Nobody wants to be a podcast guest.
Speaker:That's an activity.
Speaker:It's a hobby.
Speaker:What they want is the results that come from that.
Speaker:Anybody that says it's easy has never done it or never done it well, right?
Speaker:It's the great ones that make it look easy.
Speaker:Your time is valuable.
Speaker:You don't wanna look like this.
Speaker:A desperate, thirsty guest that will talk anywhere, have meaningful
Speaker:conversations in places that raise your profile and talk about different things.
Speaker:I believe we're one conversation away.
Speaker:The best things in my life has come through conversations.
Speaker:Tom, we're back for round number two.
Speaker:It's only been what, five, six years?
Speaker:Something like that.
Speaker:Well, I was gonna say it was before COVID, right?
Speaker:It was just before COVID and uh, uh, the world has changed so much
Speaker:since then, and while there's a lot of problems today, uh, I still say
Speaker:there is no better time to be alive.
Speaker:Ooh, I, I couldn't agree more.
Speaker:I mean, it's interesting times, it's uncharted territory with everything
Speaker:that's happening in the world.
Speaker:I feel like I don't need to label all the stuff, but we're all feeling it.
Speaker:I wouldn't, yeah, I wanna be in it, you know, like it's great to be here.
Speaker:But it's, if we went back and listened to what we were
Speaker:talking about last time, right?
Speaker:We would, if we, if at that time we would've known the world we live
Speaker:in, um, what we have here, right?
Speaker:We would've thought, oh my gosh, we won't have a care in the world, right?
Speaker:Of all with AI and everything else.
Speaker:Um, the tools that we have, we gotta remind ourselves, um,
Speaker:just how lucky we are here.
Speaker:Uh, and like I said, there is no better time to be a business owner.
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:And what's really cool is I feel like the.
Speaker:Two of us have done similar things for a long time and you know,
Speaker:we've been in media, podcasting has been this thing in our hearts and
Speaker:everything we've done in business, I feel like over well over a decade.
Speaker:And I mean, just to, to your horn a little bit, what you were just
Speaker:telling me, now you're over seven, you've helped booked over 75.
Speaker:Thousand interviews for other people, and that's over a decade.
Speaker:You've done a thousand of your own.
Speaker:I've not done that many.
Speaker:I've done what, 700 some odd shows here, episodes and, um, I've definitely been
Speaker:a guest, but like That's incredible.
Speaker:Like Yeah.
Speaker:a host is so much, uh, harder, right?
Speaker:Um, anybody that says it's easy has never done it or never done it well, right?
Speaker:It's the great ones that make it look easy.
Speaker:But when we both started out, you know, we'd say, we've got a
Speaker:podcast or to mention podcast, and people would say, what's that?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:We started, in, uh, 2015 and for the first three years, I
Speaker:give my elevator pitch and people would shake their head and say.
Speaker:What's a podcast?
Speaker:Well, then about 2018.
Speaker:2000? Yeah, about 2018.
Speaker:When all of a sudden you could just download podcasts to your phone.
Speaker:It took off.
Speaker:And then in 2020 when COVID hit, just after we had seen ourselves or seen
Speaker:each other for the, uh, in person, all of a sudden big business figured
Speaker:it out because they'd come to us and say, you know, we've got a travel
Speaker:budget, we've got a conference budget, and we still have to get to people.
Speaker:Our clients, how do we do that?
Speaker:So podcast interview marketing worked there.
Speaker:And fast forward to about, uh, uh, the end of 2023.
Speaker:There was no doubt that podcasts were starting to get indexed by ai.
Speaker:And you know, today, if you wanna get recommended by.
Speaker:The, the ai, um, engines out there, the large language models, they're
Speaker:indexing podcast interviews, and that's the content they're drawing on.
Speaker:So it's interesting, while the, the theme of what we're doing, uh, is the same,
Speaker:um, the power of it is so much greater.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Today we're not only talking to our ideal clients, we're talking to
Speaker:the AI that's referring them also.
Speaker:That's absolutely true.
Speaker:It's, it's interesting because yes, you've done the consistent thing
Speaker:of getting people booked on shows.
Speaker:I mean, really your, your company Interview Valet.
Speaker:Has done that for a decade.
Speaker:I mean, you, you are literally, I you are the goat, the greatest
Speaker:of all time in this whole thing.
