Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Evan Carmichael: Surviving Entrepreneurship | Entrepreneurship| E60

Episode Date: March 24, 2020

It's time to unlock your true potential! Today on the show we're yapping with Evan Carmichael. Evan is a serial entrepreneur, speaker, author, and coach who sold is first biotech company at the young ...age of 19. He has a mission is to help 1 billion entrepreneurs in his life and aims to solve what he believes to be the world's biggest problem--- untapped human potential.  Evan is mostly notably known for his uber successful motivational youtube channel that boasts over 2 million subscribers and 300 million views. Forbes has called him one of the world's top 40 social marketing talents and Inc. Magazine has named him one of the 100 great leadership speakers of all time. Tune into this episode to hear his entrepreneurship advice and learn how he scaled his youtube channel to become one of the most popular self-improvement channels in the world! Sponsored by Video Husky. If your’e looking for affordable video editing services to take your marketing to the next level check out /cart.videohusky.com/youngandprofiting and get 30% off your first month! If you liked this episode, please write us a review! Follow YAP on IG: www.instagram.com/youngandprofiting Reach out to Hala directly at Hala@YoungandProfiting.com Follow Hala on Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Follow Hala on Instagram: www.instagram.com/yapwithhala Check out our website to meet the team, view show notes and transcripts: www.youngandprofiting.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If every day you're watching a video or listen to a podcast or reading a book from somebody who's done a lot more than you, you may not notice a shift in yourself day to day. But if you did that every day and you look back three months, six months a year later, like, man, I've grown so much. You can't help. Like if you're, this is episode 60 of Hala show. If you go back and you watch every episode, like if you take the next 60 days and start from zero and just go, you'll be a different person in 60 days. Yeah, totally.
Starting point is 00:00:28 You got Hala in your ear, giving you confidence, boosting you up, making you feel amazing, right? And we need that because, you know, Hala might be a cheerleader for you in your life, but you probably don't have a lot of cheerleaders in your life right now. And so even though Hala may not know you, you can still learn from her, you can still get her wisdom, and you can still apply it to make a meaningful change in your life. You're listening to YAP, Young and Profiting Podcast, a place where you can listen, learn, and profit. Welcome to the show. I'm your host and executive producer, Halitaha, and on Young and Profiting Podcast, we investigate a new topic each week and interview some of the brightest minds
Starting point is 00:01:08 in the world. My goal is to take their wisdom and turn it into actionable advice that you can use in your everyday life, no matter your age, profession, or industry. There's no fluff on this podcast, and that's on purpose. I'm here to uncover value from my guests, people who are much smarter than me on their given topic by doing the proper research and asking the right questions. If you're new to the show, we've chatted with the likes of ex-FBI agents, confidence coaches, self-made billionaires, productivity experts, CEOs, and bestselling authors. Our subject matter ranges from enhancing productivity, how to get better sleep, the art of side hustles, and more. If you're smart and like to continually improve yourself, hit the subscribe button because you'll love it
Starting point is 00:01:52 here at Young and Profiting Podcast. Today on the show, we're yapping with Evan Carmichael. Evan is a serial entrepreneur, speaker, author, and coach who has sold his first biotech company at the young age of 19. He has a mission to help one billion entrepreneurs in his life and aims to solve what he believes to be the world's biggest problem, untapped human potential. And he'll do this by helping people believe in themselves more.
Starting point is 00:02:18 Evan is most notably known for his Uber successful, motivational YouTube channel that boasts over 2 million subscribers and 300 million views. Forbes has called him one of the world's top 40 social marketing talents, and Inc Magazine has named him one of the 100 great leadership speakers of all time. Now, get ready to believe in yourself with Evan Carmichael. All right, everybody. Welcome to Young Improfiting Podcast. Today I have an awesome guest, Evan Carmichael.
Starting point is 00:02:47 Thank you so much for joining the show. Thank you for love, Hala. Great to be here. Yeah, very excited. for you to be here today. So you are a serial entrepreneur and you've done so much in your life. But right now, you're essentially a trainer and a coach to entrepreneurs. And you're also a media personality with a huge YouTube following. So tell us about that audacious goal. Where did you come up with a goal to try to help one billion entrepreneurs? And are there even a billion entrepreneurs that exist today?
Starting point is 00:03:19 Yeah. So I believe in having a goal so big. that you never reach it. So I'm not the kind of person who has a five or 10 year goal. I think if you have a 10 year goal for yourself, you're thinking small. I think if you think about who you were 10 years ago, like who was Halla 10 years ago? Could she have with any accuracy predicted where you are right now? Not if you're growing, right. Yeah, you're right. I'm going to have the young and profiting podcast. No, no, no. There's no way. Not if you're growing, right? And so what makes you think you can do it going forward, right? So you can't predict anything in a 10-year window for yourself if you're growing. So I think it's mission.
Starting point is 00:03:56 I want to solve the world's biggest problem. I want to help a billion entrepreneurs. It's meant to be some giant number that I'm never going to hit. But then it fuels decision-making on a day-to-day basis. So it's why I don't do a lot of one-on-one coaching. I'm trying to reach a ton of people. It's why I'm on this show. Episode 60.
Starting point is 00:04:12 Let's go. Yeah, let's go. It's why I'm on this show. It's why I have my YouTube channel. It's why I write books. I'm trying to hit the masses. And so I think everybody having that North Star to say, this is what I'm trying to do for the rest of my life makes a big difference.
Starting point is 00:04:27 So I read or maybe I heard it on an interview that you believe that your purpose comes from your pain, right? And so your purpose is to help one billion entrepreneurs. Where did you, like what was the pain that stemmed all this? So in my first business, I was 19. I struggled a lot as an entrepreneur. I had 30% of a startup company. I was making $300 a month.
