Hello again, and welcome to Connect & Convert, Insider Strategies
Dennis Collins:for Small Business Sales Success, where our belief is, it's not about what
Dennis Collins:you learn, it's about what you do.
Dennis Collins:Hey, I'm Dennis Collins, and I'm joined today by my colleague, Leah Bumfrey.
Leah Bumphry:Hi, Leah.
Leah Bumphry:Hello, hello.
Leah Bumphry:Hello.
Leah Bumphry:And somewhere in the ether, Paul is there looking out for us.
Leah Bumphry:I can just tell.
Leah Bumphry:I can just tell.
Dennis Collins:Thank God.
Dennis Collins:I don't know if we could do this on our own.
Dennis Collins:In fact, no, I do know we couldn't.
Leah Bumphry:You and I would be having a nice cup of coffee.
Leah Bumphry:If we were in Canada, we'd be at Tim Hortons.
Leah Bumphry:I don't know where we'd be in the States.
Leah Bumphry:Would it be Starbucks?
Leah Bumphry:We'd be just having a chat.
Dennis Collins:You don't have Starbucks up in Canada?
Leah Bumphry:We do, but it doesn't have the same legendary
Leah Bumphry:appeal as a Tim Hortons.
Leah Bumphry:When you come see me up here and help me shovel snow, we'll, we'll talk.
Dennis Collins:Yeah, uh, don't hold your breath on that one.
Dennis Collins:I would love to see you, but how about July?
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:All right.
Dennis Collins:All right.
Dennis Collins:All right.
Dennis Collins:All right.
Dennis Collins:Speaking with confidence, Leah.
Dennis Collins:Speaking with confidence.
Dennis Collins:What does science have to tell us about being heard, understood, and influential?
Dennis Collins:I I don't know.
Dennis Collins:I was never a very confident speaker growing up.
Dennis Collins:You know, I, I ended up being a radio DJ and a host and all that behind the mic.
Dennis Collins:But were you a cop?
Dennis Collins:Were you a confident speaker?
Dennis Collins:I mean, I bet you were.
Dennis Collins:I bet you stood up at age seven and did speeches.
Leah Bumphry:I did.
Leah Bumphry:And I, I always loved it.
Leah Bumphry:Uh, public speaking to me, it was just a whole connection with a
Leah Bumphry:whole bunch of people all at once.
Leah Bumphry:And I, I, I just was thrilled with it.
Leah Bumphry:What I do know is anyone can learn to be a confident speaker.
Leah Bumphry:That doesn't mean you're going to learn to love to public speak.
Leah Bumphry:There's, there's a difference.
Leah Bumphry:And for most of us in our, in our public that are in our, our business
Leah Bumphry:lives, you have to learn to be confident because what is sales?
Leah Bumphry:Being able to transfer confidence now.
Leah Bumphry:I'm not talking about being fake and I'm not talking about no, you know
Leah Bumphry:being there You know having to have this bold effervescent personality.
Leah Bumphry:It's confidence can be quiet And it doesn't mean you're going to love
Leah Bumphry:it, but you can learn how to do it.
Dennis Collins:Yes, you can.
Dennis Collins:So what if I told you that anyone can learn to speak with more confidence?
Dennis Collins:People are more likely to listen to you.
Dennis Collins:Do you want people to listen to you if you're in sales, if
Dennis Collins:you're a manager, a leader?
Dennis Collins:Hey, if you're a spouse, a husband, a wife, do you want
Dennis Collins:your kids to listen to you?
Dennis Collins:Well, guess what?
Dennis Collins:There are ways that you can become more persuasive.
Dennis Collins:It can be learned.
Dennis Collins:You want to be more certain, more confident, more self
Dennis Collins:assured, more knowledgeable.
Dennis Collins:Well, the scientists, again, you know, I always turn to science.
Dennis Collins:Leah is of, Leah is of the heart.
Dennis Collins:I am.
Dennis Collins:And I am of the science.
Dennis Collins:So we blend.
Dennis Collins:We blend.
Dennis Collins:It's a good combination.
Dennis Collins:I think it is.
Dennis Collins:But scientists have now researched this.
Dennis Collins:They've researched everything at one time or another.
Dennis Collins:And they have now defined the most powerful words.
Dennis Collins:And they have defined the fact that this skill can be learned
Dennis Collins:by choosing your words carefully.
Dennis Collins:You can increase your verbal power.
Dennis Collins:Do I need to say why this is important in sales?
