The roundtable interview with Matt and Caleb Maddix and a small group of people who are trying to change the world. Enjoy part two of this special 4 part episode series.
If I use my email as a tool to amplify social videos, they’re going to rank it higher and then more views happen. If I were to just send an email, it would hit people's inboxes, and then it would disappear within 2 or 3 hours. The clicks and traffic are gone from that email. But if I push those clicks to content and boost it to my most hyper active people on my list, who love me, and then they start watching, viewing and sharing the content, it will then increase the organic reach of that video. It changes that 3,000, 5,000, 10,000 clicks I would have gotten from just email, to hundreds of thousands or even millions of people!
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Russell Brunson:
What's up everybody, this is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to the
Marketing Seekers Podcast. So I have got to ask you, what did you
think about episode number one of the World Changers Roundtable?
Hopefully, you loved it. There were so many things covered in that
42 minutes.</p>
<p>Anyway, we are moving on to the next part of this interview. As
you know, this is going to be broken down into four parts because
they kept me there, handcuffed to a table, until 3:00 AM. I'm just
joking. They didn't really. But, the question was so intriguing, we
were having so much fun, we just kept going and going until finally
I was like, "I have to fly out in three hours. I need to get back
to my hotel."</p>
<p>But now we're going to go dive into the second part. This next
episode is probably another 30 to 40, 45 minutes or so as well. So
these are some things we'll be covering in this one, which is
really fun. We talk about, number one, why my business partner,
Todd Dickerson, is so amazing, and hopefully give you ideas about
if you're pursuing opportunities and trying to land your dream job
or partnership or whatever. Number two, we talked about personality
profiling, how we actually are hiring here at ClickFunnels. We
talked about where my love for learning came from. We talked about
transition for me, going from an athlete to a business person and a
marketer.</p>
<p>We talked about some of the lessons I learned from Lindsey
Stirling, things I was not expecting to hear from her that totally
changed everything for me. We talked about people who intrigue me,
my interest in health and bio hacking. We talked about is there
anything that happens inside of this business that gets me as
excited as what I felt in wrestling. We talked about what thing is
close, but nothing actually has ever hit it. We talked about the
first Two Comma Club Awards. We talked about how to upgrade your
identity as you grow. We talked about the fact that you have to
cycle and fail and rebuild in your businesses. We talked about the
launch of ClickFunnels and how it wasn't just the fact that I was a
genius, because I wasn't. There are so many things.</p>
<p>Talking about the grace of God and how it tied into the launch
of ClickFunnels. We talked about some of my early products, like
Zip Brander and Forum Fortunes. We talked about my Christmas Grinch
sale, which was the very first big sale, big launch I ever did, to
my little tiny list that made enough money to cover Christmas for
my wife and I when we were first getting started. We talked about
becoming worthy. We talked about list building, how it's better
than buying ads, and a whole bunch of other things.</p>
<p>It's amazing, this could be 40 courses all wrapped into one
super podcast episode. So if you liked the last episode, I think
you're going to love this one as well. And I've got two more after
this, coming back, going deeper into this conversation with the
Roundtable of World Changers. So, that said, we're going to cue the
theme song. When we come back, we'll dive right into the second
section here of the interview.</p>
<p>Matt Maddix:
Dave and Todd, I mean, just wow. Those dudes are like... But what
about those guys?</p>
<p>Russell:
So here's Todd's story. So the real long story short, I bought some
software, it was coding Ruby on Rails, didn't know that. Bought
this company with the last...</p>
<p>I didn't have the money. So I borrowed money, bought this
company, coded on some platform we didn't know, and I was like,
"Screw it," right? And I tried to hire people to fix it, nobody
could fix this platform until finally I was leaving the office one
day. I literally emailed the people saying, "Turn off the servers."
We lost all of our money to this company. They shut it down. And
I'm walking out of the office and I had this impression of like,
"There could be someone on your email list who knows Ruby on
Rails." I was like, "That's weird. I had a bunch of internet
marketing nerds. There's no one that's like, 'Ruby on
Rails...'"</p>
<p>Anyway. It was starting with the impression from God, I stopped,
turned back around, set the computer to open back up, sent an email
to my list. "If you know Ruby on Rails, I'm looking for a partner.
I bought a software company and it's not working. Please send me a
message." Send.</p>
<p>Matt:
And that's all you said?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. And lo and behold, three years earlier, Todd bought some
random thing from me, happened to be on my email list. He built the
website three or four years earlier that was making six figures a
year on autopilot. Hadn't worked in four years. Just hanging out
relaxing with his wife and his daughter. And an email comes in and
it says, "If you know Ruby on Rails, I'm looking for a partner."
He's like, "I know Ruby on Rails. I can be Russell's partner."
Emails me back. And at first I see him and his beautiful wife and
I'm like, "There's no way he's a programmer. There's no way." That
was literally my thought.</p>
<p>But he was the only person that responded back so I was like,
"Okay, well, here's the login to the site. Fix it. I don't know
what to do. I'm not a coder."</p>
<p>I went to bed, woke up the next morning. He's like, "Cool, I
fixed the site. Plus I found this, this, and this. And I changed
this. And I moved these things,", and all of this stuff. He's like,
"It's working now. Do you have anything else you want to do
together?"</p>
<p>I'm like, "Huh." And so I give him another project, another
project. And for an entire year Todd and I worked together, and
never once did he ever ask me for money, ever.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
Not a penny. And I remember he started finding Boise to work on a
project together ...</p>
<p>Matt:
You're telling me he worked for you for an entire year?</p>
<p>Russell:
For free. More than a year.</p>
<p>Caleb Maddix:
Why was that?</p>
<p>Russell:
I don't know. I found out later. He'd gone to Robert Kiyosaki at
this event and he said, "Find someone who's doing what you want to
do and work for them for free." So he told me that years later. I
didn't know that.</p>
<p>Matt:
Todd, if you're watching dude. I love you man. You're legit.</p>
<p>Russell:
And so he kept coming and he started coming to Boise and we started
becoming friends. The smartest developer I've ever met. Literally
the smartest person I've ever met. I'll go that far. Just genius.
And he'd come out to Boise and we'd work on projects and ideas. We
tried to launch a couple of things. None of them really worked. And
we were just trying stuff. He was just always there, always
serving, always doing stuff. And one day were in Boise and I was
looking over his shoulder cause we're looking at stuff and I saw
his email. And there's all these emails from some recruiting site
or something. I was like, "What's that?" He's like, "Oh, it's
people recruiting me for a Ruby job." And I was like, "Do you get a
lot of those?" And he's like, "I get three or for a day." I'm like,
"Really? Are they good offers?"</p>
<p>He's like, "I don't know. Let's check it out." He opened it up
and the first one was like $400,000 a year starting salary. I'm
like, "What?" The next one is $350,000. The next was 5 ... Insane
things. I'm like, "Why don't you do that?" He's like, "I don't want
to work for them. I want to be your partner man." I'm like, "What?"
And then I all of a sudden had this realization that I hadn't paid
him in a year. We didn't have much money at the time, we're still
at the backside of a business failure when we met. I'm like, "I can
pay you maybe $50,000 a year. Can I pay you that?" He's like,
"Whatever." So I told our little bookkeeper, "Pay Todd $50,000 a
year." And they're like, "Okay." So he did that and next year we're
paying $50,000 a year. We're doing stuff and we have more things.
Started to get a little success here and there. Making more money.
Back in Boise again. And I'm like, "Can I pay you some more?" And
he's like, "Whatever."</p>
<p>Matt:
So he wasn't ever just asking?</p>
<p>Russell:
Never in his life has he asked me for money. Ever. So we bumped it
up to $100,000 a year because that's what we got, the year before
that, after a year or two working together. And then, it was crazy,
the day Leadpages got the first round of funding for $5,000,000,
the same day Todd was flying to Boise. And he gets the email. It's
east coast so he's two hours ahead. He's awake and on the plane, he
sees the email, forwards it to me, and then jumps in the plane.
He's flying for four hours.</p>
<p>I wake up. I see the email and I was like, "Leadpages? Got 5
..." I was like, we built landing page software in the past. I was
perplexed and angry. And then Todd lands. And Todd, he's a little
guy, he comes into the office all angry. He's like, "Leadpages got
5 million!" He's like, "I can build Leadpages tonight. Do you want
to build lead pages?"</p>
<p>I'm like, "Yeah. Let's compete with Leadpages." He's like, "All
right."</p>
<p>Matt:
No way. Dude. I love this.</p>
<p>Russell:
This is like angry Todd. I love angry Todd. I like all Todds, but
angry Todd is the best Todd.</p>
<p>Matt:
Is it? Okay.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's just pissed because he's like, "I can build this tonight.
Everything thing they got we can have done tonight." So we're
getting all ready. What should we call it and everything. And then
he's like, "Wait, we're building this. You want to add anything
else to it?" And I was like, "Oh. Yeah. What if it did this? And
what if it did this?" And we spent a week in front of a white board
saying, "What if it did?", and we mapped out ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Matt:
So you're talking about a week where you guys just locked in and
you were just having fun. Just doodling and whatever.</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. He's like, "Oh, I can do that. We can do that." We're
brainstorming all sorts of stuff so we map the whole thing out.</p>
<p>Matt:
Did you know at that moment you were onto something big? At that
moment right there, when you guys were like ... Or was it just
still like ...</p>
<p>Russell:
All lot of people have tried something like that. I tried before
other people tried. No one had done it. So I was kind of skeptical
but Todd's like, "I can do this. This is easy." I'm like, "Okay
because I tried it ..." He's like, "No dude, I can do it. This is
easy." So I was, excuse me, optimistically hopeful because he's a
genius but I was also nervous. But anyways, we map it out and then
we bought Clickpros.com. I wanted to call it ClickFusion because I
own ClickFusion, but we'd had three failed businesses called
ClickFusion. All of them failed and Todd was like, "No. It's bad
karma. We can't." I'm like, "But the logo is so cool dude."</p>
<p>Matt:
I love it. You love the logo.</p>
<p>Russell:
And he's like, "No, we can't." He's like, "It's got a jinx on it or
something. We can't do that. You have to come up with a different
name."</p>
<p>I was like, "But ClickFusion is the coolest name ever."</p>
<p>So we're trying things. Click everything and then ClickFunnels.
We're like, "Ah." That was the thing. We're so excited</p>
<p>Matt:
Who first said it? Do you remember? The words ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Caleb:
It's almost like God saying, "Let there be light."</p>
<p>Russell:
I would assume it was me but I'm not positive. I'll have to ask
Todd on that one.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Well, when you said it, was it instant? Like fire?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was insane, it was available.</p>
<p>Matt:
Oh, you know that feeling, right? Checking domains. You're like…
chills.</p>
<p>Russell:
How has no one thought of this before? And so we got it and I
remember I was driving him to the airport at the end of the week to
take him back home. And we got to the airport. Boise airport, It's
a small airport. So we pull up to the thing to get out and you can
tell he's probably nervous waiting. And before we get out of the
car he's like, "I really want to do this man. I'm excited." I'm
like, "Me too. Me too."</p>
<p>He's like, "I don't want to do this like your employee though. I
want to do it as your partner."</p>
<p>And in that moment, I was just like all the fear of ... I'd
tried partners in the past. It hadn't worked. All this stuff and
all the everything. And it was just this weird thing of just all
the emotions were hitting me as he sat in the car, about to get out
the car. I have 15, 20 seconds before he's going to to go. I was
just thinking about him. I was like, he's never asked me for money.
