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cover of episode From 10K to 10 Million Views: Brendan Kane’s Blueprint for Social Media Dominance

From 10K to 10 Million Views: Brendan Kane’s Blueprint for Social Media Dominance

2024/10/7
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Russell Brunson: 探讨了社交媒体营销的策略,特别是如何从少量观看量提升到百万甚至千万观看量。采访中,Russell Brunson与Brendan Kane讨论了内容格式选择、性能驱动因素分析、行动号召的有效使用以及跨平台策略调整等关键问题。 Brendan Kane: 分享了他独特的社交媒体策略,包括选择合适的视频格式,分析视频表现的驱动因素,以及如何避免在创建Instagram、YouTube或其他平台内容时遇到的陷阱。他强调了选择合适的格式、掌握其细微之处以及避免追逐潮流的重要性。他还分享了如何利用付费推广来扩大最佳内容的影响力,以及如何将有机策略与行动号召相结合,以实现最佳效果。 Brendan Kane: 详细阐述了其社交媒体策略的各个方面,包括内容格式、性能驱动因素、行动号召、跨平台策略以及有机推广和付费推广的结合。他强调了深入分析视频表现的定性和定量因素,以及选择合适的格式并坚持下去的重要性。他还分享了其团队在研究和分析社交媒体内容方面的经验,以及如何通过对比分析高性能和低性能视频来识别关键因素。此外,他还解释了社交媒体算法的工作原理,以及如何利用算法来提升内容的传播效果。

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Brendan Kane's journey began in film school, where he realized the lack of business education. This led him to start online companies, eventually pioneering digital strategies for movie studios and celebrities. He later developed a model for analyzing content performance, leading to billions of views and substantial revenue.
  • Brendan Kane started in social media in 2005.
  • He built the first influencer technology platform on MySpace.
  • He ran the first influencer campaign on YouTube in 2006-2007.
  • He helped build a firm that managed $100 million/year in paid social media spend.

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What's up, everybody? Welcome back to the Marketing Secrets Podcast. Today, I've got a special guest who's in the office today that I'm excited to introduce you guys to. We just got done recording the podcast, and this is someone who I've been watching online for a long time. I read one of his books, I don't know, two or three years ago initially as I was trying to figure out the social media game. And we've been doing a lot of social media, and I think on our side, we have ups and downs and peaks and valleys, and we're still trying to master it.

Brandon Cain

But if you want to figure out a social media strategy that's consistent, we're not bouncing from trend to trend to trend. I did idea, but like picking a lane, focusing on it and growing and getting spot where you're instead of getting 10,000 views on a video, you're getting 500,000 to a million or more. That's the kind of stuff that he does with his clients, with a lot of people, you know, from the ClickFunnels world. And he's doing with us right now as well. And so I'm excited for this podcast. Help you guys grow yourself socially, get more views, get more traction, get more leads. And with that said, we'll jump right into the podcast with Brandon Cain.

In the last decade, I went from being a startup entrepreneur to selling over a billion dollars in my own products and services online. This show is going to show you how to start, grow, and scale a business online. My name is Russell Brunson, and welcome to the Marketing Secrets Podcast.

Alright everyone, I'm here today with Brandon Cain and I'm pumped because you're here in Boise, Idaho for your first time, right? Yeah. Coming here and he's going to be spending time with our team today, helping us on our social media and a whole bunch of things like that. And so I thought before we get started to spend an hour with him doing a podcast interview, getting some private consulting. For those who don't know Brandon, he's written a lot of books. We've got...

Hook Point was the first book I read, which I was first familiar with him. And then what's the order of these? So 1 million followers was the first. Hook Point was a second. Okay. And the guide going viral is the latest one. Okay. So I'm curious. I've written three books as well, and I have a favorite of my books. Do you have a favorite of your three books?

Probably the more recent one. Now, we are just finishing an update on Hookpoint, which will probably become the favorite. But the guide to going viral is like six years of kind of information into one book. That's very cool. So what year did you write the 1 million followers? So initially wrote it 2017. And then we've updated it like two or three times since then.

Very cool. All right. So for those who aren't familiar with you or your work yet, I'd love to step back in time because I know you and I are from different worlds. I'm very much the direct response. You know, a bunch of guys in our garage just trying to figure out how to make money. You're more of the professional side of things. But yet we're here in the middle meeting with similar concepts and interests and stuff like that. So I'm curious. Will you tell us a little more about your background and how you got into this side of the world?

Yeah. So I've been in social media since 2005. So I started way back when, when like friends are in my space or predominant players and how I got in is a little bit of an interesting story. So I initially wanted to be a film producer. So I went to film school to learn the business side of the entertainment industry. I show up and I quickly realized they teach you nothing about business in film school. So I figured the best way to learn about business is to start your own. And the most cost efficient way at the time was to start online companies. So

I started a few online companies while I was going to college just to learn and experiment of like what it takes to get something up and running and manage it. And then I moved to LA to pursue a career in 2005. And at that time, like anybody, you start at the bottom making coffee, copies, deliveries, and whatever.

And when anybody would ask me, like, especially the higher ups, because when you start in any industry, you want to connect with the heads of the company. In my case was the heads of the studios or directors or actors, things of that nature. When people ask, well, why was I in LA? I would say I wanted to be a film producer and everybody's eyes would glaze over. I was just one of a million people. Another one of those. Yeah, another one of those. Exactly. So I had to take a step back and kind of understand like, well, how can I actually forge those connections? How can I provide the most value?

And I would recognize it was working for a movie studio at the time.

is every time we finished a film, there'd be a sense of anxiety and stress that would come over the office because we were spending tens of millions of dollars on a single piece of content. And then we were investing tens of millions of dollars to market that single piece of content. But it wasn't like any other industry where you had years or decades to build a brand or awareness. You literally had months. Each movie's a new brand, right? Hundreds of millions of people around the world need to know about this new brand in a very short period of time. And...