Speaker:And I, I, I say that in complete sincerity because whenever I hear
Speaker:people like, oh, I use, you know, like, oh, here's the service that I
Speaker:use for, uh, you know, getting booked and, you know, I'm talking to some of
Speaker:the biggest coaches and all that stuff.
Speaker:I, it's your name.
Speaker:I hear and I'm like, oh yeah, I know Tom.
Speaker:Alright, cool.
Speaker:I'm like, so when it comes to yeah, guesting on shows,
Speaker:like, I, I would love to hear.
Speaker:I guess how, because I almost have like a definition in my mind of how I see
Speaker:it and the value prop and all that.
Speaker:It's interesting that like, you know, the value or the benefits kind of change
Speaker:over time because of the, the, the world.
Speaker:But I guess like how would you define what, what podcast guesting is, you know,
Speaker:what you guys help people do and then also, um, yeah, I guess the power of that
Speaker:over maybe some other types of marketing.
Speaker:Yeah, and I'm gonna push back a little bit on that because you say podcast guesting.
Speaker:Um, more and more I see what most people are doing with podcast guesting.
Speaker:Um, it's a expensive hobby that's called marketing, right?
Speaker:Ah,
Speaker:It's just activity, right?
Speaker:And it's this idea of nobody wants to be a podcast guest.
Speaker:That's an activity.
Speaker:It's a hobby.
Speaker:What they want is the results that come from that.
Speaker:And so we really look at it as podcast interview, marketing, and
Speaker:you know, with any company it's like, what problem do you solve?
Speaker:Let's start with that.
Speaker:And today, I think, you know, the world has changed, but it's still the same.
Speaker:In order for somebody to to work with you, they have to know,
Speaker:like, and trust you, right?
Speaker:And especially the bigger the ticket, the sale, the more it's a service
Speaker:where people are betting on the jockey.
Speaker:They have to know, like, and trust you.
Speaker:And for the longest time people were talking about, well how
Speaker:do you break through the noise?
Speaker:And so many people now are.
Speaker:Adding to the noise saying, well, I'll get noticed.
Speaker:Well, you might get that.
Speaker:No, you might even get that.
Speaker:Like, but if you don't have that trust, you're not gonna get the conversions.
Speaker:So the idea behind podcast interview marketing is that
Speaker:you get to get introduced.
Speaker:By the authority, right?
Speaker:No one jumped on this podcast today and said, wow, I can't
Speaker:wait to listen to Tom Schwab.
Speaker:They're like, no, I like Joe.
Speaker:I like hustle and flow charts, right?
Speaker:I'm gonna go there.
Speaker:I. And when you introduce me, there's that transfer of authority, right?
Speaker:You vouched for me just in case.
Speaker:Just like if we were at a event and it was your stage and you invited me to be
Speaker:there, there's that transfer of authority.
Speaker:So instantly you get that authority and that trust.
Speaker:Then you get to talk with people for an extended period of time.
Speaker:And I always say people should do one of two things.
Speaker:Turn you up or turn you off.
Speaker:Either one is fine.
Speaker:Because at the end of the day, we don't need more leads, right?
Speaker:Leads cost you money to to work, right?
Speaker:You wanna be optimizing for value, for impact because that's what drives profits.
Speaker:So you want somebody to say, oh yes, this is the person for me, and come
Speaker:and, you know, um, better leads the close faster for a higher initial
Speaker:amount if you're not for them.
Speaker:Well let them know that early on because that way they don't
Speaker:waste their time or your time.
Speaker:So ultimately the big goal is better leads the close faster for a
Speaker:higher initial amount, but there's so many spinoffs from it, right?
Speaker:Social media, followers, content to repurpose.
Speaker:It opens up.
Speaker:Speaking opportunities, right?
Speaker:You can launch books, launch podcasts through podcast interviews.
Speaker:Um, the brand authority, the thought leadership, and then
Speaker:what we talked about before.
Speaker:You know, you get SEO value.
Speaker:From the backlinks, right?
Speaker:If, if anybody, if your clients are still using SEO.
Speaker:But the big thing also is ai, right?
Speaker:AI is listening to this, indexing it, so you're getting heard by
Speaker:your ideal clients and the people and the AI that refers them.
Speaker:So that's the problem we're trying to solve.
Speaker:And, uh, more and more every year that goes on, it becomes more powerful.
Speaker:Well that's what I'm feeling now is, you know, it's podcasting has had
Speaker:so many different flavors over the years now, you know, and you see it.
Speaker:Showing up on different platforms and in different ways.