Starting point is 00:04:48 and I didn't know what to do. I made it harder on myself in that I told my friends that I was living the entrepreneur life and I was hustling, but really I couldn't hang out with them because 20 bucks for pizza and beer was too much for me. So I isolated myself and made it really hard on myself. And I'm a visual learner. There wasn't a lot of visual content at that time. So I'm 39 now.
Starting point is 00:05:14 It was 19, 20 years ago. YouTube didn't exist. and I now want to make the path easier for other people who are struggling with what I struggled with. And so for the listeners, for the viewers, whatever you struggled with, whenever you felt the lowest as a human, the least amount of self-worth and lowest self-confidence, that moment, what happened? There's lots of people who currently are what you used to be. Yeah. And you got through, but a lot of people don't get through. And so you represent hope to them and helping them and seeing their eyes like,
Starting point is 00:05:47 light up and being a source of inspiration for them will fill you up in a way that other work doesn't. And so I want people to find out what their purpose is and then unleash it into the world. Oh, that's beautiful. That's an awesome mission. So you've studied the lives of many successful entrepreneurs, most notably Bill Gates, right? So you credit him with helping you turn around your first business. Can you share that story with us? And for those of you who don't know, Bill Gates is the second richest man in the world and he was the founder of Microsoft. One, awesome that you did your homework and research. Two, wow, I can't believe that that's even a caveat now that people don't know who Bill Gates is.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Well, maybe younger people don't know. It makes sense. It's just how much the world has changed. So worse for my life is when I told my business partner that I quit. We were struggling. I wasn't making money. I felt worthless. And so I said, I quit.
Starting point is 00:06:38 I need to feel like I'm a valuable human and something. It wasn't for lack of effort. Like every day, all I was doing every day is working and I wasn't getting results. And so I said, I need to feel worth, worth, like I have worth as a human. So I quit. And then I cried, you know, stuff kind of my eyes, my nose. I was lost. And then I woke up the next morning and I said, you know what?
Starting point is 00:07:00 I can't quit on this yet. Like I haven't given it everything. If I look back in 10 years, I'm going to say, I wish I tried a little bit harder. I wish I did a little bit more. I can't quit yet. But it's got to, I can't just keep doing the same thing. Like there's got to be something else. Somebody has solved this problem before.
Starting point is 00:07:17 And so I just asked myself, who has sold software before? And the only person I could think of was Bill Gates, who started Microsoft. So I looked at Bill Gates' story and how he got started, right? So, you know, Hall I mentioned he's one of the richest men in the world. I didn't care how he made an extra million dollars now. It's like zero to one. How did he do that? Because that's what I wanted to do.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And he did it through partnerships. So I applied his lessons into my business within a short of my business. within a short amount of time, I had my first deal for $13,500,000. And that may not sound like a lot of money, but to me, that was, man, I was just like, rich. That was rich. I had money. I was rolling in it.
Starting point is 00:07:59 That's crazy. But more important than that, it gave me hope, and it gave me a strategy I can use again and again and again. And so for the past 20 years, what have I done? Whenever there's something I don't know how to do, I ask myself, how can I model success? Who has done this thing that they can teach me and I can just learn from them? So for anybody familiar with my YouTube channel, there's a lot of content on there learning from successful people because I want to make it easier. Because if you're trying to learn from in Elon Musk, a lot of the content might be boring. He's not a fantastic speaker.
Starting point is 00:08:30 They ask some questions that you may not care about. And so we try to take eight hours of footage and condense it down into 15 minutes of awesome knowledge to learn from. Yeah. So if you guys haven't been on his YouTube channel, it is absolutely amazing. He's got these awesome like 10 reasons why XYZ is. successful and he really does his research in terms of the people that he studies. And it's really interesting to me because you don't necessarily like talk to them in person or do any interviews with them. You're really just like researching them and and finding the stuff that's online and then
Starting point is 00:09:01 curating it, which is so important to understand that like you don't actually need to talk to someone one-on-one to get information from them. A lot of people, you know, have books and have videos and you can study their lives and learn from them without necessarily knowing them personally. Yeah, I mean, I've had the good fortune of having a bunch of them on. So we had Tony Robbins on and we had Gary V on and we had Grant Cardone on. Yeah. We've had these people on. But, yeah, like, I'm never going to meet Steve Jobs.
Starting point is 00:09:25 It's not going to happen. But we could still learn from him. Yeah. And so that's what I'm trying to do is give people every day a resource to go and learn from. Because here's what happens. If every day you're watching a video or listen to a podcast or reading a book from somebody who's done a lot more than you, you may not notice a shift in yourself day to day, but if you did that every day and you look back three months, six months a year later,
Starting point is 00:09:53 like, man, I've grown so much. You can't help. Like if you're, this is episode 60 of Hala show. If you go back and you watch every episode, like if you take the next 60 days and start from zero and just go, you'll be a different person in 60 days. Yeah, totally. Because you got Hala in your ear, giving you confidence, boosting you up, making you feel amazing, right?
Starting point is 00:10:11 And we need that because, you know, Hala might be a cheerleader for you in your life, but you probably don't have a lot of cheerleaders in your life right now. And so even though Hala may not know you, you can still learn from her. You can still get her wisdom and you can still apply it to make a meaningful change in your life. I love that. Let's stick on Bill Gates a little bit longer. So he was like a genius. He got almost a perfect SAT score. He was like a coder when he was a teenager.
Starting point is 00:10:36 And so it seemed like he had like this natural ability for technology and computer. and things like that. What do you think about talent? Do you think that it's something that everybody naturally has, or do you believe that we need to work at it in order to be very good at one thing? I think everybody has the ability to be Bill Gates at something, where you can combine what you're naturally good at
Starting point is 00:10:58 with a lot of hard work and repetition and skill. So Bill Gates might have been wired a certain way, to think a certain way, to have some national intelligence, but he still worked a lot to build his business up. And I think a lot of people, either one, don't believe that they could be the greatest in the world of something. You could be the greatest in the world at something. I believe that. It just may not be what your parents want you to do or what you went to school for, right?
