Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - YAPClassic: Ken Okazaki, How to Create High-Converting Videos with Just Your Phone
Episode Date: November 8, 2024Ken Okazaki first got the bug for producing videos when he was a teenager. Years later, he went into the event business where his job was to “get butts in seats.” Every day, he was surrounded by c...rew, equipment, sets, and gear. Ken decided to pivot, take the video marketing part of the business, and start his own video marketing company. In this episode, Ken will teach you the skills that optimize video content to gain more views, leads, and sales. He will also break down his 7-Figure Video Funnel Framework. In this episode, Hala and Ken will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:39) Leaving Home at 17 (03:09) Ken’s Exciting Start in Video (07:36) Are You a Video Dabbler, Part-timer, Pro, or Rockstar? (09:51) Tips for Looking Your Best in Videos (13:33) The Eye Contact Hack for Better Engagement (15:13) Bringing Life to Your Videos with Movement (16:56) iPhone Lighting Hacks (17:51) What Is the Toilet Strategy? (22:49) Ken’s 7-Figure Video Marketing Funnel (26:50) Grabbing Attention with the ‘Hockey Puck’ Title Strategy (28:37) Crafting Magnetic Hooks (30:42) Using AI for Video Content (31:58) The HILDA System for Locking in Engagement (38:44) Delivering Value Like a Pro (43:12) Breaking Down the Video Marketing Funnel (53:37) Common Funnel Problems (55:40) Key Takeaways from Ken Ken Okazaki is the head of Oz Media Global and loves helping businesses plan, optimize, and launch their video campaigns. He offers done-for-you video agency services and done-with-you video coaching programs. He also specializes in helping promote and market personal brands. Through working with him, his clients have generated millions of dollars in extra profit from video marketing. As a side benefit of working with world-class clients who are household names, he’s been able to take what’s working for them and systematize the process to help businesses of all sizes. Connect with Ken: Ken’s Website: https://kenokazaki.com/ Ken’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/video-marketing-coaching/ Ken’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kenokazaki/ Ken’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kenokazakipage Sponsored By: Fundrise - Add the Fundrise Flagship Fund to your portfolio in minutes at https://fundrise.com/PROFITING Found - Try Found for FREE at https://found.com/profiting Mint Mobile - To get a new 3-month premium wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month, go to https://mintmobile.com/profiting Working Genius - Get 20% off the $25 Working Genius assessment at https://www.workinggenius.com/ with code PROFITING at checkout Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at https://youngandprofiting.co/shopify Indeed - Get a $75 job credit at https://indeed.com/profiting Teachable - Claim your free month of their Pro paid plan at https://teachable.com/ with code PROFITING Airbnb - Your home might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at airbnb.com/host Resources Mentioned: Ken’s Book: The 7-Figure Video Funnel: https://www.amazon.com/Figure-Video-Funnel-ultimate-marketing/dp/B09KN7ZQM5 Ken’s Video as a Service Agency: https://20xagency.com/ Go to youngandprofiting.co/goboxstudio and use coupon code YAP for a 10% off discount! LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Top Tools and Products of the Month: https://youngandprofiting.com/deals/ More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media's Services - yapmedia.io/
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Oh man, young and profitors, if you're trying to figure out
how to market yourself through
online video, you're going to want to tune into this Yap Classic.
Today we're taking it back to episode 230 from June 2023 and it's an interview that
I did with marketing megastar Ken Okazaki.
It's an absolute masterclass in how to post high performing video content.
Ken is kind of the guy behind all the guys.
Like he is the mastermind behind so many popular influencers
that you know and love.
Ken has been producing videos since he was a teenager.
And now he's the head of Oz Media Global,
where he helps his clients generate millions of dollars
from video marketing.
In this episode, Ken shares how to optimize video content
to gain more views, leads, and sales.
He breaks down his seven-figure video funnel framework
and also his famous toilet strategy.
And I shit you not,
you're gonna wanna stay tuned for that one.
So let's stop procrastinating
when it comes to online videos.
Take that plunge right now
and start your education with the one and only Ken Akazaki.
So Ken, thank you so much for being here. I definitely want to jump right into your
story. Through my research, I discovered that when you were 17, you left your home in Japan
and traveled to several different countries. So tell us about that journey and how you
first got interested into video marketing and
what led you to your career today. Wow, you did do your research. So 17 years old, I, this actually
started when I was eight years old. And I'm going to compress this as much as I possibly can to honor
everybody's time. But there was a time I was sitting in the back of the classroom and I realized the
teacher was teaching the same thing that was being taught a week ago. And went to my dad and said, dad, why do they keep teaching the same
stuff?
And he says, well, maybe someone in the class didn't get it.
And at that moment I realized that they're teaching everything to the pace of the slowest
person and I started feeling claustrophobic.
I started feeling stressed about it and I said, how much more of this is there?
And he explained, you're in elementary school, you know, then there's junior high.
And I was like, then I'm done, right?
And he goes, no, then there's high school. And I said, and then I'm done, right? And he goes, well, then there's high school.
I said, and then I'm done, right?
And he goes, well, you know, then there's college.
And at that point I was like, there's got to be another way.
So long story short, he got me enrolled in American curriculum in Japan.
I'm Japanese.
I live in Japan.
I've never lived in the States, even though I sound kind of American.
It's because I got enrolled in an American school.
So this allowed me, cause it was a correspondence course, to go at my own pace. So by 17, I'd finished
everything and I told my parents I wanted to leave home. And I literally did that thing
where you take a globe and you spin it, you close your eyes and you pop your finger down, it ended
up in India. I told my parents, I'm leaving home, I'm going to India. And I did that. And it was 11 years of, you know,
after leaving home, going to India, that I traveled to multiple countries,
got married, had kids 11 years before I came back home to Japan.
Wow. So that's how we got started. The backstory.
That's amazing. And then what first got you intrigued with video marketing?
How did you first start dabbling in video marketing?
Yeah, really good.
After India, I was trying to figure out, Hey, what's next?
And I had a friend who was commissioned to create a documentary series in Uganda.
And he asked me, Hey, I need some help.
You know how to like operate a camera and stuff, right?
And I was like, sure.
And I thought Uganda sounds like the next great stop for me.
So I went and borrowed a camera and just started playing with it,
figuring out the settings.
And this is 1999 actually, so that shows you how old I am.
So I just figured it out because I wanted to get on this guy's team
and make documentaries in Uganda.
So from there, I just always had a camera in my hand.
It was just second nature to me.
We got to flight Air Force One with the president.
We got to go Silver Force one with the president.
We got to go silverback gorillas.
I went into war zones with the Congo at the time when there was a civil war going on.
So that was a lot of excitement and adrenaline kind of stuff.
I was looking for at that time.
That's how it all started.
I love that.
And so also from our research, we found out that you used to put on really big
events with your dad for people like Tony Robbins,
and you actually completed Tony Robbins Platinum Partnership.
Tony, hopefully, is coming on the show soon.
He asked to come on my show, but we still haven't booked it yet.
Excellent.
