cover of episode Building a $3,000,000 Business for a Stranger in 57 Mins | Cash Cows | Ep 867

Building a $3,000,000 Business for a Stranger in 57 Mins | Cash Cows | Ep 867

2025/4/9
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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Ben
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Alex Hormozi: 我认为Ben的业务需要在以下几个方面进行改进:首先,优化销售漏斗,改进产品,让其更具吸引力。其次,增加营销投入,以获得更多高质量的潜在客户。目前,Ben试图向从未合作过的陌生人销售价值3万美元的服务,这非常困难。我们需要找到更有效的销售方法,降低客户获取成本,并提高销售转化率。 此外,我建议Ben将目标客户定位在年收入超过400万美元的餐厅,因为这类客户更注重商业决策,更容易接受高价位的服务。我们需要针对这些目标客户制定更精准的营销策略,并提供更具价值的产品和服务。 最后,我们需要改进销售流程,提高销售转化率。目前,Ben的客户获取成本高达1.2万美元,这远远高于行业平均水平。我们需要找到更有效的方法来降低客户获取成本,并提高销售转化率。 Ben: 我同意Alex的观点,我们的业务确实存在一些问题。首先,我们的销售漏斗不够完善,导致客户获取成本过高,销售转化率较低。其次,我们的产品定价过高,难以吸引潜在客户。最后,我们的营销策略不够精准,导致潜在客户数量不足。 为了解决这些问题,我计划改进销售漏斗,优化产品,并制定更精准的营销策略。我将重点关注年收入超过400万美元的餐厅,并提供更具价值的产品和服务。此外,我将降低产品定价,以吸引更多潜在客户。 我相信通过这些改进,我们可以提高销售转化率,降低客户获取成本,并最终实现300万美元的营收目标。

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Alex Hormozi, owner of Acquisition.com, analyzes Ben's bar consulting business, which generated $1.1 million in revenue and $123,000 in net profit in 2024. Ben aims to triple his revenue in 2025. Alex identifies key issues: an expensive customer acquisition cost (CAC) and a low conversion rate from core offer to upsell.
  • Revenue: $1.1M, Net Profit: $123K (11.3% margin)
  • Goal: $3M revenue by end of 2025
  • High CAC ($11,800), low LTV to CAC ratio (1.7:1)
  • Low upsell conversion rate (<20%)

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This is Ben. He's a cocktail consultant who helps restaurants and bars optimize their drink menus to increase profits. But his revenue is unstable. Sometimes he has a great month and then other times he sells nothing and sometimes that goes down. I'm Alex Ramosi. I own acquisition.com, a portfolio of companies that generate hundreds of millions of dollars per year in revenue. What I suspect Ben needs to work on is optimizing his funnel, fixing his offer. He's trying to sell a $30,000 thing to strangers who've never even worked with him before.

which is pretty tough. And then once all that stuff's fixed, spending more on his actual marketing. So the first thing I'm gonna do is dive deep into the business and then I'm gonna break down all the tactics that he and you can use to scale your business to

to your dreams. Hey, Alex. I'm Ben. Hello. One of the co-founders of Unfiltered Hospitality, where we help hospitality operators build better beverage programs. Tell me about the business. So we are bar and beverage program development specialists. In 2024, we did $1.1 million in revenue, $123,000 in net profit, so about 11.3% in net margins. Yeah.

We've been in business for about four and a half years, but we've helped over 200 bars launch or elevate their concepts. - So what's the goal? What do you wanna do? - My goal, three million by the end of 2025. - Big goals. - It's big goals. - Yeah, triple this year, all right. - Yeah, triple this year.

- Rock and roll. So how did you get started? - In 2008, I started my life in the world as an investment banker. - Okay. - And so I hated it, quit my job there. Over the next seven years, I worked in bars and restaurants around the city. A few years after that, I opened my first bar. It was all going really well until 2020. - Okay. - We all remember. - What happened then?

- It was just like this small pandemic. It's over now, so we're good. - Good, that's good. - Yeah. Fortunately, I got approached by a restaurant that was still operational and they said, "We need new cocktails." I said, "Great, I'm very good at that." So I tapped my business partner, Guy, and so we started Unfiltered Hospitality. - All right. - Yeah. - So who do you help? - We currently work with restaurants, hotels, bars,

Country clubs, cruise ships, nightclubs, if they have a bar, we help them. - How do you help them? - We help them by taking their bar programs from good to great. Phase one, which we call better cocktail consulting, takes 90 days. We design a cocktail menu for them, we train their teams,

And then we install an operating system to keep it all running smoothly. Phase one is Better Cocktail Consulting. Phase two? Phase two is what we call the Program Performance Retainer. Okay. So the point of this is to maintain what we did with Better Cocktail Consulting and then continue to develop the program. And we do that by having a weekly KPI call where we check the scorecard to see how well your metrics are doing. We also then provide monthly seasonal reports.

We want to maintain the training. So we have a quarterly training program where we fly out there and we train the team for two days. So you don't mind flying. That's good because I have an idea for you. So I have an inkling that Ben needs to go upmarket. Restaurants that make over a certain amount of money, they're going to think about like a business, not just like their passion project. Passion project business owners are kind of tough to deal with when you come from a business perspective. They're not willing to make like sometimes really obvious, clear, good business decisions for whatever limiting belief they have.

Okay, so that's how you help them. How do you make money? Great. Our core offer, which is what most people buy from us, is Better Cocktail Consulting. We charge $30,000 for that. And again, that's just the development and implementation. And what we love to do is upsell everybody or at least have them initially buy the Better Beverage Program, which is what we call Better Cocktail Consulting plus...

Multiple program performance retainers. Okay. What percentage of people go from the core offer to the upsell? Less than 20%. Ding, ding, ding. So my little alarm went off. When I hear, you know, barely 20%, that's an indication for me that there's probably an offer issue on the back end, maybe even the front end, or a combination of the both of how they work together. So what's the main problem? What's holding you back? We need more, better leads. Yesterday. Yeah, yeah. A long time ago.

Higher quality, higher quantity, more consistency because it's like too much variability, lower cost. So the lack of consistency really feels awful. I don't know what next month is going to be. Is it going to be a good month or a bad month?

The good months are pretty good, but I can't really fully enjoy them because the bad months are so awful. Because the way that we're doing sales now is we will go for days, sometimes weeks without any leads at all. And finally, when we do get a lead, we'll get them on the phone, we'll have the calls, we'll pitch them, they'll get excited, we'll get excited, and we get to the end, we present the price, and boom.

deal is dead. So if you can imagine that massive drought followed by a huge disappointment, I'm really looking forward to getting rid of that. A $12,000 CAC is crazy, especially considering the LTV. Ding, ding, ding. Number two, we have a super expensive cost to our customer. And this is a customer that's

probably be 1500 bucks, 2500 bucks, maybe $3,500 to acquire. So there's definitely an offer mismatch between what is being advertised and what they're selling if CAC is so high or they just have atrocious sales processes. So it's either an offer or sales process issue or both and we're gonna figure it out. - What we've noticed is that our best clients are existing restaurants, right? And so we're considering refining our targeting down to just serving restaurants

that are currently operational, making $4 million a year or more in revenue. What could you sell for like $8,000 to $10,000? Something that we've tried in the past and could easily bring it back is essentially a DIY, like we'll teach you how to do it. The uptake on that is...

what I would assume will lower. People will have a hard time like doing things if they're already not doing things. - I would think is there a different thing that could be sold that was still in that price point that wasn't DIY? I mean, basically I wouldn't position it as DIY. I would just be like, we're not gonna fly out. The good news is I think this is super fixable. Let's do the quick recap of all the numbers you got so far. - 2024 revenue, 1.1 million. Profit, 123,000. CAC, 11,800, very high. LTV to CAC of 1.7 to one.

