Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Pat Flynn: How to Build Superfans and Grow a Profitable Online Business | Entrepreneurship | YAPClassic

Episode Date: July 18, 2025

After losing what he believed was his dream job as an architect during the 2008 recession, Pat Flynn was driven into entrepreneurship with no plan B, no funding, and zero business experience. Facing i...ntense uncertainty and financial stress, he discovered affiliate marketing and began building an online business from scratch. That hustle eventually grew into a multimillion-dollar passive income empire. In this episode, Pat shares actionable strategies for marketing, building your audience, and growing your online business the smart way – including how to create superfans and generate multiple streams of passive income. In this episode, Hala and Pat will discuss:  (00:00) Introduction (02:48) How Getting Laid Off Sparked Pat’s Online Business(07:51) Evolution of Smart Passive Income’s Business Model(13:43) Building Community-Powered Courses That Stick(19:24) Affiliate Marketing Strategies That Actually Work(28:47) Why Superfans Matter in Entrepreneurship(34:29) Turning Fans Into Your Free Marketing Team (39:46) “Learning the Lyrics” of Your Audience (44:04) The Power of Naming and Labeling Your Audience (50:43) Co-Creation: Making Your Audience Feel Seen (55:42) Why Community Is the New Currency Pat Flynn is a serial entrepreneur, startup advisor, and founder of Smart Passive Income (SPI), a leading online education platform for digital entrepreneurs. He is the host of the top-ranked Smart Passive Income podcast, a Wall Street Journal bestselling author, and an advisor to several high-growth SaaS companies. Through his signature programs like the SPI All-Access Pass and SPI Pro, Pat has helped millions of entrepreneurs master affiliate marketing, build engaged communities, and create sustainable passive income streams. Sponsored By: 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 Boulevard - Get 10% off your first year at joinblvd.com/profiting when you book a demo   Resources Mentioned: Pat’s Book, Superfans: bit.ly/_SuperfansPat’s Website: smartpassiveincome.com  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, Career, Leadership, Mindset, Health, Growth mindset, side hustle, Starting a business, Solopreneur, Founder, Networking 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Today's episode is sponsored in part by Indeed, Shopify, Mercury, OpenPhone, Airbnb, and Boulevard. As always, you can find all of our incredible deals linked in the show notes or at youngimprofiting.com slash deals. Yap Gang, what if losing your dream job became the best thing that ever happened to you? In this YAP Classic episode, we're diving into the inspiring journey of Pat Flynn, a trailblazer in the world of online entrepreneurship. Pat went from being unexpectedly laid off to building a multi-million dollar digital
Starting point is 00:00:42 empire from scratch, all without a safety net. Today, he's a powerhouse podcaster, bestselling author of Superfans and the brains behind Smart Passive Income. Pat didn't just survive the disruption, he mastered it. Through transparency, trust, and a fierce commitment to community, he turned adversity into an opportunity. He cracked the code on passive income, built a tribe of raving superfans, and paved the way for purpose-driven creators to thrive online. In this episode, Pat reveals how to transform
Starting point is 00:01:11 casual followers into superfans, how to build sustainable passive income streams, and he breaks down why having a community isn't just part of the future of business, it is the future. So get ready to be inspired, take notes, and soak in the wisdom of the legendary of business. It is the future. So get ready to be inspired, take notes, and soak in the wisdom of the legendary Pat Flynn. Before we get started,
Starting point is 00:01:33 I did wanna talk about your career journey because I found out in researching your story that you actually had a whole other profession before online marketing and you lost your dream job at one point. So talk to us about that story. How and you lost your dream job at one point. So talk to us about that story. How did you lose your dream job, and how did that evolve to you then starting your blog?
Starting point is 00:01:53 Throughout high school, I wanted to be an architect. I kind of knew that early on, and I was able to become an architect, went to school for it, got a great job in the Bay Area in California, and I was set. I mean, I was planning for my future. I was contributing in my 401k, like doing all the things. And three months after proposing to my
Starting point is 00:02:12 girlfriend and she said, yes, I got laid off. And this was the great recession of 2008. So it was so weird because things were happening so well. And I was on the path that I was supposed to be on, you know, the ideal path. And then it was all just kind of like swept out under me in an instant. And that was very difficult. I didn't have a plan B because I was doing everything as best as possible and following the plan. And yet here I was getting let go.
Starting point is 00:02:34 And it was a tough time for me. I was depressed for two or three months trying to figure things out because I didn't have a plan B. I was begging for positions in the architecture space for a while, just kind of calling around and nothing was happening. And it was around that time that I discovered podcasts. This is oh wait, so this is like really early on. And there was one episode of a business podcast that I listened to. They were talking about internet business. And there was an interview with a guy named Cornelius Fichtner, who was telling his story. He was helping people pass a very particular exam in the project management space. It was called the PM exam or the project management exam. And he was making six figures a year online, helping people pass this exam. And that was my big light bulb moment because
Starting point is 00:03:16 I had taken several exams on my way to becoming an architect. I wasn't a licensed one yet, but I was on my way and there were so many different tests and there was one test in particular that was so hard that most people failed. I almost failed it on my first go, but it was very difficult and in studying for that, I picked up a lot and thought, you know what, could I do this? Could I teach people how to pass this exam? It was called the LEAD exam and it's very specialized about green buildings and sustainable design and whatnot. So I built a website to share my notes and all the things that I learned about this exam.
Starting point is 00:03:46 And lo and behold, in a few months, I started to get some traffic. People started to ask questions in the comments section. I started to answer them. I started to find that my website was being linked to and all these official green building design websites and stuff and people were sharing it around. And then later that year, I wrote a study guide,
Starting point is 00:04:05 put all my notes into a PDF file. I didn't really know what I was doing. I was just kind of figuring it out as I was going. I just used PayPal to kind of manage that transaction. And in October of 2008, I launched that book for $19.99. And I had generated a total profit of $7,908.55, which just was like, I could not believe it. I mean, every day I woke up literally to a bigger PayPal balance,
Starting point is 00:04:31 and it just didn't seem real to me. I thought that at some point during that month, the FBI SWAT team was going to come and just be like, illegal, like stop doing that. Because it just didn't feel like, I had spent five years in school for architecture and did all this stuff. And then here I was in just a few quick months generating more revenue than what I did in my architecture job.