And I'd love to understand, did you learn anything from Tony Robbins?
When, or like, did he inspire you in any way?
Let me just get this straight.
So Tony Robbins is asking you to come on the show, yet here I am before him.
So that's a pretty big deal, right?
Tony Robbins asked to come on my show.
Amazing.
And then we've been trying to book it
and it hasn't happened, but I'm like,
hey, he wants to come on.
He's got a busy schedule.
Yeah.
But I've seen the caliber of guests that come on your show,
so I'm not at all surprised if in just a few short months, you'll have a
U S president on here.
Oh, thanks, Ken.
That's where I think this is going.
But about the events, I used to do large scale events in Japan.
Tony Robbins is one of the speakers we hired at one point.
I did work with other partners, but people like Jordan Belfort, Les Brown, Nick
Vujicic, Robert Kiyosaki, These are the kind of people that if you hire them and you get them to be the
main draw of your event, you can put two to 8,000 people in a stadium.
And that's what we do every other month.
And that was the business we did.
And we did it primarily with video marketing.
So that's why I got really confident.
What I do is I had the experience of putting butts in seats by telling a compelling story with video on social media.
I love that. So let's get into the meat and potatoes of this interview.
We have the video marketing guy guys on this podcast.
We all know how important video is, but to really give us some foundational knowledge in terms of why video helps us convert more sales.
Why is video the best marketing tactic to actually convert leads?
Yeah, I'll answer that a little slightly differently.
I don't know if it is the best for everybody in every situation.
I've seen situations where people are running ad campaigns and they split test
a video against an image, they split it against just text.
And I've seen it not perform the best.
So I'm not the guy who's gonna be
shouting off the rooftop saying,
everybody needs to do video all the time.
I think video is a great tool among a whole arsenal.
You need paid ads, right?
Sometimes it's text, sometimes there's a book
people will be more attracted to than a video.
So I think video is great to have in your arsenal,
but don't make it the sole focus and shut your eyes off to all the other great things that are out there.
Blogging is still, by the way, extremely effective for getting SEO and ranking on Google.
So now that I've made that disclaimer, I think the great thing about video, there's this thing about being human.
I think AI is getting pretty close to catching up, but when you can look someone in the eye
and you see the whites of their eye
and you feel the passion they have in their voice,
that is something that a trained copywriter
may be able to attain after a lot of experience,
but anybody who's passionate about what they do,
person on the other side can feel it.
And that's why there's this shortened gap of time
from when someone starts making video to when they could start effectively communicating not just
the words that they're saying, but what they're feeling to the viewer.
And that's the magical thing about video.
I love that. And I'm happy that you made that distinguishing factor because it's
true. Everybody can like, there's different things that work for everyone in
different scenarios. And so you've got to make sure that you use the right tool
in your toolbox.
So speaking of having to sort of how people on a spectrum
when it comes to their video skills,
you talk about this in your book,
you say that they're either a dabbler, a part-timer,
a pro or a rock star.
So talk to us about from all the way to a dabbler,
to a rock star, what are the elements of each person?
Yeah, well, the dabbler is the one who's gonna
see somebody else, maybe a friend or an associate
on social media and they're gonna pick up their phone
and say, I can do that.
And they shoot a few videos, they get exhausted
and what happens is they put in the effort,
but they don't do it consistently enough
that it becomes a habit and they start getting traction.
So they've got no money as a result of it.
Ninety nine point nine nine percent of the time, it's not going to go anywhere.
Then at the next level, you got people who actually do this consistently, but they're not at the point where they can get people to the point of a sale.
Like maybe you don't have a product, you don't have a business set up
and you're going to reach some success and we'll call that bonus money.
Every now and then somebody might pop up and they'll they'll Google you
and find what you've got to offer
and they'll buy it, but it's not consistent.
Then anything above that, what's happening is consistency,
systems and processes so that it's no longer
when you feel like it.
You're treating it like an occupation, a career, a job.
If you don't show up, things don't happen.
And that's when success builds on success.
And that's when people start realizing,
hey, this person is a pillar in this vertical,
in this niche, in this industry.
And the more they hear you,
the more they want to hear about you.
I'm not going to go into too much detail here
for the sake of time, but the rock stars are the people
who in a nutshell, you're no longer pushing your content.
It's your audience is pulling the content from you.
Like the demand for it is greater than your effort to push it out there.
You're getting more people to share it.
You're getting people requesting to be on your show.
You're getting so much engagement that you'll never run out of ideas
because you could just look at the comments and use that for your content ideas.
And that's that feeling of getting pulled.
And once you reach that, there's that feeling of getting pulled.
And once you reach that,
there's a lot of people who just realize that there is this,
I guess it's like the flywheel type of feeling.
And that's flow.
And that's where I want all my clients to get.
I love that.
I hope that we all get to that place with our videos.
So let's talk about how we can look pro
without necessarily having pro equipment.
I know that you're a big advocate of using our iPhone
and that we shouldn't really make an excuse
when it comes to equipment.
So can you talk to us about that?
Yeah, it was like I chased Jarvis.
He's the one who said that phrase,
the best camera is the one you've got with you, right?
And we've all got phones.
Real quick, one of the things women always ask me is,
how can I look thinner?
And the simplest
way is to just raise your phone if it's like here, just at a slightly higher level than your eyes.
What's going to happen is it's going to taper your whole figure down to more like a V where
your eyes are going to pop a little bit bigger, your forehead is going to look, well hopefully
not too big. But what happens is you get that really nice pointy jawline and everything as it goes further
down looks a little bit slimmer.
And it's just this, you know, working the angles, right?
Yeah.
Ideally, most people are going to want to be exactly at eye level.
And there's this experiment I did where I sat people across from a diner table with
me and had conversations with them.
And then I met people in person.
And the thing is that people consistently told me
they felt more connected to me when they're sitting across.
And I realized what's happening is
the length of your legs are canceled out
and you're much more likely to be seeing
exactly eye to eye with someone.
Because when you're standing, the height difference
really makes you feel either short or tall,
inferior, superior, child, parent.
There's these relationships that our psychological brains
have already embedded in there.
But when you get the camera exactly at your eye level,
then there's that phrase, seeing eye to eye.
And people no longer feel threatened by you
or they don't feel superior to you.
They feel like they could have
a one-on-one conversation with you.
And right now I'm looking at your camera setup.
You're exactly eye to eye.
My camera is slightly higher,
simply because
the way my room is set up, I can't get it lower.
But ideally, if you got a phone,
then you don't know where to start.
Get it right at eye level.
A lot of people have it low.
That's what I call the nose hairs zone
where people are literally seeing your nose hairs.
Not the most attractive angle.
So I think one really simple thing is just figure out your angles.
Do you want to look a little bit more petite, slim?
Do you want to look eye to eye like you're having a conversation?
Or do you want to be a little bit more dominant looking, a bit of a bigger like father figure?
Then you bring it a little bit lower, not too low, you get stuck in the nose hair zone.
Yeah, this is really great.
And I don't remember who told me this, but to your point, when you're looking up in your video,
you actually look like you're less authoritative.
