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How to Scale Your Personal Brand to 10M Followers
Caleb Ralston · Watch on YouTube · Generated with SnapSummary · 2026-06-03

00:00 This podcast setup has made me a

00:02 millionaire. Podcasting is one of the

00:04 biggest opportunities for creators and

00:06 small business owners. And if you are in

00:08 that journey, this is a full-on master

00:10 class. That one video made me $10,000.

00:13 So when you understand how to package

00:15 the content, title, thumbnail, first 30

00:18 seconds, that's how YouTube pushes your

00:21 content to other people.

00:24 [Music]

00:31 my brother. What up? Did you get in?

00:34 Yeah. Yeah. I'm I'm I'm in Vegas now.

00:36 I'm doing an episode called Podcast

00:37 Explained, and I really need to know the

00:40 thoughts on how you're getting these

00:42 these views. I I I just need to know the

00:44 game, man. I'm having the greatest month

00:47 on my podcast, which uh So, you're

00:49 coming at a good time. When you say

00:51 greatest month on your podcast, what do

00:52 you mean?

00:53 $16,000 in Google ads. And that's and

00:56 that's not to mention like all the

00:58 business that's being generated from the

01:00 podcast. So, I'll be there in a second.

01:03 All right.

01:06 He in here, my brother 702. What up?

01:09 What up? How you feeling? What's up?

01:10 Welcome to the video, man. I literally

01:12 just got off the plane, bro. And I was

01:14 so excited. I'm like, I need to go sing

01:17 see the king of lighting. That's what I

01:19 Yours looks It looks beautiful all the

01:22 time. Thank you. I want to go I want to

01:24 understand this stuff, but I need to go

01:26 to this YouTube real quick. So So you

01:29 were saying you had a you're having the

01:30 biggest month on YouTube, right? So I I

01:33 I leverage YouTube for my podcast. Like

01:36 I play the YouTube game with my podcast.

01:38 You leverage YouTube for your podcast as

01:40 opposed to what? As opposed to just

01:43 audio, you know, just, you know, Apple

01:45 or Spotify and trying to grow it

01:47 internally. M YouTube is the biggest way

01:50 I uh grow the audience and the awareness

01:52 of the podcast I have cuz YouTube

01:55 YouTube is a it's a powerful platform

01:57 like it people discover you on YouTube.

02:00 Yeah. Other people who don't know

02:01 understand the YouTube game, they're

02:02 probably growing their podcast with like

02:04 the short clips on the on Tik Tok and

02:06 Instagram. But because I know YouTube,

02:10 it's been crazy. So, all right. Well,

02:13 some people have good content, right?

02:16 and they put it on YouTube and it

02:17 doesn't grow. When you say you know

02:19 YouTube, does it is your content better

02:22 than everybody else's or you understand

02:24 something we don't? My content isn't

02:27 necessarily better inherently. My

02:30 content is better packaged though. I

02:33 like to say YouTube isn't a video

02:35 platform. It's a packaging platform. So,

02:38 when you understand how to package the

02:40 content,

02:41 title, thumbnail, first 30 seconds, um,

02:45 that's how YouTube pushes your content

02:48 to other people. Uh, can you show me

02:50 what you're talking about? I need to get

02:51 in your business for a second. Let me

02:52 get a chair. I need to pull up a chair.

02:54 So, okay. So, I have my uh, this is this

02:59 is the YouTube analytics that are pulled

03:01 up right now. But, let's just, for

03:04 instance, take this video that's really

03:05 taking off. Um, we uploaded about three

03:08 weeks ago or two and a half weeks ago.

03:09 That one video made you $10,000. That

03:12 one video made me $10,000. And most

03:14 people are paying to get awareness, but

03:18 when what's powerful about this number

03:20 is that I'm being paid for my awareness.

03:24 You're being paid to get awareness.

03:26 Yeah. And so, not not only am I making

03:28 not only is Google paying me to find

03:31 customers, it's it's a it's which is

03:33 marketing, it's also building my brand.

03:36 And so like I don't have to have sales

03:37 breath in my content because it's not to

03:41 mention there's a brand deal on this

03:42 video. I signed an $80,000 brand deal

03:44 for an ad read. I do an ad on there. I

03:47 sponsor my own content with my

03:49 challenge. So as far as like the money

03:52 plan on this video, it's multiple

03:54 streams. But like here's something I

03:56 want to bring up. This is why I love

03:57 podcasting by the way. This is why I

03:58 love long form. Mhm. And then I'll get

04:00 into why this why I believe this video

04:02 is uh taking off. girl. Which, bro, this

04:05 video was not edited.

04:07 Like, not this this is what I mean

04:09 really is when you understand packaging,

04:11 you don't have to rely on fancy editing.

04:14 M. So, I'll break that down in a sec.

04:16 But this is my favorite uh stat on

04:19 YouTube, though. So, cool. 10,000

04:21 watchtime hours. Yeah, watchtime hours.

04:23 So, that's

04:24 85,000 hours of watch time. So, I'm just

04:27 going to do 85,000 on my phone. Mhm. So

04:30 that's watch hours divided by 24. I

04:33 think I'm doing this right. So that's

04:36 that's

04:38 3,000 days 3,500 days of time spent on

04:42 my brand with this video. But if I

04:44 divide that by 3 uh

04:46 65. So that's this is 9.7 years of time

04:51 spent on my brand with one video. Wow.

04:55 Um all right. So let's go into the

04:57 packaging. Okay. Let's go into the

04:58 packaging. So great. Uh, so the first

05:02 part of packaging is the title. Mhm. So

05:05 I I'm literally I'll literally just go

05:07 into the details. So this video is

05:10 entitled How to Become a Millionaire in

05:12 2025 part-time.

05:14 So something I like doing and something

05:16 that works really well on YouTube is I

05:18 like a very clear title that could read

05:22 like an article headline. So, if I if I

05:25 were to have gone on you uh Google and I

05:27 type in how to become a millionaire,

05:31 and this is the research phase of of

05:33 content, you you should have an idea of

05:35 what your title is going to be before

05:36 you even shoot your videos, which is you

05:39 should have an idea what the video is

05:40 going to be about before you shoot the

05:42 video, instead of shooting the video,

05:43 then coming up with a cool title.

05:45 Exactly. You want that clarity up front.

05:47 So, so here, people go to college to

05:50 learn how to write headlines. M like

05:51 they pay hundreds of thousands of

05:53 dollars, right? So why come up with

05:56 YouTube

05:57 titles but yourself? So what I like to

05:59 encourage people is to take these titles

06:03 that you that Google's already serving

06:06 you and make it your video.

06:09 So you went on Google and you I and I

06:11 saw some cool headlines. The first thing

06:13 that came up was Forbes. Here's how to

06:15 realistic realistically become a

06:17 millionaire. And if I saw that on

06:19 YouTube, I would have clicked that.

06:20 Yeah. There's a science that we all

06:22 don't understand, but we know somebody

06:24 knows the science. Yeah. And and my

06:26 thing is there's words like the re

06:29 realistically is the reason why you

06:30 would click on this video. It's more

06:32 like you're you're insinuating that it's

06:34 it's doable for you, you know? Now, this

06:37 is kind of a new thing that I'm teaching

06:39 when it comes to YouTube strategy is

06:41 once you have your like title,

06:44 there's something powerful about putting

06:46 something in parenthesis that's like a

06:47 whisper.

