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Interviews with Influencers by Dallas McMillan
	
  
How	
  to	
  get	
  Clients	
  with	
  Facebook	
  Ads	
  for	
  Coaches	
  &	
  Consultants	
  with	
  
Sam	
  Bell	
  
	
  
Interview URL:
http://digitalinfluence.com.au/how-to-get-clients-with-facebook-ads-for-coaches-consultants/
Video URL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzjN6GTbscQ
See more Digital Influence Interviews:
http://digitalinfluence.com.au/interviews
     
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 2 of 18
Dallas  McMillan:   Okay.  Well  hello.  Welcome  to  Digital  Influence.  Today,  I'm  interviewing  Sam  Bell  
and  we're  talking  about  Facebook  ads  and  how  you  can  use  them  to  attract  clients  
and  grow  your  business.  Thanks  for  coming  on  the  show  Sam.  Great  to  talk  to  you  
today.  
  
Sam  Bell:   My  pleasure  man.  Thanks  for  having  me  and  I'm  excited  to  share  some  awesome  
information  that  people  will  find  useful  when  it  comes  to  running  Facebook  ads  for  
their  business.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah,  I  really  appreciate  you  coming  on  the  show.  I  sent  a  bit  of  a  call  out.  I  sent  a  
call  out  to  heaps  of  my  friends  and  colleagues  on  social  media  and  asked  them  to  
recommend  someone  who  had  proven  results  attracting  clients  on  social  media  
advertising,  specifically  Facebook  ads.  I  started  talking  to  Sam.  It  was  really  evident  
quickly  that  he  had  some  great  experience  here  and  both  high-­‐level  understanding  
so  he  could  help  us  understand  how  it  works  on  the  big  picture.  Also,  he  could  give  
us  some  really  specific  advice.  Unlike  most  of  my  interviews,  Sam  is  going  to  be  
really  diving  in  and  showing  us  really  practical,  tactical  stuff  today  which  will  be  
helpful  for  anyone  who  is  already  doing  ads  or  wants  to  get  started,  wants  to  know  
how  it  works.  This  won't  be  a  talkfest.  It  will  be  some  practical  information  that  you  
can  use  immediately  and  see  how  things  actually  go  together.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Awesome,  awesome.  Excellent.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Sam,  tell  us  a  bit  about  your  business.  What  is  your  business  model?  What  do  you  
do  for  people  and  how  did  you  get  into  it?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Sure,  just  real  quick,  I  own  a  digital  marketing  agency  called  PPC  Boutique.  We  
specialize  in  running  Facebook  ads,  Google  display,  and  YouTube  ads  specifically  for  
coaches,  consultants,  author/speakers,  info-­‐marketers,  and  service  providers,  
specifically.  I've  been  doing  this  for  quite  some  time  actually.  Before  I  started  my  
agency,  I  actually  was  a  real  estate  investor.  I  used  to  buy  and  sell  a  lot  of  real  
estate  in  the  metro  Atlanta  area.  Around  2006,  2007,  I  really  started  leveraging  
social  media  and  web  2.0.  This  is  when  it  was  really,  really,  really  new  at  the  time.  I  
started  leveraging  it  to  actually  market  and  sell  my  properties.  From  that  point,  I  
actually  created  a  training  program  educating  other  real  estate  investors  how  they  
can  also  leverage  web  2.0  technology  and  social  media  so  that  way  they  can  
actually  create  a  brand  and  start  marketing  their  businesses.  
  
   From  there,  I've  actually  managed  to  get  into  the  whole  real  estate  info-­‐marketing  
world,  if  you  would,  and  done  some  joint  ventures  with  some  people  and  built  
some  relationships.  Through  that,  I  actually  started  doing  some  consulting  for  a  few  
people.  Around  2009,  Google  did  a  big  ban  on  Google  AdWords,  so  a  lot  of  people  
who  depended  upon  Google  at  that  time  as  their  main  lead  generator  for  leads,  
they  were  basically  out  of  business.  I  actually  started  doing  some  consulting  work  
and  helping  people  either  get  their  accounts  back  active  or  get  them  back  on  
Google  where  they  could  actually  run  their  campaigns  compliantly.  
  