If it's slightly lower, you look more authoritative, but like you said, you
don't want to have people look in your nose.
And here's one small trick.
I've had so many female clients and they're deathly afraid of showing a tiny
bit of a double chin, which I do sympathize with them.
And there's this, I call it the chicken move.
And this is something that I learned because I watched it behind the scenes
of Tom Cruise at one of his debuts and from the front, they're about to take
the group photo, right? And he's standing there.
What he does is he cranes his chin out as far as he can toward the camera.
And I realized that when he was sitting natural, he had a tiny bit of a double
chin. And I only saw this because there was a side angle.
Someone shot a view from this, like three, two, one.
And it goes like this.
But then here's the thing from front, that actually you can't really tell, right?
And if you're looking right at the camera and you're definitely afraid of the double chin,
you just kind of stick your head forward like a chicken.
The turtle move.
Yeah, or a turtle.
And then I started seeing it everywhere in Hollywood photo shoots.
If you look from the side angle, all the women are doing that right before the
photo or for like a close up shot. I thought that is so brilliant.
Nobody even knows that happens because they're not looking for it.
So it's just a hack,
especially because I know women are very conscious about how they look and they
should be. It's just a little trick that might help you.
Yeah, I love that. And I know that you have this phrase love
the lens. Yes. What does that mean to you?
Right now I'm looking right at the camera. I'm looking right
at you and hopefully the viewer can can see that I'm looking
right at the camera. If I were to look just a little bit off,
then it feels different. Right now I'm looking at the monitor
where you are. And I've tested conversions on this. And when
you're looking right at the camera, and even if it's the
difference of looking right at the camera here or at your own face,
the conversions on the video will change.
I don't know if you've heard of someone named Alex Hormozi, but I audited
his stuff on Instagram and on TikTok.
And we look for the things that the algorithms can't find because we
manage a lot of people's social media and we want to make sure
we're giving good advice.
I don't make predictions. I look at data and I look at how
can we use that to help them move forward, right? And we look for patterns in the top performing
videos and the bottom performing videos. And we look for the commonalities. And one of the
commonalities that we found is when he's looking off camera, those are like 80% of the videos that
were in the bottom 10% here, he's looking off camera.
And 80% of the videos in the top 10%, he's looking straight into the camera.
And when I saw that, I was like, where else can we see this pattern?
And most people, it's the same thing.
So loving the lens is disciplining yourself to look at the little black dot.
I call it black circle confidence.
That black circle is your audience.
It's not looking at your own face is vanity, right?
So if you can get to that level, then, then without effort, you're going to be
getting more engagement.
People will feel like they're more connected to you on video.
Yeah.
And it makes sense because eye contact works in real life.
Of course, it's going to work online.
The same things with human behavior transfer online or offline.
So make sense.
How about having movement in your video?
What is the importance of that?
Yeah, movement is, I took this from an evolutionary
perspective where as hunter gatherers,
when we were looking for the prey, right?
Anything that moves is where our attention will go.
It could be danger or it could be food.
And our brains are tuned to snap to where the movement is.
And there are simple ways you snap to where the movement is.
And there are simple ways you can do this in your videos.
When I start my videos, a lot of times I start with, hey guys, how's it going?
I put my hand real close to the camera.
Every 15 seconds or so, if you're holding your phone, I just pivot about 90 degrees,
changes the whole background.
But I'm still in the frame.
A lot of videos that are really successful are the ones where there's a monologue of
some inspirational quote. But then you just see someone doing things, something like laying
bricks or cutting lawns, but that movement is what keeps you engaged.
So whatever you do, keep resetting people's attention with movement.
For example, in this podcast, I'm going to guess that there's going to be cuts.
This is going to show your face, my face.
That's movement, right?
But if you're not going to be editing, you could do things like moving closer to the camera,
further from the camera, using hand gestures.
There's all kinds of ways you can do that.
Yeah, and I see lots of influencers
like walking with their phone outside and things like that.
So this really helps me
because I'm thinking about a lot of my videos,
I'm sitting down on a couch,
I should probably be moving around.
Well, there is, what you do well,
I've been researching you too,
is you can either do the movement with your hands
and with the camera and get that uploaded right away,
or you can send it to an editor
and they do the movement with titles,
with emojis, with little animations on screen,
all of that is movement.
So if you're not at the level where you can edit like that,
then use practical movement.
But if you have an editor, then they can do that for you. Okay, that makes sense.
And then in terms of lighting, using your iPhone,
what do we need to know?
Well, there's two things you gotta know.
Number one, avoid direct sunlight.
It's gonna make you like 10 years older.
If that's what you're going for, then go for it.
But most people are not.
But the most important thing is to just hold your camera up,
look at your face, and turn around 360 wherever you're at.
And then you'll very quickly see where there's more light
coming from in front than behind.
And that's really the most basic tip you can keep
that will be effective everywhere.
So you go into a hotel room,
you wanna make sure that you're facing the big window
and you're not having it as your background
because that's gonna make you either look like a silhouette
or make the background look like it's totally white. So face the light and if you got
that then I think that everything else falls into place pretty quickly. Let's hold that thought and
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So fun fact, and I've heard you talk about this
a few times, 80% of men and 69% of women
use their phone while on the toilet.
And you've taken this data and created something called the toilet strategy.
So what is the toilet strategy?
And what does this data tell us about how we should be conducting video marketing?
Yeah, I don't know about you, but I happen to use my phone in the toilet.
And when I realized that there's that huge percentage, cause that's, that's
kind of like literally your downtime, right?
So that's when you're like, you know, you're checking messages,
looking at social media and there's a couple of things going on here.
And right now it may seem obvious, but when I first presented this at a
conference, everybody was like, Oh my, you know, smack my head.
Like that's so obvious.
Why didn't I think of it?
But when your audience is in the toilet, you have to, well,
put it this way, tune your videos as if you're speaking to someone on the toilet. So there's a
couple things that we want. Number one, you want to make sure there's captions on every single word,
because when you're in a public bathroom, it's very rare that you're going to want the speakers
blaring while you're in there, right? So immediately someone's going to mute. If they can't hear you
or read you, then they're going to skip off, right? So that's rule number one. Rule number
two about the toilet strategy is the length. There are so many times on
where I've seen a video, I thought this is great. And then what we've done is eye tracking
tests. The first thing we look at is the title to see if we want to stop. The second one
is the person's eyes. The third place we look, believe it or not, is the play bar to see
how long it is. And that's through eye tracking data. And if the video is too long, like you probably want to spend five
minutes in the bathroom max.
If it's a 20 minute video, what happens is this is a great video, but I don't
have 20 minutes to say for later, which by the way, nobody ever goes to the safe
related video and actually watches them.
It's, it is a black hole where things go in and never come back out.
So you never want to get safer later.
There's the length.
You want to keep it two minutes max.
Nowadays it's under a minute.
It keeps getting shorter.
The third thing is really the big title on top.
Now that's kind of changed because nowadays with the way TikTok format
videos have really taken over, the algorithm chooses what shows up.