Dennis Collins:That is how we make a living in sales.
Dennis Collins:With words.
Dennis Collins:So let's, uh, let me say first of all that all of the science that
Dennis Collins:we're gonna discuss in this episode is based on research conducted by
Dennis Collins:one of my favorite professors, Dr.
Dennis Collins:Jonah Berger, professor at the Wharton School, university of Pennsylvania.
Dennis Collins:He is a prolific author.
Dennis Collins:A well known and sought after speaker and a business consultant.
Dennis Collins:So this stuff is, the science part of this is coming from Jonah Berger.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:So Leah, have you ever tried listening to someone who kind of hedges?
Dennis Collins:Well, kind of, maybe somewhat, usually generally.
Dennis Collins:Have you ever heard somebody talk like that?
Dennis Collins:Maybe something, maybe around, maybe some kind of.
Leah Bumphry:Absolutely.
Leah Bumphry:And you know what?
Leah Bumphry:You know right away what else is going on there.
Dennis Collins:Yeah.
Dennis Collins:Well, what else?
Dennis Collins:Yeah.
Dennis Collins:Hedging.
Dennis Collins:Well, the problem is people deduct that there's nothing going on there.
Dennis Collins:It lessens the impact.
Dennis Collins:It suggests that you're uncertain, that your ideas aren't worth considering.
Dennis Collins:So the first hint that I want to give today is if you find yourself
Dennis Collins:using those hedge words, forget them.
Dennis Collins:Definite words.
Dennis Collins:Definitely.
Dennis Collins:Clearly.
Dennis Collins:Obviously.
Dennis Collins:It's totally clear.
Dennis Collins:That projects confidence.
Dennis Collins:That makes it more easy and more likely that people will
Dennis Collins:listen to you and follow you.
Dennis Collins:What about this?
Dennis Collins:This is one that's debated over and over again, and I'd
Dennis Collins:love your opinion on this one.
Dennis Collins:Science has something to say about this, but I'd like to hear
Dennis Collins:what Leah thinks about this.
Dennis Collins:How about occasionally admitting I screwed up?
Dennis Collins:Oh, I can't, I messed up.
Dennis Collins:It's on me.
Dennis Collins:It's my fault.
Dennis Collins:How about that?
Dennis Collins:How does that help?
Dennis Collins:Doesn't that hinder communication?
Dennis Collins:Doesn't that make you look bad?
Leah Bumphry:It becomes real.
Leah Bumphry:Now that's if you really did screw up, not, not if you're,
Leah Bumphry:you're making an affectation so that you seem more real people.
Leah Bumphry:Let's say you really screwed up.
Leah Bumphry:Yeah.
Leah Bumphry:Yeah.
Leah Bumphry:I mean.
Leah Bumphry:The.
Leah Bumphry:The.
Leah Bumphry:The.
Leah Bumphry:It, when you are willing to do that, it actually makes the connection stronger.
Leah Bumphry:And think about in personal life that, that's very true.
Leah Bumphry:So much so, so much more in business because in business you
Leah Bumphry:don't have a lot of times any kind of a relationship with someone.
Leah Bumphry:If you can come forward and I, we've all been in those situations, human
Leah Bumphry:error, something goes wrong, a mistake is made, the wrong part is ordered.
Leah Bumphry:This this happened.
Leah Bumphry:And I am so sorry, and that's not how I wanted to do it, but
Leah Bumphry:I'm going to make it better.
Leah Bumphry:It gives you the opportunity to forge a relationship.
Leah Bumphry:If you're not willing to do that, it's, it's not a real conversation.
Dennis Collins:Well, yes, and science, here I go again, science
Dennis Collins:has something to say about that.
Dennis Collins:Absolutely what you said is correct.
Dennis Collins:Occasionally admitting a mistake.
Dennis Collins:negates the fact that you're nearly perfect, right?
Dennis Collins:It makes you more human.
Dennis Collins:But here is the twist.
Dennis Collins:There's a twist to this.
Dennis Collins:It only works if you're already perceived to be competent.
Dennis Collins:You see what I'm saying?
Dennis Collins:If you are perceived to be a loser, incompetent, okay, not
Dennis Collins:capable, admitting a mistake.
Dennis Collins:It only builds the case against you.
Dennis Collins:But if you are viewed as a person who is generally dependable and
Dennis Collins:competent, occasionally admitting mistake makes you approachable.
Dennis Collins:It makes you more vulnerable.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:But again, with that caveat.
