Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Hala Taha: How I Turned My Side Hustle into a Multi-Million-Dollar Media Business | Entrepreneurship | 7 Years of YAP

Episode Date: August 15, 2025

In 2018, Hala Taha launched the Young and Profiting podcast while still working her corporate job, laying the foundation for YAP Media. What began as a side hustle has grown into a top-ranked entrepre...neurship podcast, a powerful personal brand, and a thriving podcast and social media agency. In this special 7 Years of YAP series, Hala joins Jamar Jones on The Foureva Podcast to share the exact strategies she used to turn a side hustle into a multi-million-dollar media business. In this episode, Jamar and Hala will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (03:23) Her Early Career at Hot 97 and Skill Stacking Edge (07:39) Using Social Proof to Land Influential Guests (10:48) Sales as the Engine of Entrepreneurship (12:38) Building and Scaling a High-Performance Team (20:02) YAP Media: From Side Hustle to 7-Figure Business (29:33) LinkedIn Growth Hacks for Entrepreneurs (36:08) Sales Strategies for Closing High-Value Clients (43:48) What's Next: Future Plans for Business Growth  Hala Taha is the host of Young and Profiting, a top 10 business and entrepreneurship podcast on Apple and Spotify. She’s the founder and CEO of YAP Media, an award-winning social media and podcast agency, as well as the YAP Media Network, where she helps renowned podcasters like Jenna Kutcher, Neil Patel, and Russell Brunson grow and monetize their shows. With her business on track to hit eight figures in 2025, Hala stands out as a leading creator-entrepreneur. Sponsored By: Shopify - Start your $1/month trial at Shopify.com/profiting Indeed - Get a $75 sponsored job credit to boost your job's visibility at Indeed.com/PROFITING  OpenPhone - Get 20% off your first 6 months at OpenPhone.com/profiting Airbnb - Find a co-host at airbnb.com/host  Mercury - Streamline your banking and finances in one place. Learn more at ⁠⁠mercury.com/profiting⁠⁠  Policy Genius - Secure your family’s future with Policygenius. Head to policygenius.com/profiting  Framer - Launch your site for free at Framer.com, and use code PROFITING Resources Mentioned: Hala’s Podcast, Young and Profiting: bit.ly/_YAP-apple  Hala’s Agency, YAP Media: yapmedia.com    The Foureva Podcast by Jamar Jones: bit.ly/TFP-apple   Change Your Circle, Change Your Life by Jamar Jones: bit.ly/ChangeCircle  Active Deals - youngandprofiting.com/deals  Key YAP Links Reviews - ratethispodcast.com/yap YouTube - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ Social + Podcast Services: yapmedia.com Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com/episodes-new  Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Podcast, Business, Business Podcast, Self Improvement, Self-Improvement, Personal Development, Starting a Business, Strategy, Investing, Sales, Selling, Psychology, Productivity, Entrepreneurs, AI, Artificial Intelligence, Technology, Marketing, Negotiation, Money, Finance, Side Hustle, Startup, Mental Health, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth Mindset, Startup, Starting a Business, Passive Income, Online Business, Solopreneur

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'll tell you how I got Matthew McConaughey. I just thought I was going to be in corporate forever. I was already sort of a failed entrepreneur with the blog, and I had a lot of holding on to that failure. Like, I don't know if I can really become an entrepreneur again. This episode is going to be one for the history books. And we got Hala in the building. I feel like you have beautiful ability
Starting point is 00:00:26 to be able to change your circle and meet these influential people. people. What are the steps that you take to get introductions to these influential people? Well, our strategy for guest outreach has sometimes people start companies and they're targeting people who have no money. And then they have to go really low and it's just like a race to the bottom. I'll just give you my approach of like how I close awesome deals. Yop Gang, it's been an incredible seven years of hosting the Young and Profiting podcast. And I couldn't even imagine the success that we have back then. It's been seven years of never missing an episode, of building my yet media brand, my brand. And today we're a top 100 podcast for a top 10
Starting point is 00:01:23 business and entrepreneurship podcast. The podcast makes over a million dollars a year in sponsorships. And aside from having a lot of listeners that are entrepreneurs, that want to be entrepreneurs, I also have a lot of podcasters that listen to me. And I've been known as the podcast, in the industry. I teach a lot to podcasters on how to grow, monetize, creative podcast like Young Improfiting. And so to mark my seven-year anniversary, I decided I would give back. I decided that I would guest on seven other podcasts that would basically apply to have me on the show. And the reason why they have to apply is because I'm actually replaying their episodes on my podcast to help them grow their shows because one of the top ways to grow your show is to actually
Starting point is 00:02:08 guest on other shows. So instead of them guesting on my show, I'm actually going to play the conversation in hopes that you guys go subscribe to the show if you like the show. So the first one that we're going to play is the Forever podcast. That's like the number four Eva podcast by Jamar Jones, who was an incredible host. And in this conversation, I'm pulling back the curtain and giving you real actionable insights on brand building, sales, leadership, and making your vision a reality. So I hope you guys enjoy this podcast guest appearance replay, in honor of my seven-year anniversary. If you guys are enjoying these conversations, let me know. I'll try to make sure that
Starting point is 00:02:45 each conversation is different, unique, and I'm just really incredibly happy to support another podcaster. So Jamar Jones, thank you for interviewing me, and I wish you the best of luck. And we got Holla in the building. What is going on? How are you doing? I'm doing great. I'm so excited for a conversation. I've been trying to get connected with you for, I think it's 10 months. And it's funny, though, because a lot of my guests that I'm seeking to have on the podcast just takes a little bit of time. And then usually it's like growing the relationship and just making sure it's legit. So I'm super excited to, like, have this conversation with you.
Starting point is 00:03:23 The first question I got is, do you like hip hop? Yeah, I love it. Yeah. So you had a blog site, sorority of hip hop. Why hip hop? Well, I started my career interning at Hot 97 in New York, which is the number one hip-hop in all. R&B station. That's where Funkmaster Flex is. That's where Angie Martinez started out of.