It's not what you subscribe to.
So it doesn't matter quite as much, but I think it's quite effective on some platforms
where the thumbnail is gonna be much more prominent
than the actual video itself.
So for example, YouTube.
Yeah, let's take it to LinkedIn for a second.
So you may not know this,
I'm one of the biggest influencers on LinkedIn.
I do know it, you are everywhere.
Oh, thank you.
And I have a LinkedIn masterclass. And one of the things that I discovered when I was preparing this masterclass is that a lot of people are watching videos with the sound off. And I realized that on LinkedIn, especially everyone has a job. Everyone is college graduate, serious professional. But the most engaging times on that platform is 10 a.m.
in everyone's time zone.
So they're watching videos at work.
And I was like, duh, everyone's watching videos at work.
That's why any video that's either super long or needs sound performs terrible on that platform.
It needs to look really different, pattern disruption, needs to be engaging with the
sound off and be short.
Otherwise, videos do not work on that platform unless they're linked in live and
people are treating them like an event.
That's right.
So I would love to understand your perspective on the importance of
engaging video with the sound off.
I think that people have been fighting for, like say fighting against it for so
long because radio came out before TV, right?
There are silent films also where, but they had to have an orchestra right in there.
So sound has always been such a big part of it, but sound is something that is most enjoyed
as a group setting.
Now everything is going to individual entertainment where every single person, I have six kids
by the way.
Oh wow.
When I grew up and there was movie night, We all sat together around the one tiny TV.
Like that was the whole family.
Now it's like, let's movie night.
Everybody's just like, I'm watching this series and I'm watching that series.
I'm on my phone, I'm on my iPad.
We're on the TV.
So it's becoming an individual experience.
And just like at work, you're not going to get a group of coworkers to sit
around and watch a program.
Everybody's like at the cubicle, in the bathroom, in the hall,
you know, on their getting a cup of coffee.
It's an individual experience.
And as an individual experience,
sound is becoming less and less prominent.
Now, I know a podcast experience is completely different
and we're not, that's a completely different category.
But when it comes to the decoupling
of the visual experience and the audio experience,
the main reason is because it's becoming
an individual experience where sound radiates
in all directions, whereas light can be directed
just toward your eyes.
Yeah, and so I think the moral of the story is that,
especially on a platform like LinkedIn,
I don't know if Instagram is necessarily the same,
you've gotta make sure that your videos are engaging
with and without the sound on.
It's gotta make sense with captions, whatever it is.
Very true.
You finish the edit, then watch it back without sound.
And if it's not fun, then fix it.
That's the quick hack around that.
If you're not enjoying it without sound, then fix it.
Totally, and that's such a big hack.
Okay, you already told me about the timing of videos.
I think it's a good time to transition
into your seven figure video marketing funnel.
So first of all, define video marketing funnel.
What does that even mean?
So a lot of people have looked at courses, right?
Like somebody teaches you here's how to make money and here's how to get clients.
And I've gone through a lot of them myself.
And almost all the time there's going to be some form of like, okay, you got excited to
click funnels or high level or, you know, whatever other platform there is.
And there are a lot of great ones out there.
And I've surveyed a whole bunch of people
who actually went through courses.
And one of their frustrations is that every course
or coaching program tells them they got to sign up
to this 300 to 500 or they're buying thousands of dollars
of SaaS products.
And I thought, what if I run an experiment on myself
where all we're doing is using free tools, social media,
the phone in your pocket and just a payment system, Stripe or PayPal or something.
Can I actually convert leads and sales with that?
And I did an experiment and that was the premise of the book.
I scaled something to over seven figures where all I did was shoot videos on social media,
engaged with my audience through the videos, directed
people to a payment page, and then actually started coaching them on zoom.
And this is something that a lot of people don't realize that.
Like if you don't get the messaging, right.
If you don't understand how to connect with the audience, forget these
complicated funnels and trip wires and automations and saps that comes later.
Because what you're doing is you're taking something that works in
interaction with your audience. something that works, that
turns to money and systematizing it.
But a lot of people go and create the system first and then try to
connect with their audience.
And then they realized, wait, we built this Domino tower in the wrong direction.
It's a sad story I've seen over and over.
So that's the concept is use what you have.
Don't get into the tech and the craziness unless this is your third or fourth
or fifth time around, then go for it
because you've done this.
If it's your first time around, use your phone,
use free social media, get clients.
And unless those three tick boxes are marked,
then don't go and buy fancy software.
Yeah, I love this approach.
I give the same advice.
I see a lot of people who are creating products
and they don't even know if people want these products
and they go down this whole rabbit hole
investing all this money,
and then they have no demand, right?
So that's a problem.
I just actually interviewed the president of Shopify
and we were talking about how things are changing now
where creators are sort of flipping the script
on how businesses are made.
They're building an audience first,
figuring out what they want,
and then selling to them
rather than building something and then finding the audience.
Right.
So I feel like this really fits nicely with, with what you're teaching.
And just to clarify, so you're not suggesting that these videos are paid ads against them.
You're just saying organically.
Organically.
Yes.
Now, when it comes to paid ads, here's, here's how I feel about it.
And this is what I do with my clients.
And by the way, I have turned away a lot of clients or potential clients who said,
Hey, I've got this stack of cash.
Could you build this thing for me?
And I say, well, what have you sold so far?
And they said, it's nothing.
It's brand new.
I said, what have you done in the past?
And they say nothing.
I've said, I think you're too early because I don't want to have a one year
relationship with a client and then not get them results because I don't have
anything to build on with them.
So, you know, they say, well, you're the expert.
I'm like, I'm the expert at blowing up what's working, not at inventing something from scratch for you.
Yeah, you need product market fit, sir.
Exactly.
But let's get back to the thing about ads.
Here's what we do.
You've got a lot of videos that have gotten hundreds of thousands of views, I feel that I've gotten millions.
And those videos have been tested organically and they've been proven to convert better
than anything else.
So what I tell my clients and what we do is we just push them out organically on social
media.
We come back a month later, see what the highest performers are, and then turn those into ads.
We don't invent an ad from scratch because we want the most return on our ad spend.
So you're going to get the most reach with the videos that do well organically.
So we go organic first, then convert them to ads. And it's that simple.
That makes so much sense. So put the money behind the things that get the high engagement because you know they work.
That have already been proven to work.
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
Okay, so let's get into how we create this video funnel.
First step is coming up with a hockey puck title.
So what are hockey puck titles
and why do we need to actually plan our content
around a title rather than do it the opposite way?
Really good question.
Hockey puck title, when I was a kid,
I was really into hockey, ice hockey.
And Wayne Gretzky said that famous quote,
I don't go to where the puck is,
I go to where it's gonna be. And when it comes to the title, it's no longer thinking about like,
I'm going to create some content and then figure out how to get people there. It says like, no,
I'm going to figure out how to get people's attention. And then I'll put a tail end on it.
And for me, the tail end is really the content. So hockey back title is about composing great
titles. It's about researching and figuring out what words are going to rank,
what kind of triggers your audience.