He's never done anything. He's served. He's given everything. I was
just looking at him. I was like, "All right let's do it." He's
like, "Cool." And he got out of the car and he's gone.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wait a minute. So at that moment? Is was that quick?</p>
<p>Russell:
That was it.</p>
<p>Matt:
It was a gut feeling that you just knew. That he was ...</p>
<p>Russell:
It was him. Yeah. And I was literally... I said this on stage at
Funnel hacking live, outside of marrying my wife, it was the
greatest decision I ever made.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah. I remember you saying that with tears.</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Matt:
Why though? I'm curious because it's not just ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's amazing. If you look at our personality profiles, it's
fascinating. We have the same personality profiles. The
Myers-Briggs. Except for one letter's different. Where I'm a feeler
he's a thinker. And it's been magical as a partnership because we
both have so much respect for each other that we don't try to fight
each other. And it's very much like if I wanted to do something,
I'm like, "This is what I want to do. This what I'm feeling. What
do you think?" And he'll come back and be like, "Well, I think
this." And so I come up from feeling instead of thinking and it's
really cool. So sometimes his thinking will trump my feeling. And
I'm like, "You're actually right. Let's not do that." Or vice
versa. Where he's like, "I'm thinking this." And I'm like, "I don't
know why but I feel this." And he'll be like, "Okay."</p>
<p>He respects that. We just have such mutual respect that we've
never been in a fight. We've never argued. We've never had
problems. It's been amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
And he's similar to like we talk about with Dan. He went back home
after us white boarding that, sat in his basement for five or six
months and built ClickFunnels by himself.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Really just by himself?</p>
<p>Russell:
100% by himself.</p>
<p>Caleb:
No other team. No other dev?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was just him. And the right before we launched, we brought in
another partner, Dylan, who built the front-end editor and did a
lot of the UI. And so then it was those two as we got closer and
closer to the launch. And then for the next year it was just those
two that did everything. And then after a year, we started bringing
in other developers. But it was 100% Todd.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's amazing. In all aspects. You know you have friends you think
they know everything about everything. That's like Todd except he
actually knows everything about everything. You ask him anything
and he's just like ... I don't know how he does it. And I'll always
fact check him, like, "Oh my gosh. He's right again." He's
brilliant. It's amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
So for those of us who have partners or are maybe going into
partnership, what's your best advice? And what do you feel like he
does right that other partners don't do?</p>
<p>Russell:
I think the hardest thing with partners is typically we want to
partner with someone who is just like us. We did a podcast most
recently. Dean, Tony and I, right? We've done two partnerships.
Both partnerships made it through the launch and they stopped. Made
it through the launch and stopped. The podcast was like, "Why?" I
love Dean. I love Tony. They're amazing. The problem is that me and
Dean had the exact same skill set.</p>
<p>Matt:
Oh.</p>
<p>Russell:
And so the problem is that both of us are right. We both understand
it right, but we do it differently. And so it's like You have two
people, and so typically you want to partner with those people who
are like you. You're like, "Oh, we think the same. We should be
partners." But that's not necessarily the right thing because then
you've got two alphas with the same skillset, and someone has to
win and someone has to lose. And it's hard. Whereas me and Todd, we
have different skill sets. There is never a winner or a loser. We
can both win because different skill sets, both the same mission.
It's really easy.</p>
<p>So I think the biggest thing is you're trying to find the yin
yang. You're not trying to find someone who thinks like you or acts
like you. In fact, this is true in most hiring processes as well. I
used to have people like, "Send me a video if you want this job."
Right? So I get these videos, and the people that I wanted to hire
were the people like me. I'm like, "This person's awesome. They
think like me. They're a genius. They're amazing." You'll hire
them, and within a week I'm like, "I hate this person." It's
horrible. So we started shifting the way we do our hiring based on
personality profiling instead. DISC profile drives most of my own
personal hiring so I know that I'm a high D, high I, high S. No C
at all. Right? And so the people I need to hire around me are high
S, high C.</p>
<p>The problem is the people I who I watched their videos and I'm
pumped, they're high D, high I. So I'm like, "Yeah. These people
are awesome. They're charismatic. I'm going to love them. They're
drivers, they're awesome. Worst employees ever.</p>
<p>Matt:
Right.</p>
<p>Russell:
Right? So when people send us this profile, first I find the right
profile and then from there I do interviews. Because if I interview
ahead of time I get sold by the people who sell and then they're
horrible employees. And so I make sure they're high S high C,
because I know that if I talk to high S high C, I'm going to be
kind of bummed out. Like, "Oh, I don't know if this is the kind of
person that I'm going to jive with." But they're the best people to
surround myself with because I'm such a high D high S. I'm a
creator. I'm throwing things up in the air and I need people who
are S and C, who are faithful finishers, who are going to take the
things, capture them, and make sure that it's amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
Do you feel like businesses and entrepreneurs are making a mistake
by not having their employees and their team take these tests?</p>
<p>Russell:
100%. I have a new company we're launching all about personality
profiling because I'm such a big believer in it.</p>
<p>Matt:
Really? Tell me why. Top three reasons.</p>
<p>Russell:
It's in all things in life. If you're going to be a partner. If
you're going to date someone. Understanding who they are is such a
big part of it. Right? Because we think everyone sees the world the
same way we see it and it is not true at all. The way you see it,
the way we all see is so different and so if we don't understand
that at a deep level, then I get upset by what you do and at what
everyone's doing because it's like, "Don't you see what I see?" And
the reality is no they don't. So if you start understanding people
better ...</p>
<p>In fact, the software can be called Understand About Me. It's a
place you go and you take all the personality profiling and it
gives you a page that can show somebody this is me. So in five
seconds I can understand you perfectly they're like, "Oh, now I
know how to work with you." Because I understand what you are, what
your beliefs are, what your values, all the things I need to know
about you, I can find it really quickly. Where normally you're
going to go years with somebody before you understand them. I can
look at a thing and get pretty dang close in a minute.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
Now I know hot interact with you and spend time with you and work
with you. Things like that.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Question. Where does your love to learn come from? Because one of
the things I noticed from being around you, it's always like yeah,
so I had this moment where I geeked on this and I geeked out on
this. It was health and suppliments, and marketing and personality
types. There's all these different things you geek out on. Have you
always been that way? Is it like you geek out on marketing, you saw
the rewards from it, and you're like, "Wow, what if this goes into
other areas?" Where does that come from?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah, I didn't always have my life. In fact, I had a fascinating
conversation with Tom Bilyeu about this, because when I was growing
up in high school I always thought I was a dumb kid. I thought I
was an athlete, so I focused there. I thought I was an athlete, so
I was a wrestler, that was my identity, that was where I focused
at. I thought I was dumb. Because of that, straight C student high
school and college, my cumulative GPA graduating from college was
2.3. Straight C's and one B maybe somewhere in there, right?
Because I was a dumb kid.</p>
<p>When I got done I ended my wrestling career, so I stopped being
an athlete, and I was like, "Oh crap." I started to learn this
business stuff and I don't like to read. I'm a dumb kid. What do I
do? It was fascinating. Tom told me, because I had this epiphany,
I'm not actually dumb. He's like, "Actually, the reality is you
probably really were dumb. But then you changed, right?" So for me
it was like I shifted. It was fascinating.</p>
<p>Do you remember the Funnel Hacking Live where we had Lindsay
Stirling perform? One of my favorite parts of that, she did a whole
performance. If you guys don't know, Lindsay does violin dancing
stuff, and afterwards I had a Q and A with her afterwards. I had
this question I was so pumped to ask. I was waiting for her just to
like, the question is, she was on America's Got Talent, and I think
she took 7th place. When she got kicked off, Pierce Bronson or
whatever said, "You've got no talent. You're no good." Whatever,
right?</p>
<p>So I was like, do you remember that time when he said that? What
I thought she was going to say was, "Yeah, I proved him wrong.
Yeah." I was like, "What did you feel after that?" She's like,
"Yeah, I got home and I realized he was right. I wasn't very good.
So I went back and I started practicing and I started working
harder and eventually I became good enough." It was like, oh my
gosh. I got chills when I was saying it again.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
I remember when Tom said it to me, he was like, "You probably were
dumb." I was like, "I was." Because I wasn't reading things. So
with marketing that was the first thing for some reason that caught
my attention, that got me excited, right? And then if you look at
my DISC profile, ROI is my highest value. I have to see ROI in
something or I don't want to do it. So when I saw an ROI on this
reading, I was like, "Oh my gosh. I read a book, I got one little
sentence, changed a color, made more money. Oh my gosh." That is
where it started, 100%.</p>
<p>I started learning that and I started getting obsessed with
those things. As this business grew for me I started being more, I
always joke that crazy people got attracted to me, right? The best
health people, the best fitness people, the best in every market
kind of came into our world somehow. So I started getting to meet
all these people. When you're around someone who's the best in the
world at the thing, and they start talking about the thing, you
can't help but be like, "Oh my gosh, this is amazing." Right? You
zone in on that. So whenever I meet someone that's amazing and I
have a chance to talk to them like this I just geek out.</p>
<p>Like when I met your dad the first time with you guys. That's
when I bought your parenting course and everything. I was just
like, I saw you and I saw him and I was like, "I want that." So I
started going down that rabbit hole, right? I met Anthony
DiClementi, I was like, "I love this guy. I have respect for him, I
love him." Every time he talks about anything, he fascinates me,
when he talks about something it fascinates me. I have to look down
those things, right? When people fascinate me, the things that
fascinate them start fascinating me and that's when I kind of go
down those rabbit holes. This person is so intriguing and
fascinating. What makes them that way? What are they doing.</p>
<p>It's interesting. I'm not a good question asker. You guys are so
good at question askers. I've never been good at asking questions,
but I'm really good at watching what people do and then seeing it
and trying to go down the rabbit hole. What are they doing, why are
they doing it, that kind of thing.</p>
<p>Caleb:
He’s a true master in it. You can just tell. What are some things
you want to take the time to geek out on? I'm sure you see
something and you're like I want to get on that but it's not a
priority, I've got to do this. What are some things, if I had a
week or two?</p>
<p>Russell:
Just free time with nothing else involved?</p>
<p>Caleb:
What's the next thing you're going to geek out on?</p>
<p>Russell:
Oh. I would say every probably three years I get re-excited about
SEO, for some reason. I start going down that path again, because I
love it. There's times in my business when that was the focused.
It's not now at all, but I went through a couple ... Brian Dean’s a
real cool SEO guy, couple guys… I started dabbing my toe in again
and I'm like, I just want to get back into it so bad. Right now SEO
is actually our number 11 lead source as of today in ClickFunnels,
which is amazing. So we handed SEO the first four or five years,
now we're focused on it again. It's doing really well for us. I
want to go deep there because I like that. Anyway, I haven't had a
chance to do that. Any of the health stuff really, really
fascinates me.</p>
<p>Matt:
Why? I'm curious. Why are you drawn to that so much? The health
stuff.</p>
<p>Russell:
Because I've seen with myself ... My history is I got in wrestling,
at the PAC 10 tournament was my last actual wrestling match. My
wife was giving herself fertility shots in the stomach during PAC
10 so the next month se was pregnant. So I got done wrestling, got
done competing, got done running, got done lifting. All my athletic
career ended, and then my wife got pregnant. She's eating for three
kids, and I'm pumped because I don't have to work out right now,
she's hungry, I'm hungry, we're eating. We just kept eating and
eating. So over the next seven to eight months my wife gained like
60 pounds, I gained like 60 pounds. We were doing it together so
who cared, it was amazing. Then one day she has two babies and she
loses like 45 pounds and I'm like, oh crap. I'm stuck here. Where
did you go? This for me?</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
Thank you. Then at that time the business was starting and I was
stressed out trying to figure it out and I didn't get healthy
again. I just was in that state of being 65 pounds heavier for
years. But I didn't know the difference, I didn't know that I felt
differently, because I'd never been in a spot where I spent eight
hours sitting behind a computer, so I didn't know what good felt
like or bad felt like. I knew if I tried to wrestle I'd puke, so I
was like I don't feel like I'm an athlete. I just felt normal, I
thought.</p>
<p>Eight years in I was like, I don't know, I looked at myself in
the mirror and I was like, "Oh, what happened to you?" You know
what I mean? I'm sure hopefully everybody's had a chance. I was
like, huh. It was hard because in my head I knew how to work out, I
knew how to train, I knew these things. Finally I was like, "I need
to get a trainer."</p>
<p>So I got a trainer for the first time. I'd never really done
that before. Started going, and got me from I don't even know, 27,
28% body fat down to 12% in a matter of seven or eight months. I
looked better, I felt better, but what's crazy is I could work
twice as hard and twice as long. I wasn't tired. I was like, "I can
keep going. My brain's on fire. This is amazing."</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow. Just from the ...</p>
<p>Russell:
I had no idea until I lost all the weight. All of a sudden it was
just like, I can do so much more. I think, when I first met Anthony
DiClementi the first time I was like, this is my problem right now.
I am at work all day slaying dragons, doing all these things, I
have this energy. I get home at night and my two little twin boys
are there, and my little daughter, and I'm spent and I have no
energy. How do I still be a present dad and how do I have these
things?</p>
<p>The next tier was the bio hacking stuff. How do you do these
things? How do you increase energy? There's so many ways to do
that, from light therapy to supplements to sleeping to sound to
breath, all these crazy things that seem stupid. The first time
Anthony's like, "We're going to do breath work." I'm like, "We're
going to breathe? That's your bio hack? We're going to breathe
together?" He's like, "Yeah, it's going to be amazing." I'm like
super annoyed. What's the ROI on this, I've got to get back to
work.</p>
<p>So he sat me down in our gym. You've been in our wrestling room.
