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cover of episode The Funnel We Use to Make $250M+ | Ep 898

The Funnel We Use to Make $250M+ | Ep 898

2025/6/2
logo of podcast The Game w/ Alex Hormozi

The Game w/ Alex Hormozi

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Alex Hormozi
从100万美元到10亿美元净资产的商业旅程中的企业家、投资者和内容创作者。
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Alex Hormozi: 我将分享一个四步流程,我认为这能让商业变得简单。无论你刚起步还是已经赚了很多钱,这个流程都适用。我们的投资组合公司和我们提供咨询的公司都使用了这个流程,并且取得了显著的成果。去年,我们 acquisition.com 的投资组合总收入超过 2.5 亿美元,这证明了该流程的有效性。这个流程从吸引眼球开始,到最终实现盈利。首先,我们需要通过广告来引起人们的注意,这可以是付费广告、内容营销或直接联系。在所有获取客户的方式中,付费广告是扩展最快的方式,因为一个人就可以通过创意和按钮来实现规模化。创建有效的付费广告需要技巧,我将分享两个有效的框架:有机内容加行动号召(CTA)和“钩子+满足+行动号召”。有机内容加行动号召是指在表现良好的有机内容中添加行动号召,将其转化为可扩展的业务来源。如果没有足够的有机内容,可以使用“钩子+满足+行动号召”框架快速制作广告。广告的钩子至关重要,应该从各个行业中寻找最佳表现的钩子。广告数量越多越好,算法会从中选择最佳的。为了使文案更具吸引力,需要分解术语,并进行深入研究,从“时刻”的角度思考,描述人们在生活中经历的具体场景。行动号召要尽可能清晰,并展示下一步会发生什么。确保广告内容与用户点击后的页面内容一致,以减少用户流失。履行承诺可以增加你的影响力,为未来的销售打下基础。 Alex Hormozi: 在广告之后,下一步是获取用户的选择加入(opt-in),通常通过提供某种形式的引流磁石(lead magnet)来实现。不好的引流磁石已经过时,但好的引流磁石仍然有效。最好的引流磁石是解决用户最小的问题,并彻底解决它。为了让客户做出购买决定,需要提供一定量的信息。不要考虑情感买家和逻辑买家,而是考虑高信息需求和低信息需求。大部分人需要更多的时间和信息才能做出购买决定。为了最大化广告的盈利能力,需要为用户提供两条路径,让他们自我选择。我给出的引流磁石的例子是,一步通向多步解决方案。引流磁石应该准确地解决用户的一个小问题,这样他们才会相信你能帮助他们解决其他问题。引流磁石需要为正确的用户画像而制作。确保引流磁石与你想要吸引的完美客户类型相符。如果你不清楚你想要什么样的客户,你就无法制作出正确的引流磁石。在获取用户信息后,需要通过视频销售信(VSL)来销售产品。视频销售信是销售辅助工具中杠杆作用最高的工具之一。客户需要大约一个小时的信息才能愿意预约电话并准备购买。如果大多数人在购买前会这样做,那么为什么不让所有人都在购买前做同样的事情呢?视频销售信的结构并不复杂,有两种结构效果很好。第一种视频销售信结构类似于YouTube视频,包括证明、承诺、痛苦、计划和愿景。视频销售信需要给出承诺,描述痛苦,提供证明,制定计划,并展示愿景。 Alex Hormozi: 在视频销售信之后,需要对潜在客户进行资格预审,确保他们有预算、有决策权、有需求并且愿意立即购买。对未立即购买的潜在客户进行长期培养,通过电子邮件或社群等方式持续提供价值,回答他们的问题,直到他们准备好购买。品牌建设的关键在于扩大受众基础,通过长期提供价值来建立信任,从而提高转化率。通过这个四步流程,企业可以有效地将潜在客户转化为实际客户,并实现盈利最大化。这个流程就像一个微波炉,可以快速将潜在客户从冷变热。通过长期培养,企业可以建立品牌,扩大受众基础,并最终实现可持续增长。