When I say trigger, I don't mean that in a negative way,
but what's going to get them engaged psychologically.
And once you have a list of titles, you can talk to that.
For example, Hala, if I asked you if there's a title that says
the two biggest mistakes that first-time podcasters make
that's costing them thousands.
I'll bet you could riff on that for five minutes or an hour straight if you
wanted to, because that's your expertise.
So we go into what's people's expertise and then we, we make the eye catching
titles that they can talk, speak to, or, or fill the space on.
Yeah.
And so this is relevant to YouTube.
Like you said, could also be relevant for like live streams linkedin live streams of titles now Instagram
Tik Tok you don't really have titles
So instead of a title you just use that as your opening statement
And if that doesn't get people's attention, then you're doing something wrong
So the title can be the opening statement, which other people would call the hook the actual visual title
It can be in a thumbnail, but just think of it as the first information that hits your viewer.
Yeah, and that example that you gave in that hook,
you did some things that I noticed, right?
I'm a marketer too.
So use the superlative, the best, the worst.
Use numbers, for some reason people love numbers and hooks
and you made it relevant to me.
It was about podcasters and you even give monetary value,
which also will pique people's interest.
The more numbers you can stuff in a hook, the better.
So let's move on to Hilda,
which is your framework for building a video.
What else do we need to know about hooks?
Let me tell you one real quick thing though about the title.
Yeah.
It's the shortcut.
The left brain, right brain theory,
everybody's got their opinions on that,
but I'll tell you what has effectively worked is you want to engage both sides.
You want big numbers.
And for some reason, even if it's, you know, zero with dot 20 zeros, that's a big number.
Psychologically, it's a little bit big, right?
And you want an emotional word.
And if you put an emotional, expressive word and a big number together,
then you got to wrap the context around that.
So I try to think of that first,
then you're hitting the left brain, right brain,
and whether the person is leaning one way or the other,
what mood they are in that time of the day,
hopefully it's gonna be the biggest drag net
to get the most attention to your content.
Give us an example of doing that strategy.
Emotional word might be something like, I quit, right?
That's an emotional, like a statement, right?
And then a big number would be something you give me a number and I'll make
up something to go with that 10 billion.
10 billion.
Okay.
So I could say my path from zero to $10 billion.
I quit.
I was just like, what the heck does that mean?
Now you're laughing.
You might, you might actually click that, right?
Yeah.
Now it's gotta be contextual to who you are as a person. What does that mean? Now you're laughing. You might actually click that, right? Yeah.
Now, it's got to be contextual to who you are as a person.
Don't make up stuff that has nothing to do with you.
And if it was for me, it's 10 billion.
I might pick up a camera and say, 10 billion pixels?
I quit.
I might make some content on where are we going to go as far as the resolution and does
it really matter at this point?
That could be something you talk about.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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So for hooks, lately I've been using ChatGBT.
For anything that I have to come up with some sort of title,
I'm like, say this in 10 different ways, right?
Have you been using ChatGVT for that kind of thing?
We have this one-on-one coaching with our clients
because a lot of agencies,
they actually provide all the tools.
They say, just send us the video
and we'll do everything else for you.
Send us the podcast, we'll do everything.
Or we'll give you all the gear.
The gap in the market is actually someone to show up
and live direct and coach people.
A lot of people, they don't create it because they don't have the time, their
schedule's too full, or they get set up and then their hour turns into 15 minutes
because of all the other stuff they have to take care of, but the accountability.
So our coaches actually now using some AI, using their own experience as
marketers will create all of the content plans.
And that, that's the hook, whether it's a question you ask them that they can
answer, whether it's finish the sentence, whether it's a framework.
I have a few frameworks, like what I just showed you, the number and the emotional
word, there's, there's a hundred others, but we'll get them all planned out.
And then we'll have a conversation for an hour and shoot anywhere from 10 to
30 videos within that hour.
And that's the short form content.
So the hooks nowadays using chat GPT does help us get there faster.
So we're no longer starting from zero.
We're starting from maybe 60 or 70 and then our coaches will finish the rest.
Yeah, I love that.
So let's talk about the acronym HILDA.
So this is how you break down your video steps.
We already covered hooks and I'm sure in your book, you probably have, like you
said, so many different formulas for hooks.
I run you through this as quickly as I can.
Okay.
Yeah.
So medium format content, this works really well. So medium format is anywhere from 10 to 12 minutes. Like you said, so many different formulas for hooks. I'll run you through this as quickly as I can. Okay. Yeah.
So medium format content, this works really well.
So medium format is anywhere from 10 to 12 minutes.
And that's my definition.
Start with a hook, introduce yourself, lead their anticipation into something
you're going to deliver, and then finally ask them to do something at the end.
Hook, intro, lead, deliver, ask.
Hook, we explained that a bit earlier, but you've got about, by the time I wrote
the book, I think you said it was about seven seconds now, especially in the
short form videos that are less than a minute, you got about three seconds.
And I can show you the numbers behind that and the data we have based that on.
Introduce yourself.
Now it's not as necessary as it used to be, but if you must, if you feel like
you must say, Hey, my name is Ken Okazaki and I'm blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Always put that after the fact that they're bought into what you're about to say.
But the truth is nowadays, if they want to know who you are, they'll just tap
your little profile, you know, face and they could see that if you're going to
say it, keep it short, first name, who you help, what you do five seconds or less.
And that's sounds cruel, but it's real.
The longer you talk about yourself.
I'm sure you've looked at those engagement graphs on YouTube, right?
That's where people drop off is when you you talk about yourself. I'm sure you've looked at those engagement graphs on YouTube, right?
That's where people drop off is when you're talking about yourself, but some people have got it, so I say, if you must make sure you hook them in, right.
Lead.
This is where you start telling a story.
This is where you start giving context.
Like I read this newspaper article the other day, and it got me thinking about this.
I was talking to my friend or the way I discovered this, the importance of
what I'm about to share, you're just setting up the big reveal and that's what you're going to deliver next.
So this is where you actually spend the most time because the moment you release the tension,
when you deliver something and release the dopamine, so D can also be for dopamine,
that's when people feel satisfied, satiated. And you got to build this tension, release it.
It's a classic Frank Capola strategy in video directing.
And then at the end, and this is a,
there was a marriage counselor who was asked by this woman,
just like every time I asked my husband anything,
he always says, no, I wanna buy a dress, no.
I wanna go on vacation, no.
I wanna buy this vacuum cleaner, no.
And he says, well, here's what you gotta do.
You gotta one day light some candles,
cook him an amazing meal,
put on your sexiest negligee, give him mind blowing sex.
And then afterwards ask him, she goes, what?
He goes, just try it.
Did it absolutely work?
I'm like, and then she goes back and says, why did that work?
He goes, he's got so much dopamine running through his brain.
It's so easy to get a yes.
So I thought, well, if we get that level of dopamine, and I'm not sure if we
could match what she did for her husband, if we get that level of dopamine, and I'm not sure if we can match what she did
for her husband, but we want to get some dopamine going
where they feel like they had an aha moment,
right then is when you want to flip it and say,
hey, would you please join my group or download this
or click a certain link?