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   From  there,  my  agency  just  evolved  to  where  we  actually  started  doing  it  for  
people  on  an  ongoing  basis.  Obviously,  once  Facebook  opened  up  their  ad  
platform,  we  expanded  over  there.  It  actually  has  shifted  over  the  years.  When  we  
first  started,  we  were  probably  80%  Google,  20%  Facebook.  Now,  it's  the  other  way  
around  where  it's  80%  Facebook,  20%  Google.  Google  still  has  a  ton  of  traffic  but  
since  then  we've  been  very  fortunate  to  work  with  other  people  outside  of  the  real  
estate  investing  vertical  and  other  verticals  and  just  really  see  a  lot  of  data.  Just  
really  determining  what's  working,  what's  not  working  because  things  change  so  
fast  but  there  are  also  some  core  marketing  principles,  especially  when  it  comes  to  
marketing  online,  Facebook  specifically,  that  just  work  regardless  of  what  changes  
they  may  make.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic  and  that  definitely  is  a  critical  element  that  things  are  changing  all  the  
time.  You've  got  to  be  on  the  ball  but  also  your  marketing  fundamentals  have  to  be  
there.  It  doesn't  matter  what  you  do.  You  can't  just  use  the  latest  tricks  if  you  don't  
have  your  marketing  fundamentals  right.  Even  my  own  business,  you've  realized  
years  later,  "Oh  my  god.  Of  course  that  didn't  work."  I  was  missing  the  most  
obvious  things  about  nicheing  or  my  message.  Having  both  of  those  in  place  is  
critical  and  that's  something  that  you're  going  to  help  us  understand  today.  Looking  
forward  to  it.  
  
   Tell  us  about  how  Facebook  is  different  from  Google  Ads  because,  in  a  way,  they're  
offering  different  things,  aren't  they?  With  Google  AdWords,  mostly  people  are  
searching.  They  were  already  looking.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Exactly.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   It's  common  lead  generating  whereas  with  Facebook,  it's  often  they're  not  looking  
at  all  and  it's  more  demand  generation  where  suddenly  they're  thinking,  "Oh,  gee,  
maybe  I  should  do  that,"  which  they  probably  weren't  thinking  five  minutes  before  
they  saw  your  ad.  How  are  they  different  and  why  is  one  better  than  others  in  
different  situations?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Sure.  That's  a  good  question.  Basically  what  it  comes  down  to  is  intent.  Essentially,  
with  Google,  when  someone  actually  goes  to  Google,  they  actually  type  in  a  
keyword.  They  actually  have  a  much  higher  intent.  Therefore,  they're  much  more  
qualified  in  terms  of  where  they  are  either  in  the  buying  process  or  research  
process.  The  probability  in  terms  of  them  actually  converting  is  also  much  higher,  
as  well.  With  Facebook,  you  don't  have  the  intent  but  you  have  a  much  better  
targeting  in  terms  of  demographic  and  psychographic  and  really  just  understanding  
exactly  what  it  is,  what  emotional  and  psychological  triggers  will  get  someone  to  
respond.  Even  though  the  intent  is  different,  if  you  understand  how  to  
communicate  with  people  on  Facebook  and  you  really  understand  your  avatar  and  
your  targeting  is  correct,  you  can  get  just  as  high  conversions  if  now  higher  
conversions  from  Facebook,  as  well.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  I  must  say,  Facebook  marketing  is  the  marketing  medium  that  makes  the  
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 4 of 18
whole  concept  of  the  client  avatar  so  much  more  valuable  than  other  mediums.  
We've  all  seen  the  exercise  to  work  out  who  your  ideal  client  is.  It's  a  38  year  old,  
married  man  who's  got  two  kids  with  dogs  called  Roger  and  he  reads  this  and  does  
that.  How  do  you  actually  use  that  information  if  you  don't  have  access  to  those  
marketing  channels.  Whereas,  with  Facebook,  if  you  know  they  like  something,  if  
you  know  they've  got  a  dog,  you  can  actually  target  those  things  really  directly.  To  
me,  Facebook  ads  are  really  the  first  time  that  it's  almost  worth  filling  out  the  
avatar  with  complete  seriousness  because  you  can  pretty  much  target  everything  
that  would  go  into  an  avatar  with  Facebook  ads.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  That's  the  beautiful  part  about  Facebook.  They  have  so  much  data  
on  their  users  and  you're  able  to  really  leverage  that  data.  They  do  a  good  job  of  
really  sharing  that.  One  of  the  things  that  have  also  really  made  Facebook  even  
more  powerful  from  a  marketing  perspective  over  the  past  year  or  so  has  been  the  
implementation  of  their  Facebook  pixel.  Now,  they've  had  conversion  pixels  for  
some  time  but  the  new  Facebook  pixel  which  allows  you  to  really  optimize  and  
target  based  on  that,  they've  done  a  really,  really  good  job.  Their  algorithm  is  
extremely  strong  once  you  get  that  pixel  seasoned  enough  and  you  get  enough  
data.  They  actually  make  your  job  much  easier.  If  you  have  your  targeting  and  your  
messaging  correct  on  the  front  end  and  you  get  enough  conversion  data  once  that  
data  in  that  pixel  is  seasoned,  then  it  almost  becomes  easy.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah  and  it's  something  that  I've  only  really  started  to  see  the  power  of  recently  
and  partly  with  the  new  pixel.  We  should  just  say  a  pixel  is  just  a  tracking  code  so  it  
tells  Facebook  that  someone  has  visited  your  website  or  viewed  one  of  your  ads  on  
Facebook.  What  you  can  do  is  you  can  work  out  the  people  who  are  already  clicking  
through  to  your  page  and  then  target  people  like  them.  Then,  as  you  get  more  
dialog,  the  people  are  getting  to  the  page  and  opting  in,  you  can  target  people  like  
the  people  who  are  opting  in.  Then,  eventually,  as  you  get  enough  data,  you've  got  
enough  buyers,  you  can  target  people  who  are  like  your  existing  buyers.  When  we  
say,  "like,"  it's  largely  based  on  how  they  perform  with  other  Facebook  ads.  That  
brings  us  on  to  one  of  the  other  tricks  of  Facebook  marketing  in  that,  very  often,  
you're  targeting  people  who  like  another  provider  in  you  industry,  one  of  your  
competitors.  If  you  wanted  to  sell  webinars,  you  might  be  targeting  Amy  Porterfield  
because  she's  already  successfully  selling  webinars.  That's  the  shortcut  to  targeting.  
It's  not  always  about,  "I  want  a  male  from  13  to  48  years  of  age  who  lives  here  and  
has  this  job  description."  It  can  be  they've  clicked  on  this  ad  almost.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  That  brings  up  a  very  good  point  and  really  which  is  one  of  
probably  the  most  important  things  is  really  just  understanding,  again,  who  is  your  
target.  Then,  also,  understanding  your  niche  too.  Within  a  niche,  you  have  a  certain  
demographic  that  have  a  higher  propensity  to  either  buy  or  take  whatever  specific  
action  that  you're  looking  for.  The  better  that  you  understand  your  niche  and  your  
vertical  then  the  easier  it  is  to  also  understand  your  avatar.  
  