Deep Dive

Chapters
This chapter introduces Alex Hormozi's four-step process for turning content into cash, focusing on paid ads as the fastest way to scale. It details two frameworks for creating effective paid ads: 'organic + CTA' and 'hook + meet + CTA', emphasizing the importance of compelling copy and calls to action.
  • Four-step process for monetizing content: Ads, Opt-in, VSL, Qualification
  • Paid ads are fastest to scale
  • 'Organic + CTA' and 'hook + meet + CTA' ad frameworks
  • Importance of compelling copy and clear calls to action

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

So I'm going to walk you through a four-step process that I think puts business on easy mode. And so whether you're just getting started or you're already making tons of money and are just trying to make more, this process just works. And I've done it in tons of different portfolio companies and companies we've advised. And just to give you a little bit of context, as of last year, our portfolio at acquisition.com did over $250 million in aggregate revenue. And I say that not as a promise that if you do this, you're going to get that outcome, but that this works. So that being said, let's dive in.

All right, this is the blueprint to unlocking your business's full monetization potential. And I'm going to walk you through it step by step. My name is Alex Ramosi on acquisition.com. And I've used this process in dozens of businesses, both in our portfolio and businesses we've advised. And our business as of last year did it for $250 million in aggregate revenue. And so there's four steps to this. Starts with eyeballs, starts with people's attention, and it ends with you making money. What are the steps in between? Let's dive in. Step number one, get the ad.

So we have to fundamentally show something to someone in order for them to find out about our stuff, right? And we agree on that. If the answer to that is yes, then the first step here is that we're going to have some sort of advertisement. Now, that ad might be somebody reaching out. It's an advertisement, literally letting people know about stuff. It could be a paid ad. So it could be an interruption-based ad that happens on any social media platform. It could be a piece of content like this that says, hey, go buy this thing.

Now, between all the different ways of getting customers, paid ads versus content versus outreach versus maybe the exception being affiliates, paid ads is the fastest to scale because one guy with buttons and good creative could scale it to the mood. Right.

And so it's all about skill when it comes to creating paid ads. Now, I'm going to just use this as our placeholder, but if you're trying to get into paid ads, then I'll give you two little frameworks that have worked really well for me. So number one, and this is a new one, which is absolutely murdering it for us, is what I'll call organic...

Plus CTA. Very complicated. All right, so what is organic plus CTA? It's you have whatever organic content you make. Some content does better than others, provided you make organic content relevant to the stuff you sell, which, by the way, probably a good idea.

You make your content, and then you find the good ones, and then all you do is you add a call to action at the end that sends people to your thing. And we already know it works because we've already tried it. And so you get to have all these test shots on goal that cost you nothing by simply making the content, and then just let the algorithm tell you what people already like, and they engage with, and they share, and they click, and they get past the hook.

And then you just say, oh, I'm going to take this thing and I'm going to turn it into something that feeds my business in a more scalable way because I'm not going to rely on the platform to just give it to people for free, which is great. But I also can't really add a longer call to action because it would tank the effectiveness of the clip. But if I put it in the beginning and then I pay the platform, then they're happy to display it because they already have a display for free. So why wouldn't they want to display it in exchange for money? And then we can add our very simple call to action at the end for some sort of thing.

Now, the second kind of way of thinking about this, like this one's by far the easiest. If you can do this, do it. Now, if you're like, okay, I don't have enough organic or I just need to quickly make ads directly, then this is the framework that I already use. So I have hook plus meet plus CTA. All right. So I'm gonna break down each of these really quickly.

So from a hooks perspective, what I do is I still look at the best performing organic and the best performing ads across all industries. So this is one where you don't need to stick to your industry. You might find a hook that works exceptionally well in finance, and it works really well for hotels too, right? Provided it doesn't actually say finance in it. And so you'll see that hooks just convert across way different audiences because it just draws attention. And so the first thing I'll look at is hooks. And this is by far the 80% of the ad. And you're like, wait, but they're so short.

And they're still the most important. So we should just be thankful. It's crazy. It's like people have a hard time accepting that something short could be more meaningful than something long because it takes more work. Like, would you prefer that the thing that means the most is actually really hard and long to do?