And it's the timing that's so important.
This is so interesting.
So I want to ask some probing questions on each part.
So for the intro, based on what you said,
it sounds like if it's a cold audience,
you probably should, if it's paid cold,
probably should introduce yourself to show some sort of social proof, right?
And if it's warm or like on your own social media,
maybe don't do that because mostly it's going to be your followers seeing it
unless it goes viral and then they'll click on your profile if they wanna learn more.
Does that sound right?
It's really hard for me to cover every situation
because right now, for example,
I'm a guest on your podcast, there's YouTube videos,
there's super short form, but generally, yes,
I think that's a good guideline.
Okay, cool.
Something that I thought was interesting
is that you suggested don't use your last name
from my understanding.
Why just first name in the intros?
You want people to feel friendly toward you.
And like when I speak to you, I'll probably just say,
Halla, you know, and you might say, Ken,
and we're having this conversation.
We're not consistently using full names because we feel comfortable with each other.
And what we're doing is assuming rapport.
We're not assuming formality.
When you assume rapport, the other person is more likely to get on board
and assume rapport back with you.
And then later on, they might feel more open to sending you a DM and say, Hey, I checked
out your video.
Would love to learn more.
It's more likely to happen because they feel more rapport because that's how you started
the conversation with them.
Oh, that's so interesting.
I always say good branding is making people feel like you're an old friend.
So that makes a lot of sense to me.
I think we're on the same page.
Yeah.
OK, so let's talk about this step in terms
of leading their anticipation.
This is where a lot of people get stuck.
Why do people get stuck in this part?
And can you give us some real tangible examples
of how you can do this?
This part is more art than science,
because there are a million ways we can do it.
So let's give a live example.
Let's say the thing I want to teach someone is with the Go Box Studio, which
you have, there's this cool feature where you can draw right over the video screen.
And a lot of people first saw that when I actually invented that, that process,
couldn't get a patent too bad, but there's tons of people were asking me,
how do you do that?
So I made a quick video about it and then leading up to showing, you know,
the exact steps, one, two, and three.
I talked about all the frustrations of the processes.
I tried, I was like, you know, I really wanted to get this effect.
I was drawing on the screen.
So one was actually bought this piece of glass and I had it lit like a lightboard,
but it was big and clunky and I couldn't take it anywhere with me.
And it took a lot of time to build.
And then I tried this, I tell them about all the failures and people
are bought into this journey.
And then when I teach them how to do it, they're just like, oh my God, compared
to all the effort that you went through, thank you so much for this cool hack.
It gave more weight and gravitas and more value to what I actually taught them
because I gave them a bit of the journey to how we got there.
So that could be like a little bit of an origin story on something.
That's one way.
One of the favorite ways that I see work effectively is how, because most of my
clients are business coaches, is they tell a story of the before and after of a
transformation that a client had, and then explain the process for how they do it.
You might say something, you know, I worked with this man, he's 55 years old.
He's got three beautiful kids and a wife, but the wife was constantly stressed
because he was never home and the kids were not, he wasn't going to see the kids
grow up.
He was making good money, but his health was deteriorating.
He barely saw his wife and they, he never got to keep his promises for vacations.
Came to me saying, I got to get this fixed, but I don't want to sacrifice my income.
So what I did is, and he teaches that one, two, three steps.
Now people are bought into the steps because they might be that 50 year old person who
has their life out of balance and they have money but no time.
So those are some examples of how can you give context, tell a story, or paint a picture
that sets up what you're about to share.
This is so good, Ken. Like, you are so brilliant. I've had video marketers on the podcast before,
but by far I feel like you are giving the best advice. Thank you!
You really know your stuff. You really, really know your stuff. So let's talk about delivering
value. One thing that I just want to stress to my listeners is from my understanding, what you say in your hook is the value that you're promising, right?
So you need to make sure you deliver on your hook.
Otherwise, people are going to leave your video and be like, you didn't, I watched this for no reason.
Clickbait, right?
That's what clickbait is.
It is.
So talk to us about how we can frame up delivering our value and what we need to know about that.
Yeah, let me paint a quick picture for you. Say you're a drug dealer. So talk to us about how we can frame up delivering our value and what we need to know about that. Yeah.
Let me paint a quick picture for you.
Say you're a drug dealer and social media, by the way, I see the closest analogy.
It's like a farm and like you gotta plot a land on the farm and the person who owns the
farm is, you know, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube.
They own the farm and you are leasing a plot.
Now what's going on is when you create content, then the product
is your content and they use that and they sell it. The only thing on social media, the university
across all platforms that is a universal currency is time. People buy time, the advertisers buy it
from the farmer. And you're just the person who's volunteering to create, to work the farm for them,
which is amazing that they convinced us to do this.
So now that we've got this analogy where time is a monetizable product, it actually is money.
It's bought and sold every single day, millions of times, billions of dollars.
And when you understand this, then what you got to think is like, well, if I am buying
and selling time, and that's the currency of social media, when someone watches a video,
let's say they spend three minutes,
they pay you three units of time.
And what are you getting in return?
What you got to give them is a dopamine hit, because otherwise
they will not get addicted.
They won't come back.
They won't feel like they got their money's worth.
So if you say, hey, get over here, you know, spend three minutes with me
and I'm going to give you a dopamine hit.
They come, they pay their three minutes and you don't give it. Two things
are going to happen. Number one, they're going to feel like, Hey, you are a
scumbag. And number two, I'm never coming back. And I might even tell people to
avoid you. And that's what happens when the promise doesn't meet the delivery.
So what you want to do is give them a dopamine hit. And I think another way to
say this is aha moment. If you could get people
like right now, I see you're nodding. I love that. When I see people nodding, I'm like that's we're
on the same page. They're having an aha moment here. And that transaction was successful,
very likely they'll come back. So you just got to deliver what you say you can deliver. If you say,
I'm going to teach you the most mind blowing strategy to use chat GPT that will earn me $12,000 in the next 30 days.
And then you actually show screenshots and demonstrate it.
That is a good fit.
But if you say it and then give some general advice without showing anything that's actually
believable, not a high chance that people will continue coming back.
They'll be disappointed.
That's the kind of the match you're looking for there.
Yeah.
So the dopamine is actually what gets people coming back and addicted to our videos and gets you super fans. Okay, so the last step is
asking for the right thing. How do we know what that right thing is? A lot of
people spend a lot of time talking about how you know really ballooning up their
whatever their free thing is and a lot of times it's you know it's a PDF maybe
it's a book or something, right?
All I say is there's three columns.
There's who, what, how, and it's just like, Hey, if, if you're a business coach and
you're looking to do a what, which is use video more effectively in your business,
and you want the X thing, cheat sheet or free download or a 30 minute course on something.
And then I would usually, instead of saying click below for the link, because
nowadays people don't like clicking link, I'd say comment X below or share this
with a friend.
These are things that people are more likely to do.
And besides clicking a link, clicking links is, I don't know, I think everybody
has a little bit of a phobia that they're gonna get shot down a rabbit hole or something.