06:49 So it's it's it's and sometimes you're

06:51 whispering. This is so good. Sometimes

06:53 you're whispering the answer. So So in

06:57 this case, it's how to become a

06:58 millionaire in 2025, which 2025 is

07:01 creating a a distinction that this is

07:03 updated information, but then the

07:04 part-time is like, wait, what? So I'll

07:08 I'll put another one, which some people

07:10 be like, no, bro, you had Myin on your

07:11 podcast. Okay, let me put somebody that

07:13 no one knows. I'll put um uh I had this

07:17 girl, her name is Cassandra Smith, who

07:19 does like how to Okay. Genius way to

07:24 monetize your content and then in

07:26 parentheses an online community. So I'm

07:29 like I'm giving the answer in the title.

07:31 Dang. And then so so that's title. Yeah.

07:34 You have any questions about that? No,

07:36 it's just cuz I interviewed her too and

07:39 I don't think we got 150,000 views.

07:40 Here's what I love, bro. And we did a

07:42 fire interview. No, dude. Here's a this

07:45 I'm going to show you the power of

07:47 packaging. Not to dog my homie Ryan

07:49 Peneda. Yeah. Okay. So, we both

07:52 interviewed Russell

07:54 Brunson in the same day. Okay. So, this

07:58 is I'm going to show you right now the

07:59 power of packaging. Yeah. Okay. And it

08:01 doesn't matter your audience size. If

08:02 you understand this skill, you can

08:04 leverage it. So, I'm going to go Ryan.

08:06 Shout out to Ryan. Love you, Ryan. Um

08:09 and uh I'm going to go pull up on Ryan

08:10 while I'm out here. Yeah. No, he his

08:12 studio is tight. He actually had me come

08:14 in and help a little bit, but that's

08:15 surprising. Okay, so Ryan, who has over

08:18 400,000 subscribers, posted this this

08:21 conversation with Russell that got that

08:23 maxed out pretty much at 18,000 views 11

08:26 months ago. So that's so way bigger

08:29 audience than I had at the time. And

08:31 then still he's his audience is still

08:32 bigger than me. And when I say audience,

08:33 I mean subscribers, right? our

08:36 conversation because I understand

08:38 packaging

08:39 112,000 even though he

08:41 has way more followers way way more

08:44 subscribers correct yours is packaged

08:46 correctly it's packaged correctly so we

08:48 talked about the title in this case this

08:49 was how to sell your knowledge and make

08:51 more money online in

08:52 2024 and then the thumbnail is the

08:55 second part I like to say that the title

08:57 is for the algorithm the thumbnail is

09:00 for the audience

09:03 do they have to be connected

09:05 They they should complement each other.

09:07 So when I when I mean when I say connect

09:09 it, like most people just put exactly

09:11 what their title is in their thumbnail.

09:13 No, it needs to complement your

09:14 thumbnail, but this should speak to the

09:16 individual that's going to click on your

09:18 video. So that's how you get a person.

09:20 You want a person to start consuming

09:22 your video before they click on it. And

09:24 you do that by having them wonder. Maybe

09:27 they ask themselves a question or or

09:29 it's like, "Oh yeah, I never want to

09:31 worry about money again." So like, so

09:33 this is the like what this is the

09:35 science and art of YouTube. Now the next

09:39 part is the intro. Okay. So the reason

09:42 why I want to show you Myin's intro is

09:44 because we didn't edit it at all. Okay.

09:46 It just starts. Mhm. But I'm going to

09:48 I'm going to um I'm going to tell you

09:50 why it worked so well. Did you not edit

09:53 it? Did you just start it intentionally

09:55 or like did you run out of time or you

09:57 just didn't have time to So we just we

09:59 we just started the conversation and I

10:01 I'm I try to fight for three elements in

10:03 every intro that we do. Mhm. And those

10:06 elements are um clarity. Meaning that if

10:10 you clicked on a video that's how to

10:11 become a millionaire in 2025, you need

10:13 to hear something along those lines

10:14 within the first 30 seconds. H so so

10:17 people know that they're in the right

10:18 place. Got it. So that's why you craft

10:21 the conversation kind of the title

10:24 first. Yes. So that in the intro you can

10:27 give them a piece of it. Exactly. Dang.

10:29 I think I was doing this all wrong.

10:30 Yeah. So clarity then then credibility.

10:33 Mhm. So sometimes you might have

10:34 somebody who and credibility is like

10:36 anything like in this case the

10:38 credibility was I was like what better

10:40 person to have on to have this

10:42 conversation than somebody who makes

10:43 millionaires for a living. M and I just

10:45 said that naturally now like but and I

10:48 said by the way Myron thank you for

10:49 making me a millionaire.

10:51 So all this is happening before a minute

10:53 happens. So that's that's bringing cred

10:56 credibility. And then the last thing is

10:58 comprehension. Mhm. So comprehension is

11:01 can somebody get something out of this

11:03 intro? like it's almost like a um you're

11:07 giving them you're giving something away

11:09 up front like and so when I when I say

11:12 when I say comprehension the viewer

11:14 should get something so a lot of people

11:17 just like drag or when and I learned

11:18 this from you bro most amateur

11:20 podcasters are like so tell us your

11:22 story don't start that way cuz nobody

11:25 cares about them they care about

11:26 themselves so what so the the

11:29 comprehension that starts in right away

11:31 is so why why do people have a hard time

11:33 making a million dollars

11:35 So getting that's your first question.

11:36 That's the first question. Oh, and then

11:38 we get into it. Now, now there's so much

11:41 obviously I'm leaving up to the expert

11:43 or the person I'm asking the question,

11:44 but there are times where I will do a

11:46 what I like to call a solo podcast and I

11:49 I I implement all these principles,

11:52 right? Like I just want to make sure

11:53 that the conversation has these things

11:55 and then just go for it. I like to see

11:58 my conversations like a course. Mhm.

12:01 courses answer the who, what, where,

12:04 when, why of a thing. So, you want your

12:06 conversations to unpack those things,

12:09 you know? Um, and so yeah, that mean

12:11 that's how you crush it on YouTube, bro.

12:13 And I don't upload shorts on my YouTube

12:14 channel. I upload one video like this is

12:18 this is it's just crazy. I I I literally

12:20 upload one video a week on YouTube and

12:22 I've been doing that for about 18 months

12:24 and it hasn't been perfect, but yes, in

12:26 the last 28 days. And then then this is

12:29 like this is a stat that people would

12:30 love if you're in business. At the last

12:32 48 hours, I was at church yesterday.

12:34 Mhm. And then today we're doing this.

12:36 Yeah. I'm not I'm not working on my

12:38 YouTube channel right now. Right. Right.

12:40 And 22,000 people have consumed my

12:42 content and and my videos are an hour

12:45 long. So on average, people are spending

12:46 15 to 20 minutes with me. Those are

12:48 that's 22,000 people that spent about 15

12:51 minutes with me, bro. On average. This

12:53 is an inc. You've really broke down the

12:57 science behind it. Yes. I you not just

12:59 creating good content. It's an art and

13:00 science and I I I hope that and what

13:04 what's the number one ingredient is

13:06 intentionality. Mhm. Just be

13:08 intentional. If you're just turning on a

13:10 camera and you're just turning on mics,

13:12 then you you're already going into it

13:15 without like why if you want somebody's

13:17 Oh, dang. This is a bar right here.