Starting point is 00:04:52 And that was like a huge thing for me. And then I just leaned into that. You know, the next month I started to make, you know, over 10K a month and then 14K a month. May of 2009 was our biggest month. $30,000 in a single month. I'd raised the price of my book and everything. And that's when I started SmartPassiveIncome.com
Starting point is 00:05:09 because a lot of people were like, Pat, how did you do this? How did you not just survive during the recession, but how did you figure out a way to thrive during it? And I said, I need to unpack this myself because I'm kind of just, I have no idea what I'm doing, but I'm figuring it out and I'm just gonna post everything I'm learning. and that's where Smart Passive Income really started
Starting point is 00:05:27 to take off because it was a way for people to learn entrepreneurship from the things I was learning as I was going right it was kind of in real time if you will and I loved talking about all the mistakes I made and the things that I wish I had done differently and I think that's why people loved it because I wasn't selling anything. I wasn't trying to say like, hey, the internet secrets are here, but you gotta pay money. It was just like, no, here's what's going on. And that grew and that blew up and I've written books
Starting point is 00:05:53 and I've gone on stage now and I have this giant audience now related to this. And over the years I've generated nearly $10 million in earnings since 2008. It's not just me now, I have a team of people and I have several other businesses. I've invented a physical product to explore that world. I have a number of YouTube channels,
Starting point is 00:06:10 one in the world of Pokemon that's kind of exploding right now, just all these kinds of different things that I've been playing with and I just love to share the results, like everything I do is a case study, whether it works or not and it's a way for me to teach people along the way. I love that backstory. And today on your website, Smart Passive Income, you've got a lot of different courses,
Starting point is 00:06:30 and you've evolved from this blog and e-books to having this whole community and platform. Can you talk to us a little bit about your current business model today and maybe how it's evolved over the years? For sure. In the beginning, I mean, I didn't start generating revenue from the entrepreneurial blog until 2011, so a couple years after. And that was just done through affiliate marketing. Affiliate marketing is recommending other people or other companies' products and essentially getting a commission if you send anybody over. This is different than advertising where a company will pay you upfront. This is a company who will pay you when a customer goes through. And I started
Starting point is 00:07:09 to generate several tens of thousands of dollars a month doing that by sharing the different tools I was using to build business, the different website hosting platforms and email service providers. And that was the fun part about what I was doing. I could just share all the information for free. Right. It wasn't behind the payrolls. Like, here's all the things I'm doing. And, you know, step three, here's a link if you want to use the same tool as me. Step eight, here's the same tool that I used. And I started to generate a lot of revenue by just sharing all the information for free. However, in 2016, I had a lot of people ask me for much more in-depth information. And that's where
Starting point is 00:07:43 online courses started to come into play. And my first one came out in 2017 about podcasting. And that, still to this date, is our most popular course. And I just walk people through the entire process to go from idea to launch to building an audience to then monetizing and doing that in a genuine and transparent way. And we've had tens of thousands of students go through our courses since then.
Starting point is 00:08:04 However, in 2020, things started to change, not just in the world, but in our business too. We had sold at this point maybe two and a half to three million dollars worth of online courses, getting really really high ratings and very very high completion rates. But we started to notice that the completion rates started to become a little bit less and that was very troubling to us. You know, we're not in this just to make money. We're in this to help people. In fact, the more that we serve people, the more money we make. So we started to notice that maybe the courses, there was just so many from so
Starting point is 00:08:33 many different people now that it just wasn't working the way they used to. Information now is freely available really anywhere, right? When you think about it, you could look up anything. Back in the day when I started, like in 2012, 2011, information wasn't as freely available. So just by having the information, that was valuable. Now having the information, that's almost adding to the overwhelm that people have.
Starting point is 00:08:56 And so we discovered that, okay, we need to add some new elements to this educational platform that we have in order to make this continue to work and thrive for our students. And so we decided to shift into building a community. And we love it now because it's, we didn't coin this term, but we definitely are owning it. And it's the idea of community powered courses. And we have now two communities. One is our SPI Pro community for people who have established businesses, but then we have also our all Access Pass. And here's the big difference, right?
Starting point is 00:09:25 Our podcasting course, for example, we had sold it for years for $499, right? Which was tremendous value, once you get back in return is huge, but it was pretty high price point for a lot of people, and that's one course, and now we have over a dozen. So if you stack all those together, that's thousands of dollars worth of courses.
Starting point is 00:09:42 However, with the All Access Pass, you can get access to all of those courses, a community of people who are going through them with you access to my team and instructors to guide you along the way pathways through those courses that relate to where you are at in your journey. And what's really popular in our community is what we call our accelerators. So we just launched one a couple weeks ago for our members where you can go through a course together with an instructor and it's like week by week you go through these modules you go through these lessons and then there's office hours if you need help. The course material is the course but there's real
Starting point is 00:10:16 time learning and feedback and questions and answers happening at the same time sort of a hybrid cohort based model and the completion rates are through the roof like absolutely tremendous and it's just so much better and you can get access to all of those things for what is the equivalent of $59 a month so it's a lower barrier to entry and what the hope is is that people won't just take the one course that they want right now but they see the next course in their future after that right so they might start a podcast and they go you know what i'm building this audience this audience now. I want to build an email list. All right, you already have access to email marketing magic. So go into that and go into this one and then go into this one.
Starting point is 00:10:51 And the idea being it's a win for everybody because it's a lower barrier to entry. But then hopefully people will stick around for several months or if not years and everybody will generate more revenue over time in that way. If and only if we are providing value versus a larger upfront payment. So the community now, we're trying to take the lead in the space with community powered courses, trying to set the example for our colleagues as well. And it seems to be working. I see that as such a huge trend. So I launched my first course earlier last year.
Starting point is 00:11:20 I'm one of the biggest influencers on LinkedIn. So I launched a LinkedIn masterclass. And as a part of this, intuitively, I was like, okay, I'm gonna build a community around this. Anybody who joins the course, they can pay a small fee, join us in a WhatsApp group, we'll support each other's links. I'll do twice monthly office hours, bring in other speakers. And to my surprise, everybody's favorite part about the whole thing is the community. And they all hang out together,
Starting point is 00:11:45 they meet up with each other in conferences, and they always say, like, the course was amazing, it gives everybody common ground to talk about and have some sort of like foundation where they've got things in common, but it's really the community and they help each other and have peer calls and they've like taking it off on their own in terms of what it is.
Starting point is 00:12:03 So I guess my question in that is, how do you make sure they communicate with each other as a community? What are the ways that you are fostering community within your course, I guess? You have to lead by example, right? Just having a space, like an empty space. Like imagine the physical version of that, right?