Starting point is 00:11:26 It's something totally different. Hala probably didn't go to school for podcasting. No. LinkedIn live streaming, right? You don't go to school for that, right? So it's probably she's the weird duck in her family. Like you're doing a what? You go home for Christmas or New Year's and explaining what you do.
Starting point is 00:11:43 Like, yeah, I've got a LinkedIn live show. And we bring people on, it seems totally foreign and different. But believing that you could be the greatest in the world that's something. And then every day chasing that down to get better at the skill, I think is inside everybody. Most people just either one, don't believe themselves enough to chase something down or to go off and actually find it. Yeah. So what's your advice to people? who don't believe in themselves and who have a hard time thinking that they are good at anything
Starting point is 00:12:11 or that they can easily learn anything and they just have like low confidence. Like what's your advice to them to start moving the needle to start believing in themselves a little bit more? One, recognize that that's not you talking to you. Those are other voices in your head. Those are your parents. Those are your teachers. Those are your aunts, uncles, friends, community.
Starting point is 00:12:33 you're not born and automatically think I suck. So this has been something that's been planted inside you. Already that is a step. Yeah. So next step, we need to remove the negativity from our lives. Who is it that when you hang around, you feel worse about yourself? Maybe that's your parents. Maybe that's your friends.
Starting point is 00:12:55 Just because you went to high school with somebody, it doesn't mean you should still be their friend now. A lot of us are in friends out of convenience more than anything else. So the asset test becomes when you're with somebody and you leave. Like I'm talking to Hala, when this is done, I'm going to feel pumped, right? You want to be around more people like that. When you're done leaving them, you feel great and they feel great. We don't have that many people in our lives who are like that.
Starting point is 00:13:20 A lot of people, after we've spent time with them, you feel like you need a nap or you need a shower. It's like you've just been drained and now you're dirty. Totally. And so eliminating as much as possible. those people from your life or just to topics. Maybe you love your mom, but whenever you talk about your career, it leads down to this mess. So I'm not talking about my career with my mom, but we're going to talk about all this other stuff. Yeah. So you eliminate the negativity. Now you've got a hole.
Starting point is 00:13:46 You've got all this, you've got extra time. You're not hanging out with your negative friends, but what are you going to do with your time? You need to inject more positivity. Whether that's remotely, like my YouTube channel, Hala's show, books, podcasts, or whether that's physical of going out and going to events and going to meetups and going to conferences and trying to meet people, that three-step process. Amazing advice. Really great advice. Let's talk about some other idols.
Starting point is 00:14:10 One of my idols is Gary V. And you guys say something similar in that we should trust the process more and we should love the process. So what do you think about that? Could you just tell us about why it's so important to actually trust your process and not only focus on the end result? When you tie your self-worth to the end result, which could be how many people listen to this podcast or how many people watch my video or how much money did I make today or some end result,
Starting point is 00:14:40 if you tie yourself worth to winning, you're only going to take on projects that you know you're going to win at. And so you play small for life. When you tie yourself worth to the effort, to trying, to taking on challenges, most days you're not going to win. But you're going to going to end up accomplishing so much more than the person who's just staying inside their comfort zone only doing the things they know how to be great at. So for me, if I'm doing this show, if I'm nervous to come on and do this show is episode 60, I don't want to let holla down. You know, my biggest fear is I'm going to disappoint people. So if I showed up and the only thing I did was vomit all over my microphone. One, hey, you get some good content. It's different.
Starting point is 00:15:26 It might get a viral clip. You know, it might be the way. worst interview of all time for you, for me, but I'm still leaving patting myself in the back saying I did my max. And hopefully for my next interview, I only vomit inside my mouth. And then the next interview is a little bit, right? And I'll slowly get better. Yeah. If you woke up and did the thing that made you proud of yourself every single day, you're going to accomplish amazing, amazing things. Yeah. If you only tie yourself worth to getting that result, you're going to stay small for life. Yeah, we have a super unique company culture. We're all about obsessive excellence. We even call ourselves scrappy hustlers.
Starting point is 00:16:06 And I'm really picky when it comes to my employees. My team is growing every day. We're 60 people all over the world. And when it comes to hiring, I no longer feel overwhelmed by finding that perfect candidate, even though I'm so picky because when it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. Stop struggling to get your job post noticed. Indeed, sponsor jobs help you stand out and hire fast by boosting your post to the top relevant candidates. Sponsored jobs on Indeed get 45% more applications, the non-sponsored ones, according to IndyD data worldwide. I'm so glad I found Indeed when I did because hiring is so much easier now. In fact, in the minute we've been talking, 23 hires were made on Indeed according to IndyD data worldwide. Plus, there's no subscriptions
Starting point is 00:16:45 or long-term contracts. You literally just pay for your results. You pay for the people that you hire. There's no need to wait any longer. Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed. And listeners of this show will get a $75-sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at Indeed.com slash Just go to Indeed.com slash profiting right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com slash profiting. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, Indeed is all you need. Yeah. And the other thing is that life is more joyful when you enjoy the process because you're enjoying every moment of it. You're not only waiting until, you know, the outcome. And then whether it's good or bad, that's when you're happy. You're just happy all the time. And positivity times positivity is more success, right? So that's opinion on it at least. So Zig Ziglar is somebody that you apparently worked with. I heard you talk about that in passing, but in what capacity did you work with him? So I haven't worked with Zig himself.