Speaker:You know, you have, you know, I, or Apple, apple Podcasts or
Speaker:before that was, you know, iTunes and all that stuff, and Spotify.
Speaker:Now YouTube has taken a big charge in podcasting and who knows
Speaker:where it's gonna go from there.
Speaker:But it seems like the, the, the power of being a guest and being a, being
Speaker:a guest on someone else's platform, I've always seen it as like, all
Speaker:right, this is someone else's stage.
Speaker:And I get to go in these virtual stages.
Speaker:If you're doing it that way or in person and, and now like you said, you're, you're
Speaker:edified, you're, you know, you're having them now present you as the authority
Speaker:for whatever reason why you're there.
Speaker:They blow you up and then, and even if someone ever knew of
Speaker:you, they're like, oh, wow, okay.
Speaker:You know, if, if it's the right thing for them, they're gonna lock in.
Speaker:And, um, the no like, and trust factor being the human, you
Speaker:know, I feel like being a. An actual human, not a cloned human.
Speaker:We'll talk about kind of the tech and the AI stuff, but,
Speaker:I'm kind of curious of, yeah.
Speaker:Your thoughts on how, maybe it's even all these other benefits that
Speaker:happen on the human side of things.
Speaker:Like when you're doing, like you said, you get to have a conversation
Speaker:with someone, uh, the host.
Speaker:So like what are some other things that we might not be thinking about?
Speaker:today, every time I see something, my first thought
Speaker:is, is this AI generated right?
Speaker:And if it is, that's fine, just let me know.
Speaker:But if it is it, if you make, make me believe that it's not ai and I find
Speaker:out it is, it destroys all trust.
Speaker:And I think we all look at emails and go.
Speaker:This is AI generated, right?
Speaker:Um, Joe would never call me Thomas, right?
Speaker:So if an email comes and says, dear Thomas, well that was
Speaker:scraped from somewhere, right?
Speaker:Or I pick up my phone now, and there's that just, is this a real person or
Speaker:There's this ai and I think it can destroy trust very, very quickly.
Speaker:And so I think it's important to acknowledge what's AI
Speaker:and what isn't, and people.
Speaker:Gravitate towards long form collaborative content.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Listening in on a conversation.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I, I don't know that I wanna listen to a blog that has been made.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And the thing is today is that something scale and something don't.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And I can.
Speaker:I can send a ill million emails in the time we've been talking up to this point.
Speaker:Very efficient, but not very effective.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:The same way.
Speaker:Um, uh, I could probably write a million blogs in the time we've been talking,
Speaker:absolutely.
Speaker:but it's efficient.
Speaker:But is it effective?
Speaker:And so I think podcasts and especially podcast interviews is
Speaker:that nice way that it's effective.
Speaker:But it's also efficient because this is the same conversation you
Speaker:and I would be having one-on-one.
Speaker:Uh, if we were talking on, you know, zoom, if we were having a beer, if we
Speaker:were having a, a cup of coffee, and this is this way that we can capture
Speaker:it and share it with the world.
Speaker:And throughout time, right.
Speaker:I've, uh, in 2024, I had a, uh, new client that came from an
Speaker:interview that I did in 2018.
Speaker:And what was so amazing is the first question that they had was,
Speaker:Hey, when did you grow the beard?
Speaker:And I was thinking, uh, December of 2019.
Speaker:But they had.
Speaker:Listened to the podcast they had actually, it was, uh, Jamie
Speaker:Masters, uh, eventual Millionaire.
Speaker:And they'd watched the video.
Speaker:And so when they jumped on with me, they didn't know when it was recorded.
Speaker:It was evergreen.
Speaker:And so they were just shocked by, Hey, you grew a beard.
Speaker:Yeah, just overnight.
Speaker:That that's right.
Speaker:Yeah, that's, it's incredible.
Speaker:And that's the beauty of podcasts.
Speaker:Like that's why like even have my library of episodes, I see still,
Speaker:like there's some that really take off still and are consistently listened and
Speaker:that's, I'm sure from all the referral traffic and SEO and maybe a EO now.
Speaker:Uh, but to your point, like you're.
Speaker:So actually I'm gonna, I'm gonna ask you about something that you brought
Speaker:up prior to us chatting here is you've done like a thousand of these.
Speaker:So you have a lot of thou, just you personally, thousand different
Speaker:guest interviews you on other people's shows, other media, and
Speaker:you were kind of basically saying more is not the the answer, right?