Starting point is 00:12:21 You have an empty gym and you're like, okay guys, come in here, we're all together. And then you just kind of leave them there. And you know, that's not really, you need some sort of direction. And so if you can go into that space and create the safe space for people to come, but then you're also showing up
Starting point is 00:12:35 and you're leading by example. If you want people to post stories and post videos, well, you got to go in there and post stories and videos yourself. And when you do that, it unlocks that ability for others to do it because nobody wants to be the first one to do it. And they just want to see somebody else do it first,
Starting point is 00:12:49 and then they can kind of follow that lead. So that's number one. Number two is finding who might be the future leaders in that community, right? You are a leader yourself because you've created this thing and you facilitated it. But within that community, there's going to be some people who seem to rise above the rest as far as like their excitement for being there. Those are the people you can really lean on to turn into administrators or moderators, if you will,
Starting point is 00:13:11 or shine a light on them a little bit and they'll shine it back on everybody else. And so finding out who those people are in your community, not everybody will be that. Some people love to lurk and are just in the background. And to them, the community is still valuable because they're reading the conversations and they feel like they're a part of something without feeling like they have to show up
Starting point is 00:13:28 in a way that's uncomfortable to them. But there's gonna be people who are more extroverted in those spaces who do show up. And when you recognize those people, they will show up even more. And it just, eventually, the community begins to have a heartbeat of its own, right? In the beginning though, it's lifeless
Starting point is 00:13:46 and you gotta get in there and you gotta do it yourself for a little bit. But once you recruit some people from the inside and even some people on the outside to help manage the community as well, you start to see things take off on their own. And you get to that tipping point where you could even just sit back
Starting point is 00:13:59 and just watch it happen on its own. It's such a beautiful, organic thing as you're seeing in your community as well. People will connect with each other. They'll make partnerships together. They'll hold each other accountable, create masterminds with each other, even without you having to really facilitate that
Starting point is 00:14:13 because you've done the job of finding those people who, like you said, have that common language and that common sort of understanding of why we're here. And it's just like at the baseball stadium, right? If your home team hits a game winning grand slam, you're high fiving and hugging people who are just wearing the same ball cap, even though you don't know their name, because you're there for the same reasons, right?
Starting point is 00:14:32 And you can win together, you lose together, all that sort of stuff. I also think thirdly, having some rituals, if you will, things that are happening every week or every month on an ongoing basis that people can look forward to. This is great for a number of reasons. One, retention, especially if it's great and it's valuable. People are going to not imagine their life without it, right?
Starting point is 00:14:51 So they're going to stick around and continue to be a part of that. But it also trains them to kind of get involved in a way that they can look forward to every single month. So one thing that we do in our communities, for example, is we share wins of the week. It's a very simple one that you can do, but it also encourages and motivates people who might not be participating, but also still just reading on the inside. We love to have community challenges. We've done these challenges inside of SPI Pro.
Starting point is 00:15:15 You know, used to do them monthly, but we've brought it down a little bit because it was just a little bit too overwhelming. Which goes to the fourth point, which is just to always continue to remain connected to them and listen and understand. We've adjusted our communities. I mean, I feel like they're adjusting always because the community is like a living being that has different needs and changes over time.
Starting point is 00:15:35 So we've been able to prune certain spaces in our community. We've been able to add new things based on what people want it. So, again, just being there to listen and engage is really key. It's probably the least passive thing you could do, I will be honest, even though the brand is Smart Passive Income, we knew that we had to be very active in order to best serve our audience. Yeah, 100%.
Starting point is 00:15:56 And I think that's the trend now. I think there's so much on demand that people just really are craving connection and real time information and things like that. And that's sort of the trend that's happening right now. And you have my wheels spinning because when you mentioned about like, those shining stars that sort of
Starting point is 00:16:13 take the lead of the community, I remember talking to my assistant VP and we had this guy that was just like really doing a great job. And I was like, we should pay him, he should be a moderator. And she was like, no, no, he's so happy, he'll be fine. Fast forward, like move too slow, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:16:28 People will, if they don't get appreciation right away, they'll start to lose interest in what they're doing. So to your point, you really need to shine the light on people that are doing a really great job for your community. For sure, and there's a few ways that we do that. You know, with my podcast, I'll give them the microphone every once in a while.
Starting point is 00:16:47 They literally will actually have the mic for 20 minutes in their own episode on our Fridays episodes, which are a little bit shorter. And it, again, puts a spotlight on them and it makes them feel like even more a part of the community. Another thing that we did recently is we actually hired a person in our community. They're actually on our team now because we just love her so much and what she's been
Starting point is 00:17:09 able to contribute. And now she's actually helping other community members feel more welcome. And she has this voice that I can never have as a former community member herself versus from the top. Yeah, sure. Pat Flynn. Cool. But like Heather, no, she was a Pat Flynn fan who joined the community,
Starting point is 00:17:25 who leveled up and is now actually a part of the team and literally on our payroll now, which is awesome. And that encourages other members in the community too. It's like, oh, you were just like us and conversations that can be had with her are different than what can be had with me. When I first started Young and Profiting podcast back in 2018, it was just a hobby. And for two good years, I poured more time and money than I got back. At times I kept asking myself, is this worth it? What if it never works?
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Starting point is 00:22:32 Indeed.com slash profiting, terms and conditions apply. Hiring Indeed is all you need. We just talked a little bit about the trends, of course, is how they're becoming more community based with these mastermind type offerings, right? When it comes to affiliate marketing, I have no idea. I've just never really got into it, right? But in 2023, it feels like there's so many different ways to do affiliate marketing. I see a lot of influencers who use like Amazon stores and like that's really hot right now. So I guess what are what are the hot trends with affiliate marketing right now?
Starting point is 00:23:04 hot right now. So I guess what are the hot trends with affiliate marketing right now? Yeah, it's less of a of a trendy thing versus just a way for you to generate revenue by directly bringing customers to a company. And that's always been a thing. When I first started out, I discovered affiliate marketing with my architecture website, actually. So I was selling my own product, right, for $19.99. And there was this other company that was paying me $100 a month to essentially sponsor my website or have a banner out on my website. So I thought I was like, wow,
Starting point is 00:23:33 I just have to put a logo on my website and link to your website for $100 a month? Absolutely. Well, they had a product that was complimentary to mine. It was a online exam simulator, and it was a $79 product. And they had an affiliate program. And I said, what's the affiliate program?
Starting point is 00:23:49 And they said, well, it's kind of like a referral program. Every person who you refer, who comes in and becomes a customer, will pay you $20. And I was like, okay, so if I just bring five people in, then that'll make up the cost of what it would be to just do the sponsorship like we've been doing. So I send an email out with my affiliate link. A company will give you a unique link that's tied to you and your account so that they can track who you're bringing in.
Starting point is 00:24:13 I think we brought in 200 customers that first month for them. So I had made $4,000 in an instant by just doing that versus the $100 a month that I was making. And here's the kicker. They still let me do the banner ads on top of the affiliate marketing. So I was kind of double dipping, which is really great. The holy grail of affiliate marketing these days are often with things like software or anything that has a recurring payment.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Like if you are an affiliate for Descript or ConvertKit or whatever, right? They will pay you every month that a customer you bring in stays on. So these things stack over time. And so we have some companies that we promote who have a recurring affiliate program where we're generating 10, $12,000 a month, knowing that it's just gonna be bigger the next month and they just continue to stack, right? So where I would start is, well, what products, what things are you already using
Starting point is 00:25:14 or you already involved with that you can set up an affiliate partnership with those companies? The other cool part about this that is sort of like the next level in what we teach in our courses, once you start producing some volume, and this should be pretty simple for you as well, especially with your authority and the size of your brand, also very key. You don't just want to promote something because it can make money for you. If you promote the wrong products to your audience, you can ruin your reputation in an instant.