Starting point is 00:17:42 We worked with his son. Okay. I love Zig. I mean, Zig was one of the founding fathers of personal development. A lot of people don't know who he is. If you walk down the street and say, hey, who's Zig Ziglar? Most people have never heard of him. If people don't know who Bill Gates is, they definitely don't know who Zig Zig Zigler is. So tell us. Who is he? So, I mean, one of the fathers of personal development, and he was one of the first guys to get on on the road and create books and create programs. And for me, part of what's become a part of my mission is helping preserve the legacies of some of these people. So when we were doing a tribute video to Zig, we worked with his son who's taking over the Ziegler brand to get content and put it together and share it because I want people to know who Zig Zig Ziglar is. and otherwise that content could be buried and lost forever.
Starting point is 00:18:31 Yeah. So it's been a nice side perk of what I end up doing is that we get to connect with a lot of these people. And it's been this special, even guys like Tony Robbins, I don't think he's doing enough. Like Tony Robbins is not native on YouTube. Yeah. And I want him to be more on YouTube because I want people to know his message. Now, he's still got a lot of time. He just turned 60, I think.
Starting point is 00:18:54 But still, like, is he going to make for another? 10 years, another 20 years. Yeah. I want people to hear the message, whether it's coming from me or Zig or Tony or the new people, or Hala sharing her message. Like I want more voices coming out and speaking because maybe they don't, maybe when they hear it from Zig, they don't quite get it. But then Hala with her spin, with her story, maybe that's the moment that it actually
Starting point is 00:19:19 tweaks and you make the change. And so all of my content, we've done 6,000 videos plus on my YouTube channel. It's all positivity. It's all believe. it hopefully is inspiring and motivating you. But Eric Thomas is going to yell at you and Oprah Winfrey is going to hug you. And everybody has their own style. But it's still Oprah and Eric Thomas are often saying the same things, just with a different technique.
Starting point is 00:19:40 Yeah, everybody resonates with different people. You have to find the right person that resonates with you. So let's switch to YouTube. I know we have a hard cut off at 155 and I want to pull all your different YouTube strategies out of you. So let's move on to that. So in case you didn't know, Evan, how? over two million subscribers on his YouTube channel. He's got one of the most popular pages in the self-improvement space period. He is a guru when it comes to YouTube podcast strategies.
Starting point is 00:20:06 You actually started off with a blog site, with a website. So first, tell us why you ended up transitioning to YouTube. And I think that was like 10 years ago. So what made you transition from the website to focusing more on YouTube? Yeah. So April 2009 was my first video. So it's almost 11 years now? Wow. Crazy. Crazy. Wow.
Starting point is 00:20:27 You got it so early. I mean, I'm sure it didn't feel like that back then, but. Well, here's the thing. So I, why did I do it? One, I love, I love testing out different things. I love trying on different things. Even this, like we're doing a LinkedIn live broadcast, right? I haven't done that many.
Starting point is 00:20:43 You introduced me to Stream Yard, a new software I've never heard of, right? Like, I love trying out different things. And some of them stick, and most of them don't. But I'm a visual learner. So I used to learn a lot through books. I don't listen to a single podcast because auditory is the worst for me. If I couldn't see you right now, I'd be like this. I could close my eyes and really focusing in because it's hard for me to learn through auditory.
Starting point is 00:21:09 So I wanted more visual content because I'm a visual learner. So I wanted to create YouTube videos. This new platform called YouTube. So let's make some videos that I can help people with. At the time, though, YouTube was not an educational platform. YouTube 11 years ago was, you know, cat coughing up a hairball and man falls downstairs. So you did get in really, really early. Memes.
Starting point is 00:21:34 Like I'm making 10-minute thought leadership videos. Nobody was, but it also wasn't smart, right? I mean, my first video in one year had three comments on it. And the first one was my mom. And the second was my older sister. and then the third comment was some random guy who happened to find my videos. So if you think about it, like in a year of the video being up, only one person commented on my video.
Starting point is 00:22:01 Yeah. I just stuck with it, right? I just like, I just kept going. I just kept creating content. So crazy. 6,000 videos later. So it took me five years to get to 7,000 subscribers. You think about it, five years, 7,000 subscribers.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Now, I wasn't committed full time. I wasn't putting out as much content. But also the platform had to catch up to what I was. making. Yeah. So how'd you scale? How'd you get from 7,000 to 2 million in five years? A couple of things. One, I took it more seriously, just like anything else, right? Like, this is episode 60. If you're doing, a lot of people get to episode three and then stop. Like, oh, I didn't get people watching. Nobody's giving me comments. There's no shoutouts. And they quit, right? Yeah. If you keep going and we do this again for episode 600, it's going to be even bigger,
Starting point is 00:22:47 Right. Yeah. Like I just kept going where a lot of people quit because they're not getting the results. Two, YouTube caught up, right? Like YouTube became an educational platform. People will consume education and long form videos. People will watch a three-hour video on YouTube. It's crazy.
Starting point is 00:23:03 Yeah. That was not what was happening when I first started. And in three, I got better, right? Like you do something 6,000 times. You're going to get better. I'm introverted naturally. That doesn't come off when I'm doing stuff like this. but I'm an introvert.
Starting point is 00:23:18 I don't like the spotlight. I don't need to have the limelight on me. Go back and watch my first videos. They're all still up there. You can see how awkward and nervous and shy and anxiety I had and making the content. But I wanted to serve. I wanted to help.