Speaker:So what's your, what's the thinking that we need to shift here?
Speaker:early on I was almost embarrassed.
Speaker:Now that.
Speaker:My thought was, we'll just do more.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:It's a numbers game.
Speaker:Just get out there and keep talking about the same thing, and it makes no sense from
Speaker:an efficiency or an effective standpoint.
Speaker:You know, if you believe that, just go to Times Square and
Speaker:talk to start talking to people.
Speaker:Sooner or later, you're gonna find your ideal customer,
Speaker:and that sounds ridiculous.
Speaker:So you've gotta be much, much more targeted.
Speaker:And now I'm trying to do.
Speaker:More with every interview instead of just doing more interviews.
Speaker:It's something that we, we've been preaching for years.
Speaker:Uh, while the market is just saying that's a numbers game,
Speaker:just, just do more interviews.
Speaker:It's like, no, your time is valuable.
Speaker:You don't wanna look like this.
Speaker:A desperate, thirsty guest that will talk anywhere, have meaningful
Speaker:conversations in places that raise your profile and talk about different things.
Speaker:And what always used to frustrate me is that there's great conversations
Speaker:that have been had over the years.
Speaker:I don't go back and index them, I don't think people are
Speaker:going back and indexing them.
Speaker:And while there was that content that somebody may, um, may stumble
Speaker:across, heck, my team is not even going back and finding those.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And it was just, that's the way it is.
Speaker:And now, uh, through the, the wonders of technology, you can
Speaker:go back and you can pull that up.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:I can.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:We did a search one time, we were trying to do a, uh, a clip.
Speaker:And so we said, um, Tom, you know, routinely says my microphone
Speaker:makes me sound good, my team makes me look good, right?
Speaker:And we went in there and said, what podcast did he say that on?
Speaker:What, um, time, right?
Speaker:And within five, 10 minutes, it pills picked up probably 30
Speaker:different podcasts and said, here's where you can get all the clips.
Speaker:That would've taken an intern, uh, mind numbing months to do.
Speaker:And so that exists.
Speaker:And now even, uh, with a platform like, uh, uh, delphi.ai, that blows my
Speaker:mind that you could take all of that content, put it in there, and you don't
Speaker:have to listen to all the interviews.
Speaker:Just ask my, you know, AI clone.
Speaker:A question and it'll go back and, you know, after that
Speaker:thousand hours of me talking, um, somewhere in there is your answer.
Speaker:that's it.
Speaker:I mean, that's, uh, in little plug.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Your, your code is living on your website somewhere right now.
Speaker:Um, we'll, we'll, we'll put links to it because.
Speaker:Like you said, there's, there's all this content that you personally have made,
Speaker:and now the fact that you've kind of done the work to publish all this material,
Speaker:it's, it's out there and you've said probably a lot of the same stuff, but
Speaker:there's unique things everywhere as well.
Speaker:And to uncover that manually would be almost impossible, you know, if
Speaker:you're looking for, but, but now, like, like you mentioned Delphi, since,
Speaker:since you brought it up, you know, we, we did recently clone you and.
Speaker:It's freaking awesome.
Speaker:I mean, it's what, almost 2 million words in there and
Speaker:we've just started two days ago,
Speaker:It is amazing and, and it's um, we do a lot with category design, right?
Speaker:And once you see what the world could be, it's hard to ever go back and say.
Speaker:Why would we ever go back?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Once you see the problem and that idea of me telling someone, oh yeah,
Speaker:I've done a thousand interviews.
Speaker:Uh, just, just listen to them.
Speaker:It's like, what ideal client, um, is gonna say, oh, I, I am so interested that I'm
Speaker:gonna spend a a thousand hours, right?
Speaker:I, I'm gonna spend the next six months of my life just listening
Speaker:to your podcast interviews.
Speaker:It's like, no, just.
Speaker:Let me ask the question and you give me the answer.
Speaker:And I love it too because just the same way podcast interviews are
Speaker:scalable, this search is scalable too.
Speaker:And um, you know, one of the things you've heard me preach for
Speaker:years is I reject this idea that we're all one funnel away, right?
Speaker:I'm a engineer, I'm a big fan of automation.
Speaker:But this idea that we're all gonna be put through funnel is, is dehumanizing, right?
Speaker:I believe we're one conversation away.
Speaker:The best things in my life has come through conversations.
Speaker:Now, this is a way that allows people to have conversations with me at mass, right?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:it's like, well, it's not actually you, but.
