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Marc Guberti

E81: Crafting An Elevator Pitch That Amazes Everyone With John Livesay

January 26, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

John Livesay is a top sales expert and funding strategist with over 20 years of experience. He hosts The Successful Pitch podcast with investors from around the world and is the Pitch Mentor at startfast.net, the number 1 accelerator in Upstate New York. John gives startups the pitching secrets to become irresistible to investors.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“People have to trust you, like you and know you before they buy from you.”

“There’s really 3 unspoken questions that everybody has whenever they hear you pitch anything.”

“The best step to being more confident is to be prepared.”

“Practice, so you have something to say.”

“The key to success is confidence and the key to confidence is preparation.”

“Tell your clients to be a human, not a robot.”

“Make it conversational and don’t think of it as an invitation for a monologue.”

“The best way to keep a conversation going it to create an open loop.”

“Never reject yourself.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • What to say in your elevator pitch
  • How to tailor your elevator pitch to different people
  • How to be confident when you’re speaking and sharing your elevator pitch
  • The difference between face-to-face pitching vs. online pitching
  • How to continue a conversation beyond the first interaction

 

Key Links From The Show:

John’s Site

John’s Podcast

John’s Twitter

John’s Instagram

 

Recommended Books:

The Successful Pitch by John Livesay

Dealstorming by Tim Sanders

Disrupt You! by Jay Samit

How to Be a Power Connector by Judy Robinett

Support Breakthrough Success On Patreon

Please consider supporting Breakthrough Success on Patreon. I publish five episodes per week which I carefully prepare for, and I choose to not run ads in my podcast to enhance the listener experience.

I offer my patrons various perks, and even a donation as small as $1/mo would make a big difference for growing and maintaining Breakthrough Success.

You can support Breakthrough Success by going here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

E81: Crafting An Elevator Pitch That Amazes Everyone With John Livesay

January 26, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

John Livesay is a top sales expert and funding strategist with over 20 years of experience. He hosts The Successful Pitch podcast with investors from around the world and is the Pitch Mentor at startfast.net, the number 1 accelerator in Upstate New York. John gives startups the pitching secrets to become irresistible to investors.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“People have to trust you, like you and know you before they buy from you.”

“There’s really 3 unspoken questions that everybody has whenever they hear you pitch anything.”

“The best step to being more confident is to be prepared.”

“Practice, so you have something to say.”

“The key to success is confidence and the key to confidence is preparation.”

“Tell your clients to be a human, not a robot.”

“Make it conversational and don’t think of it as an invitation for a monologue.”

“The best way to keep a conversation going it to create an open loop.”

“Never reject yourself.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • What to say in your elevator pitch
  • How to tailor your elevator pitch to different people
  • How to be confident when you’re speaking and sharing your elevator pitch
  • The difference between face-to-face pitching vs. online pitching
  • How to continue a conversation beyond the first interaction

 

Key Links From The Show:

John’s Site

John’s Podcast

John’s Twitter

John’s Instagram

 

Recommended Books:

The Successful Pitch by John Livesay

Dealstorming by Tim Sanders

Disrupt You! by Jay Samit

How to Be a Power Connector by Judy Robinett

Support Breakthrough Success On Patreon

Please consider supporting Breakthrough Success on Patreon. I publish five episodes per week which I carefully prepare for, and I choose to not run ads in my podcast to enhance the listener experience.

I offer my patrons various perks, and even a donation as small as $1/mo would make a big difference for growing and maintaining Breakthrough Success.

You can support Breakthrough Success by going here.

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

How To Profit From Your Free Content

January 26, 2018 by Marc Guberti 2 Comments

Have you ever wondered why people spend so much time creating and publishing free content? There are people like Neil Patel who manage to write 4,294 free blog posts. With each of those blog posts averaging 1,000 words (modest estimate for Neil), that’s over 4 million words of content.

That’s like reading through several copies of Tim Ferriss books.

And that doesn’t even include editing your content like a pro.

I myself have written over 2,000 blog posts, created hundreds of YouTube videos, and close to 100 episodes on the Breakthrough Success Podcast.

Why bother? Why not invest that time towards generating revenue?

Creating free content is a long-term game that will result in more revenue than most of the other strategies. Even with a coaching business, you are limited by the number of hours that you can take on clients in a given day.

In this free piece of content, you’ll learn how you can profit from the free content you create for your audience.

 

Send People To Your Email List

Free content does a magnificent job at sending people to your email list. At the end of all of my blog posts, I invite visitors to subscribe to receive a free offer.