- Marketing spend without salaries is $10,000 a month, close rate 66. - So come here real quick, check this out. This is the $100 million scaling roadmap. Ben is at stage four, prioritize. And let me know if this sounds familiar. He's saying yes to anyone who would pay. He's got all these different types of avatars. He's getting way too many unqualified leads. But he's getting people who are clicking, he's getting people opting in, but they're not the right types of people. Here's his next problem.

The result of all this stuff is that he's got to specialize his product. He's got to make better free stuff and have better creative to boost the volume and add qualifications and friction. Sounding familiar? And so the thing is, is that as much as it always feels like this unknown journey when you're a business owner, businesses behave in patterns.

We broke out after studying our portfolio companies, seeing where they got stuck and how we broke through and put it in 10 stages. If you're curious about where you're at, this is absolutely free. Just go to acquisition.com forward slash roadmap, plug in your business information and our automation thingy will tell you what stage you're at and what you need to do to get to the next level. So it's absolutely free. Go check that out. And if you want our team to like double check the work and make sure that it's the right one and give you more tactics around it, you can hop on a call on the next page and we'd love to help you out. The nice thing is that like,

I feel very confident that your business will grow because there's some really obvious holes. I think I honestly have what I need. Why don't you come on this side and then we'll probably, we'll power through it together. Does that work? Yeah, that sounds great. All right. But before we get started, would you mind if I made you a cocktail? Ah, all right. I'll be saucy for our cocktail. Oh, no, don't worry, Alex. I took care of that. We actually have a...

The Grand Slam Offer.

Fresh grapefruit juice, squeezed it myself this morning. A ginger mint cordial to give it a little spice and a little herbaceousness. And then we have our pineapple kombucha. I know way more people's drinks than their actual names. Grand slam offer. I am. Matt, can I bring it over? Yeah, by all means. Let's do it. Thank you. All right. Here you go. Oh, I got the whole experience. There we go. All right, man. Enjoy. Thank you. Cheers. Cheers. Oh, that's great. Awesome.

I can definitely see how the kombucha would take off the edge of the drink. Like it could hide a spirit really easily with that. Oh, yeah. Okay, so there's a lot of things. So I think that we need to actually talk about the offer, which is something that I don't always get the opportunity to talk about. But I think that you have a clear offer issue. I think we need to talk about Avatar. That'll be as it relates to the offer. Number three, and this is going to be a big one, is going to be the funnel. There's a lot of stuff that, like a lot of missing things there that I think we can like really quickly fix. And then sales...

And then finally, maybe Ascension. And so that's kind of the big overarching theme. So right off the bat, I think that you have an offer issue. So either that means that we're getting the wrong avatars on the phone or we're getting the right avatars on the phone and we're offering the wrong thing. So I would say $30,000 is super expensive for just a straight, literally just a straight call funnel. Very tough. So when Alex said I had an offer problem, I...

had a strong feeling he was right. Because four and a half years into the business, if we're struggling the way we're struggling, there's got to be something broken. And if Alex says it's the offer, good chance it's the offer. For what you're looking at, CAC for a small business or a restaurant, I would imagine should probably be in the neighborhood of $1,500, $2,500. That's where, that's like, if you were up at $3,000, $3,500, I'd be like, okay, fine. But it's going to be in that kind of range. And so I think there's a, you can probably cut it by at

at least two thirds compared to the 12,000 or whatever that you're spending right now. So I think there's a lot of opportunity from that perspective. God, there's so much stuff. I'm trying to think, okay, why don't we just start tip of the spear and let's open up the ads.

since that's the one that we can control the most. So right off the bat, we need to have clear call-outs. So we need to be talking about what avatar are we really looking for? So struggling to get the most out of your cocktail program. I don't know if that's necessarily even the language that would matter. I also wouldn't restate my name unfiltered hospitality because we already have it above there. So it's like, it's some of the most valuable advertising real estate. And so I would probably have something to the degree of like restaurant owners, asterisk, asterisk. You know what I mean? And then like second line, like,

is your, like, are you doing over X million dollars per year? Or it could just be $4 million plus per year restaurant owners is call out number one. And then the question would be pain-based hook. All right, so check this out. So I'm on page 136 of the leads book. The first part I'm talking about here is the call out. So we have to get the right people to notice the ad and it is by far the most important.

And so I'm trying to compress the things that he's looking for in his ideal avatar into just one line. So they're like, oh, I'm a $4 million plus per year restaurant owner or bar owner. Just put it there and then like, this is for me. And once I do that, 80% of the work of advertising is actually done.

as crazy as that sounds. What I'm getting into further after that is, okay, let's see if we can ask a yes question or an if then statement or talk about some ridiculous result. All of these things are kind of the line after actually calling out the prospect, right? Now, once we get a little further into the copy, I like using the what, who, when framework. So this takes the value equation, which I talk about in my first book,

this guy and tries to like explode this into many different copy variations and so what we want to talk about is both the dream stuff which is what's the good outcome how do we make it fast to make it likely how to make it easy and then on the flip side the pain which is what's your nightmare scenario and so this gives you a lot of different angles to approach the copy for a customer whether it's a b2c customer or b2b business owner and the reason I'm such a big proponent of pain in advertising is one is it super compliant - I have the belief that

that the more precisely you can articulate the pain of a prospect to that prospect and even describe it more accurately to themselves than they can articulate it, they will believe that you can help them almost better than any promise that you can make them. So if you're like, hey, did Sally say this yesterday? Did you have this problem that showed up? And are you consistently running out of your most expensive ingredients, but then sometimes they go bad? All of a sudden, like,

God, this guy knows exactly where I'm at. And now I'm far more likely to take the next step. Has cocktails been less than 10% of your revenue year over year? Something like that. Right. Or, because I know you said in the messaging, they're not as receptive to like profit money related stuff. There are avatars that do like profit, but a lot of them like recognition. And being cool. Yeah. And being cool. Right. Yeah. They want to be cool and they want to be like popular. Like they want to be able to show off. Yeah.

