Entrepreneurs on Fire: Untold Secrets
In this episode, Charles dives into the dynamic world of podcasting and entrepreneurship with John Lee Dumas, the innovative founder of "Entrepreneurs on Fire." John reveals his extraordinary journey from Army officer to podcasting pioneer, demonstrating how he transformed his vision into a multi-million dollar enterprise.
John challenges conventional wisdom about podcast growth, emphasizing the power of niching down, maintaining transparency, and implementing efficient systems. Charles and John explore the delicate balance between content creation and monetization, the art of crafting engaging daily episodes, and developing sustainable business strategies that prioritize both audience growth and revenue generation.
John's expertise shines as he breaks down his methods for creating a lean, profitable operation, implementing effective guest management techniques, and fostering a mindset of continuous improvement. He underscores the importance of understanding your specific avatar, the strategic use of financial transparency, and maintaining authenticity even as the pressure to expand your audience intensifies.
Whether you're a novice podcaster struggling to find your niche, an established content creator seeking to scale your reach, or an entrepreneur navigating the complex landscape of media monetization, this episode is packed with game-changing insights. Get ready to revolutionize your approach to podcast growth, audience engagement, and sustainable business creation.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
- Discover how John leveraged the "inch-wide, mile-deep" strategy to create a game-changing podcast
- Learn why financial transparency can dramatically increase your audience trust and engagement
- Gain insights into aligning your podcast content with profitable business models for long-term success
- Understand the power of systems and processes in scaling your podcast while maintaining a small team
- Explore strategies for monetizing your podcast through diverse revenue streams while maintaining quality and personal authenticity
Head over to podcast.iamcharlesschwartz.com to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode.
KEY POINTS:
2:43 Importance of Education: Emphasizes the value of educational content in podcasting alongside entertainment.
4:36 Balance in Life: Discusses the necessity of balancing various aspects of life for overall success.
5:42 Eating Right Daily: Highlights the importance of proper nutrition in maintaining productivity and success.
6:43 Importance of Transparency: Reveals how openness about business practices can build trust with an audience.
9:12 Number One Solution: Explains the concept of becoming the primary solution to a specific problem in your niche.
10:31 Cutting Through Noise: Offers insights on standing out in a crowded podcasting landscape.
11:38 17 Steps Overview: Briefly mentions a 17-step roadmap to podcasting success.
12:55 Finding the Right Team: Shares strategies for hiring and managing an effective, lean team.
16:14 Resources for Entrepreneurs: Recommends tools and resources for aspiring podcast entrepreneurs.
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 Welcome to the proven podcast, where it does not matter what you think, only what you can prove. Everyone says daily podcasting is impossible to sustain.
Speaker 1 John Lee Dumas has been proving them wrong for over a decade. Host of Entrepreneurs on Fire has published every single day for 10 plus years and built a multi-million dollar business doing it.
Speaker 1 The show starts now.
Speaker 2
All right, so welcome back. Today, we're with John from Entrepreneurs on Fire, and this is one of the people who inspired me to do podcasting as a whole.
Thank you so much for being on the show.
Speaker 3 I'm excited to be here. I love when I get to meet people who have been inspired by something that I've done.
Speaker 3 And now they're sharing their message, their voice, their mission with the world, because, you know, we're all here making ripples. Hopefully, a lot of us are making positive ripples in this world.
Speaker 3 And we don't really know how big of an impact these ripples can have.
Speaker 3 Like right now, honestly, somebody could be listening to this in the Siberian wilderness, and they're inspired to do something that they might otherwise not have done.
Speaker 3 And to me, me, that's just exciting. So I want to commend you for putting on good stuff into the world.
Speaker 2 I appreciate it. I think, you know, as you said,
Speaker 2
there could be someone in Siberia that we never meet. We never know their name.
But if they move the bar a little bit, it's absolutely worth it.
Speaker 2 So one of the reasons I talk about how Entrepreneurs on Fire inspired me was the idea that most podcasts don't give phenomenal value. They're talk shows and they're like, you wrote a book?
Speaker 2 What on earth is a book? I didn't want to do that. I wanted to say, hey, how do we get something?
Speaker 2 So we have the person pull over that single mom who's trying to help out and write down specific tactics so that we could move them forward with it, which is why we create the lab reports.
Speaker 2
One of the things you did is you showed everybody that, hey, podcasting isn't just podcasting. It's just not noise.
This is a huge marketing arm. This is a business and a community within itself.
Speaker 2 As you grew that, what were some of the struggles that you ran into?