Starting point is 00:03:43 And that's really how I started my career at 18, 19 years old. I was Angie Martinez's assistant. And I feel like I grew up at the station. And so I would basically help her run her show as essentially her associate producer. And I would host parties at night, host rap showcases and make my money selling rap showcase tickets and hosting those events. And then I started this blog. And so my world was hip hop from like, 19 to 27, my first serious boyfriend who was almost basically my husband. I was with him for 11 years was Harry Fraud, who's a huge hip-hop producer. I avoided my first divorce. We never got married, but we were inseparable for 11 years. So like my world was hip-hop. I was a singer. I used to sing songs. I wouldn't say it was hip-hop, but I had elements of hip-hop in it, more pop.
Starting point is 00:04:33 But yeah, music has been a huge part of my life, and I love hip-hop till this day. I just celebrated my success and bought myself a hot pink Porsche. And what am I bump in my Porsche is hip hop music. Nice. Who's the goat in hip hop for you? I like to stay up with what's hot now. You know, I tend to just like the best dancey hip-hop music. So right now I really like Kendrick Lamar.
Starting point is 00:04:57 I really like Sizzah. You know, Cardi B is pretty cool, but like maybe not so much anymore. But like I still like. He's a vibe. Yeah, she hasn't really come out with anything. great that's been new lately but i would say Kendrick lamarns says are my top two right now yeah that's super bowl performance by him was absolutely incredible so i was a former hip hop artist for 11 years of my life that's why i found that really interesting open up for a lot of major acts doing like 100 shows a
Starting point is 00:05:25 year at one point so i tore my vocal cords oh wow and do you mold any of that past music background into what you're doing today i would say a lot of the skills that i learned are transferable. So I always talk about this concept of skills stacking. And for example, when I was at Hot 97, I learned everything about audio production, right? I was running the dilap boards. I was editing things live. I had to learn how to audio edit really quickly. I had to learn how to do research and write questions, even though I wasn't the one answering the questions. I was even reading commercials on air. Now, a huge part of the way that I make money with sponsorships as I read commercials. I've been reading commercials since I was 18 years old at
Starting point is 00:06:09 97. They had me reading commercials. So a lot of those skills are transferable to what I do now. Fast forward to the blog era. I was running this blog for two, three years. It was an event business. I also had radio shows on the side. Young Improfiting is actually my fifth show. I had many different music-related online radio shows before I even started this podcast. And so I learned more about promoting a show. I learned about SEO. I learned about graphic design because I had to build this website by myself. I didn't have money to hire any team.
Starting point is 00:06:41 I learned about recruiting teams and motivating teams. I recruited over 50 girls to blog for me for free during this time period. I hacked Twitter. So I learned about social media. This was like 2012-ish. Social media was just starting. So I had a lot of fundamental principles
Starting point is 00:06:58 of how to hack a social media platform even before the term influencer was created. There was no such thing as influencers. And so I created our influence by having 50 girls, 100 girls at a time tweeting the same thing because nobody had reached. If you had 5,000 followers, you had a big following back then. So I used our combined reach to become influencers. Right now, I'm really known for entrepreneurship and crater entrepreneurship and being popular on LinkedIn and business. And I've totally did a 360 in terms of my brand before. I was more of music, events, and
Starting point is 00:07:35 now I'm more business, but the skills underpinning everything are the same. So I wrote a book called Change Your Circle, Change Your Life. I feel like you have this beautiful ability to be able to change your circle and meet these influential people to be on your podcast and continually grow your personal brand. What are the steps that you take to get introductions to these influential people and how do you change your circle? Our strategy for guest outreach has always been the same. It's a volume game.
Starting point is 00:08:04 And we just don't lower our standards. So essentially, when I first started this podcast, I always had big guests on the show. Because I said, I didn't want anybody who wasn't an expert. I didn't want anybody who have never written a book, for example. They don't have to be a huge celebrity, but I want them to be a well-known person in their field, a thought leader. And so from the start, I made a list of 100 people that I wanted. And we reached out to all of 100. And at first, two people said, yes.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Dory Clark was somebody that I wanted. And then the author of The Like Switch, Dr. Jack Schaefer, those were my two first guests on the podcast. Leveraging them, I got Chris Foss. I got Stephen Kotler. I got all these other people that I interviewed right away when I first started my podcast were really reputable people. And it's because I leveraged the names that I got to get the names that I wanted. And it was just a volume game, right?
Starting point is 00:08:55 Then we just kept going out the list. And there's some people like Gary Vee took five years to get on the podcast. podcast. But it's easier as you have a bigger influence. You have more social proof. We have more reviews. You have more credibility. It gets easier and easier to get the people that you want on the show. Nowadays, most of the time, I can just be like, let's get him on the show. And then three weeks later, he's on the show. Now it's more of that. But there's bigger targets. Like if I wanted Elon Musk on the show, that's going to take a lot of effort. We're going to have to email his team 20 times, 30 times. And it's not really me meeting people in person.
Starting point is 00:09:33 It's really just about my social proof and growing my presence and credibility as a podcaster and becoming known as a podcaster that they need to have in their rotation. So brand positioning is what I got from that. How you position your brand, making sure the social proof is there. So once you do get the opportunities because you're sending off so many emails, they take a look into who you are, your brand, and people that you've been associated with. And they're like, oh, yeah, it's already proven. We've got to do something.
Starting point is 00:10:01 I'll tell you how I got Matthew McConaughey. This was four years ago. So I wasn't even as big as I am now. But I was ranking on the charts already. I was ranking in the education category. And I saw that he went on some girl's show that I know for a fact, because I know everything about podcasts, that she has no audience. She's the LinkedIn influencer, but her podcast is not popular.
Starting point is 00:10:19 So then I showed him, she's ranking here. And I'm ranking 30 above her, or even like 100 above her. I don't remember what it was. where she was and where I was on the charts and I was like, I saw you went on this girl's show. You should come on my show. I have 20 times more followers than her subscribers and then he came on my show.
Starting point is 00:10:38 It's also being scrappy and being proactive. If somebody has a book coming out, they're more likely to be going on podcast. So you want to also be strategic timing-wise. And I know that you're amazing at being the brand voice of your company, growing your podcast, but you really love sales. What made you love sales so much?