13:20 If you want somebody's attention, Mhm.

13:24 they need your intention. All right.

13:26 That incredible. What I think I'm most

13:29 impressed by, and one, you've been doing

13:32 this for a very, very long time,

13:35 but the way you make something look so

13:37 beautiful. And actually, when I came

13:40 into the studio, Yeah. I thought it was

13:43 going to be like lights hanging from the

13:46 ceiling and like expensive like super

13:50 expensive stuff, but it's like a room,

13:53 bro. Just a room. It's just a room, bro.

13:56 Yeah, man. I I'm all about the

13:59 minimal approach to if if you have any

14:02 obstacle in your way, the chances are

14:04 you're going to it'll be less likely for

14:06 you to do the action you need to do

14:07 repeatedly. Yeah. So, I'm uh a question

14:10 I always ask myself, this is just like I

14:12 don't know if it's my personality, but

14:14 is how can we do less without

14:17 compromising quality?

14:19 And and sometimes it's also how can we

14:21 do more without compro compromising

14:23 quality? But I'm always a fan. I'm

14:25 always

14:26 optimizing in order to just get to the

14:30 essence of something. I don't know if

14:31 that's just my personality, but yeah,

14:33 let's dude. Whatever you want to know

14:34 about this set, the studio, I'm going

14:37 there first. Um, what makes this room

14:40 not a regular room? Something I had to

14:41 understand are these. And people think

14:44 it's just something on the wall. So, can

14:45 you explain? Yeah. With this. And you

14:47 got it in the ceiling. I know you you

14:49 guys can see that. You got them in the

14:51 ceiling. Let's explain this. Yeah. So,

14:53 this is what you call sound treatment,

14:56 right? Um, I like to the reason why you

15:00 want to prioritize audio and put your

15:03 money toward audio is because audio

15:05 creates intimacy with your viewer. If

15:08 there's something distracting

15:10 somebody from consuming your content,

15:12 like one of the worst things you can do

15:13 is make somebody work to consume your

15:14 content. Yeah. That's why you click off.

15:16 So, when I walked into this space, which

15:18 is an open 850,000 square feet of, you

15:22 know, concrete and wall, it was an echo

15:25 chamber. And so I wanted to dumb, you

15:28 know, bring down the echo. And the way

15:30 we did that was custom ordering these

15:33 sound panels, um, which each spot that

15:36 they're hanging in. So I have them along

15:37 the walls around. And and if you ever

15:40 get sound treatment like this, you want

15:42 them at the level you're talking at.

15:44 Yeah. You don't want them too high or

15:45 too low. And then we got some hanging on

15:48 the roof because, you know, sound is

15:52 bouncing. That's what it's saying. The

15:53 ceiling. Yeah. So, so every time a uh

15:57 you know audio waves hit a hard object,

16:00 it bounces and comes back and that's why

16:01 we get echoing. All right, so let's

16:03 let's get into some gear. Let's get into

16:05 some gear. Uh what are we shooting with

16:07 today? So, I've been using literally I'

16:10 I've never used a camera setup for so

16:12 long without the need the feeling that I

16:15 need to upgrade. So, that's why I love

16:17 recommending this camera. So, the camera

16:18 I've been using is the Sony FX30. Yeah.

16:21 which is a beautiful camera because it

16:23 has internal fans. It'll never overheat

16:25 on you. So, if you're doing long form

16:27 like podcasting, uh you don't have to

16:28 worry about that. And then I pair it

16:31 like the secret to the shot and we'll

16:33 talk about the lighting, but it really

16:35 is the lens you use. Um the reason why

16:38 my shot looks like butter is because I'm

16:41 using the Sigma 56 millimeter lens.

16:45 Sigma 56 mill I actually use the same

16:47 camera. So, you're using the Sigma 56

16:51 mill. What am I? I think I'm using 30.

16:53 So, yeah, you're 30, which means Yeah,

16:55 which means it's not as compressed.

16:56 Right now, this works really well in

16:59 this space because there's there's

17:01 distance created like and this is why I

17:03 got an open open room. You know, most

17:05 people will put up their furniture up

17:07 against a wall and it doesn't create

17:08 separation or it's hard to get like a

17:11 dynamic shot going. So, what do you mean

17:13 they put it against the wall? Yeah. Like

17:14 I mean, you're saying the chairs? Yeah,

17:16 they'll they'll put they'll put the

17:17 chairs up against the wall and it

17:18 doesn't I mean at that point it's it's

17:21 no longer Yeah. I mean you you can't

17:23 have background blur if you're right up

17:24 against the background. Got it. Can we

17:27 show an example of what that looks like

17:28 even with these cameras to uh show what

17:31 it looks like closer to the wall and

17:33 then Yeah. Great. So So for instance uh

17:36 Art, you're filming me. So, if if

17:39 Art like zoomed or like just was right

17:43 there, like this isn't as dynamic of a

17:46 shot cuz I'm right up against the wall

17:48 like and and you know, you go to a

17:49 podcast studio, most of the time they're

17:51 right right up against the wall like

17:52 this, right? Okay. Now, and I'm

17:55 literally just going to I'm going to

17:57 have you go over here, Art. I'm going to

17:58 swap over this

18:02 chair. And now now I want you to

18:05 uh like like zoom in a little bit. I can

18:09 back up if you want me to. And all the

18:11 stuff is blurry in the back. So which

18:14 one would you prefer? That one for sure.

18:16 So the other one like just looks so flat

18:19 and plain. It's not flattering. Yeah. So

18:22 now shoot wherever you have the space.

18:24 But this is why I initially signed the

18:27 lease here is cuz I knew if I can get an

18:28 open if I could put the the people in

18:30 the middle of the room. Okay. Here

18:32 here's here's the bar. You ready for it?

18:33 Talk to me. Okay. Uh, instead of putting

18:36 the chairs against the wall or the seats

18:38 against the wall, put the cameras

18:40 against the wall and put put the people

18:43 in the middle of the room.

18:45 So that way, cuz nobody needs to know

18:48 what's behind the camera, you know? So

18:51 Oh. So So hypothetically, if you could

18:53 put cameras up against the wall and you

18:55 could bring the people from the wall,

18:57 you can create more of a dynamic shot.

18:59 Bro, this is this is insane because I'm

19:02 actually thinking about all the errors

19:04 that I'm making in my own studio, which

19:06 is crazy, bro. This is a master class

19:09 right now. Okay. All right. So, cuz and

19:11 actually in my So, in my studio, I have

19:14 I have the chairs and I So, it's like

19:17 the wall and then I got like some stuff.

19:19 It's like a little bookshelf, but my

19:22 chair is about here, right? And then my

19:24 cameras are in the middle of the room.

19:26 But what you're saying is just move my

19:28 cameras back to the wall. Yeah. Move my

19:30 chair up and then let the back wall be

19:34 more.

19:39 Now this is good. Yeah. So now I will

19:41 say there there is a there's a pro and

19:43 con to every setup, right? The the pro

19:46 is this looks great with what you see.

19:49 Like this looks great with how far the

19:51 camera is, how the background. Um the

19:54 con is that these don't zoom. So that

19:56 particular lens doesn't zoom. It doesn't

19:58 zoom. But this is why it's called a

20:00 prime lens, right? And this is why it

20:02 gives such a great blurry background.