He sat me down and he's like, "You have to sit because if you're
standing you'll hit your head and you'll die." I'm like, what are
you talking about? He sits me down and we do these breathing
exercises where he's yelling at us and screaming. All this stuff is
happening. If anyone's ever done deep breath work it's nuts.</p>
<p>We're doing this thing where we're supposed to do this heavy,
heavy breath work until he's like, what's going to happen is the
world is going to ... Has anybody done jiu-jitsu here? Been tapped
out before?</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
So you get choked out. What will happen, the carotid artery gets
choked and the world starts shrinking like this. If you take
pressure off it, it comes back to life. If you don't, it goes
darker and darker until it disappears and you're gone, right? If
you've never been choked out, that's what happens. It's a really
fun experience. But you have the minute when you see it shrinking
around you and then it's gone, right?</p>
<p>He told me that's what's going to happen. You're going to
breathe so much that the world around you is going to start
shrinking. If you don't stop you're going to pass out. So we go all
the way to where it starts shrinking, stops, and then when you hit
that point you let me know and then you hold your breath for as
long as you can. He's like, "How long can you hold your breath
for?" I'm like, "Maybe a minute." He's like, "You'll do it for at
least five." I was like, there's no way.</p>
<p>So he says sit down, we're doing this breath thing, we're going
like crazy and sure enough the walls start doing weird stuff. I
feel like I'm on drugs. I'm sweating like crazy. We keep doing it.
He's yelling at me. All of a sudden the world starts closing around
me, I'm like, "What is happening?" And then he stops and is like,
"Hold your breath." He starts the clock. I'm sitting here holding
my breath forever, looking around. We had three or four of us guys
all doing it at the same time. I'm freaking out. And then it starts
getting quieter, things are slowing down, we're sitting there and
then he's like let some of the pressure out but don't breathe in.
Let pressure out, pressure out, pressure out, keep doing that, and
it gets done and the stop clock is over five minutes. I'm just
like, I just held my breath for five minutes.</p>
<p>Matt:
And you didn't even know it.</p>
<p>Russell:
Insane. And then the rest of the day we were on fire. It was just
like, whoa. Right? We brought a cryo-sauna at our house and we go
freeze in the cryo-sauna and the rest of the day you just feel ...
That's the thing I love now, these little weird things. Light
therapy, breathing, weird things that just seem stupid. You do it
and you can go longer, you can think better, you can do stuff. All
those things just get me so excited.</p>
<p>Anthony's fun because he randomly will just ship me weird stuff
in the mail. Just the weirdest things. It makes my wife so mad. It
just shows up. There's a big old box. She's like, what's this from?
I'm like, I'm hoping it's from Anthony, it's going to be amazing.
Just weird things. Tons of stuff.</p>
<p>I love that kind of stuff because the ROI on it is crazy.
They're always these weird things. I have this headband someone
sent me. You put this headband on, you put an app on and you start
working and it just makes you not tired, makes you focused. These
weird things. How does this work? I don't know. And they're like
oh, it works because the waves over here sync your brain and change
your brain waves and the creative state and all these things. I
mean, I don't know how it works but I just wrote two chapters.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Do you do breath work every day?</p>
<p>Russell:
No, because it's so intense. If I had a coach who could walk me
through it. I have a recording of Anthony doing it and I almost
dread it because I know how hard it is. By the time you're done
you're sweating.</p>
<p>Caleb:
I've got to get that recording.</p>
<p>Russell:
I'll get it to you. By the time you're sweating, you're like what
just happened? I just breathed for five minutes. It's weird.
Anyway, I would love to understand it on a deeper level but I don't
understand a lot of the things now. Some of them I've gone deep on,
but a lot of them I do without knowing why. I hate it because my
wife will be like, "What's this do?" And I'm like, I don't
know.</p>
<p>Matt:
Just love it.</p>
<p>Russell:
One of my buddies, Preston Eli, he wrote this blog post, he called
it the Warriornaire Workout. In there he explains part of his
morning workout. He's like, why do I do it? He's like, because Tony
Robins does, and I obey all giants who fly helicopters and have
stage presence. That quote goes to my head all the time. People ask
me, why do you do that? I'm like, because I obey all giants who fly
helicopters and have stage presence, that's it. I'm like, I don't
know the reason why, Tony says so, therefore I will do it. I would
like to understand it at a deeper level so I have a better response
than I obey all giants with helicopters and stage presence. But
that's a pretty good reason. Anyway.</p>
<p>Matt:
Real quick, does anybody else want to throw in a question for
Russell? Anybody else here live with us?</p>
<p>Caleb:
Let me ask one more real fast. Because I want to. I want to ask
this. We were just having sushi, I was asking you, what are some of
the favorite periods of your life? One of them you said was
wrestling, which I found funny because by far one of my favorite
periods is baseball, which people wouldn't expect because obviously
I've been on stage and all this other stuff and that should take
the cake. But those moments when you're just on the field, you're
in the zone, there's nothing better. Where, with what you get to do
now, whether it's being live on a webinar or being on stage or
whatever it is, where do you get the same feeling of wrestling? Do
you know what I mean? You know, the feeling in your chest?</p>
<p>Russell:
Today while we were in line at the grocery store I talked to your
dad about this. I said that the best feelings I ever had in my life
were from wrestling. The feeling of winning a hard match that I
wasn't supposed to win and getting your hand raised, I never felt
something like that, that felt as good as that, ever. I've been
searching in business to find that, and I've never found it.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
Do you feel like sports is like business in any sense?</p>
<p>Matt:
Good question.</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure, yeah. There's a lot, for sure. What I was going to say is
the closest I've ever gotten to feeling that is when you serve at
an event and you see a table rush and you see not only people where
they get the a-ha, but enough of an a-ha where it gets them to get
up and to move. That's the closest I've ever felt to that. It's not
as good, but it's the closest I've ever felt to that. Which is why
I love doing the big things. I get a glimpse of that.</p>
<p>Caleb:
How close? Scale of one to 10. Wrestling's a 10. Where does that
rank?</p>
<p>Russell:
If wrestling's a 10, I'd say it's about an eight. In fact it's
interesting because when I first started in business I was racing
for that, trying to find it, trying to find it, trying to find it.
It took me years before I was like ...</p>
<p>Matt:
Is it disappointing?</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure, yeah. We launch today and make a million dollars and it's
like, huh. That sucked. What else have we got. Give me something
else.</p>
<p>Matt:
Exactly.</p>
<p>Russell:
The money goal is always what I thought was going to be the thing,
and those always were just like, huh. In fact, literally one of the
main reasons I did the Two Comma Club Awards, for me I need, maybe
it's just from a decade of my life someone grabbing my hand and
raising it. I was like, entrepreneurs need that. No one raises our
hands. Two Comma Club Awards, for me, is me lifting their hands
like you did it. I needed that, they need that. That's one of the
main reasons I did that, because that's the equivalent of that.
Anyway.</p>
<p>Matt:
How many millionaires have you created?</p>
<p>Russell:
This year we passed 1,000 people that won the two comma club award.
We're over 120.</p>
<p>Matt:
How does it feel to say that? To say it? You know how sometimes
it's like so many people that have passion or goals or huge dreams
and visions, rarely do they really celebrate what's happening on
the journey. Do you find yourself ever getting where your vision is
so big and your passion is so deep that even saying things like
there's 1,000 millionaires. Dude, that's huge. Man, 1,000 people
that are millionaires because of you.</p>
<p>Russell:
I think the first time I really got that, probably the most
impactful time, was the very first Funnel Hacking live that we gave
away Two Comma Club Awards. It was the third Funnel Hacking live.
It was a couple of months before that we had the idea of a Two
Comma Club and an award, talking about that. I legitimately didn't
know. I wonder if anyone in ClickFunnels has actually made a
million dollars. I don't even know. So Dave went back and the
database guys went through everything and I remember he came back
and was like, there's 79 people right now that made a million
dollars. I was just like, are you serious?</p>
<p>Matt:
Was it a boost of confidence? What did it do for you?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was one of those things, looking back on me doing these events
where two people showed up and nobody showed up, hardly anybody,
where I was so excited about this? I was like, how come nobody
cares? To now it was like, this is actually, I've talked about this
long enough people are believing it and now they're doing it. You
start seeing it, and there's the fruits of it. In my mind I was
like a million bucks, even then, ClickFunnel was new, I was like a
million dollars is hard. Most of my friends I knew were like made
somewhere near a million dollars. There were people who have been
in this business for a long time. A million bucks is a big deal.
That was most people's goal still.</p>
<p>The fact that 79 people had done it, that was just weird to me.
I think that was the biggest one, the realization that just like,
oh my gosh. It's not just a theory and I think it works, it's
working. It's working at a scale that was unfathomable to me at the
time. 79 people. To go to 200 and then 500 and then 1,000 is
crazy.</p>
<p>Matt:
What was your question, buddy?</p>
<p>Speaker 4:
You're talking about how at each level of success you hit, some of
your mentors hit that ceiling, right? Because of the posturing,
right? So ultimately I feel like when you get to a new level of
success it requires you to upgrade your identity, your self image.
What have you found is the number one routine, what's your process
for upgrading the identity, upgrading your self image? Because I
think that's so important because it can either hold you back and
have you self sabotage and not take action and go after what you
want, or it's going to be the thing that keeps you at that level
and continues to propel you forward. What's kept you ...</p>
<p>Russell:
That's good. It's weaved through everything, right? The one that's
the most obvious external, especially in our world, because you see
marketers, most people when they first start selling whatever it is
they're selling they're bragging about themselves. Here's my ad,
here's my name. It's all about them, that's the first tier of it.
And then the second tier, when they start having the realization, I
feel like is when they stop talking about themselves and start
talking about the people they've helped.</p>
<p>Speaker 4:
Mm.</p>
<p>Russell:
You see externally. You don't hear me talking about how much money
I make. I'm not like, oh, check out what I got. I talk about all
the other people. It's like, that's next year, is that. And then
for me the third tier now, which has been really cool, is talking
about Lady Boss, right? The success story isn't Kailin, it's
Kailin's customers, right? So it's like that next tier. What you're
talking about is like the external version of that. There's a lot
of internal things that you've got to deal with, but you'll notice
it shifting in people when you look at just their messaging and
what they're saying. From the way they podcast, they video, they
market, their ads and everything, it's the shift of it's not about
me, it's about them. It's not even about them, that's the external
version of it.</p>
<p>Internally I think it's really, it's what we talked about, I
can't remember why, but we brought up yesterday or today I had this
really successful guy I met one time who the first time we met he
was like tell me your story. So I was telling him the wrestle
posturing story about how great I was. He was like, no. Tell me
about the time you failed. So I was like, well, I'm in the middle
of one right now. So I told him let me tell you. I told this whole
thing. I remember afterwards I was so embarrassed. He's going to
think I'm an idiot. You know, that fear? He was like, good, you
cycled. I was like, what? He was like, I will not work with
entrepreneurs who haven't cycled at least once. Because if they
haven't then they still believe their own bio, right?</p>
<p>I think that's the biggest thing, the internal version is that.
The first time around, before you cycle, you think it's all you. I
know for me it was. I remember doing this the first time, I'm like,
I am a genius. I'm the smartest guy in the world. And then when it
collapsed I was like, oh, there's a lot of things outside my
control. This is not me. There is a team, there's God, there's all
these other things that are making this possible. There's a
scripture, I can't remember where it's at, it's the Bible, Book of
Mormon, but it says you can either be humble or God will humble ...
Ah, I'm misquoting it by far. But it's like God will humble people.
You can be humble or he will humble you. So it's like, looking at
that, I'm like round two I'm going to be a humble person because I
don't want to be humbled again, right?</p>
<p>Matt:
I still feel it.</p>
<p>Russell:
This is not me. I understand, I look around now and it's 100% like
there's no way I would be where I am right now if Dan Usher didn't
make videos the way he does. There's no way I'd be here right now
if Todd Dickerson could not code software the way he does. There's
no way, all these things are so many people.</p>
<p>Matt:
You're so right.</p>
<p>Russell:
Then there's so many success stories that inside of it there's just
so many people. And then there's the grace of God. I just look at
the timeline of when ClickFunnels came into the market. I've now
got funnels for a decade, nobody cared. Then all these things were
happening, we started having the idea for ClickFunnels, started
building it, we're creating it, and then literally we go to traffic
and conversion, Todd's halfway done building ClickFunnels, and Ryan
Deiss stands on stage in the biggest event at the time and he
spends the entire four days talking about funnels. Talking about
how funnels are the greatest thing.</p>
<p>Everybody's like, what's a funnel? They're all taking notes. Me
and Todd are like, does he know we're building? He's talking about
funnels. He's talking about funnels like crazy. And then the next
day everyone gets home from traffic and conversion and everybody
that day, the next day 8,000 funnel consultants pop up. Everybody's
a funnel consultant. Everyone is on Facebook talking about funnel
consultants and teaching funnels and all this stuff. We're like, oh
my gosh. Todd, get this software done, everybody's talking about
funnels right now. So he's coding like crazy, all this stuff is
coming around, all of a sudden everyone's like, millions of funnel
consultants, everyone's doing it, and all of a sudden we're like,
hey, we created this thing called ClickFunnels, here it is.</p>
<p>All of a sudden all of the consultants and all the people and
everyone came and we were the only platform. I look at that, as
smart as I think I am, there is so much grace and timing. If I'd
launched a year earlier, a year later, it would not have hit the
way it did. 100% it was the timing of all these things that have to
happen. If it wasn't for that ... I can act like I'm smart, I'm a
genius, but man, there's so much divinity that came into all the
things. There's no way it could happen without that. Anyway, just
understanding those things.</p>
<p>Matt:
What did you learn when you were cycling?</p>
<p>Russell:
So many lessons. Russell, you are not that good looking. Or cool.
