Facebook Ads Experts Spill Their Guts PDF
Facebook Ads Experts Spill Their Guts PDF
Facebook Ads Experts Spill Their Guts PDF
Jeff Miller
Copyright 2019 Jeff Miller
CoolBeans Digital
www.coolbeansdigital.com
Contents
Revenue Techie 1
About Robin Alex 1
Pay-to-Play 1
Bigger and Better Gigs 2
Turning to Tech 3
Finding Revenue 3
Robin’s Advice 4
Final Thoughts 5
45 Days to $10K 45
About JR Rivas 45
Humble Beginnings 45
Transitioning to Digital Business 46
Growing His Business Online 47
Getting Visibility 48
Final Thoughts 49
Growing a Dental Business with Ads 50
About Sean O’Connor 50
1. Customer Research 50
2. Crafting the Ad 51
3. Crafting the Offer 51
4. Crafting the Sales Process 52
5. Sean’s Advice 52
Final Thoughts 53
Pay-to-Play
Robin started his first business at 16 years old, selling game
servers for online multiplayer First Person Shooter games like
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive. He would buy the servers at
data centers and sell them to game players who wanted their
own servers to host games on.
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Looking back, Robin realizes he could have made tons of money
off his server selling business, but at the time it was enough to
pay for a few more years of school. However, he did make plenty
of mistakes running his first business, which he learned from and
avoided in his later business ventures.
After the lawsuit, Robin was let go from the company. He then
got into the bar scene, DJ-ing and spinning records. Eventually,
he went into business with a friend and bought a bar. However,
they sold it a year later. He credits this experience to his
knowledge of making money by spinning things and waiting, as
they waited until the moment was right to make the most off
the bar.
2
Turning to Tech
Once Robin decided he was done DJ-ing for a living, he turned
to I.T. He became a Managed Service Provider (MSP), managing
I.T. infrastructures for companies, both small businesses and
larger corporations.
This all happened before Facebook really took off. Yet, his clients
would still ask if he knew anything about online marketing
since he already knew a lot about digital things. Every so often,
he would take on digital marketing gigs because the money was
there.
Through RS7 Tech, Robin and his team would win huge deals,
between $20,000 and $40,000. However, it was “feast and
famine,” as Robin describes. The agency would win the bid for a
large project, work on it for a few months, and once the project
was completed, that was it. Since there were so many times
where the agency had no work, Robin knew he needed to be
closer to the revenue line to make consistent money.
Finding Revenue
After having so many periods with no work, Robin rebranded
RS7 Tech as Innovate Fast. With his newly rebranded agency,
he started out with building websites and Google ads, and
eventually began working with Facebook ads. Everything else
the agency offers grew out of those first, basic services. The
agency has grown to a full-time staff of 7 employees and works
with large corporations, like AT&T.
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through Yelp. Robin happened to answer their call, not knowing
who he was speaking to. He later got an email from AT&T’s
Senior Vice President. Robin notes that sometimes, just having
your listing out there works.
Robin’s Advice
The very first piece of advice Robin has is to treat your client
what they’re worth to you. When his agency brings on a new
client, they look at how much this client would make them
in a year. If a client is paying $3,000 a month, they’re really a
$36,000 client. Give your clients the amount of effort they’re
truly paying you for, and they will stay longer.
Clients themselves can also make your job difficult. You might
get them tons of leads, but most businesses hate getting on the
phone to follow up with a lead. They will get on the phone and
do a half-assed job if they call at all. Robin solved this problem
for his agency by creating a system where clients can access
all the lead information and text message the leads instead of
calling, and his agency can monitor how well the client is using
the system. Be sure to coach your clients properly and find a way
to keep tabs on their follow-ups.
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Final Thoughts
Extending the time frame you work with a client helps in your
relationship with them. If you do a month-to-month, no strings
attached service plan, it strains the relationship and they’re
more likely to leave.
5
$25k+ In 4 MontHS FLat
An interview with Reno Pace
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he offer marketing as a service to other businesses in the area.
By November of 2018, he was ready to launch his agency and
announced it publicly on his Facebook page.
“Boom, it just kinda blew up.” From that post on his personal
profile, he received over 20 messages from people he knew,
thinking he would only receive one or two. Though he didn’t
know how to run an agency just yet, he did have a background in
sales, which made having the conversations easier. He didn’t give
any pitches or talk sales, because all the people who messaged
him were friends. He just told them what the services were
about and what he could do for them.
This was Reno’s first deal and his biggest deal, to date. The
contract was paid right before Christmas that year, with no
defined timeframe for completion. Once his new client was
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done selling inventory during the holidays, they began with a
complete rebrand of the company.
Paid to Pitch
Reno found a really unique way to make some money up front,
before even signing a client on. After his initial 15-minute
discovery meeting, where he got an idea of the prospect’s
business, goals, and experience with marketing, he would explain
the three-phase process he uses for all his clients:
1. Customer Acquisition
2. Customer Ascension
3. Customer Retention
Joint Ventures
It’s surprising how much clients will spend when they
understand the process. But, sometimes, there are clients who
need all the services but just can’t afford it up front. This is why
Reno prioritizes just a few important solutions. However, in a
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few cases, where Reno and his wife see potential in the business,
they make an offer to act as CMO in exchange for a percentage
of revenue.
This doesn’t happen often, and it’s normally what they call a
“second offer” for businesses they believe in. So far, they’ve been
approached once, and have put out two offers. He considers
these to be lifetime appointments, where both parties are stuck
with each other for good. The great news is that these joint
ventures potentially put Reno on the path to multiple millions
by the end of the year.
Final Thoughts
Though most of Reno’s initial clients were part of his immediate
community of friends and family, he suggests having regular
conversations with all prospects. Take it slow, understand their
needs, and offer them the right solution. As of the time of this
writing, Reno has managed to break $25K and without even
touching Facebook ads for any of clients.
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corporate coG to carpetInG
MaVerIck
An interview with John Williams
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Knowing he had to find a way to more than replace his income,
John started looking for new opportunities outside of the
corporate world. He thought about dropshipping, but the idea of
selling thousands of small items online wasn’t appealing.