   There's  actually  a  few  shortcuts  that  we  use,  I  guess  you  could  say  a  few  hacks,  if  
you  will,  that  allow  you  to  bypass  that.  You  mentioned  one  of  them  already  is,  if  
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 5 of 18
you  know  some  of  your  competitors  or  who  are  some  authority  figures  in  that  
specific  marketplace  and  you  know  that  they're  already  marketing  or  selling  a  very  
similar  product  or  service,  you  can  very  easily  target  those  individuals.  The  
challenge  sometimes  though  happens  when  you  want  to  go  into  a  certain  market  
or  vertical  and  you  might  not  actually  be  able  to  target  that  specific  person  on  
Facebook,  even  though  they  may  have  a  big  audience  or  a  big  following.  It's  weird.  I  
don't  know  exactly  why  Facebook  does  that  but  there  are  some  instances  where  
you'll  go  to  a  page  and  that  page  may  have  over  a  100,000  likes.  When  you  go  to  
actually  target  as  an  interest,  it's  not  available.  You  may  see  another  page  that  may  
only  have  30  to  40,000  likes  and  you  can  actually  target  it  as  an  interest.  I  believe  it  
has  to  do  with  the  algorithm,  how  many  people  are  actually  talking  about  a  
particular  subject  and  it's  just  based  on  the  amount  of  likes.  I  know  that's  part  of  it  
but  there  are  some  ways  to  actually  leverage  that  and  find  alternative  targeting  
sources  that  you  may  not  have  been  aware  of  previously.  I'm  happy  to  share  some  
of  that  on  the  call  today.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  Perhaps  we  can  start  off  just  by  talking  about  the  big  picture  process  of  
how  we're  using  Facebook  ads.  This  is  something  I've  talked  to  other  specialists  
about  and  I  cover  in  my  training  but  just  tell  us  how  most  of  your  clients  use  
Facebook  ads.  Where  do  they  sent  them?  What  do  they  get  them  to  do?  How  do  
they  eventually  turn  them  into  a  customer?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  that's  a  great  question.  The  majority  of  our  clients,  again,  are  coaches  and  
consultants.  For  the  most  part,  we  use  the  webinar  model.  Basically,  we  have  a  
Facebook  ad  driving  people  to,  just  not  a  webinar  but  an  automated  webinar.  I  
want  to  make  that  distinction.  Basically,  we  have  an  automated  webinar  that  we're  
driving  people  to.  They  register  for  the  webinar  and,  essentially,  the  call  to  action  
on  the  webinar  is  for  them  to  complete  some  application  or  survey  which  pre-­‐
qualifies  that  lead.  Then,  from  there,  they  generally  have  a  phone  consultation  or  
strategy  session  at  which  they're  presented  with  the  opportunity  to  enroll  in  
whatever  program  or  service  that  our  client  is  offering.  That's  pretty  much  the  
standard  model,  especially  when  you  have  big  ticket  products,  anything  $1000  plus.  
  