Starting point is 00:10:59 The way you were raised, did you just have this affinity to it where you just wanted to pick it apart and learn everything about it? Why is sales such a love for you? I think I've been doing sales for a long time. I've been an entrepreneur since I was a little girl. I was always the one who would be like selling bracelets or selling artwork, putting my cousins to work to like make stuff that I could sell. Recruiting people at school to not just create like a lemonade stand, but a slushy stand. And I was always the one coming up with schemes to make up money. And it was just really exciting to me.
Starting point is 00:11:30 So not only just selling, but making offers and just being an entrepreneur in general is something that is really natural for me. And you know, what sales to me is human behavior. And human behavior is just so interesting to me. How do you can influence people to make decisions? What gets people to buy? And ultimately helping people because I only sell what I think will really help somebody. And so I can help someone make more money, for example, or build their personal brand. That feels really good as well.
Starting point is 00:12:00 So I just love sales. I feel like it's one of the most interesting professions that you can have or skills that you can have, especially for entrepreneurs. It's one of the most valuable skills that you can. Oh, yeah, 100%. How is important as far as for the scalability and to build the right culture within your team to get to where you're going? Because even for this podcast, just in transparency for everybody listening and watching,
Starting point is 00:12:22 her team is awesome. Responsive, everything is outlined. I can tell there's a system. It's not ad hoc and like, yeah, let's just get around, blah, blah, blah. So how important is it building that culture that you've built in your company and also how you built the systems to make it sustainable? Our company is multifaceted now, right? So I kind of think of my business as three businesses. I have my social media and podcast agency, which is the first company that I started. I have my podcast. where I grow and monetize 35 other shows, people like Jenna Coucher and Russell Brunson and Amy Porterfield and Lori Harder, I'm responsible to get them all their sponsorships. That's my main focus. And then I have my brand. So I have my personal brand, my podcast, my social channels,
Starting point is 00:13:10 my courses, my mastermind, my events, my speaking, right? So then I have my brand, maybe eventually a book, whatever it is. So I really have three businesses. And I have 60 people that work across all of these businesses. And I have a charity project, which we don't even need to get into that. But I've got these three businesses, and they all have different processes. And I think the main thing is that I don't try to do it alone,
Starting point is 00:13:37 and I've never tried to do it alone. I always have a team, and I'm not the type of person that is scared of asking for help. And even getting people on board who are not extremely senior, and I'm willing to take help no matter what. For example, with this podcast, by episode two, I had 10 people, volunteers,
Starting point is 00:13:59 they were fans that found me on LinkedIn, who worked for me. I had 10 people by episode two who worked for me on the podcast. And they worked for free. And they were just folks that were fans that I was like, okay, I'll teach you how to video edit, I'll teach you how to build my website, I'll teach you how to manage my LinkedIn,
Starting point is 00:14:17 I put them all in Slack, I would meet with them weekly. And I basically would train them. And what they got out of it is that I would teach them skills. We were motivated behind a mission. At this point, nobody was getting paid. I was working the hardest. So they were just motivated by how hard I was working.
Starting point is 00:14:33 And they just wanted to learn from me and be a part of the team. Right. Now, fast forward, five, six years later, these people are managers. These people have equity. These people are still with you? A lot of them. Oh, wow. Kate is my VP of Social and one of my business partner.
Starting point is 00:14:48 She's going to have 5% of the business. She runs my whole social agency. From the start, I always had people around me that were shadowing me. So now I've been able to put people in place one whole part of my business. Kate runs the whole thing. She's got 40 people under her. And I interface with her, not the 40 people anymore. So she was with me from the ground up.
Starting point is 00:15:10 I created all the systems for the social media podcast agency. How does the onboarding work? What is that process? How does the posting work in the review process for all the posting work? How does it work in terms of team meetings and how often do we meet with our team and how do we have KPIs and how do we innovate? And all these systems I've put it in place. Now she's running it. She's a really great manager.
Starting point is 00:15:31 I wouldn't say I'm anymore. I'm not a great manager because I don't have enough time to be a great manager. I only have enough time to be a great manager to the managers on my team, not everybody, right? So she's one example. Then Jason, who is my other business partner who runs my production side of the house and helps me with the network. He's a different type of support that I received. That is not somebody who was an intern under Maine, shadowed me until they became my right hand.
Starting point is 00:15:58 He had his own company. He was an acquisition hire. So he had his own production agency. He heard me on a podcast and he was like, Hey, Hala, what you're doing with the app media is awesome. I really think I can help you level up your production. I have my own production team. So I brought him on as my executive producer.
Starting point is 00:16:14 He let go some clients. And then eventually he did such a great job that I was like, My company is doing way better than yours. Shut down your company and just come run my production team. Now he's helped me build my network. He's my CEO. He's my CFO. He's probably going to be the CEO one day because if I really want to take things to the next level,
Starting point is 00:16:34 I can't be CEO forever. I'm more of like the visionary, the CMO, the face like Gary Vee of his company, right? I can't think that I can do everything. It's not possible. So I put him in that position and he's able to run with it. He's doing an excellent job. And so it's about knowing the things that you lack. Like, I'm not great at finances.
Starting point is 00:16:53 I'm amazing at sales and offers. Let me focus on the sales and the offers. Let me focus on the sales marketing and the offers. And let me just get the best possible help for everything else. The last thing I'll say is that we're not afraid of international talent. I've got about only probably, I had more U.S. but we keep getting less and less U.S. hires. We probably only have 11 U.S. hires, including me and Kate and Jason,
Starting point is 00:17:18 who are the business partners of yet me. media and maybe a handful of other U.S. folks. And we're heavily invested in arbitraging talent overseas. And we find that they're better talent. So we maybe have 10 employees in Nigeria, which is like a huge focus of ours as getting Nigerian talent because they're so smart. They're so loyal. They can work for U.S. hours.