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Following Jeff’s Advice
John got his first real client after Jeff pushed him to go to a
local networking event. There, he met a hypnotherapist who
was interested in his services. He got on a Zoom call with her
and signed her on for $1000 a month for an ad campaign.
Unfortunately, she wasn’t able to continue working with John
due to legal issues with her franchise.
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gained one client, who happened to own a franchise of a popular
carpet cleaning company in the United States.
John told his client about the referral scheme he has, and the
client told him that if he got him good results, he would tell
others in the industry about him at a conference in Denver.
So, they started working together, and soon enough, John was
crushing it for his new carpet cleaning client. He managed to
get him 42 customer opportunities, 30+ of which booked an
appointment.
Final Thoughts
In John’s opinion, franchises are the best clients to go after
when running a Facebook ads agency, especially if your niche
is the carpet cleaning industry. Though working with an
independent business owner can be lucrative, franchisees are
already spending money on marketing, as most corporations
require franchises to spend a certain amount on marketing
every month.
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If you do go after franchise clients, though, keep in mind that
some companies may restrict the kind of marketing a franchise
owner can do. But if you do manage to get a franchise client, all
you need is one really good run to gain referrals. If you knock
it out of the ballpark for one, they will likely get you loads of
referrals for other franchisees.
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tHIrd tIMe’S tHe cHarM
An interview with Robert Dobrilovich
Freelancing on Upwork
Robert started his agency on Upwork after a friend of a friend
introduced him to it. At first, people around him tried to
dissuade him, telling him there’s no way to make money online,
that it was just a scam. Regardless, he began working and took
on his first client at 1 cent per hour. His next job after that was
at $1 per hour for a Canadian company.
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50 or so 5-star reviews, which put him in the top 10 percent SEO
freelancers on the platform.
At the time, his friend and girlfriend both helped him stay
focused and motivated, despite his struggle with shiny object
syndrome. He worked some fun projects with his friend, where
they made some money and developed a “really cool friendship.”
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clients that signed on. This was a win-win, and it made pitching
and closing the clients easier.
That sounds bad at first, but it was Robert’s entry into the
community, where he began helping people solve their
problems for free. He quickly became recognized as a helpful
problem-solver in his communities. So much so, in fact, that
John Williams, who he was helping at the time, posted a raving
review recommending Robert in their Facebook group. That
recommendation earned him five new clients and solidified him
as an expert in the community.
He was doing well, until one day, his account was suspended. His
account was one of millions that were hacked, and they needed
to verify his identity before reinstating his account. It took two
weeks to get back on. The problem was that with no account, he
had no access to his business manager, and without the business
manager, he couldn’t control client campaigns -- including
ad-spend.
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Retaining Clients
Robert acknowledges that business is full of ups and downs.
He says it’s normal, and he doesn’t take it too hard. But, one
thing he’s always done is keep clients happy. He does it by
guaranteeing results and providing exceptional customer
support.
Final Thoughts
Remember that people don’t care about much more than results.
Document and develop case studies explaining your results,
and provide a result-driven guarantee. Also, though you should
set boundaries, be flexible with clients. Robert’s clients know
that they can get him at anytime during weekdays, but never on
weekends.
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LandInG YoUr FIrSt FIVe reStaUrant
cLIentS
An interview with Matt Plapp
In this interview, Matt shares five things you can do to land your
first five restaurant clients in half the time he did.
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salesperson. Talk to people, don’t just try to sell to them by
making everything about you and what you offer upfront.
Another word of advice from the pro is don’t niche down too
early. Matt suggests starting out with three different targets:
Don’t tell them what you do initially. Remember, this is the start
of another relationship you want to build. Just give them your
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name, tell them you love what they’re doing, and ask to connect
with the owner on LinkedIn.
Either way it goes, this is a win-win scenario for you. You either
gain a client without having to pitch your services or you walk
away with some valuable insight into your target market.
Ultimately, people who trust you will buy from you. The better
relationships you build with restaurant owners, the more likely
they are to ask you for your services without ever having to sell
to them.
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them. When you see them, just say, “Hey, I want to interview you
for my website!”
You’re not asking them to pay you for marketing, you are just
simply asking to give their restaurant some free publicity. Who
doesn’t love that? The more value you add to your relationships
with restaurant owners, the more they will trust you, and who
knows. Maybe in a few months, they’ll asking you for marketing
services.
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for Christmas, and surely let their families know. The store
increased their sales that holiday season, selling more high-
ticket items than usual.
Final Thoughts
Matt’s one piece of advice for beginning restaurant marketers is
to chronicle your journey with video early on. Record everything
on video. Every interview, every seminar, every talk you host, get
it on video and post it to your social media pages.
This helps you to become visible in the right manner. You never
know who in your friends list has really solid connections to
restaurant owners.
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FaILed Facebook Marketer to FIVe
FIGUre copYWrIter
An interview with Brian Mead
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chiropractor. The client, however, only managed to close 12 of
those leads.
Though the course was insanely tough, it made him realize that
he didn’t understand his market or how to position himself, both
of which came through in his copy.
He took on his first copywriting client, Dr. Erin Johnson, for free.
He wrote all the funnel and ad copy for the doctor’s new course,
which generated over $30,000 in sales in 7 days, in exchange for a
testimonial.
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Lessons Learned
Through his journey from failed Facebook Ads marketer to
sought-after copywriter, Brian realized that lots of sales copy,
including his old work, didn’t understand the target audience,
the market, or the competition.
The more you understand your audience and what they want,
the more “your copy is going to kill it.” If you research your target
audience and keep them in mind when writing your copy, it is
sure to resonate with them and lead to sales.
The Takeaways
If Brian’s crazy journey has taught us anything, it’s that
working hard, doing good work and investing in education and
mentorship are key to great success.
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• Acquire the right skills for the job.
• Get a good mentor to guide you.
• Always do your research.
Final Thoughts
As Brian’s mentor would always say, “Good copy is not written,
it’s assembled.” When writing copy for anything, research,
research, research. If you are thorough in your research, your
copy will write itself, and it will work.
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dorM rooM dropSHIppInG to $800k
a MontH
An interview with Nathan Hirsch
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his success to the relationships he was able to build between his
Amazon store and his customers.