No, right? Like the fact that hooks are short is a gift from God for advertisers that we can actually have the most important thing, not require a ton of work. Now, if you want to be smart about it, it should require work because you're going to do that work in the research or the pre-search before you record this. So for here, I would have at least 50 plus hooks. And you're like 50 plus hooks. Yeah. You're probably not making nearly enough ads. And I don't care what your spend is. Like, like if you're, if you're spending $10,000 a month, a hundred thousand dollars a month, like you can never have too many ads. I'll just say that you

up. You can never have too many ads. You just give the algorithm more things to pick from to find the winners. Now, the meat, I'm going to give you a different framework that I haven't talked about much lately. And so I'm going to break it down for you right here. All right. This is four-step persuasion. And I just think it's just so easy to understand. Ready to have your mind blown? I'm kidding. It probably won't blow your mind. It'll probably be like, oh, that's interesting. Um,

So this is how I think, this is my mental framework, all right, for how I actually make persuasive advertisements, copy, pitches, whatever, right? Which is you're going to get more good stuff if you do the thing I want you to do. You're going to get less bad stuff if you do the thing I want you to do. And if you don't do the thing that I want you to do, you're going to get more bad stuff and you're going to get less good stuff. That's it.

four different angles that you can hit on any action I want you to take. So if you sign up for the gym, you're going to feel better. I'm making this obviously really simple. You're going to get more good feels. You're going to have more energy. You're going to sleep better. All that stuff's good. You're going to... Now, what's the inverse of that? You're not going to feel the brain fog that you've been feeling. You're not going to feel as lethargic. You're not going to have your kids out playing and feel like you can't play with them and feel like a bad parent. We're going to get rid of all that. Minus negative thing.

But the thing is, is the only thing easier, you know, than taking this small action today is not taking that action. And so, but the thing is, is that if you don't take that action, then whatever brain fog you're feeling right now, the current weight that you put on over the last five years, let's push it out two or three years. How much more weight are you going to be? Like if you're, if you're 50 pounds overweight now, what are you going to feel like it's 70 pounds overweight? It'd be, it'd be way worse, right? You don't want that. Also,

All those memories, when you think about the happiest memories that you have with your kids, with your family, those are going to decrease. You're going to have fewer of those because you physically can't do that. And so the only thing easier than taking action is not taking action at all. And so if these are the things that you want, you should do this thing because that way we can avoid this stuff. That's it. Very straightforward. And this is what constitutes...

are meat. Now, I'd be a very simplistic example. If I want to make that more interesting, right? And if you want to like, how do you create unique copy? This is a little advanced tip for you. All right. So pro tip, break down the terms. So what does it mean? So if I say you're going to feel better, right? That is not going to be compelling copy. I can promise you that right now. But what does feel better mean to somebody? How would I know that feeling better had occurred?

In their life, and this is where the research of reading Amazon reviews for products that are similar in your space, even if you sell services, read the positive reviews in their language of the things that they will say of what happened. And the way they think about this, here it is. This is it. This is the big word that you need to double underline. Think in moments.

What is the moment that someone would think, wow, I feel better? What's the moment? What occurred? What happened? Right? Maybe it's that they were able, let's say if it's an elderly population that were dealing with this weight loss thing, they were able to take the kid off the ground and pick him up. Right? And they have this moment where after they had that little three, four minute exchange, they're like, man, that was awesome. I couldn't do that before because I was so weak and I hadn't developed my shoulder strength. I didn't have the mobility to do that. Like, wow, it's a moment.

What else would it be? Maybe it's bending over to tie my shoe. I felt like I was getting out of breath because I had to hold my gut in so I could lean over to tie my shoes. That's gone now. What if there was a world where you just put both of them on and you could do it while you're standing?

right? That's not out of reach. It's just a couple steps away from where you're at right now, right? So if I say that, I can describe all the things that someone might experience and then denote that they feel better without saying you're going to feel better. And so this applies for each of these elements of copy. And this is what makes copy potent. It's the specificity because you want someone to understand it within their own context of like, man, I've had that happen. And that's

That's real. That's what makes you a copy. And if that little copy tip was helpful for you, then I have pages and pages of things that have helped me make good ads inside of the Run Paid Ads chapter and page 129. So I talk about, one, how paid ads work, obviously. But secondly, how do you write the copy? So I break down all the anatomy of ads in all of this, all these pages I'm talking about.