So I noticed that at the time, this was 2005, we were using traditional medium like TV, print, radio, but nobody was really tapping into digital because it was relatively new. And, you know, people were starting to kind of look at it after the dot-com bust, but it wasn't, people weren't taking it seriously. So I just went to the head of the studio and I said, listen, we can tap into these online traffic sources for a fraction of the cost, in some cases, no cost at all.

So that's where I started building digital divisions for movie studios and kind of pioneering like the first influencer campaigns and influencer technologies to help get the word out. So you launched those on MySpace and Friendster? Because by the way, that's the same time I got started. I was trying to figure out how to monetize Friendster, I remember, in college and MySpace. So very few people I know have gone back that far as well, which is cool. Yeah, so I did the...

I built the first ever influencer technology platform on top of MySpace at the time and licensed it to MTV and Viacom, but there's no such thing as an influencer. So the ceiling was capped pretty low. And then I did the first influencer campaign on YouTube in 2006, 2007 for a movie called Crank with Jason Statham. How did that work? There were a lot of YouTube influencers at that point popping up?

There was no such thing as an influencer. I was just like, there's these young kids that are generating millions of views on videos. So I just made a list of the top 50 or 100, and I started direct messaging them. And I said, do you want to interview a movie star? So it just kind of started off that way. Yeah, and it was... I mean, we didn't pay anything for it, and people were very open and receptive because it's not like today where everybody's DMing everybody to get them to do something. So at the time, these young content creators were all about...

That type of access, that type of interaction. You're giving them what they need, which is content and access to unique people, and they just have the views. Yeah. That's really cool. That was 2006. Interesting. So after that, what happened next? What was the next part of the transition? So I started building technology platforms on top of social media, the influencer tech platform being one. Are you a developer or you worked with developers? No, it was more kind of product-based.

kind of understanding the concept and then I would hire developers to help create the code around it.

and created several different partnerships with Viacom and MTV at the time. And those partnerships opened up the doors to kind of work with big mainstream celebrities or musicians like Taylor Swift and people like that of trying to understand at a very early stage of like, how do you turn social audience into commerce and convert that into meaningful revenue and meaningful kind of fan participation? So I did that for a few years and then I got heavily involved in the paid media space and helped

build a firm from scratch that was optimizing the first wave of social media advertising. Like for example, like we were the biggest third party partner of YouTube's TrueView when it first launched.

So we grew that company to managing about 100 million a year in paid spend, but predominantly Fortune 500 and 100 companies. And through that experience, it's very different than direct response. And kind of that world, it's like, we're going to take traditional TV assets and traditional assets and put it through social media. And they're not really focused on direct response. They're more focused on big brand awareness and brand building. So I saw a lot of the

The missteps that they were taking in terms of the investments they were making behind content that you could clearly see wasn't going to kind of translate because if you take like a television or traditional creative asset and put it on social media, it's a completely different communication.

And when I would ask these companies, like, where's the data to support this creative decision? Because they were investing millions of dollars against a single piece of content. They didn't have a process or a model behind it. And that's where I left and started building the foundations of the models that we use today of really understanding how content performs and why content performs. It was just as important why content doesn't perform and understanding those patterns and structures that

to allow companies or brands really effectively go and produce content for these new mediums. Because people don't realize social media is like still brand new. And even at the time when we were doing this, it was only around for like eight or nine years. Yeah. Interesting. What I love about you too, I was, this morning I was on Instagram just preparing for this. And I was on your channel looking through and I watched probably, I don't know, 40 of your reels going through it. And I love it because...

you're very at least it seems from the outside maybe i'm wrong but you're very um like for me i'm very obsessed with like looking at the process like but for me my art is funnels right so look i buy everyone's product look every single funnel look at the sales messages upsells the downsells the sequencing the emails like i geek out about that at a level i don't know anybody else on the planet that does and by just watching your short form on instagram today i was just like man like you're doing the same thing on like every viral video like so many of those like there's this video versus this video they look almost identical and like this one got

3 million views and got 48 million views. Here's the reason why. And like the analytical, like the, how deep you look into the reason why things are working is really fascinating. I'm curious. Is that like, is that from your, your standpoint, that same, is that what you're geeking out on? Is that your favorite thing to look at those kinds of things? Or what's your, how do you, how do you learn this stuff? I guess. Yeah. So we've built the foundation of our entire company based off that. So it's exactly what you said in terms of like analyzing every funnel and breaking it down and every single nuance of it. Because like,

I think in your world, like you're looking at this at such a granular level, like you could see a specific headline or a word or a phrase or an order bump or an upsell making all the difference in terms of whether that funnel is successful or not successful. We're doing the exact same thing with social media. We're looking at a very granular level and you have to like the biggest mistakes that people are making with organic social are two things. One,

they are just looking at their own content. So let's just say you're stuck at 10,000 views a video. If you keep looking at your own content, how do you expect to break through to that next level? The second element is they're just focused on the quantitative layer, meaning they're just looking at their metrics like views, click-throughs, engagements, any type of engagement, shares, likes, comments. That tells you something works or doesn't work.

But in terms of organic social, you need to look at the qualitative element of why things work. In the same way that you would dissect a funnel, you're looking at the qualitative elements that drive that success or detract from that success. So that's the lens that we're looking through social media. So we've assembled a team that over the past six years, we've done 10,000 hours of research of breaking down social content. And the way that we're looking at it is what we call a format.

So in a sense, like the perfect analogy I could use is like there's different types of funnels. You know, there's like a book funnel, there's a VSL funnel, there's a webinar funnel, there's all these different types of funnels. And each funnel requires its own kind of nuance of how to execute on it.

So we look at social media from a format perspective. So for example, like if you've seen me coming from the film industry, if you've watched a movie that's been made over the past 50 years, every movie follows the three-act structure. That's the format that people use. And like you think about Steven Spielberg, one of the best storytellers of all time, he doesn't reinvent that three-act structure every time he makes a movie. He masters that over decades.