   Granted,  you  can  actually  sell  products  that  are  $1000  from  automated  webinars.  
The  challenge  is  that  when  you're  going  to  code  traffic,  there's  no  relationship  
established,  the  offer  has  to  be  really,  really  good.  Generally,  the  higher  the  price  
point,  the  more  time  you're  going  to  have  to  spend  to  really,  not  only  establish  
rapport  and  authority  and  trust,  but  to  really  show  the  benefits  and  features  of  the  
product  or  service  to  where  someone  would  be  willing  to  spend  $1000  plus  and  not  
really  have  that  relationship.  
  
   When  you're  selling  higher  end  services,  it's  a  much  lower  barrier  to  entry  for  
someone  to  pre-­‐qualify  and  then,  from  there,  have  the  opportunity  to  speak  with  
them  on  the  phone.  That  way,  you  can  really  build  that  relationship,  establish  the  
authority,  address  any  concerns,  and  then  hopefully  close  the  sale  over  the  phone.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  Another  huge  benefit  of  talking  to  your  clients  like  that  is  you  get  to  work  
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out  what's  wrong  with  the  offer  too.  Perhaps,  you're  almost  selling  people  the  
wrong  thing.  By  the  sales  process  that  you  use,  the  sales  conversation,  you  can  
actually  ask  what  are  you  paying  for  it?  Make  sure  you're  hitting  them  in  your  ads,  
in  your  landing  page,  in  your  webinar  because  if  you  try  and  do  everything  
automatically  and  just  have  a  purely  online  business,  you  don't  get  that  client  
contact  which  you  need  to  develop  a  high  value  product  that  people  are  prepared  
to  pay  $1000,  $5000,  $10,000  for.  Understanding  the  customer,  always  the  key  to  
marketing,  sales,  and  great  product  development.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  Absolutely.  Some  people  use  different  sales  mechanisms.  We've  
just  found  webinars  to  be  the  most  effective  and  then  using  an  automated  webinar  
model  because,  what  we  found  through  testing,  is  with  live  webinars,  the  good  
thing  about  live  webinars  is  that  you  do  have  a  very  specific  date.  The  challenge  is  
that  the  more  time  that  someone  has  in  between  the  time  that  they  registered  
from  the  time  they  attend,  your  attendance  rate  is  going  to  be  much  lower.  It's  
going  to  be  decreased.  On  average,  with  live  webinars,  we'll  see  anywhere  between  
a  25%  and  maybe  a  40%  attendance  rate,  40%  obviously  being  on  the  high  end.  
What  automate  webinars,  just  in  time  webinars,  the  way  that  we  structure  them,  
we  see  anywhere  between  50%  to  70%  attendance  rate  on  the  regular.  That's  
pretty  common  ground  actually.  If  you  see  with  low  50%  on  an  automated  just  in  
time  webinar,  then  there  may  be  something  off  with  the  messaging.  Your  
attendance  rates  are  definitely  going  to  increase.  The  beautiful  part  of  it  is  that  it  
actually  has  to  be  present  to  give  that  webinar  live.  You  can  actually  do  a  really,  
really  good  webinar  one  time,  deliver  the  goods,  prove  that  it  performs  and  it  
converts,  and  then  once  you  know  that  this  one  performs,  then  you  can  then  take  
that  and  then  put  it  into  an  automated  evergreen  format.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Okay,  awesome.  Of  course,  the  big  question  then  becomes  how  do  we  get  people  
to  this  webinar?  That's  really  where  the  Facebook  ads  come  in,  isn't  it?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Absolutely,  absolutely.  The  webinar  and  having  that  conversion  mechanism  is  just  
one  part  of  the  equation.  Then  you  actually  have  to  get  in  front  of  the  right  
audience,  the  target  audience,  in  order  to  make  sure  that  you  are  showing  your  
offer  to  people  who  have  the  highest  probability  to  actually  convert  into  a  potential  
sell.  That  really  boils  down  to,  again,  knowing  your  vertical  or  your  market,  and  
then  also  knowing  and  understanding  your  demographic.  Like  I  said  previously,  
there  are  a  few  ways  that  we  actually  use  to  shortcut  that.  If  you  remember  when  
we  first  started  the  call,  we  talked  about  the  power  of  Google  and  how  people  who  
are  actively  searching  on  Google  have  a  specific  intent.  The  good  part  with  Google  
is  that  if  I  go  to  Google  and  I  type  in  a  keyword,  I  have  an  intent  that  I  am  looking  
for  a  particular  product  or  service  or  something  to  that  effect.  We  actually  leverage  
this  to  find  targeted  interests  on  Facebook.  I'll  be  happy  to  walk  you  through  that  
process  if  you're  interested.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yes,  sounds  great.  
  