All of this is how you can make the ad. All right. And so this is the level one framework. The level two that you put on top of this is who and when this is the one, which again, I also cover in the book. Real quick, guys, I have a special, special gift for you for being loyal listeners of the podcast.

Layla and I spent probably an entire quarter putting together our scaling roadmap. It's breaking scaling into 10 stages and across all eight functions of the business. So you've got marketing, you've got sales, you've got product, you've got customer success, you've got IT, you've got recruiting, you've got HR, you've got finance. And we show the problems that emerge at every level of scale

and how to graduate to the next level. It's all free and you can get it personalized to you. So it's about 30-ish pages for each of the stages. Once you answer the questions, it will tell you exactly where you're at and what you need to do to grow. It's about 14 hours of stuff, but it's narrowed down so that you only have to watch the part that's relevant to you, which will probably be about 90 minutes. And so if that's at all interesting, you can go to acquisition.com/roadmap, R-O-A-D, roadmap.

So we could talk about the prospect, but we could also talk about that prospect status with regards to their spouse. Talk about with regards to their kids. Talk about with regards to their frenemies, their rivals, their competitors. What are all these plus and minuses with regards to that rival dad across the street or that rival business? What do all those look like? And then how do we pace that for today, but then also the future? What does the future look like when things don't go the right way? Well, that's going to be the bottom side. That's what happens if you don't take action.

On the flip side, what does the future look like if things go well? So we can play it out today, but also play it out tomorrow. And this gives you unlimited different angles to make the meat of your ad more compelling. And then the third thing is obviously the call to action, which you want it to be as clear as humanly possible and tell them exactly what you want them to do and what will happen next. This is a key point that a lot of people miss. Not only do you want to say it, you want it to be demonstrated in the ad. So if I want someone to go to the next page, when I say go to the next page, I want the go to the next page to be visible.

because that way what happens is you have congruence. So, and that has a couple levels of persuasion there. So number one, in terms of congruence that people say, okay, I have set my expectations and they click and then their expectations are met. And then what do you know? You have way fewer people who bounce off the page because the page looks exactly like I expected it to. Now, what else happens?

the person who actually made the recommendation, who made the suggestion to go to the page also increases in influence. Because when you say something's going to happen and then it happens, the person, consciously or subconsciously, doesn't matter, science works either way, they will believe the next thing you predict with greater certainty. And so wouldn't you want people to be like, man, when that guy says something's going to happen, that's what happens. That precedes or plants the seed for the sale that will inevitably come down the road.

So once we have our ads, so now we're getting eyeballs, right? People are seeing the ads. And then what are they doing? They're taking an action. All right. So this is my world's terrible mouse click. They click on the ad. I don't know. Our little mouse is on fire, but we're just going to go with it. All right. The next step in this process is going to be the opt-in, right? We want them to give us their information for something. And what are they going to give us the information for? So typically, it's going to be a lead magnet of some sort. Now, people have this big issue with like,

ah, lead magnets are dead or lead magnets are alive. I'll tell you this, bad lead magnets are dead. Good lead magnets certainly are alive.

And most lead magnets suck. And so it's unsurprising that the vast majority of people who start to run ads the first time don't make money because their ads suck. And the first time you take a sales call, you probably suck because you don't know how to take a sales call. And the first lead magnet you make will probably suck too. Now, I want to give you, in my opinion, the best lead magnet that I've ever seen in my whole life. All right. And so it was actually in the dating space.

and it was called How to Know if a Girl Wants You to Kiss Her. Now, who wouldn't want to know if a girl wants you to kiss her, right? And so the simple answer to that, and this is the lead magnet, is try to brush her hair behind her ear, and if she moves her head away, then she doesn't want to kiss you. If she doesn't move her head at all or moves her head towards your hand, then she does.

Very simple. All right. But the beauty of this is like, wait, so that's, that could be a lead magnet. Of course it could be a lead magnet. We want to solve the tiniest problem we possibly can for the prospect and completely solve it and blow them away. Now, some people are like, I made this full course and there's nothing wrong with that. To be clear, I've got a whole bunch of them on my site. The thing is, is there's going to be a certain amount of information that is required in order for a customer to make a decision.