So I usually get them to comment something,
that way they're initiating their reach out to me.
I use that comment as a starting point
for what we call the smooth segue,
where we segue people from viewing to engaging.
And then you'll retarget them in the DMs
or something like that, sounds like. I have a conversation with them. You know, I just chat and say, Hey, thanks for the comment.
I think you're looking for X resource.
Is that right?
And they say, yes, I'll send it to them.
Then I'll probe a little bit into whether I can help them with my business.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
Got it.
Okay.
So moving along your framework, the next piece is the missing link.
So in your book you write, you've got to offer something that's priceless to your viewer,
free for you to give.
That is the missing link between where they are.
So tell us more about this concept.
Yeah.
Between where they are and where they want to be.
So a lot of times, like if I said to you, Hala, that you can absolutely earn enough money to have a 500 foot yacht.
Now you might get a picture of yourself cruising this yacht, you know, hanging out with Yuland Musk and everything.
And I'm exaggerating here for demonstration purposes.
But then a lot of people will start dreaming about that.
But it's really hard for people to actually identify what are the steps to get there.
And then I might say, but the thing you're missing is the right connections.
To the people who can make that happen.
The vehicle, which is going to be your business.
And I'm not sure what I'm making stuff up here.
I'm going a little bit farfetched here, but you paint the picture of what's
possible and then remind them of where they're at and then talk about the few steps that are in between.
Now that the thing they never knew they always needed can be, for example, a software tool.
It can be a free training, but it's something that you can give infinitely for free without
costing you money.
And that's what's important.
Otherwise it's very hard to manage a free marketing with physical products.
And there are people who have figured that out.
So an example I gave before was I give them new information.
And this is back when this is before TikTok really blew up.
I wrote this book.
So just for context, I used to say with the toilet strategy, I said, you know what, when 60 to 70% of people are sitting on the toilet when they watch video, number one, yes, number two.
And I found that if you have captions on the video, then it's going to make
the engagement go much higher.
And I give some stats around that.
And number three, and you want to put out these videos every single day in
order to build on that engagement.
Now there, everybody's thinking I need to create videos with titles on top
captions and they, I need to make them every day.
And then I say, I've made a free tutorial that will show you how to use some free
tools and shoot this on your phone and get it done in under three minutes for one minute video.
Would you like it right now?
So I gave them information about where they want to be and then they get excited, but they don't realize that there's a free tool that's going to help them do it.
Now, everybody wants to download this tool and I give it to them for free.
Now you could just go to TikTok and that'll do it for you pretty much.
But that's an example of something that worked really well.
I give them new information
and then revealed that there's a gap
and then offered it to them for free.
So if I was embarking on a video market strategy,
I think I would A,
start to think about all of my customer pain points
and then start to think of many free solutions
that I could create. I think you'd call them micro solutions, free solutions that I could create.
I think you'd call them micro solutions, right?
That I could create for free.
Or it might cost me a little money,
but I could be able to give it away for free.
And then you would want to then upsell them
to some higher ticket offer once they're hooked in
and they got some value from you.
Exactly, or you just nurture them in your emails
until at some point when they're ready, they'll come to you.
Just keep providing them with your data. In your example, what I would do is I would look for
like research data, like specific data. That's, that's a little bit obscure, but that you can
apply to what you do. You can say something like, did you know that videos that have this certain
type of animation in the beginning get higher conversions than others? Or did you know that
there's four words I use toward the end of all of my call to
actions that makes the ads convert better?
I'm not sure what that's going to be.
Did you know that when I wear the certain combination of colors, you know, or have
this kind of guest, or there's a question I ask whenever I get stuck in a podcast,
I will get the show back on track.
Then everybody's just like, what is that question?
And you say, just DM me question down below or comment question up below and I'll
send you the free three step PDF for all the questions I asked to keep my podcast
interviews on track. People will go for that. They will eat it up.
I love that and I love that you're saying don't put a link because I'm doing this
kind of stuff all the time and I find the same thing when you just give
somebody an action like comment it's it's less salesy I guess and people get
scared of the sales language.
Here's what's important is you give them a specific word to comment.
And if you say, you know, like, if it's a three-step process, you say, comment three below.
If it's a conversion process, say, comment conversion below.
Now it's meaningful and it's intentional.
And when you DM them, then there's no question about why they commented something.
Like you could jump right into that conversation.
Hey, great.
It looks like you're trying to raise conversions and you're looking for my tool.
Is that right?
Yes.
Great.
Here it is for free.
And then you could start probing a bit.
Okay.
So let's talk about smooth segues.
This is the last part of your funnel.
What do we need to know about this part of the process?
This is where you take people from passively viewing to actively engaging.
And we're segueing from someone doom-scrolling, randomly fighting your video, and just like
we described earlier, they're going to engage with you.
But the conversation has what I call three stoplights, right?
Three hills, right?
The first one is permission to share.
So first, they're going to have asked for something
and you're going to say, Hey, confirm that they actually want it. Some people just randomly comment
stuff and they're not really engaging. Right. And you don't go further until they say, yes, I want
it. Say, great. You give it to them. Now it's a bit of an uphill to get there. Like you're making a
bit of effort. Like, Hey, Hala, thanks so much for the comment on the video. Get them to respond.
Right. If they don't respond, then it's a dead conversation.
I saw you commented three.
I think you want my three stuff resources
to achieve blank, is that right?
Yes. So you take number one.
Number two is you want to share some examples of other people
who are in the same boat as a person
you're having a conversation with.
Hey, I worked with so-and-so and I had these kinds of results.
Would you like to see a case study on that?
Now they're starting to buy into the vision
of what's possible for them,
but you're doing it indirectly with someone else.
If they say yes, you send them some information.
And the third one is really getting permission
to actually send them a way to have
one-on-one conversation with,
if that is what your sales process is.
And that might be with your sales team,
it might be with somebody else who's prospecting, but you gotta have a conversation flow that
follows these three frameworks.
Cause if you don't get permission at these three steps, a lot of people skip ahead and
they, you know, you've seen these, these DM pitches and man, that just nothing clogs up
my, I call it constipation.
What you're doing is clogging up their system with big chunks of lumpy text.
And it's like, come on.
And it's copy pasted.
It's not at all authentic.
So you want to break it up into small bits, have conversations,
make sure that they're engaging back.
And then just remember what those three checkpoints are and you're good to go.
This is such great advice.
I'm actually really excited to dig deeper into your work
and see what I can leverage from my business.
So I know that we discussed different iPhone hacks
and that's great for people who are on a budget,
but in terms of people who have more budgets to spend
and really wanna level up their on the go video marketing,
I know you have GoBox Studio.
I just wanna share a story
in terms of how I found out about it.
I was at a podcast conference and I see this like really cool suitcase looking thing with
two lights and a fancy camera and one of my friends was actually manning the booth and
he helped build the studio.
And I walk up to him, his name is Junaid and I'm like, what is this?