Sam  Bell:   All  right,  awesome.  
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Dallas  McMillan:   I'll  just  raise  the  screen  here  and  we'll  have  a  bit  more  view  of  your  Facebook  ads  
manager  account.  Great,  looks  good.  
  
Sam  Bell:   All  right,  can  you  see  my  screen?  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yes.  
  
Sam  Bell:   All  right,  excellent.  One  of  the  things  that  we  like  to  do,  we  actually  just  started  
going  to  Google  and  looking  for  keywords.  I'll  walk  you  through  the  thought  process  
here.  For  example,  if  I  was,  let's  say,  a  fitness  coach  or  expert  and  I  wanted  to  find  
people  who  were  actively  seeking  out  a  fitness  coach.  I  would  actually  start  with  
Google.  I'll  explain.  This  will  make  more  sense  as  I  go  through  it.  I'll  go  to  Google  
and  I'll  type  in  "fitness  coach."  Let's  see  fitness  coach  online.  Basically,  what  I'm  
looking  for  is  I'm  looking  for  the  top  sites.  I'm  looking  for  the  top  organic  sites  that  
are  ranking.  The  reason  is  because  these  are  the  sites  that  get  a  ton  of  traffic  for  
these  specific  keywords  that  also  have  a  very  high  intent.  Why  does  that  matter?  
  
   Well,  most  sites  that  show  up  in  the  organic  listings,  if  they  get  enough  traffic,  then  
they  also  generally  have  a  pretty  big  organic  following.  Most  sites  that  have  a  
pretty  big  organic  following  also  have  a  Facebook  page.  What  I'm  really  doing  is  I'm  
using  certain  keywords  to  find  sites  that  will  have  the  type  of  visitors  that  have  high  
intent  that  also  have  a  page  that  I  can  potentially  target.  Does  that  make  sense?  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yes.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Excellent.  Let's  see.  Fitocracy,  so  this  says,  "How  to  get  started  as  an  online  
personal  trainer."  I  don't  want  that.  I'm  actually  looking  for  a  personal  trainer,  
right?  "Gives  you  a  private  coach,"  so  this  may  work.  Born  Fitness  Coaching  with  
Consultation,  Just  Go  Fitness,  Free  Personal  Trainer.  Here's  what  I'm  looking  for.  I'm  
looking  to  see,  do  they  have  a  social  presence.  Generally,  they  will  have  some  link  
to  their  social  media  account  on  their  site.  
  
   Here  we  go.  All  right,  Fitocracy.  I  just  want  to  see  how  many,  all  right,  they  have  
61,000  likes,  right?  We  know  that  anyone  that  is  interested  in  Fitocracy  are  people  
who  are  actively  looking  for  a  personal  trainer  or  a  fitness  coach  of  some  sort,  
right?  
  
   Born  Fitness,  personalize  your  fitness  and  diet  plan  now.  Again,  same  thing  here,  all  
I'm  looking  for  really  is  just  the  social  and  seeing  what  type  of  following.  35,000  
likes,  okay.  Meet  your  goals,  right?  Basically,  anyone  that  finds  these  sites  
organically  are  more  than  likely  my  ideal  prospect.  I'm  doing  this  for  sake  of  
example.  However,  you  will  want  to  obviously  read  some  content  on  the  site  and  
just  make  sure  that  the  information  on  here  is  what  your  target  prospect  would  
potentially  be  looking  for.  This  looks  like  it  is.  It  doesn't  have  as  many  likes  but  
that's  okay  because  even  when  we  come  across  sites  that  do  not  have  a  big  
following,  that's  okay  because  you  can  still  leverage  their  social  presence.  
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   Here's  another  one,  Changing  Shape.  Let's  see  how  many  likes  Changing  Shape  has.  
They  have  around  2,000.  All  right,  this  is  a  good  start.  Then,  what  we  do  is  we  go  
from  here  and  then  we  use  the  Facebook  tool,  Audience  Insights.  If  you're  not  
familiar  with  Audience  Insights,  Audience  Insights  is  a  Facebook  research  tool  that  
allows  you  to  look  for  specific  interests  and  see  the  demographic  in  that  interest,  
see  the  psychographic,  also  see  income  data,  the  behavior  of  those  individuals  on  
Facebook.  What  I  want  to  start  doing  is  I  want  to  start  qualifying  these  particular  
pages  and  see  if  they  are  a  potential  target,  right?  
  