Speaker 3
A lot of struggles. I mean, for one, back in 2012, when I launched, not many people knew what a podcast was.
Not many people had the means to listen to a podcast.
Speaker 3 I knew the platform of podcasting was sound because it's on-demand, targeted, free content. I mean, that is a tough triple threat to beat.
Speaker 3 When you can press play and pause when you want to, unlike the radio that would just talk at you. It's a huge game changer.
Speaker 3 When you can actually choose the specific content you want to create instead of just being at the whim of whoever's producing that content, again, let's go back to the radio. That's a huge win.
Speaker 3 And guess what? It's free as well. So it has those first two things and it's free.
Speaker 3 So to me, it was just such a no-brainer no-brainer that people like you mentioned driving in a car can start turning that into automobile university i walk my dog for two hours every day once in the morning once in the evening i'm listening to podcasts that entire time that's two hours of education that i'm getting that otherwise i would just be whistling looking at the beautiful clouds here in puerto rico which by the way is fine but i'm glad that i get to use two hours to educate myself to become better at something to learn something that i might not otherwise have learned and to me that's amazing.
Speaker 2 I agree. And I think most people where they may misfire on this is they're not using it as a tool to advance.
Speaker 2 And as people even are trying to monetize, they're trying to grow, they're trying to figure out how to make their podcast stick. What are some of the tools and some of the things you ran into?
Speaker 2
Because you do it better than anyone I know. And you add a side of transparency, which is why I love it.
Like, hey, this is how much we made this time. This is how much we make every single month.
Speaker 2
This is where our revenues are. You are extremely transparent.
And in an age that lacks authenticity, you seem to be one of the few people that's doing it effectively.
Speaker 3 So, what is it that you found?
Speaker 3 Listen, entertainment is important.
Speaker 3
I watch Netflix every single night and I enjoy it. I look forward to it.
Myself and my wife, after a nice, healthy day of exercise, of work, of spending time with our son.
Speaker 3 We like to be entertained.
Speaker 3
That's fine. There's nothing wrong with that form of entertainment.
But what's also very important is to not just always be entertained, but to be educated as well.
Speaker 3
And that's what a lot of people were missing the boat with when podcasting started was it was all comedy podcasts or it was all sports podcasts. And guess what? That's fine.
I listen to those as well.
Speaker 3 And that's entertaining and that's good.
Speaker 3 But when I started mixing in audiobooks about business, podcasts about business, about entrepreneurship, about stoicism, about educating myself, about different languages and like learning, learning, learning, to me, like that's what led to everything.
Speaker 3
So I have nothing against entertainment, but I love when we can also bring in a healthy dose of education. It's all about balance.
Like everything's about balance.
Speaker 3 Are you getting enough exercise every day? Are you eating the right things nutritionally every single day? Are you resting enough at night? Are you sleeping enough? Like that's huge as well.
Speaker 3
Are you educating yourself enough? Are you working enough? We got to pay the bills. I mean, everybody's got bills.
This is the world that we live in.
Speaker 3 So you have to just sit down and be very intentional about how am I going to use the set hours that I have in the day to have the balance that I want?
Speaker 3
And to your point about transparency, to me, listen, back in 2012, I was an ex-army officer. I spent eight years in the army.
I did a 13-month tour in Iraq. Like I was in the army.
Speaker 3
Then I was in corporate finance. Then I was in law school.
Then I was in commercial real estate. Like I had taken a very traditional path.
I didn't know.
Speaker 3 I didn't understand if you could actually make money online being a good person, being a person of value, giving goodness to the world.
Speaker 3 And I just didn't know if it was possible because nobody was sharing the behind the scenes. They were talking the talk, but do you ever really know if somebody's walking the walk?
Speaker 3
So when I said, hey, if I ever start making actual money in this business, I'm going to share everything, every dollar that I make. I'm going to open the kimono.
I'm going to. show my bank accounts.
Speaker 3 I'm going to bring my accountant on to give a tax tip and as well as verify verify my income report. I'm going to bring my lawyer on to give a legal tip and to do the same.
Speaker 3
And to me, that transparency is meant to inspire people of like, hey, this can be done. And this is how we're doing it.
Take inspiration from what's working for us that makes sense for you.
Speaker 3
Don't do the things that we're doing wrong because we're doing plenty of things wrong. We're making plenty of mistakes.
Let us make those mistakes.
Speaker 3 You can avoid them now and skip over them and be off to the races.
Speaker 2
And again, this is what inspired me. Because there's so many people out there who are just selling to sell.