Starting point is 00:25:38 So it's very, very important to select the right products, the ones that you know are going to serve your audience and everybody wins in that situation. But what I'm saying is, well, you could take this one step further. Many of the companies that I had been once an affiliate for, I'm now an advisor to those companies because I was able to come to them with even more value than just customers. I was able to bring them some feedback and advice and some thought about the future of their companies and how it could be even better.
Starting point is 00:26:07 And so some of these companies have brought me on now where I'm still an affiliate. But now I can say I'm an advisor. I'm an advisor for ConvertKit, for example, and I've been able to directly influence some of the decisions that that company has made, which has benefited the company, but also has benefited me and benefits my audience as well. And so I literally own shares of the company now as a result of that. And of course that can lead into much bigger payouts down the road. And it just allows me to feel even more of a tie to the brand and the company and Nathan, the founder. So there's a lot of things you can do with those partnerships.
Starting point is 00:26:39 Many times you can't get to that level, but there are some other additional things that might happen. For example, if you get in good with a company in that way, you're producing a lot of volume for them. You have even more permission to go, hey, Canon cameras, we sent over a hundred people your way last month. Are there any products coming out that I could review on my YouTube channel that you might want to send my way that I can get behind?
Starting point is 00:26:58 A lot of companies will send stuff early to people or even give things to those people in exchange for the volume that they know that they're going to produce. So there's a lot that can be done there. And of course, we teach this in our All Access Pass as well. But I hope that helps and maybe more gears are turning now as a result. Oh, 100%. And so with my podcast network, I'm all about doing 360 campaigns. So it's podcast ads, social media, newsletters.
Starting point is 00:27:28 We get all of those types of platforms sponsored. And what happens is because I'm also focused on digital promotions, not just podcast ads, we get a lot of link clicks and rebuys, right? Which is pretty rare in the podcast world. In the podcast world, you tend to get, a lot of people get ads and it's sort of churn and burn because there's no conversions typically
Starting point is 00:27:48 because it's really hard to go memorize a link and when you have time, remember it, remember the promo code and have a conversion. But online, you just click a button and people can convert. So my question for you is with affiliate marketing, where do you see the most click conversions? Like what is the most successful for you typically? Or what's the best approach?
Starting point is 00:28:08 All the approaches work. So on the website, we teach something for free. Like, here's how to do this, and here are the steps required. And in those steps, because that is a high-value article, it literally gives away everything. But within those steps, here are the tools that you can use. And we found, I mean, probably the best example of this, this goes a little back in the day,
Starting point is 00:28:32 but in 2011, I built a website from scratch in a space that I knew nothing about to show people how it was done. And I did that in the security card training industry. I'm not a security guard, my mom happened to be one, but that didn't really matter. I was showing people from scratch how I was doing this. Here are the keywords that I'm selecting.
Starting point is 00:28:51 Here is the tool that I'm using to do that. Here's how I built the website. Here's how I wrote the articles. Here's where I hired writers to do that and do the research. Here's how all this happened. And I remember on day 73, I was kind of like a case study sharing the progress every single day. On day 73, this brand new website hit number one in Google. And on that day, my affiliate earnings for all the tools that I mentioned in that process just went through the roof.
Starting point is 00:29:16 Because people saw, whoa, he did it. And he showed us every step along the way. I want to do it too. I'm just going to follow the same process and get the same tools. And now I'm able to generate revenue that way. So by open case studies, and that could be on any platform obviously, but on a blog for search engine optimization and such, that worked really well. Podcasts work really well too. And one thing that I love to do on a podcast is not just talk about the product and talk about how it's used and how awesome
Starting point is 00:29:45 it is, whatever the product may be. But I love to invite the company onto the podcast. So I invited Nathan Barry, the founder of ConvertKit, an email service provider that I'm now an advisor for, onto the podcast, not to talk about ConvertKit and how awesome it is, but to get into his story. Why did you even create this product? What were the struggles building this thing from the ground up? And through that, the audience begins to build a relationship, not just with me, but with the company who I am now promoting.
Starting point is 00:30:15 And so now there's more of a genuine feel for, oh, I understand that this product is here to help me for the right reasons and what it can do for me. And now I even know the founder in through the podcast, right? So you can use your platform to do it that way too. YouTube is a great platform for affiliate marketing. I did a video for Descript, which is a podcast editing tool and a video editing tool. They're really innovative with AI involved and stuff. And there's a tool in there called Overdub, which allows you to read a few sentences
Starting point is 00:30:43 and then it kind of mimics your voice. And it's both awesome and scary at the same time. So I created a video about that, but also how useful that could be, especially for a podcaster. And that video in nine months saw over a million views. And of course, I included a link, an affiliate link to Descript. And I use on my website, I use a WordPress plugin called pretty links to take that affiliate link, which is often filled with a bunch of characters and stuff that you can't memorize
Starting point is 00:31:09 and turn it into something like website.com slash descript, right? Or website.com slash convert kit. So that way on a podcast or on a YouTube video, it's much more easy to remember. And it still goes through that affiliate link for you. Anyway, that's just a small tip. But this video has now accounted for a total of $40,000 in commissions. That is my take home after all the people
Starting point is 00:31:31 who have seen that video and then clicked and then now are a member or a user of Descript as well. And that's just one of the dozen plus tools that I've talked about on my YouTube channel. So you can imagine just what the revenue might be like across the board, across those different tools. But that's a more recent example that, again, just to kind of show you this is still working and working really well today.
Starting point is 00:31:49 I love it. You're making me want to negotiate getting like some sort of affiliate deal with all my brand sponsorships. I've done it a little bit, but haven't really leaned into it. Okay, so before we can sell anything, we actually need to create an audience. And I know that you have a book that came out in 2019 called Superfans. So first things first, how do you define a super fan? Yeah, so a super fan. And this book is very much inspired by an article that was written, I think, in 2005 or 2006 by senior editor of Wired magazine, Kevin Kelly.
Starting point is 00:32:20 And he wrote an article that is pretty pronounced in the entrepreneurial space called A Thousand True Fans entrepreneurial space called a thousand true fans The whole premise about true fans and he defines this and I define super fan in the same way is a true fan or a super Fan is somebody who if you are a musician this is the person who will drive eight hours to listen to your set and then kind of wait for you backstage just to get an Instagram photo with you because they're they're you know, very much in love with your music You know a Swiftie right is a version of that. If you are a business or have a product, this is like the people who will wait in line overnight
Starting point is 00:32:51 just to be first to get access to that thing, like what we see with Apple sometimes when a new phone comes out. But you don't have to be a celebrity or a huge company in order to have those kinds of fans because anybody who has a message and who has a platform will develop fans over time and over time those fans can become true fans or super fans. The people who will buy your product without even reading the sales page. The people who when there's a troll or
Starting point is 00:33:17 somebody who says something negative about you, they're going to step up and defend you. Like you won't even hear about it because they're in the front lines, right, to defend you from those trolls. These are the people who make your podcasts, your YouTube videos, your blog posts, a part of their daily ritual, right, to listen to while eating a biscuit and having coffee in the morning or what have you, right? It's just like they can't imagine their life without your brand or your message or your voice or your podcast anymore. That's a super fan. But a super fan's not generated overnight, right? They're not there the moment they discover you. They're created by the moments that you create
Starting point is 00:33:51 for people over time, for those people over time. And there's a ladder, I like to call it the pyramid of fandom that I take you through in the book. And there are different conversion points to go from the bottom of the pyramid, your largest portion of your audience, which is your casual audience.