   I'm  going  to  start  here  with  Fitocracy  and  see  if  they  are  an  interest  that  I  can  target  
on  Facebook.  They  are.  You  see  that  came  up.  Now,  I  can  see  the  demographic.  It's  
right  down  the  middle.  51%  women,  51%  men,  career-­‐building,  lifestyle,  most  of  
these  people  have  a  college  education.  49%  of  them  are  married  and  they  excel  in  
IT  and  technical  and  arts,  entertainment,  sports,  media.  Okay.  Now,  here  is  
something  interesting  that  you  want  to  pay  attention  to.  Fitocracy,  I'm  looking  for  
an  affinity.  They  have  an  affinity  of  1,317.  What  this  basically  means  is  the  higher  
the  affinity  the  more  engaged  these  people  are  with  this  page.  We  generally  look  
for  pages  with  an  affinity  of  50  or  above  so,  to  have  1,317  affinity,  means  that  these  
people  are  very  highly  engaged,  which  is  a  very  good  thing  for  us.  
  
   Activity,  so  activity  tells  me,  do  these  people  click  on  ads?  Do  they  like  pages?  From  
what  I  can  see  here,  yes  they  do.  Most  of  them  use  both  desktop  devices  and  
mobile  devices.  When  I  actually  go  set  up  my  campaigns,  I'm  actually  going  to  
target  both  of  those  placements  so  that  way  I  can  maximize  my  exposure.  
  
   Household,  so  they're  mostly  homeowners.  That's  good.  I  can  see  that  the  average  
median  value  of  their  home  is  $200,000  and  $500,000  so  these  people  also  do  have  
money  to  spend,  which  is  also  pretty  important  because,  if  we're  targeting  people  
and  they're  all  broke,  that's  not  necessarily  a  good  thing  if  we're  looking  to  sell  a  
product  or  service,  especially  if  it's  pricier.  Then,  also,  they  do  have  an  affinity  to  
use  credit  cards  66%  of  the  time,  okay.  
  
   Retail  spending,  online  purchases,  basically  this  would  be  a  good  interest  to  target.  
That's  really  how  we  use  the  intent  of  Google  to  find  high  ranking  organic  sites  and  
then  to  begin  to  drill  down  and  determine  if  they  have  a  audience  that  we  could  
potentially  target  on  Facebook.  This  is  how  you  can  reverse-­‐engineer,  if  you  will,  
using  Google  to  find  targeted  interests  that  otherwise  you  probably  never  would  
even  target.  I  just  did  this  off  the  cuff.  I've  never  heard  of  Fitocracy  in  my  life  so  this  
is  something  that  I  probably  would  have  never  found  otherwise.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   To  some  degree,  you  can  also  find  other  keyword  ideas  and  marketing  phrases  
because  you  know  what  those  people  ...  The  people  that  like  that  page  like  what  
they're  saying.  They  like  what  they're  doing.  They  like  what  they're  offering.  You  
can  look  at  their  marketing  messages  and  even  their  product  offerings  and  think,  
"Gee,  maybe  I  could  offer  something  similar  to  that."  It's  a  great  way  to  see  what's  
already  working  in  the  market  that  people  are  responding  to  and  responding  at  a  
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high  rate.  You  can  spend  ten  years  trying  to  build  a  Facebook  following  and  never  
get  that  engagement.  Or,  you  can  model  someone  who's  already  killing  it  with  that  
level  of  affinity  and  save  yourself  a  lot  of  time.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  You  can  also  see  other  pages  that  they  like.  More  than  likely,  
there's  other  pages  that  they're  associated  with,  as  well.  You  can  take  a  look,  like  
you  said,  at  their  content,  see  what  type  of  content  they're  putting  out  there,  
which  content  is  really  getting  the  most  engagement.  That  gives  you  an  idea  of  
some  of  the  things  that  you  may  want  to  consider  posting  on  your  page  or  things  
like  that.  
  