They're like, I've done this, I've done that.
Speaker 2
You brought out and you bring that up transparency. What I love also is you share those tactics.
As you say, when you bring on your lawyer, your accountant, you share actual tips.
Speaker 2 If someone's having a podcast right now and they're trying to build a community as you have, what are the things that you have found to kind of scale it, to build that community?
Speaker 2 Because it's all about scaling here. How do you scale your community?
Speaker 2 If you're just an online podcast that's providing entertainment and education, which seems to be the magic formula, how do you then get into a community?
Speaker 2 What are the best communities you should work with?
Speaker 3 A big mistake that almost every podcaster makes, and almost every entrepreneur and businessman and woman makes is they don't stand for something strong they just are kind of like you know what i i want to give value in this area but i don't want to be too specific i don't want to be too niche because i want to have the opportunity to have as many listeners as possible as many clients as possible as many customers as possible so i don't want to cut out a possible client.
Speaker 3 That is the exact wrong mentality because if you're trying to resonate with everybody, you are going to resonate with nobody because it's just not going to happen if you're in the middle.
Speaker 3
And for me, it's all about love me or hate me because there's no money in the middle. I am creating specific content for a specific person, for a specific avatar.
That is so key.
Speaker 3 That is such the dynamic that people need to be working towards. And I wrote a book and the whole book is like 300 pages long, but it honestly could be summed up in one sentence.
Speaker 3 And this one sentence,
Speaker 3 99% of entrepreneurs cannot
Speaker 3
answer truthfully that they are doing this. And that's why they're struggling.
That's why they're failing. And that is, are you the number one solution to a real problem in this world?
Speaker 3 And the first part, most people are not the number one solution. They're the 10th best solution or the second best solution or the 100th best solution.
Speaker 3 Nobody wants the second best solution to infinity. to a real problem that they have.
Speaker 3 People will beat a path to the doorstep for the number one solution to their real problem, and they'll ignore all the rest. And so you're a pale weak imitation of somebody else.
Speaker 3 No shocker that you're getting no business, no customers, no clients at the level to the scale that you want to get.
Speaker 3
And that second part, some people are the number one solution, but it's to just some kind of a problem. It's not a real problem.
It's not a very significant pain point.
Speaker 3 And if it's not a big pain point, people aren't going to part with their hard-earned dollars to get that solution. They're just going to be like, oh, that's a nice to have, but not a need to have.
Speaker 3 It's going to be the number one solution to a real problem. And so that's why all the podcasts that launch that just interview entrepreneurs, they're just another one in the crowd.
Speaker 3 They're just a pale weak imitation of the top podcasts that are out there that have been doing it for decades, like Entrepreneurs on Fire.
Speaker 3 It's the people that actually stand for one thing specifically and become the best at that thing. Those people win.
Speaker 2
So how do you cut through the noise then? Now, let's say you're an individual who's running a podcast. You've been doing it for five years.
You've never really ranked.
Speaker 2 You're trying to get through there. How do you cut through the noise? How do you identify that? Again, as we say, inch-wide, mile deep, that pain that that specific niche has?
Speaker 2 What are some of the things that you run into? So you don't get lost in the noise.
Speaker 3
You've been there for five years. You are definitely not the number one solution to a real problem.
Because again, people will beat a path to your doorstep if you are.
Speaker 3 If you've created the number one natural cure to Lyme disease, people will find you because that's how this world works. They will find you.
Speaker 3 So, what is that one thing that you want to stand for that you want to be? And if you're struggling, you haven't done that yet.
Speaker 3 And I recommend doing something like my book, The Common Path to Uncommon Success, takes you on a 17-step roadmap to do just that.
Speaker 3 So, you can finally stop wasting your time and just being mediocre and just being average and finally step into potentially being great.
Speaker 2 So, of those 17 steps do you have in your book, which ones are are the ones that people kind of get stuck on and get kind of go, oh, this is, I have hurdles there.
Speaker 2 They're kind of come in and they're going to reach out to you, John, and they're going to say, hey, I get it. I'm not meeting this super high pain point for this specific niche.
Speaker 2 What are the things that when they go through your 17 steps that you're working, when you're working with clients and you're connecting with them? What are the things you found?
Speaker 2 Because your background comes from a military environment, which thank you again for your service, into a very entrepreneurial environment, which is a different type of a battlefield.
Speaker 2 So in your 17 steps, how are the ones that resonate with you the most or people get stuck?