Leah Bumphry:And I would add to that, Dennis, if you're working with
Leah Bumphry:someone else who made the mistake and you're the one having to tell the
Leah Bumphry:client about it, telling them that it was Dennis that made the mistake.
Leah Bumphry:It's the worst thing you can do.
Leah Bumphry:I'm saying, you know what, Paul, that was not my fault.
Leah Bumphry:It was Dennis that did it.
Leah Bumphry:Don't, I'm sorry, I've worked with Dennis, I'm trying.
Leah Bumphry:He keeps on and on and this happened, but I'm gonna fix it.
Leah Bumphry:I love Dennis.
Leah Bumphry:I end up looking, especially if there's no relationship there, I
Leah Bumphry:look like someone passing the buck.
Leah Bumphry:I'm kicking Dennis windows down.
Leah Bumphry:I'm not willing to work as a team.
Leah Bumphry:So there, there's some intricacies to being to the honesty, even if.
Leah Bumphry:Dennis, even if you did mess up, I'm not going to say it was you.
Dennis Collins:Well, there's one exception to that.
Dennis Collins:Anything that gets screwed up on this podcast is Boomer's fault.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:So
Leah Bumphry:you and I know it.
Leah Bumphry:Yeah.
Leah Bumphry:But don't tell him I said that.
Leah Bumphry:I agree.
Dennis Collins:No, but you know what, what you're talking
Dennis Collins:about is the finger pointing.
Dennis Collins:Yes.
Dennis Collins:Finger pointing you, you, you, that never works.
Dennis Collins:Never works.
Dennis Collins:That is the worst thing you can do.
Dennis Collins:It's always me and I, I'm uncomfortable when you say that I'm uncomfortable
Dennis Collins:when you're late for the meeting.
Dennis Collins:You make me uncomfortable.
Dennis Collins:I'm not you.
Dennis Collins:I am uncomfortable when you don't abide by what we agreed to our agreements.
Dennis Collins:So how about emotional words?
Dennis Collins:That's a no brainer.
Dennis Collins:We know.
Dennis Collins:You don't need the science to know that emotional words and
Dennis Collins:concepts, they grab attention.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:Yep.
Dennis Collins:But here is another twist.
Dennis Collins:Maybe you already knew this, Leah, because you're a, a wonderful writer.
Dennis Collins:Emotion.
Dennis Collins:There are certain types of emotional words that get more attention than others.
Dennis Collins:Did you know that?
Leah Bumphry:Well, I'm not surprised, but tell me more.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:How about emotional words that denote uncertainty work better
Dennis Collins:according to the scientists?
Dennis Collins:Words like unsettled, anxious, doubtful, unsure, okay?
Dennis Collins:Positive emotional words are good, but uncertain Emotional words are better.
Dennis Collins:Isn't that interesting?
Leah Bumphry:And you know, that makes sense to me, because when
Leah Bumphry:we feel uncertain, we're actually baring our soul a little bit more.
Leah Bumphry:We're actually sharing something a little bit deeper.
Leah Bumphry:At least when, when in, in this kind of an instance.
Leah Bumphry:So it would grab attention.
Leah Bumphry:People are not expecting that.
Leah Bumphry:We've all walked into a store and it's an obvious commissioned
Leah Bumphry:salesperson and everything looks absolutely fantastic on you.
Leah Bumphry:And it's gorgeous.
Leah Bumphry:Oh, it's perfect.
Leah Bumphry:It fits you like a glove.
Leah Bumphry:It looks fantastic.
Leah Bumphry:And real women hate that as much as real men do.
Leah Bumphry:But yet there are still those unreal type of salespeople that do that.
Leah Bumphry:Now, I'm much more likely to buy the really fancy hat, not the fancy hat,
Leah Bumphry:but the jacket from the salesperson that looks at one on me and goes, you know
Leah Bumphry:what, I'm not sure about that one on you.
Leah Bumphry:Let's try this.
Leah Bumphry:Ah!
Leah Bumphry:Yeah.
Leah Bumphry:Because all of a sudden, she's sharing something with me that's
Leah Bumphry:maybe not that comfortable.
Dennis Collins:Say, Leah, that looks doubtful on you.
Leah Bumphry:And there's been those times, let me tell ya.
Dennis Collins:Or Leah, I'm anxious when I see you wearing that.
Dennis Collins:And again, we're kidding, but you get, of course, now here, here's
Dennis Collins:something that I need your help on.