Starting point is 00:17:40 And we've seen incredible success with them. India, Philippines, we even got Algeria and things like that. So we are really focused on international. talent and that is helping us because we're more profitable than a lot of the other networks and social agencies because we're focused on U.S. talent and our team is happier, they're hungrier, they're more resourceful. We just have a better culture because people are more thankful for their job at our company. We've got an awesome culture at YAP media. I don't know if you want to go deeper on certain things. No, I mean, honestly, you answered that perfectly. I do want to highlight
Starting point is 00:18:15 one thing, though. You had mentioned that you're maybe not the best man. but your way on how you lead. So even having volunteers, 10 volunteers in the beginning, but to give them the vision of where this is going to go, they believed in you and the vision enough to volunteer and to still be there. It's crazy. That's totally for a little. I'm like, they're still there?
Starting point is 00:18:40 Not everyone, but there was about 20 people for two years who work for free for me, and I would say about eight of them are still with us. And it was the most engaged ones are still there. Wow. So you really know how to cast a vision for people to really see where this thing is going to go? When I first started it, they were like, what do you imagine? We're going to be the number one podcast network. I didn't say self-improvement.
Starting point is 00:19:04 I didn't think that clearly. But I was like, we're going to be the biggest podcast network. That is crazy. And this is good, too, for everybody listening. You don't have to always hire where you're at. Even at Forever Media, we have talent all over the place, too. And there was a time when I had 15 people that everybody was in-house, same place. And I quickly learned, hey, there's other ways to hire.
Starting point is 00:19:28 You don't necessarily need to have people right there in the big fancy office and all that stuff. You can have great talent from all over the place. So that's definitely some golden nuggets for people. At Yap, we have a super unique company culture. We're all about obsessive excellence. We even call ourselves scrappy hustlers. and I'm really picky when it comes to my employees. My team is growing every day.
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Starting point is 00:20:47 Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com slash profiting. Terms and conditions apply. Hiring, indeed, is all you need. Young and profitors. I know there's so many people tuning in right now that end their workday wondering why certain tasks take forever, why they're procrastinating certain things, why they don't feel confident in their work, why they feel drained and frustrated and unfulfilled. But here's the thing you need to know. It's not a character flaw that you're feeling this way. It's actually your natural wiring. And here's the thing. When it's a thing, when it comes to burnout. It's really about the type of work that you're doing. Some work gives you energy and some work simply drains you. So it's key to understand your six types of working
Starting point is 00:21:31 genius. The working genius assessment or the six types of working genius framework was created by Patrick Lencioni and he is a business influencer and author. And the working genius framework helps you identify what you're actually built for and the work that you're not. Now let me tell you a story. Before I uncovered my working genius, which is galvanizing and invention, so I like to rally people and I like to invent new things, I used to be really shameful and had a lot of guilt around the fact that I didn't like enablement, which is one of my working frustrations. So I actually don't like to support people one-on-one. I don't like it when people slow me down. I don't like handholding. I like to move fast, invent, rally people inspire. But what I do need to do is ensure that
Starting point is 00:22:10 somebody else can fill that enablement role, which I do have, Kate on my team, So working genius helps you uncover these genius gaps, helps you work better with your team, helps you reduce friction, helps you collaborate better, understand why people are the way that they are. It's helped me restructure my team, put people in the spots that they're going to really excel. And it's also helped me in hiring. Working genius is absolutely amazing. I'm obsessed with this model. So if you guys want to take the working genius assessment and get 20% off, you can use code profiting.
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Starting point is 00:24:21 Wow. I started this company as a side hustle yet media. So I started the podcast two years. Then I started my social media agency and that took off right away. Our second client was a billionaire who paid us $30,000 a month. Was that luck? Was that a little bit of luck hustle in grits? I mean, it was a little bit of luck.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Yeah. Again and again and again where I got like a few of him. water then paid me 27K month and then the CEO of 100 got junk similar like big size deal right so I got like three big ones in a row and then suddenly I was like damn I'm making like a hundred grand a month and I'm still working at Disney and I'm running this off interns and people from the Philippines then I was like okay like we're making money as soon as I got the first one I hired Kennedy as the full-time social media manager Kate was still working at her full-time job who's one of my business partners then I hired for next
Starting point is 00:25:14 I don't even know when I officially became an employee. I don't remember the timeline of that. And you said 2020 is when it really boomed for your company. What do you feel like was that turning point of people reaching out? Everybody was asking me at the end of my show for years. So I had grown LinkedIn first. So I was a LinkedIn influencer from start. Within six months of starting my podcast, I was one of the top LinkedIn influencers.
Starting point is 00:25:40 I would say about a year and a half later, two years into podcasting, I became a bigger podcaster. I got popular on CastBox. I became known as one of the top podcasters on LinkedIn. I would always post my content on LinkedIn. I still wasn't that big on Instagram or YouTube or any other channels. It was really just a biggest podcaster on LinkedIn. And I had some apps that I was popular on.
Starting point is 00:26:00 And I became popular on podcasts. Well, everybody used to always ask me, how did you grow your podcast? How did you grow this LinkedIn channel? And it would be the guests that would come on my show. And all the guests, like I told you guys already, they were all successful, really popular authors, entrepreneurs. I never had crappy guests, right? So the guests came on and they all had a lot of money
Starting point is 00:26:21 and they would always ask me at the end of my show, how did you do this? How did you grow your LinkedIn? How did you do your podcast? Can you do this for me? And podcasting and stuff was still like pretty new. There was a big podcast agencies. There was definitely social media agencies,
Starting point is 00:26:34 but maybe not so many LinkedIn ones. And I was doing such a great job. And part of it was because I had this machine. I had 20 people working for me. So we had the best videos, we had the best content, we were so professional. The team that you liaison with for guest outreach, same team that was running me back then, right? So that's why they're so polished. They're so awesome.
Starting point is 00:26:53 And so they just had such a great experience. And I would always say, oh, sorry, this is just a hobby. I have a full-time job at Disney. I get paid a lot. This is just for fun. This is just a hobby. Because even though I said I wanted to be a podcast network, I truly didn't believe it. In my heart, I was like, this is just a hobby.