So people have different histories of reinforcement, meaning they've had good things that happened in the past from different things that they've done. And so if somebody did really well in school, they like, you know, getting A's and maybe the score matters more for them. Other people, it's like they like the applause. Other people, it's like they like showing up and having people flock to them. Like everyone has different drivers. We want to describe what it's like, the experience of success in as many varied ways as possible to attract the most

varied avatars as long as they meet our requisites. - Like, is your cocktail program flaccid? Would probably do great. - Yeah. - Has no one ever posted anything good about your cocktails in the last two years? If you look at your reviews on Yelp, do you just have Long Island iced teas and vodka sodas? - Right. - Like, you might need a,

Insert, you know, a bar we haul. Instead of saying, because what this is is super feature heavy. Data-driven menus designed to get more orders, team training that delivers, because all that sounds like work. Yeah. For me. Sure. And so what I want is what occurs as a result, right? And so I'd be talking more about like, clients see typically 10x their investment in the first year, 30% increase in menu orders. I'm not sure if it like bites at me.

You know what I mean? And so it would be more like what the experience is like from people just ordering the things that they know off the top of their mind to getting excited when they open up your menu. And then all of a sudden saying, oh man, I want to try so many of these and then ordering two or three times more. So it's like dial into the experience of what the avatar is going to go through. Right. And then I would translate it. Okay. What about the restaurant owner? Having, you know, your restaurant featured in some of these types of magazines, what

which honestly doesn't take as long as you'd think as soon as you make these types of changes. - Sure. - You know, what a lot of restaurant owners don't know is that one of the largest profit drivers in the business is alcohol. And it's the one thing that they're the least focused on. - Right. - If you want, you can book a call, but even if you don't, what I did was I took the top 10 worst drinks to serve,

And I'll show you how to replace them with 10 drinks that are better than that that work for just about any bar. Now, on the thank you page, so you can download that on the next page, but on the thank you page, if you want us to personalize it to your bar concept, we'll show you how to organize the bar so you can get way more drinks served, you can do it with higher margins, and you don't have to train people for nearly as long because if you set it up the right way. If that's interesting, book call on the next page. And so that would be more or less my ad.

Right. At least my ad structure. And so the big thing, number one, is that A, is that we need better ads. Yeah. So that's going to be both the copy. So we want call outs to avatar. We want to have pain based hooks. We want to be more benefit versus future driven. B, we want to bang in lead magnet. What we want to do ideally with lead magnet is demonstrate authority and expertise with something that they didn't know that they should know.

- Right. - 'Cause either you reveal a problem, you give a sample of a solution, or you give a one step of a multi-step process. Those are the three types of lead magnets you can give. So check this out real quick. So this is a perfect example of an offer and lead magnet mismatch. So kind of what I was saying in the beginning, like we're honing in here and I'm pretty sure this is the problem. So what I explained here, this is page 30 of the leads book. He's trying to do this. He's trying to go from low trust

straight to a sale right in that scenario he might sell a couple people which he is but instead what i'm trying to get him to do is put some sort of valuable lead magnet first which goes getting people from low trust to high trust and then that increases the number of people be more likely to buy from him after demonstrating value this is probably the

like first big jump that we're going to do in the business that I think is going to have a huge impact on the growth. And what I was referencing for him is under lead magnets, there's always a continuous problem solution cycle. And so the three types of lead magnets are just like I named. Real problem, have a free trial, or one step of a multi-step process. It's almost like I wrote the book on this shit.

Like, I think that's the right direction because I think it being cocktail focused, because right now we've been working on a lead magnet that's profit focused. Okay. And it's straightforward. I mean, essentially, it's a tool that they use in Excel and they pull up a P-Mix, they put in their top 10 sellers, the quantities, the price. Yeah. They make a...

$0.50, $2 adjustment, and $50,000 in profit. Yeah. Magic. That's great for the profit-driven avatar. Yeah. And so I don't know if there's a way to kind of stack lead magnets. So I wouldn't stack them. I would just test one versus two.

So if we were to just test 97 versus 47, you might think, okay, well, maybe, you know, just from the front end, $97 in the test that we've run, actually, it converted almost the exact same amount, but it was twice the money. So that was a good idea. But where the real money was, was the fact that people who bought this were way more likely to spend money. Now, for me to answer why, no idea. Just know that.

And so this is why we test all the way through LTV, not just which one gets more opt-ins or which one gets more sales in terms of volume upfront. You might find though, is that maybe the cost, and this is why it's important to track all the way to the sale, is that you might find that the profit driven one costs three times as much to get the lead, but you close more sales.

And I'm going to show, I'm going to break down some more funnel stuff in a second because I'll show you how we need to reorganize yours. But I would just run that as an ABA. So we're going to run some ads. We're like, hey, so you'll do the same exact intro. Yep. And then the transition will be like, and if you want the top 10 drinks that you shouldn't be serving that actually hurt bars and their profitability, download my thing. And I'll show you 10 different ways of making them that are more profitable and faster. Got it. And then the other one is like, and if you want to see how much,

revenue you could potentially be missing out on. I have a tool that we use internally that I'll just give you for free. You can plug in your numbers and then it'll spit out exactly what the opportunity is. And if you're like, you know what? I'm not really a big Excel guy. That's fine. On the thank you page, schedule call will walk you through it specific to your bar right now. Right. So I think both those work. And I would just split test that. Like I don't know the answer to that question. They will. But lead magnet for sure is one of the things that's missing from these ads. And also probably why you're not getting the conversion you need to on the online page. So why don't you click...

So we're going to swap this ad out for an ad that talks about the lead magnet, has a pain-based hook, and kind of mirrors some of the copy that just went through. Okay, go for it. Okay, so right off the bat, the most expensive real estate on this page is top to bottom, right? And so you having your logo at the top nicks it. Doesn't matter. No one knows who you are yet. They're coming from cold ads, and this isn't the branding opportunity. Got it. So yeah, this is direct response.

So better bar program, I would take that out because they don't know what they're opting in for yet and that doesn't mean anything. Launch an elite high profit bar, I would split test the hell out of that. It might become the hottest bar in your town. Okay, just try out a few different. Yeah, no, 100% and then beautiful cocktails, professional team and seamless operations, I would mix that. So I would want the sub headline to be basically the single largest concern someone has about the promise of the headline.

Got it. So here's this amazing thing and here's that thing that you're thinking about now that you don't believe me in so let me tell you why you should believe me in the next line. Right, like the reason your cocktails suck is because like... Yeah, I mean it could be like with or without, right? So launch an elite high profit bar without having to redesign your existing location, without buying expensive ingredients that go bad or having a really expensive training process. Sure.

I don't know. This is just me thinking if I were a bartender. So here, there's a lot of pieces to this. And I don't think you need any of them because I've already gone through your funnel. I would basically drop this to just... I'll tell you why. So I'm okay with all of these if... Basically, you collect this information twice in this funnel. I don't know. Have you gone through it? I built it. Okay. So let's go through it. Let's just go, you know, A, A, A. We just put whatever in. Okay. A at AOL.com. So that was me. Yeah. Okay. Okay.

My director of office is freaking out. She's like, is that you guys? She's like, we got a lead. We got a hot one. So let's say we click here. Now just click whatever time. Alright.