Or anything.</p>
<p>Matt:
It's basically not about you, right? Yeah, I feel that. So what was
hardest? What were the tough lessons?</p>
<p>Caleb:
How many times did you cycle?</p>
<p>Russell:
Two big ones for sure.</p>
<p>Matt:
Really? Do you mind sharing?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah, the first time was after I was trying to figure this thing
out. I remember one of my buddies was like, you're making money
online? I'm like, yeah. He's like, that's cool. I'm like, do you
want a job? He's like, what? I'm like, you're the first person I
know who's interested. I'll pay you to come hang out with me. He's
like, all right.</p>
<p>So I hired my friend. He's like, I have some friends too. I'm
like, okay. So I start hiring all these people because I want
someone to talk to. Anyway, it was really bad. I ended up having a
whole bunch of employees nobody knew how to do anything. I didn't
know how to train anybody. I was hiding in the room trying to make
money to pay payroll while they're standing outside like, do you
want us to do anything? I'm like, don't talk to me, I've got to
make money to pay your payroll. They're like, we can help. I'm
like, I don't have time to explain anything to you. It was
horrible. I built it up to the point where it was just like, I was
launching a new thing as fast as we could just to pay payroll.</p>
<p>As an entrepreneur, you kill something you get to eat, right?
It's like the greatest thing in the world. Employees, they want to
get paid every two weeks whether they killed anything or not. I did
not realize that until they were like we need money and I'm like,
but we haven't made any money. They're like you have to pay me. I'm
like, what? I'm so confused. Like, okay. Anyway, it had grown and
we didn't have a model, sustainable.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
You just launched stuff to see if it works?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. When I was by myself it was like, I had an idea today, let's
try it. You launch it, it makes some money, sweet. And then it was
like, I made 20, 30 grand. It was my wife and I, so it was like,
that lasts nine months. You know?</p>
<p>Caleb:
What did you sell? Obviously I know the potato gun backstory. You
said I talked about funnels for like a decade before that. What
were you selling during that decade leading up to ClickFunnels? I
know it's an inordinate amount of stuff. Is there anything not even
close to funnels, like something ...</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. The very first, pre-potato guns, my very first big idea was
... Back then what everyone was doing, you know who Yanik Silver
is. Yanik would write a book and then he would sell the resale
rights to the books. Someone else would buy it and they could sell
it. I remember I got online, I saw these books, I bought a book
from Yanik and I'm like, I can sell this. I bought a book from
somebody else. I was buying all these eBooks I could sell. But then
inside the books they would have links back to all their sites. I'd
sell the book and I was like, I made 10 bucks selling the book. And
then inside the book Yanik is selling his thousand dollar course
and seminars and things. They make all this money. I'm like, I got
10 bucks. He made like $1,000 off of me selling his book. I
remember being mad. I was like I wish there was a way I could brand
this ebook so that before somebody opens it and sees his ad they'd
see my ad. That was the first idea I ever had, ever.</p>
<p>So my first product was called Zip Brander, it was this little
thing that would take an ebook and it would brand it. You open it
up and it popped up an ad. You see the ad and you click a button
and it would take you inside the ebook. It was my first thing. We
launched that and I sold 20 or 30 copies of it. But that was the
first money I ever made, it was amazing. I had a customer list, I
was like this is amazing. And then the way I was selling those, I
was going to forums. This is pre-Facebook, so all you little kids,
before Facebook, before MySpace, before Friendster, we used to go
to these things called forums. They were these things where people
would talk all day. So we'd go to these forums. One of the rules in
the forums is you could comment all you wanted but you could have a
signature file. At the end you could have like, Russel Brunson,
check out my new software Zip Brander.</p>
<p>I'd go to these forums and I would just spend eight hours a day
answering questions and asking questions and everything. People see
my ad on every little thing. My footer was on everything. That's
how I was selling Zip Brander initially. I was in 50 forums posting
like crazy but I couldn't keep up with it. I was like, man, if I
could create a software that would manage this whole thing, that
would be amazing. So my second product is called Forum Fortunes. It
was this little software that would manage your posting on every
single forum. You post and you could see if someone responded back
on Forum 49 it would pop up and you're like, oh, you can go find it
and go back and comment and keep the discussion. I made it for
myself and then we started selling that. We sold more of those
because I now had a little customer base here and went bigger.
After that it was the next. It was always what's the next thing.
That's kind of how it started back in the days, little tools and
things like that.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
How do you know when you're shooting all these bullets, how do you
know when you shoot a cannonball?</p>
<p>Matt:
Good question.</p>
<p>Russell:
The thing about it initially, I had been married, I was making zero
dollars a year as a wrestler, so for me to make $600 in a month,
that was a cannonball. That was insane. I thought I was the coolest
kid in the world. $600 was insane. So I did four or five little
things. I remember it was Christmastime and I remember my wife
wanted to buy a couch and it was a $2,000 couch. I was just like,
oh, I can't afford that. I don't have a job. I'm getting sick to my
stomach.</p>
<p>I had this idea, what if I do a sell and just sell a whole bunch
of crap that we had. I had a bunch of eBooks I bought rights to, a
couple of things I had created, so we made this Grinch sale. I
remember I wrote the copy, it was like, it was the Grinch Before
Christmas or something. It had a picture of the Grinch and his
heart growing three sizes, I don't know. I wrote this copy. My wife
and I had been married a year, she really wants a couch, I can't
afford a couch, so if you guys buy this, if I sell 32 of these
things, I can buy her a couch and put it under the Christmas tree.
It will be amazing.</p>
<p>Caleb:
You said that in the copy?</p>
<p>Russell:
In the copy, yeah. It was the reason why. I still have the page, I
can show it to you. I know exactly where it's at, I can show it to
you. So I had the whole page and then only an email list of like a
couple hundred people at the time. I still had an affiliate
program, so at the top it had an affiliate link. So I sent an email
to my list and went to bed that night. Someone on my list was a guy
named Carl Galletti, I haven't heard about Carl in a long time. He
was a big famous copy writer at the time. Carl went and saw the
thing, bought it, and started affiliating. So he joined the
affiliate program, he was like this is awesome. He took that email,
sent it to his entire list of this huge thing. So I go to bed. I
wake up the next morning, we're at $10,000 in sales.</p>
<p>Matt:
How much before you went to bed?</p>
<p>Russell:
Oh, like $30, $40 or something. I was like, what just happened. Did
I rob someone? I didn't know what happened. I looked at my email
and there's all these people who were like, hey, I bought two of
them, I hope you can get your wife that couch. Oh, I sent it to my
friend. All these people. Because Carl promoted it, all these other
people who follow Carl saw it. Carl is like it's converting like
crazy. Tons of people are buying it.</p>
<p>I'm freaking out. I'm going to wrestling practice trying to
answer customer support. I'm late for practice, I ran into
wrestling practice, I get back out I'm like, "Oh my gosh, I made
like $600 in sales." I'm freaking out. Anyway, the whole thing goes
through and over that, I think it was a seven day sale or something
like that, we made $35,000. Which is more money than I'd seen in
all my lifetime combined times 100, right?</p>
<p>I paid probably 10 grand in affiliates. We made, I don't know,
$25,000 that we got to keep. I was like, "Oh my gosh." I told
Colette, and Colette's like, my wife. I love her. She doesn't
understand the business part of things at all. I was like, "We made
$25,000." She was like, "Is it illegal?" First thing. "Are you
going to go to jail? Is it illegal?" I'm like, "No, I don't think
so. I'm pretty sure."</p>
<p>The first thing I did is I went and bought the couch for her,
for Christmas. We got it back, I got a picture of her, sent it out
to the list saying thank you so much, you got the Christmas gift,
the couch. They all celebrated together, all the people. I was like
oh my gosh, this is the greatest game of all time. This is so much
fun. I was like, what's the next idea, what's the next thing. It
was like that, these little things. After that one was done now I
had way more customers, all these people that had bought my product
knew who I was now so the next thing was easier so it incrementally
kept growing and getting bigger. Somewhere along the line I
launched the potato gun thing. Upsales of things.</p>
<p>We didn't call them funnels back then. We called them sales
flows or sales processes. Talk about your sales flow, what's your
sales flow.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Sales flow.</p>
<p>Russell:
I remember Dylan Jones was our partner at ClickFunnels. Before Todd
we tried to build something like ClickFunnels, we called it
Click.com.com, which is a horrible name. But Dylan's, I still have
all the UI images, and in there we had a whole section for sales
flows and all these things. It's like, this was the first
ClickFunnels. Because Dylan was on the UI eventually on
ClickFunnels anyway, but we literally designed something like this
five or six years earlier. Just crazy.</p>
<p>Matt:
Do you think that all those little failures and all the trying and
that kind of energy is what brought you here today?</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure. It's the key. I wish I could grab everybody because
everybody's like, okay, I'm waiting for my ClickFunnels, or I'm
waiting for my thing. They're waiting and they're waiting and
they're waiting. I was like, the reason why I got this thing was
because I didn't wait. If someone were to give me ClickFunnels
initially it would have been bankrupt in 15 minutes, right? You
have to become worthy of the thing eventually. You don't become
worthy by waiting, you become worthy by trying. And trying and
trying and trying. Eventually, if you keep doing that, over time,
then God's like, all right, he's going to do it. He's built 150
funnels, now I'll give him the idea.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow, that's powerful.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
How much more did you feel that all your other friends are in the
same game?</p>
<p>Matt:
I hope you guys take there's more that's caught than Todd. That's
some gold in what he just shared right there, what you were just
sharing. But go ahead. What was the question?</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
I was just saying how much more would you fail if all your other
friends were playing the same game?</p>
<p>Russell:
All my friends were like why are you launching more stuff? Why do
you keep doing things? They do like one product launch a year. They
got so annoyed. They were like, dude, stop doing stuff. I'm like,
why would I stop doing this? This is so much fun. It was just
confusing to me. Why don't you guys do more? Everyone, they make
money they'd just be done.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Why would you keep doing more? Was it genuinely like one funnel
away? Like this next funnel's the one. Were you just like you sold
yourself on it, this is it, so you keep going? Or did you just
really enjoy it?</p>
<p>Russell:
Well each one I thought was. Each one, every time I was so
surprised, like this is amazing. That was the one. The next one's
bigger. Oh my gosh, that was even better, who knew? And then I just
kept going from there, you know what I mean? So I wasn't waiting
for ClickFunnels or anything like that. I was just enjoying the
journey every time. It was so exciting. Eventually it was like, oh
crap, who knew that that was going to do what it did.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Was it all emails? Was there any ads or was there anything to scale
the traffic?</p>
<p>Russell:
First 10 years was 100% emails, partnerships. There wasn't ads back
then. I mean, there was Google ads, but the first initial Google
slap happened about the time I was getting started. Prior to that a
lot of guys I knew built their email list off of Google ads and
then the slap happened. A lot of them had lists. I started getting
to know those guys, going to events, meeting them, so that's how it
started initially was tons of that. And then there was this big gap
for years where paid ads weren't a thing. Some people did banner
ads, but it wasn't consistent. It wasn't like it is nowadays. It
was harder. You worked harder and all the stuff wasn't there.
Mostly we focused on ... If you didn't have an email list, you
weren't playing the game. It's like, who's got lists, how can you
build lists, what can you do?</p>
<p>Matt:
You still think that's true to a degree?</p>
<p>Russell:
100%. That's why the traffic seekers book was so important for me
to write, I feel like, because most of the people in the game today
have been blessed with Zuckerberg's simple Facebook ads that make
the game easy.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
They've never focused on building lists. I was like, you guys, just
so you know, Zuckerberg is going to screw us all. It's going to
happen.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Caleb:
It will happen.</p>
<p>Russell:
It's like, if you don't have a list you're all screwed. I've been
through this for 18 years now, I've been through five or six
cycles. I've seen people who made millions of dollars who now are
not online. The people who have waded the storm the whole time are
all the list builders. They're the ones who survived. Everyone else
who's good at ads, they come and they go and they come and they
go.