Starting point is 00:27:11 is for me to get my passion out. I wasn't ready really to do anything else with it. And I just thought I was going to be in corporate forever. I was already sort of a failed entrepreneur with the blog. And I had a lot of holding on to like that failure. Like I don't know if I can really become an entrepreneur again. I didn't know what the path was yet. I didn't really see the path clearly. So then when COVID hit, I ended up having a lot of time, right? We started working from home. and these guests would continue to ask me for these services until one time, have you ever heard of Heather Monaghan? Yeah, name sounds familiar, yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:46 He's like a huge LinkedIn influencer. She already had like maybe 100,000 followers. She would not leave me alone. She was like every video, Hala, you need to teach me how to do these videos. Holla, we need to talk. She came on my show and she would ask, and I told her, no, I can't help you. And then I wanted her to be my mentor. And I was like, okay, she's somebody who I want to be in 10 years.
Starting point is 00:28:07 She's the speaker. She's this huge influencer. Everybody knows her. And so I was like, hey, I'll teach you how to do these videos on Saturdays. And so I set up all this time on her calendar every Saturday for me to, like, train her. The first Saturday that we met, I like took her through, okay, this is our Slack channel. These are our templates. This is how you do this.
Starting point is 00:28:27 This is software. I took her through all these processes. And she's a call. I just had a call with Gary V's team. I want to work with you. I want to be your first client. You hate your job at Disney because I've been talking to her on the phone. and stuff, so she knew that I didn't like my job.
Starting point is 00:28:39 She's like, you need to just take the leap. I want to be your first client. What do you say? I was like, okay, cool. She didn't pay me a lot. She paid me like $1,000 a month. So I couldn't quit my job or something, but I started making her video. So good.
Starting point is 00:28:52 So I got on this guy, Jason Waller. He was a CEO of the fastest growing private solar company invites me on his podcast. So I would get invited on podcasts. At the end of the show, he was like, hey, I see you do LinkedIn podcast. can you do this for this guy's a billionaire? For the first time ever, I was like, yes, I can. I was like, I have an agency. I can do this for you. So I had no logo. I had no website. I had no name of my company. I was really good at making PowerPoints. I was really good at graphic design. I was really good at presenting. So I created a PowerPoint. And I remember talking with one of my interns at the time.
Starting point is 00:29:31 He was my first business partner, Tim. And I was like, okay, let's do LinkedIn 3K, Instagram 3K, podcast 3K and he's like he's a billionaire let's just say 10k each service and i was like okay okay so i put together this presentation and i just go in with confidence me and tim on the call with jason go through the deck again no website no logo no nothing just the social proof of what i've built myself and i go through it and i'm like all right it's 30k months and he's like let's do it and i'm like wow What were you thinking after that? We were like, we got to find a contract. You got to find this.
Starting point is 00:30:08 We went online. We found a business bank account. Yeah. Suddenly I had to form of company. So we did it. And he was our first client. And then again, I told you, we got client after client after client. And everything just scaled so, so quickly because I had all this built up demand
Starting point is 00:30:26 from just building my brand for so long and never selling to anyone. And so suddenly everybody was like, oh, man, I want to sign up with Hala. And COVID hit. Anybody who had money knew that they had to be online. So if they weren't online, they were looking for the right person. And I was seeing, I guess, maybe as this golden child that knew, like, had a blow up LinkedIn and podcasts. And so I got all the clients. And I did a really, really great job for them, too.
Starting point is 00:30:52 I really crushed it for all of my clients. Oh, my God. There's so much to unpack there. And when you were first working with the influencer that you wanted to, to have, be a mentor, you did that for free, right, those Saturdays? I just totally did that for free. That's how I got all my mentors doing free work for people. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:09 I got Jordan Arbinger to be my mentor. That's amazing. Please rewind that, that story that she just told, because first, you got to present value to people. People oftentimes, because I have this knack of being able to change my circle again and again and to meet influential people and to be connected. And then they're like, dude, Jamar, how are you doing all this? this stuff. First is about providing value up front. And it's not always money all the time.
Starting point is 00:31:35 Sometimes it is, you might have something that can be beneficial to somebody else. And that was in the case of for you, but also at the same time, you were building your brand on LinkedIn and growing that and treating yourself as you were a client. And I think every business, especially small businesses, need to hear that because there's a lot of social media agencies out there. And I'm sure you know where I'm going with this. That their socials suck. They're not. Not good. But they're like, oh, but I can do it for you. But why are you not doing it for yourself?
Starting point is 00:32:04 You should definitely be your first client. And then the people that you want to get in front of definitely offer your time and resources to that person. And then to also have confidence enough to just charge what you felt that was a good price. Like, here's the thing. Like I was low balling, but I had every right to charge that high because I did have the systems. Remember, I had 20 volunteers. Heather's whole argument was you have a company. She was like shaking me.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Like you have a company. Like dumbass. You know? Like that's company. So I had a great foundation. And to your point, we only did stuff that we already knew worked for me. So we figured out LinkedIn.
Starting point is 00:32:48 We started doing it as service. We figured out podcasts. We started doing it as a service. We figured out sponsorships. We started a network. Right. So it's like we only did the stuff that we knew already worked for me.
Starting point is 00:32:59 And the other thing to know, know, is that when you build a brand, so I had built an awesome brand. And that's what enabled me to charge higher. And then the last thing I'll say is that it is your choice who you sell to. I chose to sell to these people that were wealthy and who had their own companies and who could afford my services. And I chose a route that is more like white glove, catered towards somebody who doesn't have a lot of time, all done for you, no stone unturned. you can call me on speed dial type of a relationship. And I chose my target client.
Starting point is 00:33:37 And I stuck with that, right? Sometimes people start companies and they're targeting people who have no money. And then they have to work really low and it's just a race to the bottom. So I purposely tried to pick a really high level client with a high level service and went about it that way. Oh, that's amazing. So can I ask just about LinkedIn? Because you were able to build that and continually build that. Is there a certain secret sauce to LinkedIn, in your opinion?
Starting point is 00:34:03 Is it just consistency and making sure that your brand is high quality? What is it to you that for the reason why you were able to grow on LinkedIn so fast? I think you hit the nail on the head where consistency plays a lot to it. Because you've got to put your reps in. You've got to figure out what's working, what's not working. The reason why I was able to pack the LinkedIn algorithm is because I was posting every day and I did it myself at first. You can hire a team like mine where you know that they know what they're doing, right?