Starting point is 00:23:30 And so that's why I created it. So I just got better. This episode is sponsored by Video Husky, a video editing subscription that provides you with unlimited video editing for a flat monthly fee. I use Video Husky to edit all my videos, including the one you're watching on YouTube right now. Your videos have a one to two day turnaround and you get your own dedicated
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Starting point is 00:24:22 So how did you improve your on-camera skills? Like you said you were a little awkward. You're like a little introverted naturally. How did you start to have more presence, speak better, things like that? One, recognize that I need to stop being selfish, that it's not about me. It's about the audience. It's not about me being great. It's about helping people.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Like every time I switch it to, even here, if I'm nervous about coming on your show, it's like, it's not about me. I'm here to help Hala and her audience hopefully learn something. And shifting it to service reduces anxiety, increases the confidence, increasing the motivation and all. Like, I've got something that can help people and I need to stop being selfish and get it out there. Two, modeling success, just like I did with Bill Gates in my first business, look at other people who are communicating and what can you learn from them. So I would study Tony Robbins and Les Brown and Zig Zigler and Oprah and all the people that I have profiled on my channel over the years. And your goal is to be the best you, right? It's not to be the next Steve Jobs or Bill Gates or anybody.
Starting point is 00:25:24 It's like, but I could take this piece from Oprah and this piece from Bill Gates and this piece from Kanye and you slowly become a better version of you. I think a lot of people watching and listening could get there a lot faster than me. It's been a slow work in progress. Most people aren't going to make 6,000 videos to get to this point. But it's the consistency and willingness to follow through because you have a mission that matters and drives you. Yeah, that's awesome. And it totally shows that, you know, you put in the hours. Like you've got a really good presence and you speak really well.
Starting point is 00:25:56 Let's talk about credibility on YouTube. So let's say you come across somebody new who's new to YouTube. For me, when I look at a new podcast, there's certain things that I look at. I look at reviews, like number of reviews. Are they real? Are they actually saying the person's name or did they buy those reviews? There's certain things that I look for to judge credibility. For you, when you go on a YouTube page, you being like a YouTube guru, what do you look for?
Starting point is 00:26:19 So I guess it depends on what I'm, why am I on that page? To see like if you feel like this person is having good progress on YouTube, let's say, like is about to do well or has the potential to do well. So if we're living inside like the thought leadership space, like you're an expert in getting your message out as opposed to, because YouTube is everything. YouTube could be prank, prank videos and food challenges. Let's stick on like self-improvement, that type of space. So I look at, does the person have something that I'm learning from?
Starting point is 00:26:49 Have I learned from this human? So people mostly focus on the wrong thing. People mostly focus on what microphone am I going to use and what's in my background and how's my hair and is the lighting perfect? All the stuff that you probably don't ever want to be an expert at. If you want to be in person development, be a speaker, be a trainer, be the person up front. Most people will spend 20 minutes recording the video and then eight hours editing it. You're training the wrong skill. You're focusing all your time and I think that you don't want to
Starting point is 00:27:21 get great at. Now, if you're a producer or you're an editor or you are a camera person and that's your skill, great. Like, your stuff better look fire. But I look first at not how well it's shot and how great the background is. I care about the content. Can you teach me something in your message? And then that's really all I look for. Is like, did I learn something? So you don't care. Like, you're not looking at subscribers or view counts or comments or anything like that. Does engagement matter on YouTube the same way it matters on social network platforms?
Starting point is 00:27:51 For sure. Like if you're talking about now, how do I rank my videos and how do I get exposure for my content? Yes. The more engaged of the community you have, this is why when people buy fake subscribers, it actually destroys their channel. Because here's what happens. YouTube, you make a video. you know, Hall is going to make a video of her top 10 rules of success. Awesome. We often get discouraged, like, oh, we need people to come on the channel.
Starting point is 00:28:15 I need to buy a whole bunch of subscribers. I need to look good. I need to look good. So how YouTube works is when you launch a video, it doesn't go out to the broad audience yet. It goes to a percentage of your subscribers. If they like it, it goes to a greater percent of your subscribers. If they like it, it goes to all your subscribers. And if they like it, it goes out into the YouTube world.
Starting point is 00:28:34 If you bought fake subscribers, when your video goes out, they're not going to watch it. And so YouTube's saying, well, if your own subscribers are not watching it, why would we ever push it out to non-subscribers? The people don't know who you are. Yeah. And so people just get stuck in this death spiral with now they can't get out of it because they bought all these subscribers who never engage with the content. Yeah. And I think that's for like most social network platforms, like buying fake followers like just kills your momentum. You really need to do it organically or else like you have no community.
Starting point is 00:29:04 and you're basically like speaking to no one. You just look good for somebody who's clicking on your page for like a hot second and doesn't know any better. So let's talk about continuing the session. I know that when it comes to YouTube, continuing the session, increasing minutes watched, keeping them on YouTube is really important. So talk to us about how we can ensure that people stay on YouTube so that our videos get suggested. Okay, so you set the keyword there suggested. Suggested is how you actually grow. People think of YouTube as a search engine, which it is, second largest search engine in a world, but most views don't come from search.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Most channels don't blow up through search, which is what we think of. It comes from suggested. So somebody might type in, how do I, blank, blank, blank, one video shows up. They watch that video, but then they consume five to eight more from the recommended videos down the side, right? That's where you need to be showing up. So step one is you need to show up against your own channel before you're going to show up against other people's channels.
Starting point is 00:30:04 Okay. So if somebody's having a YouTube channel, go incognito mode to your own channel, watch any video, and see how many of my videos are actually showing up down the side. Not when you're logged in as you because it's your channel. Of course your stuff is going to show up. Incognito mode and see how many of your videos are showing up. Okay. You can also look in your analytics to see where is suggested in your...
Starting point is 00:30:25 So suggested videos on your own channel. If your videos are suggested for your own channel. If you are not suggested against your own channel, you're never going to be suggested against somebody else's channel. Okay. Same logic. Like if my own people aren't watching it, why would YouTube ever send it off to new people? But ultimately, like if you're making videos about success, you want to be showing up against
Starting point is 00:30:45 my videos, which are about success. But you won't until you rank against your own videos first. Okay. So how do you rank against your own videos first? One, consistent thumbnail design. Okay. People, especially at the beginning, are all over the map. Different logos, different fonts, different branding.