Period. I would toss out the idea of emotional buyer, logical buyer, and just replace that, and this is how I think about it, as high information and low information. How much information does someone need in order to make a purchasing decision? Some people need less. Some people need more. But if you provide more to everyone, you will close more people overall.

And so a lot of us are trying to add to straight money. And there are going to be those people who will just see an ad, watch a video, and then buy something. That happens. They are the minority. They are the crazy people. And we are grateful for them because they allow all the machines to work.

But for the other 97% of people, they usually need a little bit more time, a little bit more information in order to make the decision. And we have to facilitate that. So there's going to be two paths that people are going to self-identify as we go through this to maximize our monetization of the advertising that we do to make the most money.

Now, the lead magnet that I just explained, which was just have the girl brush her, sorry, brush the girl's hair behind her ear, you can feel it out. So what type of lead magnet is this? What I gave you is a one-step to a multi-step solution. So most people who are in the dating space aren't looking to just get a kiss.

right? They're looking to find more dates. They're looking to, you know, eventually find a wife. Uh, they're going to have to get into a relationship. They're going to maybe get married later. So there's all these other problems that are going to have to happen outside of just figuring out if a girl wants to kiss you. If I don't have dates, I don't care. Now this is neat, but I still have other problems that need to solve. But if you accurately solve that problem, cause I'm like, I can understand why that would work. Then what do you think I'm going to do next? I'm going to believe that you can probably help me solve

my other problems. What I just outlined, you can come in real quick. So this is page 32 of the leads book is the problem solution cycle, right? And there's many, many problem solution cycles that exist within a larger goal. The bigger the goal, the more problem solutions they have to go through, right? And so our lead magnitude has to solve one of these little problem solutions. So the little teaching the girl, you know, teaching the guy how to know if the girl wants to kiss him. It's not the big loop. It's just one of these tiny itty bitty loops. That's all it is.

But now I think, well, he helped me solve that one. I'll bet you he could help me solve the rest of them. Now, what type of lead magnet is this? So the type of lead magnet, you could reveal a problem, which would be like, the reason that you're not getting responses in your DMs is because of this. So if I show them a framework for what a DM is supposed to be, I reveal the problem of why they're not getting responses. Now, the other side of this is that I could say, hey, I'm going to give you a free trial of my dating thing. Like, it's another type of lead magnet. Now, this one is actually step three or type three of lead magnets, which is

I'm giving away one step of a multi-step process to get an outcome, right? You're not just trying to get a girl to kiss you. You have to get responses and you have to set up dates and then you have to know how to talk on the dates. You have to know how to flirt beforehand and afterhand. And I don't know what afterhand is, but apparently it's a thing, right? And so you got after it. And then it's like, how do I do the second day? How do I do the third day? What are smooth ways to, you know...

Proposition a woman to whatever. You got my idea. I'll stop there. Fill the rest in with your imagination. And then propose. There we go. We just went straight to marriage. The whole thing is there's a lot of problems that are going to happen in this process, and we don't need to solve them all. Think about a dating person who's like, here's how to go from zero to married. That would be a lot. We just have to solve the problem that's in front of them today.

Now, one of the other issues with the lead magnet is, is it made for the right avatar? And this is a big one. And this is like, people mess this one up a lot. All right. And so they're like, okay, well, how to make your first, how to get your first five clients, right? I have some videos for that, but that's not my main avatar. Now I am willing to help people out who are getting started and that's okay. That's why I make those things. But is it, is somebody who's just getting started my avatar today? No, but I'm betting on the fact that they will be years from now, but not because I want to give something to that person today. Right.

And so if you have a spectrum of customers that you could potentially service, you want to make sure the lead magnet is consistent.

that's perfectly fit for the perfect customer that you want. And if you haven't gotten clear on the type of customer you want, then you're certainly not going to be able to make the right lead magnet. Now, I have a free chapter. I think it's called acquisition.com. I think it's called forward slash avatar. I think that's what it is. But if you go yourfirstavatar, acquisition.com, or Oxford Museum, I'm sure you can find it. But basically, if you're not sure how to pick your avatar, that chapter explains it. It was actually kind of like a single that I released after the offers book. I recommend you check it out.

