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  • Forget Focus: Switching Topics for Niche Site Success – Rich From Meal Prepify
    It’s what we hear all the time, right? FocusFocusFocusYes, thing are super hard, and things might be working, but focus!Well, Rich from Meal Prepify (and PF Geeks!) kinda-sorta did the opposite. Rich is here to chat about how he… Blogged for 3+ yearsSWITCHED TOPICS COMPLETELY, essentially abandoning (kinda) his siteProceeded to crush SEO and grow and find success If you have desires to work on any projects, blogs, or niche sites OUTSIDE of what you’re currently doing
     

Forget Focus: Switching Topics for Niche Site Success – Rich From Meal Prepify

14 December 2020 at 10:00

It’s what we hear all the time, right?

  • Focus
  • Focus
  • Focus
  • Yes, thing are super hard, and things might be working, but focus!

Well, Rich from Meal Prepify (and PF Geeks!) kinda-sorta did the opposite.

Rich is here to chat about how he…

  • Blogged for 3+ years
  • SWITCHED TOPICS COMPLETELY, essentially abandoning (kinda) his site
  • Proceeded to crush SEO and grow and find success 🙂

If you have desires to work on any projects, blogs, or niche sites OUTSIDE of what you’re currently doing, you need to listen to this episode.

Listen to my episode with Rich from Meal Prepify

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Let’s talk about a big takeaway:

There are different kinds of “focus.”

Focusing on what you’re doing right now = close browser tabs. Put down your phone. Take a deep breath and DO THE WORK.

That’s 1 type of focus.

But how about this one?

Focusing on achieving the long-term vision for what you want your life to look like.

That’s different, isn’t it? That’s the focus Rich had.

  • Trying this blog or that
  • Trying this product or that
  • Trying SEO or Pinterest or Facebook ads or podcasting.

All of those are secondary to the overarching focus of “I want to quit my job.”

Or “I just want to make an extra $1k a month.”

The trick is to zoom out–so you can see where the “line” is.

I’m not encouraging you to drop your current endeavor to start a niche site.

I don’t want you to spread yourself thin! The non-vision focus DOES matter…

…but the trick is to find that line.

The line between

1 – I should keep going with this current [blog, strategy, or product]

vs

2 – I should pivot to a new [blog, strategy or product] in order to reach my long-term vision.

Tricky, right???

Welcome to entrepreneurship 😉

**

Watch this video for a bit more on vision planning, and drop me a comment below if you feel inclined!

The post Forget Focus: Switching Topics for Niche Site Success – Rich From Meal Prepify appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • Jim Harmer shares where the OPPORTUNITIES are for 2021 (Income School)
    Niche sites? SEO? YouTube? What channels are hot right now (and for the rest of 2021?) In today’s little chat, Jim Harmer (Income School) joins me (again, see part 1 here) to chat about… YouTube (spoiler alert)SEO“How to produce good content” I.e. what that means, and ACTIONABLE advice for making it happenEnjoy! Listen to my episode with Jim Harmer on SEO, Niche Sites, and YouTube! or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify ALSO…
     

Jim Harmer shares where the OPPORTUNITIES are for 2021 (Income School)

11 January 2021 at 10:00

Niche sites? SEO? YouTube?

What channels are hot right now (and for the rest of 2021?)

In today’s little chat, Jim Harmer (Income School) joins me (again, see part 1 here) to chat about…

  • YouTube (spoiler alert)
  • SEO
  • “How to produce good content” I.e. what that means, and ACTIONABLE advice for making it happen

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with Jim Harmer on SEO, Niche Sites, and YouTube!

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

ALSO…

If you’re seriously looking to go hard on YouTube this year, do the following 2 things:

  1. Come check out my own YouTube channel (#subscribe of course)
  2. Go listen to this mega podcast episode for how to get started on YouTube.

It’s gold.

<3

The post Jim Harmer shares where the OPPORTUNITIES are for 2021 (Income School) appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • 5am Joel on Rekindling Motivation, Sending Must-Read Emails, and Taking Over Budgets Are Sexy
    Y’all, it’s time to admit something… I’m a fanboy of 5am Joel, and have been for quite a while (5am Joel, Budgets Are Sexy). I was always impressed at his schtick–waking up and sending an email to his newsletter AT 5AM IN THE MORNING. (I mean, are you NOT impressed?). But aside from that–he’s one of those people who just has a knack for producing content that CHANGES people–and I was thrilled to hear his name announced when he took over
     

5am Joel on Rekindling Motivation, Sending Must-Read Emails, and Taking Over Budgets Are Sexy

25 January 2021 at 08:00

Y’all, it’s time to admit something…

I’m a fanboy of 5am Joel, and have been for quite a while (5am Joel, Budgets Are Sexy).

I was always impressed at his schtick–waking up and sending an email to his newsletter AT 5AM IN THE MORNING. (I mean, are you NOT impressed?).

But aside from that–he’s one of those people who just has a knack for producing content that CHANGES people–and I was thrilled to hear his name announced when he took over Budgets (easily one of the most well-known and biggest personal finance sites in the history of blogging. Luv u J)

In this episode we chat…

  • Little silly tips & tricks we do to stay positive and stay motivated (not at all woo woo. Ok maybe a little).
  • How to write really, really good emails people want to open
  • way more

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with 5am Joel:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Ok here’s more goodness for you…

The post 5am Joel on Rekindling Motivation, Sending Must-Read Emails, and Taking Over Budgets Are Sexy appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • How to Grow (Real) Passive Income Through E-Books: Michelle Jackson
    Self-publishing e-books has ALWAYS been one of those “do these really work” things for me. It just seems odd. Do people buy these?Are they really that easy to make? Self-publishing just SOUNDS difficultHow do these generate income? In any decent amounts?Whelp, lucky for us, there’s awesome creators like Michelle Jackson (Michelle Is Money Hungry). Aside from being a fun & awesome person–she’s also been around the blogosphere a block or two, and has bui
     

How to Grow (Real) Passive Income Through E-Books: Michelle Jackson

1 February 2021 at 10:00

Self-publishing e-books has ALWAYS been one of those “do these really work” things for me.

It just seems odd.

  • Do people buy these?
  • Are they really that easy to make? Self-publishing just SOUNDS difficult
  • How do these generate income? In any decent amounts?

Whelp, lucky for us, there’s awesome creators like Michelle Jackson (Michelle Is Money Hungry).

Aside from being a fun & awesome person–she’s also been around the blogosphere a block or two, and has built up S E V E R A L income streams with her blog/business.

Several meaning like 10+.

We’re here to chat about:

  • E-books: How to get started, how it works, etc.
  • Is blogging still relevant in 2021?
  • How to determine which potential products resonate with your readers.

(That last one is a profitable art & science, and something everything single one of us needs to learn).

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with Michelle Jackson:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

I’d also just like to point out that a few other DYEB Podcast guests have had E-books as a core monetization strategy: Joseph Hogue and Liz Wilcox.

I kinda want to write a book now. (I mean I feel like I could likely repurpose a LOT of existing content I already have).

Now to figure out what to write about 🙂

The post How to Grow (Real) Passive Income Through E-Books: Michelle Jackson appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • Lessons Learned From Joining Toastmasters International: Melissa Neacato
    I’m about to make a big, bold statement: The single most important skill for successful entrepreneurship is the ability to communicate. Writing blog posts people CARE aboutSending sales emailsSales of ANY KIND actuallyway moreThe ability to communicate ideas is something we need to train ourselves in constantly. Poor communication skills = slower audience growth fo sho. THAT is why I invited my good friend Melissa on today’s podcast (find her new podcast, Her EnterpRISE,
     

Lessons Learned From Joining Toastmasters International: Melissa Neacato

8 February 2021 at 09:57

I’m about to make a big, bold statement:

The single most important skill for successful entrepreneurship is the ability to communicate.

  • Writing blog posts people CARE about
  • Sending sales emails
  • Sales of ANY KIND actually
  • way more

The ability to communicate ideas is something we need to train ourselves in constantly.

Poor communication skills = slower audience growth fo sho.

THAT is why I invited my good friend Melissa on today’s podcast (find her new podcast, Her EnterpRISE, here).