Russell Brunson:
What's up everybody, this is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to the
Marketing Seekers Podcast. So I have got to ask you, what did you
think about episode number one of the World Changers Roundtable?
Hopefully, you loved it. There were so many things covered in that
42 minutes.</p>
<p>Anyway, we are moving on to the next part of this interview. As
you know, this is going to be broken down into four parts because
they kept me there, handcuffed to a table, until 3:00 AM. I'm just
joking. They didn't really. But, the question was so intriguing, we
were having so much fun, we just kept going and going until finally
I was like, "I have to fly out in three hours. I need to get back
to my hotel."</p>
<p>But now we're going to go dive into the second part. This next
episode is probably another 30 to 40, 45 minutes or so as well. So
these are some things we'll be covering in this one, which is
really fun. We talk about, number one, why my business partner,
Todd Dickerson, is so amazing, and hopefully give you ideas about
if you're pursuing opportunities and trying to land your dream job
or partnership or whatever. Number two, we talked about personality
profiling, how we actually are hiring here at ClickFunnels. We
talked about where my love for learning came from. We talked about
transition for me, going from an athlete to a business person and a
marketer.</p>
<p>We talked about some of the lessons I learned from Lindsey
Stirling, things I was not expecting to hear from her that totally
changed everything for me. We talked about people who intrigue me,
my interest in health and bio hacking. We talked about is there
anything that happens inside of this business that gets me as
excited as what I felt in wrestling. We talked about what thing is
close, but nothing actually has ever hit it. We talked about the
first Two Comma Club Awards. We talked about how to upgrade your
identity as you grow. We talked about the fact that you have to
cycle and fail and rebuild in your businesses. We talked about the
launch of ClickFunnels and how it wasn't just the fact that I was a
genius, because I wasn't. There are so many things.</p>
<p>Talking about the grace of God and how it tied into the launch
of ClickFunnels. We talked about some of my early products, like
Zip Brander and Forum Fortunes. We talked about my Christmas Grinch
sale, which was the very first big sale, big launch I ever did, to
my little tiny list that made enough money to cover Christmas for
my wife and I when we were first getting started. We talked about
becoming worthy. We talked about list building, how it's better
than buying ads, and a whole bunch of other things.</p>
<p>It's amazing, this could be 40 courses all wrapped into one
super podcast episode. So if you liked the last episode, I think
you're going to love this one as well. And I've got two more after
this, coming back, going deeper into this conversation with the
Roundtable of World Changers. So, that said, we're going to cue the
theme song. When we come back, we'll dive right into the second
section here of the interview.</p>
<p>Matt Maddix:
Dave and Todd, I mean, just wow. Those dudes are like... But what
about those guys?</p>
<p>Russell:
So here's Todd's story. So the real long story short, I bought some
software, it was coding Ruby on Rails, didn't know that. Bought
this company with the last...</p>
<p>I didn't have the money. So I borrowed money, bought this
company, coded on some platform we didn't know, and I was like,
"Screw it," right? And I tried to hire people to fix it, nobody
could fix this platform until finally I was leaving the office one
day. I literally emailed the people saying, "Turn off the servers."
We lost all of our money to this company. They shut it down. And
I'm walking out of the office and I had this impression of like,
"There could be someone on your email list who knows Ruby on
Rails." I was like, "That's weird. I had a bunch of internet
marketing nerds. There's no one that's like, 'Ruby on
Rails...'"</p>
<p>Anyway. It was starting with the impression from God, I stopped,
turned back around, set the computer to open back up, sent an email
to my list. "If you know Ruby on Rails, I'm looking for a partner.
I bought a software company and it's not working. Please send me a
message." Send.</p>
<p>Matt:
And that's all you said?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. And lo and behold, three years earlier, Todd bought some
random thing from me, happened to be on my email list. He built the
website three or four years earlier that was making six figures a
year on autopilot. Hadn't worked in four years. Just hanging out
relaxing with his wife and his daughter. And an email comes in and
it says, "If you know Ruby on Rails, I'm looking for a partner."
He's like, "I know Ruby on Rails. I can be Russell's partner."
Emails me back. And at first I see him and his beautiful wife and
I'm like, "There's no way he's a programmer. There's no way." That
was literally my thought.</p>
<p>But he was the only person that responded back so I was like,
"Okay, well, here's the login to the site. Fix it. I don't know
what to do. I'm not a coder."</p>
<p>I went to bed, woke up the next morning. He's like, "Cool, I
fixed the site. Plus I found this, this, and this. And I changed
this. And I moved these things,", and all of this stuff. He's like,
"It's working now. Do you have anything else you want to do
together?"</p>
<p>I'm like, "Huh." And so I give him another project, another
project. And for an entire year Todd and I worked together, and
never once did he ever ask me for money, ever.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
Not a penny. And I remember he started finding Boise to work on a
project together ...</p>
<p>Matt:
You're telling me he worked for you for an entire year?</p>
<p>Russell:
For free. More than a year.</p>
<p>Caleb Maddix:
Why was that?</p>
<p>Russell:
I don't know. I found out later. He'd gone to Robert Kiyosaki at
this event and he said, "Find someone who's doing what you want to
do and work for them for free." So he told me that years later. I
didn't know that.</p>
<p>Matt:
Todd, if you're watching dude. I love you man. You're legit.</p>
<p>Russell:
And so he kept coming and he started coming to Boise and we started
becoming friends. The smartest developer I've ever met. Literally
the smartest person I've ever met. I'll go that far. Just genius.
And he'd come out to Boise and we'd work on projects and ideas. We
tried to launch a couple of things. None of them really worked. And
we were just trying stuff. He was just always there, always
serving, always doing stuff. And one day were in Boise and I was
looking over his shoulder cause we're looking at stuff and I saw
his email. And there's all these emails from some recruiting site
or something. I was like, "What's that?" He's like, "Oh, it's
people recruiting me for a Ruby job." And I was like, "Do you get a
lot of those?" And he's like, "I get three or for a day." I'm like,
"Really? Are they good offers?"</p>
<p>He's like, "I don't know. Let's check it out." He opened it up
and the first one was like $400,000 a year starting salary. I'm
like, "What?" The next one is $350,000. The next was 5 ... Insane
things. I'm like, "Why don't you do that?" He's like, "I don't want
to work for them. I want to be your partner man." I'm like, "What?"
And then I all of a sudden had this realization that I hadn't paid
him in a year. We didn't have much money at the time, we're still
at the backside of a business failure when we met. I'm like, "I can
pay you maybe $50,000 a year. Can I pay you that?" He's like,
"Whatever." So I told our little bookkeeper, "Pay Todd $50,000 a
year." And they're like, "Okay." So he did that and next year we're
paying $50,000 a year. We're doing stuff and we have more things.
Started to get a little success here and there. Making more money.
Back in Boise again. And I'm like, "Can I pay you some more?" And
he's like, "Whatever."</p>
<p>Matt:
So he wasn't ever just asking?</p>
<p>Russell:
Never in his life has he asked me for money. Ever. So we bumped it
up to $100,000 a year because that's what we got, the year before
that, after a year or two working together. And then, it was crazy,
the day Leadpages got the first round of funding for $5,000,000,
the same day Todd was flying to Boise. And he gets the email. It's
east coast so he's two hours ahead. He's awake and on the plane, he
sees the email, forwards it to me, and then jumps in the plane.
He's flying for four hours.</p>
<p>I wake up. I see the email and I was like, "Leadpages? Got 5
..." I was like, we built landing page software in the past. I was
perplexed and angry. And then Todd lands. And Todd, he's a little
guy, he comes into the office all angry. He's like, "Leadpages got
5 million!" He's like, "I can build Leadpages tonight. Do you want
to build lead pages?"</p>
<p>I'm like, "Yeah. Let's compete with Leadpages." He's like, "All
right."</p>
<p>Matt:
No way. Dude. I love this.</p>
<p>Russell:
This is like angry Todd. I love angry Todd. I like all Todds, but
angry Todd is the best Todd.</p>
<p>Matt:
Is it? Okay.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's just pissed because he's like, "I can build this tonight.
Everything thing they got we can have done tonight." So we're
getting all ready. What should we call it and everything. And then
he's like, "Wait, we're building this. You want to add anything
else to it?" And I was like, "Oh. Yeah. What if it did this? And
what if it did this?" And we spent a week in front of a white board
saying, "What if it did?", and we mapped out ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Matt:
So you're talking about a week where you guys just locked in and
you were just having fun. Just doodling and whatever.</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. He's like, "Oh, I can do that. We can do that." We're
brainstorming all sorts of stuff so we map the whole thing out.</p>
<p>Matt:
Did you know at that moment you were onto something big? At that
moment right there, when you guys were like ... Or was it just
still like ...</p>
<p>Russell:
All lot of people have tried something like that. I tried before
other people tried. No one had done it. So I was kind of skeptical
but Todd's like, "I can do this. This is easy." I'm like, "Okay
because I tried it ..." He's like, "No dude, I can do it. This is
easy." So I was, excuse me, optimistically hopeful because he's a
genius but I was also nervous. But anyways, we map it out and then
we bought Clickpros.com. I wanted to call it ClickFusion because I
own ClickFusion, but we'd had three failed businesses called
ClickFusion. All of them failed and Todd was like, "No. It's bad
karma. We can't." I'm like, "But the logo is so cool dude."</p>
<p>Matt:
I love it. You love the logo.</p>
<p>Russell:
And he's like, "No, we can't." He's like, "It's got a jinx on it or
something. We can't do that. You have to come up with a different
name."</p>
<p>I was like, "But ClickFusion is the coolest name ever."</p>
<p>So we're trying things. Click everything and then ClickFunnels.
We're like, "Ah." That was the thing. We're so excited</p>
<p>Matt:
Who first said it? Do you remember? The words ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Caleb:
It's almost like God saying, "Let there be light."</p>
<p>Russell:
I would assume it was me but I'm not positive. I'll have to ask
Todd on that one.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Well, when you said it, was it instant? Like fire?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was insane, it was available.</p>
<p>Matt:
Oh, you know that feeling, right? Checking domains. You're like…
chills.</p>
<p>Russell:
How has no one thought of this before? And so we got it and I
remember I was driving him to the airport at the end of the week to
take him back home. And we got to the airport. Boise airport, It's
a small airport. So we pull up to the thing to get out and you can
tell he's probably nervous waiting. And before we get out of the
car he's like, "I really want to do this man. I'm excited." I'm
like, "Me too. Me too."</p>
<p>He's like, "I don't want to do this like your employee though. I
want to do it as your partner."</p>
<p>And in that moment, I was just like all the fear of ... I'd
tried partners in the past. It hadn't worked. All this stuff and
all the everything. And it was just this weird thing of just all
the emotions were hitting me as he sat in the car, about to get out
the car. I have 15, 20 seconds before he's going to to go. I was
just thinking about him. I was like, he's never asked me for money.
He's never done anything. He's served. He's given everything. I was
just looking at him. I was like, "All right let's do it." He's
like, "Cool." And he got out of the car and he's gone.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wait a minute. So at that moment? Is was that quick?</p>
<p>Russell:
That was it.</p>
<p>Matt:
It was a gut feeling that you just knew. That he was ...</p>
<p>Russell:
It was him. Yeah. And I was literally... I said this on stage at
Funnel hacking live, outside of marrying my wife, it was the
greatest decision I ever made.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah. I remember you saying that with tears.</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Matt:
Why though? I'm curious because it's not just ClickFunnels.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's amazing. If you look at our personality profiles, it's
fascinating. We have the same personality profiles. The
Myers-Briggs. Except for one letter's different. Where I'm a feeler
he's a thinker. And it's been magical as a partnership because we
both have so much respect for each other that we don't try to fight
each other. And it's very much like if I wanted to do something,
I'm like, "This is what I want to do. This what I'm feeling. What
do you think?" And he'll come back and be like, "Well, I think
this." And so I come up from feeling instead of thinking and it's
really cool. So sometimes his thinking will trump my feeling. And
I'm like, "You're actually right. Let's not do that." Or vice
versa. Where he's like, "I'm thinking this." And I'm like, "I don't
know why but I feel this." And he'll be like, "Okay."</p>
<p>He respects that. We just have such mutual respect that we've
never been in a fight. We've never argued. We've never had
problems. It's been amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
And he's similar to like we talk about with Dan. He went back home
after us white boarding that, sat in his basement for five or six
months and built ClickFunnels by himself.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Really just by himself?</p>
<p>Russell:
100% by himself.</p>
<p>Caleb:
No other team. No other dev?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was just him. And the right before we launched, we brought in
another partner, Dylan, who built the front-end editor and did a
lot of the UI. And so then it was those two as we got closer and
closer to the launch. And then for the next year it was just those
two that did everything. And then after a year, we started bringing
in other developers. But it was 100% Todd.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
He's amazing. In all aspects. You know you have friends you think
they know everything about everything. That's like Todd except he
actually knows everything about everything. You ask him anything
and he's just like ... I don't know how he does it. And I'll always
fact check him, like, "Oh my gosh. He's right again." He's
brilliant. It's amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
So for those of us who have partners or are maybe going into
partnership, what's your best advice? And what do you feel like he
does right that other partners don't do?</p>
<p>Russell:
I think the hardest thing with partners is typically we want to
partner with someone who is just like us. We did a podcast most
recently. Dean, Tony and I, right? We've done two partnerships.