Starting point is 00:34:31 But most people don't have that opportunity when you're just starting out. You've got to post yourself. So hand post, understand what the patterns are in terms of how you're posting. And on LinkedIn specifically, it's not really what you're posting. Now, keywords are more and more important and things like that. But it's more about how you're posting. What are the ways that you're publishing? What are you doing in the first 90 minutes that you're publishing?
Starting point is 00:34:55 How are you getting engagement on your posts? How are you DMing people so that you can trigger the algorithm so they see your content? So there's so many different rules on LinkedIn in terms of how you publish and engage that you need to be aware of. So the features using videos versus graphics versus polls, it matters, but really not so much. I'll try to break it down as simply as I can. Number one, you've got to train the algorithm on what you're an expert on. And that goes with all social media platforms. We live in a world where it went from friend graph algorithms to now it's went to interest graph
Starting point is 00:35:33 algorithms. So the friend graph algorithm was all about having as many followers as possible. People just see the most recent content or the most engaging content, the most viral content. Fast forward to today, the TikTokification of social media, as Gary V says. Now it's all about getting you exactly what you want when you're on, having the most relevant topics. It's not about having a million followers. You could have zero followers and go viral. It's not even about having the most viral content. It's about the most engaged content in your niche that gets sent to the user who's most interested in that content. And this happens in real time. You guys know,
Starting point is 00:36:09 when you're scrolling on reels, if you look at a dance video for too long, suddenly your next three videos are dance videos, right? Right. So this is all happening instantly, and it's enabling people who don't even have a lot of followers to crush it on social media. So all social media platforms are moving towards that direction. So on LinkedIn, what that means is you need to train the algorithm on what you're an expert on. So that means having keywords in your profile that match the keywords in your post. So if I talk about podcasts and I want to teach people about podcasts, I better have
Starting point is 00:36:40 podcast in my title, in my bio, in my job descriptions, keywords related to podcasting or social media or whatever. the keyword cloud I want to be recognized for as an expert on on LinkedIn. And then I want to have posts that also talk about that content. And then I want to have really meaningful content that gets engagement, that gets high viral actions, so long comments or shares, so that the algorithm knows that I get engagement on this content and they send it to more users who want to see content like that. And there's certain things that you need to understand in terms of what to post, like I mentioned, being an expert and then having keywords in your posts that line up
Starting point is 00:37:17 your expertise. That's number one. And the number two is the publishing and engagement strategies. So in the first 90 minutes on LinkedIn, it's really important to have a velocity of engagement. So that means you need to be an active member of the community. You need to be DMing your first connections. When you DM somebody and they DM me back, they're 85% more likely to see your content the next time they log on. You need to reinvigorate your first connections all the time so they see your stuff so that when you post things up, they reciprocate, they comment, they like, they actually see your content. You need to make sure that people who follow you actually want the content that you have or else when that first 90 minutes is up and people
Starting point is 00:37:56 see your content and they don't engage, you're going to get panelized for that. You need a velocity of engagement when you first post. You can even join engagement pods, which are not against terms of service to try to get likes and comments from your first connections as soon as you post. You need to be a good member of the community and post on other people's stuff so that you're just part of this world where you guys are feeding each other. So it's really important to know how to publish and you can artificially do that through engagement pods, not automation. I'm not talking about bots. I'm talking about real people, but you can set yourself up for success strategically being in an engagement pod and also just
Starting point is 00:38:30 being a good member of the community is going to help you get more traction. So many actionable steps that you just gave to grow on LinkedIn. And most of the times it's just people just being consistent first. I always tell people, just starts. Just get on a good cadence and then you can start to be a scientist about it and go down there. But yes, to do all those things, that's how you're going to grow fast and grow quickly and get into the algorithm.
Starting point is 00:38:57 And who told you that content was important? Why was that such a priority for you when you started to hone that in even for yourself? To be honest, my main goal was always just to help people. I didn't even have a monetary goal, which is why when people asked me for me to be their agency, I said no all the time. Right. It was all I wanted to do. I was happy.
Starting point is 00:39:19 I was happy. I was happy. Just growing this movement and having this podcast and interviewing awesome people and sharing the information and just being positive and helping other people. That's what really motivated me. What motivates me is building a team and helping my team and then helping other people online. And so for me, it was all about just having positivity. Maybe, like, deep down inside, I wanted to, like, have a brand. And I've always been very outspoken and, like, to be the lead in the play and stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:39:50 So I always like to be like center stage. That's who I am naturally. But it wasn't what I was thinking about. I was thinking about helping people. There was, like, a big void in helping young people in business at the time. It was really innovative for me to come out with a business podcast as, like, a young, lady in 2018. Now everybody has a podcast, but when I did it, it was really new.
Starting point is 00:40:15 People were like, what are you doing? What is this? You know, and that in itself of just helping people and coming out with this new concept of podcasts was really cool and just motivated me itself. Hello, Yap Gang. I know my young improfiting listeners want bigger businesses and a better life. And the New Year is the perfect moment to reset and commit to your growth. But let's be real.
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Starting point is 00:44:21 So on the sales side of your business, what's one killer closing line that you can share with us? Like, when you close these big sponsorships or brand deals, maybe big agency accounts, what's one line that really, or maybe it could be a couple of lines, but something that's like going to really close somebody to move forward for business. I'll just give you my approach of how I close awesome deals. It's being the best and the most knowledgeable
Starting point is 00:44:52 about what I'm talking about. So let's say it's me trying to close an agency lead and they want to do LinkedIn and podcasts. I'm going to go over our services, but throughout the whole conversation, I'm going to be dropping gem after gem after gem. This is why we do our strategy. This is why it works.
Starting point is 00:45:10 Here's the data behind it. Here's a case study of how we have 3x somebody's impressions on social media. And I'm just like where they leave it being like there's no way that I could replicate what this girl has built. I want to work with her. So like most of my sales success is just off the strength of me being so much more knowledgeable and just knocking the socks off people in terms of they're being impressed with my knowledge. And I feel like that is my core strategy.
Starting point is 00:45:36 The other strategy that I have is just making sure that in the beginning of the conversation, so I always have really nice sales decks. And in the beginning of the conversation, before I even put up a presentation, I'm always trying to understand like their core problem. I'm trying to filter out. Are they even a good fit for me? And I'm not afraid to actually say, you're not a good fit for us, but I know so and so who is. Because I always want my reputation to be killer and I want to always do the best job.