Aside from being an inspiring & kind human, she also has some cool experiences that I think can help us become better communicators, speakers, and writers 🙂

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with Melissa Neacato:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

ALSOOOOOO.

If you want similar content to binge on, go listen to this chat with Bethany Bayless (who as also been a part of Toastmasters actually).

Ciao blog tribe!

The post Lessons Learned From Joining Toastmasters International: Melissa Neacato appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • How to Build SIMPLE Funnels, For Beginners – Miles Beckler
    FUNNELS: “We’re awesome and can make you a lot of money.” YOU: “What on earth are you?”“Why on Earth do I need to care about funnels?”“Are you ever going to be NOT overwhelming and highly technical fancy-pants??”PETE AND MILES BECKLER: In this podcast episode with Miles Beckler (go subscribe to him on YouTube! He’s great.), we’re going to talk about building SIMPLE funnels for your business that yield more income on auto
     

How to Build SIMPLE Funnels, For Beginners – Miles Beckler

15 February 2021 at 10:00

FUNNELS: “We’re awesome and can make you a lot of money.”

YOU:

  • “What on earth are you?”
  • “Why on Earth do I need to care about funnels?”
  • “Are you ever going to be NOT overwhelming and highly technical fancy-pants??”

PETE AND MILES BECKLER:

In this podcast episode with Miles Beckler (go subscribe to him on YouTube! He’s great.), we’re going to talk about building SIMPLE funnels for your business that yield more income on autopilot.

If you haven’t noticed—I’ve been going HARD on funnels in my own business over the past 6 months, and couldn’t be happier.

Income is up. Working hours are way down 🙂

The problem?

“You should build a funnel” kinda sorta hits people like “You should kinda sorta start a SpaceX competitor company to take on Elon Musk directly.”

Like no. Overwhelming. Not sure where to start, or if I could (or should?) even do that.

Whelp, Miles is here to help!

Happy listening 😉

Listen to my funnels chat with Miles Beckler:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

More resources for building funnels for your blog or online business:

The post How to Build SIMPLE Funnels, For Beginners – Miles Beckler appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • The β€œCopywriting Trifecta” That’ll Help You STAND OUT: Kira Hug
    Ah yes, words! Whether or not you think of words as “CoPyWrItInG” or not–they’re important. Even SMALL tweaks to words you use in front of your audience could be the difference between… “zomg I need this. I feel like you’re speaking just to ME.” or… “zomg back to Facebook.” *closes browser tab. Today, I’m joined by Copywriting Jedi Master Kira Hug host of The Copywriter Club podcast, personal branding
     

The β€œCopywriting Trifecta” That’ll Help You STAND OUT: Kira Hug

22 February 2021 at 10:00

Ah yes, words!

Whether or not you think of words as “CoPyWrItInG” or not–they’re important.

Even SMALL tweaks to words you use in front of your audience could be the difference between…

“zomg I need this. I feel like you’re speaking just to ME.”

or…

“zomg back to Facebook.” *closes browser tab.

Today, I’m joined by Copywriting Jedi Master Kira Hug 👉 host of The Copywriter Club podcast, personal branding know-it-all (in a good way), and all-around awesome person.

I sincerely hope this episdode inspires you to go BACK to your “initial touch points of your brand” and change stuff.

(that sounded uber professional didn’t it?? I really just be “go update your damn home page to be more interesting and in line with your BRAND.”)

>_<

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with copywriter Kira Hug:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Here’s a few more copywriting resources for you:

The post The “Copywriting Trifecta” That’ll Help You STAND OUT: Kira Hug appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • The Trick to Getting on 1,000+ Podcasts (And Why You Need To): Tom from Interview Valet
    If I’ve said this once, I’ve said it a million times (and I have btw): Being a guest on other people’s podcast is one of THE best. ways. to. grow. your. audience. For your blogFor your podcastFor your business It’s a very high-ROI activity from a time perspective. Buuttttt… Yeah it’s hard. I get it. Sending pitch emails, following up, getting rejected again and again till you wanna literally sell that $50 USB microphone you bought just for
     

The Trick to Getting on 1,000+ Podcasts (And Why You Need To): Tom from Interview Valet

1 March 2021 at 10:00

If I’ve said this once, I’ve said it a million times (and I have btw):

Being a guest on other people’s podcast is one of THE best. ways. to. grow. your. audience.

  • For your blog
  • For your podcast
  • For your business

It’s a very high-ROI activity from a time perspective.

Buuttttt…

Yeah it’s hard. I get it.

Sending pitch emails, following up, getting rejected again and again till you wanna literally sell that $50 USB microphone you bought just for this.

#realtalk

Today, the founder and CEO of Interview Valet, Tom Schwab is joining me on the podcast to help us out!

(Interview Valet is a company that specializes in booking podcast guests btw)

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with Tom Schwab from Interview Valet:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Other resources for podcast guesting:

The post The Trick to Getting on 1,000+ Podcasts (And Why You Need To): Tom from Interview Valet appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • YouTube Ads 101: How to Get Started ASAP – Aleric Heck
    I’ve spent tens of thousands of dollars on Facebook ads over the past few years, and there’s only ONE thing I’m 100% convinced of: They’re getting harder :/ I’ve heard through the grapevine blogvine that YouTube ads could be a hot opportunity right now. But, seeing as how I know NOTHING about YouTube ads–I brought on the founder of AdOutreach (a YT ad agency), Aleric Heck. Warning After visiting his site–you’re going to see his
     

YouTube Ads 101: How to Get Started ASAP – Aleric Heck

8 March 2021 at 10:00

I’ve spent tens of thousands of dollars on Facebook ads over the past few years, and there’s only ONE thing I’m 100% convinced of:

They’re getting harder :/

I’ve heard through the grapevine blogvine that YouTube ads could be a hot opportunity right now.

But, seeing as how I know NOTHING about YouTube ads–I brought on the founder of AdOutreach (a YT ad agency), Aleric Heck.

aleric heck

Warning 👇

After visiting his site–you’re going to see his ads everywhere 😎

Enjoy!

Listen to my YouTube Ads chat with Aleric Heck:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Other stuff…

If you’re into ads and funnels n’ stuff (sounds like the name of my new kid-friendly 80’s pizza restarautn, am I right??)…you’ll wanna check out

The post YouTube Ads 101: How to Get Started ASAP – Aleric Heck appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • DYEB Basement Office Makeover
    In late December 2019, my family moved to Northern Michigan–and I finally had. my. own. office. It was ammmmmazing to have my own little place to work (and store camera and podcasting gear lol)–but it was cramped, ugly, and NOT a comfortable place to spend 40 hours a week. In March 2021, we bought a house and moved–and I inherited a sweet basement room to turn into my office! This just-for-fun post details the renovation process, gear purchasing decisions for podcasti
     

DYEB Basement Office Makeover

4 August 2022 at 14:15

In late December 2019, my family moved to Northern Michigan–and I finally had. my. own. office.

It was ammmmmazing to have my own little place to work (and store camera and podcasting gear lol)–but it was cramped, ugly, and NOT a comfortable place to spend 40 hours a week.

In March 2021, we bought a house and moved–and I inherited a sweet basement room to turn into my office!

This just-for-fun post details the renovation process, gear purchasing decisions for podcasting & YouTube, and other insights have found over creating a productive, comfortable, and happy workplace.

8.4.22 update: I’m mostly DONE and IN LOVE with my current setup. Final details below.

impromptu shot, 8.4.22!

Furniture & Decor list

Computer Workstation List

PSST: I’ve been SUPER into mechanical keyboards. They’re literally life-changing! Wanna learn more? Check out this article: What is a mechanical keyboard? (and why are they better?)

YouTube/Podcast Gear list

It’s worth noting that I’ve accumulated all this gear over YEARS. I didn’t go out and blow thouuuuusands of dollars. Ain’t nobody got the budget to get all that at once lol.