20:04 And so I would, you know, if you want

20:07 the versatility to zoom in and out, just

20:09 get a zoom lens. Um, but those don't

20:12 typically have the low aperture. Low

20:14 aperture. So yeah, right now this is at

20:16 1.4 and you know, your people can just

20:18 put up a example of what it really looks

20:20 like and like the background is gone.

20:22 It's like it's literal butter. Yeah. And

20:24 I love I My thing is like, dude, if I

20:26 can we show Can we show this? Yeah. If I

20:28 could be the Sit. If I could Oh, yeah.

20:30 Sit down. I'll set up the shot real

20:31 quick. I'll hit record on this, too. All

20:34 right. So, so you're sitting down. It's

20:36 a little bit low. So, I'm going to bring

20:37 up the camera real

20:40 quick. And um yeah, I mean, I'll even I

20:43 even have to crank this a little bit

20:44 just in order to But this looks really

20:47 good. So, you would typically look at

20:48 me, but Mhm. and we could move it a

20:50 little bit closer, but that's the only

20:51 way to change the shot is you got to

20:52 like move the camera itself. Got it. So,

20:55 that's the con to the setup, but with

20:57 the flexibility and that the spot being

20:59 dedicated to be used for the podcast,

21:01 I'm like, it's fine, you know? Got it.

21:03 Because I mean, typically, if you're

21:05 going to have a set, if you're going to

21:06 have your your own studio, you're going

21:07 to have a setup that's pretty much going

21:08 to be static for the most part. Exactly.

21:10 So, that's what this is great for. This

21:11 is a very great static setup. But, hey,

21:13 actually, I take that back, dude. We

21:15 take this on the road. Mhm. because it's

21:17 so lean and mean. For sure. But you know

21:20 how to set it back up. So yeah. Um but

21:22 yeah, so FX30 56 millm if you need more

21:26 width then you can get the 30 mm. If you

21:30 need if you want it if you want a med

21:32 medium wide shot cuz I used to do a

21:34 third angle. We actually took that away

21:36 and we talk about why I don't use that

21:37 any I don't use that either. Here's why

21:39 we took away the wide angle. We took

21:40 away the wide angle because when you're

21:43 cutting up a social clip, like a

21:46 vertical Yeah. based on who's talking,

21:49 that angle always has to be adjusted.

21:50 Yeah. And it just added a So, all that

21:54 to say, yeah, we just do two angles. So,

21:57 this is the exact same setup as on the

21:59 other side. And you're probably

22:01 wondering, somebody's probably wondering

22:03 like, okay, what what's this whole

22:04 contraption being plugged into the

22:05 camera right now? So, if you see this

22:08 studio, would you get in a white shot of

22:10 the studio, Sean? It's There are no

22:12 cables on the ground. So, that is a I I

22:15 have a mess in my studio because I have

22:17 the dummy batteries and I dummy

22:19 batteries. Yeah. With the continuous

22:20 power adapter. Sure. But the which is

22:23 fine. It's not fine. Okay. It's not

22:25 fine. We're tripping over wires. I trip

22:27 over the wires and I know they're there.

22:28 It's crazy.

22:30 But my thing is with this is if you have

22:33 a continuous power adapter and you, you

22:35 know, make it clean. Cool. You'll never

22:36 have to worry about the battery dying.

22:38 Yeah. So, what we do is we get what this

22:40 is what you call a Vmount battery.

22:43 Vmount battery. It's essentially like a

22:45 power rig. Yeah. They Yeah. And every

22:47 brand has them, but this allows you to

22:51 get I mean hours. I mean, I've never had

22:54 to worry about this dying in a full day

22:57 of using it. And so, here's what's

22:59 really cool about the FX30. This is

23:01 besides the fact if if you want to shoot

23:03 reels, you could put like a quick

23:05 release plate here. So if we wanted to

23:07 shoot reels, we can just slide it in and

23:09 lock it in. I was actually wondering

23:11 what that was. So that's called a quick

23:13 release plate and it just screws into

23:15 the other side. Yeah. And so you don't

23:17 have to keep You don't have to just keep

23:19 screwing. So there's a plate. There's a

23:21 plate. And then if you want Yeah. If

23:23 we're doing the podcast. Cool. Can you

23:25 turn that real quick cuz I want the

23:26 audience to see what they're what we're

23:28 seeing. Yep. So, we'll go like this. So,

23:32 like Yeah. And if you wanted to shoot

23:34 reels, like dedicated reels. Okay. Yep.

23:37 Over here.

23:39 So, when you're creating your when

23:41 you're creating content, let's say for

23:42 instance, you're running, you know,

23:44 shooting ads or just some some Instagram

23:45 or Tik Tok content. Y, you just turn the

23:48 camera instead of having to zoom in,

23:50 right, or crop it in. Yeah. So, my my

23:53 thing with with knowing when to flip the

23:56 camera, you know, it's you want to ask

23:58 yourself the question, where is this

23:59 piece of content going first? So, if I

24:02 know I'm going to post this just on

24:04 Instagram or just on TikTok or something

24:06 like that or just YouTube shorts, then

24:08 yeah, you could film this this way. If

24:10 you're unsure, then of course go

24:12 horizontal if you're unsure. But that's

24:13 what I just I mean, it's just another

24:15 cool thing that I love about the FX30s

24:16 cuz they just they build in screws and

24:18 so you don't have to um buy a extra

24:20 cage. But it's literally, bro, that's

24:22 the camera setup. Yeah. It's very lean

24:25 and it's it's clean. You don't have to

24:28 worry about too much. And then and we

24:30 can get all this stuff on Amazon, right?

24:31 I have the links. I have the links

24:32 below. Uh are they your links or my

24:35 links? My links, bro. What do you mean?

24:37 So, if you buy this camera off his link,

24:40 he'll make 60 bucks. 60 bucks. Yeah. I

24:42 think I think Let's go. 4%. Yeah. Total.

24:45 Let's Let's go. So, this is about 1,800.

24:48 This is like 400. And then tripods, you

24:51 can add another 200. So yeah, for this

24:54 camera battery, I mean, I think these

24:57 are like $100. Really? Yeah. What I love

24:59 about this though, I will say what's

25:01 cool about the FX30 is you could buy

25:03 this with a top handle that has the XLR

25:06 inputs. You got one of those? I do. Let

25:08 me go grab it. That's right here, isn't

25:09 it? Isn't that it? Uh, that is that is

25:11 like it. Let me let me grab it real

25:13 quick. And so what you can do is you get

25:14 and what I used to do is I used to plug

25:16 straight into the camera. Yeah. Which

25:18 for most people, I actually think you

25:19 should just do it. Yeah. Because I'll

25:21 talk about the workflow. But because I

25:23 have somebody that works on the team, he

25:24 can he can put things together. But for

25:27 most people, if you're just like filming

25:28 yourself and you don't want anybody,

25:30 just just get one get the FX30 with the

25:32 top handle and plug your podcast mic the

25:35 the with the angle that it's facing and

25:37 then you'll have what you'll have is

25:39 you'll have good audio with that video

25:41 file. Got it. You won't have to sync it

25:42 in post or, you know, make it match. Got

25:44 it. So that's what this is. Um Yeah.

25:46 Yeah. So, that's that's the camera

25:47 setup. Okay. All right. Let's let's go

25:49 lights, bro. Let's go lights. Um, so

25:52 these are Ulonszi

25:56 uh Cobb lights. This is a Cobb lights.

