific company.
And then we've got a few employees.
My,
my mom works for us full time and then a couple of customer support.
And then probably hiring on a,
we've got like a web team as well that we outsource to.
So it's pretty lean.
For your company, what were your revenues for the past year?
The past year went down a little bit.
It was probably right around just over $2 million in sales.
Wow, that's great.
And the year and a half was about $2.5 million.
I had kind of taken a step back for about a year and really I kind of started doing some different things in my business,
in my life.
I was focusing on playing in the Olympics and trying to do all that,
so I was pursuing other things, stepped back.
But fortunately enough, we had built up enough of a system in place
that we pretty much did just almost as much in sales last year
as we did the
previous year when I was working, you know, 10, 15 hours a day. So it's, uh, it's nice.
That's incredible. So what would you say is this is very inspirational how you built this up and,
and, and use LinkedIn and other things to build this, this you've chosen yourself basically,
uh, to, to, to steal the title of my book. You've chosen yourself to make this new career that didn't even exist 10 years ago.
Exactly.
Yeah, I created something.
I learned how to leverage everything to make money from it.
And it started with those events.
It started by, okay, I'm going to sell a sponsorship and make a couple hundred bucks.
And then I'm going to sell tickets. And then I was like, what about the food and bar
sales? All these people are buying food and drinks. So I started negotiating with them and
saying, hey, can I get a 15% cut on all the food and bar sales? And if they spend more than 5,000,
can I get a 20% cut? So I started making money that way. I started selling my books at the
events. I started getting consulting from people. I started doing everything.
I was like, how can I leverage the value I'm bringing to monetize it?
And that's what I've done in my life now in a couple of companies I have,
which is leveraging everything to monetize it.
So let me ask you a question. Have you thought about making an agency where you start doing this for big brands?
It's crossed my mind, but I feel like that's going to be a lot more work. making an agency where you start doing this for, for big brands? Uh,
it's crossed my mind,
but I feel like that's to be a lot more work and it's not something I want to
do.
I think I don't want to do a lot of time consuming tasks.
The reason I bring it up is like once you have an agency where you have people
paying you on a monthly basis,
a big amount,
you could sell that ultimately for millions of dollars
to other agencies.
Sure.
Yeah.
I just feel like it'd be a lot of work.
I look at Gary Vaynerchuk and how much work he's put in
in the last couple of years to build his agency,
and he's built something amazing with a couple hundred employees now
and however much he's doing in revenue.
But I just think about how much energy and time
that he's been spending on the road to sell and speak just to get clients in.
And he's been hustling.
But it's not something that's what I want.
I'm living a good lifestyle right now.
And I'm still growing financially.
And I'm pursuing other things in my life, handball, Olympics, my health, that I think are more important.
Kind of like what you talk about the balance of living
the dream in your book, that being on the road every day speaking and being on the conference
calls all day and consulting is not a priority to me because I want to live a great life,
a balanced life and pursue the things that are interesting to me as well.
Well, Lewis, this is fantastic. I mean, on our earlier podcast, I mentioned to you that I feel like every day is an adventure just from even the people I meet and the things I get to do.
And having this podcast is very inspirational.
It's really great to hear the story of what you've done.
So congratulations.
And thank you for letting me take over your podcast for the half hour.
I'm glad I had a chance to do it.
And, you know, good luck.
I appreciate it.
Thanks, James.
Thanks, Joyce.
And there you have it, guys.
I hope you enjoyed part of my story
that I continue to share a little bit over these episodes and over these podcasts.
If you enjoyed this, please leave us a review over on iTunes.
Leave us an honest review and feedback.
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Let me know what you think.
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Again, keep posting pictures wherever you are in the world,
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With that, guys, I hope you have an amazing week.
And until next time, make sure to do something great. Oh, I'm sorry not to come though When you're the only one swimming in my eyes
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