Phase 1 – The “Before”

Ok, so here’s the basement room “before” status:

Left side of the room
Right side of the room

(Also, the seller left that huge wooden outdoor bar in there. It was almost really neat–almost. It ended up taking up WAY too much space, and it was filthy)

  • Dimensions: 9ft by 18ft
  • Walls: crazy concrete, recently painted with a sealer (which was a cool white color)
  • Floor: Concrete, painted with some crazy flaky paint (by the seller)
  • Ceiling: Unfinished, exposed floor joists with random wiring/pipes

There were 3 initial problems with this basement office…

  1. There were no electrical outlets
  2. There was only one horrid light in the middle of the room
  3. It felt like a dungeon. Really cold. Stone. Ugly.

But hey, at least I have one tiny window (and it opens!)

Task 1 – Get power

I called an electrician, who came over and wired in 3 power outlets (with grey plastic conduit). Cost about $80 for parts and labor–I’d call that a S T E A L.

Task 2 – Fix lighting

Nevermind lighting for YouTube (I talk about that below)–but just having NORMAL, GOOD lighting can ABSOLUTELY, 1,000% change the look and feel of any room.

I initially thought I’d have to use lots of lamps, etc, and that recessed lighting would be a HUGE expense, or a HUGE pain.

I thought wrong.

As it turns out, Home Depot (and other places) make these sweet LED faux-recessed lights that can be hardwired into the electrical lines, OR simply plugged into a light socket. And they’re super cheap!

Granddad DYEB!

This is where Granddad DYEB came in to save day–he helped me mount the fixtures, and hardwired everything himself (so I could turn these on with the lightswitch).

Nailed these into the floor joists.

They’re even dimmable!

THIS MADE A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE, IMMEDIATELY. It’s nuts how important lighting is.

We put 6 of em in!

Task 3 – Paint walls (and unfinished ceiling!)

Sooooo for the past several months–I was actually thinking that this office would have a light, natural, bohemian feel to it.

I mean, who doesn’t want a Pinterest-worthy office like these???

I had saved these for inspiration–then did a 180 about-face

There were 2 reasons I opted to COMPLETELY change direction after dreaming about my light-filled-bohemian-office…

  1. It’s a damn concete basement
  2. There is SO LITTLE natural light
  3. GEAR. I have oodles and oodles of black metal, black plastic YouTube and podcasting gear, with cords everywhere.

Can you imagine one of those Pinteresty rooms with MASSIVE YouTube lighting, microphones and cords everywhere, etc? lol no.

But can darker rooms still be cool?

Especially with low-to-no natural light?

I threw on some initial dark brown/grey paint samples.

“Squirrel” didn’t do it for me

These did not feel good :/

At this point I did more Googling, Pinterest-ing, and YouTubing, trying desperately to find inspiration….which I eventually did!

Found this randomly and liked it.
Then I discovered Becki & Chris on YouTube

Becky & Chris are fantastic YouTubers who talk a lot about home reno, interior design, etc–and they do dark colors REALLY, REALLY WELL.

I mean, I haven’t seen them do a concrete basement room–but maybe Matte Black would work for me??

90% of my wardrobe is either black or grey–and I also listen to Nine Inch Nails.

And now I want a matte black office? I’m apparently emo.

more paint samples

After much debate–I decided that black might actually fit the concrete basement feel a bit better than TRYING to replicate a light, bohemian, Pinterest look.

Plus, it’d hide the black gear soooooo much better.

Next steps:

  1. Purchase a paint sprayer (I could’ve rented one, but that was like 45% of the purchase price just for one day, and I KNOW I’ll use this again. Also, I just really really wanted one. It was a BLAST.)
  2. Grab 3 gallons of Benjamin Moore Regal, Black, matte finish
  3. Buy more tarps, as I used 6-7 of them to cover everything.
  4. Lay down tarp, tape off new ceiling lights, outlets, etc.
  5. Buy a respirator mask on Amazon (a MUST-HAVE if you use a paint sprayer, especially indoors in a tiny room with no ventilation)
  6. Figure out how to use the sprayer, and then paint!
GRACO MAGNUM. So much fun.
I stole 40-50 plastic bags out of the recycling bin to use like this lol.
I also decided to paint the unfinished ceiling the same color as the walls. Makes it feel soooo much more open.
I’ll be honest, at this point–I was scared I made a terrible choice in color.

Pro Tip: Remember that wet paint is always a different color than dry paint. And a COMPLETED room will always feel different than a work-in-progress room.

It took a few hours of work, another hour of clean-up (and showering omg), but then it was done!

It felt really good! Not slam-dunk great, but way better.

I moved my old desk in so I could work again. Sweet!

I am REALLY happy with how the unfinished ceiling and exposed pipes look. They look incredible with the matte black.

The next phase = outfitting the office (to make that black look a little less awkward lol)

Phase 2 = outfit the office

Soooo I also had lofty dreams of Pinterest-worthy, hearty, real, and EXPENSIVE furniture and decor.

I ditched that dream as well, and went back to my go-tos:

  • Ikea
  • Wayfair
  • Amazon

The trick was searching for new furniture that would go with the black theme.

First, a new rug (on sale for $99 on Wayfair. It’s cheap, but I love the design and it feels great).

Next, Mrs. DYEB and I took a nice day-trip to Detroit (with no kids!!!), and went on a house-related shopping spree.

We FILLED my Ford Expedition to the brim lol.

Boom! New rug and Ikea faux-leather couch. It’s actually NOT orange.

The biggest purchase was a sofa. I wanted a COMFY place to sit (and so others can come and sit in the office).

I’m a huge fan of the medium-toned leather (it does look a wee bit orange in that photo, but it’s closer to brown in real life).

A note on room layout and Feng Shui

This basement room is NOT laid out well for both Feng Shui and shooting YouTube videos lol.

(Btw – the only Feng Shui I actually care about is NOT having your back to the door. It feels so weird like that, better to be looking at the door from your desk).

But for shooting video, I wanted to have the only natural light working FOR me–so I wanted the window to the side of my desk.

Soooo what to do?

I wanted an L-shaped desk, but wasn’t in love with this.

After much debate, and with help from my wife, I opted for a 2 desk approach and picked up a Husky standing workbench from Home Depot ($200, probably the most affordable and simple standing desk you can get.)

It’s a hand crank, not electric, but it’s easy and cheap
current layout

I’m STILL not convinced I’ll keep this layout forever (I doubt it, actually), but for now it does a few things.

  1. Makes good use of space. I LIKE having a bit of emptiness just next to where I sit at my computer. I don’t like feeling cramped.
  2. On the other hand, the YouTube desk is NOT against the wall (which I require to have camera, lighting, and mics set up anyways)
  3. I get to face the door when I’m at my main desk
  4. The window light works for shooting video (though it’s still behind me when I’m at the YouTube desk. It balances out the shot and illuminates the room just enough)

The only real downside to the current layout is that the window light is DIRECTLY behind me when at my main desk (for Zoom calls, podcast recordings, etc.) Looks really bad.

Here’s the current “left side of the room,” complete with my new pouf as well (I’ve always wanted one of these lol.)

poufs are awesome
The right side of the room, my YouTube setup

2 more reasons this setup works well:

  1. I want to shoot videos down the length of the room for more depth of field. (a must for any great YouTube backdrop)
  2. I like NOT shooting videos at my main computer desk. I love having a specific spot for video!

Lighting!

While the recessed lighting is 100x better than the single bulb in the middle of a small room–I also wanted accent lighting for videos (and to feel comfy).

I ended up splurging a few bucks extra for smart lighting.

Philips WiZ app lighting from home depot.

I got 2 full RBG bulbs, as well as some string lighting to mount to the back of my main desk!

Subtle, but makes a huge difference
I LOVE the WiZ app so far. Lots of fun color combination templates, presets you can save, and more.
This is the “fill light” for my 3-point lighting setup.

So for video…

  1. Key light = the big Godox SL150 with Aperature lightdome mini II.
  2. Fill light = small mountable lamp above (from Ikea), with smart lighting to make any color/temperature I want, bounced off a $1 white foam board from Wal-Mart
  3. Background lighting = the string light on the back of the desk, and an Ikea floor lamp
  4. Also, the window = lights up the room, and I can always cover it with curtains (I got a super cheap black blackout curtain from Meijer, and just hang it up with 2 clamps).

Here’s a shot from the first YouTube video I recorded:

so dark and moody and I love it.