Both partnerships made it through the launch and they stopped. Made
it through the launch and stopped. The podcast was like, "Why?" I
love Dean. I love Tony. They're amazing. The problem is that me and
Dean had the exact same skill set.</p>
<p>Matt:
Oh.</p>
<p>Russell:
And so the problem is that both of us are right. We both understand
it right, but we do it differently. And so it's like You have two
people, and so typically you want to partner with those people who
are like you. You're like, "Oh, we think the same. We should be
partners." But that's not necessarily the right thing because then
you've got two alphas with the same skillset, and someone has to
win and someone has to lose. And it's hard. Whereas me and Todd, we
have different skill sets. There is never a winner or a loser. We
can both win because different skill sets, both the same mission.
It's really easy.</p>
<p>So I think the biggest thing is you're trying to find the yin
yang. You're not trying to find someone who thinks like you or acts
like you. In fact, this is true in most hiring processes as well. I
used to have people like, "Send me a video if you want this job."
Right? So I get these videos, and the people that I wanted to hire
were the people like me. I'm like, "This person's awesome. They
think like me. They're a genius. They're amazing." You'll hire
them, and within a week I'm like, "I hate this person." It's
horrible. So we started shifting the way we do our hiring based on
personality profiling instead. DISC profile drives most of my own
personal hiring so I know that I'm a high D, high I, high S. No C
at all. Right? And so the people I need to hire around me are high
S, high C.</p>
<p>The problem is the people I who I watched their videos and I'm
pumped, they're high D, high I. So I'm like, "Yeah. These people
are awesome. They're charismatic. I'm going to love them. They're
drivers, they're awesome. Worst employees ever.</p>
<p>Matt:
Right.</p>
<p>Russell:
Right? So when people send us this profile, first I find the right
profile and then from there I do interviews. Because if I interview
ahead of time I get sold by the people who sell and then they're
horrible employees. And so I make sure they're high S high C,
because I know that if I talk to high S high C, I'm going to be
kind of bummed out. Like, "Oh, I don't know if this is the kind of
person that I'm going to jive with." But they're the best people to
surround myself with because I'm such a high D high S. I'm a
creator. I'm throwing things up in the air and I need people who
are S and C, who are faithful finishers, who are going to take the
things, capture them, and make sure that it's amazing.</p>
<p>Matt:
Do you feel like businesses and entrepreneurs are making a mistake
by not having their employees and their team take these tests?</p>
<p>Russell:
100%. I have a new company we're launching all about personality
profiling because I'm such a big believer in it.</p>
<p>Matt:
Really? Tell me why. Top three reasons.</p>
<p>Russell:
It's in all things in life. If you're going to be a partner. If
you're going to date someone. Understanding who they are is such a
big part of it. Right? Because we think everyone sees the world the
same way we see it and it is not true at all. The way you see it,
the way we all see is so different and so if we don't understand
that at a deep level, then I get upset by what you do and at what
everyone's doing because it's like, "Don't you see what I see?" And
the reality is no they don't. So if you start understanding people
better ...</p>
<p>In fact, the software can be called Understand About Me. It's a
place you go and you take all the personality profiling and it
gives you a page that can show somebody this is me. So in five
seconds I can understand you perfectly they're like, "Oh, now I
know how to work with you." Because I understand what you are, what
your beliefs are, what your values, all the things I need to know
about you, I can find it really quickly. Where normally you're
going to go years with somebody before you understand them. I can
look at a thing and get pretty dang close in a minute.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
Now I know hot interact with you and spend time with you and work
with you. Things like that.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Question. Where does your love to learn come from? Because one of
the things I noticed from being around you, it's always like yeah,
so I had this moment where I geeked on this and I geeked out on
this. It was health and suppliments, and marketing and personality
types. There's all these different things you geek out on. Have you
always been that way? Is it like you geek out on marketing, you saw
the rewards from it, and you're like, "Wow, what if this goes into
other areas?" Where does that come from?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah, I didn't always have my life. In fact, I had a fascinating
conversation with Tom Bilyeu about this, because when I was growing
up in high school I always thought I was a dumb kid. I thought I
was an athlete, so I focused there. I thought I was an athlete, so
I was a wrestler, that was my identity, that was where I focused
at. I thought I was dumb. Because of that, straight C student high
school and college, my cumulative GPA graduating from college was
2.3. Straight C's and one B maybe somewhere in there, right?
Because I was a dumb kid.</p>
<p>When I got done I ended my wrestling career, so I stopped being
an athlete, and I was like, "Oh crap." I started to learn this
business stuff and I don't like to read. I'm a dumb kid. What do I
do? It was fascinating. Tom told me, because I had this epiphany,
I'm not actually dumb. He's like, "Actually, the reality is you
probably really were dumb. But then you changed, right?" So for me
it was like I shifted. It was fascinating.</p>
<p>Do you remember the Funnel Hacking Live where we had Lindsay
Stirling perform? One of my favorite parts of that, she did a whole
performance. If you guys don't know, Lindsay does violin dancing
stuff, and afterwards I had a Q and A with her afterwards. I had
this question I was so pumped to ask. I was waiting for her just to
like, the question is, she was on America's Got Talent, and I think
she took 7th place. When she got kicked off, Pierce Bronson or
whatever said, "You've got no talent. You're no good." Whatever,
right?</p>
<p>So I was like, do you remember that time when he said that? What
I thought she was going to say was, "Yeah, I proved him wrong.
Yeah." I was like, "What did you feel after that?" She's like,
"Yeah, I got home and I realized he was right. I wasn't very good.
So I went back and I started practicing and I started working
harder and eventually I became good enough." It was like, oh my
gosh. I got chills when I was saying it again.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
I remember when Tom said it to me, he was like, "You probably were
dumb." I was like, "I was." Because I wasn't reading things. So
with marketing that was the first thing for some reason that caught
my attention, that got me excited, right? And then if you look at
my DISC profile, ROI is my highest value. I have to see ROI in
something or I don't want to do it. So when I saw an ROI on this
reading, I was like, "Oh my gosh. I read a book, I got one little
sentence, changed a color, made more money. Oh my gosh." That is
where it started, 100%.</p>
<p>I started learning that and I started getting obsessed with
those things. As this business grew for me I started being more, I
always joke that crazy people got attracted to me, right? The best
health people, the best fitness people, the best in every market
kind of came into our world somehow. So I started getting to meet
all these people. When you're around someone who's the best in the
world at the thing, and they start talking about the thing, you
can't help but be like, "Oh my gosh, this is amazing." Right? You
zone in on that. So whenever I meet someone that's amazing and I
have a chance to talk to them like this I just geek out.</p>
<p>Like when I met your dad the first time with you guys. That's
when I bought your parenting course and everything. I was just
like, I saw you and I saw him and I was like, "I want that." So I
started going down that rabbit hole, right? I met Anthony
DiClementi, I was like, "I love this guy. I have respect for him, I
love him." Every time he talks about anything, he fascinates me,
when he talks about something it fascinates me. I have to look down
those things, right? When people fascinate me, the things that
fascinate them start fascinating me and that's when I kind of go
down those rabbit holes. This person is so intriguing and
fascinating. What makes them that way? What are they doing.</p>
<p>It's interesting. I'm not a good question asker. You guys are so
good at question askers. I've never been good at asking questions,
but I'm really good at watching what people do and then seeing it
and trying to go down the rabbit hole. What are they doing, why are
they doing it, that kind of thing.</p>
<p>Caleb:
He’s a true master in it. You can just tell. What are some things
you want to take the time to geek out on? I'm sure you see
something and you're like I want to get on that but it's not a
priority, I've got to do this. What are some things, if I had a
week or two?</p>
<p>Russell:
Just free time with nothing else involved?</p>
<p>Caleb:
What's the next thing you're going to geek out on?</p>
<p>Russell:
Oh. I would say every probably three years I get re-excited about
SEO, for some reason. I start going down that path again, because I
love it. There's times in my business when that was the focused.
It's not now at all, but I went through a couple ... Brian Dean’s a
real cool SEO guy, couple guys… I started dabbing my toe in again
and I'm like, I just want to get back into it so bad. Right now SEO
is actually our number 11 lead source as of today in ClickFunnels,
which is amazing. So we handed SEO the first four or five years,
now we're focused on it again. It's doing really well for us. I
want to go deep there because I like that. Anyway, I haven't had a
chance to do that. Any of the health stuff really, really
fascinates me.</p>
<p>Matt:
Why? I'm curious. Why are you drawn to that so much? The health
stuff.</p>
<p>Russell:
Because I've seen with myself ... My history is I got in wrestling,
at the PAC 10 tournament was my last actual wrestling match. My
wife was giving herself fertility shots in the stomach during PAC
10 so the next month se was pregnant. So I got done wrestling, got
done competing, got done running, got done lifting. All my athletic
career ended, and then my wife got pregnant. She's eating for three
kids, and I'm pumped because I don't have to work out right now,
she's hungry, I'm hungry, we're eating. We just kept eating and
eating. So over the next seven to eight months my wife gained like
60 pounds, I gained like 60 pounds. We were doing it together so
who cared, it was amazing. Then one day she has two babies and she
loses like 45 pounds and I'm like, oh crap. I'm stuck here. Where
did you go? This for me?</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
Thank you. Then at that time the business was starting and I was
stressed out trying to figure it out and I didn't get healthy
again. I just was in that state of being 65 pounds heavier for
years. But I didn't know the difference, I didn't know that I felt
differently, because I'd never been in a spot where I spent eight
hours sitting behind a computer, so I didn't know what good felt
like or bad felt like. I knew if I tried to wrestle I'd puke, so I
was like I don't feel like I'm an athlete. I just felt normal, I
thought.</p>
<p>Eight years in I was like, I don't know, I looked at myself in
the mirror and I was like, "Oh, what happened to you?" You know
what I mean? I'm sure hopefully everybody's had a chance. I was
like, huh. It was hard because in my head I knew how to work out, I
knew how to train, I knew these things. Finally I was like, "I need
to get a trainer."</p>
<p>So I got a trainer for the first time. I'd never really done
that before. Started going, and got me from I don't even know, 27,
28% body fat down to 12% in a matter of seven or eight months. I
looked better, I felt better, but what's crazy is I could work
twice as hard and twice as long. I wasn't tired. I was like, "I can
keep going. My brain's on fire. This is amazing."</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow. Just from the ...</p>
<p>Russell:
I had no idea until I lost all the weight. All of a sudden it was
just like, I can do so much more. I think, when I first met Anthony
DiClementi the first time I was like, this is my problem right now.
I am at work all day slaying dragons, doing all these things, I
have this energy. I get home at night and my two little twin boys
are there, and my little daughter, and I'm spent and I have no
energy. How do I still be a present dad and how do I have these
things?</p>
<p>The next tier was the bio hacking stuff. How do you do these
things? How do you increase energy? There's so many ways to do
that, from light therapy to supplements to sleeping to sound to
breath, all these crazy things that seem stupid. The first time
Anthony's like, "We're going to do breath work." I'm like, "We're
going to breathe? That's your bio hack? We're going to breathe
together?" He's like, "Yeah, it's going to be amazing." I'm like
super annoyed. What's the ROI on this, I've got to get back to
work.</p>
<p>So he sat me down in our gym. You've been in our wrestling room.