So in terms of like a format of a few examples, one's called man on the street that you've probably seen on TikTok or Instagram, where basically you interact with somebody on the street in some way and capture their reaction. So I have a friend friend that we've worked with named Alex Stemp that uses this as a photographer. So he approaches random strangers on the street, offers them a professional photo shoot, and

and shows the end result. So he's used that format over the course of years to amass an audience of 20 million followers. There's another one that uses it called School of Hard Knocks, which I'm sure you've probably seen where they interview successful people on the street.

So that's an example of a format. Another one is called Two Characters, One Lightbulb, where it's the same person that plays an expert and a novice, and they go back and forth and debunk a common myth or misconception about whether it's finance, nutrition, legal, any of those things. So

So the way that we look at social media is we look at it through that specific format and a specific platform, and then we go really deep in it. And the way that we go deep is a process that we call gold, silver, bronze. So we'll look at somebody using a specific format, for example, like School of Hard Knocks. On the surface level, it looks very simple, but there's a lot of depth to it. So what we would do is we would take a channel like that and pull...

10 to 20 of the top performers, which is gold. In that case, it's a few million views plus. Then we would take the average performers, which we call silver, 10 to 20 of those, and then 10 to 20 of the underperformers, which are bronze. So those are like less than 100,000. And what we're looking at is we're looking for something called performance drivers, which are contextual elements of how you express performance.

a specific format. So this can be things like pacing, tonality, what's happening in the first three seconds, captions, title cards. In the example of Man on the Street, the reaction of the person that you're interacting with. So we have a library of like 200 of these performance drivers. And what we're looking for is what's happening in those high performers,

that's not happening in those low performers. Again, not from a content perspective, but from a context perspective and really kind of measuring those elements. And through that process, you're learning a lot about what actually drives up your chances of using that format versus driving it down. Because most people will see a format like Man on the Street or any format out there and be like, oh, I see what they're doing. They're just interviewing a person on the street. I'm going to do that. And 99% of people fail.

because they just, they're not paying attention from the contextual element. Say the funnel, like I have a book funnel too, but it's not working. Like, I don't know why it looks similar. Why not? Well, I mean, I can attest to it as like, I ran book funnels on ClickFunnels for three years and it took us a long time to figure that out. On the surface level, it looks super easy. Oh, you just say you give away your book for free and charge shipping and handling. But there's so much nuance in,

in kind of all those different elements. And we're looking at social media in the same way. Interesting. So there's the, what'd you call it? You don't, you call it not frameworks. What'd you call the formats? Formats. Yeah. Do you have, is there a known number of formats? There's infant number types of formats. So you guys have, these are the 20 that work the best. So we've done analysis on over like 220 and we have a team that researches like three to five new ones every week.

But there's like different levels, like man on the street, we've done 10 different research projects on that. So typically the way that we work with clients is there's kind of like beginner formats and advanced formats. So,

like there's 20 or 30 kind of beginner ones. And as a beginner, it's not about like the content. It's more like if you're just getting into social media and you're trying to master the nuances of, of communication, you may want to start there before going on. Um, but it's also that there are specific formats to specific platforms. It's not like one platform is going to

across every single platform. They're typically dialed in for each one. In one of your books, you talk about the different formats. Where's the best spot for them to learn? Here's the ones you can look at. The guide to going viral. So we break down our entire model that we spent the past six years building and invested several million dollars for that. And I'll actually, we're giving away that book for free. It's not even shipping and handling. If they go to hookpoint.com forward slash Russell, they can download the PDF version

or Kindle version of it. But I break, so we have a model called the viral content model that includes that gold, silver, bronze. And we break down the entire content

and process in that book. That's cool. So you have the formats and then inside the formats, did you say there's 200 things you're looking for? Is that what the number was? Yeah, typically what we do when we break down a format, we distill it down to like three or five, but we kind of, because you don't want to be analyzing content at like a level of 200. It just becomes too messy. But we kind of look at, again, those high performers versus low performers. The core things. Those core elements of it. Yeah. So when you work with somebody, is it better for...

somebody to like pick a format and you just double down and all your ones are madness street or all your ones, whatever, or is it, do you change things around? What's typically the best? So typically we say stick with one format, obviously pick the format that you think best represents the message you want to put out, but also format that you enjoy is like, that's the reason when we've do so much analysis is I don't want to sit here and say, Oh, there's only three to five formats. You have to choose one, whether you like it or not.

But we typically say stick with one until you've mastered it and really understand that format. And then once you understand that, then you can make the choice, do I want to add another format into it? Because just that process of mastering one sets you up for success to master the next one. But if you try and do like two or three formats at the same time, then you're losing that kind of learning opportunity. And it's one of the reasons that I really...

recommend people stay away from trends because trends obviously are very fleeting and you're kind of trying to learn each trend as you go versus with a format you're mastering the nuances of becoming a storyteller on a platform and those learnings can be applied to either the next format or to the next platform that you go after very cool

What's up, everybody? This is Russell Brunson. I've got something really cool for you today from my friend Taylor Wells. Taylor spoke at our last Funnel Hacking Live because I wanted him to share a really cool concept about what he calls the revolving pricing method. And today he decided to sponsor the podcast to give you guys more access to this super cool strategy that you are going to love. It's something we've been implementing into our high-end coaching program as well, and it is amazing. But to kind of give you some context about

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Um, so for your specific, and I know we're talking across a lot of platforms, Instagram, YouTube, and things like that. What are the formats you use personally for yourself on each of the, are they different or are they similar across all of them?