- Right, so now I gotta put it all in again. - Right. - I'm like, "God, this sucks." So this is a really classic business owner mistake, which is that a lot of business owners haven't even gone through their own sales process. They set it up two years ago and they haven't gone through it. You would be amazed at how many times you change a couple things and then you go through it again and you're like, "God, this looks horrible." Except you're running traffic to it and this is what customers are seeing. And I'm guilty of this too, so I'm not saying I'm immune to it. And so having some regular cadence of actually going through, clicking the buttons,

because this is obviously a ton of friction and this is bad friction. Good friction is you add qualifications, you make sure the right people are coming in, the bad people are going out. But this friction of just having people like repeat opting in for stuff or like very slow load times, that's bad friction that gets both good and bad people to stop opting in.

it. So fundamentally, marketing comes down to having the sweet spot on friction. Because if I were to advertise, hey, here's my phone number and this is how much it is, call me to buy, that would have the least amount of friction in the process possible. But the issue is I'd probably get a ton of people to call or maybe not. And it's just like, it's too fast. On the flip side, if you make people jump through 30 hoops, you might have a perfectly qualified customer, but you're missing out on 90% of the people who would have bought if you just made it a little bit less frictiony.

And so it's all about the sweet spot between both extremes. And in general, the more expensive the product or service, the more friction you'll generally need to add. And so my little moniker for this is the bigger the plane, the longer the runway in order to get it to take off. Okay, so now that we're back here. So first off, this needs to not be on YouTube. So you need to get somebody because otherwise it looks hokey. Get it on any third party, get it on a Vimeo, whatever. Yeah, you don't want other recommendations. It's just like it's taking people off the site and I don't think it looks good. Whatever.

- Right. - Whatever. This is what your new funnel's gonna look like. So you're gonna have, hopefully this looks like a book. - Yeah, okay, I got it. - Okay. And then we have your email, we've got our headline.

sub headline, and then we've got our image, right? So then that's then gonna go here, which you have congrats. And then we'll have our main, our secondary headline. Now here's where we put the video above, above the scheduler. Okay. And then the scheduler is going to be here. So this will be VSL. Then we'll have the booking and then post booking. We'll have a separate thing here, which will one have the VSL and the lead magnet.

So it's just like that way they can go to their email to get it, but they also can click here to get it. Just makes it convenient for them. But what we have here though is basically how to prepare for your call and just more selling. - Yeah.

I'm a huge advocate of having videos or kind of sales materials prior to a human intervention. And the reason for that is if you've ever done sales on a consistent basis, you end up kind of repeating the same presentation, if you will, over and over and over again. And so then it starts to sound rehearsed. The other person zones out. You zone out because you've said it so many times. I like taking all of the stuff that you kind of repeat over and over again in a sale and front-loading that.

And so when you're on the call or when you start the call, you can start it like, okay, how's everything sound? And now we can basically start from the beginning to making a decision rather than like, just like another prerecorded, you know, vomit of a salesperson. And the other benefit of a video is that there's a lot more visuals, right? Like if you're talking to the phone, you're talking on zoom, you'll be limited in the amount of visuals you can probably provide. Whereas here you might be able to provide charts and graphs and statistics and visuals that make it more compelling and easier for somebody to understand.

I would rather have the perfect pitch delivered every time in an automated format and then have the customization be what the conversation is after the fact to get them to decide to buy or not. This is the new funnel. - Right. - This is what we advertise. - And just real quick, this is after they schedule VSL, this is the VSL again. - It's just a different one, but yeah. - It's a different one, but more like prep for sales. - So think about it like this. Think about all the things that people present with on the call early that are their biggest concerns. - Okay. - That's what you put there. - Okay.

So you might be wondering this. You might be wondering this. So let me put your minds at rest. So these are the things you need. You don't need this. You do need this. If you're concerned about these four things, I'll break them down one at a time. So first things first and then walk through it. And I'll be on. So have a computer. It's going to be a Zoom call or expect it from this number, whatever. So call prep concerns in this VSL. This one is like more about like –

If we honestly, like if we just do this, you're probably going to like significantly increase your sales. And we do it like, I mean, like we could probably do nothing else today. And like, that's all that has to be done, right? Is that the ads need to go to the right avatar, which is called out. We're actually going to give them a reason to go to this page that they can immediately get value from. They're going to opt in. Then we have our, now, if you want to do more of the, you want to add more of the information that you were collecting over here, you can, that's fine with me. As long as it's,

fully integrated into here so that they don't have to do it twice. If you want, you can put a little on this side, like a black banner across the top of this that has, you know, for $4 million plus only. Yep, got it. This is a big part of this, of what we were talking about earlier. Sit my brain juice for a second. Hold on, I'm going to spill it. I've got a lot of stuff in here.

Okay. So you're confident about the $4 million avatar. Is there any reason that $2 and $3 million avatars don't work? They do. They just, they're going to be a harder sell because their ROI isn't as good. So then let's get to the offer part because this, this like, because this is, this is the, this is the funnel and process. But now let's talk about the offers that we're selling here. All right. So let's put this because now this is going to go to the phone. This is a phone for everyone who is born before. Yeah.

Sorry, after 1995. So these are the offers, okay? So Ben has a clear offer problem. I wrote my entire first book on this issue because it's one of the most common problems that limits businesses. And the offer is a strategic thing that you do in that it affects the entire business. If you change your offer, it changes the advertising, it changes the conversion process, it changes your pricing, it changes your deliverables. So it changes everything.

But because of that, if you nail the offer, that's where you can have these massive upticks in growth seemingly overnight. And so I'll just read this little piece for you. No offer, no business, no life. Bad offer, negative profit, no business, miserable life. Decent offer, no profit, stagnating business, stagnating life. I would say he's right now between two and three. Good offer, some profit, okay business, okay life. And then what we want to build is a grand slam offer, fantastic profit, insane business, and freedom. That's what we want to get to.

So let's break this out. So I think that that offer straight off the bat selling $30,000 up front, really tough sale. Totally. Very, very hard sell. So I like that he's charging premium prices for premium services. That makes sense. The problem is how he's selling it and when he's selling it. The right offer at the wrong time is still the wrong offer. That's the problem he has. And so this $30,000 thing absolutely should be, and maybe we need to change that. Maybe that should be a $60,000 or $90,000 thing.

But selling it right off the bat is kind of like, he's getting people who've never met him before to just get on a call and then just try and buy. Rather than try and go for that, I'd rather go for a much easier sale that with that first product or service we can give them the information so that now our entire business is about upselling customers into our 30, 60, $90,000 thing rather than spending six phone calls to close somebody on a $30,000 thing and having people drop off at each of those steps. This is how I, if I owned your business,

I would have my front end thing be like five or six grand. I would have it solve one very specific problem very well that more than, you know, gives them a 50K or a while on a $5,000 thing. But,

But it's built in purposefully just to get the quick sale, transition from prospect to customer, one call close, not three call closes, which I'm sure you're having to do right now just to close. Right. Yeah. You're arm wrestling people to get 30 grand. We're missing the point of even having this simple sales funnel. And so get the 5K, do the three calls you were going to do as a sale anyways, provide value for those three, and then at the end sell your 30K thing.