The next part is making sure people are happy and coming back
to you, and avoid bad reviews at all costs. This is especially
important in running a store on Amazon. Amazon will shut an
account down if it has too many returns and too many negative
reviews. Those metrics and reviews help bring you up or down
on the listings. The customer isn’t always right, but it’s in your
best interest to make the customer happy so you can keep
making sales and getting referrals.
Soon enough, he did. Busy season hit, and he was swamped with
emails, listing products, and fulfilling orders, working 20+ hours
a day on his own. His grades plummeted, and his no social life
disintegrated. “I can never let this happen again,” he thought,
ultimately deciding to start hiring people.
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His classmate was one of the first to answer to his facebook
post for a job. Crazy enough, 8 years in, they still work together
today as business partners. He learned his lesson, and continued
to hire the same way, but kept hiring unreliable, college kids.
Unfortunately, no older, more reliable candidates wanted
to work for a young entrepreneur, so he went on to hire
freelancers.
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• Use webinars, cold calls, emails and partnerships to
increase your reach.
Final Thoughts
Nathan believes “You can always make more money, but you
can’t get your time back.” This is the belief that lead him to found
Freeeup.
The best way to make this idea part of your business practices is
to hire freelancers. However, there is such a thing as hiring the
wrong freelancer.
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bIoLoGY oF a MeSSenGer bot
Marketer
An interview with Mackensie Liberman
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find a new career. She chose to go in to Facebook marketing,
starting with completing Dan Henry’s course. Six months after
beginning the course, she received a flyer advertisement in the
mail for a small local business. This business would become her
first client, and the most difficult one. After receiving the flyer,
she calls the owner and offers to do his advertising on Facebook.
He agrees, paying her around $400 a month for the service.
Eventually, she had him on for $800 a month, adding Facebook
Page management to her services.
Though she had gotten her first client, not all was going as
planned. He very quickly became a difficult client, admitting that
he was both bipolar and schizophrenic. She chose to keep him
as a client, as he was the only client she had at the time. In the
time she worked with him, she managed to get him tons of leads
through Facebook Ads. However, she kept her distance from the
client, and he eventually stopped paying her retainer fee. She
took the opportunity and stopped working with him.
Mackensie then tried the same strategy she used for the pizzeria
on a small taqueria owned by a Mexican man. The owner,
who spoke broken English, was interested in her services, as
he was already running his own Facebook page and having
trouble engaging with an audience outside of his Spanish-
speaking family and friends. She pitched her services at $500 a
month to run Facebook Ad campaigns for the restaurant. The
owner haggled with her, not being able to pay her that much
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each month, and they settled on $300 a month and free food
whenever she wanted.
She still works with the restaurant to this day, running ads for
gift card giveaways and monthly birthday promotions which
feed into the restaurant’s Facebook Messenger bot. For both
promotions, customers are taken to the bot, where they can
sign up for the giveaway or for their free birthday meal voucher.
Those who didn’t win the giveaway were sent a coupon for a free
appetizer. Since these coupons came as promo codes, clients
were often using them multiple times, redeeming free food
items and not purchasing anything else. Mackensie eventually
solved this problem by including a “redeem coupon” button,
which would only display the voucher once and could track who
has already redeemed the offer.
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budge, knowing the value in her services. Being in Florida, the
orthodontist opted for both an English and Spanish bot.
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3. Charge restaurants between $500 and $1000 for bots.
Restaurants notoriously have slim profit margins, so
they may not be able to afford as much as other clients.
Offer your restaurant clients a volume discount if they
purchase services for all of their franchises or locations.
Remember to keep ad spend as a separate fee.
4. Don’t choose industries that bots won’t work for. Bots
work best for industries that are fun or that people use
all the time, such as restaurants, salons and the like.
Pick ones that are easier at first, and avoid industries
that might be a little more difficult to gain leads for.
Facebook marketing and messenger bots don’t typically
work with businesses that see their growth through
referrals, such as accountants and lawyers.
Final Thoughts
The first word of advice Mackensie has for marketers trying
to make it in the Facebook Messenger bots arena is “don’t give
up.” If she had stopped after her first client (who was a terrible
client), she would have missed out on making her first $10,000
month a year in. She also suggests giving yourself some room to
learn and not to get overwhelmed. Start with a simple bot, and
maybe build one for your own Facebook page to begin with. Add
other features on once you understand the basics.
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HoW to Get YoUr FIrSt cLIent
WItHoUt a Free trIaL
An Interview with Theo Stavrou
His first client was the owner of the gym he had been a member
of. He had previously spoken to the owner about getting more
leads for the gym, but he declined more than once. However, it
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wasn’t until Theo changed the way he approached his prospects
that he won his first client and many thereafter.
Here are Theo’s four big tips for landing local clients.
1. Leverage Relationships
Theo’s first client was an MMA gym that he frequented. He’d
been a member there for more than a year, and he used that to
his advantage. At first, the gym owner brushed him off every
time Theo approached him about growing membership for the
gym. A few months into Dan Henry’s course, he finally realized
his approach was wrong and managed to get the gym owner to
say yes by switching gears.
2. Streamline Onboarding
Theo credits the close of his first client to the onboarding
documents offered by Jeff. The streamlined process of client
onboarding helped Theo understand the needs of the client
more readily. It also served to establish him as an expert
marketer, as well as showing the client how in need of Theo’s
services his gym was.
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The streamlined onboarding process, made up of 15 simple
questions, outlines the needs of the client, regardless of whether
they know their own needs or not. It also builds an urgency for
the client, as they begin to see what their needs actually are and
what they may be missing out on by not signing on. The process
is also helpful, as it uncovers the client’s marketing budget.
The key: find an enticing offer and project a positive ROI. If your
prospect can live with the number, they’ll be sold.
Final Thoughts
Prospect people that are already spending marketing dollars. If
they’re already marketing, they have the capacity to spend more
or just reallocate marketing funds. Businesses that are currently
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marketing will also more readily understand and accept your
role in their business, limiting objections and time-spent
pitching. Companies that value marketing will value your time
and what you do.
Oh, and the simplest thing you can do to increase ROI? Set up a
simple retargeting campaign. Your clients will thank you for it.