Yeah, so we're predominantly focused on Instagram right now, and it's more kind of explainer, short form explainer breakdown videos of what you've seen, the side-by-side comparison of videos, which is kind of like a very surface level introduction to our model. But now we're going to be getting into YouTube on kind of more in-depth explainer

and videos using the explainer format for that. Is it similar though? You're still going to be doing like showing the A and B split test and going deeper on it? Yeah, more context wrapped around it. It will be in it, but it'll be like five minutes of like a 20 to 30 minute video breakdown. Yeah, very cool. Okay, so I'm going to, since you're here in Boise and you're going to be working with my team later, I'm going to use this time, hopefully selfishly for like a mini consult. So on my side,

So what we're really good at, we're really good at funnels and paid ads. We're really good at building email lists and promoting through there. Social is where we, we have like peaks and valleys where we're like, do something and it's working and then it doesn't work and back and forth. Um, I think we've tried a lot of different formats, some with some success, but not consistency, um,

You know, same thing like Instagram, there's a different strategy in YouTube versus TikTok. And I was just curious, like if you were working with me from the very beginning, what would be, what's the process? Like what's something if we're like, okay, Russell, you've got stuff happening, but we're starting over to make sure we're doing this correctly. What would, what does that look like if you walked in on a console day like that? So the first place to start is what is the format that we're going after? And you may have done the format in the past or you may not, it may be something completely new. But really sitting down, determining what is the format that,

that we can focus on mastering the nuances of because we see this a lot and I understand why it happens is like a format doesn't work so we're like oh this isn't working I move on to the next one but when you don't have kind of a foundational model to kind of

use the creative process to produce that that format that's when it can kind of feel like oh this isn't this just isn't working for me i'm going to move on to the next thing so or sometimes we create something that that does well use this a lot of views and no comments or views and comments but no one's clicking or like you know i mean it's like do we still do those things because there's there's brand equity potentially in there but then it's not driving the metric we're looking for of actual like this is how we make money in our business you know what i mean like those are the things i think we get stuck in and so for us we're like well we see

It could be a trend or it could be something where, oh, let's just try this type and it works.

for one of the metrics engagement, but not for whatever, you know, it's like, I think that's where we keep getting stuck on is just like not knowing the consistency of like, this is the message, just what we're pushing to. This is the goal. You know what I mean? So, so it's a, it's a great question. And you know, I experienced this a lot, especially with people that have done really well with paid ads. So approaching organic is completely different than paid. So organic is all about how to get people to know, like, and trust you. It's not about how do we sell or push a conversion. So,

what, what, what we work with in our clients, we're working with people that want to be the top 1% of social media. Like we're not the people you work with if you just want to hire a social media manager and like do okay and just kind of have content. Like we work with people to be that top 1%, the kind of the elite that are pushing millions, if not tens of millions or hundreds of millions of views through their channels. So the way that we look at organic is how do we build formats that,

that really drive that performance, take you from 50 or 100,000 views a video to a million views a video and look at the economies of scale of how you're building that trust, that credibility with that audience. And once we have that dialed in, then we can look at how do we integrate calls to actions.

Because if you start with call to actions in the beginning, you can't tell if your content is underperforming because of the call to action or it's underperforming because of something else. So the first goal is how do we just drive the massive economy of scale? So let's just say,

the person watching this, on average, they generate 10,000 views of video. And of those 10,000 people watching that, maybe 50% are its core target audience. It'll never be 100%. It's the same thing with paid ads. It'll never be 100%. But let's say we can take them from 10,000 views of video to 500,000 views of video. And it's, you know,

10% of the core target audience. So we went from, you know, a potential 5,000 to 50,000 people that can buy our products or service. And if you scale it even higher and higher, that's where the benefit organic comes in. And I'm not saying you can't layer in calls to action. You definitely can. Like you'll see it in our content. Like we do a call to action report for the free copy of the, of the book.

But we perfected that format before we layered in the call to action. So we know if a video underperforms, it's not that. But another element of the model that we do from an exercise standpoint is we

If you have used a format, like you said, and you have an extreme high performer, what you can start doing is using that high performer on one side of the screen. So you pull up the high performer on one side and a low performer on the other side, and you do a side-by-side comparison. And now you're doing an apples-to-apples comparison. You can see why that piece of content performed versus the underperformer and vice versa. If you have an underperforming video, you play it side-by-side with the high performer, and then you can start doing

you know, diving into the nuances of what the difference is in terms of how you executed that video. But if you're kind of going from trend to trend to trend or from format to format, that side-by-side comparison, it's like comparing apples to oranges. It just doesn't work. The same thing, I'm sure it's in funnels, is like you can't compare like a book funnel with like a VSL funnel. They're completely two different things. And that's where having that solid foundation of choosing a format and optimizing against that format

really leads to not just incremental success but breakthrough and consistent success because again if anything ever underperforms you just pull it up on on one side of the screen versus a high performer and play them side by side okay so for me let's say let's talk about instagram for a minute so if you were for what you know about me and my brand and what we do what would you recommend like what format do you think would be the best for me to be consistent on instagram

Well, I think there's probably not men on the streets. That one makes me super anxious. No, you don't definitely need to do that. Interpreted Russell's like, I don't want to talk to people on the streets. I think that there's a few. I think that the fact that you break down funnels could be extended for a wider audience where you could not just break down funnels, but look at kind of some of the most successful websites or launches of brands or new brands.

commercials, you know, even like break down Taylor Swift's e-commerce store, like how is her kind of language and things of that nature I think could be really interesting. I think also the two characters, one light bulb of breaking down misconceptions about business, about marketing could be an interesting one. I think that for you is how do we take, you know, one of the,

the performance drivers that we look at is called the generalist principle, is how do we take your core expertise and make it interesting to the widest possible audience while still not losing the subtext of the core audience that you're speaking at? So we really want to kind of look at it from that perspective. But, you know, as we're breaking down viral content, I think there's elements of

that you can break down of what it means to make money online and kind of the specific elements of that. Yeah, when I was watching yours today, I kept thinking about similar. I was just like, man, I could do something similar

I mean, it wouldn't be like yours is very much AB, this versus this, but ours... It potentially could. Do you remember that website back in the day that... And I don't know if it's still around, but the AB test website? Oh, witchtest1.com. Yeah. It's gone now, yeah. Yeah. I tried to buy it from them back in the day because I tried to buy ads on their site for a split testing book we had and then they wouldn't...