So I think that the changes that Alex recommended for the funnel make a ton of sense. I'm not a professional funnel designer. I've really only been doing paid ads for the last year and listening to somebody who's got as much vast experience like Alex tell me exactly what I need to do is super helpful.

And I know that I could probably figure it out over many, many years and painful processes. But ultimately, having this path to create a funnel that works is going to make me feel a lot better. So what can we split off that's like,

Five or six grand that would be immediately valuable to them that doesn't require a huge amount of work, but they could just like, they could use your calculator. They can make these changes and immediately see like a return that would then create the necessity for your main thing. Yeah. I would say that the pricing thing is massive. Okay. Another thing would be like just very basic sales.

training for their teams. Like they need, they need a script. Like they're bartenders and servers. If you don't have a script for your sales team, like you have no idea. And the way you look at that is very straightforward. How many drinks per person are you selling? Right. You know, a number of guests, you know how many drinks you're selling, you know, drinks per guest. Yeah. Boom. That's like a pretty easy metric to like, how do I grasp onto? Which of those is easier for you to deliver on?

the pricing is like massively easy because they just have to change their people. - Then I would go pricing audit first. - Yeah. - Because also there's immediate value in that what I would do is like, let's back calculate how much more profit you would have made last year if you had these prices. - Yeah. - And then they're like, holy shit, I would have made a hundred grand. And you're like, cool. So pretty good return on the five. - Yeah. - Great. If you like that, you're gonna love what I have for you next. - Got it. - Which is how do we actually make sure this happens consistently quarter over quarter. This is actually what we do with our, you know, with our premier customers. - Right. - It's too cold of a sale right now. - Yeah.

So either we have to have a much longer sales process, or we lower the bar so we can just get them in the door. And then we can upsell. - And the profit booster, which is what we call it in general, is like, you think that that is going to be meaty enough for them. Obviously-- - It's 5K. We're not selling 30. - It's five. - It's like dude, if we just fix this one thing, I'll more than. I know what your market looks like. We have comps in the area. We can tell you what this market can sustain, and that way, the question is, what's it worth to get it right on the first shot?

So like for sure, I could say, hey, just bump your price up by 10%, but you'd probably freak out about that. Of course you would, and rightfully so. So what we're going to do is remix a couple of the things, get the prices appropriate to your area that we already know are working, so you don't have to sweat about it. Right.

Right. Done. So it's like the only real cost to you is reprinting your fucking menus. Right. And then the next step is like, do you want to raise your prices again, but sooner? Well, you need a better quality product, better trained bartenders, et cetera. And I feel like that could help them kind of understand that they will have that opportunity to do it again sooner because they already got the bump. And the reason I want this one is because this is fast and easy. Yeah.

which I like selling those things first. You have to do this in order to do this, so you might as well sell this first. And the fact that it's easy and fast and profitable, like it checks all the boxes for fast, easy, risk-free.

- There you go. - Got it. - I think we make this 5,800 on the phone for the pricing booster, whatever you wanna call it. - Yep. - And then what we do is that then leads to the quarterly retainer at, I think you had 9K per quarter, right? - Mm-hmm. - And that's probably high pricing. - So Alex's idea about the $5,800 offer really makes a lot of sense. What he was explaining, that trying to sell somebody a $30,000 service cold,

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isn't working. There was a little bit of an aha moment, but actually it makes a ton of sense. So I'm excited to try to find an opportunity to give our clients or prospects that will become our clients exceptional value right off the bat will one, make it a lot easier to go to the next step and also give us a lot of quick wins so that we're not constantly putting in all this work to get nothing.

I'm trying to think about the easiest way to do this. I would probably end up doing a rollover upsell. So we're selling step one of a multi-step process. That's what this is. And I would seed that up front.

So when you sell the thing, it's like, listen, I'll be real with you. My whole goal is to give you this pricing audit. I'm just going to easily ROI myself and like everybody will be happy. What I really want to do is help you really transform the bar because you can only do a pricing change once. And then after that, what do you do? Right. But even if we make this pricing change, great, we made an extra hundred grand, but wouldn't it be cool to make an extra million? Now I'm not promising that because obviously your results will vary. It depends on your market. But what I can do is basically walk you through what it takes to truly build this into a staple that then also drives people into the food side. So it becomes a virtuous cycle.

And so what I want to do is take your 5,800 and I'll credit towards the end. So if you're wondering, should every business have a back end and a front end or multiple offers? The answer is it depends. And I know that's a terrible answer, but I'll tell you what it depends on. There's a certain amount of information that is required for somebody to make a decision. Depending on where they come in on that continuum of needing a little bit of information versus needing a lot of information, then there has to be more selling that must occur.

Then the next constraint that comes up in the business is cash flow. Well, if we're spending money to get these people in, we want to recruit that cash as fast as we can. And for somebody to buy maybe a $100,000 thing, it takes more time and more information to make that decision. And during that time, we're spending all this money in labor and advertising, but we're not seeing any return. The idea of sometimes having a front-end and back-end offer is mostly just to pull cash forward, offset the cash outlay, which is another way of saying...

decrease the payback period, or increase the cash conversion cycle. Lots of fancy words, but basically just get money back faster. So that then everything after that's all gravy, you recruit the money, now you can go get another customer, and then this person's all in the ascension process. For example, his advertising was all brand-based and all inbound, then he could probably get away with just going straight to a more expensive thing because they've already consumed so much information prior to that. But since he's almost entirely based on cold traffic ads,

we have to lower the bar to get people to just take that small jump so that he can then prove himself to then take the big jump. - Got it, seen that before. - Yeah, 'cause it works. And you do it, but it's like you only get that if you do that during the two to four weeks that we have. So that's the time window we can apply it towards. And if you want, I'll apply it to your first payment. So the 9K becomes 4K for your first quarter, and then you go into 9K after that.

Or, if you want, one of my personal favorites is just knock off $1,500 per quarter. So make this $10,500 or $10K per quarter, but if you do it now, it's $8,500. Got it. And we knock it off. That way, we spread the discount over four.

I gave Ben two different ways of applying the discount. I prefer spreading discounts because I don't want an easy yes and then go from 4K to 9K and then them say, oh, actually, I'll just get the quarter and then I'll cancel. I'd rather spread the discount out and get the commitment over the long term. And so if someone's willing to pay the $8,500, they're like, okay, well, that was nice of him to credit the $5,800 or $6,000 towards my payment. So it's like a nice gesture. It encourages people to take action, but it's not so much so that it's getting the wrong type of customer in because the price is going to double. That way you're not crushing your firsts.

Your first payment. Sure. And the 9K per quarter, which is what we're doing that is continuity on the better cocktail consulting thing. So how do we... How sticky is that? How sticky is it? Are people re-upping? The actual design and implementation of their cocktail menus? Are people churning out of this?