Phase 3 – Decor & Feel

Truth be told, this is the phase I’m currently in as of April 2021!

  • I need wall art. I have zero.
  • I need a small bookcase (I’m thinking a long n’ short TV stand actually) to put on the wall under the window.
  • I need a bit of soundproofing done.

What I HAVE mostly done is get my main workstation the way I want it, completely with a desk pad, fake plant, and vertical laptop stand!

felt desk pad + plant + new monitors + laptop stand

Also, it’s worth noting I’ve done a bit of cord management as well.

Here’s the “before”
Still a few below to work out–but ABOVE the desk is so much cleaner.

Note the mechanical keyboard…

I’m officially obsessed at this point (and I use different keyboards for work and gaming (Mac and PC)) lol.

I wrote up a guide to the best gaming keyboards here, so go read that, too!

Here’s the “after, but still not 100% yet”

FYI – I mounted all that stuff underneath the desk with cheap velcro strips from Home Depot. It was surprisingly fun, but I still have 2-3 more cables to figure out.

What’s next:

  1. slowly add wall art! Looking for maybe a print of Picasso’s “The Bull”, or other black-n-white (with a white background) pictures/prints
  2. Find a low, shallow, but long TV stand to use under the window (for storage and decor)
  3. Find a good way to quickly hang up moving blankets and/or sound-absorbing curtains when I want to record
  4. Keep playing with the lighting setup to get it dialed in 🙂

Over to you for the comments, what do you think?

What kind of wall art should I get? How could I make it more comfy and cool?

The post DYEB Basement Office Makeover appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • 10 Things I Wish I Knew Before Starting My Own Business
    Hey Blog Family! Pete here. This is a guest post from my good buddy, Jim Wang from Wallet Hacks. I hope you find it valuable! When I started my first blog back in 2005, I didn’t think it would become a business… and that was a good thing. I just started a journal. It gained traction, got a few readers, and it grew bigger than I could’ve ever imagined. One of the advantages I didn’t know I had was my ignorance. I didn’t know what the heck I was doing and
     

10 Things I Wish I Knew Before Starting My Own Business

12 April 2021 at 10:00

Hey Blog Family! Pete here. This is a guest post from my good buddy, Jim Wang from Wallet Hacks. I hope you find it valuable!

When I started my first blog back in 2005, I didn’t think it would become a business… and that was a good thing.

I just started a journal. It gained traction, got a few readers, and it grew bigger than I could’ve ever imagined.

One of the advantages I didn’t know I had was my ignorance. I didn’t know what the heck I was doing and no one else did either. You didn’t have a million posts teaching you how to start a blog or how to dominate social media or how to earn money – blogs were journals and all you do with a journal is write in it.

Through the years, I’ve learned a lot of things about business that I don’t think are considered common knowledge – here they are:

1. Being “Smart” Doesn’t Matter

Have you ever heard of someone complain about the success of another person – wondering how that person succeeded even though they weren’t that smart? Or they weren’t that talented?

Being successful has very little to do with how smart and talented you are.

It’s more about how hardworking you are, how lucky you are, and how quickly you move. You want to do quality work but you need to put out a lot of volume. If you’re willing to outwork everyone else, you are guaranteed to succeed. You only fail if you stop (otherwise, just pivot!) and if success is about finding a needle in the haystack, you just have to look harder and longer than someone who is “smarter.”

Smart people also have a tendency to avoid failure. If you were always a high performer in school, never failed a test, you don’t know adversity. You’ve been playing that game on easy mode and failure teaches you how to overcome it. That’s why many successful people will tell you that they weren’t the smartest person in their class but they were hardworking – that’s the only thing you can control.

(also, failing often can be a good thing, it gets you one failure closer to success!)

In college, I remember reading a study in my psychology class that has stuck with me to this day. Two groups of people were given a keychain with fifty keys, one of which unlocked a door. One group was told that the keychain contained a key that unlocked the door. The other group was told that the keychain might contain a key that unlocks the door. Not unexpectedly, the percentage of people unlocking the door in the first group was higher and is directly attributed to them believing they had the key… it was just a matter of trying all the keys.

Try all the keys – it’s in there. You don’t have to be smart to find it, you just have to keep trying.

2. The Tools Don’t Matter

Spend enough time in Facebook groups about business and you’ll see a lot of questions about tools.

If I want to start a blog, what should I use? (WordPress)

What plugins do I install? (doesn’t matter)

What writing tools do I need? (doesn’t matter)

What matters is doing and figuring it out as you go. When you run into a problem, find the tool to solve it. Don’t try to “pre-solve” problems or you’ll never get started in the first place.

And if you pick the wrong tool, you can always change it later.

3. You Don’t Need More of That Kind of Knowledge

Stop watching videos, reading blog posts, and listening to business podcasts. You need to execute.

Derek Sivers has a great quote – “If [more] information was the answer, then we’d all be billionaires with perfect abs.”

His point was there are a lot of reasons why we aren’t where we want to be but it’s rarely about information. You know enough to create a plan and start doing the work.

Once that plan gets punched in the face, that’s where the real knowledge starts. The knowledge no one talks about because it’s in the weeds and only someone doing the work would understand.

How do you price your product? How do you know what services to offer? The only way to know is to put that offer in front of a lot of people and see what they think.

Tim Ferriss shared a story about how he came up with the title for the Four Hour Workweek – he bought Google Adwords ads promoting the book using various titles and subtitles to see which got the most clicks. His intuition, and that of his publisher, didn’t match the market. He could’ve studied books on marketing or researched what titles resonate, blah blah, but the reality is you don’t need more information of that type. You need more action because that’s what gets you the information you really need.

You don’t need more information – you need more experience. Then you can take that information and apply it according to your experiences. You need to build the systems, break the systems, then rebuild them with improvements.

Stop consuming content and start creating content.

4. You Don’t Have to be Perfect

Every successful business owner has iterated to where they are today. The web is a fascinating place because you can see where people start and where they are today.

Gary Vaynerchuk is one of the most popular and well-known internet personalities out there. He has appeared in countless videos.

Here was his first:

The audio is OK. The video is OK. Even Gary’s personality is muted from what we see today (I don’t know him so this may be what he’s like in real life and what we see online is an amped-up “TV” version). The thing that isn’t just OK is the thing that shines through – his knowledge. That’s top-notch.

Now watch episode #1001:

This episode is much better on the production side but the format is roughly the same (it’s about the wine), and his knowledge is still great. He says “uhs,” a cork rolls off the table and he catches it, but no one cares about those.

Make sure your expertise is on point but otherwise just get started, iterate, and improve.

5. Create Value, Then Collect Some

Business is not about convincing people what you made is good and that they should buy it, it’s about showing them that it’s valuable and they can’t live without it. What you sell won’t be for everyone, but the key is to find the people it is for and making sure they understand it’s for them.

AIDA is a common marketing acronym that stands for Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action. It’s the idea that to sell someone, you take them on this journey from awareness to action. You have to get your customers aware of your product or service. Then you generate interest in your product or service on the part of potential customers. Then you need to develop a desire for your specific product or service. This all culminates in an action – they buy it.

Reality is less clear. Most of the time you’re just trying to put your solution in front of someone with that problem. There’s a massive population out there where the awareness and interest and desire are all there, they just need to know about your solution.

The solution is where you create value in the world. And when you solve a problem for people, you can reap some of the rewards. If you create no value and only seek to extract value, you may win in the short term but you won’t win over the long term.

The most valuable post on my first blog was about 0% balance transfers. Today, every financial website has a list of 0% balance transfers. Back then, very few did because it was a relatively new phenomenon that most people didn’t know about. So there was value in curating a list of every offer so someone could see them in one place – you didn’t have to search every card issuer’s website.

Tim Chen at Nerdwallet, now practically a household name in finance, started by maintaining an excel spreadsheet of the best credit card offers. He would share this list with his friends and family because they valued his opinion and his analysis. This grew into the massively popular, and the incredibly profitable, website you know today as Nerdwallet.

While this isn’t to promote the idea that you should work for free, or for “exposure,” there are areas where doing so has merit… and it’s usually not when someone outright asks you to.

6. Don’t Talk About Your Business, Just Open It

There’s a tendency amongst people who aspire to run a business to tell everyone about their plans.