Speaker:I'll give you an example, and I, I don't want to keep rambling on here.
Speaker:Over Thanksgiving weekend, um, I found out that one of my favorite authors,
Speaker:uh, a great guy by the name of Al Ramadan, uh, had an AI clone, right?
Speaker:I've talked with Al before, had him on my podcast, and, you know, if I had a
Speaker:quarter of a million dollars, I could hire his agency, but I was able to in an hour.
Speaker:On a walk on vacation, have a conversation with this AI clone and you know, he
Speaker:asked me the questions, it was in his voice with the Australian accent, and
Speaker:we had this great conversation and at the end I get a transcript of it and.
Speaker:You look at that and say, that is amazing.
Speaker:And I, I talked with them afterwards and said, you know,
Speaker:well, what's the monetization?
Speaker:And some people monetize it, some people don't.
Speaker:And like he pointed out, here's a way that he can help people.
Speaker:It doesn't cost him any time or money.
Speaker:And you know, not every entrepreneur has a quarter of a
Speaker:million dollars to talk with them.
Speaker:and I, I want to kind of double click on the whole conversation, you
Speaker:know, your one conversation away.
Speaker:'cause even prior to me, and I've heard you say that before, but I've
Speaker:been, the way I think about cloning is that it's like a conversation funnel.
Speaker:So I'm kind of like actually molding the two in a way.
Speaker:But you're absolutely right.
Speaker:It's, it's to increase the engagement.
Speaker:It doesn't take away the human side because.
Speaker:I think, you know, as automation, all this stuff happens with AI and all this tech.
Speaker:The, the most valuable thing of everything that's left are the humans.
Speaker:It's human connection.
Speaker:It's this, it's the experience virtually that we can have,
Speaker:like you and I here right now.
Speaker:But also, um, through podcasts, through people listening and
Speaker:watching, but also in person.
Speaker:And then, you know, the tech can help us create the, almost like the engagement.
Speaker:So more of the right people, find the real us.
Speaker:I mean, there's so many other nuances here, but that's where.
Speaker:I like to lean into the human side of all this tech.
Speaker:It's like I'm happy about the tech.
Speaker:I'm really more happy about how do we have more of these valuable or like really rich
Speaker:conversations, not surface level stuff.
Speaker:And it's with the right people.
Speaker:And I really believe we're going into a conversation economy
Speaker:for, for a brief period of time, we were forced to type right?
Speaker:So the only way I could send you an email was to type you an email.
Speaker:The only way that I could communicate with the computer was to type right.
Speaker:Typing was one of those skills that you could not get through life with,
Speaker:and I think you're gonna look back.
Speaker:In history and go, what is that?
Speaker:Well, that's a keyboard.
Speaker:Why would you use that?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I have found myself that I have the computer reads stuff to me because
Speaker:it's so much easier, uh, whisper flow.
Speaker:I started to use that, um, a few months ago, and it's so much
Speaker:easier just for me to do a. Random rant and communicate that way.
Speaker:And so I think all of a sudden we're going back to conversations just like we used
Speaker:to be because technology would slow us down right in the days of the telegraph.
Speaker:Well, you better know Morse code, um, in order to communicate, and
Speaker:you better make it very, very brief and correct and precise.
Speaker:Because it's so expensive.
Speaker:And it was the same thing with typing and all the rest of this.
Speaker:And so I see it more going to a conversation economy.
Speaker:And you know, science fiction often tells us what the future looks like.
Speaker:And I think of no one on Star Trek was ever typing.
Speaker:You know, they actually talked to the computer, which was the
Speaker:hologram or, um, what was the, the.
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:The, the, the movie, uh, Hal was the computer.
Speaker:Now Hal took over.
Speaker:It was not a good thing, but everybody just talked to Hal.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And it was the Space Odyssey, that same thing.
Speaker:And to me it's like, uh, we used to talk, uh, to each other all the time
Speaker:before computers and before technology, and now we get to go back to that.
Speaker:We get, I, I feel like there's a, you're spot on Tom.
Speaker:I can agree more with the whole everything.
Speaker:I feel like there is gonna be this almost transition period where people
Speaker:are trying to figure it out, right?
Speaker:Like they almost maybe over index on the automation side of things.
Speaker:If you're a business owner, if you're someone like that, super interested in it.
Speaker:And there's probably gonna be some pushback, I would imagine, from people
Speaker:who are not so keen on automations.