Anyways, once we have our lead magnet, we have their information. So what is that going to lead to? We're going to need to lead to something that's going to sell them, right? Who's going to warm up the prospect, all right? And so this is where we get our video sales letter. This is a VSL, all right? It's just a fancy term here. Fancy, fancy, smancy. By the way, if you want an example of a lead magnet, this is one that we have. So you can check this out. So

$100 million scaling roadmap. This is for business owners, right? So if you're a business owner and you're trying to scale, then you're going to be at one of these 10 stages of scaling. And so what problem can I solve for you today? Well, if I can solve the current constraint in your business and show you where this is, by the way, a reveal a problem type of lead magnet, I reveal the problem. And then I also give you the solution to do this. But the thing is, is if you see this and sometimes even just being, oh my God, this is exactly what I'm struggling with right now, then it probably increases the likelihood that you think, okay, I think this guy can help me out.

Simple as that. And it provides you more information to eventually make a decision. All right, so the lead magnet sets the stage and attracts the exact type of prospect that I want to work with, right? Someone with qualifications. But now we have to convert them, all right? And this is where our video sales letter comes into play, all right?

So the video sales letter, the video that you have here is probably one of the highest leverage things that you can create in terms of sales aids, right? Like if you get on, if a lot of times you're like, man, you know, ads don't work for me. It's not that ads don't work for you. It's that you haven't put enough friction in your process. And again, this is one of those things everyone's afraid of. Everyone's afraid of adding steps, adding friction, adding questions, adding qualifications, having people watch things in order to make a purchasing decision. But I promise you, if you look at your customers over the last however long,

Most of them, almost all of them, will not have immediately bought something. Most of the times they will have consumed an hour, two hours, three hours plus of information from you in various formats before they decide to go through this process and ultimately buy.

And so what we want to do is reverse engineer and facilitate this. Like the big finding I had when I was in gym launch, um, was that 78% of customers had, had consumed at least two long form, uh, pieces of content. Now I had podcasts, I had books, I had, um, I had, I had a group that I had kind of the video version of those podcasts. And so I,

78% had consumed at least two. So in thinking about this, I was like, okay, so my average piece of long form content at the time was something they brought of like maybe 17 to 20 minutes. So basically people had to consume, call it an hour, right? Of information from me in order to, to be willing to book a call and be warm and potentially buy. And so I was like,

okay, if that's what it takes, why don't I try and force people to become somebody who is likely to buy? If that's what 78% of people do before buying, well, then why don't I get 100% of my people to do the thing that 78% do that are the ultimate buyers? That's the idea.

So if you're like, okay, VSL, what do I put inside this video? I'm going to walk you through a very simple frame. There's a bunch of different versions of VSLs that you can run. I'm not going to get into that today. People overcomplicate this. They want to make this seem like this big box of black magic. And I've made so many video sales letters in my life that I can tell you there is no big box of magic. And I'll give you two different structures that work really well. Okay?

So structure one is actually very similar to a YouTube video. So you're going to go the five Ps, which is proof,

Promise, pain, plan, picture. Okay? So what does this mean? It means that I need to make some promise that they're going to get from this video. I need to talk about the pain to demonstrate that I know where they're at right now. I need to give them proof that they, that they, why they should believe me. And then I'm going to lay out the plan of how I'm going to help them solve it. And then usually I want that to be a visual so they can understand, hence the visual, right? And then after I've done all of these things and I go through my plan, right? Here's my plan. Okay. After

after I have this kind of meaty part, then I'm going to have what I consider the FAQ section, which is what do people say when they get on the phone that they have questions about? I want to put all of the FAQs, every single one of them into this video. I want to pre-handle the objections. And a lot of them are really sensical concerns. How long have you been doing this? How do I know this is legit? Answer all of their concerns in the video. And then finally,

I just call it a little proof stack at the end, which is you just put stories of successful customers, right? And you can put your CTA here, and then you put another CTA here, saying, by the way, this concludes the video. At the end of this, it's just going to be a testimonial reel. You can watch this if you want. Now, when you say that, I'll just tell you this right now, you think that people won't watch them? People watch all of them.