Yes. Basically, anybody who buys it as part of the initial package, they don't continue on with it. They stop after two quarters. I have my suspicions on why that's happening. Okay, why? We are not showing them the value. We're not demonstrating it in a meaningful way. We're supposed to fill out a scorecard. We're supposed to show them week over week how much better their program is doing. You're not doing it? No.

I have my team. Well, you have the team, sure. So there's a little warning alarm that's going off for me right now, which is that if people are turning out in two quarters, basically two payments, that's not a good sign. You know, he nailed it. He's not providing value. That's a kind of amorphous big term. But underneath of that, it's like, the question is why? One of the difficult parts with consulting or education is that if you are what I would consider a one-trick pony, I'm not saying Ben is, but if you are, then once you've kind of like implemented your thing, it's like, why should someone keep paying you? So

you so i like to figure out ways that we can have some sort of consumables or something that is always changing the business that is required for you to keep providing value one of the benefits of a bar restaurant is that they're always getting new staff in and so new staff needs to get trained up consistently now the downside is if they learn how you train then they'll just say well i'll just train them myself and not pay you this money we have to figure out a way to make the back end

or just accept that it's not and then charge an appropriate amount of money for it so that you deliver that value, you have a good margin, and you just understand that that's the nature of the business. And the good news is there's a gazillion restaurants and bars, and so you'll be able to do that for a very long time. Well, some people try to create recurring revenue for recurring revenue's sake, but some products and services are not really meant to be recurring.

correct. There's a reason that after four years of education in college, you graduate. After high school, you move to the next thing. Education in general tends to graduate people. They learned, and because they learned, they no longer should continue. Now, how does the education system deal with this? They just give you more and more majors, and you can become a master, and you can become a PhD, and you can be a double secret PhD. They'll just always give you something else. It's more common in an education and consulting business like his, but the businesses that are most valuable, obviously, are businesses that once someone comes in, they never want to leave or stop paying.

But it doesn't mean that you can't make a ton of money in businesses that you do just one-time services on. So I don't think there's anything wrong with that. There's just less enterprise value. Why are they doing it? I think there's a little bit of resistance to just kind of numbers in general. From them? From them. I co-designed that component of it for them to do. Is there a way that you can just get a login to their system and then collect it? Definitely. I'll bet you if you...

logged into their system and once a month they had a meeting with you where you showed them their numbers. It would almost feel like, this guy knows all my stuff, I have to, you know what I mean? And so I think that would be worth the extra time cost, maybe it's two hours per account or whatever, who cares. - Get that. - Right, that to me feels worth improving. 'Cause if you can't fix churn, there's no point in doing any of this. - Right. - 'Cause otherwise you just have people falling off the back. It's like we have to start with people staying and then we can fix all the front end stuff. 'Cause why would we pour more into a leaky bucket?

So how does this process feel overall? - Feels great. I mean, it's in line with the direction I wanted to go in. It's just obviously laid out much more clearly and

using a system that you know works. Okay good. As an entrepreneur you try to figure out a lot of things on your own. You can do it a lot of ways. You can do it by doing the research, trying things out, or working with people who have been there and done it before. With Alex, not only has he been there and done it before, he's been there, done it incredibly well multiple times for businesses in tons of different industries. And so when he says that something's going to work,

I believe it. The sales training is like the intermediary. Is that kind of what you're recommending here? Because in my head, the offer component starts with the pricing part because that's the easy win, right? That would then move into the cocktail consult, the better cocktail, the $30,000 offer. And then that would move into the $9,000 a quarter offer.

Any reason to not just push them into continuity? Because they probably still have shitty cocktails. I could make that just, I could just say, we'll start, we'll just do our program and we'll just, we'll do it in the first three months. It'll be the first quarter, we'll be the program. That's fine. As long as we can maintain the continuity. Yeah. There's an offer structure that I like a lot called the wave fee offer. So basically I could say, listen, this thing I charged $30,000 for. Yep.

If you commit for the year, I'll waive it, but you're committing for it. Now, if you want to cancel two quarters in, you have to pay me this. So it's like, I'll eat the cost. If I take the risk on, you make the commitment. That's the risk you take. And I'll front you all this work. If you take the risk, you don't want the commitment, then pay for that. I'll do it. And then it's quarter to quarter. Yep.

Which one would you prefer? Got it. But now it's an A-B close. Right. That help? Yep. Okay. I'm going to talk about a session in a second, but I think big picture, we have funnel redo. Yep. So we got that going. Number two is add call outs. Three is we have new lead magnet. Four, we have inside of funnel redo, we have three step and then Vimeo, video above scheduler.

And then we have integrate scheduler with opt-in. All right, let's pull this page up again real quick. So I'm going to design this as though it were the second page because the first page is really simple. It shows headlines of headline image opt-in. That's it. All right. So basically the first half here, you could peel off and make that the first page, but you'll have a picture of the thing.

that you're going for. - Right. - And you're gonna remove the top two, you know, you remove your logo, you're gonna remove better bar program, take that out, beautiful cocktails is gonna be the, without X, Y, and Z that you're, you know, your biggest concerns. Now let's scroll down. All right, cocktails that capture, highly trained bar teams, functional product. I would think about it like this, like create drinks that create regulars. Get staff that customers can't wait to come back to and tip like crazy, you know, parentheses.

and then functional operating processes. - That's like all about headache reduction. - Yeah, I wanna think about, like functional operating processes, the way to, when I think about when I'm writing a copy is what are the moments? So if I have functional operating process, what's the moment for me as a restaurant owner or a bar owner that I would experience the benefit

of functional operating processes? Is it when I realized that I didn't have to throw out all this inventory that I, like all these old pineapples that I thought I was going to need and then toss out? Like, what's the moment or moments? It's kind of one of those things like when you notice the pain isn't there anymore, right? Like that's a hard thing to kind of figure

Well, then tell me what the pain is. The pain works fine. Like the pain that they typically have with a dysfunctional operating process. Give me a moment. Is like when they walk in, the bar's a total mess because nobody knows how to set it up. Like no more disaster back of bar. But it's just like you can do the negative or the relief of the positive. Okay, now let's scroll up. Okay, a lot of consistent proven results. I would say like we drive quarter over quarter alcohol sales growth.

'Cause that's what, to me, proven results doesn't mean anything as a word. 30% cocktail sales, 40% return to beverage, 50% boost speed of service. I would actually use the numbers as the subtext and I would use the benefit as the primary text. So speed of service is like get rid of waiting lines,

And then it says underneath 50% boost in speed of service. That's me personally. So I referenced earlier in the ads around the copy, but now we're applying the same frameworks from who, what, when to the landing page. I like to speak in terms of moments because people don't really, like they have to translate or unpack a word of like a process or some specific improvement. It just takes mental effort and

every piece of mental effort you ask someone to use, a certain percentage of people say, nah, I've got other things in my life and they'll dip. I want to pre-digest the food. I want to pre-digest the pain and explain the moments that they probably recently experienced that will then make them believe that I have complete context on their problem and therefore a high likely to be able to solve it.