Dennis Collins:You are, if anyone has read anything that Leah Bumfrey has written, you are lucky.
Dennis Collins:You're fortunate because she is a magnificent, inspiring writer.
Dennis Collins:Uh, if you, if you go to wizard of ads, partners, uh, our webpage.
Dennis Collins:You'll see her work featured on there under her real name, Leah Bumphrey.
Dennis Collins:But she's a great storyteller.
Dennis Collins:And so I'm gonna pose a question to you.
Dennis Collins:What story Tra ? Yeah, I Trajectory?
Dennis Collins:Yeah, you can do it.
Dennis Collins:There you go.
Dennis Collins:is the most persuasive.
Dennis Collins:What does science tell us?
Dennis Collins:Okay, there are three choices.
Dennis Collins:Straight line, no ups or downs, just straight to the point.
Dennis Collins:Second, negative up to a positive, and then down to a negative.
Dennis Collins:So, negative to positive, positive to negative.
Dennis Collins:Third choice, a roller coaster ride.
Dennis Collins:Frequent peaks and valleys, many ups and downs, boom, you're on.
Leah Bumphry:It's a, it's a, it's almost a trick question because
Leah Bumphry:you think of the word persuasive.
Leah Bumphry:Okay, what story method is the most persuasive?
Leah Bumphry:You would think the straight line.
Leah Bumphry:You're here and I want you to go to here and I'm just shooting to kill.
Leah Bumphry:I am telling you this is the way it is.
Leah Bumphry:So that's our, our, our head or the, maybe the science dentist
Leah Bumphry:would have us think it's this.
Leah Bumphry:But in fact.
Leah Bumphry:I don't believe that to be true.
Leah Bumphry:I think when you're telling a story and you're trying to persuade someone, you
Leah Bumphry:want them to hear what you're saying.
Leah Bumphry:You want them to be part of the story.
Leah Bumphry:You want them to visualize it.
Leah Bumphry:So the up and down, the, the, the setting, the stage, the involving them,
Leah Bumphry:getting them emotionally invested, having them visualize their own life,
Leah Bumphry:their own first grade teacher, their own mailbox, whatever, whatever the
Leah Bumphry:story is about is going to hook them.
Leah Bumphry:I had, uh, editor ones that told me that that beginning hook that, that, that start
Leah Bumphry:where you have them decide, yes, I want to know this and they're going to go a little
Leah Bumphry:bit deeper and then it does a switch.
Leah Bumphry:So they're going to go a little bit different.
Leah Bumphry:And then, Oh, here's this different, that is going to persuade much more than just.
Leah Bumphry:Telling them the story.
Dennis Collins:Well, Miss Lea, wehh always knew you were about the smartest
Dennis Collins:person in the room, which is always true.
Dennis Collins:But, what does the science say?
Dennis Collins:Okay?
Dennis Collins:It is somewhat counterintuitive.
Dennis Collins:As you would, as you said, first, the straight line, no ups or
Dennis Collins:downs, is probably the go to way that most people tell stories.
Dennis Collins:But it's not the one that's the most persuasive.
Dennis Collins:Ah.
Dennis Collins:It's the roller coaster, just as you, uh, illustrated, the ups and the downs.
Dennis Collins:That is the most persuasive story.
Dennis Collins:So when you're crafting a sales story or a story about your business, a
Dennis Collins:marketing story, use the ups and downs.
Dennis Collins:You know, maybe your origin story had some downs in it.
Dennis Collins:There were some bad times, right?
Dennis Collins:And all of a sudden things got great.
Dennis Collins:Everything was lovely.
Dennis Collins:And then all of a sudden, Oh, 2007, 2008 hit boom down again.
Dennis Collins:How do we recover from that?
Dennis Collins:That's the kind of story that people listen to and are persuaded by, I guess.
Dennis Collins:You're right on with that one.
Leah Bumphry:But Dennis, when you think about it, we were talking at
Leah Bumphry:the beginning about public speaking and whether you love it or hate it,
Leah Bumphry:but the ability to do it confidently.
Leah Bumphry:When you are talking to an audience and you are talking to that one person in
Leah Bumphry:there and you pick that person and you see them engaged in what it is that you're
Leah Bumphry:saying, that builds the confidence because when you are connected to all that energy
Leah Bumphry:in a room, I don't care if you're talking to two people or you're talking to 200 or
Leah Bumphry:2000, those people If they are listening to you, if you have them coming on this
Leah Bumphry:ride with you, there's only you and them individually in the story and in the room.