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3 cLIentS to SUcceSSFUL MedSpa adS
aGencY In a Year
An interview with Kris Trinity
1. Getting Clients
Kris Trinity’s trek into the Facebook marketing landscape began
by accident, after a client he was creating content for asked if
he could run ads for her. Willing to try his hand, Kris agreed. His
first attempt at ads, however, failed. But he decided he had to
learn, and took Dan Henry’s course just to figure it out.
After taking Dan Henry’s course, Kris landed his first client, a
medspa owner in Ireland, by offering a 7-day trial in exchange
for a testimonial and case study. In those 7 days, the trial
brought in 108 leads on a low-value offer for an anti-aging
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treatment called Venus Freeze. This inspired him to seek out
other clinics who might use the same device, knowing he could
bring in good results for other medspas.
He visited the Venus Freeze website and found a list of all the
clinics in the UK that used their product. He took that list and
pitched his services using his first client’s results. He offered a
similar trial, asking only £100 for ad spend, forfeiting his own
fee. Two clients took him up on the offer. One earned 60 leads.
The other only earned a little over 20 leads but converted them
at almost 70 percent.
So far, he’s run over 12 of these ads for his own agency at £600
pounds a month of ad-spend, something he didn’t have the cash
for a year ago. He says he wouldn’t change the way he began and
grew his agency. Cold calling and getting clients organically gave
him the infrastructure to do paid ads.
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Using MedSpa Language
Another problem is the industry jargon that professionals use,
such as micro-needling. They have a tribal language that the
public isn’t privy to. Using that language in ads can be off-putting
and confuses people. They need to use other phrases and
terminology to explain the treatments to the public.
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This increases the odds that they follow the process properly
and they come back and stay on as a client. If they’re not
following your instructions, give them penalties.
Final Thoughts
When starting up a Medspa Ads agency, or any other kind of
Ads agency for that matter, Kris says to just get out there and
try to grab the opportunities. As it comes to medspas, there are
loads of local businesses that are struggling with their marketing
efforts.
Lastly, Kris says you have to have a lot of mental resilience when
starting an agency. It will require you to step outside of your
comfort zone and not every conversation will lead to a “yes”.
Learn how to accept rejection. You can’t outsmart your way into
success.
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45 daYS to $10k
An interview with JR Rivas
About JR Rivas
Born into a single-parent household in New York City, JR Rivas
grew up in poverty. Spending most of his childhood struggling
alongside his mother and sister, JR knew he wanted to become
an entrepreneur since he was young. JR entered the digital
marketing scene at the start of his twenties, going from no
clients to $10,000 in under 45 days. He now teaches other
entrepreneurs how to succeed in their own digital marketing
business.
Humble Beginnings
As a child, JR always knew he wanted to be an entrepreneur.
Growing up in a low-income, single-parent household, he
dreamed of one day making enough money to live the lifestyle
he wanted.
45
years old, he was reading success books like Rich Dad, Poor
Dad and The 4-Hour Work Week, which inspired him with the
possibility of being a successful entrepreneur.
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Henry. At the time that he had Dan as a guest on his podcast,
Dan’s course was just starting his coaching business and his
course was 7 months away from being released.
Once Dan Henry’s the course was out, JR decided to take it.
While taking the course and learning how to build his Facebook
ads agency, it took JR about 6 months to land his first client.
In those 6 months he looked for a client, JR wasn’t making any
money. Once he got his first client, he managed to gain two
more, and in a matter of 45 days grew his business from $0 to
$10,000.
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talked to them every day, which kept him and the others going.
As he watched others who started out on the journey with him
land clients, it gave him hope he would as well.
Getting Visibility
In order to grow his business to where it is today, JR relied on
becoming more and more visible. Aside from becoming more
visible on Facebook through the creation of his group and
engaging in other groups, he also managed to get himself on 3
local news shows.
If you’re looking to gain some local visibility, here are a few tips
JR has for getting on TV:
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Final Thoughts
JR’s final suggestion for those who are starting out is to go to
live events when trying to learn about the business and network.
In-person events have a greater impact than online events or
courses. It’s easier to procrastinate at home, but in-person
events push you to go forward full-speed. The things you learn at
these events are implemented almost immediately, so you leave
with things already started.
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GroWInG a dentaL bUSIneSS WItH
adS
An interview with Sean O’Connor
1. Customer Research
Before running a successful ad campaign on Facebook, Sean
relied mostly on organic content and boosted posts. Though he
had tried running ads before, he found more engagement and
reach with boosted posts. So, that became his go-to method of
acquiring leads for his dental clinics.
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to pin down the right offer, message and target audience. To his
surprise, it was more obvious and intuitive than he’d previously
thought.
2. Crafting the Ad
Sean realized early on that he was getting about six to eight long
emails per month, pitching services instead of solutions. No one
was asking him if he needed more clients or revenue. He also
realized that the standard €21 special, and the like, attracted a
specific type of client: tire kickers.
These types of people were out looking for a deal, but would
never commit to a dental practice. To Sean, there were two
issues that seemed to bring on the dreaded “tire kickers”:
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It turned out that his target market for orthodontics was mostly
mothers with preteens and teenagers, and a majority were
willing to pay the discounted upfront fee, even though the
payment plan was still available. It was a win-win for everyone.
Sean repeated this process for their other services, but the
orthodontic deal is still their “one solid offer.”
Along with himself, he had his front desk check all their lead
sources, follow up and set appointments with qualified leads
every morning. Additionally, he created a clarity report that
showed new clients a diagnosis, prioritized by urgency. This way,
the front desk was able to set appointments to fix those issues
more quickly.
The report served to clarify the clients’ needs and make them
more ready to commit to future appointments -- which, of
course, meant more money.
5. Sean’s Advice
While there is plenty to learn from Sean’s experience with the
dental industry, here are some of the most important bits of
advice he can offer.
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For dental clinic advertisements:
Final Thoughts
Sean’s final advice to Facebook Ads agencies working with
dental clients is to stop asking the dentist to sell. Dentists are
not likely to be part of the sales process at their own practice.
While it’s beneficial for the dentist to understand the process,
they will be too busy caring for patients to sell to them. Make
sure you train the front desk and office manager in the sales
process so that they will handle it on behalf of the dentist.