So there's a number of really small things that you can do at a page that can have a really big improvement. First off, like everything that someone sees above the fold, like that's the most important part of the page. Like what happens on someone's mobile device or their desktop before they scroll? That's above the fold is kind of what they say in the marketing world. If you've got like the name of your business and it's cold traffic, they don't know, they don't care. So like take that out because they don't know who you are. And so then the headline itself, it's like we want it to be some sort of very clear like reason for them to move forward. And then I usually have sub headlines that clarify or add context to the headlines.

And so oftentimes that'll be like without X, Y, and Z or without pain, it qualifies it. Underneath that, it's like I want it to be as simple and clear as possible what they're going to get. And then basically everything below the fold is just if you're still skeptical, let me just give you more information to make the decision. But I want all of the information I'm providing to be relevant to why someone should move forward, not just like a whole bunch of stuff about us.

And then make sure that you have disclosures around results to make sure you explain how these things are calculated. And otherwise, it could just be an unsubstantiated claim. So with the new lead magnet, we have the new funnel. We have the new ad callouts. This is great. We're going to have the $5,800 pricing offer, which I like. And then Ascension, which is going to be a rollover. I think there's a C in there somewhere. Ascension via rollover plus...

- Waved 30K offer, all right. Also the thing is this in-person onboarding is gonna serve as such a good first experience for them 'cause you're gonna fly out, you're a fixed month, they'll be like, "Wow, this was so worth it." And right now your team does all of this stuff, right? Not you? - I'm all acquisition. - Okay, the people flying out is your team? - Yeah, exactly. Yeah, no, I never-- - Okay. So what I wanna do, yeah, so what I wanna do is add an ultra high ticket with you. - Yeah. - So just five X the price.

And you can present that first. Yes. Get the gas and be like, or I can tell my team to do it to me. The exact same process is just, I got, I got a wife and kids. And so you want me out there? I'll do it. Happy to. And it's just obviously, you know, this is what we do, but they're going to run the same play. So effectively the first,

- So $5,800 pricing is part of like an extended sales offer. - 100%. Instead of taking three calls or four calls like you are right now, just get paid, deliver the value, and then once you have an exchange, they get more than what it's worth. Customers versus prospects are like 10 times more likely to buy again. - Of course. - And so just get 'em, make 'em customers so you can increase the likelihood so then they buy again. - Right, give 'em a ton of value, have it all be with me. - And it's easy, 'cause this is just pricing related, right? It's pricing, you know, 15, 30 day fix. They immediately see the value and you're like, dude, if you like this, you're gonna love that.

Right. Do you feel like there's a lot of value for me doing all that fulfillment? Or do you think that that's something that I can also have somebody on my team? I think you do it first. Do it first. Just to get a feel for it. Sure. Totally that. And because what I want to make sure that we nail is this. Got it. Because we're not in it for the $5,800 thing, right? We're in it because we want to see. I would want to see at least 50% upgrading into that. Yep. Okay.

Get to here and then potentially... Make them the money to pay you the next thing. And I would say the way that I operate is that I never want to ask you for money I haven't already made you. Got it. And you'll notice that's a common theme of how I roll. Right. And so it's like, let me go make you $100,000. We make you that with the new bar program. Right. And then with the next thing, it's going to cost you a third of what I already made you. Right. So you're good. I've already made room for you to afford me. Right.

It's a much easier sale. Right. So I charge them $5,800. They're now making $9,000 a month, month over month. And they're like, oh, look, you have $90,000 that you didn't have before. You can use that on us. Right. Got it. And you want to make sure that you make that offer before the end of that 30-day period.

So it's like you want to offer it at week two, three, again at four if you need to. And the way that I offer those things is either I'll do immediate upsells. If I don't have that, which in this one it doesn't make sense. So you'd have the milestone moment. So they implement it and they have their first weekend after the pricing audit and their sales are the same or their sales go up and they're like, holy shit, I made way more money. So that would be a moment that I would immediately...

ask for the sale. The next one that I would have is basically like the next week, because this is a pretty short time. And then finally you have last chance. So you have three shots at the sale for this. Now you were taking sales calls before. Yeah. But now you're talking to a customer. Yeah. And they've already delivered them value. Right. Easier. And they're making money. Exactly. Okay. I mean, big picture if we're looking at this like

The funnel redo on its own could very well triple the lead volume that you're getting right now. Okay. Honestly. Just the combination of the funnel redo, the ad callout, and having a lead magnet that actually resonates to that specific avatar. Like this alone could probably just triple. Just these things. Mm-hmm.

This is going to dramatically improve sales velocity. Sure. Let's talk about sales real quick. What do you do? Like, so what's the walk me through what, like how you structure the conversation for sales. You already have something. Yeah. So that's the, that this is the, like the click to close, right? Okay. Prospects. Yeah. They visit the landing page soon to be optimized. Yes. Fill out the form. Yeah. Fill out the form. And that automates a text message, text message and email. So text message and email. This,

I guess if they didn't book, it'll still go out. They'll have the link to book, et cetera. It also triggers a call from my director of ops who's largely involved in the intake process. So she conducts an intake. This was previously for – we had this intake process in place because of low-quality leads. So she would take an intake call, 15 minutes. If they were qualified, she'd send them off to me. Okay.

I'd conduct a discovery, usually about 30 minutes. I'd talk to them about what their biggest pain points are. I'd ask them all the different questions about what they want to see. What percentage of them have been watching the video? This new video? No, what percentage of them have been watching the video after...

Like when they get on the phone with you? - Oh, that video is new. - Okay. - Yeah, that's like a month old. - Brand new. Okay, got it. Well, this last month you've taken sales calls. Have any of them mentioned the video? - No. - Okay, so they're not watching it. So this, the way that I structured it here where they're gonna have to see the video before they, well they'll see it and they'll have to scroll in order to get to the scheduler will probably increase the likelihood they should actually watch it. But the other thing is that that set call, so I'm gonna make this number seven. Set goes to then video.

to then close. So your director of ops is gonna say, "Awesome." So I'm gonna set you up with Ben, but before you get on, I'm gonna send you this video. Make sure you watch it, and I'm just gonna say, "Do that," 'cause the first question he's gonna ask you is, "Did you watch the video?" And if you haven't, he's just gonna say, "Okay, I'm gonna grab a coffee," and you watch the video. So you're gonna do it either way, so you might as well just do it now.

And also for you, when you hop on the call, I'll be like, did you watch the video? If they say no, it's like, great, watch that. And I'll be like, and the reason we do that is because I already have a lot of facts and figures and things like that that I can describe with my words, but it'll take us three times as long as you just watching it. And so then that'll give us good context rather than me just spewing stuff at you, which most people are like, okay, fair enough.