25:58 Cob lights. So, I guess uh Art, if you

26:02 come this way, you'll see this light

26:04 over here, which I'll break down each

26:06 light, but this is what you call a panel

26:08 light. Mhm. Right. So, that's a panel

26:10 light. And then we have another light

26:12 over there which I'll break down. But

26:13 this is what you call a Cobb light and

26:15 it has uh this modifier which you would

26:18 call a lantern softbox. Right? So this

26:21 cob light what's beautiful about it is

26:23 it's it it's very quiet and it puts out

26:26 a large light that's nice and soft. The

26:29 reason why my podcast podcast looks what

26:31 did you say? Beautiful. Is that the word

26:33 you use? Okay. Thank you. It's

26:34 beautiful. buttery, silky uh is uh is

26:38 because of this modifier, I believe. You

26:41 know, and there's different ones. People

26:42 have boughten like the octagon or

26:43 whatever. I like this because it's

26:45 forgiving. Mhm. Aim it in the general

26:48 vicinity of a person's face and you

26:50 should be all right. Gotcha. So, so for

26:51 most people, it's great. What's cool

26:53 about this one in particular is it also

26:54 takes uh those Vmount batteries. So,

26:58 again, no cables. Now, if we want

27:00 cables, we can do we can put some. Yeah.

27:02 Um, which if you have a I want to

27:05 encourage you if you're going to do

27:06 stuff like I am doing, just have a

27:07 system. Just know that when we leave the

27:09 studio, we put these on chargers so that

27:11 the next day we can just run it. So,

27:14 yeah. So, yeah, that's the setup. And

27:16 and I know this is pretty funky. Yeah.

27:18 So, this is that's heavy duty right

27:19 there. Yeah. This is a you know, it's

27:21 like a $100 light stand with wheels.

27:24 $100. Yes. Just this part. And then this

27:27 is like an additional hundred. Okay.

27:29 Gotcha. Um, so let me talk about why I

27:32 don't just have the light on this part,

27:33 which most people that's what they would

27:35 do. Like if you can get the light close

27:39 to a person, obviously if we had it on

27:42 here, we'd have to bring it a lot closer

27:43 and it might get in the shot. Mhm. So

27:46 you can get away with just doing it

27:47 that, but obviously I wanted to, you

27:50 know, level it up and I didn't want to

27:51 mount it on the ceiling, right? So, what

27:54 this allows us to do is it allows us to

27:56 get the light over the person or at the

27:58 person's face without the this having to

28:00 be so close. So, that's all that just

28:02 says. And then when we, you know, I use

28:04 I use the studio for workshops and

28:06 things like that. Shout out to you too,

28:07 by the way. People need to know this.

28:09 Okay. But you were one before I launched

28:12 my podcast, we shot a we shot an episode

28:15 before I had it. Yes. Which I encourage

28:17 people to do. Get like four under your

28:18 belt before you launch your podcast. And

28:20 on the conversation, I was like, "Yeah,

28:22 dude. I want to use this space to do

28:23 workshops, but I'm afraid to. And you

28:24 were like, "Why are you afraid?" I was

28:26 like, "Cuz I don't know what to talk

28:27 about." He's like, "What do you talk

28:28 about online?" And I told him, "I talk

28:30 about this stuff." He's like, "Why don't

28:31 you just talk about that stuff, but just

28:33 in person?" Yeah. And and that

28:36 conversation pushed me to do workshops

28:38 and like masterminds in here. And we

28:40 just got done with our eighth one. I

28:42 appreciate you. Thank you, man. Making

28:44 me love execution, man. That's right.

28:47 Yes, dude. It doesn't matter if you have

28:48 a good idea, you want to execute. The

28:50 student becomes the teacher. I've I'm

28:52 learning so much, bro. You have no idea.

28:55 The For one, my lights are in the

28:57 ceiling and they shoot down. I'm like,

28:58 "Dang, I need to get this and start

29:00 putting it together. My chairs are too

29:02 close to the background. I got I got

29:05 cords everywhere, bro. Like, you are

29:08 you're giving me a master class. I don't

29:10 even know if they're getting value, but

29:11 this is Okay, good. I mean, I imagine if

29:13 you're getting value, then they're

29:14 getting value%. So, um yeah, I did

29:17 notice this though. you. The lights are

29:20 Where do you normally sit? You sit on

29:21 this side, right? Either side. It

29:23 doesn't matter. Yeah. You don't have a

29:24 specific side. Just I don't I actually

29:26 wanted to I like switching it up. Not to

29:28 mention, we rotate this setup three

29:31 different ways. So, I've done podcast

29:34 where we shoot this way. I've done pods

29:35 we shoot when we were here. We shot it

29:38 this way. Mhm. So, yeah. I mean, I like

29:40 switching up cuz I like the regularly or

29:43 you just every now and again you get

29:44 tired of a shot and you just switch it

29:46 up. Yeah. That's That's pretty much it.

29:48 Or you come in here and say, "Well, this

29:49 particular guest, you know what I mean?

29:50 I think we'll do it against the

29:51 fireplace like that." Yes. Oh, that's

29:53 pretty dope. But I did notice it's the

29:56 lights are very close. Yes. I actually

30:01 want it closer. Really? Why? Why not

30:04 have it higher?

30:06 Because when they're higher and further,

30:09 the harsher you're blasting them. Now,

30:13 it does spread it out, which is fine,

30:15 but getting it close and soft is just

30:19 how I create the shot. Cinematic

30:21 lighting is just that. It's large soft

30:23 lighting. And it's hard to get soft

30:26 unless you know you've I don't know if

30:27 you've seen like people who have like

30:29 these sheets in the sky and they're

30:30 shooting lights through the sheets or on

30:32 a on a movie set they'll like rig up a a

30:34 screen and then they'll shoot a powerful

30:36 light through the screen but that screen

30:38 depending on the the shot they're trying

30:40 to create is is how they're achieving

30:42 that. So that's essentially what I'm

30:44 doing just in a podcast setting. Wow.

30:47 Yeah. All right. So what's going to

30:50 light here which I thought would be in

30:52 the shot. Is it in the shot or? No,

30:54 because I don't have a center angle. You

30:55 don't have a center angle. So, um I

30:58 don't have a center angle because when

31:00 we cut up clips, we don't want to have

31:02 to edit that angle every time it shows

31:04 somebody who's talking. So, it makes the

31:07 syndication or the um the distribution

31:10 of the short form from the podcast a lot

31:12 easier. Got it. But why is it back

31:14 there? But why is it back there? So, it

31:16 can actually create a separation for us.

31:19 It's it in Hollywood they call it a a

31:21 hair light or a practical light um uh or

31:26 an accent light or a motivated light. So

31:29 So okay. So that was the key light. This

31:32 this guy's the key light. Key light main

31:33 light. Main light. And and I do want to

31:35 let's just for whatever it's worth if if

31:38 Art close if if Art's shooting that that

31:41 uh mic Oh, it would be a lot easier if

31:44 you could see if you were wearing black,

31:45 too. Sometimes people wear black. But

31:47 yeah, I'll just shut this off.

31:48 And it and it to most people they'll be

31:51 like that does nothing. Mhm. But for

31:56 me it it adds a a it adds a separation

32:01 on the mic itself and then if you're

32:03 wearing black it pulls you from the

32:05 background. Oh. So it's some light that

32:07 separated. So you know it's not if I was

32:10 wearing black it could look like it's

32:12 right on my shirt. Yeah. But what does

32:14 it create? like a it just it just No, it

32:16 it just it just puts a line on the mic.