Starting point is 00:34:05 These are the people who just found you. Maybe a lot of you listening are watching this right now. Maybe you're a part of my casual audience because you just discovered me for the first time and you might be curious about my website and all these other things, right? You're a casual audience member and this makes the largest part.
Starting point is 00:34:19 Whenever you are paying for ads, whenever you are showing up on search engines, this is bringing people into the bottom of this pyramid, casual audience. And our job is to convert them into an active audience member. They are now a subscriber. They now know who you are and they kind of like your stuff. They will be there to read it. They might even be a customer.
Starting point is 00:34:36 They're not quite yet elevated to super fan status yet, but they at least are active in what it is that you're doing. From there, though, this is where we then convert them into a part of our community. The connected community is where magic happens. It's where not just you're talking to them and they're talking to you, but they're talking to each other. And you've done a really good job of this. This is something I'm very focused on. And naturally, some of those people will become super fans just because they can't imagine life without it. They feel an identity as a fan of your brand.
Starting point is 00:35:06 But there are some things you can do to convert people who are maybe on the fence or who are a part of that community to become a super fan. And one of my favorite ways to do that is just by offering what I like to call the what's up, a small moment of surprise and a personal reach out just to see how a person's doing. Actually, I can demonstrate this for you right now.
Starting point is 00:35:23 Yeah, sure. So I'm gonna go to Instagram and you're just gonna have to believe me for you right now. Yeah, sure. So I'm gonna go to Instagram, and you're just gonna have to believe me because I'm not gonna share my screen, but I'm gonna go to Instagram, and I'm gonna go to a comment on one of my latest posts on Instagram, and I'm just gonna see, okay, this is Omer.
Starting point is 00:35:35 So I'm gonna go to Omer's Instagram. He's somebody who just left a comment on one of my latest posts, and I'm gonna go to a message, and I'm gonna go and do a video. Hey, Omer, it's Pat Flynn here. I hope all is well. I know this might be random, but I just want to say thank you so much for following the
Starting point is 00:35:48 channel and I appreciate you. If you have any questions about anything that I can help you with, let me know. Have a good day. Bye. I sent that to Omer. How long did that take? Less than 10 seconds, right? On Friday, I walk my dogs around the neighborhood for one hour, two leashes in one hand, my
Starting point is 00:36:05 phone in the other, and I'm just doing these quick little messages to people on social media for one hour. So I'll get through 60 to 80 in that one hour. 95% reply rate. And of those replies, most of them say, oh my gosh, I cannot believe you took the time to send me a quick message or that just made my day or thank you so much for thinking of me. I can't believe you reached out to me, right? No, this is not a hundred percent scalable, but not everything in business should be a hundred percent scalable,
Starting point is 00:36:32 especially when it comes to the human to human interaction. This is something that you can do that is free, that doesn't take anything but time and consideration and many of those people have become super fans just because you're giving them something that other brands are not. Just a little bit of attention and that goes a very very long way. In fact many of those people will screenshot those messages and share them out and go, Bethlen reached out to me this is insane like I didn't feel like I was that important right and that's what people want we just want a sense of belonging
Starting point is 00:37:03 we want to know that there's other people out there who are there for us or who see us. And that's the beauty of community. It allows for that to happen more often because especially in this world where we're all feeling so alone and so disconnected, and even though social media was supposed to bring us closer together, it's actually pushing us further apart.
Starting point is 00:37:20 But those like you who are stepping up to create those communities and then taking those super fan strategies and actually giving people a little bit of time and attention. I mean, you are now creating a business that is future proof. Because let's say LinkedIn goes away or YouTube goes away or whatever. I mean, hopefully you have an email list as well. But if you have superfans, you could set up shop anywhere, shop anywhere and they'll come and support you. And that's a great feeling to know that you have that insurance policy of super fans in your brand. Yeah, 100%. I'm like profusely nodding
Starting point is 00:37:54 if you're not watching me on video. I see it, yeah. I've built my communities and I know what you're saying is right. You have to go out of your way and reach out to people without selling them anything. You know what I mean? And just give them value, give them affection
Starting point is 00:38:09 and show up for them. So you say, focusing on the experiences that create super fans is the most important thing that you can do for your business. Why is that? What is it that super fans do that can help accelerate your business? Well, number one, they become your marketing team
Starting point is 00:38:26 without you having to pay them anything. I mean, you've already paid them enough in terms of the experiences that you've offered them. This is their way to pay you back. They will talk you up. They will hoist your flag high. And I've had people tell me that they annoy their friends so much with how much they talk about the brand or SPI or me. And I'm like, that's kind of funny. But they will talk about you and become your marketing strategy.
Starting point is 00:38:50 And this is what I love so much about this is if you think of that pyramid growing, right, you want your user base to grow. You want to scale up. Many people will go outside of their brand to do that. Let me pay for ads to bring new people into the brand. Let me do search engine optimization to show up when people search for this thing or show up on YouTube, whatever. And that grows your pyramid, sure, but from the bottom, right? And again, you got to work hard. It's reverse gravity. You got to go up this pyramid, which takes work and
Starting point is 00:39:18 energy. And then you have to convert them into all those different spaces that I told you about. But if you are serving your audience and providing value and giving them those experiences, those super fans will do the talking for you. And when they bring other people into the community, this is growing your community from the inside, right? And guess what? No matter how big your brand is or how small it is,
Starting point is 00:39:37 there's already people who are there who you could serve in this way, who may do this for you. When they bring new people in, they're not coming in cold. They're not coming in as a casual audience member now because of that trust that they've built together with that person that they're recommending. I think it was Zuckerberg who said the best growth strategy is a recommendation or something like that.
Starting point is 00:39:55 They're coming in already active, is not already a part of the community because they're coming from the inside. So you can grow and scale your business by growing the experiences that the people who already are in your brand have. And again, it's not just about selling them something that could be one part of the experience. But what happens after they buy something?
Starting point is 00:40:13 One thing I talk about in the book is this tool called Bonjoro, B-O-N-J-O-R-O. And what's really cool about that is you can set up a system in which case, when a person purchases your product or becomes a member or even joins your email list, you can get a notification on your phone that says, you know, hola, just joined SPI Pro or whatever the case may be. I can in a moment's notice, click on that notification, it pops up a video, recording opportunity, and just literally personalize a welcome to the community for you and use your name and welcome you.