Then I tried to buy the company and then they shut down. Yeah, I mean, people are enamored. It was actually really cool. People had to guess, like, did this one or this one? And that was kind of the test. I mean, people are enamored by comparisons and breakdowns of things. It's interesting. We have thousands. I mean, we're running split tests in every funnel every single day. So we have thousands of, like, just our own data. But I think kind of broadening it out to...

Maybe not using the word funnel, but using like landing or like website or something like more general language to bring people into the ecosystem and introduce them to the concept of funnel. Yeah. Interesting. So if we decide that was the direction, would you say 100% then of posts of reels on Instagram or all folks in that? Would you still rotate through other things? Like do you bring family and do you bring extracurricular videos in to try to build rapport or do you focus on...

I feel like with you, you guys just focus on the one format style. I mean, if it was me, I would say focus on one thing. I'm not going to tell you never to post other stuff if you don't want. I just don't want to lose the core focus of...

we're trying to perfect this format. If you want to post family stuff or other things, you can. But I think that there's just a real learning curve in terms of focusing on one format, mastering it going on. And I'm sure you probably give that advice with funnels is you don't, if you're working on your first funnel or, you know, trying to really scale your business, focus on one funnel first before you introduce other funnels into your business. Cool. Okay. Yeah.

Um, anything else on like the Instagram side that you would do or say that we should be aware of outside of the focusing on the one content type? Um, I mean, we do it. I mean, Instagram, I think is having a major resurgence in terms of lead gen. You know, you see a lot of people doing this. We do it of like comment to, you know, get some type of free opt-in or opt into something you can generate. I mean, we're, our business is generating like three or 4,000 leads a month.

through that. So that is a massive, like, if you're thinking about like, what's the difference between choosing Tik TOK or Instagram reels, like there's a massive upside to Instagram right now, but I just kind of stress that like, that's just a tool that can only be integrated once you've mastered the art of communicating, because just because you use it doesn't mean you're going to generate leads for your business. You need to wrap your organic strategy around that and master those communication elements, uh, towards that. But yeah,

Again, like any platform, Instagram included, it's really choosing that format and layering in kind of the qualitative elements of really understanding what drives that. And again, nine times out of 10, it's not the content of what you're talking about that's driving the performance, it's the context of how you wrap it. And I'll kind of break down another mistake that people make with short form video, Instagram included, is those first three seconds are critically important in terms of getting somebody to stop the scroll because there's two core metrics that

dry virality. It's stopping the scroll and kind of the retention of how long you're holding that audience for. And most people are messing up those first three seconds because they have too much going on. They have like a caption or they have a title card captions and somebody speaking at the same time. So there's three different things that somebody has to focus on in those first three seconds.

And once the subconscious feels like it's getting left behind, it's just going to move on to the next video. So be very clear on what your visual hierarchy is in those first three seconds. And it does not have to be you speaking. It could be focusing on a caption or a caption at the bottom or a, um, a title card at the top. So that's a big kind of element to really understand as you're going into this. And, and then, um,

With Instagram or any other platform is really understanding what drives performance, what causes you to break through versus causes you to suppress. And that's the algorithms. And the algorithms are really, there's a lot of misinformation and frustration about them. One being that they suppress your reach on purpose to get you to pay for reach, which you and I know they don't make money off of you getting you to boost your posts. They get money off of like the best direct response and biggest brands spending millions or tens of millions of dollars a month.

The algorithms are designed to do one thing, and that's keep people on the platforms longer. So the longer they're watching your videos, the more ads they can serve, the more profit they generate. So this isn't like Netflix where they invest billions of dollars in original content to keep you on their platform. They rely on us as content creators to be the fuel that runs them. So they want to see us succeed. They want to partner with us.

And the way the algorithms work is a high level analogy is like you'll post something and let's say they seed it to 100 people and they'll measure how effective you are in terms of stopping the scroll and retaining that audience. And if it's successful, then I'll do another 100. And if it's successful there, they'll keep extending out, out, out, out there. But if with those first 100 people or any of those benchmarks,

It's not effective in stopping the scroll and holding attention. They'll cut the reach right there because they're just going to favor other content. So they'll just suppress your reach. And that's oftentimes where you see people with a large audience that have low number of views or engagement. It's just because that piece of content's not effective.

holding up to the standards. In the world that we live in today, there's no free wins with social media. It's not like back 10 years ago where just because you had a certain audience size, you're automatically going to reach 30 to 50% of that. And the reason is

We've gone from a world when I started with a few million people on social media. Now there's close to 5 billion people on social media. And every time any one of us opens up our favorite app, there's probably at least 150,000 pieces of content that can see to us based upon the people that we follow, the content that we've engaged with.

So they're looking for that content that's going to grab and hold attention as long as possible. So it's critically important to understand these variables about how the algorithm works. It's not out to get you. It's just telling you that the way that you're trying to contextualize your message is not breaking through.

And another big thing that I always implore to people is any subject matter can go viral. So some people come to me sometimes and say, my subject matter is not sexy. It's not interesting. Taxes go viral. Insurance goes viral. Real estate, you know, nutrition. We've worked in all these industries or sectors and we have research to prove that any subject matter can go viral. It's just the way that you're contextualizing it and bringing it to the world. Interesting. Yeah.

um, yeah, I'm not glad. It's my, the frustrates me when I see some of the content that goes viral that I'm just like, man, frustrating, like, um, in different industries and weird things. And then mine, I'm like, sometimes I'm pushing so hard. I'm like, I don't understand like why, you know, like I'm better communicator or videos and better edited, all kinds of stuff. And it's like nothing versus some other ones. And it's just like those little, those little things that, um, yeah, it's just, it's pure context just to show you kind of the nuance to it. So, uh,

Earlier, I mentioned a friend and somebody that we work with, Alex Stemp, that does the Man on the Street photography shoot. At one point, we did a breakdown of his most viewed video, which is 100 million views on TikTok versus another video that was 5 million views. And the retention graph on the 100 million view video, meaning the length of time people spent watching it, was 27 seconds versus the 5 million view one was 21 seconds.