32:20 I know it sounds silly, but that's what

32:22 it's doing. And but I think it's these

32:24 these little things that make your

32:27 content look so much better than

32:29 everybody else's. Yeah. Like cuz I could

32:30 watch I mean I think what it'll do is

32:33 it'll make the shot look flat if I

32:34 turned off this light and then if I

32:36 turned off this light over here and he

32:39 put the light behind the Karate Kid

32:41 little. Yeah. So it's it probably looks

32:45 fine because because the camera looks

32:48 good and it's a good key light. I think

32:49 at bare minimum this is what people

32:51 need. Yeah. Right. And if you want to

32:52 put a lamp back here, the lamp will kind

32:54 of do the same thing that this is doing.

32:56 Got it. But by simply So this is like a

32:59 dark abyss right now. Probably you

33:01 seeing from Art's angle, but just by

33:03 turning this on, it just adds a little

33:06 bit of life to the background. And also

33:08 we crack the bathroom door. Yeah, this

33:10 is this is very intentional. Hold on.

33:13 You see uh this bathroom door back here?

33:15 Yeah. So, we crack this and it's funny

33:18 cuz and and so there's a very warm light

33:20 in there, but this this creates a a cool

33:23 dynamic, too, in the background. Yeah.

33:26 Does it look like a bathroom door? I

33:27 can't see it right now. No, I mean, all

33:29 you see is it just looks like a part of

33:31 the aesthetic. Yeah, correct.

33:34 That's hard, bro. It's these little

33:36 things, bro. Like, crack the bathroom

33:38 doors and let that brown light like

33:40 that. Like, that's crazy. Yeah. So, one

33:42 tip I have with lighting is anytime you

33:44 light your face, you want daytime

33:46 temperature, aka what you see right

33:48 here, right? The the key light is

33:50 daytime temperature. Any light in the

33:52 back, whether you do a colored light or

33:54 warm light is free play. You can do

33:56 whatever you want. Got it. Yeah. So, so

33:58 that's why it looks fine. But if I had a

34:01 light that color hitting your face, it

34:03 wouldn't it would look dingy and weird

34:05 and your skin tones would be jacked up.

34:07 The mics we use, which I like to say

34:09 like just buy it once, right? If you buy

34:11 the short SM7Bs, you only have to buy

34:13 that once unless you drop it and break

34:15 it. But these are the SM7 DBs. So these

34:18 are the newer versions that you don't

34:21 need that additional, you know, preamp

34:23 thing. There's a preamp built in. You

34:24 don't need a cloud. You don't need a

34:25 cloud lifter. Oh. So it's already built

34:28 into this mic. So we have this mic on

34:30 these road PSA arms. And then uh like I

34:34 mentioned, I used to go directly into

34:36 the cameras, but now I'm going into this

34:38 Zoom device. Mhm. So, this is the Zoom

34:40 H6 Essential. And let me talk tell you

34:43 why this is a dope device. Uh, number

34:46 one, it's very affordable. Like, it's

34:47 like 180 bucks. Nice. You can plug in up

34:50 to four mics. And what I love about this

34:54 is you don't have to monitor audio.

34:56 Yeah. No one needs to be because it

34:58 captures what is called 32bit audio

35:01 files. So, it's just a raw audio file

35:03 and there's no such thing as talking too

35:05 loud or talking too low. It's capturing

35:07 it all. Oh wow. So I don't have to

35:09 think. That's the goal. The goal is

35:11 like, can we hit record on the camera

35:12 and not have to worry about overheating?

35:14 Sure. Can we hit record on this and not

35:16 worry about it peaking or being too low

35:18 and then we have to crank it up and it

35:20 doesn't sound that good. So a lot of

35:22 people will buy that road cer thing and

35:24 it's just like this. It's like a

35:25 computer. Yeah. If if all we have to do

35:28 is record audio Yeah. then run it. And

35:30 what's cool about this is you can also

35:32 plug it into a computer and then use it

35:34 as like an a USB interface. And then

35:36 another uh feature of a another Vmount

35:39 and that's just powering it just in

35:41 case. Uh it does run by battery, but we

35:44 just want to make sure that it doesn't

35:45 die. So that's that's the mic setup.

35:47 Dude, that's literally this podcast

35:49 setup has made me a millionaire.

35:53 Let's have a conversation. I want to

35:54 talk about that. Yeah, we'll hit record

35:55 on these.

35:57 All right. So, I mean, we see, you know,

36:00 how amazing this content is. We

36:02 obviously see that you have incredible

36:04 content, right? But, um, I want to know

36:07 from a podcasting standpoint, how have

36:10 you developed as a person? Because I

36:11 mean, somebody gets a chance to have a

36:14 conversation on a regular basis, you

36:15 start to develop some skills and

36:17 understand things about people, right?

36:19 So, I want to know like how have you

36:21 improved your life? Yeah. I mean, I

36:24 think the first thing is just having a

36:26 front row seat to put your curiosity on

36:28 display. Um, I I'm finding that

36:33 curiosity is a superpower and and just

36:37 being able to learn from what other

36:38 people are legit doing. I

36:41 um so all I'll say is it's made me a

36:43 better student. You know, I I have a um

36:46 kind of like a a goal when I have an

36:49 expert on the podcast or somebody that's

36:50 good at doing something. Um, and and my

36:53 role is to be the audience advocate. And

36:56 it's also for me to, like you say, get

36:59 free coaching, you know? So, it's maybe

37:00 better because I've gotten free coaching

37:01 because I'll bring my legit circumstance

37:04 to the table. Like when Russell Brunson,

37:06 I was interviewing him and he was giving

37:08 me an example and he's like, "Let's just

37:09 say you're a fitness coach." I was like,

37:10 "No, let's just say you're a content

37:12 coach." And and then things like that,

37:15 you know, um, it's made me better even

37:17 in the sense of relationally. What

37:19 people don't realize is one reason to

37:20 start a podcast is to connect with

37:22 somebody and have a platform where you

37:24 can share information. But another

37:26 reason to start a podcast is the

37:28 conversations after the podcast when the

37:30 cameras are off and the mics are off and

37:31 then you just actually are networking um

37:34 and talking. So like people that I been

37:37 able to interview have become friends.

37:39 Yeah. So that's really cool. And um and

37:42 yeah and then and then I have the the

37:43 conversations where I am um just me and

37:48 art. I call him solo podcast. So Art's

37:50 my video guy. Art.mpp4 is that guy like

37:52 to call him. He's here. Yeah. And so

37:56 um it's he becomes the audience

37:58 advocate. So I you know I even teach

38:00 people if if you think about starting a

38:02 solo podcast, do one, but have a have

38:04 somebody to to stop you in your track to

38:06 just be like, "Hey, what about this

38:08 situation?" So art will interview you

38:10 essentially. Well, I'll I'll come with

38:12 the information and it's almost like I'm

38:14 delivering it kind of talking head but

38:16 conversational and he'll just be the

38:19 audience advocate. So, yeah, he'll be

38:20 like, "Well, you know, you say just

38:23 record everything you're doing, but what

38:24 if you work a full-time job?" Like,

38:25 okay, in that moment and people

38:27 appreciate that's how you create

38:29 bulletproof content is you you let

38:32 people ask questions that aren't in the

38:33 room. You know, something I've been

38:35 doing too is I've been inviting my inner

38:37 circle to be on the the while we're

38:40 filming it live. something you do. Yeah.