This is the solution that I've been looking for as an influencer, because historically,
to record my podcast, if I was going to conferences
and things like this, it was like lugging around two mics,
lights, stands for my mics, a computer.
It was just too much work, and I would often avoid it,
which meant that I would have breaks in my schedule, and it would be really tough to travel as a podcaster and having a number one show.
I can't just like not put out an episode, right?
So I loved it.
And I was like, sign me up.
I want to be an ambassador, whatever I can do, because I knew that this was a pain point
that a lot of people, especially business influencers, were probably experiencing.
So I'd love to understand the genesis of this and more about this product.
I've been creating digital media for my clients for several years since 2016.
And somebody who is in a lot of the same circles as me, he reached out to me.
His name is Alex Hormozi and he said, can I hear you?
The guy who's good at video.
And I said, yeah, that's I've been, I've heard that once or twice.
And he says, could you create something for me where I can
take my stuff on the go?
I've got a great studio set up at home, but I'm about to go on vacation.
I need something to take with me.
At first I said, no, he's a very persuasive guy and that's probably why
he makes a hundred million dollars.
And he got me to build him a prototype and I sent it over.
He loved it. He's, and this is about 18 months ago when he first
started his YouTube channel. I think it was already going but not really like as regularly as it is
now. He loved it. He started using it. He was shooting his YouTube videos with it and then he
snapped a photo on Instagram and he's put it in his story and he got about 5,000 comments. Most of
them are saying where can I buy one of these? So he calls me up and he says, Ken, I think you should make a business out of this.
And at that point I had no intention of starting a hardware business, but he
planted that seed and then I started making more iterations on the sending it
to my clients, the kind of people who are sending us videos.
And a lot of times the videos without due respect were shit.
And we had to go and, you know, like get very creative about making them look good. But once we started sending these kits, they started sending us amazing
4k crisp video, much like the quality you're seeing with me right now. So we just kept
iterating our clients gave us suggestions, ideas, requests, and we just kept adding or
subtracting things to make it what it is. And in October 2022, I'd been working on this for almost a year.
And I had to decide, is this a hobby or is this business?
So I didn't want to guess for the rest of my life, if this was going to take off.
So I went and rented a, I sponsored a booth at a, at an event in San Diego,
targeted at agency owners.
And our booth was completely packed the whole time.
Everybody around us was complaining that they had no foot traffic.
We had a crowd constantly.
We had sold, I think 25 of these units and that's like a quarter million dollars.
And I was like, okay, I think it's a business.
So I went back and started restructuring things and thinking about how can I get
this to more people and help more people with this tool?
Yeah, it's an amazing tool and I'm very excited to have my own GoVox Studio so thank you. Okay so as we close out this
interview I thought it'd be really fun to do something quick fire so it turns
out your video marketing funnel could be used as a diagnostic tool and so I'm
gonna list out some common problems that people face and you tell me where the issue is in the funnel and what we can do about it.
Okay.
Oh boy.
You're putting me on the spot.
Let's see.
Let's go for it.
Oh, you're going to crush it.
Come on.
Views are low.
Well, that could be a whole number of things, but the first thing I would look at is what's
the opening statement, what's going to get people in.
I'd look at the thumbnail, the hooks, because a you just three seconds counts as a view on most platforms.
So if they can't, if you can't keep them for three seconds, a lot of
times it's a title, it's a thumbnail.
And that's the first thing I'd go into tweaking.
So I would look historically at what did the best among your previous stuff.
And then look at how can we use more of that and then expand on it.
Love it.
Retention is poor.
So that usually means that your hook sucks.
Like you didn't promise them something later on to give them a reason to stay.
Watch Mr. B.
So he always talks about what is going to happen as a result of watching his
roughly 10 minute episodes.
So that's pretty important is he set them up for a reward at the end.
Then they'll stick through.
Low engagements.
They don't comment and like.
Yeah.
No compelling reason to engage.
Maybe you didn't even tell them to.
So there's, there's two ways.
Outrageous content.
That's humor or something shocking.
People love sharing that.
I don't suggest doing that too much.
Otherwise you could go down a rabbit hole there, a dark rabbit hole.
But just remind people why they should comment.
Hey, comment, agree down below if you think that
this is something you agree with.
And if it's something important you share, then they will.
No converting customers.
That's your smooth segue.
You know, like you gotta take people from passive viewing
to active engagement.
And then that's the segue point
that would get people to convert.
Amazing.
Well, Ken, you dropped so many gems.
I think everybody's gonna have a page of notes
after this interview.
Thank you so much for your time.
We asked two questions to all of our guests
at the end of the show.
The first one is, what is one actionable thing
our young and profitors can do today
to become more profiting tomorrow?
Pick up your phone, shoot a video, upload it.
Don't even look at it because it's the compounding effect of doing it
daily that gets good.
I say it's not quality or quantity.
It's quantity that creates quality.
It's you put in the reps, you get good.
You get good at speaking by speaking.
You get good at running by running.
You get good at video by doing video.
So that's one.
There's two.
I think the second thing is stop looking at your competition
because everybody who's very successful, including you,
didn't start with where they're at now.
They started with something else and they evolved to that.
And if you try to skip steps, your trip, I've seen it happen too many times.
Find your own path, even though it may be a bit scary because there's no blueprint.
But that's the way every single person who's doing really well right now.
They've done it. They found their own blueprint.
They created their own blueprint, found their own path.
So stop looking at the leaders and mimicking them.
Get inspired by them, but don't mimic them.
That's great advice.
The last question is what is your secret to profiting in life?
And this can go beyond financial video, it could just be anything.
I think you got to design your career around your non-negotiables. I quit my seminar business because
it wasn't satisfying me so I decided on five non-negotiables and built my current agency
around that. Number one is I need to have cameras around me. Number two, I wanted to have very stable
income so recurring revenue business. Number three, I wanted to travel. Number four, I wanted to have very stable income. So recurring revenue business.
Number three, I wanted to travel.
Number four, I wanted to continue hanging out with the caliber of speakers I had on
my stage by making them my clients.
And number five is I wanted the freedom to leave my family as much as I wanted.
So when I decided those, it was no longer what can I do that's going to make me money.
It's like, what business can I invent that will satisfy these five non-negotiables?
So if you figure out your non-negotiables,
design your business around those.
And then I think that you end up a lot happier
in the long run.
That's beautiful.
Thank you so much, Ken.
Where can our listeners find more about you
and the things that you do?
I think the best place to find me on Facebook,
Ken Okazaki, but just look up at Ken Okazaki
on any platform you'll find me, or head on over toaki, but just look up at Ken Okazaki on any platform, you'll find me.
Or head on over to our website 20xagency.com.
That's where we do all the services for our clients.
And if somebody wants to buy GoBox Studio, where can they go?
So we do have a special deal, which is only that you can only get with Hala.
Go to goboxstudio.com slash yap.
And then you'll see the special deal we created just for the listeners of this podcast.
Amazing.
And I'll stick all those links in the show notes.
Thanks again.
Really appreciated having you on.
Amazing.
Thank you so much.
I enjoyed it. Are you planning your next great side hustle?
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