Starting point is 00:40:44 And I can even collect more information up front to then include in that message. So imagine you just bought something and the founder or a person who works at that company sends you a personalized video message welcoming you. I mean, you're already feeling like, okay, I think I spent my money in a good place here. Like I can be more confident with this decision
Starting point is 00:41:03 that I just made. You're reinforcing that decision that they made. And when people buy something often, especially when it's educational, it's like there's always that worry like, is this really going to work? This helps soften that opportunity to have a person even think that now they're thinking, wow, this is a great first impression. And now that carries forward into everything else they're doing. It is about the experiences though, because those are the stories that people can share, right? People are more likely to share what they're going through, the transformation they had versus,
Starting point is 00:41:31 oh, you gotta check out Pat's course because lesson five about launching your show was amazing. No, it's you helped me start a podcast and get more connected to my audience. And that one time I had a question, you had an answer for me, it just meant so much. And that one time I had a question, you had an answer for me. It just meant so much. And that's what people are saying every single day.
Starting point is 00:41:48 And of course, those people also become the people who create the best testimonials, and become the best guests on your podcast. I mean, it's just self-perpetuating at that point. It's amazing. And something that I want to call out is that this organic approach to building an audience is really profitable.
Starting point is 00:42:04 I know that when I started my LinkedIn Masterclass, I tried this organic approach to building an audience is really profitable. I know that when I started my LinkedIn masterclass, I tried an organic approach where I'd posted on my LinkedIn and we were just getting sales, sales, flying off the shelves, you know, never had to do a paid ad. Let's say six months into the course, we were doing it monthly. I was like, let's try paid ads.
Starting point is 00:42:21 We'll just, you know, expand our audience. But what I found is that we'd pay all this money for paid ads. People would come in as casual audience members, like you were talking about. They wouldn't even show up to the webinar. There was like a super low conversion rate because to your point, they didn't know me.
Starting point is 00:42:34 They didn't trust me. They didn't know my stuff. It was like we had to teach them from scratch who I was. And so we ended up wasting a whole ton of money testing this out. And then I was like, forget it. Let's just lean into the organic approach because that's obviously working
Starting point is 00:42:47 and converting a lot better. Yeah, 100%, I love that. So let's talk about the lyrics. You say we have to learn the lyrics of our audience. So how can we get better at the language and understanding the language that our audience members use this? It just reminds me of my wife in fact,
Starting point is 00:43:03 because she's a huge fan of the Backstreet Boys. I talk about them in the beginning of the book, in fact. And I didn't know how much of a fan she was until she took me into the closet and then showed me this bin of all these things, including bobbleheads of the Backstreet Boys and framed pictures of Nick Carter, who was her boy crush back in the day. And I started to ask her, like, how did you, when did you fall in love with this band so much? Like I just got very curious about it. And she gave me a very specific moment in her life
Starting point is 00:43:31 when she remembers really enjoying the band and really when this whole journey started for her. And you know, she's gone to concerts and has met the boys and stuff, her boys as she calls them. Anyway, and I'm an Nsync fan, I don't know how we ended up together, but we did. She said that when she was 15, this was a while back, right?
Starting point is 00:43:48 And so there was no Spotify, there was no iPod. It was just the radio, right? And she said that she was listening to the radio moments after she had broken up with her boyfriend. I mean, it was a bad breakup. She was like crying in her bed, you know, a teenage girl in her bed crying over a breakup. And she heard a song on the radio.
Starting point is 00:44:04 And she even said that she's like, I heard the song plenty of times before, but this time it meant something different because every lyric in that song was describing everything she was going through that moment. And that song was Quit Playing Games With My Heart by the Backstreet Boys. And when you read the lyrics to that, you can understand how it would connect with a girl who's going through that in their life. And she told me that that's when she really started to dig deeper into the band, wanted to buy the album, and then ended up going to a concert for her birthday that year. And all this kind of stuff started to happen simply because the lyrics matched where she was at in her life. And a lot of times in business, we struggle because our lyrics that we're sharing with
Starting point is 00:44:45 our audience for, what our product is and just the stories that we're telling, aren't necessarily matching the lyrics that a person in our audience is going through. We need to match the words and the descriptions of those problems as best as possible. And I think it was Jay Abraham, a very famous old school internet marketer who said, if you can define the problem better than your target customer, they're going to automatically assume that you have the solution. Right. It's one of those cases where when you hear a person describe what you're going through so well that you're just like,
Starting point is 00:45:16 yes, thank you. You understand me now. If we can get our audience to think that way, they're going to be more likely to listen to what we have to say audience to think that way, they're gonna be more likely to listen to what we have to say, to take up our recommendations, to purchase our products and all those kinds of things. So it's not just one thing to understand the problems and pains that our audience is going through, the challenges, that's key.
Starting point is 00:45:36 But what is even more important is, how are they describing those problems? In fact, one of my favorite things to do and offer to my students is to run a survey to your audience. Because in that survey, you can literally ask the question, In fact, one of my favorite things to do and offer to my students is to run a survey to your audience. Because in that survey, you can literally ask the question, what's your number one challenge right now related to blank, whatever it is that you're serving them with. And you want that to be an open-ended question because you want to get back the typed messages
Starting point is 00:45:57 in the words that your audience is using. And then here's the cool part. And it almost feels like cheating. You take those answers and then you just give them back to everybody else in your emails and your sales copy and it's like you get people going, wow, how did you know I was feeling that way? And it's like, because I found other people like you and literally asked them to tell me and it's, it almost feels like cheating in that way, but it's so great. I mean, I've had people comment and go like, you just seem to know exactly what I'm going through
Starting point is 00:46:24 in life right now. How did you know? It's like, because in a way you've had people comment and go like, you just seem to know exactly what I'm going through in life right now. How did you know? It's like, because in a way you've told me already and now I'm just giving it back to you. And that validates, wow, this is the person I should listen to, this is the person I should learn from, this is the community I should join, et cetera. So that's how important understanding the lyrics is.
Starting point is 00:46:39 This is why I think of a couple artists like Taylor Swift, who every lyric in her songs are just, they're so cutthroat because they just matter so much to her audience and they're very relatable. Same thing with Olivia Rodrigo right now. I mean, her words for a teenager are just like spot on, if you will, and that's why they're growing so much. In addition to musical talent and such,
Starting point is 00:47:02 but the lyrics matter. So are you matching the lyrics that your audience would respond to? That's the question I want to ask your audience. Since you brought up Taylor Swift a few times, I know that she calls her audience Swifties. Yeah. Can you talk to us about the importance of labeling your audience or naming them? Yes. So this can happen on its own. Your audience will kind of over time make up their own name.
Starting point is 00:47:26 But in some cases, you might need to nudge a little bit. And this is really important because this is where a person can then start to put a name to who it is that they're following and why. And it allows an opportunity for those people to kind of find each other too. I imagine when a person who's a fan of Taylor Swift, I'm not a Swifty, by the way, nor am I a Belieber or a part of Beyonce's Beehive, but you can see how there's these names a person can connect with another person. Hey, are you a Swifty too? Cool. Now we have this common language and understanding in an instant. We know some stuff about each other just through that naming convention. And so one thing that we did on SPI was I had to actually not forced.