   You  can  even  take  this  a  step  further  and  leverage  and  find  similar  pages  to  
Fitocracy.  This  is  one  of  the  strategies  that  we  use  here  in  our  agency.  There's  
actually  a  site  called  Find  My  FBID.  Basically,  what  this  site  does  is  it  reverse-­‐
engineers.  It  basically  converts  the  actual  name  of  the  page  into  the  numeric  ID  
that  Facebook  uses  to  identify  that  page.  I'll  show  you  why  that's  important  in  a  
minute.  For  Fitocracy,  this  is  the  numeric  ID.  Why  this  is  relevant  is  because  
Facebook  really  does  provide  us  with  all  the  data  that  we  need.  There's  actually  a  
query  that  you  can  use  within  Facebook  to  find  pages  that  are  similar.  I  can  say,  
"Facebook,  show  me  pages  that  are  similar  to  the  Fitocracy  based  on  the  page  ID."  
Now,  Facebook  has  given  me  a  list  of  other  pages  that  I  could  potentially  target  
that  are  very  similar  and  are  going  to  also  have  very  similar  audience  that,  again,  I  
otherwise  probably  would  have  never  even  considered.  
  
   The  one  that  is  most  similar  is  CrossFit  Invictus.  Then  we  have  Jim  [inaudible  
00:28:00],  Rock  Tape,  Steve  Paleo  Gods.  Look  at  this.  You  see  the  correlation?  Born  
Fitness,  wasn't  this  the  guy  that  was  in  the  organic  result,  right?  Nia  Shank,  Quest  
Nutrition,  these  are  all  potential  interests  that  I  could  go  and  check  and  see  if  they  
are  available  to  target  that  we  otherwise  would  never  have  even  ...  I've  never  heard  
of  any  of  these  other  than  Born  Fitness,  which  we  just  Googled  a  few  moments  ago.  
It's  a  very  effective  strategy  and  tactic  that  anyone  can  apply,  regardless  of  the  
vertical.  That  was  just  off  the  cuff,  one  keyword,  but  you  can  really  dig  deep  and  do  
a  lot  of  research  and  find  very  good,  high  affinity  targets  and  interests.  The  beauty  
of  using  this  strategy  is  that  most  people  aren't  aware  of  it  so  those  interests  
probably  won't  have  anywhere  near  the  competition  of  some  of  the  maybe  bigger,  
broader  interests  that  you  would  potentially  go  after.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Great.  For  any  marketer,  this  is  just  the  dream  in  terms  of  being  able  to  find  related  
content  and  look  at  how  ...  They're  doing  your  market  research  for  you  in  way  
because  they've  got  their  audience  already.  You  can  see  what  posts  people  are  
responding  to  and  model  those.  We  can  do  more,  can't  we?  We  can  actually  go  and  
target  those  pages'  most  engaged  followers  with  our  ads  and  get  our  content  right  
in  front  of  them.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yep,  exactly.  Then,  through  the  power  of  the  pixel  because  my  strategy  is  to  get  as  
very  focused  and  targeted  as  possible  on  the  front  end,  season  the  pixel  with  those  
really  highly  hyper-­‐targeted  people,  and  then  once  I  get  enough  data,  my  pixel  is  
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then  seasoned  with  the  best  of  the  best,  the  most  engaged  people.  When  I  tell  
Facebook  to  go  out  there  and  find  and  optimize  for  me  based  off  this  pixel,  they're  
going  to  find  the  most  hyper-­‐targeted,  most  engaged  people  because  of  the  
targeting  that  we  did  up  front.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  You're  picking  the  right  people  at  the  beginning  but  then  you're  filtering  
or  refining  them  and  just  the  cream  of  the  cream  is  who  you're  targeting  at  the  
end.  Instead  of  that  classic  story  that  half  the  money  I  spent  on  advertising  is  
wasted,  you  don't  know  which  half,  and  of  course  really  it's  99%  of  the  money  is  
wasted,  instead  you  can  filter  it  down  just  to  the  few  percent  of  people  who  are  
most  likely  to,  not  only  be  interested,  but  to  click  and  even  to  buy  and  just  market  
to  those  people,  or  them  and  your  best  guess,  and  have  large  numbers  of  them  as  
well.  Rather  than  just  having  your  handful  of  people,  you  can  use  that  lookalike  
audience  to  expand  it  to  hundred,  thousands,  or  tens  of  thousands  of  people.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  A  beautiful  part  is  that,  as  you  scale  out  and  use  those  lookalike  
audiences,  even  if  you  scale  it  to  2,000,0000,  3,000,000  people,  once  you  have  that  
pixel  data,  you're  telling  Facebook  to  optimize.  Even  though  you  have  a  pool  of  
3,000,000  people,  Facebook  is  only  going  to  show  your  ads  to  those  people  that  fit  
the  criteria  based  on  the  data  that's  on  your  pixel  anyways.  That's  really  how  you  
scale  out.  You  can  target  broad  interests  and  things  like  that.  However,  I've  found  
this  strategy  to  be  much  more  effective.  Obviously,  at  the  end  of  the  day,  you  
always  want  to  test  so  go  see  for  yourself.  Test,  play  around  with  it,  but  you  don't  
need  big  budgets  to  do  this.  You  can  do  this  with  very  small  budgets  to  start  and  
scale  out  as  long  as  your  numbers  work  for  you.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   For  sure  and  it's  worth  mentioning,  for  people  who  haven't  done  a  lot  with  
Facebook  ads,  is  that  Facebook  actually  optimizes  each  campaign  based  on  who  is  
responding.  As  more  people  engage  with  your  ad,  it  gets  a  better  idea  who  to  show  
that  ad  to  in  the  future.  Your  ads  can  improve  over  time  in  performance  when  they  
first  start.  That's  what  the  seasoning  process  partly  refers  to.  It's  Facebook  
gathering  data.  This  is  huge  amounts  of  data  that  it's  basing  its  calculations  on,  
much  more  than  we  can  handle  ourselves.  It's  almost  a  big  data  type  thing  because  
it's  referring  to  a  lot  of  the  other  ads  that  have  been  run  in  the  same  niche  as  well,  
looking  at  audience  behaviors.  It  pretty  much  knows  the  people  who  are  not  only  
going  to  click  on  the  ad,  but  then  who  are  going  to  put  their  email  address  in.  That's  
something  we  just  didn't  have  access  to  previously.  
  