So we're talking about a six second differential that represented 95 million views and performance. And I'm sure you see similar things with funnels, like just this slight tweak, the slight word or the slight placement of this in different areas in the background. Yeah. Dumb stuff. Yeah. So that's, that's, it's,

Nine times out of ten, it is not about the content. It's just the way that you're contextualizing that content, the qualitative elements of how you're delivering it that is causing it to not perform compared to what you see out there in the market. One of the ones I watched today that you did, it was like this really cool looking thing of cement.

It had two different videos, right? And one of them, the guy put the cement and put it on a really thin, a thin piece of wood. And one was on a thick piece of wood. And like, because it was on a thin piece of wood, people have the anxiety. Like what if it falls off? Like as little as that thing was. And one, I can't remember when it was like, you know, a hundred thousand, one was like 40 million. And it was just like that little thing that, so I'm curious, like,

As you guys are creating the content, are you thinking those kind of things? Or in post looking back like, oh, we should have – there's not enough curiosity here. There wasn't enough – you know what I mean? Like how much prep work are you doing ahead of time to create the piece to know that you're going to hit as many of those things as possible? It's both. It's pre and post because you want to set the hypothesis of –

what you're doing like for certain clients and we'll probably do this with your team eventually is we when we choose a format we'll create a script template and sometimes people actually want like written out scripts it doesn't have to be that it can be kind of like a story structured one where we break down the format based upon the key elements of it so that you kind of have the reference on one side in your you know script or what you're going to say on the other side so that you're hitting those specific performance drivers and those elements in it

so that you know going into it that I've done enough prep based upon the research and we understand what's going on. But if it doesn't perform, we never look at it like, oh my God, that's the end of the world, it didn't perform. Again, our model accounts for that so that if it didn't perform, we just go back and we just have an open conversation. Okay, what did we miss? And typically it's we just forgot to do something completely or there was a performance driver element that just didn't click. And that's where, again, if

If you have a high performer in that format, you can do a side-by-side comparison, which is always the best. But as you're starting out, you may have to use a reference of somebody else doing that format and maybe somebody from a completely different industry. Because again, it's not about the content, it's about the context. But you want to set the stage both in the beginning and at the end. Like with that format that you're talking about, we've done it quite a few times and we just know at this point,

that it's the clips that we choose that drive the performance. So we just had a conversation with our team internally where we're having our team spend two hours of research per video instead of one hour to make sure that we're finding the right video that we're going to be reacting to. That's awesome. Okay. I'm excited to see the work you do with my team to figure out some of those things. This episode is brought to you by CarMax.

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Ryan Reynolds here for, I guess, my 100th Mint commercial. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I mean, honestly, when I started this, I thought I'd only have to do like four of these. I mean, it's unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month. How are there still people paying two or three times that much? I'm sorry, I shouldn't be victim blaming here. Give it a try at mintmobile.com slash save whenever you're ready. For

$45 upfront payment equivalent to $15 per month. New customers on first three-month plan only. Taxes and fees extra. Speeds lower above 40 gigabytes. See details. Okay, I want to transition now. So let's say we master the one format type on Instagram. It's working. Actually, I'll go backwards. So would you replicate that in TikTok or would you use a completely different strategy in TikTok? Are those two similar enough that you just replicate the clips or how do you...

So they seem similar, but they're very different in terms of the interaction user interface. So the way that we would look at it is, does that format, has it been proven to work? So let's just say we're focused on Instagram Reels, we get that format dialed in. Then we look at TikTok and we see, does that format prove to work on that platform? And if it does, what are the kind of subtle nuances between it working on TikTok versus Instagram? Because it's

very rarely are you ever going to just say, take it from Instagram Reels, put it on TikTok, and it's going to perform the same or vice versa. So there's certain formats that,

where it may perform as well on TikTok, but we just need to do a slight different edit. Maybe it's like the first three seconds or just a slight variation of it. In most cases, if we really want to excel at that level, we'll typically choose a different format. But what I say with most people I work with is like, if you just master like Instagram Reels and you

you blow it out of the water and you're generating millions of views of video, like you're going to have more business, you know what to do with just off of that.

then you can make that determination. Maybe I'm just okay with average performance of reposting it, or I want to tackle that next challenge and find a format that can drive growth on that platform as well. For you guys, and I'm on a TikTok, so I don't even have the app, so I don't know. I haven't seen. Are you on TikTok doing the same kind of stuff, or do you have something, a different strategy there? We are. I mean, we're kind of in that boat of like we're just focused on Instagram and Instagram Reels, and we're just reposting to TikTok by not expecting anything.

kind of massive performance. More of my effort right now and our team's effort is just going to be investing in long form on YouTube. And that's obviously different

formats. That's the next direction I want to go. Cause I'm, I'm saying my Instagram, I think is one of our sweet spots and you and YouTube. Those are the two that we focus primarily on. So that's my next question. So we, we've, we've picked a format type on Instagram that's working as you transition out to YouTube. Are you using something similar or is it completely different strategy or what does that look like? It's completely different strategy. You can find adjacent kind of subject matter. Obviously the subject matter you want to be the same, but adjacent, uh,

kind of like similar type formats in the way that you're going after it. But the strategy of I'm going to create long form content and cut it down into bite-sized clips and use those for my short form content strategy is not a recipe for reaching the top 1%. But would you use the same format? Like if you're doing the, you know, your A-B split test, that kind of thing, would the YouTube video be the same principles or would it be...

different storytelling type it's completely different storytelling like in terms of the direction that we're going in for there will be an element of it but it'll be like three to five minutes of like a 20 minute video so there's a lot more kind of long form storytelling a lot more build up and explanation of going into kind of those breakdowns that can occur yeah okay um

Interesting. So we have similar thing on YouTube where we keep testing different formats. Some with, you know, we're still kind of bouncing around trying to figure out the right format. If it's me talking to camera versus, you know, event footage, we have more event footage than anyone on the planet. So it's like we're pulling those in. We're in the spot. We're testing a lot of things. With other clients you've worked with, what's the core? As you're moving into YouTube, what's the core foundational principles you're focusing on with them? It's the same exact principle. So,

You know, in terms of like my advice to you would be is like select the format that you really want to do.