38:42 And when you when you do questions after

38:44 the fact based on the conversation we

38:46 just had, it bulletproofs that

38:48 conversation even more and it and that's

38:51 the goal. The goal is to put out the

38:52 best conversation around a thing, but

38:54 yeah, I don't know if that's answering

38:55 your question, right? Yeah, absolutely.

38:57 I I it's maybe better, you know, as far

38:58 as connecting with the audience, too,

39:00 you know. Um we put out a conversation

39:03 on how to, you know, grow on YouTube

39:05 this year. That was at the beginning of

39:07 the year and I mentioned something in

39:08 the podcast like you know if you want to

39:10 monetize your YouTube channel without

39:12 waiting for Google to do it just sponsor

39:14 your own videos and then we moved on and

39:16 there was like five comments of people

39:17 being like you said sponsor your own

39:19 videos what does that even mean and I

39:20 didn't realize that it's not as literal

39:22 as it sounds people are like unpack that

39:25 dude I ended up making a video just on

39:27 monetizing your YouTube videos so the

39:30 podcast was called um your your channel

39:33 will be monetized after this video M and

39:36 that's a strong hook, bro. Yeah. And so

39:39 I then I then talk about how to sponsor

39:41 your own videos and how to conduct an ad

39:43 read and how to do it without sounding

39:45 salesy. And um and that video got more

39:48 views than the YouTube video, man. And

39:50 so yeah, what is it teach? It's it's

39:53 just allowing me to connect more and

39:54 really uh understand the people that you

39:57 know that we're serving with the podcast

39:59 which when you start a podcast you're

40:00 just like very internal about it and

40:02 then over time you're like oh this is

40:04 the people that are finding it you know

40:05 and so that's incredible bro so what are

40:08 all the ways that you can think of that

40:10 you're monetizing the podcast all the

40:13 ways uh that I could think of I guess

40:15 number one the the easy one is I like to

40:18 say is I I've been from day one

40:21 sponsoring my own

40:22 And whether you sponsor it with a lead

40:24 magnet or an actual like I believe like

40:26 a low ticket offer is an easy one. Um

40:29 you can build your email list and even

40:31 just start getting you know customers

40:32 off your podcast. So that would be

40:34 number one would be that I I I started

40:37 with a lead magnet and that grew my

40:39 email list by 10,000 people in a short

40:41 amount of time. And then I did my

40:44 challenge ad where it's just, hey, if

40:47 this is what you're looking to do and

40:48 you want to see how to how it could be

40:50 done for you or with you or whatever,

40:52 join my challenge. And that's a $100

40:54 thing that you know there's other tiers.

40:56 The next way is through affiliates. So,

41:01 one of the best affiliate performing

41:02 videos, I had a conversation with a guy

41:04 named Rory Vaden. and that conversation

41:08 because I he gave me a special link and

41:10 I put it in my description. You know, I

41:12 think I made 10 grand so far, which

41:14 means he made 100 grand off of one

41:16 conversation. Isn't that incredible?

41:18 Yeah. Wild. So, like I was going to sit

41:20 down and talk with you anyway, so I

41:22 might as well make an extra 10K. So,

41:24 that's affiliates. I would say in the

41:25 year of 2024,

41:27 I mean, at least 60K in in just

41:31 affiliates. M um the the next thing is

41:35 60K in just affiliates, bro. I remember

41:38 I used to make $40,000 and I had I had

41:40 to work the whole year, right? And I had

41:42 to work the whole week. Crazy. Every

41:44 week of the year to make 40,000 and you

41:47 get to sit here and have conversations

41:49 with people to make an extra 60,000,

41:51 right? Insane. Uh recently signed a

41:54 brand deal with Yulanszi. I How'd you

41:56 get that? Uh, I was ready to like just

41:59 prove the concept that you could use

42:01 your YouTube channel to build your

42:03 business, but also it's if you're if you

42:05 have an audience, there are other

42:06 businesses that will just pay you to get

42:08 in front of that audience. And if you

42:09 align with them, then like do something

42:11 together. So, the lights that we use,

42:14 the tripods we use, the Vmount that we

42:16 use or one of the Vmount uh batteries we

42:19 use are Yuloni. I've been using Yulanzi

42:20 for for years. And so we did like a a 24

42:26 it's also I'm also creating content for

42:28 their YouTube channel. So it's kind of

42:29 like uh what do you call UGC user

42:31 generated content but that was an 80k

42:34 brand deal for 24 ad reads and then I'll

42:37 I'll make 24 kind of like breakdown

42:39 videos. Um 80 grand. Yeah. Just just cuz

42:43 now Yeah. No. Yeah. And I I literally I

42:46 have a DM right now from from a guy who

42:49 DM'd me this morning and said, "Hey, you

42:51 love what you're doing. Let's talk about

42:53 sponsoring your podcast." So, and I and

42:55 I align with this guy and his software

42:57 company. So, that might be an

42:59 additional. And this is just additional.

43:00 This isn't the the the main income to my

43:03 business aren't these streams right now.

43:05 These are just bonus for doing it the

43:07 right way, man. And so, uh there's that

43:10 there then the Google AdSense. Last year

43:12 we made about 60k in Google AdSense and

43:15 uh already this year we're at like like

43:18 30 already. So this this year should be

43:21 more. Um yeah and there's not to mention

43:24 that like when people work with me at a

43:26 deeper level ultimately it's

43:30 um yeah I mean that like I don't charge

43:33 cheap prices to work with me. I charge

43:34 20 grand to work with me for a year. So

43:37 that that works out really well too. Um

43:40 and yeah and and here's my thing. I I'm

43:42 a content coach. I coach entrepreneurs

43:45 to help build their personal brands on

43:46 platforms like YouTube and Instagram.

43:48 And by me doing the work, it keeps me

43:51 fresh. Yeah. And so when you ask me like

43:54 what's something that podcast has done

43:55 for you, it's made me better at

43:57 communicating. It's made me better at

43:59 teaching what my discoveries are because

44:02 it's giving me discovery. And like, you

44:03 know, don't follow a coach who isn't

44:05 actually doing the thing that they're

44:06 telling you to do. Sure. For sure. So

44:08 yeah, those are I'm probably missing so

44:11 many others, but I mean I that's the the

44:13 easy way. Yeah, affiliates, you know, my

44:16 own

44:17 offers, Google, brand deals and

44:20 sponsorships. Oh, dude, I've had two

44:22 people pay me to be on the podcast. Pay

44:25 you to be on their podcast. No, I'll pay

44:28 you to be on your podcast. And if there

44:30 is value alignment and and I'm okay with

44:33 them, you know, like I vet them hard. I'

44:35 I've been offered a ton, but yeah. Um

44:38 I've I've taken two so far at 175.

44:43 So, and I can't I I came to that number

44:46 when I realized I I knew somebody that

44:47 wasn't getting as many views and

44:49 engagement as I did and they were

44:50 charging 25. I was like, my man stuff is

44:54 way nicer. Yeah, for sure. And so, and

44:57 so yeah, the the

44:59 the two I guess I guess with two of

45:01 those Yeah. I mean, that's pretty cool,

45:03 too. Moral of the story, you're killing

45:05 it, bro. Moral of the story, it was an

45:07 it was a great idea to start a podcast.