I'm just like, you know. All right. So this is a version of a VSL that works great. Another version, if you have something that is more well-defined, right? So like if you're, when I say that, it's like if you sell a service that people, if I went on the street and said, hey, do you know what an electrician does? Do you know what a HVAC person does? And if somebody understands that a little bit better, then I spend less time on this and I just go five Ws, right? Which is, you know, who, what, where, when, why, right?

And then I'll still have my FAQs, still have my proof stack, and still have my CTAs. So this is basically two different versions of the meat. And guess what? Both have worked. But I thought there's this big box of magic. All we're doing is answering all the questions that someone might reasonably have before making a purchasing decision so that when we get on the phone with them, we can just help them make a purchasing decision rather than having two calls where we're giving them information before they make a purchasing decision. So right now, let's say that you run an ad campaign and you're like, man, it's taking me like three or four calls to close somebody.

It's because this is the magic of this. If it's taking you two or three calls, then that tells you that prospects need two or three hours of information in order to make a buying decision. And so if you're efficient with it, those three-hour calls can probably be covered if you are specific in what the FAQs are and all the concerns, and probably cover it in maybe 45, 90 minutes if you're just very diligent about noting what the questions are. And I'll give you another pro tip on this, which is,

You want the FAQ to be in their language.

So if someone says, I'm really busy right now, you want to have a way to handle, I'm really busy right now. Now they might also say, I've got a lot going on. Now to you, you might be like, oh, because a salesman might think immediately, oh, well, that's just a timing objection. And the answer is yes, you're right. But the thing is, is that someone might have six different ways of saying a timing objection and you want to have an FAQ that covers each of those five or six ways. Because if you said that to a salesman and

And they said, I'm really busy right now. And then you responded with how you would overcome someone saying, I've got a lot of plate spinging. You would actually have a slightly different overcome for that or objection handler. And so we need to basically say it in their language and then say the overcome that's appropriate to each of those things. So yes, that means you're going to have to have an answer for their questions.

But this should hopefully demystify all of the black voodoo magic around what is in one of these videos. You're just answering their questions. That's it. Now, I always get this question. Should I put my price in the VSL or should I not put my price in the VSL? The answer is it depends. All right. Now, the reason I say this is there are some businesses where basically everybody

I tend to put price in my stuff, and that's because I have more demand than I can handle, and I want to add friction to my process so that I can maximally utilize the sales team, right? Not waste their time. If I had an underutilized sales team, then I'd be probably more willing to not have the money qualification there. I will say this, though. The longer I've been doing business, the more I just end up putting all the information up front.

And everyone's always afraid of, you know, what if I tell them, you know, the price? It's like they're going to find out eventually, right? So I just, I tend to try and...

cover as many things before the sales call as humanly possible. Okay, so now you've got an ad, they clicked, they got the free thing. Now they've got the video sales letter, which by the way, pro tip, you can actually put the lead magnet inside of the VSL if you want to. So you'd be like, by the way, that thing about the girl thing, I'll tell you that in a second. Then you get to the first third of your VSL. Then you can slice in the lead magnet and say, hey, by the way, this is the tip. And guess what? I have 28 other tips that you can follow, which I'll show you in this video. And then you go through it, right?

But now we have to convert these people. All right. So I'm going to put something here and then something here. Sorry that my little money, that is a phone for everyone born before, you know, 2000 or after 2000. Okay.

So what is bans? I've talked about this before, so I'm not going to hit on this a lot, but you want to make sure they have budget authority need timing. Do they got the money to spend? They have the ability to make the decision. Do they need this thing? And is right now the time they want to buy? If we can answer those four things and you do that in the application, or if you have a scheduler, right, where they're booking a call, you make sure that those are the questions that are being asked there. And you only, and here's the tough part. You actually only take calls with people who say they have the money to spend. They have the authority to make the decision.