Starting point is 00:48:11 You kind of have to still have it be a little bit more natural. And it can take a little bit of of choreography to do this. But I ended up calling my audience Team Flynn. So Team Flynn. Why? Because we're all a team. We're in this together. And I'm just the team captain. But I'm going to pass you the ball sometimes. You're going to score. But we're all all a team, we're in this together and I'm just the team captain. But I'm gonna pass you the ball sometimes, you're gonna score, but we're all gonna celebrate
Starting point is 00:48:28 because we're in this together, right? So Team Flynn. And there's like Team Gary Vee, right? And Team Tim Ferriss, so I'm just Team Flynn. And what it really did was allowed people to feel like they're connected to me a little bit more and also each other in that way as fans of the brand and fans of the channel.
Starting point is 00:48:44 I think it was Seth Godin who said, naming things is really important because that's when you start to create substance for something that a person can now talk about and connect with and it's that important in your brand and community as well. Yeah, totally makes sense and I call my YAP fam or young improvitors so I do the same thing.
Starting point is 00:49:02 YAP fam, yeah. Okay, so let's talk about mixing business and personal. One of the biggest questions that I get, I talk about personal branding a lot. People are always like, should I mix my business with my personal life? What's your opinion on that? Yeah. I mean, there's a different line for every single person, right? And it's not like, okay, if you say yes to that, okay, and now I have to live stream
Starting point is 00:49:23 myself eating waffles for breakfast. Like that's not what we're talking about here. What I feel like we need to discover is like, well, what makes you you, right? As a person, that's the biggest advantage you have over everybody else in the same space that you're in is nobody is like you. You are 100% different than everybody else that's doing the same thing or talk about the same thing. And that's a very unique advantage that you have. So to not share those things about yourself that make you, you would put you at a disadvantage, right?
Starting point is 00:49:51 It reminds me of there was a website that I used to follow a long time ago. This was back in my early affiliate marketer days. Shoe Money, Jeremy Shoemaker was his name and he had a brand called shoe money. And I didn't really get involved in his brand very much, but I did follow him simply because every once in a while he would talk about UFC, you know, being in the Octagon and some of the fighters that were going to be fighting in the Octagon. And because at the time I was somewhat into that, I was like, oh, that's cool. A fun, interesting fact about him.
Starting point is 00:50:24 And it makes me more connected to the brand. Does he talk about all the time I was somewhat into that, I was like, oh, that's cool. A fun, interesting fact about him. And it makes me more connected to the brand. Does he talk about it all the time? No, but it is something that shows up and it makes me go, oh, that's a human with that interest that is similar to mine. That's kind of cool. In a very similar way, I talk a lot about a movie. One of my favorite movies called Back to the Future, quite a bit on my brand. And it just comes up naturally.
Starting point is 00:50:40 I'm not like forcing that on anybody. I don't talk about it all the time. But when it does come up, people can see that I do get jazzed about it and I kind of nerd out about it a little bit. And that's just a part naturally. I'm not like forcing that on anybody. I don't talk about it all the time, but when it does come up, people can see that I do get jazzed about it and I kind of nerd out about it a little bit. And that's just a part of who I am. It's a movie that's played a role in my own history and it's just, I love it.
Starting point is 00:50:54 And now, like I remember in 2015, that was a big year for Back to the Future because that was a 30 year anniversary. It's also the year that Marty McFly travels into the future. And so it was a big year. And every day that year, whenever there was any news about Back to the Future happening or, you know, the cast was on some talk show or something, I would get linked to it all the time.
Starting point is 00:51:16 Did you see this? I back to the future is on. I just thought of you. Now I'm able to like inception be a part of a person's life simply because they know that about me. And that's how that personal part of my brand has played a role in providing more of a relationship with my audience versus a transaction with my audience. Right. It's a difference between a relationship and a transaction. And it's these things like the things that my friends know about me. I want my audience to know about me as well.
Starting point is 00:51:42 Maybe not everything, but you know, the things that make me me. If my audience knows that too, then we can be two people who could start a relationship together in that way. And that rapport just means a little bit more when those things are coming out. So, you know, I know, for example, Shalene Johnson, she's a big snowboarder. She's told stories before about snowboarding and wanting to get into that industry as an entrepreneur and then backing out because it would affect her fun
Starting point is 00:52:05 that she would have with that space. So whenever I think of snowboards now, I think of my buddy, Shalene Johnson, right? I think of another friend of mine, Thomas Frank, who is on YouTube and how he used to play Magic the Gathering because when I was a kid, I used to play Magic the Gathering and nerd out on that too. And apparently I have this whole giant side of my audience
Starting point is 00:52:22 that are all marching band nerds because I was in marching band When I was in high school and in college and I also did drum corps as well And it's funny because I remember to finish off the story really quick in my podcast a smart passive income podcast I have a fun little fact about me Shared by my voiceover guy in the beginning of every episode and there's nearly 750 of those now that are out there and it's funny because when I go to conferences, people will bring up those fun facts that they remember. There was one time this woman talked about how she also had a very large baby when she had a baby, because I was 11 pounds, 12 ounces when I was born.
Starting point is 00:52:56 And that, like, random little fact just made her go, oh, like, connected her to me a little bit more. So, again, you could see how these things can play a role. They're not the center and you don't want them to be the center, but they add more color and flavor to the brand and allow people to connect with you on a little bit deeper of a level.
Starting point is 00:53:15 So smart. I love all of these tips. So I'm gonna read an excerpt from your book that I thought was really great, summarizes a lot that you just said. You say, instead of spending money on ads, spend more time on people, instead of worrying about the latest growth hacks
Starting point is 00:53:28 and strategies, worry about identifying and addressing the biggest pains and problems of your target audience. Instead of figuring how to optimize your conversion rates, figure out the rate at which you're able to connect authentically with your audience and make them feel special. So speaking of making them feel special, I interviewed the CEO of Thrive Cosmetics
Starting point is 00:53:47 and she's like obsessed with making her audience feel special. She even names products after her best customers, which I think is awesome. What are some great ways to make our audience feel special? Well, we talked about one of those ways earlier, which is just to give them a little bit of time, the little what's up strategy that I talked about, putting a spotlight on your audience, just like how we talked about putting a spotlight on some of your community members before, that can be absolutely key when you actually showcase and take the spotlight off of you and put it on your people. This is what Donald Miller talks about in his book Story Brand.
Starting point is 00:54:19 Your audience becomes the hero of the story. The Luke Skywalker's or the Princess Leia's, you are just the Yoda now that everybody wants to go to, so they can have the same transformational story that they did. So featuring their story, uncovering that case study, and really getting into the before and after and celebrating them will in a way also celebrate your entire audience.
Starting point is 00:54:40 And even though you're just focused on one person at a time, people can relate to that or see a future version of themselves in that transformational story, which is key. And that makes them feel really special. Even just mentioning them, I love the idea of naming a product after, I think for a cosmetic line that's absolutely genius. Mr. Beast invites some of his audience into challenges that he has. There's a lot of brands that do a really good job of doing that.