Yeah. But you don't want me to just give you a lecture for 10 minutes. I don't want to either. This has some graphs, it has some figures in it that makes it a little bit more, more digestible for you. Totally. And so yeah, that'll be the sales process there for post call. And you'll be like, honestly, if you do these things at this price point, I think you'll be able to start closing like at that,

- A lot. - Yeah. - 'Cause if you were closing like 50%, which I think you could if you're an owner operator and you're at this point after this kind of process, I mean I think you could close, some people owner operator close like 80% on these calls. So I'm a big believer in founders selling the product in the beginning

And I think there's a number of reasons for that. One is it keeps you close to the customer. You can understand how the marketing is doing. You can see who's coming in and that will give you a very rapid feedback loop in terms of what you need to adjust on the front end and how you can kind of get feedback on your offer and your pricing. And it takes out one very important variable, which is that if you have a salesperson in there, you might not know if they're doing a good job. So you might be like, ah, they're not closing. What's the problem? And they might be like, I don't know. These leads suck. But

like, is it a pricing issue? Is it a copy issue? Is it an avatar issue? Being closer to it, you would be like, oh no, these are the right people that we're talking to. And they're just shocked at the price. So they're not shocked at the price, but they're just not getting it. And so each of those would kind of offshoot into different types of solutions. The big thing is though, I like founder selling the beginning as well, because when you're the founder, you're the most convicted. And so you will...

typically be able to outperform any salesperson. And in the beginning, when you have fewer resources, you could use the extra conversion percentage and the decreased cost of not having a salesperson or paying the commission. So think, I can close twice as many sales and I don't have to pay the commissions for it. It frees up cashflow so that we can make some of these big bets early on that are gonna build the foundation for the business.

There's so few leads that are coming in that I think he should be taking these calls basically until he can't take these calls anymore. And by the time he can't take these calls anymore, he's already completely blown past his revenue level. He'll have a whole bunch more revenue and cash flow to then solve the problem of him not having time. And that's the game of business. With that being said, that would be like if you just did that, it would be more than a 5x in sales. Because if you get to 30% close rate would mean that you make the same revenue.

without your actual $30,000 back end. Right, but if you're at 50%, you're making 40% more revenue and then you still have your back end. One last thing is that I understand why you're not spending that much money, but you are spending too little money. With the fixes that we're at now, it would be okay to keep the spend that you have. But if I were selling a $30,000 thing, you're barely advertising enough to get enough volume for something of that ticket. And so for me, if I test stuff, I usually test it two times CAC.

Per campaign. Yep. So, I'm sorry, two times allowable CAC. Not current CAC. Yeah, right, exactly. That's kind of my benchmark. Per campaign, though. So I might run multiple campaigns to figure out which one's working. But for you, your funnel process was messed up, and that's why your numbers aren't good. Yeah, got it.

So what I'm referencing here is that I budget two times the cash I collect from a customer in 30 days when I'm testing new ads. For example, if I make $100 in profit from a customer in the first 30 days, I will let an ad go to $200 in spend before shutting it off as long as I'm getting leads. And the reason for that is usually because there's a certain amount of inefficiency in the beginning that you have to be willing to stomach to find the ads, the copy, the hooks, the creative variations that are going to ultimately perform. I have to be able to

stomach bad ads that don't convert and make up for it in good ads that do convert and then be like, okay, so this is working not as efficiently as I want, but it's working. Now let's double down on this and make 10 more variations that are more similar to this messaging. Yeah, and once he finds the messaging that converts, it's like, by all means, blow the doors off and spend as much as you can, or at least as much as you can while being able to take all the sales calls. That's it, like this really fixes it.

The good thing is like this, like you wanted to hit your triple. I make no guarantees. These are high likely like shots. Okay. That's very encouraging. Yeah. No, you've got it. And I think this is the key. Because also think about all the calls you're not going to have to take. All the ones that are three calls and then don't close.

Right? Right. You're spending all your time on these wasted calls when it could be one call closing 5,800, 5,800, 5,800. And so you see this as a one call close at 5,800. Like discovery. For sure. Discovery. For sure. Oh, that's your problem? Yeah, I figured. For sure. Here's the solution right here. Not even a question. Yeah, got it.

- That's like, you should be expecting one call. And you should set that as the agenda. You'll say the four things you have to say legally. Hey, this is X calling from Y in regards to Z. By the way, this call is recorded. Before we get going, just wanna say, how you doing today? Great. Let me set the agenda. I'm gonna go through the lead magazine that you just got. I'm gonna understand some of the metrics about your bar. And then at the end, if it's a good fit, I can explain to you how we might be able to help you out. Sound good? Great. And then we just go through. I almost forgot, 'cause Michael wants me to do this. - Oh yeah.

- Oh yeah. - This could be, this could be, I mean it actually could be your triple, could be right here. You could definitely two to three extra call outs in terms of CCRs with the ad call out. I'll bet you your conversion rate, do you know what your conversion on your landing page is right now? - Like last year it was like 7%. - Okay, so 7% could probably go closer to 30%, which is my benchmark for a lead magazine page, which would be like a nice little chill 4X here. I think you going from 6% close rate

to like 30 to 50% is super reasonable given the fact that you are the one who's going to be selling it and the price point is what it is. So I think in a real way, you might even make more money just selling this than you're currently doing with none of the extra work. And then all of this, this right here, is just going to be gravy. Yeah.

So you're basically going to be able to stack potentially probably a double of your current revenue from this source, but then stack 100% of your current revenue from this. How do you like this plan? Love it. It's a lot of what I want to do. Oh, good. And it's...

I've started kind of trying to figure out if this is something that makes sense for me to do. And then obviously seeing it all on paper and coming from you gives me a level of confidence to want to do it. I would do it pretty much in this order. You're going to redo the funnel. Once the funnel's redone, technically the lead mag would happen at the same time as the funnel. So one in three happen together. Ad call outs, you then run the ads. This is basically your phone process. So this happens up front. Four and six would happen together because this is sales process. The extension happens after they buy.

This is also going to happen again with sales process. So basically one and three together, two happens next, four, six, seven happen third. Then you go back to your ads guys and say, Hey, go spend more. Go find more keywords. Yeah, there you go. Hold on. Let me, let me, it's all about the pinky.

Cool? Cool. All right. I was both very excited and very nervous to come into something like this, to really put it all out there and be vulnerable, not just in front of somebody who I have an immense amount of respect for, but also...

people who are gonna watch this video, you guys. That was awesome, getting through that, right? And I felt once it was actually done, it felt amazing, right? Like it felt great to know that I have a path forward that I can really count on. And while I know that no guarantees are there, I do know that I feel a lot better and that's important.

So I really like Ben's business. It's clear that he understands the bar business well, which is one of my big requisites, like actually be good at the thing before trying to sell the thing. I think if he makes some of the changes that I outlined, it's very likely that the business does well. And I like to be clear, this is in no way a promise that you who's watching this at home. If you do this in your business, that you'll get the same results because...

His results are completely up to him and the effort that he takes and his background, his knowledge. So your results may vary. That being said, if you enjoy this type of stuff, these business breakdowns, these Cash Guys episode, you'll definitely want to check out this one. 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 forward slash roadmap, R-O-A-D map, roadmap.