Lately, I’ve included opt-in boxes in the middle of my content. With this strategy, I effectively turn all of my blog posts into landing pages. Small differences in site wide conversion (i.e. from 3% site wide conversion to 4% site wide conversion) will make a big difference in how much your email list grows in the weeks and months that follow.

I don’t only promote my opt-ins in my blog posts. On my blog’s sidebar, I give readers the option to click on my free offer and get it in exchange for joining my email list.

On my podcast, I mention a link at the beginning of the show where readers can go to buy one of my products or get a free offer.

With all of your content, you must be laser-focused on turning as many of your visitors into subscribers as possible. Boosting email subscribers is essential to profiting from your free content.

 

Optimize Your Autoresponder

The autoresponder contains all of the emails your new subscribers receive when they join your email list. Autoresponders can cover a few days or a few months depending on how deep you want to go.

This is different from the welcome email which would thank the person for subscribing and provide that person with the promised free offer.

Most email marketing solutions including ones like ConvertKit and iContact allow you to create an autoresponder for new subscribers.

Successful autoresponders strengthen the relationship between you and your new subscriber before making a pitch.

A common but effective tactic is to include a picture of yourself in the first email and describe the context. I use a picture of myself in a mountain trail where I sort of got lost but enjoyed all of the sights of that run.

Knowing more about you will make your new subscribers more interested in the products you’ll offer later on.

I prefer to write this email, offer three free pieces of content related to my product, and then send 3 emails about the product. If a new subscriber buys the product through your autoresponder, you can ascend them to a higher priced product.

If a new subscriber doesn’t buy the product, you can continue sending them free value and occasionally offer them other products.

 

Leverage Affiliate Marketing

Affiliate marketing is one of my top sources of income. You can find proven products in your niche and promote them knowing you’ll make the commission you deserve.

I tend to promote an affiliate product to my email list at least once per month. Daily emails gives me plenty of opportunities to promote affiliate products and share my free content.

You can also make money on your blog directly through affiliate marketing. You can promote an affiliate offer similarly to how you would promote a landing page.

To take things to the next level, anytime you mention a tool you use, make sure you use your affiliate link.

When I mention ViralTag, I use my affiliate link (just like I’m doing right now). This is a tool that I frequently recommend anyway. Adding an affiliate link into the mix allows me to make commissions based on the products and services I would have recommended anyway.

Ideally, you get visitors onto your email list and leverage affiliate marketing to your email list, but you can also leverage your free content to drive affiliate sales. The same principles apply to promoting your own product.

 

In Conclusion

Creating free content allows you to drive visibility to your brand. That visibility should result in more subscribers and sales. I use the word should because the way you optimize your website determine what results you’ll get.

As you optimize your site or quickly affirm to yourself that your site is optimized, remember this…

You are never finished with optimizing your site. To this day, I’m looking for ways to increase my conversion rates. Even when I hit my conversion rate goal, I’ll set a new goal for myself and boost conversions even more.

Plus, there are so many parts of the journey that you can optimize. You can optimize the landing page, the autoresponder messages to ensure more clicks, the sales page, and more.

Creating free content is the first step. Optimizing your website is the next step, but it should be taken immediately when you take your content brand seriously.

What are your thoughts on creating free content? Do you have any tips for us? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Blogging Tagged With: content creation

E80: Succeeding As A Millennial Entrepreneur With Steven Van Cohen

January 25, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Steven Van Cohen’s entrepreneurial journey started in 2011 when he turned a $3,000 investment into a $3 million global consulting company. He recently launched his second company, 21Mil, an online platform built to develop millennial professionals. 21Mil is the first ever micro-learning platform built to help young professionals succeed in the workplace.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“Sometimes, we lose sight of taking a step back and really learning from the older people in the organization and filling in the blanks when and where we can.”

“Learn from others.”

“If you know what you are talking about and you have something to back it up, then people are definitely going to give you the time and day.”

“Millennials do a good job of leveraging the technology and resources that they have access to in order to get things done.”

“Our generation is the most education generation in the history.”

“It’s inevitable that organizations need to start changing the way they do business.”

“The biggest opportunity that led to this success is timing.”

“In order to be successful, you need to align your skills and your passions.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why age is just a number and not a limitation when you are in a business
  • What are the advantages of being a millenial and how to harness those strengths
  • How non-millenials get better at working with millennials
  • How to achieve success as a millennial entrepreneur

 

Key Links From The Show:

Steven’s Site

Steven’s LinkedIn

Steven’s Email

 

Recommended Books:

The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer

Built to Change by Christopher G. Worley and Edward E. Lawler III

The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg

Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World by Adam Grant

Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard by Chip Heath and Dan Heath

Support Breakthrough Success On Patreon

Please consider supporting Breakthrough Success on Patreon. I publish five episodes per week which I carefully prepare for, and I choose to not run ads in my podcast to enhance the listener experience.