Speaker:So there's gonna be kind of like this little, who knows
Speaker:what happens in the in between.
Speaker:But overall, I feel like, yeah, the human connection.
Speaker:I, I, I, I, I bet my money there, you know, that's where I feel
Speaker:like the, the true wealth is gonna be in the long run, you
Speaker:and I, I think the people that are honest and transparent about it,
Speaker:um, are the ones that it builds trust and great example here, uh.
Speaker:Eddie Yon, uh, he's one of the category pirates, a great author.
Speaker:Um, I listen to all of his things, right, and it's his voice reading
Speaker:it, but at the very beginning he's like, this is Eddie Y's AI voice.
Speaker:He doesn't try to pass it off.
Speaker:And if he didn't, I would never know the difference until he got to
Speaker:that point where he started talking about lead generation in marketing.
Speaker:A lid.
Speaker:And I'm like, oh, lead generation.
Speaker:And I just sort of had to laugh at it and it's like, okay, AI is close, but
Speaker:if, if he would've put it out that this is really me, I would've thrown
Speaker:the BS flag and lost trust instead.
Speaker:It was like, it was really neat and it made me smile.
Speaker:It's like, uh, it's close to Eddie, but it's not Eddie.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And that's the best way to do it.
Speaker:It's like you're not duping anybody.
Speaker:And that's the problem with, you know, you go to TikTok,
Speaker:Instagram, all these other socials.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like you said earlier, you have to decipher what's real, what's not.
Speaker:And I'm sure we'll see a crackdown, uh, on, you know, or
Speaker:tightening up labels of this stuff.
Speaker:You kind of starting to see it already, but that's where.
Speaker:Yeah, that's, that's the, I dunno, it's tricky.
Speaker:You know, we're in this like, murky phase right now where everybody's
Speaker:experimenting and throwing stuff out there, so there's just so much noise.
Speaker:yeah, I genuinely think like what you're doing with Interview Valet and
Speaker:getting folks to not only see it as a hobby to go on other shows and, but
Speaker:you're actually using it for a purpose.
Speaker:There.
Speaker:It's marketing, there's whatever agenda it is, but with intention behind it as well.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:I'm going to, I'm gonna do a plug for our podcast check, check out, um, the
Speaker:episode with Joe Fier and because he did something that has never been done.
Speaker:On our podcast or I've never seen done right?
Speaker:We always teach people at the end of the podcast, you know,
Speaker:give them one place to go.
Speaker:Give them, you know, multiple ways to, to connect with you.
Speaker:And it's always, go to this page, download this, jump on my calendar,
Speaker:get a free copy of my book.
Speaker:But it was almost like the conversation stopped at the end of
Speaker:the podcast and it didn't start again.
Speaker:Until there was a discovery call and Joe, you were able to go there
Speaker:and say, listen, if you wanna talk to me, talk to my AI clone.
Speaker:Come here.
Speaker:No matter what day of the week it is, what, what time of day you,
Speaker:you can talk to me and it's my ai.
Speaker:And you were very clear about that.
Speaker:Or you know, if you want to talk to me or my team, one-on-one real people,
Speaker:go here and we'll schedule a time and.
Speaker:Uh, going back to what I preached of we're one conversation away.
Speaker:We were never able to do that before.
Speaker:It was, well, we're a conversation and then a PDF in a form, and, and now
Speaker:then we'll get back to a conversation.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:But now what you're able to do is like, let's keep this conversation going.
Speaker:I'm happy you said that because you've obviously seen a lot of these,
Speaker:you literally do it for over the last decade is get folks geared up
Speaker:and ready to be their best self on other people's platforms, right?
Speaker:Like so, and part of that whole thing is to have.
Speaker:Have a place we could direct people to after the conversation ends.
Speaker:I mean, that's marketing 1 0 1 or you know, direct response.
Speaker:You know.
Speaker:So, uh, I, when you said that, I was like, really, like no
Speaker:one else has ever done this.
Speaker:Like, that's wild to me.
Speaker:What, and even that I, somebody's gonna listen to this
Speaker:five years from now and say,
Speaker:Duh.
Speaker:why would the conversation end?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:I always think, you know, I went back later in life and uh,
Speaker:got my MBA and I spent way too much time, way too much money.
Speaker:My grandfather, God rest his soul, could have told me what marketing was, right?
Speaker:Marketing was starting a conversation with somebody that could be an ideal client.
Speaker:Our ideal customer, right?