A lot of your friends will be polite and tell you that your idea is solid gold. They’ll give you encouragement because they’re your friend, not because they’re analyzing your business. They may visit on opening day but that’s because they are supporting you, not the business. If you live in that echo chamber, every idea of yours will be great and grand – it’s bad data.

In fact, research tells us that when we talk about our goals we actually get satisfaction just from talking about it. Our friends praise us for our big dreams and that tricks our brains into thinking we’ve actually accomplished something. Derek Sivers did a short Ted Talk about this exact phenomenon. You can check that out here.

Another sneaky aspect of talking… when you’re afraid of failure, it’s easy to talk about an idea and never start it. If you don’t start it, you can’t possibly fail – it’s just a fantastic idea that can live in your head forever.

If you do this, the best thing you can hope for is for someone to have the same idea and succeed. Then you can celebrate that you also had a great idea but someone beat you to it. You didn’t fail, you just didn’t succeed fast enough. Regret is far worse a feeling than failure.

7. A Business Will Force You To Grow

People love a sexy entrepreneurship story. If you’re working a 9-to-5 you dislike or find mildly tolerable, it’s fun to read stories about entrepreneurs. It’s like your own little Shawshank Redemption, except with careers. It’s all about the twists.

But like prison breaks, most businesses fail. And not only do they fail, they often fail slowly and painfully over a long period of time.

The irony of business is that the ones that succeed, they also succeed slowly and painfully over a long period of time.

Running a business will force you to grow as a person in ways a “regular” job won’t. You will be forced to learn new skills, often under pressure with limited resources, as the world changes around you and without a safety net. It’s both frightening and exhilarating.

But that’s what makes entrepreneurship so alluring. You get to grow in ways you didn’t expect and it’s an experience unlike many others.

And while starting a business is something we should celebrate but it isn’t something everyone should aspire to do. (or feel bad if they don’t have any interest in it)

The pedestals should be reserved for those providing for themselves and their family – doing whatever that looks like. If it’s clocking into a 9-to-5 job, celebrate it. If it’s opening a retail store, celebrate it. If it’s going to work for your parents, celebrate it. No one path is inherently better than another, it’s just different paths to the same destination.

8. You Don’t Have to be a Rockstar

I love behind the scenes videos and shows of anything. I like seeing how the sausage is made and what the salumists are thinking.

One of those shows is Last Chance U – it follows the coach and the players of a junior college football program as they go about their season. The players are all great athletes who find themselves on their last chance to make a Division I school. The show is tough to watch because these guys with gifted physical talents often find themselves unable to navigate the rest of their lives, including going to school, taking classes, and staying out of trouble.

How does this apply to business? For those athletes, it’s the NFL or bust. In business, there’s a tendency to think that you have to start something worth millions or billions to be worth it. You have to raise venture capital money and become a unicorn (company worth $1b). Many people think that because that’s what gets you on the cover of Time magazine. You have to be a rockstar.

The reality is far starker. Not only is it unlikely you’ll create a startup unicorn, it extremely unlikely. You will not create a massive company but you will suffer for a few years just to fail. It’s just how that world works.

It also misses a big segment of business where you can live a very comfortable life doing relatively mundane jobs. Take a landscaping company – it’s a competitive business but you can make a great living doing it. You know how you can tell it’s lucrative? So many of those companies exist and operate in a small area. In our neighborhood of about 30 homes, I’ve seen three different companies doing landscaping.

If you skip the VC route and chasing unicorns, you can build a business that accidentally becomes one. Take 1-800-GOT-JUNK – what started as a one-man and one-truck operation has become a massive hauling empire worth billions.

Don’t miss the quarters on the ground when you’re searching for hundred dollar bills. It’s still money and that’s the point of business.

9. Find a Business Friend

A lot of experts will talk about finding a mentor and learning from a mentor – that’s great advice.

But more importantly, find a business “friend” or peer that you can just talk things through with. Throughout my years of blogging and building internet businesses, I’ve had several people who I’ve considered my friends. We talk about various things that go on in the business and sometimes there are concrete bits of advice and action that result.

A lot of the times it’s just sharing funny stories, complaining about competitors and partners, or just talking through whatever is on our minds. It’s like therapy but with someone who understands what you’re doing. It’s not a mentor-mentee relationship, though on some level every conversation has a bit of that dynamic, it’s more like therapy. This can help during stressful times too.

10. Don’t Ask for “Advice”

And to round this all out – this last one is one of my personal pet peeves.

Don’t ask someone to grab a coffee to pick their brain. Don’t ask for “advice.”

If you have a specific question, ask it. If you don’t, it’s fine to wait. Don’t just ask for generic “what would you do in my shoes?” because it’s terrible and it’s lazy. The person you’re asking won’t know your situation, your experiences, what you’ve tried, what you haven’t, etc. So you will get a terrible answer that probably won’t help.

What is difficult for you in your business? What is the next problem you need to solve?

Ask that question and ask it in a way so that the person knows what you’ve done already.

For example, let’s say you’re a personal finance blogger and you’re having trouble getting traffic to your site. A question you might ask me would go something like this:

“Hey Jim, I really love what you’ve done with Wallet Hacks, I’m a big fan. I’m a personal finance blogger that’s been blogging for about six months and I’m having trouble getting traffic. I’ve tried social media like Twitter, Pinterest, and Facebook – but that doesn’t seem to do much. I’ve also tried getting links from other blogs by emailing them but no one responds. What are some things I can do to grow my traffic?”

That’s a question I would actually answer – and my answer would look something like this:

  1. Join the FinCon Community Facebook group and interact with the people in the group, answer questions, demonstrate your expertise, and make friends
  2. Try to find ways you can help the Admins
  3. Volunteer to be a contributor of some kind, perhaps managing the share thread, or coordinating other activities
  4. Sign up for HARO, answer everything relevant no matter how big or small, share HARO questions with specific people within the FinCon group where you think it makes sense
  5. Comment on other FinCon blogger’s posts, engage with them on social media
  6. When you see someone else launch something, try to help them promote it with retweets and sharing, even words of encouragement are good too

Those are specific steps but the basic gist is to become a valuable member of the community you want to be in – that facilitates everything else. From there, you can try to start projects with other bloggers that now know you’re a real human being and not a spam bot. You can start a joint podcast or even just a content series.

As you answer more HARO requests, you can build up your As Seen In page with more credibility signals.

As you start to get more traffic, you build a lead magnet and get people on your email newsletter – that way you can push out content to them rather than wait for people to show up. But like everything else in life, it all starts with creating value in the community you want to be in and leveraging the good things that will happen.

That’s a good actionable answer! But a question like “How do I grow my blog?” would not get such an answer. It’s a vague question so it would get a vague response – if it got any response at all.

Summary

The most important part of starting a business is to just start. You don’t have to be perfect, and you don’t have to know everything before you begin. Heck, you really only need to know the next step. You’ll figure it out as you go and you will succeed as long as you don’t stop.

The post 10 Things I Wish I Knew Before Starting My Own Business appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • The β€œWhat Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans
    In 2021, bloggers often STRUGGLE to get page views–let alone REAL fans that continue to follow them for months and years. It’s a busy internet ???? The “What Why What” formula contains the bare minimum of blog “branding” that you absolutely NEED to emphasis if you want to attract long-term fans and readers. This is a simple copywriting lesson that’ll help you turn random website visitors into people that follow you. Want to know the real re
     

The β€œWhat Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans

13 April 2021 at 09:00

In 2021, bloggers often STRUGGLE to get page views–let alone REAL fans that continue to follow them for months and years.

It’s a busy internet ????

The “What Why What” formula contains the bare minimum of blog “branding” that you absolutely NEED to emphasis if you want to attract long-term fans and readers.

This is a simple copywriting lesson that’ll help you turn random website visitors into people that follow you.

Want to know the real reason behind this post?

To help me save time on blog reviews.

I’ve reviewed over 1,000 blogs over the past 5 years–and every single blog I’ve looked at runs into the same problem.

They lack the essential explanation behind “what why what.”

So I’m finally just putting my answer into a blog post format to hand to people ????