Leah Bumphry:And that is how you become a confident speaker and that is how
Leah Bumphry:you persuade and that is how you form connections with your listeners.
Dennis Collins:Wow, you just gave a brilliant example of
Dennis Collins:synchronicity, brain synchronicity.
Dennis Collins:Uh, that is exactly what happens.
Dennis Collins:Let's say that the experiment that I'm thinking of that, uh,
Dennis Collins:the Wharton professors have done is about a movie trailer, okay?
Dennis Collins:And they put groups of people in different theaters and they play
Dennis Collins:different movie trailers for them, right?
Dennis Collins:And the ones that resonate most are brief, emotional, to the point.
Dennis Collins:And short.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:They're not long winded trailers and guess which one they try others that
Dennis Collins:are longer, louder, not as compelling.
Dennis Collins:guess which one wins, the one that creates brain synchronicity, they put
Dennis Collins:them in an fMRI machine and the brains are synchronized, which means that is
Dennis Collins:the highest level of communication.
Dennis Collins:So you just perfectly described that.
Dennis Collins:I hope our listeners will go back and play that over because she said it as well
Dennis Collins:or better than any scientist ever said.
Dennis Collins:Thank you folks!
Dennis Collins:Okay!
Dennis Collins:Next topic, turn past into present.
Dennis Collins:Okay, what does that all mean?
Dennis Collins:Well, a lot of times we use a past tense.
Dennis Collins:Well, this thing was true at some point in the past, the solution worked
Dennis Collins:well, uh, something, um, that we found this to be true in the past.
Dennis Collins:doesn't work as well as this solution works.
Dennis Collins:Well, not worked well, or what you find today, not what you found.
Dennis Collins:Isn't that interesting?
Dennis Collins:Present tense suggests action, doing something, some stability,
Dennis Collins:something more enduring than something that used to happen.
Dennis Collins:So put your past.
Dennis Collins:Isn't that something, put the past tense in the past and use action words.
Leah Bumphry:I am enjoying our conversations.
Leah Bumphry:I'm not hoping to enjoy our conversations.
Leah Bumphry:I am enjoying them.
Leah Bumphry:If I, if I say I'm hoping to, that leaves you going, Oh, is she hoping
Leah Bumphry:that that sounds going to be good?
Leah Bumphry:Is it?
Leah Bumphry:What, what, what?
Leah Bumphry:Or she did before she doesn't anymore?
Leah Bumphry:No, I am.
Leah Bumphry:We are wired, but we're wired to think of.
Leah Bumphry:What is as being what always will be and, and where we are.
Leah Bumphry:And that is so important because that's all our brain understands.
Dennis Collins:Present tense, you got it, the now.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:So let's wrap this up into a little new year's gift, put a bow on it.
Dennis Collins:How can you speak with more confidence?
Dennis Collins:Forget the hedge words, forget about the kind of, the maybes, the
Dennis Collins:usuallys, the generallys, et cetera.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:Uh, forget.
Dennis Collins:Oh, I forgot one.
Dennis Collins:The verbal tics.
Dennis Collins:Forget the verbal tics.
Dennis Collins:Uh, I, I, have you ever been a member of Toastmasters by any chance?
Leah Bumphry:I've taken some classes, but not a member.
Leah Bumphry:No.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:Well, I've been a member for years and they have a little ceremony.
Dennis Collins:I guess you can call it ritual that whenever you say a tick word, they ring a
Dennis Collins:bell right in the middle of your speech.
Dennis Collins:You could be given the most serious.
Dennis Collins:speech you've ever given in your life.
Dennis Collins:And if you say, um, er, filler words, ding, the bell goes off
Dennis Collins:right in the middle of your speech.
Dennis Collins:Now you don't stop speaking.
Dennis Collins:It just to warn you that you said a filler word.
Dennis Collins:Okay.
Dennis Collins:How about recorded sales calls?
Dennis Collins:As you know, I listened to hundreds of hours of actual recorded sales calls.
Dennis Collins:I will say this.
Dennis Collins:The person in this particular group that is doing the worst at closing
Dennis Collins:uses the most filler words, verbal tics, and transcripts don't lie.
Dennis Collins:And you know, and the transcripts that I pull, all the filler words are underlined.
Dennis Collins:You can actually have them removed from the transcript.
Dennis Collins:I leave them in.
Dennis Collins:I want them to see it.
Dennis Collins:Okay?