Speaker:That's what marketing is, and there's this idea of, well, we'll start the
Speaker:conversation, then we're gonna end it.
Speaker:Then we're gonna nurture them and do this and send them in a follow up sequence.
Speaker:And then our whole goal is to get them on a call so we can talk with them.
Speaker:And it's like, from a a 30,000 foot view, why would you stop it?
Speaker:Why don't you just continue the conversation?
Speaker:That's right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, and make it easy.
Speaker:You know, the whole thing is to try to reduce friction across the board
Speaker:and through life and, and engage with people where they want to chat with you.
Speaker:You know, like try to make it there, you know, text, video,
Speaker:audio, whatever it might be.
Speaker:You know, just try to figure out how to mold that.
Speaker:To, to keep the friction away.
Speaker:'cause that's where things fall apart.
Speaker:And I mean, your grandfather's absolutely right.
Speaker:and Tom, I was thinking, okay, so to kind of wrap this up, I wanna make
Speaker:it super actionable with like how you would, uh, so let's say someone
Speaker:wants to, like, all right, all right.
Speaker:I, I really want to get on other podcasts and other media
Speaker:to their stages, if you will.
Speaker:Um, what's like a quick.
Speaker:Do this, make sure to maybe start with like the don'ts, like, absolutely
Speaker:don't do these things, but what are the key things you would recommend
Speaker:folks to do, uh, to best make the time, uh, the most time of that experience
Speaker:I would say start with the end in mind.
Speaker:Why are you doing this, right?
Speaker:If it's for an ego or a hobby, that's fine, but most people are doing it
Speaker:because they want to use it to build their brand, build their business.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So with that in mind.
Speaker:You can't say enough of the right things to the wrong people.
Speaker:So who are the right people?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So who do you wanna talk to?
Speaker:And they're not all listening to the Joe Rogan podcast, right?
Speaker:So bigger is not better.
Speaker:Find the shows that they listen to.
Speaker:And sometimes you can do that by just asking ai.
Speaker:There's a lot of databases that we license that will tell us that
Speaker:information, but you know, you just put yourself in the shoes of that.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Your ideal client.
Speaker:So think about that.
Speaker:The other thing is we were talking before about if something's
Speaker:effective or efficient.
Speaker:So, so many people will come back and say, well, here's my list of
Speaker:a thousand podcasts to go after.
Speaker:Well, why don't you pick five?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Listen to them, give the host a rating and review.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I guarantee you we're all vain.
Speaker:We all look for our name, right?
Speaker:So if you leave a rating and review, they'll know who you are.
Speaker:And then you reach out and you say, um, engage with them on social media.
Speaker:Share the content.
Speaker:Give, give, give.
Speaker:Then reach out to them and say, Hey, I've listened to the podcast.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:You know that guest you had Tom Schwab a little bit weird, but that's okay.
Speaker:Um, then give them.
Speaker:Uh, value.
Speaker:You know, I, I would like to share this with your audience, or I
Speaker:think this would be helpful, right?
Speaker:If you keep giving, people will ask you to be on the show.
Speaker:So that's how you get your foot in the door, right?
Speaker:And you don't have to reach out to a thousand podcasts,
Speaker:podcasters know podcasts, right?
Speaker:If you get on one show and do a good job.
Speaker:At the end, after they've stopped recording, just
Speaker:say, I really enjoyed this.
Speaker:You know, I'd like to do more of this.
Speaker:Do you know anyone else?
Speaker:If they introduce you to two more people, um, your dance card's
Speaker:gonna get filled really quickly.
Speaker:So that's how to get on the show.
Speaker:Or you can hire an agency and just be the guest, right?
Speaker:Um, once you get on the show, start with the end in mind.
Speaker:Think about what do you want people to know.
Speaker:What do you want them to feel?
Speaker:What do you want them to do afterwards?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Just don't go on there and talk about my story.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Nobody cares about your story.
Speaker:Uh, we're all selling preparation H, right?
Speaker:Hemorrhoid cream.
Speaker:Nobody cares about our product or service.
Speaker:They care about the pain in the rear end.
Speaker:So think about that on what you share.
Speaker:And then at the end of the interview, most hosts are gonna say something like.
Speaker:So, Joe, how do people get in touch with you or, so Joe, any final words?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Make it easy for people.
Speaker:Send them to one place, but give them multiple ways to say, uh, to, to opt in.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So when Joe said on the podcast interview marketing show, he's
Speaker:like, just go to the website and you can talk with me with my AI clone.