Starting point is 00:46:03 So I don't want to actually have somebody who can't afford my services or who doesn't have an offer yet for my social agency and so on. So I'm like, okay, like, what is a problem? What wasn't working before? Okay. What are you hoping to achieve now? What are your goals? How do you make money?
Starting point is 00:46:19 Where are you driving R. And this is so important to do you on a sales call before you to jump into your solution because if you don't make it about them from the beginning, the whole time they're going to be like, why does this person think they can help me? They didn't even ask me about my business. people want to talk about themselves, right? And they want to make sure that you understand their problem and you know exactly how to solve it.
Starting point is 00:46:40 So once I know these are all their problems, this is what didn't work before, this is how they make money, now I can use all of that information and customize the way that I go over this presentation in a way that addresses every single concern that they had organically throughout this presentation as if this is what I was going to say the whole time anyway.
Starting point is 00:46:59 But I tailor the things that I can hone in on based on the problems that they had or the things that they want to solve. So good. Another thing is that we tend to scare them on the price a little bit. So I tell them up front, on my discovery call conversations,
Starting point is 00:47:16 we don't tell them the price on the call. If I feel like I know them and they've got money and it's not a big deal, I'll be like, yeah, 10K in months for LinkedIn. If you want to bundle, we have to like sit and price it. But most of the time, we're like, I just want to worry you.
Starting point is 00:47:28 We're really expensive. They're the best. I stand up a dedicated team going to have five people that's your extended marketing team were not cheap. I'm just warning you. But anyway, we're going to go and try to give you the best pricing. You wanted all these different things. There's some cost savings involved from bundling these services. We'll get back to you on the price, blah, blah, blah. Then I email them the price and I basically scare them so that they're thinking it's worse than it's even going to be. And then they're like level set once they
Starting point is 00:47:55 actually get the price. So that's something that we do is that we always make sure that they know that were expensive before we give them the price. That way they're not shocked. And if anything, they're less shocked. Yeah. They're going to worse. So that's one thing. And then the other thing is sometimes you have these calls.
Starting point is 00:48:13 They go amazing. And people are like, yep, ready to sign. Even after the price, ready to sign, ready to go, blah, blah, blah. And then they ghost you. Yeah. That's happened to everybody. Now, my favorite thing to do is, and Chris Boss taught me this, is to just approach them with like a no oriented question.
Starting point is 00:48:31 There's a couple of things I want to talk to you guys about closing. So you never want to sound needy. So something that I do is we always have one spot left. We always have a wait list. Even if we don't, we always have a wait list. We always have one spot left. We have availability starting in two weeks. I never want anybody to feel like I'm desperate because I'm not.
Starting point is 00:48:49 I'm not desperate for any sort of client, right? So never ever want to sound desperate like you've got so many spots you want to sign right now. Everything can be, yeah, whatever, take your time with any sort of contract that gets sent out, you want to call it an agreement. So you don't want anybody to get scared of the word contract. You want to call it an agreement. Let's say you send your agreement and you give it an expiration date. Hey, we've got a lot of clients.
Starting point is 00:49:14 Just FYI, if you don't sign by this date, it expires. Every agreement needs to have an expiration date. A lot of people don't do that, right? So you want to have an expiration date so they feel like there's some sort of timeline. But let's say they ghost you in the process that's two days before it's expiring. You want to just reach out with a no-oriented question like, Hey, hey, what's up? Hope you're well. Are you no longer interested in LinkedIn services?
Starting point is 00:49:35 Just flat out ask them. And not like, I just want to say this and this is why we're so good and this is what, no. Hey, I just want to ask, are you no longer interested in LinkedIn services? I need to know to figure out how to proceed with other people on Q or just are you no longer interested. What's going to happen is they're going to email you immediately and be like, oh, no, I'm so sorry. I just got blocked up with blah, blah, blah, I'll get back to you here. They're going to tell you what's blocking them. it costs them off guard because instead of saying yes, they're saying, oh, no, I'm not.
Starting point is 00:50:06 And another thing is, is Lincoln no longer part of your strategy? Or are you no longer looking to grow XYZ's personal brand? And they're going to be like, no, of course we want to grow his personal brand. And then this is why we're delayed. So just like kickstarts the conversation again. So like that's a really great way to get the conversation going. It's like you're the queen of positioning. everything that you're talking about is how you're positioning and you just have this innate confidence within you
Starting point is 00:50:34 that I think a lot of people struggle with. You started at the beginning of this podcast was saying like if you believe in your services that you really actually can help people, well, then selling is easy because you know that you could help somebody. If you're still trying to figure it out, then it's going to be really hard for you to sell people. And it's going to be hard to be confident in that. I mean, the position that you had from the type of people on your podcast to how you're selling, to how you position your agency, to how you position your brand. Everything is how you position yourself. I think it's such a really good takeaway for people because people are just doing stuff, you know?
Starting point is 00:51:14 And they don't think about like, well, what's my lined in the sand? What am I not okay with? Who do I not want to work with? They need to ask these questions. and I think this is a great reminder. And just want to say this really quick for all the audience, Hala has tons of webinars and stuff for free on her YouTube page. Tons.
Starting point is 00:51:34 So you guys can go binge watch. She goes really deep into this stuff. So what's next for you? I know the podcast network is a really big focus. What's your next big position play? Like, what are you doing next? I'm really focused on growing my network. So I have the YAP Media Podcast Network.
Starting point is 00:51:50 We're the number one business and self-improvement podcast network. I have about 35 shows. And my main thing is recruiting as big podcasters as I can. I just moved out to Austin. So I'm officially in Austin. Oh, you're in New York. Yeah, I moved to Austin. Oh.
Starting point is 00:52:06 Yeah, so I moved. Where are you based? I'm in Richmond. I was in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Now I'm in Richmond. I have now met in the past three days, like five to six different people from Austin. Now that live in Austin, like, I got to go to Austin. I got to go.