So let’s dig into what the heck that means, and why it’s important.

The goal: to collect loyal, trusting, raving fans.

And we want to nurture them starting with random website visitors (i.e. new traffic).

Got it?

People come to your brand from a tweet, pin, click in Google, etc–and you nurture them to raving fans who buy your products and click your affiliate links. The “what why what” conquers the FIRST step in that journey before people bail on your blog

Without nailing this, that journey will never take place for most blog visitors.

1 – “What” is your blog about?

If the name of your blog is “Personal Finance for Dummies” or “Problogger,” people might get a great idea.

But what if you’re domain/brand name is your name?

Or something clever but obscure that explains nothing? (Think ChasingFoxes.com)

What if your name is Busy Budgeter, but you also talk about multiple sub-topics that aren’t budgeting?

Don’t you think you should explicitly tell people EXACTLY what you blog about?

rosemarie busy budgeter homepage
She told us, explicitly, WHAT her blog is about

FYI that’s Rosemarie, founder of Busy Budgeter, a $1M+ blog. Here’s her story!

Your job as a brand-builder and true-fan-magnet is to inform new website visitors EXACTLY what your blog and brand is about. What you teach, share, and sell. Make it easy for people to learn this information.

Where is this most important?

Your homepage, and possibly your about page. Tell people what you do.

Moving on.

2 – “Why” should we follow you–rather than your competitors?

So your name is Bobby and you started a personal finance website called “Millennial Money Man.”

Great!

But there are 1,823 other personal finance blogs out there.

Rockstar Finance says over 1,800 personal finance blogs in their directory…

Why should people follow Bobby as opposed to everybody else?

Bobby sharing “why” people should trust his content and follow him

Apply everything I’m saying to your own niche FYI.

There are tons of other blogs like yours.

There are two main ways to convince visitors why they need to follow YOU: Authority and your unique story.

  1. Authority = People want to know that YOU know what the heck you’re talking about.
  2. Your unique story = something none of your competitors have.

Bobby’s story above is that he paid off $40k of student loans over 18 months on a teacher’s salary.

While there are loads of similar stories now among finance bloggers–there were far fewer when Bobby started his blog, and it allowed him to stand out and make people say “wow.”

Home page, about page, sidebars, email opt-ins. Show people why.

Most of DYEB’s “why” is my story.

  1. I’ve started over 45+ online businesses and blogs, failed a lot, and have a ton of stories for learning to share.
  2. I might actually be OBSESSED with blogging and online business. My passion for this helps me stand out.
  3. I quit a cushy job to be broke for a while and make this whole online business thing work.
  4. I made $18k in my first year, and on track to triple that in year 2.

3 – “What’s” in it for me (a new website visitor)?

The old “WIIFM” thing:

What’s In It For Me?”

Seriously though. What’s it in for me to read your blog post? Literally, what am I going to get?

Knowledge? Laughter? Commiseration?

What’s it in for me to opt-in to your email list–especially since I’m on 10+ other newsletters in your niche?

What do I get?

Tell people, in the most explicit of terms, exactly what they will get out of being a follower of [your-blog-name].

problogger email opt in
Tell them what’s in store if they stick around.

Go back and remember our goal.

Repeat after me.

My job as a blogger is to turn cold website traffic (new visitors), into loyal repeat visitors, fans, and customers.

You don’t make tons of money from your blog from brand-new website visitors. You make them over time from loyal fans.

Sharing your “what why what” is the very first step to turning first-time visitors to repeat visitors.

judgment-free finance and friend-making. Their core purpose attracts their core audience.

Random website visitors need to know

  1. what on earth your platform talks about (specifically)
  2. why they should follow you rather than other similar blogs
  3. what they’re going to GET out of being a follower.

So tell them, in as few words as possible, as quickly as possible, all across your blog.

Go forth and nurture true fans.

But before you do, drop me a comment and say hello below!

The post The “What Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • How to make (the right) people like you more – Copywriting & Branding Queen Hillary Weiss
    *love me love me, say that you love me. *fool me fool me, go on and fool me! Ok amazing 90’s pop songs aside–my podcast guest today is a brand strategist, copywriter, and overall hilarious and awesome creator–and she’s gonna help us find true love. From our audience. But not in a weird way. Hillary Weiss and I are gonna chat… WHAT is a “statement piece” and why you need oneExercises for copywriting (to write more good words)Her de
     

How to make (the right) people like you more – Copywriting & Branding Queen Hillary Weiss

19 April 2021 at 10:13

*love me love me, say that you love me.

*fool me fool me, go on and fool me!

Ok amazing 90’s pop songs aside–my podcast guest today is a brand strategist, copywriter, and overall hilarious and awesome creator–and she’s gonna help us find true love.

From our audience.

But not in a weird way.

Hillary Weiss and I are gonna chat…

  • WHAT is a “statement piece” and why you need one
  • Exercises for copywriting (to write more good words)
  • Her definition of “influencer”
  • way mo’

Enjoy!

Listen to my episode with Hillary Weiss:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Other awesome branding and copywriting resources ????

  • Check out Hillary’s site, and opt-in for her Statement Piece (it’s halfway down the page)
  • I recently had Kira Hug on the podcast as well, that was a great episode.
  • It’s an OOOOLD podcast series I did, but check out “Stories That Sell” if you wanna get better at intentionally telling stories.

and yo, if you enjoy this episode, drop us some comment luv below?

I’d love to hear what you thought about creating a “statement piece,” or just say hello 😉

The post How to make (the right) people like you more – Copywriting & Branding Queen Hillary Weiss appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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  • Advanced Blogging Strategies That Are Working Right Now – Robert Farrington Part Dos
    Robert Farrington (The College Investor, a massssssive site at this point) is joining me on the podcast today to answer a simple question: “What’s working in your business–right now?” It’s an interesting question, and it brought up a lot of cool stuff! Although I will say that a lot of what we talk about could be consider “advanced,” but don’t let that put you off completely. There are gems in here! We chat SEO in 2021Completely ou
     

Advanced Blogging Strategies That Are Working Right Now – Robert Farrington Part Dos

3 May 2021 at 09:00

Robert Farrington (The College Investor, a massssssive site at this point) is joining me on the podcast today to answer a simple question:

“What’s working in your business–right now?”

It’s an interesting question, and it brought up a lot of cool stuff!

Although I will say that a lot of what we talk about could be consider “advanced,” but don’t let that put you off completely. There are gems in here!

We chat

  • SEO in 2021
  • Completely outsourcing a podcast for his blog
  • Partnering with affiliates
  • and more!

Enjoy 🙂

.

Listen to my episode with Robert Farrington:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

The post Advanced Blogging Strategies That Are Working Right Now – Robert Farrington Part Dos appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

  • βœ‡Do You Even Blog
  • Jessica’s First Evergreen Funnel [Success Case Study!]
    Jessica (http://thefioneers.com/) recently implemented a SUPER simple version of an evergreen funnel–and has already seen some incredible results from it! Today she’s sharing the juicy details of what she did and how she’s made it work so far!l I am also proud to say that she’s an Online Impact member and BMF student (technically the first BMF student I think?). Anywho, Jessica’s brilliant. You’ll get alot out of this one Listen to my episode wi
     

Jessica’s First Evergreen Funnel [Success Case Study!]

10 May 2021 at 08:59

Jessica (http://thefioneers.com/) recently implemented a SUPER simple version of an evergreen funnel–and has already seen some incredible results from it!

Today she’s sharing the juicy details of what she did and how she’s made it work so far!l

I am also proud to say that she’s an Online Impact member and BMF student (technically the first BMF student I think?).

Anywho, Jessica’s brilliant. You’ll get alot out of this one 🙂

Listen to my episode with Jessica from the Fioneers:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Till later my entrepreneur and funnel-building friends! 🙂 🙂

The post Jessica’s First Evergreen Funnel [Success Case Study!] appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

  • βœ‡Do You Even Blog
  • Nurture Sequences 101 – What to say and how to do it.
    Ah yes, the whole “customer journey” thing. Taking somebody who JUST took a leap to join your email list… …and turning them into loyal, DIE HARD “i’ll literally buy anything you ever put out–even if it’s a new chewing gum brand” sort of follower. (or something). The problem though? What on Earth do we SAY to these people? To earn their trust?To build our authority?To HELP them? Luckily, email marketing pro Allea Grumm
     

Nurture Sequences 101 – What to say and how to do it.