I offer my patrons various perks, and even a donation as small as $1/mo would make a big difference for growing and maintaining Breakthrough Success.

You can support Breakthrough Success by going here.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

How To Promote Your Brand During Industry Events

January 25, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

To succeed in business, you need to constantly perform at your best. The better you promote yourself, and the more people you connect with, the more your brand will grow. We’re good at promoting ourselves online. Use social media, grow an email list, and interact with people. Promoting your brand during an industry event is completely different.

Industry events are different because of their structure. You have a limited time window to learn from speakers and connect with attendees. Within your limited time, you need to build relationships that will continue after the event.

Promoting your business is much easier if you are the speaker at a industry event. As an attendee, it’s more difficult.

Regardless of whether you are a speaker or an attendee, the insights in this article will give you a leg up at the next industry event you attend.

 

Determine Your Objectives

Determining your objectives revolves around this question:

What do I want to get out of this event (other than learning from speakers)?

Do you want to recruit more affiliates for your upcoming launch? Do you want more clients? Are you looking for a coach? These are some of the questions you need to ask yourself as you ponder the primary question.

Without determining your objectives, none of the other tactics in this article will carry any weight. Determining your objectives is the first step to achieving them.

 

Meet Up With The Right People

When you walk into an industry event, you’ll be walking within a sea of people. Not all of these people are equally important for your objectives. Some people are more enthusiastic than others to hire a coach. Some people are downright negative, and you need to get out of those conversations as quickly as possible.

The event’s structure will make it easier or more difficult to meet up with the right people. If an industry event has many presentations, you can attend the presentations where more of your potential clients will be.

Let’s say you coach people on launching and scaling a successful podcast. You can either go to the presentation about podcasting or the presentation about Twitter.

Go to the presentation about podcasting, connect with people before it starts, and then connect with more people after the presentation.

If presentations are not segmented in this fashion, arrive earlier than usual and talk with the other early birds. The early birds are usually some of the most determined attendees at the event.

Even if these people aren’t the right people for your coaching, affiliate program, or anything else, chances are they know a good fit.

 

Talk With The Speakers

If you go to an industry event, you owe it to yourself to talk with the speakers. Getting on these individual’s radars will open the door to more opportunities in the future.

This is how some of my best friendships with top players in my industry get formed. I watched people like Seth Godin, Mike Michalowicz, and Ramon Ray deliver awesome presentations multiple times. I interacted with all three of these marketing legends multiple times.

You only get that level of interaction and friendship by continuing to show up and interacting with the speakers. If you want to take this specific tactic to the next level, you can follow a speaker around to multiple locations.

Just make sure you can go up to the speaker and say what you were able to implement from the previous speech.

Influencers appreciate it when you consume their content and pay attention to their brands. They love it when they hear people say, “This is what you taught me…and this is how I applied it to my business.”

 

Make A Profit From The Event

Have you ever wondered why people are willing to spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars for a single ticket at an industry event? Most people view these events as opportunities to learn from the leaders and interact with them.

Savvy marketers view these industry events as a way to make more money. The moment I graduate college, I’m going to more events like Social Media Marketing World regardless of whether I am a speaker or an attendee.

Tickets cost anywhere from a several hundred to over $1,000 depending on when you get them. At an event like this, I would build relationships with people and hope at least one attendee becomes a client.

The lowest I charge for any of my services is $497/mo with a 6-month commitment. That’s $2,982 in six months—way more than the price of a Social Media Marketing World ticket.

And that’s if I just get one client for my lowest-priced service.

But an event like Social Media Marketing World attracts thousands of social media marketers, so if I only got one client from SMMW, I definitely did something wrong.

 

Practice Your Pitches Beforehand

The second worst time to start practicing is on the day of the event. The worst scenario is to not practice at all.

If you can’t effectively communicate with attendees, you won’t achieve your objectives. No matter how great your product is, you won’t get affiliates if you don’t effectively communicate.

I advise practicing every day for moments like this. Getting in front of the mirror helps some people, but I don’t see the need. As long as you continue practicing your pitch, you’ll give a better pitch when you need to.

Start with practicing your various elevator pitches. Various elevator pitches?

One person would be a great guest on your podcast. Another person would be a great client. Each person gets a different pitch.

You don’t tell the potential guest about your coaching services. You don’t focus your conversation with the potential client about your podcast.

As an added bonus, you can practice the pitch with someone. Make your pitch, and have your partner control the rest of the conversation.