And just don't waver from it because if you really want to do it and you follow kind of the model that we've outlined today, you will master it, especially somebody with your skillset of understanding kind of the nuance of storytelling. I think that people give up on formats too easily. And especially in YouTube where it takes a lot more of an investment from a, a long form perspective. Um, but really start with that core format, find a key reference, um,

Again, the reference does not have to be, obviously there's nobody like you. So that reference is probably going to be in a separate kind of subject matter industry and study that reference from the high performers to low performers to really layer into kind of how you're going to tackle and go after long form. Okay. Um, okay. Next questions are, uh,

The way that you and your clients are moving people from social to the other things, right? Because as much fun as it is getting a million views or 10 million views on a video, it doesn't pay the bills for anybody. So I'm curious like what you're,

what's the core focus i'll lead with like one of the biggest problems i've had in the past we're trying to like remedy is i have so many funnels that when i come out and it's like we do a piece of content it focuses here or this one here different places that like it waters it all down and so we're trying to figure out the right strategy and i'm just curious what is the right strategy move people from social to to the next step so uh i'll give you an example so again the way that we

perceive organic is how do we leverage it to get people to know, like, and trust us to the point where they just want to ultimately take that next step. This is the reason that big brands spend billions of dollars engaging celebrities, athletes, influencers, things of that nature, because people know, like, and trust them. And if that person says, you know, go buy this or just automatically, if they're associated with it, they sell a lot of product.

So, we worked with a very niche industry, a leather craftsman that had very little to no experience in social media. He was stuck at 2,000 followers. And he was stuck there because he was creating commercials of his products because he sells like leather wallets, handbags, purses, briefcases, things of that nature. So, he was just approaching social media the way most people do is like, I'm going to create an ad and use it for organic content.

So we followed this model in this process to help him develop a format called, is it worth it? Where he'll take like a $500 Chanel handbag and deconstruct it on screen and tell you whether it's worth the money that you paid for it. So in his content, there's no calls to action, but he used this format to build an audience of 2.5 million followers across the social media channels. And he's generated like two or 300 million organic views at this point. And the format is so successful. People,

getting to know him, his expertise, they trust him. He just has a link in his bio. And through that, he sells out his most expensive inventory because he's built so much trust into that. Now, I'm not saying you don't have calls to action in your videos. Like I said, you have them once you've mastered that. But as you know, when you're reaching that level of organic lift, the retargeting element, the retargeting audience that you can build through that,

is massive and it brings down your effective cost per action. So understanding your ability to retarget these audiences with your specific ads is

Long form is a little bit easier to layer in kind of more organic CTAs of, especially with you of having different funnels, you can layer it in and just say, click the link below that video. But the way that we're kind of using it with organic, as I mentioned earlier, is specifically with Instagram, which you're focused on is, okay, let's master the format, get that format performance up. And then that CTA can be super subtle, right?

And with that CTA, you can change kind of what you're giving away with it. And I'll actually, now that I think about it, another kind of tip that I can give in terms of CTAs, specifically on Instagram that we found is don't have the CTA at the end of the video, have the CTA about three fourths of the way into the video. So, you know, if you'll see in my videos, we'll be breaking down

you know, like four, four elements of why this, you know, video did 10 million views versus a hundred thousand views. And after like the third point, I'll be like, and if you're enjoying this video, you know, comment below to get your free guide to going viral. And then I go, and finally let's break down the last element of why this video went viral because it kind of gives the people a reason to, to stick around versus if you put it directly at the end of the video, it cuts off automatically. Yeah. So at a high level, it's, um,

So understanding like organic, if you reach that top 1%, the numbers will be so big that you'll have a massive retargeting audience. The numbers will be so big that you'll just have people that ultimately want to take that next step. And then once you've mastered that element, then you can start layering in CTAs on a kind of an authentic level that fits into the content. Yeah, very cool. With yours, the ones I watched today, they're all pushing towards this guide right here. What's the CTA for this guide right here?

Guide to going viral. They want to get a free copy. How do they get it? Hookpoint.com forward slash Russell. Oh yeah. Okay. So I want to walk through strategy. So you're doing the viral, not every time, but, but strategically three fourths of the way you're putting a link or putting a message for them to go download this. And what's kind of a funnel guys. What's the rest of the funnel? What's it look like afterwards? I'm curious on that side. So we have an outbound team so that we'll, we'll reach out to them and then we put them in our, our email cadence. So,

We're thinking, and I'd love to pick your brain, but trying to reverse the book funnel from instead of book funnel, free shipping, like free book, and then into to something. But we haven't mastered that yet because we get so many leads from the organic because the organic works so well. And another tip that you can do is on the organic side is if you have a video that is working,

once it plateaus, don't be afraid to put paid behind it. Because there's a lot of people who think, oh, if you put paid behind organic, they're automatically going to suppress your reach. So you have to pay for organic or you have to pay for views or reach each time. It doesn't work that way. We've proven it time and time again. So if you start getting into this,

and you have like an Instagram reel that's doing well and has a CTA in it, and it's, let's just say it hit a million views, but it kind of plateaued, don't be afraid to put paid behind it and kind of keep pushing it because that will A, kind of push,

We've seen the cost per acquisition of a strategy call for our team just completely decrease using this model. But also you can get organic lift off of putting paid behind content as well. Yeah, very cool. Interesting. Yeah, I'm curious. I'm gonna have to go through the whole funnel now and see exactly what you guys are doing. It's interesting because we're seeing...