Speaker 3 Step eight is all about systems and processes, and people fail here miserably. They are waking up every morning and they are recreating the wheel.
Speaker 3 They are starting from scratch, basically, and they're not building off of things they've built beforehand. They're not compounding.
Speaker 3
They're not actually scaling off of what they've already created to begin with. And so, they're just always kind of stuck at level one.
You need systems, you need processes, you need the right team.
Speaker 3
And by the way, our team is now a total of four people. That's myself, my wife, and two virtual assistants.
We have a small team and we make and keep multiple millions of dollars per year.
Speaker 3
So it's not the size of the team. What it is is it's the quality of the systems, the quality of the processes, the quality of the team.
That's key.
Speaker 2
Absolutely. Systems that you're free.
There's simply no way around it.
Speaker 2 When you're going through this process and you're looking to bring on a small team that executes well, what are the tools that you leverage?
Speaker 2 Because now with AI and all the other technology things that we have, what are some of the tools that you're like, if I didn't have these, I would just completely burn out.
Speaker 3 You need a CRM. You know, one of our
Speaker 3
annual sponsors is HubSpot. They're a fantastic CRM.
We love them.
Speaker 3 They're fantastic. So you need some kind of customer relationship management software, CRM.
Speaker 3 You know, obviously you need the basics.
Speaker 3 Like you need something like a Slack, like an Asana, like a Trello to be keeping track of things, to be making sure that people on your team know know what they're supposed to be doing and are held accountable for doing those things.
Speaker 3 While at the same time, you're not micromanaging. Like you're giving your team tasks to do, making them take ownership of it by not micromanaging.
Speaker 3
So if they succeed or fail, it's on their, it's on their own back. It's not on your back because you're looking over their shoulder all the time.
It's on them.
Speaker 3 And if they fail, then they're not the right person for the job and move them out and move somebody else in.
Speaker 2
So how do you find that right person? Because I've used VAs for decades and I love my VA. She's been with me forever.
How do you find new amazing VAs?
Speaker 3 So when you're hiring somebody, then you've got to give multiple people who have gotten to the quote unquote, like top three to top five, depending on how many positions you're hiring for, the identical task and give them 24 hours to complete it and set them off into the wilderness and let them come back to you.
Speaker 3 And those ones that come back with a fantastic solution to the project that you gave, those are people to consider. Like that's the initial step, the initial process.
Speaker 3 And then once you've hired a person, you know, again, you have to make sure that you are giving them the opportunity to succeed or fail on their own merit and having them on a one to three month trial period, which is very transparent to let them, you know, let everybody that's involved know that, hey, we are hiring you, but it's a 90-day process where if you prove yourself, you're coming on full time, but this is on you to make it or break it.
Speaker 3 So you just got to find the self-independent individuals that are out there and there's not a lot because you know a lot of them are doing great things for themselves already on teams and that team's not gonna let them go because they're high performers and so you've got to put in the work
Speaker 2 where do you normally end up searching for these individuals across the board are you i'd say zip recruiter
Speaker 2 zip recruiter is the best
Speaker 3 recruiter.com slash fire
Speaker 2 Slash fire. Okay, use the slash fire.
Speaker 2 So when you were growing and your podcast was scaling and it was taking off, what did you decide? And how did you decide which direction you were going to go as far as your monetizations?
Speaker 2 Because some people avoid a lot of people.
Speaker 3 It's always all about letting your audience tell you. You ask your audience, what is your biggest struggle? They will tell you what their biggest struggle is.
Speaker 3 And then you provide the solution to that struggle in the form of a product or a service or a mastermind or coaching or a book or fill in the blank.
Speaker 3
And I know we got just a couple of minutes, a couple of seconds left here. So let's bring it home, brother.
Yeah.
Speaker 2 So if people are going to trek you down, they want to find more about you and gate resources to you. You have so many things.
Speaker 2 I know where to find you, but can you tell the audience what's the best way to find you?
Speaker 3
EOFIRE.com is our headquarters. That's where all the magic happens.
We have a lot of free resources for entrepreneurs there. And of course, my podcast is EntrepreneursOn Fire.
Speaker 3 You can find that any podcasting directory. And it was cool hanging out today, brother.
Speaker 2
Absolutely. It was amazing.
Thank you so much for coming on.
Speaker 3 Have a nice day.
Speaker 1
John just exposed the brutal truth about mediocrity. It's his daily grind for over a decade wasn't luck.
It was laser focus on serving one specific avatar better than anyone else.
Speaker 1 Stop trying to be everything to everyone. Pick your lane and dominate it.