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FroM FaILed bUSIneSS to proFIt In
reaL eState
An interview with Shayne Hillier
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Shayne eventually left his friend’s company due to the loan not
being repaid and filed a lawsuit against the company, as the
2-year statute of limitations was approaching. However, Shayne
soon found out that cutting ties with the company and getting
his money back wouldn’t be as easy as he thought. The company
later filed a half-million dollar countersuit against him and
two other lawsuits against his family. The company eventually
settled with Shayne outside of court for $35,000, but the
company filed for bankruptcy the same day the settlement was
to be paid, and Shayne was never repaid.
At the time of the lawsuit and the bankruptcy, Shayne and his
wife had just gotten pregnant and recently purchased a new
house. Knowing he needed a way to make money and keep his
family afloat, Shayne began looking into what he could do with
his knowledge of I.T. and web design.
Shayne’s first real client is what changed the game for him,
leading him from no clients to having plenty. At first, he booked
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a meeting with the office manager of a real estate agency, telling
them that he sold Facebook ads. At the meeting, he was told that
the agency already ran its own ads on Facebook and that they
were generating over 400 leads a month.
Once he was done with the meeting, the real estate agency
signed on with Shayne, paying him $47,000 Canadian.
With his first real estate client, Shayne met their needs by taking
those leads they were already bringing and turning them into
customer opportunities by following up with those leads on the
agency’s behalf and scheduling over the phone and in-person
consultations with individual real estate agents. He provided
conversions, training and systems for those leads to become
clients.
While Shayne didn’t have huge success right away, he does admit
that success in this business is a learning process. He knew
that just calling the leads would not convert. Through trial and
error, he tweaked the process and learned the different ways he
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could convert a lead from a contact to an appointment or client.
Shayne eventually hired real people to call back leads on behalf
of his real estate clients, booking and confirming appointments
for realtors and agents. This gets leads in front of an agent in-
office as soon as possible, which drives higher conversion rates.
2. Don’t let your client focus on the bad leads so long they
mess up the good leads.
Realtors and real estate agents often have a mindset where
they try to chase all the leads and end up losing out on the
good ones. Retrain your client and their team to focus on the
best leads.
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client follows up with a lead within 10-20 minutes instead of
in 2 hours.
Final Thoughts
Shayne’s last words for anyone in the Facebook Ads agency
game, especially for those working with real estate clients, is be
persistent. Keep working at it and eventually good things will
start to come out. It’s hard work, but at the end of the day, you
will get to enjoy the fruits of your labor.
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a MILLIon doLLar aGencY bUILt
FroM notHInG
An interview with Darryl Stevens
His first client came from a holistic meetup group that his friend
invited him to. It just so happened that that night’s meeting was
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about SEO. He ended up signing on a stranger who owned a
supplement drink as his first client.
He also went online, looking for agencies that were at the level
he wanted to be and asked for advice. One of those agency
owners met with Darryl for lunch, gifted him their proposal
template, and taught him how to get larger clients to trust him.
About a month later, he managed to bring in $20-$30K projects,
up from $2-$3K.
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journey process, which relieved a lot of the issues they faced as
an agency.
Expert Secrets
Change your mindset…
But don’t lie. You have to be honest, have integrity, and be a good
person, or it’ll bite you in the ass. Even the smallest white lies
can come back to get you.
However, you also have to position yourself for the job you want.
If you want to be known as a large agency, then make sure it looks
like that right out of the gate. Don’t position yourself as a mom n’
pop agency if that’s not what you want to be. Build your agency
like you’re a multi-million dollar agency right out the door.
You’re not lying to people, but you have to position your website
like you are this big, beautiful brand that creates great work
because that is what higher-level clients are looking for. They
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can discern between who is a low, mid and high-level firm. You
will lose bids over it. Make your agency and brand appear so
much bigger than it actually is.
Become visible...
Once you have a website that attracts the right clients, you
need to become visible to them. Get comfortable generating
leads, asking for referrals and word of mouth. Consider building
partnerships with another website that would prominently
feature your agency. Set up satellite offices at co-working spaces
across the state or country, where you can list as a location even
if you don’t own an actual office there. You can use it for monthly
meetings, and it’ll help bring in more digital leads.
Final Thoughts
Don’t play the rise and grind game. Don’t overwork yourself. It
could lead to burnout, exhaustion, broken families, etc. You do
have to work hard, but you need to have boundaries.
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GettInG HIGH-paYInG cLIentS In
e-coMMerce
An interview with Todd Mobley
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Todd knew an equestrian retail business was very niched down
vertical that would be easy to target in ads. He approached his
friend through a Facebook message, told him he was starting
up a marketing agency and offered him a free trial of his digital
marketing services. All the client would have to pay for was his
ad spend, which, according to Todd, the client would have spent
elsewhere in advertisements. Luckily, the client knew the value
of marketing, especially as he was just starting a new business
venture. He told Todd, “I want feet in the door” on the day of his
store’s grand opening.
The client agreed to the free trial Todd offered him. They chose
to offer a free item through the ad to get people in on the store’s
opening day. The ad generated over 100 opt-in leads and 80
people showed up to the grand opening. Of those 80 people,
over half made an in-store purchase. The store’s grand opening
ad campaign brought in over $4,000 in revenue with only $900
in ad spend.
In the time after that, Todd moved on to new clients and slowly
grew his agency. About 8 months later, the horse supply store
owner contacted him again. This time, he was ready to move
forward with digital marketing for his online store. He had built
out his website and had good products for sale.
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the market for equestrian supplies throughout the whole
country for the campaign to work. This campaign would become
Todd’s first high-ticket retainer, charging his retail client $6,500
a month, including ad spend.
When explaining the strategy he had put together for his client,
Todd used a slide deck. He still uses this with every potential
client. He uses 4 to 5 slides with a high-level strategy plan for
the business. He uses these slide decks, along with Zoom, to
deliver his strategy sessions. For each client he is delivering
a strategy session to, he creates a personalized landing page,
which includes the video and a link to download their proposal.
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has is not to guarantee your clients anything. Show them the
results you acquired for previous clients, but don’t guarantee
them those same results. Your results, as always, may vary
between clients.