Starting point is 00:31:01 So somebody could be watching your video and they like it. And your video could be showing up down the side, but they're not going to click on it because they don't know that that's your video. Got it. Because you use a different font because you're too far out, right? So like headshots from the chin to like top of the head because it's mobile consumption. So full body shot you might love and it looks great on your desktop. But when somebody goes to the phone, they don't even know who that is. Just looks like some woman or some guy on a thumbnail.
Starting point is 00:31:27 Right. Yeah. So especially for personal brand, headshot always. And by the way, you can re-upload those thumbnails. So they're not stuck forever. And so let's say you change your branding, like that happened to me. I still need to do this. But I need to update all my thumbnails.
Starting point is 00:31:40 But that's something you can go back retroactively and do. Yeah, even looking at this live stream here, right? You've got your colors. There's two shades of blue. You know, your name and my name look the same, right? In terms of the font and a background, you've spent your time thinking about what does my brand look like. And so I need to know what a hala thumbnail looks like.
Starting point is 00:32:00 Totally. So that you're not losing views. If you can start teaching YouTube that when somebody watches one Hala video, they watch eight, they're going to start recommending you like crazy. If you teach them that they watch one video and then they bounce, they're not going to recommend you as much. So consistent thumbnail design is one. Two is a series.
Starting point is 00:32:18 So if you're going to give me a 10-part series on how to launch a podcast, that could be a 10-part series and people will then consume the whole series, right? They watch the first video about how to book Gasp. And the second video about gear and a third video about questions to ask, right? And so if I really want to start a podcast, I'm going to watch all these videos and you're teaching YouTube, hey, people are loving my content. And then a third one that I would say, this is something a lot of people overlook, is the end cards. Yep.
Starting point is 00:32:46 So you've got end cards that last 20 seconds at the end of every video. Don't tell people to subscribe in your video. Don't say, hey, guys, you like to subscribe. Don't tell people to thank you for watching. as soon as people feel like it's over, the video's over, they leave. You don't subscribe to any channel. Think about your own behavior. You didn't subscribe to the channel because the person on camera said,
Starting point is 00:33:08 subscribe to my channel. You subscribe to the channel because you like their content. You've probably seen four of their videos. Like, I like what this person's putting out. So your goal at the end of a video is to make them go watch another video. So you need to think, if you're recording this video, what video do I currently have on my channel that's most relevant to this video.
Starting point is 00:33:29 So already live. Already live on the channel. What's the most relevant video? So treat it like a sports analogy, if it's the end of a first quarter in basketball, you don't expect people to go home. They're coming back for the second quarter and the third quarter and the fourth quarter.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Treat that like every video is just the first quarter. They should come back and watch your next video for the second quarter. So what is the second quarter video for this topic? So if you're talking about podcasting, lead them to another podcasting video. What's up, Young and Profiters? I remember when I first started Yap, I used to dread missing important calls. I remember I lost a huge potential partnership because the follow-up thread got completely lost in my messy communication system.
Starting point is 00:34:15 Well, this year, I'm focused on not missing any opportunities. And that starts with your business communications. A missed call is money and growth out the door. That's why today's episode is brought to you by Quo, spelled QUO, the smarter way to run your business communications. Quo is the number one rated business phone system on G2, and it works right from an app on your phone or computer. The way Quo works is magic for team alignment.
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Starting point is 00:35:01 Try Quo for free plus get 20% off your first six months when you go to Quo.com slash profiting. That's QUO.com slash profiting. Quo. No missed calls, no missed customers. Yeah. And so do you recommend, like, we just, like, put the link in the description and that's how they navigate to it or just tell them about it?
Starting point is 00:35:19 Yes, but most people don't consume through description. It doesn't hurt. It just won't help that much. Okay. So you have 20 seconds at the end for an end card. And what the end card means is you can actually put a video on the screen that people can click. Okay. So it's like something you do through YouTube.
Starting point is 00:35:35 Through YouTube. But you have to talk about it in the video. So you have 20 seconds. You think already about what's my next video that they need to go watch. And you say, hey, if you like this video, you have to go watch this next one where I talk about whatever. It's right there. Go click it. Right.
Starting point is 00:35:51 And like point to it and look at it. So that they go click it. Right. And make it a relevant awesome video, right? You're not sending them to some piece of junk. Like that's another video on your channel that you're proud of. Yeah. But you tell them to go click on it.
Starting point is 00:36:03 Yeah. If you have editing capabilities, like you have an editor helping you. Yeah. Then you have 20 seconds total to use. 10 seconds is you pitching that next video. The last 10 seconds is highlights of that video that you then show up. So whatever the best parts of that next video is, you tease it at the end of your current video. Okay.
Starting point is 00:36:23 If you don't have editing capabilities, then you pitch that video for 20 seconds. Yeah. I'm going to teach you how to blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, I'll see you there. Like, just assume they're going to go there, right? You're not kicking them out. Yeah. So then you're starting to trigger inside YouTube. Why are we doing this?