Starting point is 00:55:04 Lego is another one that I talk about in my book because they actually have a website called ideas.lego.com. So Lego ideas, any fan can create a Lego creation out of the bricks that they have, upload it, and if it gets enough votes, it will be considered to be actually manufactured by Lego itself. And you get a little bit of a royalty on that product if the community votes it up too. So what a way to recognize the people who are actually buying your products by allowing them to get involved in the design process.
Starting point is 00:55:35 I think even the founder or CEO said, you know, we have like hundreds of designers in-house, but we have hundreds of thousands of potential designers out of house that we could put a spotlight on and reward as well. So I think this is an awesome opportunity for you and your team, anybody listening or watching, to get creative with how can we make our people feel something.
Starting point is 00:55:55 And if you wanna get even more meta with it, bring one of your own people into that meeting. I mean, what a way to make them feel like a part of the process, but also they're gonna have a voice of the community that will enable you to do that even more. And so you're teasing out this concept
Starting point is 00:56:11 that you talk about in your book called co-creation, right? And I know that Amy Porterfield, who's in my network and one of my close friends, she does a really great job of co-creation. Can you give us some examples of how an influencer or somebody who has a big audience can co-create with their audience? Yes. So there's a number of different ways to do this on a smaller scale. If, let's say, for example, you have a book coming out, you could simply offer a few different
Starting point is 00:56:37 choices for book covers and say, hey, everybody, which cover do you like best or do you have any suggestions? And this is a cool way to kind of get people involved, to get people a little behind the scenes. It opens up the factory door a little bit, but it also gives them an opportunity to have a voice in something, which I think is really cool. One thing that we're doing is we're bringing
Starting point is 00:56:54 a few of our community members, not just on podcast episodes to spotlight their transformation, but we're actually giving them the opportunity to teach something. We know that we have a lot of people in our community who are much smarter at certain aspects of business than I am or my team is.
Starting point is 00:57:08 So why not invite them on and have them become an expert that can be seen in front of everybody? And that is a way for us to add to the SPI curriculum from SPI members itself, which is really amazing. I mean, again, I think that when you are creating anything, asking yourself the question, how might I be able to get my audience involved in this, is wonderful. I think there's a lot of opportunities that a lot of creators have to do that. And collaborations are another great way to do this.
Starting point is 00:57:35 If you are a YouTuber, bringing another person on who is another YouTuber into your community, and shooting a video together is a great way to do that. A lot of people I see today are collaborating on building their email list. Like I'll share your list with mine if you share mine with yours. There's a lot of interesting ways to do that and I think collaborations.
Starting point is 00:57:53 We see that a lot in going back to the music world. Bruno Mars's first song that everybody heard him on was not his own song. It was a guy named Travi who is a rapper who had the song billionaire. I want to be a billionaire. Bruno was the chorus. He was not featured. And then guess what? His album came out later, but we all already fell in love with his voice and his style. So doing that in our world as entrepreneurs, collaborations, bringing in and inviting people into your LinkedIn group or Facebook group or
Starting point is 00:58:22 whatever, and having them take the lead every once in a while is a great way to do this and kind of create and serve the community together. and inviting people into your LinkedIn group Especially if you're building a community you need to read this book. There's so many things we didn't even cover So Pat as we close out this interview I want to ask a few questions about the future of the marketing industry Which I feel like would you would you say you're a marketing expert? I feel like you're very heavy in this world I have a lot of experience in the Evolution of marketing. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, I think so So talk to us about what are the biggest things that you've seen changed?
Starting point is 00:59:08 And in 2023, what are the biggest things that you're focused on in terms of just staying on top of all the change that's happening? Yeah, I mean, to do that, the ladders to stay on top of it, it's just to listen and to offer avenues to listen. We do something in our community called the town hall where we invite people to come in and actually express their voice and express their opinion and share what they have going on. And if you don't create a space for that to happen, everything's just gonna be in a vacuum, right? And then you're not even gonna be able to hear it. So that's number one, but number two,
Starting point is 00:59:36 community, community, community. This is gonna be the future of business. And this is where a lot of businesses are now actually scrambling to figure it out because they know that things that once worked did not search engine optimization is not as successful as it once was. It wasn't as much of a hand me out as it was back in the day. There are a lot of different changes in different industries that are happening where you know, at the center of it all is just how do we bring our people together?
Starting point is 01:00:02 And I think that's always been the case. We've maybe lost that over the years as these new technologies, new platforms have come out, but I think we're looking for ways to bring that even together now. And you're even seeing platforms like a YouTube and Twitch figure out how to better create that membership experience in those platforms. And I think we as entrepreneurs can step up and do that for our own people in our own unique ways too. So again, when you step up to facilitate and bring your community members together,
Starting point is 01:00:26 that does nothing but heighten your brand and develop that sort of insurance policy of community that will go with you no matter what happens into the future. Well, thank you so much for all your insights. I end my show with two questions that I ask all my guests and this doesn't have to do with the topic of today's episode.
Starting point is 01:00:42 You can say whatever you want. Okay. What is one actionable thing our young and profitors can do today to become more profitable tomorrow? My favorite thing to do, and I still do this, is I reach out to people individually on my email list, brand new email subscribers, and I try to get on a Zoom call with them.
Starting point is 01:01:00 And I just want to chat and get to know them, hear the lyrics from their own mouths, and understand what their biggest challenges are in real time. And people are very surprised that I do that 10 times a month still with an audience of millions, but it's so helpful. And even just one of those conversations can turn into gold for you as far as an understanding of who you're trying to help and how. So that would be my best recommendation.
Starting point is 01:01:21 Try to get on a Zoom call or a phone call or a DM at least exchange to one of your, with one of your audience members and just kind of dig a little bit deeper than you normally do. You hear that young and profiters, learn the lyrics and Pat, what is your secret to profiting in life? Honestly, just serving first. That's a mantra of mine.
Starting point is 01:01:43 My earnings are a by-product of how well I serve my audience. So it's all just serving first. That's a mantra of mine. You know, my earnings are a byproduct of how well I serve my audience. So it's all about serving first and, you know, doing that without even asking for anything in return. Because this world has this amazing way, the law of reciprocity, right? The universe just will in some way, shape or form pay you back one way or another. It might not be monetary, it might be through honest feedback, constructive feedback. It might be through recommendation. But when you step forward to serve others, the world has a way of serving you back.
Starting point is 01:02:07 I love it. Where can our listeners learn more about you and everything that you do? Thank you so much. So smartpassiveincome.com is the website. Everything from our All Access Pass to SPI Pro is in the podcast's link there. And I have a personal website to patflint.com
Starting point is 01:02:22 or you can find me at Pat Flynn on most social media platforms. Amazing, he is not hard to find, but I will stick all the link in the show notes. And I have a personal website to patflint.com

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