Starting point is 00:52:21 I love Austin. So I just moved out here in February. We're building like a creator compound. So essentially a creator house and studios. I'm like a temporary studio right now. So we're building like studios and like a headquarters basically. I'll live on one side. The other side would be like a creator house and studios.
Starting point is 00:52:40 So very excited about that. And it will help us recruit podcasters and things like that. So yeah, that's my main focus. I got to focus. That's the name of the game. I can't spread myself then. I already have a lot going on. There even might be an avenue where I shut down parts of my business
Starting point is 00:52:57 so that I can laser focus on everything I need to do with my podcast and my network. Or, as I was saying, before, maybe I stepped down as CEO so that I can focus on what I need to focus on. Perhaps a book in the future, everybody keeps asking me to write a book, but again, no time yet. To do that, I feel like it's not on the roadmap quite yet. How often are you speaking? Are you doing a lot of speaking as well? I'm speaking pretty often. The last one that I did was I spoke at Funnel Hacking Live, which was awesome.
Starting point is 00:53:26 So Tony Robbins, that's a Russell Brunson's event. It was like 6,000, 7,000 people. So that was incredible. I did it all about podcast monetization. Oh, that's awesome. That's awesome. So I always close out the podcast with asking this just a fun question. What's your top five favorite movies of all time?
Starting point is 00:53:47 Oh, God, I'm the worst that this. Really? I have this question. Are you not really an avid, like, movie washer like that? So I love movies, but I am not good at remembering names for the life of me. I'm so bad at this kind of stuff. Like, I'm really bad at this stuff. I'll try to do it, like Wedding Singer, 10 things.
Starting point is 00:54:08 All of them are going to be old because I only remember old movie names. 10 things I hate about you. Welcome to the Doll House. These are all, like, old movies from when I was, like, 13. Fear, right? I only remember the old movies. I can't remember. I'm terrible.
Starting point is 00:54:23 It's so funny. I asked the one question that you're like, I don't remember movies. I watch movies as dates. Like, this is one lesson that I want to teach your listeners because you were saying, positioning,
Starting point is 00:54:34 all this stuff. I just talked to Cal Newport, who's like this big productivity guru. And his main thing, and I totally align to it, is that you need to understand that to gain expertise and success it's slow. I've been in this world now for like 15 plus years doing the same thing. Social media
Starting point is 00:54:56 broadcasting, social media broadcasting. It's evolved, right? It was radio, then online radio, then it was blog, then it was the podcast, then it was LinkedIn, but it's all the same shit, right? I was doing the same thing every day, obsessed with it, every day, putting in work, focus, putting in work, focus, putting in work, focus, training other people. So I learned, it even better because I'm training other people and just getting the reps, getting the reps. And I focused on this skill that now I have. And it was because I said no to other things, like watching a million movies or watching every TV show or I watch movies as a date. And I don't do it by myself. I have been in Austin for five months. I don't even know how to turn the TV on
Starting point is 00:55:41 in our Airbnb. I never found out. Wow. I have relationships. I love to work out. And I have a company, and I have a podcast, I don't have time to, you've got to say no to something if you want to be the best in the world at something. And I consider myself to be the best in the world at knowing how to grow and Montailles podcast and LinkedIn as well, knowing how to rock LinkedIn. Those are the two things that I'm the best in the world that I feel like are top 10 in the world. If you want to be in the best in the world, you've got to say no to a lot of things. And so for me, I don't want to memorize actors and actresses and movies. I don't give me shit about that. That's not going to make me money.
Starting point is 00:56:19 That's not going to grow my team. That's not going to get me to $100 million in revenue, right? So I'm sorry, I don't have an answer to your question. 13-year-old holla. No, it's fantastic. I kind of had the same thing because, you know, with movies, I do remember the name, but I don't know a lot of actors. So, like, when people start, if I'm in social circles
Starting point is 00:56:38 and they start talking about movies and actors, I can only go so far in the conversation. Unless that's your industry. If you're a movie producer, director, or actor, sure, know everything about that. But if you're not, what are you wasting your time for learning about people who don't give a shit about you? Oh, I love that.
Starting point is 00:56:54 Where can people get connected to you? How can they reach out? So if you want to listen to the podcast, I highly recommend it. I love my podcast so much. It's my baby, so Young and Profiting on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, wherever you listen to the show or wherever you listen to your podcast, you can find us. If you want to find out about LinkedIn,
Starting point is 00:57:11 I have a master class that we're doing. I only do it one time a year now, a live one. If you want to sign up for that, you can go to yapmedia.com slash course. I'm also releasing a new podcast course that I've never, I've never done that before. I'm releasing a growth and monetization course, hopefully in like August or September. So working on that now. So excited about that. Yapmedia.com for all the agency stuff.
Starting point is 00:57:35 And yeah, you can find me pretty easily, I think. Oh, that's sweet. Thank you so much for your time. Everybody listening, watching, please lay comments, subscribe to the podcast. This podcast has been fantastic. I think you've helped a lot of people. People need to replay this over and over, and then they need to hop to your YouTube,
Starting point is 00:57:53 and they need to go binge watch. You are very articulate about how you do things. I hope that this podcast helps people appreciate that a little bit more about how you're positioning and how you're doing everything. There's a science to it, and I can already see it. This is awesome. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:58:10 And everybody, don't forget if you can change your circle, you can change your life. Until the next episode. We're out. Peace. All right, guys, as we wrap up, I want to thank you again for tuning into Young and Profiting podcast the past seven years, whether you're an old listener that has been listening all these years or somebody who just found the show recently, which there's actually a lot of you. I really appreciate it. Something that we're really focused on in year seven is growing our video presence. So we're on Spotify video. We're really doubling down on YouTube. I have almost
Starting point is 00:58:43 60,000 subscribers on YouTube. So make sure you guys go subscribe to me on YouTube. that would be a great seven-year anniversary present. Well, you guys, I really am blessed to be the host of this podcast. I couldn't imagine a more fun career. And I hope that I was able to support you, Jamar, in this episode. I hope that you grow your podcast, you achieve all your dreams. And to everybody tuning in, I hope you achieve your dreams too. This is your host, Halitaha-a-Taha-a-a-a-the-podcast princess signing off.

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