Dennis Collins:It absolutely takes away from your credibility.
Dennis Collins:Absolutely.
Dennis Collins:There's no question about it.
Dennis Collins:Rather than use a filler word, here's what you should do.
Dennis Collins:Pause.
Dennis Collins:Just pause.
Dennis Collins:When you need to think, if you need to think before you speak.
Dennis Collins:By the way, speakers who pause are viewed more positively.
Dennis Collins:They are thought to be more competent than people who use filler words.
Dennis Collins:So we gotta get rid of the, the, the ahs.
Dennis Collins:Just think of that bell ringing every time you Yeah!
Dennis Collins:That's it.
Dennis Collins:Ah.
Dennis Collins:Ding!
Dennis Collins:Okay, so let's close this up.
Dennis Collins:How about the hedge words?
Dennis Collins:Get rid of them.
Dennis Collins:Use definite words.
Dennis Collins:When to admit a mistake.
Dennis Collins:When you are perceived as competent, a small mistake once
Dennis Collins:in a while is a good thing.
Dennis Collins:Use emotional words, but emotional words with an uncertain load.
Dennis Collins:Use the best story structure, which is the roller coaster, and get rid of
Dennis Collins:verbal tics, and use the present tense.
Dennis Collins:What do you think, Leah?
Dennis Collins:There's seven tips.
Dennis Collins:You can start being more confident and more persuasive today.
Leah Bumphry:Absolutely.
Leah Bumphry:And you know what?
Leah Bumphry:The old, you remember the old joke that you just had to visualize people
Leah Bumphry:naked when you're talking to them with a big group to have that confidence?
Leah Bumphry:Then we don't have to do that because that's, that's
Leah Bumphry:not comfortable for anybody.
Dennis Collins:Uh, let me assure you that never worked for me.
Dennis Collins:Well, I guess it depends on your audience.
Leah Bumphry:Well, there you go.
Leah Bumphry:That, that synchronicity, hey?
Dennis Collins:Synchronicity.
Dennis Collins:So what do you think, Leah?
Dennis Collins:Does this, does this ring true?
Dennis Collins:Do you think this will help our small business owners, our sales
Dennis Collins:managers, our sales people?
Leah Bumphry:I, I really believe it does it, it, it is, it all
Leah Bumphry:comes back to wizard of ads.
Leah Bumphry:org, right?
Leah Bumphry:Wizard academy.
Leah Bumphry:org.
Leah Bumphry:I should say.
Leah Bumphry:Wizard academy.
Leah Bumphry:org.
Leah Bumphry:The, the small business.
Leah Bumphry:Yeah.
Leah Bumphry:Well, our sponsor and our, our ability to have.
Leah Bumphry:To direct our listeners to classes there that are very very specific
Leah Bumphry:the I mean, I think of the young Writer's class where the help kids
Leah Bumphry:become that much more confident
Dennis Collins:I should have never mentioned that
Leah Bumphry:You know what?
Leah Bumphry:We're gonna we're gonna be regretting that I think my bell
Leah Bumphry:sounded a little different Wow.
Dennis Collins:What did you say that got belled?
Dennis Collins:I don't think you deserve the bell,
Leah Bumphry:Leah.
Leah Bumphry:I think we're just going to power through it.
Dennis Collins:Go ahead.
Dennis Collins:Wizard Academy is, it's a must.
Dennis Collins:If you haven't been there, go to wizardacademy.
Dennis Collins:org.
Dennis Collins:Do yourself a favor.
Dennis Collins:Look at the lineup of 2024 classes.
Dennis Collins:They've got a ton of them already on the books.
Dennis Collins:Pick one that you like.
Dennis Collins:Sign up.
Dennis Collins:And go sign up early because the early birds get a beautiful accommodation
Dennis Collins:on campus in Austin, Texas, right in here where the classes are held with
Dennis Collins:food and drink and a wonderful time.
Dennis Collins:So wizardacademy.
Dennis Collins:org
Leah Bumphry:and much like our podcast, it is everything you learn is
Leah Bumphry:going to be based on science, but it comes with such a degree of heart that
Leah Bumphry:when you go back to your real life.
Leah Bumphry:Everything's going to be better.
Dennis Collins:It will be.
Dennis Collins:We guarantee it.
Dennis Collins:Boom.
Dennis Collins:Okay, that's it for this edition of Connect & Convert.
Dennis Collins:We look forward to seeing you the next time.
Dennis Collins:Stay tuned.