How will you react when your partner says, “This works”, “This isn’t for me right now”, or something similar?

How will you handle questions like “What’s the price?” and “What’s your podcast all about?”

Don’t just get a partner who listens to your elevator pitch. Ask that partner to get actively involved and ask questions as if this wasn’t a rehearsal.

 

The Post-Event

This is where the magic happens. You’ve gone back-and-forth between sessions, attendees, and speakers. Understand that everyone else at the industry event followed that same schedule.

A day after the event, everyone begins to play catch up mode. People respond to emails, address backlogged tasks, and do everything else that they missed.

But during this time, many people are catching up with their inboxes. You need to get into the attendees’ and speakers’ inboxes during this time.

Continue the conversation you were having before. This email will be different depending on who you were talking to. You may decide to send a potential client a link to schedule a free 30 minute call. You may provide a speaker with a link to schedule a time to appear on your podcast.

For people you want to know better but don’t have a call-to-action for, you can simply email them and mention the following:

How great the event was (great practice for any post-event email)

How much you enjoyed meeting the person and/or learning from them

To help you with this process, write some notes on the back of every business card you receive. Write what you and the other person just discussed and some points you can bring up during the post-event conversation.

What were the topics you discussed? Did anything personal come up from either side? Did this person have a kid, upcoming birthday, or anything else? Who’s their role model? You won’t know the answers to all of the questions like these. Knowing the answer to a single one will allow you to write a more personalized email.

 

In Conclusion

Why would I write a blog post about industry events when I rarely attend them? The answer is that I set a goal to attend a few industry events in 2018. I’m going after the more high-ticket industry events where I know I can positively impact attendees.

I’m going where more of my targeted audience goes. But these aren’t just people in my targeted audience. These are people who care… a lot.

If you’re willing to spend hundreds or even a little over $1,000 on a single ticket, and that doesn’t include traveling expenses for people who live in different countries, you know this is a serious crowd.

They’re super successful already or willing to put in as much effort as possible to become super successful.

You don’t just spend that much money for a single ticket and plan out your travel just to be wishy washy during the event.

Seriously committed people attend these types of events, and you should too. My school schedule makes it more difficult to attend a variety of these events, but I’ll tell you this…

I’ll be at Podcast Movement 2018.

What are your thoughts on attending industry events? Do you have any tips for making the most of these events? Do you have a question for me? Sound off in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Business Tagged With: content brand

E80: Succeeding As A Millennial Entrepreneur With Steven Van Cohen

January 25, 2018 by Marc Guberti Leave a Comment

Steven Van Cohen’s entrepreneurial journey started in 2011 when he turned a $3,000 investment into a $3 million global consulting company. He recently launched his second company, 21Mil, an online platform built to develop millennial professionals. 21Mil is the first ever micro-learning platform built to help young professionals succeed in the workplace.

 

Quotes To Remember:

“Sometimes, we lose sight of taking a step back and really learning from the older people in the organization and filling in the blanks when and where we can.”

“Learn from others.”

“If you know what you are talking about and you have something to back it up, then people are definitely going to give you the time and day.”

“Millennials do a good job of leveraging the technology and resources that they have access to in order to get things done.”

“Our generation is the most education generation in the history.”

“It’s inevitable that organizations need to start changing the way they do business.”

“The biggest opportunity that led to this success is timing.”

“In order to be successful, you need to align your skills and your passions.”

 

What You’ll Learn:

  • Why age is just a number and not a limitation when you are in a business
  • What are the advantages of being a millenial and how to harness those strengths
  • How non-millenials get better at working with millennials
  • How to achieve success as a millennial entrepreneur

 

Key Links From The Show:

Steven’s Site

Steven’s LinkedIn

Steven’s Email

 

Recommended Books:

The Progress Principle by Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer

Built to Change by Christopher G. Worley and Edward E. Lawler III

The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg

Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World by Adam Grant

Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard by Chip Heath and Dan Heath

Support Breakthrough Success On Patreon

Please consider supporting Breakthrough Success on Patreon. I publish five episodes per week which I carefully prepare for, and I choose to not run ads in my podcast to enhance the listener experience.

I offer my patrons various perks, and even a donation as small as $1/mo would make a big difference for growing and maintaining Breakthrough Success.

You can support Breakthrough Success by going here.

Filed Under: Breakthrough Success

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Primary Sidebar

I am a content marketer and personal finance writer who produces content for individuals, small businesses, and corporations. My content will help drive engagement and sales to your business. I have produced content for several publications, including…

  • US News & World Report
  • Business Insider
  • Benzinga
  • Newsweek
  • Bankrate

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