You asked really about the free plus shipping book funnels, like transitioning from a free book person into a high ticket client. Do you, my question, sorry, I'm flipping this around now, but my question is, do you have like a, do you have a virtual event that you ever do to sell or is it 100% of everything happening from the phones? Everything's 100% through the phones. We're going to try and figure out how to do a virtual event. We've never done one. Okay. I have like a 45 minute masterclass that's kind of like evergreen, but it's not set up

like a live event. Yeah. Yeah. We're seeing really well right now in a couple of our high end clients too. They're coming in, pushing, pushing a free book offer. And then the, the rest of the funnels, like it's pushing into a pay challenge to get somebody to show up. Now you got a three day period time to send them to hire ticket or things like that. Cause it is harder to go straight from a book to like, Hey, register for strategy call or come give me $20,000, $25,000. Like it's such a,

There's such a gap between like, I got a free thing to $25,000. And so anyway, that's- Does it matter between three or five days for the channels or just- It doesn't matter. Different strategies. There's like-

Yeah. No, it doesn't really matter. As long as all, as long as you're hitting same thing, as long as you get all the beats, uh, you know, there's, there's core thing. There's, there's five core things you got to hit and it can be in a 90 minute webinar. It could be in a three day. It could be in a five day. It could be in a, yeah. As long as you hit all the core beats, you gotta do to break false beliefs and move somebody into the next level. So anyway, um, so fun. Um,

Cool. So outside of short form and long form with your clients, is 100% what you do and focus on is video or do you guys do any of the other like Facebook and the other ones or…

I don't know about you, we've struggled with Facebook over the last couple of years getting anything to go past, you know, like getting any kind of organic viral growth out of anything. Is that just a use case for us or are you seeing success there with your people? We see success there when you focus on it. It's just, again, there's different formats that work well for Facebook and you have to just dial those in. But I think for your business and kind of where you're at is Instagram and YouTube is a really good focus.

Facebook still has a lot of legs. I think they have like three or four billion users at this point. A big percentage is international, but it still can work. In terms of

90% of our work is video based just because from a retention standpoint, like the albums want to serve that more. Our model works for anything. It can work for, for, for text, for images, things of that nature. You know, there's so much talked about slide shows is like the one thing that kind of like drives me crazy is like,

you know, like these videos that say, oh, if you use this trending song, you're going to go viral. And 99% of people use it, don't go viral because they don't understand the context. Same thing with the slideshows is like, well, if you use a slideshow, you'll go viral. It's like, it's not, it's not the, the, the slideshow itself. It's the expression of it. It's the same thing with formats is like, just because you're using a format doesn't mean you're going to succeed and go viral with it. So I think in any platform that you focus on any format, whether it be,

text or image or any of those things is just make sure to kind of do the research and understand what's the difference between you know high performer and a low performer yeah it's funny because i you're saying that reminds me in the funnel world i was talking about because i mean people like i have a funnel why isn't it working and for me it's like there's always an art and a science i'm like the science is the structure it's the the pages the

Like all the sequence, that's the science of it, right? But then the art is your message, your story, your offer, your... And that's the harder thing to teach people through because it's just like you have to like...

you got to put your message into it correctly. You know what I mean? Uh, cause the science part's easy. It's like, Oh yeah, there's a page here and there's gonna be an order form bump and an upsell down. You know, this is what it looks like. I think the same thing, you know, someone picks a format, like there's the science of it, but then you got to weave your art into it to make it actually, actually work. Right. It's a hundred percent correct. It's just because you have a funnel doesn't mean it's going to work. Yeah. And I think it's a little bit more frustrating on our end because of social media, anybody can pull out their phone, press record and post something. I'm a superstar. So it's like, it's a blessing because it's truly democratized communication, but,

But the downside is, is everybody thinks it should just be that easy because you can pull out a phone and just record and post something. But it's, it just really comes down to the nuances of mastering these skill sets. Yeah.

Very cool. Well, man, first off, thank you again for coming to Boise and hanging out and being on the podcast. I really appreciate that and working with my team, which is going to be really, really cool as well. For those who are in my whole world, we're all trying to figure out either paid, organic, or both. Everyone's thinking about that. Where's the best spot? Should they go get the guide going viral first? Should they read something else first? My people are book readers too, so what's the best spot?

Where's the best place for them to start following you and doing all the things? Yeah. So if they want, like the book breaks down our model, they can go to a hookpoint.com forward slash Russell to get it. Um, if they just want to kind of reach out to us and see how we can help them go to hookpoint.com and you mentioned some of the breakdowns and stuff, they can go to my Instagram, uh, Brendan Kane and get a sense of kind of what we were talking about as a breakdowns. Yeah. That's cool. And then you guys, you're not, you're not an agency. You don't do done for you work. You be, you guys do coach and consult and

and teach people the processes, right? Yeah. So we developed the strategy. So we have a team of researchers that, that will do the research for companies, break it down. And we also train teams or individuals in the model. And we work with people with like no social media experience all the way up to like multi-billion dollar corporations. Like it doesn't matter to us because the model has been proven to

Like the model's been used to generate 60 billion views, $100 million in a billion in revenue at this point. We've proven against every skill level in industry or sector. Yeah. So cool. Well, I'm pumped, man. I'm excited to see how ours evolves and changes after this day with you and hanging out with you. And I really appreciate you doing it. So everyone go to hookpoint.com slash Russell, R-U-S-S-E-L-L, double L's, and go get a free copy of The Guide to Going Viral. And I appreciate you hanging out, man, and being part of the podcast. Thanks, Russell. I appreciate it. Thank you.