Starting point is 00:36:39 We want to extend the session time. Yeah. We want to tell YouTube that our videos are linked, that when people watch one Hala video, they watch eight Hala videos. And now we're going to start being suggested against our own videos. And when that happens, we're going to start getting suggested against other people's videos. Awesome. So let's talk about some of the written content around our YouTube videos. So there's a bunch of different space. There's the headline or the YouTube title. There's the description. And then we actually
Starting point is 00:37:04 had a question from Lyndon Gray. He's asking, do tags work on YouTube? So what do you think about these written words? I know you mentioned that search isn't really the way that people find your videos. So is there just no point to optimize those things? There's definitely a point to optimize. We're just not optimizing for search. The only search optimized channels where you got to be thinking search first is where people are not going to subscribe to your channel. Okay. So you, Hala, want people to subscribe to your channel because there's going to be awesome content that's coming out. If you had a how do I unclog my toilet, nobody's going to subscribe to that channel, right? They just have a problem with their toilet and need an answer. So that's what we want to optimize
Starting point is 00:37:48 for search, right? But for most people, if you're in person development, you're not up, you want to optimize for people to subscribe to your channel. So text matters a lot, but you want to think what's going to get people to click. So we use text on the thumbnail itself. That's not searchable, but the text in a thumbnail is what people will see. Okay. Title next. And again, we're optimizing for clicks. So everything that people have learned about already from digital marketing, just apply to now YouTube. So think about if you're sending an email out, what's the subject going to be? It's going to be something that's going to make me want to open up that email.
Starting point is 00:38:25 Yeah. Apply the same thing to the text on your thumbnail and the text in the title. If you were doing a landing page to promote your coaching service, like what's the title going to be at the top, that headline? Think about that to be the title of your video. So we're definitely optimizing, but optimizing for people to click on it, not optimizing for search terms that's going to show up. Got it.
Starting point is 00:38:46 Description, very little, and tags like nothing. Really? Yeah. Interesting. So have you ever heard of that tool called Tube Buddy that everybody promotes? Do you feel like that's just garbage then? No, no. Hold on.
Starting point is 00:38:57 I love Tube Buddy. I've helped them build a whole bunch of their back end. Oh, okay. But not for tags. Okay. Got it. You can do it for tags. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:06 I mean, I think it's a great tool just to make sure you've got the basics and you're not totally like off the ball. Tags might be half of one percent of your success. Got it. Great. Throw it in there, but it's not going to be the thing. I use TubeB Buddy every day. I love their AB split test tool. So for any marketers, TwoBBDdy is the best out there right now for AB split testing.
Starting point is 00:39:26 So once your video goes out, we wait a week and then we test the thumbnail. One thumbnail versus another thumbnail. One headline versus another headline and see what converts the best. We've done over 1,800 different split tests. We're going to do 3,000 more this year. Yeah. I split test more than anybody that I've ever met on YouTube. And two buddy, I love two buddy.
Starting point is 00:39:46 They're the ones that I use for all of that. Yeah. Just not for tags. So I know what a split test is, but not everybody is a marketer. So can you explain what a split test is and the different types of experiments you do on YouTube? So is this video going to be on YouTube? Yeah. Great.
Starting point is 00:40:00 Okay. So this video is going to go up on YouTube. Hala can experiment. Like, what's the thumbnail going to be? Maybe it's Halla's face. Maybe it's my face. Maybe it's both of our faces. Maybe it's both of our faces when we're like super energetic or maybe I'm
Starting point is 00:40:14 crying or there's different options that you can put. So with Two Buddy, what it does is it tests one against the other and it shows you which one gets more clicks. So Hala by herself gets 8% click through rate. Hala with Evan gets 7% click through rate. Evan by himself gets 2% click through rate, right? Great. Go with the holla by herself. And so for every video, we always split test a thumbnail and we split test the title to see, I like both. It's not about what I like is about what works. And so they'll run the split test until you have an answer to say, nope, go with this one. It's better. Now, sorry, this might be a dumb question. But the way that, like, I haven't done any tests for YouTube like officially. So do they actually go live? Like when you do
Starting point is 00:40:59 the test, is it actually like two videos that go live and like you split the audience 50-50? No. So it's the same video. So like here's what I would do if I was you. One, use your community tab. There's a community tab on YouTube where you can poll your audience that most people never use. So for every video we put up, we go to our community tab and say, hey, I've got this interview with Evan Carmichael, and we talk about these kinds of things. What should we call it? And then you give them two options. Whatever option they like the most, you lead with that as the primary option.
Starting point is 00:41:31 That's what we're going to call the video. One week later, I'm going to go to TubeBuddy and then split test the other option that I also So liked. And what two buddies is going to do is take that same video and every day change the title. So you're not releasing two different videos. It's this interview right here. So you keep the views and everything. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:41:53 So like Thursday is going to be the first title and Friday's going to be the second title and Saturday's going to be the first title and Sunday's going to be the second title. And it just keeps testing them every day until it gets enough data to say this one is better than this one. Yeah. What other things can you? So aside from headline thumbnail. Is there anything else that you can split test? Those are the two main things. You can split test description.
Starting point is 00:42:15 You can split test tags. Test it. It's like, hey, don't listen to me. Go split test your tags. Yeah. And I would love to see somebody's data to say by split testing tags, we blew up our video. I've never seen it, but I would love it because that means I made a mistake on 6,000 videos and I can go back and start crushing those old ones.
Starting point is 00:42:33 Yeah, totally. So let's talk about the time, like the amount of time that we should shoot our video. I know that you're a proponent of like 10 minute videos. Is there a reason why you think 10 minutes is a sweet spot? A couple things. One, short videos don't do well in the thought leadership category. YouTube wants audience retention. They want people sticking on YouTube as long as possible. Go to your own. Just go to YouTube.com. Anybody listening and watching, go to your own YouTube. com and see what's being recommended. The only things that will be sub five minutes are going to be music videos because you refresh them and you listen to that same song many times.
Starting point is 00:43:12 No matter how good your thought leadership video is, they're not listening to it 20 times and like smashing the refresh button or some crazy viral video like a Star Wars trailer or some like thing that's really popping. Everything else is going to be eight, nine, ten, twelve, fifteen, twenty minutes long. So you want to play in that range. We look for ten at a minimum. One, because longer is typically better as long as it's good. Like don't have an eight minute video that then you stretch to 10 and fill with crap.