24 May 2021 at 09:00

Ah yes, the whole “customer journey” thing.

Taking somebody who JUST took a leap to join your email list…

…and turning them into loyal, DIE HARD “i’ll literally buy anything you ever put out–even if it’s a new chewing gum brand” sort of follower.

(or something).

The problem though?

What on Earth do we SAY to these people?

  • To earn their trust?
  • To build our authority?
  • To HELP them?

Luckily, email marketing pro Allea Grummert (Duett.co) is joining me on today’s podcast to give her best tips for a SOLID nurture sequence!

Enjoy 😉

Listen to this chat about nurture sequences:

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

More handy resources for building funnels, etc:

Now go write some emails 🙂

The post Nurture Sequences 101 – What to say and how to do it. appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

  • βœ‡Do You Even Blog
  • 11 Online Business Podcasts You Need to Be Listening To.
    I know I know… I have left a void in your podcast player. Since I’m in-between DYEB podcast seasons–you’ve just been ITCHING for more blogging & online business podcasts, yes?? Well, good news! Here are some of my all-time favorites (as well as new discoveries!) for creators & online entrepreneurs. Let’s start with some podcasts you might not have heard of before… The Not For Lazy Marketers Podcast – Emily Hirsh Listen
     

11 Online Business Podcasts You Need to Be Listening To.

2 August 2021 at 09:00

I know I know…

I have left a void in your podcast player.

Since I’m in-between DYEB podcast seasons–you’ve just been ITCHING for more blogging & online business podcasts, yes??

Well, good news!

Here are some of my all-time favorites (as well as new discoveries!) for creators & online entrepreneurs.

Let’s start with some podcasts you might not have heard of before…

The Not For Lazy Marketers Podcast – Emily Hirsh

Listen for…

  • really great strategies for Facebook ads & funnels
  • short n sweet-ish episodes! Generally 12-16 minutes long (I always skip the first 60 seconds, as it’s the same intro every week.

Emily runs some great solo shows, and is a really good marketer and salesperson herself. Pay attention not only to what she SAYS to do–but what she does within her own business 😉

Akimbo – Seth Godin

Listen for…

  • sage advice from the world’s top marketer
  • new ideas that’ll make you ponder
  • interesting historical tidbits about our culture

Seth’s awesome (but only because he was a guest on my podcast here. JK he’s just awesome), and this podcast format is really nice.

He rarely gets specific in terms of strategy, tactics, etc, but that’s kinda the point. He’s helping us THINK about things, and hopefully become better marketers (and humans) in the meantime.

If you’re into the Godin, definitely give it a listen.

Naval – Naval Ravikant

This one’s a bit different…

Naval isn’t a creator like we typically think of–he’s a startup investor and entrepreneur in his own right–and this podcast is less about online business–and becoming a smart thinking & savvy entrepreneur.

I highly highly HIGHLY recommend his podcast on wealth building. It’s the single best audio resource I’ve ever found for this particular personal finance take.

Search News You can Use – Marie Haynes

If you’re into SEO (#highfive), you def need this one.

It’s less “how to” kinda stuff–and more news, updates, and the occasional hot take or new idea. Most of the more “pro” SEOs I know tend to listen to Marie.

Systems Saved Me – Jordan Gill

Listen for…

  • fun interviews with female entrepreneurs
  • strategies & ideas on SYSTEMS, automations, integrations, and organization.

It’s kinda like the title says: all about systems in our business!

Just one problem–Jordan actually shut down the podcast in mid-2021. Boooooo. Episodes are still up for now though, so go listen to some of the old ones!

My old tried-n-true business podcast lineup:

These have been around for a while, but I still find myself listening to on occasion!

Online Marketing Made Easy – Amy Porterfield

Listen for:

  • great interviews. I really like Amy’s interview style
  • the beginner basics
  • Solid (but not necessarily unique) perspectives

Amy’s pretty broad–and tends to “dumb down” her message in a lot of ways–but that doesn’t mean any of it is bad advice at all.

In fact, she’s one of my favorite interviewers in marketing (I tend to skip her solo shows). Definitely worth a listen, especially if you’re still pretty new!

Oh yeah, and you should probably check out the Do You Even Blog podcast–ever heard of it???

I hear the dude that runs that is firrreeee. So handsome too.

The Side Hustle Show – Nick Loper

Listen for:

  • a variety of guests, topics, and ideas
  • success stories in small business and/or solo entrepreneurship

I just love Nick, and always have. He’s also a great interviewer–and I like that it’s not ALL about blogging, or ALL about SEO, or copywriting, etc.

He has a nice variety of interesting guests–both experts and non-experts alike. I don’t listen to every single episode, but I’ve been a regular listener and subscriber for years.

The Tim Ferriss Show – Tim Ferriss

Listen for:

  • the occasional entrepreneurship episode, otherwise general life-improvement kinda stuff
  • extremely casual (almost unedited it seems) chats with extraordinary people
  • good stories

Like him or not (and many don’t), but Tim’s a smart cookie.

This is one of the main podcasts I binged in the years leading up to THIS business of mine (Do You Even Blog), and I can partially attribute all the work I’m doing–to Tim and this podcast.

Interested in YouTube? Binge these 3 podcasts…

These are specific to YouTube 😉

Comments over Coffee – Nick Nimmin

Nick goes through his own YouTube comments and finds good questions–and then answers them on this podcast. I like Nick a lot!

YouTube Creators Hub – Dusty Porter

Dusty’s is more interview and success story-based, and oh look! I’ve been on his show!

Video Creators – Tim Schmoyer

Tim runs a YouTube consulting agency–and tends do repurpose a lot of livestreams to his podcast.

I personally recommend going and checking out some of his older content–instead of starting with the most recent. The older episodes (1-2 years ago) are usually still relevant, and were better imo.

All business’d out? Here are my current non-business podcasts 😉

I’m going to argue right here and now–that many of these podcasts can ALSO improve your content & business skills!

While listening to these podcasts…

  • have fun, duh
  • pay attention to how THEY create their content!

Learn from them, be entertained by them 😉

In no particular order…

An oral history of The Office – Brian Baumgartner (Kevin Malone)

This will obviously be way better if you’re a fan of The Office–but it’s so well done! Hats off to Brian for his storytelling and narration.

Also, it’s just hilarious.

Twenty Thousand Hertz – Dallas Taylor

It’s a podcast about…sounds. Sound boring? It’s seriously not. Count this podcast as one of the most interesting shows I’ve ever caught.

You don’t have to be an audiophile to find enjoyment here, either. It’s so good.

Hardcore History – Dan Carlin

My official favorite podcast of all time.

It’s about history. It’s about humans. It can get hardcore every now and then.

Subscribe ASAP (and if you’re new to the show–I recommend going and checking out the series on WW1. “Blueprint for Armageddon” or something like that.

The way I heard it – Mike Rowe

Speaking of pristine storytelling–this podcast is a work of art.

I personally recommend going back to the OLDEST episodes to start–as the newer episodes include more dialog and discussion. The old episodes are JUST short stories, and Mike is an absolute master.

Everything is Alive

I mean everything. The Coke Bottle is alive. The newspaper is alive and well, and telling you about her day.

This is the show where inanimate objects take life–and usually end up teaching us an interesting lesson.

The Kevin Rose Show

You can kinda consider this the cousin of the Tim Ferriss podcast–as Tim and Kevin are good friends and tend to talk about some of the same topics. A good listen, especially for those who are into tech.

Popcorn Finance – Chris Browning

My buddy Chris runs a personal finance podcast, and you should listen.

I’ve listened to probably 200-250 personal finance podcasts over the years, and there are really only 3-5 that I stay subscribed to (even if I don’t listen to every single episode). Chris is one of those!

His are more short n’ sweet, and I just like his voice 😉

Smart Money Mamas – Chelsea Brennan

Chelsea is also a good friend (and OG Online Impact member woot!), and the work she’s doing in finance (specifically for moms–but I listen anyways) is incredible.