He sat me down and he's like, "You have to sit because if you're
standing you'll hit your head and you'll die." I'm like, what are
you talking about? He sits me down and we do these breathing
exercises where he's yelling at us and screaming. All this stuff is
happening. If anyone's ever done deep breath work it's nuts.</p>
<p>We're doing this thing where we're supposed to do this heavy,
heavy breath work until he's like, what's going to happen is the
world is going to ... Has anybody done jiu-jitsu here? Been tapped
out before?</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Russell:
So you get choked out. What will happen, the carotid artery gets
choked and the world starts shrinking like this. If you take
pressure off it, it comes back to life. If you don't, it goes
darker and darker until it disappears and you're gone, right? If
you've never been choked out, that's what happens. It's a really
fun experience. But you have the minute when you see it shrinking
around you and then it's gone, right?</p>
<p>He told me that's what's going to happen. You're going to
breathe so much that the world around you is going to start
shrinking. If you don't stop you're going to pass out. So we go all
the way to where it starts shrinking, stops, and then when you hit
that point you let me know and then you hold your breath for as
long as you can. He's like, "How long can you hold your breath
for?" I'm like, "Maybe a minute." He's like, "You'll do it for at
least five." I was like, there's no way.</p>
<p>So he says sit down, we're doing this breath thing, we're going
like crazy and sure enough the walls start doing weird stuff. I
feel like I'm on drugs. I'm sweating like crazy. We keep doing it.
He's yelling at me. All of a sudden the world starts closing around
me, I'm like, "What is happening?" And then he stops and is like,
"Hold your breath." He starts the clock. I'm sitting here holding
my breath forever, looking around. We had three or four of us guys
all doing it at the same time. I'm freaking out. And then it starts
getting quieter, things are slowing down, we're sitting there and
then he's like let some of the pressure out but don't breathe in.
Let pressure out, pressure out, pressure out, keep doing that, and
it gets done and the stop clock is over five minutes. I'm just
like, I just held my breath for five minutes.</p>
<p>Matt:
And you didn't even know it.</p>
<p>Russell:
Insane. And then the rest of the day we were on fire. It was just
like, whoa. Right? We brought a cryo-sauna at our house and we go
freeze in the cryo-sauna and the rest of the day you just feel ...
That's the thing I love now, these little weird things. Light
therapy, breathing, weird things that just seem stupid. You do it
and you can go longer, you can think better, you can do stuff. All
those things just get me so excited.</p>
<p>Anthony's fun because he randomly will just ship me weird stuff
in the mail. Just the weirdest things. It makes my wife so mad. It
just shows up. There's a big old box. She's like, what's this from?
I'm like, I'm hoping it's from Anthony, it's going to be amazing.
Just weird things. Tons of stuff.</p>
<p>I love that kind of stuff because the ROI on it is crazy.
They're always these weird things. I have this headband someone
sent me. You put this headband on, you put an app on and you start
working and it just makes you not tired, makes you focused. These
weird things. How does this work? I don't know. And they're like
oh, it works because the waves over here sync your brain and change
your brain waves and the creative state and all these things. I
mean, I don't know how it works but I just wrote two chapters.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Do you do breath work every day?</p>
<p>Russell:
No, because it's so intense. If I had a coach who could walk me
through it. I have a recording of Anthony doing it and I almost
dread it because I know how hard it is. By the time you're done
you're sweating.</p>
<p>Caleb:
I've got to get that recording.</p>
<p>Russell:
I'll get it to you. By the time you're sweating, you're like what
just happened? I just breathed for five minutes. It's weird.
Anyway, I would love to understand it on a deeper level but I don't
understand a lot of the things now. Some of them I've gone deep on,
but a lot of them I do without knowing why. I hate it because my
wife will be like, "What's this do?" And I'm like, I don't
know.</p>
<p>Matt:
Just love it.</p>
<p>Russell:
One of my buddies, Preston Eli, he wrote this blog post, he called
it the Warriornaire Workout. In there he explains part of his
morning workout. He's like, why do I do it? He's like, because Tony
Robins does, and I obey all giants who fly helicopters and have
stage presence. That quote goes to my head all the time. People ask
me, why do you do that? I'm like, because I obey all giants who fly
helicopters and have stage presence, that's it. I'm like, I don't
know the reason why, Tony says so, therefore I will do it. I would
like to understand it at a deeper level so I have a better response
than I obey all giants with helicopters and stage presence. But
that's a pretty good reason. Anyway.</p>
<p>Matt:
Real quick, does anybody else want to throw in a question for
Russell? Anybody else here live with us?</p>
<p>Caleb:
Let me ask one more real fast. Because I want to. I want to ask
this. We were just having sushi, I was asking you, what are some of
the favorite periods of your life? One of them you said was
wrestling, which I found funny because by far one of my favorite
periods is baseball, which people wouldn't expect because obviously
I've been on stage and all this other stuff and that should take
the cake. But those moments when you're just on the field, you're
in the zone, there's nothing better. Where, with what you get to do
now, whether it's being live on a webinar or being on stage or
whatever it is, where do you get the same feeling of wrestling? Do
you know what I mean? You know, the feeling in your chest?</p>
<p>Russell:
Today while we were in line at the grocery store I talked to your
dad about this. I said that the best feelings I ever had in my life
were from wrestling. The feeling of winning a hard match that I
wasn't supposed to win and getting your hand raised, I never felt
something like that, that felt as good as that, ever. I've been
searching in business to find that, and I've never found it.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
Do you feel like sports is like business in any sense?</p>
<p>Matt:
Good question.</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure, yeah. There's a lot, for sure. What I was going to say is
the closest I've ever gotten to feeling that is when you serve at
an event and you see a table rush and you see not only people where
they get the a-ha, but enough of an a-ha where it gets them to get
up and to move. That's the closest I've ever felt to that. It's not
as good, but it's the closest I've ever felt to that. Which is why
I love doing the big things. I get a glimpse of that.</p>
<p>Caleb:
How close? Scale of one to 10. Wrestling's a 10. Where does that
rank?</p>
<p>Russell:
If wrestling's a 10, I'd say it's about an eight. In fact it's
interesting because when I first started in business I was racing
for that, trying to find it, trying to find it, trying to find it.
It took me years before I was like ...</p>
<p>Matt:
Is it disappointing?</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure, yeah. We launch today and make a million dollars and it's
like, huh. That sucked. What else have we got. Give me something
else.</p>
<p>Matt:
Exactly.</p>
<p>Russell:
The money goal is always what I thought was going to be the thing,
and those always were just like, huh. In fact, literally one of the
main reasons I did the Two Comma Club Awards, for me I need, maybe
it's just from a decade of my life someone grabbing my hand and
raising it. I was like, entrepreneurs need that. No one raises our
hands. Two Comma Club Awards, for me, is me lifting their hands
like you did it. I needed that, they need that. That's one of the
main reasons I did that, because that's the equivalent of that.
Anyway.</p>
<p>Matt:
How many millionaires have you created?</p>
<p>Russell:
This year we passed 1,000 people that won the two comma club award.
We're over 120.</p>
<p>Matt:
How does it feel to say that? To say it? You know how sometimes
it's like so many people that have passion or goals or huge dreams
and visions, rarely do they really celebrate what's happening on
the journey. Do you find yourself ever getting where your vision is
so big and your passion is so deep that even saying things like
there's 1,000 millionaires. Dude, that's huge. Man, 1,000 people
that are millionaires because of you.</p>
<p>Russell:
I think the first time I really got that, probably the most
impactful time, was the very first Funnel Hacking live that we gave
away Two Comma Club Awards. It was the third Funnel Hacking live.
It was a couple of months before that we had the idea of a Two
Comma Club and an award, talking about that. I legitimately didn't
know. I wonder if anyone in ClickFunnels has actually made a
million dollars. I don't even know. So Dave went back and the
database guys went through everything and I remember he came back
and was like, there's 79 people right now that made a million
dollars. I was just like, are you serious?</p>
<p>Matt:
Was it a boost of confidence? What did it do for you?</p>
<p>Russell:
It was one of those things, looking back on me doing these events
where two people showed up and nobody showed up, hardly anybody,
where I was so excited about this? I was like, how come nobody
cares? To now it was like, this is actually, I've talked about this
long enough people are believing it and now they're doing it. You
start seeing it, and there's the fruits of it. In my mind I was
like a million bucks, even then, ClickFunnel was new, I was like a
million dollars is hard. Most of my friends I knew were like made
somewhere near a million dollars. There were people who have been
in this business for a long time. A million bucks is a big deal.
That was most people's goal still.</p>
<p>The fact that 79 people had done it, that was just weird to me.
I think that was the biggest one, the realization that just like,
oh my gosh. It's not just a theory and I think it works, it's
working. It's working at a scale that was unfathomable to me at the
time. 79 people. To go to 200 and then 500 and then 1,000 is
crazy.</p>
<p>Matt:
What was your question, buddy?</p>
<p>Speaker 4:
You're talking about how at each level of success you hit, some of
your mentors hit that ceiling, right? Because of the posturing,
right? So ultimately I feel like when you get to a new level of
success it requires you to upgrade your identity, your self image.
What have you found is the number one routine, what's your process
for upgrading the identity, upgrading your self image? Because I
think that's so important because it can either hold you back and
have you self sabotage and not take action and go after what you
want, or it's going to be the thing that keeps you at that level
and continues to propel you forward. What's kept you ...</p>
<p>Russell:
That's good. It's weaved through everything, right? The one that's
the most obvious external, especially in our world, because you see
marketers, most people when they first start selling whatever it is
they're selling they're bragging about themselves. Here's my ad,
here's my name. It's all about them, that's the first tier of it.
And then the second tier, when they start having the realization, I
feel like is when they stop talking about themselves and start
talking about the people they've helped.</p>
<p>Speaker 4:
Mm.</p>
<p>Russell:
You see externally. You don't hear me talking about how much money
I make. I'm not like, oh, check out what I got. I talk about all
the other people. It's like, that's next year, is that. And then
for me the third tier now, which has been really cool, is talking
about Lady Boss, right? The success story isn't Kailin, it's
Kailin's customers, right? So it's like that next tier. What you're
talking about is like the external version of that. There's a lot
of internal things that you've got to deal with, but you'll notice
it shifting in people when you look at just their messaging and
what they're saying. From the way they podcast, they video, they
market, their ads and everything, it's the shift of it's not about
me, it's about them. It's not even about them, that's the external
version of it.</p>
<p>Internally I think it's really, it's what we talked about, I
can't remember why, but we brought up yesterday or today I had this
really successful guy I met one time who the first time we met he
was like tell me your story. So I was telling him the wrestle
posturing story about how great I was. He was like, no. Tell me
about the time you failed. So I was like, well, I'm in the middle
of one right now. So I told him let me tell you. I told this whole
thing. I remember afterwards I was so embarrassed. He's going to
think I'm an idiot. You know, that fear? He was like, good, you
cycled. I was like, what? He was like, I will not work with
entrepreneurs who haven't cycled at least once. Because if they
haven't then they still believe their own bio, right?</p>
<p>I think that's the biggest thing, the internal version is that.
The first time around, before you cycle, you think it's all you. I
know for me it was. I remember doing this the first time, I'm like,
I am a genius. I'm the smartest guy in the world. And then when it
collapsed I was like, oh, there's a lot of things outside my
control. This is not me. There is a team, there's God, there's all
these other things that are making this possible. There's a
scripture, I can't remember where it's at, it's the Bible, Book of
Mormon, but it says you can either be humble or God will humble ...
Ah, I'm misquoting it by far. But it's like God will humble people.
You can be humble or he will humble you. So it's like, looking at
that, I'm like round two I'm going to be a humble person because I
don't want to be humbled again, right?</p>
<p>Matt:
I still feel it.</p>
<p>Russell:
This is not me. I understand, I look around now and it's 100% like
there's no way I would be where I am right now if Dan Usher didn't
make videos the way he does. There's no way I'd be here right now
if Todd Dickerson could not code software the way he does. There's
no way, all these things are so many people.</p>
<p>Matt:
You're so right.</p>
<p>Russell:
Then there's so many success stories that inside of it there's just
so many people. And then there's the grace of God. I just look at
the timeline of when ClickFunnels came into the market. I've now
got funnels for a decade, nobody cared. Then all these things were
happening, we started having the idea for ClickFunnels, started
building it, we're creating it, and then literally we go to traffic
and conversion, Todd's halfway done building ClickFunnels, and Ryan
Deiss stands on stage in the biggest event at the time and he
spends the entire four days talking about funnels. Talking about
how funnels are the greatest thing.</p>
<p>Everybody's like, what's a funnel? They're all taking notes. Me
and Todd are like, does he know we're building? He's talking about
funnels. He's talking about funnels like crazy. And then the next
day everyone gets home from traffic and conversion and everybody
that day, the next day 8,000 funnel consultants pop up. Everybody's
a funnel consultant. Everyone is on Facebook talking about funnel
consultants and teaching funnels and all this stuff. We're like, oh
my gosh. Todd, get this software done, everybody's talking about
funnels right now. So he's coding like crazy, all this stuff is
coming around, all of a sudden everyone's like, millions of funnel
consultants, everyone's doing it, and all of a sudden we're like,
hey, we created this thing called ClickFunnels, here it is.</p>
<p>All of a sudden all of the consultants and all the people and
everyone came and we were the only platform. I look at that, as
smart as I think I am, there is so much grace and timing. If I'd
launched a year earlier, a year later, it would not have hit the
way it did. 100% it was the timing of all these things that have to
happen. If it wasn't for that ... I can act like I'm smart, I'm a
genius, but man, there's so much divinity that came into all the
things. There's no way it could happen without that. Anyway, just
understanding those things.</p>
<p>Matt:
What did you learn when you were cycling?</p>
<p>Russell:
So many lessons. Russell, you are not that good looking. Or cool.