They have the need and they're willing to move forward now. Now, how much easier of a call do you think it is when someone's gotten value from you? They then fully understand the questions that someone might ask around making a purchasing decision from you. They say they have the money, the time, the need, the authority to do it. Now you're talking to them. How likely is it you think you're going to close them?

way higher than if you didn't have all that stuff. The reason that this process right here is the most efficient way of converting traffic is that it's kind of like a microwave.

You take someone from a cold prospect to a hot prospect. It's like you can slow cook it, you can simmer it, you can bake it over time. Or you can just nuke that thing. And so this is basically like nuking a prospect. How do we just bomb them with all this? Because think about it like this. If someone's like, I've followed you for a year. If someone followed short form for a year, and let's say they consumed...

five pieces a week, which would be a crazy amount. It's 250 shorts. Well, the average shorts, let's just be generous here and say it's 30 seconds, which it isn't. All right. So that would mean that they've consumed 120 minutes, about two hours. So we can have them consume 120 minutes over a year and then buy. They've gotten that much information in order to make a sale. Or we can just have them consume all two hours up front. And so think about this. I think a lot about sales processes as a plane taking off.

This is my, like, this is my Alex's very simple visual. All right. So we've got our plane, right? Here's our plane. The little wheels on our plane. I don't know. Just go with it. There's my, there's my terrible plane. All right. The thing is, is could this plane take off on this runway? No, the plane's too big. So I have to increase the size of my runway to give this plane enough lift to

to take off. The size of this runway is the amount of information that you need to tell the prospect. And so if we know that someone needs two hours to make a purchasing decision, then what do you think we've done? They consume a little bit here. They're going to consume, you know, maybe 30 to 45 minutes here, right? And then on the call, what do you think we're going to get here? Another hour. And so when we add all this together, they've gotten about two hours of information from us, but we did it in the span of a couple of days rather than over a year.

And this is why this is kind of like the ramrod, the fastest way of monetizing within a business. Now, what happens to all the leads that go through this process and don't necessarily want to purchase immediately? The logical people, the people that actually make sense and they're not crazy. So what do we do with all these people? Well, we want to put them somewhere that we give them long-term nurture where we just say, oh, you are just the type of person who needs more information to make a decision. No worries. Then I'm just going to give you more information.

And I'm going to do that, provide more value over a longer period of time. And so that's where things like having a school group where you just dump all the extra leads into and you keep making content there and you answer their questions there until eventually they're like, hey, I do actually want to take some action on this. And then boom, you send them, you run them through the process, you microwave them again, you reheat them, right? And then boom, you make the sale, right? That's the idea. So this long-term nurture, once people go through that, they're still going to come right back through the front door again and then get reheated. So these are the four steps. You make your ads.

You have a banger lead magnet, you have a VSL, and then you qualify the person before the sale. And pro tip 4.5 is that for everybody who doesn't buy, you have to put them in some sort of either email sequence or group or both where you continue to provide value. You continue to basically answer all these little FAQs that they've had because maybe they've got other ones or maybe they just need to see more proof. Some people just need more information to make the decision. That's all it comes down to.

And when you do that and you provide as much information as possible, you convert a way higher percentage of the audience. So let me give you the massive pro tip, the thing that took me way too long to understand. What do you think a brand is? We're giving someone tons of information over a long period of time about who we are, what we're about, our way of doing things.

And so the reason that brands grow significantly bigger than the people who just do this, like if you just do this, you're going to be able to make some money, but you'll quickly cap. You will be able to make money, but you will cap. To build the brand, we have to have this thing be enormous. And then this thing ends up being our eyeballs at the front of this. So that we have this enormous audience of people that have gotten value from us day in and day out for an extended period of time.

That is then what over time, it's like, I think about it like this. It's like, you've got this, this, this pyramid of people who are interested in your stuff. Right. And this is as they, you know, get more information, right? They move up the pyramid. And so all we're going to do is we're going to have these people are the ones who give us money and all these people aren't going to do anything. They're just going to get, they're just going to be like, man, this guy's great. Or this gal is great. Right. So if we want to grow this, this, this little, this little slice here, what do we do?

We grow the bottom. We grow the base. And this fundamentally is what Growing A Brand is about. You're growing the base so that the top of the pyramid is way bigger than over here, where you have to try and take someone up the elevator using the four-step process that I just walked through.