I tend to get the most value from her mindset-focused episodes.

Unlocking Us – Brené Brown

One of the G.O.A.T.s at this point? Brené’s podcast has turned out great I think! (and be sure to grab The Power of Vulnerability on Audible. It’s one of my all-time faves as well).

Also, here are my top-recommended true crime podcasts:

I won’t explain each of these, because if you’re into true crime, well, no explanation needed. They’re about true crimes!

(But these are particularly well done)

  • Cold
  • Bear Brook
  • The Ballad of Billy Balls
  • The Clearing
  • Missing on 9/11
  • (and their first season, Missing in Alaska, is good too!)

Comment below w/ your favorite shows!

I’m all ears. Literally.

Drop me a comment below and promote a show you’ve been digging this year!

????

The post 11 Online Business Podcasts You Need to Be Listening To. appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

M.I.T.-proven social media strategies, world-class podcasting, and landing national book deals – Joe Saul-Sehy

11 October 2021 at 12:11

Social media has been around for AGES by now…

But when’s the last time you really sat down to review your “strategy?”

Ya know, to grow an audience? Get more view/downloads, whatever?

Do you even HAVE A STRATEGY™?

*checks notes–crap, no, I don’t.

Today’s guest is one of my all-time favorite podcasters, entertainers, and genuinely great dude, Joe Saul-Sehy!

And he’s here today to A: have fun, and B: help us think about social media again “for the first time since setting up that TikTok account that we never actually post to and almost hate checking now–and UGH yeah ok I need to think about this again.”

Enjoy the chat!

Listen to my episode with Joe Saul-Sehy!

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

And if you enjoy Joe, be sure to check out everything he’s doing over at Stacking Benjamins! (one of the top personal finance podcasts out there, and one of the few I still listen to ????).

Also, STACKED.

His book! Grab it here!

And if you really just want to see Joe (I mean, who doesn’t??), watch a DIFFERENT podcast we recorded here:

Joe and I tell fun podcasting stories–and he helps us build confidence with “our voice.”

So…

Are you all pumped up to level-up your TikTok game? Ready to jump into podcasting because of Joe?

Drop us a comment below and say hi!

<3

The post M.I.T.-proven social media strategies, world-class podcasting, and landing national book deals – Joe Saul-Sehy appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

Could you START a podcast/blog for a brand? How Sarah Li-Cain became an in-demand, highly-paid freelance producer.

18 October 2021 at 09:00

Want to be a next-level freelancer?

Highly-paid? Sought-after?

Want to pick and choose your clients and definite your dream career doing what you REALLY want to do?

Sarah Li-Cain is a world-class podcaster, (and blogger, YouTuber, producer, freelancer–lots of stuff really), and today’s she’s stopping by to chat about partnering with companies to produce content.

She’s also just a genuinely nice & smart person! There’s loads of value in this one 😉

Listen to my episode with Sarah Li-Cain

or listen on Apple Podcasts \ Google Podcasts \ Spotify

Here some fancy-pants resources from today’s show, and related reads/listens!

The post Could you START a podcast/blog for a brand? How Sarah Li-Cain became an in-demand, highly-paid freelance producer. appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

  • βœ‡Do You Even Blog
  • The β€œWhat Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans
    In 2021, bloggers often STRUGGLE to get page views–let alone REAL fans that continue to follow them for months and years. It’s a busy internet ???? The “What Why What” formula contains the bare minimum of blog “branding” that you absolutely NEED to emphasis if you want to attract long-term fans and readers. This is a simple copywriting lesson that’ll help you turn random website visitors into people that follow you. Want to know the real re
     

The β€œWhat Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans

13 April 2021 at 09:00

In 2021, bloggers often STRUGGLE to get page views–let alone REAL fans that continue to follow them for months and years.

It’s a busy internet ????

The “What Why What” formula contains the bare minimum of blog “branding” that you absolutely NEED to emphasis if you want to attract long-term fans and readers.

This is a simple copywriting lesson that’ll help you turn random website visitors into people that follow you.

Want to know the real reason behind this post?

To help me save time on blog reviews.

I’ve reviewed over 1,000 blogs over the past 5 years–and every single blog I’ve looked at runs into the same problem.

They lack the essential explanation behind “what why what.”

So I’m finally just putting my answer into a blog post format to hand to people ????

So let’s dig into what the heck that means, and why it’s important.

The goal: to collect loyal, trusting, raving fans.

And we want to nurture them starting with random website visitors (i.e. new traffic).

Got it?

People come to your brand from a tweet, pin, click in Google, etc–and you nurture them to raving fans who buy your products and click your affiliate links. The “what why what” conquers the FIRST step in that journey before people bail on your blog

Without nailing this, that journey will never take place for most blog visitors.

1 – “What” is your blog about?

If the name of your blog is “Personal Finance for Dummies” or “Problogger,” people might get a great idea.

But what if you’re domain/brand name is your name?

Or something clever but obscure that explains nothing? (Think ChasingFoxes.com)

What if your name is Busy Budgeter, but you also talk about multiple sub-topics that aren’t budgeting?

Don’t you think you should explicitly tell people EXACTLY what you blog about?

rosemarie busy budgeter homepage
She told us, explicitly, WHAT her blog is about

FYI that’s Rosemarie, founder of Busy Budgeter, a $1M+ blog. Here’s her story!

Your job as a brand-builder and true-fan-magnet is to inform new website visitors EXACTLY what your blog and brand is about. What you teach, share, and sell. Make it easy for people to learn this information.

Where is this most important?

Your homepage, and possibly your about page. Tell people what you do.

Moving on.

2 – “Why” should we follow you–rather than your competitors?

So your name is Bobby and you started a personal finance website called “Millennial Money Man.”

Great!

But there are 1,823 other personal finance blogs out there.

Rockstar Finance says over 1,800 personal finance blogs in their directory…

Why should people follow Bobby as opposed to everybody else?

Bobby sharing “why” people should trust his content and follow him

Apply everything I’m saying to your own niche FYI.

There are tons of other blogs like yours.

There are two main ways to convince visitors why they need to follow YOU: Authority and your unique story.

  1. Authority = People want to know that YOU know what the heck you’re talking about.
  2. Your unique story = something none of your competitors have.

Bobby’s story above is that he paid off $40k of student loans over 18 months on a teacher’s salary.

While there are loads of similar stories now among finance bloggers–there were far fewer when Bobby started his blog, and it allowed him to stand out and make people say “wow.”

Home page, about page, sidebars, email opt-ins. Show people why.

Most of DYEB’s “why” is my story.

  1. I’ve started over 45+ online businesses and blogs, failed a lot, and have a ton of stories for learning to share.
  2. I might actually be OBSESSED with blogging and online business. My passion for this helps me stand out.
  3. I quit a cushy job to be broke for a while and make this whole online business thing work.
  4. I made $18k in my first year, and on track to triple that in year 2.

3 – “What’s” in it for me (a new website visitor)?

The old “WIIFM” thing:

What’s In It For Me?”

Seriously though. What’s it in for me to read your blog post? Literally, what am I going to get?

Knowledge? Laughter? Commiseration?

What’s it in for me to opt-in to your email list–especially since I’m on 10+ other newsletters in your niche?

What do I get?

Tell people, in the most explicit of terms, exactly what they will get out of being a follower of [your-blog-name].

problogger email opt in
Tell them what’s in store if they stick around.

Go back and remember our goal.

Repeat after me.

My job as a blogger is to turn cold website traffic (new visitors), into loyal repeat visitors, fans, and customers.

You don’t make tons of money from your blog from brand-new website visitors. You make them over time from loyal fans.

Sharing your “what why what” is the very first step to turning first-time visitors to repeat visitors.

judgment-free finance and friend-making. Their core purpose attracts their core audience.

Random website visitors need to know

  1. what on earth your platform talks about (specifically)
  2. why they should follow you rather than other similar blogs
  3. what they’re going to GET out of being a follower.

So tell them, in as few words as possible, as quickly as possible, all across your blog.

Go forth and nurture true fans.

But before you do, drop me a comment and say hello below!

The post The “What Why What” Formula For Nurturing True Fans appeared first on Do You Even Blog.

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