Speaker:Or if you'd like to have a discussion, right, you can
Speaker:find a time on the calendar.
Speaker:Give them an either or.
Speaker:This shouldn't be a, uh, a landing page, a squeeze page where it says,
Speaker:you know, either sign up or don't just move them along in that conversation.
Speaker:And, you know, um, if we can be any help with that.
Speaker:Just there's, I was gonna say, um.
Speaker:There's lots of information out there, and by the time you hear this, uh, you'll
Speaker:be able to talk with my AI clone, uh, thanks to Joe and his great team, and
Speaker:you'll just be able to ask the questions.
Speaker:Love it.
Speaker:Love it.
Speaker:So Tom, where's a place that, uh, people should go, and I'm
Speaker:gonna ask you that question.
Speaker:Where should they go?
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:And so if, if for no other reason, go here to see how you
Speaker:should build your welcome page.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Send them to one place.
Speaker:So for us it's interview valet with a v.com/hustle, right?
Speaker:For hustle and flowcharts, interview valet.com/hustle.
Speaker:when you get there.
Speaker:You're gonna see Joe's picture, Joe's your friend.
Speaker:That's the transfer of authority.
Speaker:Everything we talk about is gonna be there, and then there'll be
Speaker:the, you know, my social media.
Speaker:But most importantly, there's gonna be my AI clone.
Speaker:If you would like to talk with me or my AI clone, that will be there.
Speaker:I wrote a book.
Speaker:If you want a copy of the book that will be there.
Speaker:I'm happy to send it to you or.
Speaker:Same way Joe did it.
Speaker:If you'd like to talk with me, you know, one-on-one to see how
Speaker:we could work together on this.
Speaker:I'll put my calendar schedule in like there.
Speaker:So tell 'em where to go.
Speaker:Tell 'em what they find there, and then tell 'em where to go again.
Speaker:So all of that is at interview valet.com/hustle.
Speaker:Well, Tom, yeah, just, uh, this is, this is great.
Speaker:You always, I mean, I learned a few things that I should be doing better on, uh,
Speaker:guesting, but also just making the most of the stuff that we've already created.
Speaker:So, you know, when we follow your, your path, like you just said there.
Speaker:I mean, it's literally creating the best type of content.
Speaker:So, and all this stuff's evergreen.
Speaker:It's not going anywhere for a very long time.
Speaker:No matter what's happening with ai, it's still gonna be around there.
Speaker:thank you very much.
Speaker:And what is, I mean, you might, and you might have already said what you're
Speaker:excited for, but sometimes I like to, I'm curious of like in the next year or
Speaker:so, is there something that you're just super excited to, to put out into the
Speaker:world or something that you're paying attention to that's just top of mind?
Speaker:I'm working on a manifesto called the Conversation Economy.
Speaker:Um, Christopher Lockhead did a post recently, and then he had a guest.
Speaker:Um, the guest was Rick Bennett, who was like the, one of the great
Speaker:copywriters out there, and he said something that, uh, struck me.
Speaker:He said, God hates the coward, and the market ignores them.
Speaker:I'm like, oh, what's worse To be hated by God or to be.
Speaker:Ignored by man, right?
Speaker:And so that, that really struck me.
Speaker:And then, uh, Christopher put something out that most companies
Speaker:don't have a marketing problem.
Speaker:They have a courage problem to say what they believe in who, what
Speaker:they do, all the rest of that.
Speaker:So that's the thing that I'm really trying to get to do for next year.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Put it, put it out there.
Speaker:If you don't like meat, that's fine.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:My wife loves me, my grandkids love me.
Speaker:That's good enough for me.
Speaker:Um, but just trying to be, um, very bold in what I say.
Speaker:Not to, not to be offensive, but to be clear.
Speaker:I love it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:'cause it's up to us and that's the human side, you know, have
Speaker:the courage and get out there.
Speaker:I think that's how we make the biggest connections with the right people anyway,
Speaker:is when we're bold and courageous.
Speaker:So I can't wait to read it conversation economy when it's out.
Speaker:Um, so I'll be looking for that 2026.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:Uh, it, the, the initial manifesto should be out in Q1 and then almost like the same
Speaker:way the, um, category pirates are doing.
Speaker:I'm just going to keep releasing small portions of it and then
Speaker:someday put it together in a book.
Speaker:Right on.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Well, it's very timely,
Speaker:Tom.
Speaker:I appreciate you a ton, man.