Final Thoughts
Todd’s final thoughts for digital marketers is to focus on top-
level strategy. Show your clients the big picture, so they can
truly understand their problems as it comes to their customer
base and business needs. Having your client understand their
business problems and offering them a real solution for those
problems will earn you more. According to Todd, marketers
doing business this way get 2 to 3 times the going rate for
Facebook ad marketers.
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a Facebook adS aGencY WItH no adS
An interview with Daniel Tapia
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his offer like a client would -- as he would if he were buying his
own product. He realized that no one wanted to pay another
large monthly retainer. They wanted a product at a fixed price
that they could control maintenance on. This revelation helped
him shift his business from just advertising to consulting and
training.
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foot in the door and increase the perceived value of the
product.
• Stack the value of each deliverable. Show people
how much each thing is work, and then show them the
bundle price. The value of the stack generally blows
people away, eliminates almost all resistance and get
them purchasing swiftly.
Helping his clients get results from their leads not only
increased their revenue, but it increased their trust in Daniel
and his methods. Giving customers back the power to run their
own business allowed him to generate more revenue, overall,
than he did before, and all with less work.
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Final Thoughts
According to Daniel, most people don’t charge enough and
are afraid of setting high upfront fees or higher-ticket services
because they don’t know whether they can deliver on the
promise or not.
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SUcceSS aFter aLMoSt caLLInG It
QUItS
An interview with Jimmy Rutkowski
A Shaky Start
Just 90 days before converting the first dentist’s referrals into
new clients, Jimmy was an unsatisfied service representative
at a 9-to-5 job. Ready to branch out in a new direction, he took
Tai Lopez’s marketing course online and started learning about
social media marketing. A month later, he was done with the
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course and raring to go. He knew he had what it took to start
running effective campaigns. All he needed was the clients.
Eager to get his side project off the ground, Jimmy threw
himself head-first into the networking game. He went to events,
contacted everyone he knew who owned a business and even
reached out to friends and acquaintances. Everyone said no.
The friend worked with clients who had plenty of content but
no marketing strategy. They needed a way to ramp up their
brand exposure and were open to hiring a marketer. Jimmy took
it on.
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The Big Break
During the conversation that was supposed to signal the end of
Jimmy’s marketing agency and working with his friend — at least
for the time being — his photographer friend threw him a line
before he could say anything.
His friend knew about someone who might need Jimmy’s help.
So rather than quitting his business and focusing on his 9-to-5
job, Jimmy took the client on. A social media manager herself,
she needed help figuring out the marketing aspect of what she
did for a client of hers. He helped her out and built a rapport with
her. Unfortunately, he couldn’t solve her problem completely.
But a few days later, she referred him to someone else.
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1. Create an Irresistible Offer
In order to draw new customers, the dentists needed to focus
on valuable promotions that were hard to turn down. However,
this didn’t necessarily mean a discount.
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to focus advertisements on high-end services like Invisalign
rather than low-ticket services like cleanings and teeth
whitening.
Final Thoughts
Before quitting his full-time job, and while working with his new
dentistry clients and planning to take on more, Jimmy was able
to negotiate a deal of $8,000 per month with a large marketing
company. But his trajectory was hardly a straight line to the top.
Third, build rapport with everyone you work with and don’t
underestimate the power of word-of-mouth referrals. You never
know when someone is going to know someone who might
need your services. Don’t burn bridges and don’t underestimate
anyone’s connections. Do your best to build camaraderie with
your clients and the rest will follow.
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FroM bUSboY to beer bUS
An interview with Brett Watts
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running ads than managing people’s brands, so he switched over
to lead generation full-time.
1. The Event
When it comes to an event, sales don’t really happen during the
first couple of months. Instead, he used this time to build a list,
increasing awareness and anticipation in the community. He
used Jeff’s customer research method to help tailor the event
and get leads through the survey, which was incentivised with a
raffle and discount code.
After that, he ran giveaways about twice a week for the three
months leading up to the event, giving away two to four tickets
each time. He’d also run flash sales, and offer a great discount to
those who didn’t win the giveaway.
2. The Campaign
Even though he had the technical aspects down, Brett had never
actually marketed an event before. He didn’t know what he was
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doing, so he sought the help of his online marketing buddies,
who helped him with Facebook strategies.
• Radio ads
• Facebook ads
• Social media influencers
3. The Results
With $10,000 in ad spend, Brett was able to generate 2,500
ticket sales at varying price-points, build a 4000-lead list, and
pull in a handful of sponsors for the beer fest. Safe to say, it was
a success.
The event owners now call him in for all marketing ideas and
decisions, effectively making him a Chief Marketing Officer, and
they refer him to other event owners, making him the go-to for
event marketing and lead generation in his area.
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Brett went from making $100 a month running restaurant ads
while working at a restaurant part-time to a $2000 flat fee plus
commissions and bonuses through the beer bus event.
Final Thoughts
Brett credits his success in event marketing to meeting his
friend’s brother, the owner of the mobile beer brewery, in
person. See people in person, that’s how you make good
connections that lead to big things.
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tHe poWer oF partnerSHIpS
An interview with Francis and Kylo
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Over time, he realized that he liked creating ads, but he didn’t
like interacting with clients. He reached out to his long-time
friend, Kylo, to handle the sales and training process for his
agency. Together, they’ve scaled the agency immensely, hiring a
third member and partnering with other local digital agencies.
2. Selling Services
Kylo claims that Wisconsin is well-known for being 20 years
behind the rest of the world, making new technology slow to
be adopted. Though they’ve been intrigued, Francis and Kylo
have had to get prospects comfortable with the idea of new
marketing techniques.
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3. Working with Partners
As of the date of the interview, Kylo claims that at least 60%
of their revenue comes from partnerships and referrals,
most of which came from networking meetings and speaking
engagements.
4. Building a Team
When it comes to finding a business partner for your agency,
Francis suggests finding someone you’ve known long enough
and trust. You need to be able to have honest and open
conversations. Sometimes ideas are stupid and you need to be
able to call each other out.
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Francis to keep doing what he was best at while adding massive
value to their services.
Final Thoughts
Don’t waste time doing things you’re not good at. Pay someone
who’s better and make money doing what you’re best at.