45:09 It was the best idea to start a podcast.

45:11 And it was it's so cool cuz you were

45:13 actually working for um you were working

45:16 for Think for a while. Shouts out to

45:17 Sean, man. Brilliant. Brilliant

45:19 individual. And I've learned so much

45:21 from him, too. And you I mean, yeah.

45:23 Yeah. I like a partnership, but you

45:25 know, like you branched off and started

45:27 your own thing. And I know that had to

45:29 be scary. You know what I Sure. It's

45:32 wild cuz even signing the lease on this

45:34 place, I was scared. How much was it? I

45:36 mean, it's like you look back now, but

45:38 it was it's it's like $2,200 a month,

45:40 but it was a three-year lease. Yeah. And

45:43 um and that was double my mortgage or

45:46 like when you consider like the

45:47 internet's like 300 bucks here. I'm

45:48 like, why? Cuz it's cuz it's corporate

45:50 internet. I'm like, okay. I didn't know

45:51 corporate internet's 10x. But um but

45:54 yeah, I was about I was like I was

45:55 telling my wife I was like, what if we

45:57 just got a baller house and made a

45:58 studio downstairs? But dude, I'm so glad

46:01 I I did this scared and I signed the

46:03 lease. Yeah, dude. I think about Alex

46:05 Shamoszi's been here. Lewis House has

46:07 been here. David Chans has been here.

46:10 Chris Bumstead, the six-time Olympian.

46:12 Uh, wow. Chris Doe, Neil Patel, you

46:16 know, all the dudes, you know, Neo's

46:18 been here, Myron's been here. I mean, I

46:20 when I think about like all the

46:24 opportunity that taking that step of

46:27 faith has created, I'm like, my

46:30 goodness, like what if I did not do

46:31 that? And there's something about like

46:34 legitimizing yourself and getting a

46:36 space like this does. And I I had I had

46:39 intentions when I signed the lease, but

46:41 like I didn't know where I'd be now two

46:43 and a half years later. Cuz in my mind,

46:45 I was like, "Yeah, we're going to rent

46:46 this space out." out and we did, you

46:47 know, and that's but that that renting

46:50 the space out started to get in the way

46:51 of the business and so that's why I'm

46:53 excited. I'm actually we've outgrown

46:55 this and um I'm excited to to level up.

46:58 I'm trying to become like you little

47:00 creator clubhouse in Vegas. You know

47:01 what I'm saying? Oh, we need to do that

47:03 for sure, man. But uh no, thank you so

47:04 much, bro. This is uh this was an

47:07 experience for me. I'm telling you, just

47:09 full transparency. I learned so much.

47:12 And as you're talking, I'm ready to go

47:14 retool my whole studio, my whole

47:17 podcast, the way I approach it. Last

47:19 question. What's the title of this

47:21 video? The title of this video or the

47:24 thumbnail? Give me one. We'll go on

47:26 Google. But what's the title? I I think

47:29 I mean I think video podcast studio

47:32 tour. Mhm. And it's like in parenthesis

47:35 could be like crispy and clean. Um or

47:40 and then the thumbnail could say like

47:43 zero cables or something like that, you

47:46 know. I like that. I like that. Or Yeah.

47:49 Or I mean that's one angle. Yeah.

47:51 Because we kind of started it with that

47:53 stuff uh when we were sitting down. It

47:56 could be, you know, a it could be the

47:58 monetized angle. um how to monetize your

48:01 podcast uh or YouTube channel or how to

48:04 grow your so like 16,000 a month from

48:08 YouTube something like that. Yeah. Or or

48:09 yeah six figure podcast too like that's

48:11 that's one way. So these are all things

48:13 it kind of does matter how the intro

48:15 starts. The intro shouldn't just start

48:17 with the phone call thing. Got it. There

48:20 should be based on the intro that you

48:22 decide

48:23 on. You should there should be a little

48:25 bit of a coming up. So should I do

48:28 talking head and say you could do that

48:29 too like like shooting a direct to

48:31 camera and being like you know so uh

48:34 podcasting is one of the biggest

48:36 opportunities for creators and small

48:38 business owners and if you are in that

48:41 journey this this is a full-on master

48:43 class like I mean and then somebody can

48:45 be like okay I'm not going to waste my

48:46 time here and I mean this was a full-on

48:48 master class for sure. So it could be

48:50 how to how to build a six-figure podcast

48:52 and then in parenthesis is whatever the

48:55 time is. You can you can you can do uh

48:58 63 minute master class. Yeah. You know

49:00 and then the thumbnail could be you know

49:04 Yeah. podcasting made me a millionaire.

49:07 Ah you know or that bar you want to make

49:10 sure maybe that you you frontload that

49:12 part. Yeah. Yeah. So but I that's 8020

49:14 rule. spend 80% on the packaging of your

49:17 video and then the rest just like this

49:19 was was this fairly easy like to conduct

49:21 this? Yeah. Okay. So that the 20% is

49:24 done. Yeah. Now Yeah. The energy the 80%

49:28 should go into the packaging. I like

49:30 that. I like that. Oh, appreciate you,

49:32 my brother. Uh I'm about to take this

49:34 back and Oh. Oh, last thing. Will you be

49:37 speaking at Podcast Summit this year?

49:38 Podcast Summit 2025. This will be my

49:40 third time speaking at Podcast Summit.

49:42 Bro, I feel like I can't have podcast

49:44 without you there. Like you like I think

49:46 your your fandom gets more and more

49:48 every single year. It's kind of crazy.

49:50 Praise God, bro. Yeah. No, it's a cool

49:53 it's a cool experience. Honestly, the

49:55 podcast summit I think because you

49:57 literally cover everything. You it's

49:59 almost like don't don't do that.

50:02 Whatever you're planning on doing if you

50:05 want to start a podcast like and it

50:07 doesn't include podcast summit cuz you

50:09 go we there is gear is covered.

50:11 monetization, back-end business

50:13 optimization, you know, brand deals and

50:15 sponsorships, business structure. I

50:17 remember uh uh Don Donnie Donnie, she

50:21 she like broke down like LLC's and all

50:24 that. I'm like, "Dude, this is what I'm

50:25 talking about, bro." Yeah. Know, it was

50:27 So, you were listening to the sessions,

50:28 too. 100. I'm a student, bro. You know,

50:30 I ain't trying to I literally just You

50:33 gave me the the the game plan. I just

50:35 ran the play, man. I appreciate you. I'm

50:37 so proud of you, brother. And I'm so

50:38 grateful for you at the same time cuz uh

50:41 again I am I am learning from your

50:43 mastery, man. So thank you so much.

50:44 Appreciate you. Listen, man. Get your

50:46 tickets to Podcastsummit 2025.

50:48 Podcastsummit.com if you're watching

50:49 this in 2026. Just get your tickets to

50:52 Podcasts Summit 2026, okay? Cuz we're

50:54 doing this every single year. It gets

50:55 bigger and bigger and bigger. So, uh

50:58 click the link below. We will set up a

51:01 promo code summit. Maybe let's let's

51:04 actually do PS25.

51:06 promo code PS25 will give you a special

51:09 discount off of the already discounted

51:12 tickets. All right, so we out of here. I

51:14 see you in August.

51:16 [Music]

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