Starting point is 00:43:41 But if you're an expert, just take me deeper. Yeah. If Hall is talking about some topic in person development she's passionate about, you have a deep well of knowledge. Just tell me more. Tell me another story. Tell me who you've helped. Tell me how you got out of it. You can always tell more that brings value.
Starting point is 00:43:57 That's not just fluff. Totally. So that's an asset that a thought leader brings where if you're doing a song or something, how do you stretch a four-minute song into a 10-minute song? It's really rough. It's not how most songs are done. Also, when you have a 10-minute video, 10 minutes and one second or more, you can add mid-roll ads to the video.
Starting point is 00:44:20 So if monetizing the video is important, YouTube pays you, guys. LinkedIn's not paying you. Twitter's not paying you to make content. Instagram's not paying you to make content. Google has thousands of employees who are in charge of selling YouTube ads, and they take a cut for every ad they sell. against your video. So you can get paid to make content as well as build your brand and sell your coaching and whatever else you're trying to do. So if it's over 10 minutes, you can add a
Starting point is 00:44:45 midroll ad that pays you a lot more. So 10 minutes itself, you're not getting a middle ad. 10 minutes in one second or more, you're getting midroll ads. And so this is, you know, an hour long or so interview. There might be three or four different midroll ads, depending on browser history, that will make you a lot more money than if you. you're just putting out a seven-minute video. So a question on YouTube advertising, actually, and this comes from the audience from Annat Nurula. She's asking if you have any hacks for YouTube advertising growth.
Starting point is 00:45:17 So yes, 10-minute videos plus, consistent content, at least once a week. I'd love for you to be three times a week or daily, but at least once a week to start building it up. I would look at if making money through advertising is super important to you, and great, like, hey, if you start making money doing your thing, You can scale up and keep it going. And it's really hard to keep going when you're making zero.
Starting point is 00:45:41 So it's important to make money. Money is not number one, but it's not number 100 either. It's got to be in your top five. Use the Google keyword planner tool. Just go to Google and type in Google Keyword Planner Tool. And what it will do is show you across the entire Google platform for different keywords, how much they pay. So I've done a couple videos explaining this and I have it more in depth in my course.
Starting point is 00:46:05 but you can just go do this yourself and check it out. I looked at something like recipes, and recipes itself would only pay 20 cents for every thousand views. But then if you talked about Martha Stewart recipes, it pays like 800% more. Now, you may not have anything to say about Martha Stewart recipes. Maybe you hate Martha Stewart and never want to give her any promotion. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:46:28 But do you have something that you could say? And if you can, can you make a video on it? If you did, you'd get paid more. I had a guy in my course who messaged me about his wife's YouTube channel and she does makeup tutorials and eyelash extension and all that kind of stuff. And so we just put in eyelashes and it paid okay. But if we looked at, what's the, does the beauty brand that starts with C? I mean, there's probably tons.
Starting point is 00:46:54 It doesn't really matter. But these guys are spending tons of money right now on YouTube ads. So I said, hey, if you make a video about this product or using it and put it in the title, and mention it, you can get paid like 10 times more money than if you just talked about eyelashes. Now, again, does she use that product? Does she like, you have to have something authentic to say about it. Don't just do it because it pays well, right?
Starting point is 00:47:18 But either a good review or a bad review, you'll get paid a lot more. And not just a little bit more, like 10 times more, 20 times more, 500 times more, right? Huge gaps. That's crazy. And it's free. Just go to Google Keyword Planning Tool. and type in whatever you're talking about, and it'll show you the differences. So I know that we're running up on time.
Starting point is 00:47:39 I want to be respectful of your time. We have about three minutes left. I have so much more to ask you. I wanted to talk to you about time management and stuff, but we don't have time. So let me ask you this question. It's a question I ask all of my guests. What is your secret to profiting in life? Figuring out a way to mix what you love doing with what brings value to other people.
Starting point is 00:47:59 If you love doing something, but it brings no value to other people, then you have a hobby. Like if you love talking to a microphone, but nobody ever watched, you have a hobby. And it could be a really fulfilling hobby, but it's just a hobby. If you're just chasing down an opportunity, but you don't care about it, you're going to lose. If you're making a podcast but you don't care about podcasts and you're just doing it because 2020 hot opportunity, you're going to lose because people who love podcasting are going to destroy you because they love it and you don't.
Starting point is 00:48:26 So it's that intersection of what you love doing, back to loving the process of that we talked earlier with what brings value to other people. You're solving a problem so you can get paid to it. That's where you can shine and have ultimate success. That's awesome. And where can our listeners go to learn more about you and everything that you do? So, I mean, if you want the books, you can go to Amazon, easiest place to find it. If you want some of my content or to connect, any of the social media channels, type in Evan Carmichael. You'll find me. Yeah, he's awesome. Check out his YouTube. Check out his website and follow him on LinkedIn if you're here. So thanks all for tuning in to another episode of
Starting point is 00:49:01 Young and Profiting Podcast. Thanks so much, Evan. It was such a pleasure. Thanks for listening to Young and Profiting podcast. Follow Yap on Instagram at Young and Profiting and Check us out at young and profiting. If you enjoyed the show, don't forget to write us a review or comment on your favorite platform. Reviews are the number one way to thank us, especially if you write a review on Apple Podcasts.
Starting point is 00:49:22 And be sure to share this podcast with your friends and family on social media. You can find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or LinkedIn. Just search for my name. Hala Taha. Thanks again to Video Husky, the sponsors of our show. If you're looking for affordable video editing for a flat monthly fee, head over to cart.videohusky.com slash young and profiting for 30% off for your first month. Big thanks to the app team, as always. This is Hala, signing off.

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