Always explain the process and mentally engage the client so
that they’re comfortable with what they’re getting. They’ll end
up paying you more because they understand what it is they’re
paying for.
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an oUtSoUrced cMo For
FrancHISeS
An interview with Stephanie Saenz
Sweet Sixteen
Steph’s marketing journey began before she even finished high
school. At the ripe old age of 16 years old, she started working
at a local movie theater, after her father insisted she was old
enough to find a job. Two years later, Steph was offered a
supervisor position at the theater.
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As a manager, she had the opportunity to compete in a
competition where theaters throughout the nation would put
together a grassroots marketing campaign for a particular film
studio’s movies. Since no other manager wanted to participate,
she took it upon herself to create a campaign with no budget at
all, contacting local radio stations and finding ways to get people
in the theater to watch the movie.
While Steph didn’t exactly win the contest, she placed 4th
overall in the nation, which was impressive for a teenage
manager. As soon as she turned 19 years old, the movie theater
chain offered her a position as district marketing manager for
all of the South Florida area. In this position, she managed and
taught theaters all along the Southeast coast of Florida her
grassroots marketing strategies.
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cultural arts facility had a relatively large budget for physical
advertisements, which are much more costly than digital ads.
Steph managed to convince the facility to allow her to use some
of the marketing budget to start doing ads online in addition to
the radio, newspaper and billboard ads.
Flying Solo
While working as a marketer at the cultural arts center, Steph
found Dan Henry’s group, which had recently started. She
was part of the beta group before he began selling his course.
Through Dan Henry’s training, she learned about Facebook ads
and social media marketing.
She compiled a spreadsheet with all the data from both kinds
of advertising to calculate the costs per lead and per actual
customer. Facebook ads turned out to be far cheaper than the
rest of the marketing methods. Doing this, it took her 2 years to
convince the investors that her numbers were correct and that
digital marketing was the best way to acquire new customers.
Steph’s Secrets
Along the way, Steph gained some valuable experience working
with franchises, particularly those in massage therapy and spas.
The lessons she learned along the way shaped the way she runs
her agency today. Here are Steph’s 4 secrets to getting franchise
clients.
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1. Have a Portfolio
Steph believes that having a portfolio ready to show to your
clients is the most important part of closing a deal. This is
especially true for clients who might do things a little more
old school. She suggests carrying a physical portfolio with
you, as well as having one online.
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Corporations and their franchises are driven by money. If you
get the results you promise, corporate may look the other
way and allow you to work with a franchise. Put yourself in a
position where you understand them and what you can and
cannot do in terms of running a marketing campaign.
Final Thoughts
The last bit of advice Steph offers to those who are trying to gain
franchise clients is to prove you can handle multiple franchises
at once. Once you start to work with one franchise and prove
that you can bring them results, other franchises may become
interested in working with you.
Know what works in each area you are working in. What
works for a franchise on one side of the city may not work for a
franchise in another. Same goes for franchises in different cities
or states.
Lastly, your greatest source for clients is referrals. Once you can
prove that your services provide results, the word will start to
spread and you will start to gain more clients.
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WrItInG HIS WaY to 10k
An interview with Danny Velez
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Looking for a way out of this lifestyle, he took Dan Henry’s
Facebook ads course, where he first learned about copywriting.
At the time, he didn’t know what copywriting was. He thought it
was just telling a story that leads people to take an action.
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Make it looks as professional as possible and write good
posts that show your expertise and your accomplishments.
Make sure your content adds value to your profile, including
your pictures. Get rid of drunk pictures and excessive selfies.
Everything should show people that you are professional
and what it is that you do.
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You don’t have to talk to them about business. Congratulate
them on accomplishments or life events.
Interact with them for a few days and then send them a
message and initiate a conversation. Tell them that you
like their posts and that you’d like to talk to them soon.
Just don’t sell to them right away. Warming up prospective
clients properly gives them a higher lifetime value as a
client. They might also come to you for help at some point.
Clients have to trust you before they will be willing to pay you
before they start seeing results. If they don’t trust you even a
little, they won’t want to pay you ahead of time. They will just
say no and avoid you in the future. People will trust you if your
Facebook profile shows them you’re worth trusting.
Final Thoughts
Copywriting is all about evoking a certain emotion in the reader
and getting them to identify with the story. When working with
clients, you may need to help them find their story before you
begin writing for them. Whether your client knows it or not, he
or she has a story.
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Ask your clients questions to figure out their story. Interview
them in person or over the phone if need be, and structure your
copy around their story. This is especially useful if you’re writing
a Soap Opera sequence for emails.
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8 MontHS to $7k retaInerS
An interview with Jide Alufa
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The first was a dentist trial that lasted three months. The client
paid for the ad-spend, but Jide provided the services for free.
Three months in, Jide panicked. He wasn’t getting results with
$500 a month in ad spend and didn’t know what else to do. After
consulting with Jeff, he managed to generate 30 leads. Tired of
working for free, he gave the client an ultimatum: pay him $750
per month, or stop working together. Within two days, he got his
first real retainer, which he later raised to $1K per month.
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confident in your proven ability, your knowledge and your online
community of professionals is key to gaining clients and charging
what you’re worth. If you feel like you’re not there yet, find that
community online and build your knowledge and experience.
1. He Focused on Selling
Jide figured out that he was spending too much time in the
Facebook ad manager trying to figure out how to get the
results he was promising his clients so that he could be sure
he could deliver. The more time he spent trying to figure
things out was time he wasn’t using to gain new clients,
which meant he was losing money. After that, he decided he
was going to focus more on sales.
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no longer offers free trials. He recommends charging $150
per hour and using that rate to quote clients.
4. He Charges Upfront
Realizing that clients are likely to refuse to pay once
services are provided, Jide started requiring payment
upfront. He tells clients that without paying for his service
upfront, they cannot accomplish the goals they set in the
first meeting.
Final Thoughts
Jide’s final advice for those starting out on their Facebook ads
business is to never do a free trial for a client. If you need to
practice, find a friend who owns a business and practice there,
but never offer someone who you have only a client relationship
with to do work for free. This sets the tone for the rest of your
working relationship, and it makes the client undervalue your
service. When you go to pitch a prospective client, make sure
state your price upfront.