Or anything.</p>
<p>Matt:
It's basically not about you, right? Yeah, I feel that. So what was
hardest? What were the tough lessons?</p>
<p>Caleb:
How many times did you cycle?</p>
<p>Russell:
Two big ones for sure.</p>
<p>Matt:
Really? Do you mind sharing?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah, the first time was after I was trying to figure this thing
out. I remember one of my buddies was like, you're making money
online? I'm like, yeah. He's like, that's cool. I'm like, do you
want a job? He's like, what? I'm like, you're the first person I
know who's interested. I'll pay you to come hang out with me. He's
like, all right.</p>
<p>So I hired my friend. He's like, I have some friends too. I'm
like, okay. So I start hiring all these people because I want
someone to talk to. Anyway, it was really bad. I ended up having a
whole bunch of employees nobody knew how to do anything. I didn't
know how to train anybody. I was hiding in the room trying to make
money to pay payroll while they're standing outside like, do you
want us to do anything? I'm like, don't talk to me, I've got to
make money to pay your payroll. They're like, we can help. I'm
like, I don't have time to explain anything to you. It was
horrible. I built it up to the point where it was just like, I was
launching a new thing as fast as we could just to pay payroll.</p>
<p>As an entrepreneur, you kill something you get to eat, right?
It's like the greatest thing in the world. Employees, they want to
get paid every two weeks whether they killed anything or not. I did
not realize that until they were like we need money and I'm like,
but we haven't made any money. They're like you have to pay me. I'm
like, what? I'm so confused. Like, okay. Anyway, it had grown and
we didn't have a model, sustainable.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
You just launched stuff to see if it works?</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. When I was by myself it was like, I had an idea today, let's
try it. You launch it, it makes some money, sweet. And then it was
like, I made 20, 30 grand. It was my wife and I, so it was like,
that lasts nine months. You know?</p>
<p>Caleb:
What did you sell? Obviously I know the potato gun backstory. You
said I talked about funnels for like a decade before that. What
were you selling during that decade leading up to ClickFunnels? I
know it's an inordinate amount of stuff. Is there anything not even
close to funnels, like something ...</p>
<p>Russell:
Yeah. The very first, pre-potato guns, my very first big idea was
... Back then what everyone was doing, you know who Yanik Silver
is. Yanik would write a book and then he would sell the resale
rights to the books. Someone else would buy it and they could sell
it. I remember I got online, I saw these books, I bought a book
from Yanik and I'm like, I can sell this. I bought a book from
somebody else. I was buying all these eBooks I could sell. But then
inside the books they would have links back to all their sites. I'd
sell the book and I was like, I made 10 bucks selling the book. And
then inside the book Yanik is selling his thousand dollar course
and seminars and things. They make all this money. I'm like, I got
10 bucks. He made like $1,000 off of me selling his book. I
remember being mad. I was like I wish there was a way I could brand
this ebook so that before somebody opens it and sees his ad they'd
see my ad. That was the first idea I ever had, ever.</p>
<p>So my first product was called Zip Brander, it was this little
thing that would take an ebook and it would brand it. You open it
up and it popped up an ad. You see the ad and you click a button
and it would take you inside the ebook. It was my first thing. We
launched that and I sold 20 or 30 copies of it. But that was the
first money I ever made, it was amazing. I had a customer list, I
was like this is amazing. And then the way I was selling those, I
was going to forums. This is pre-Facebook, so all you little kids,
before Facebook, before MySpace, before Friendster, we used to go
to these things called forums. They were these things where people
would talk all day. So we'd go to these forums. One of the rules in
the forums is you could comment all you wanted but you could have a
signature file. At the end you could have like, Russel Brunson,
check out my new software Zip Brander.</p>
<p>I'd go to these forums and I would just spend eight hours a day
answering questions and asking questions and everything. People see
my ad on every little thing. My footer was on everything. That's
how I was selling Zip Brander initially. I was in 50 forums posting
like crazy but I couldn't keep up with it. I was like, man, if I
could create a software that would manage this whole thing, that
would be amazing. So my second product is called Forum Fortunes. It
was this little software that would manage your posting on every
single forum. You post and you could see if someone responded back
on Forum 49 it would pop up and you're like, oh, you can go find it
and go back and comment and keep the discussion. I made it for
myself and then we started selling that. We sold more of those
because I now had a little customer base here and went bigger.
After that it was the next. It was always what's the next thing.
That's kind of how it started back in the days, little tools and
things like that.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
How do you know when you're shooting all these bullets, how do you
know when you shoot a cannonball?</p>
<p>Matt:
Good question.</p>
<p>Russell:
The thing about it initially, I had been married, I was making zero
dollars a year as a wrestler, so for me to make $600 in a month,
that was a cannonball. That was insane. I thought I was the coolest
kid in the world. $600 was insane. So I did four or five little
things. I remember it was Christmastime and I remember my wife
wanted to buy a couch and it was a $2,000 couch. I was just like,
oh, I can't afford that. I don't have a job. I'm getting sick to my
stomach.</p>
<p>I had this idea, what if I do a sell and just sell a whole bunch
of crap that we had. I had a bunch of eBooks I bought rights to, a
couple of things I had created, so we made this Grinch sale. I
remember I wrote the copy, it was like, it was the Grinch Before
Christmas or something. It had a picture of the Grinch and his
heart growing three sizes, I don't know. I wrote this copy. My wife
and I had been married a year, she really wants a couch, I can't
afford a couch, so if you guys buy this, if I sell 32 of these
things, I can buy her a couch and put it under the Christmas tree.
It will be amazing.</p>
<p>Caleb:
You said that in the copy?</p>
<p>Russell:
In the copy, yeah. It was the reason why. I still have the page, I
can show it to you. I know exactly where it's at, I can show it to
you. So I had the whole page and then only an email list of like a
couple hundred people at the time. I still had an affiliate
program, so at the top it had an affiliate link. So I sent an email
to my list and went to bed that night. Someone on my list was a guy
named Carl Galletti, I haven't heard about Carl in a long time. He
was a big famous copy writer at the time. Carl went and saw the
thing, bought it, and started affiliating. So he joined the
affiliate program, he was like this is awesome. He took that email,
sent it to his entire list of this huge thing. So I go to bed. I
wake up the next morning, we're at $10,000 in sales.</p>
<p>Matt:
How much before you went to bed?</p>
<p>Russell:
Oh, like $30, $40 or something. I was like, what just happened. Did
I rob someone? I didn't know what happened. I looked at my email
and there's all these people who were like, hey, I bought two of
them, I hope you can get your wife that couch. Oh, I sent it to my
friend. All these people. Because Carl promoted it, all these other
people who follow Carl saw it. Carl is like it's converting like
crazy. Tons of people are buying it.</p>
<p>I'm freaking out. I'm going to wrestling practice trying to
answer customer support. I'm late for practice, I ran into
wrestling practice, I get back out I'm like, "Oh my gosh, I made
like $600 in sales." I'm freaking out. Anyway, the whole thing goes
through and over that, I think it was a seven day sale or something
like that, we made $35,000. Which is more money than I'd seen in
all my lifetime combined times 100, right?</p>
<p>I paid probably 10 grand in affiliates. We made, I don't know,
$25,000 that we got to keep. I was like, "Oh my gosh." I told
Colette, and Colette's like, my wife. I love her. She doesn't
understand the business part of things at all. I was like, "We made
$25,000." She was like, "Is it illegal?" First thing. "Are you
going to go to jail? Is it illegal?" I'm like, "No, I don't think
so. I'm pretty sure."</p>
<p>The first thing I did is I went and bought the couch for her,
for Christmas. We got it back, I got a picture of her, sent it out
to the list saying thank you so much, you got the Christmas gift,
the couch. They all celebrated together, all the people. I was like
oh my gosh, this is the greatest game of all time. This is so much
fun. I was like, what's the next idea, what's the next thing. It
was like that, these little things. After that one was done now I
had way more customers, all these people that had bought my product
knew who I was now so the next thing was easier so it incrementally
kept growing and getting bigger. Somewhere along the line I
launched the potato gun thing. Upsales of things.</p>
<p>We didn't call them funnels back then. We called them sales
flows or sales processes. Talk about your sales flow, what's your
sales flow.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Sales flow.</p>
<p>Russell:
I remember Dylan Jones was our partner at ClickFunnels. Before Todd
we tried to build something like ClickFunnels, we called it
Click.com.com, which is a horrible name. But Dylan's, I still have
all the UI images, and in there we had a whole section for sales
flows and all these things. It's like, this was the first
ClickFunnels. Because Dylan was on the UI eventually on
ClickFunnels anyway, but we literally designed something like this
five or six years earlier. Just crazy.</p>
<p>Matt:
Do you think that all those little failures and all the trying and
that kind of energy is what brought you here today?</p>
<p>Russell:
For sure. It's the key. I wish I could grab everybody because
everybody's like, okay, I'm waiting for my ClickFunnels, or I'm
waiting for my thing. They're waiting and they're waiting and
they're waiting. I was like, the reason why I got this thing was
because I didn't wait. If someone were to give me ClickFunnels
initially it would have been bankrupt in 15 minutes, right? You
have to become worthy of the thing eventually. You don't become
worthy by waiting, you become worthy by trying. And trying and
trying and trying. Eventually, if you keep doing that, over time,
then God's like, all right, he's going to do it. He's built 150
funnels, now I'll give him the idea.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow, that's powerful.</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
How much more did you feel that all your other friends are in the
same game?</p>
<p>Matt:
I hope you guys take there's more that's caught than Todd. That's
some gold in what he just shared right there, what you were just
sharing. But go ahead. What was the question?</p>
<p>Speaker 3:
I was just saying how much more would you fail if all your other
friends were playing the same game?</p>
<p>Russell:
All my friends were like why are you launching more stuff? Why do
you keep doing things? They do like one product launch a year. They
got so annoyed. They were like, dude, stop doing stuff. I'm like,
why would I stop doing this? This is so much fun. It was just
confusing to me. Why don't you guys do more? Everyone, they make
money they'd just be done.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Why would you keep doing more? Was it genuinely like one funnel
away? Like this next funnel's the one. Were you just like you sold
yourself on it, this is it, so you keep going? Or did you just
really enjoy it?</p>
<p>Russell:
Well each one I thought was. Each one, every time I was so
surprised, like this is amazing. That was the one. The next one's
bigger. Oh my gosh, that was even better, who knew? And then I just
kept going from there, you know what I mean? So I wasn't waiting
for ClickFunnels or anything like that. I was just enjoying the
journey every time. It was so exciting. Eventually it was like, oh
crap, who knew that that was going to do what it did.</p>
<p>Caleb:
Was it all emails? Was there any ads or was there anything to scale
the traffic?</p>
<p>Russell:
First 10 years was 100% emails, partnerships. There wasn't ads back
then. I mean, there was Google ads, but the first initial Google
slap happened about the time I was getting started. Prior to that a
lot of guys I knew built their email list off of Google ads and
then the slap happened. A lot of them had lists. I started getting
to know those guys, going to events, meeting them, so that's how it
started initially was tons of that. And then there was this big gap
for years where paid ads weren't a thing. Some people did banner
ads, but it wasn't consistent. It wasn't like it is nowadays. It
was harder. You worked harder and all the stuff wasn't there.
Mostly we focused on ... If you didn't have an email list, you
weren't playing the game. It's like, who's got lists, how can you
build lists, what can you do?</p>
<p>Matt:
You still think that's true to a degree?</p>
<p>Russell:
100%. That's why the traffic seekers book was so important for me
to write, I feel like, because most of the people in the game today
have been blessed with Zuckerberg's simple Facebook ads that make
the game easy.</p>
<p>Matt:
Wow.</p>
<p>Russell:
They've never focused on building lists. I was like, you guys, just
so you know, Zuckerberg is going to screw us all. It's going to
happen.</p>
<p>Matt:
Yeah.</p>
<p>Caleb:
It will happen.</p>
<p>Russell:
It's like, if you don't have a list you're all screwed. I've been
through this for 18 years now, I've been through five or six
cycles. I've seen people who made millions of dollars who now are
not online. The people who have waded the storm the whole time are
all the list builders. They're the ones who survived. Everyone else
who's good at ads, they come and they go and they come and they
go.
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