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aGencY GroWtH tHroUGH pUbLIc
SpeakInG
An interview with Andrew Page
About Andrew
Based in a southern suburb of Atlanta, Georgia, Andrew Page
began his Facebook Ads agency career by booking public
speaking gigs in his area. By leveraging his connections to
professionals in the local community, Andrew managed to
positions himself as an expert in the field by speaking to groups
of business owners about digital marketing and the tools
available to them.
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connections they had in the local community. The short one-
hour seminar turned into a workshop that lasted over two hours.
Preparing to Present
According to Andrew, the best way to prepare for a public
presentation is to just get out there and do it. Of course, it’s
important to have something to show, but tons of preparation
isn’t necessary. For his first presentation, Andrew used a slide
deck he got through Jeff, which he then customized to reflect
his own brand. This slide deck included Jeff’s 3 secrets to
advertising on Facebook.
For the speaking events that followed the first one, Andrew did
come a bit more prepared, especially for the workshop, which
was more hands-on. While Andrew believes handouts aren’t
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necessary, he did bring some printed handouts for workshop
attendees, which helped walk them through their own ad-
building so they could apply some of the concepts they learned
at the workshop right away and get feedback from him and
other attendees.
1. Just go do it. At least for the first one. You don’t need to
be prepared, and you don’t need years of experience for
people to listen to you and find value in what you have
to offer.
2. Don’t worry about an offer. You don’t have to sell or
give away anything at the end of your presentation.
Your presentation already offers attendees value.
3. Record yourself. If you can, record your first few
presentations and have someone watch them and give
you feedback on how you can improve.
4. Don’t panic at big questions. Chances are no one will
ask you anything major when you’re speaking. However,
if someone asks you something big you aren’t prepared
to answer, just tell them you’re saving it for another
seminar.
5. Don’t go overboard. Presentations don’t have to be in-
depth to be valuable. Just give your audience a general
overview.
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How to Use Public Speaking to Grow Your Agency
Speaking in front of a group of people may not seem like the
most profitable use of your time, but can lead you and your
agency to some serious growth. However, it does take time
and some persistence. If you’re starting out with nothing to
offer after a seminar or presentation, you can still network with
attendees and get booked for another presentation. You may
even spark some interest in your services or, at the very least,
spark interest in knowing more about social media marketing.
Final Thoughts
If you’re just starting out on your Facebook ads agency and
have a speaking engagement set up, the easiest way to have a
presentation ready is just to screenshot the settings in Facebook
and put those pictures in a slide deck. You can find these slide
decks through Jeff’s Agency Scaling Secrets Facebook group.
You can also create your own slide decks that walk attendees
through the process of setting up ads for their business.
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FroM MobILe appS to Facebook adS
An interview with Paxton Hare
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When he finally got back into it, he started off with the “curious
student” tactic, finding Jeff’s group in the process.
An hour after the event, the gym owner called Paxton, asking
for a meeting that Friday. By Tuesday of the next week, Paxton
signed him on and received his first check for $2900.
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the details. He took this methodology and ran with it at other
events, finding one or two interested prospects every time.
Once they understand the process, the price is the only possible
sticking point. However, he just presents the math, showing ROI and
the objection is handled. He also guarantees 30 leads per month or
their next month is paid for, which adds confidence and trust.
Final Thoughts
Meeting people in person creates growth. Go meet people in
person, where you can have live discussions and provide a sense
of guidance, and just tell them what you do. Most people don’t
really know what Facebook ads are or how they work. The value
of the service is in asking the right questions that people don’t
think of or know the answers to.
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conVertInG LeadS For dentIStS
An interview with James Cluster
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wanted to go ahead and give James’ service a try, noting the
success he has had with other marketing campaigns. The results
weren’t in similar niches, but as James said, “it’s not about the
industry, it’s about the tactics.” He told his dentist that he
knows how to get butts into seats and people through the door.
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Converting The Leads
James began running the offer for the following month about a
week ahead of time, to give those with a birthday the first week of
the month time to plan ahead. The goal of the ad campaign was to
get people to come in for a free whitening before their birthday,
where they would likely be in photos or out celebrating.
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allowed him to run a contest where patients who completed the
checklist would be entered to win a free vacation of their choice
to Mexico, Las Vegas or Orlando. The only catch was they had to
pay for their flight.
Final Thoughts
When you’re approaching dentists about their marketing,
it’s important to realize most dentists are already focused
on marketing. However, most of the marketing they do is
traditional, which includes mailers, on-page SEO, client reviews
and internal referrals. If you can figure out how to nurture an
internal lead to get the dentist a good review (such as with the
post-appointment checklist), you will do great. Dentists want
good reviews, and they want their patients to keep coming back.
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FroM MobILe appS to Facebook adS
An interview with Jamie Eldridge
Those who comment are sent to a scheduler bot that lets them
schedule a shopping appointment with him. Using the Schedule
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Once platform, the bot gives them three reminders of the
appointment before offering the option to reschedule.
After that, he began offering six classes for $15. This was still
an easy offer, and people would normally come in with cash --
usually a $20 bill. For $15, the kids could take the class, and for
an extra $5, they could get a uniform. This made the kids and
the parents feel more like a part of the program, increasing the
chances that they would commit to a contract.
The ads that performed best for him has been 10 classes for
$27, including a free uniform. He cautions, though, never to say
“weeks” in ads for martial arts, dance or gymnastics classes.
Always tell people how many classes they’re getting for their
money, not how many weeks it lasts. This gives them clarity and
increases chances of conversion.
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Jamie also says it’s all about getting the families to fall in love
with the program. If they feel like they are part of the program,
and if you get them to trust you, they’ll buy from you and want to
stay with you long-term.
The intro offer isn’t designed to make the school money. It tries
to cover costs, at best, but the point is to get people through the
door and involved so that they are more likely to become long-
term paying clients. Don’t try to upgrade leads to clients on the
spot, even with a discount. In his experience, it never works. Let
the program sell itself.
Whatever you do, he cautions not to “be the free guy in town.”
Try the $5 trick, where you offer an extra three classes or a
uniform for an extra $5.
Final Thoughts
For martial arts schools:
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For agencies:
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