   Awesome,  so  where  to  we  go  from  there?  We've  got  our  audience  list.  What's  the  
next  step  in  the  process?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Sure,  so  once  you  have  your  targeting  down  and  you  understand  who  your  
audience  is,  then  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  are  creating  the  right  message.  
Understanding  that  with  Google,  we  can  be  very  direct  in  our  marketing  because  
the  intent  is  there.  With  Facebook,  Facebook  is  social.  People  are  not  on  Facebook  
to  buy,  to  find  a  fitness  coach.  We  really  want  to  use  the  medium  that  resonates  
most  with  people  on  Facebook  and  that's  stories.  You  want  you  ads  to  look  native  
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meaning  you  want  them  to  look  like  regular  news  feed.  You  don't  want  them  to  
look  like  ads.  You  don't  want  them  to  stand  out  and  scream,  "I'm  a  marketing  ad.  
Click  on  me."  You  want  it  to  actually  be  more  subtle  and  engaging.  The  images  you  
use  are  important,  however,  you  want  them  to  look  almost  organic,  if  you  will,  just  
like  it  was  their  friend  sharing  it.  You  want  to  tell  stories.  You  want  to  talk  about  
things.  
  
   For  example,  I  might  write  an  ad,  and  just  to  stay  in  line  with  this,  I  might  write  an  
ad  that  says,  "I  was  struggling  to  get  myself  in  peak  performance  shape.  I  have  my  
20th  anniversary  class  reunion  coming  up.  I  was  just  worried  that  I  wasn't  going  to  
have  the  same  look  that  a  lot  of  classmates  saw  when  they  saw  me  20  years  ago.  I  
started  doing  some  research  online  and  I  came  across  this  guy  over  at  Born  Fitness.  
I  was  absolutely  blown  away  with  some  of  the  results  that  they  got.  I  said,  'What  
the  heck.  Let  me  go  ahead  an  give  it  a  try.'  I  went  and  I  subscribed  to  their  email  
and  I  downloaded  this  e-­‐book.  I  was  absolutely  amazed  at  some  of  the  practical  
things  that  were  in  the  e-­‐book  that  I  was  able  to  implement  and  get  in  my  peak  
look  and  feel  in  time  for  my  reunion.  I  think  you  would  really  like  it.  You  should  go  
check  it  out  and  see  for  yourself."  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah,  cool,  so  it's  very  personal.  It's  still  obviously  got  some  personal  intent  there  
but  it  is  conversational  and  it's  talking  to  someone  one  on  one.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Exactly.  You  want  to  incorporate  stories  and  people.  If  you  really  think  about  it  at  
the  end  of  the  day,  humans  pass  knowledge  down  through  stories  and  story-­‐telling.  
When  you  market  on  Facebook,  if  you  think  in  terms  of  a  storyteller,  you  think  in  
terms  of,  not  so  much  of,  "I'm  selling  something,"  as  much  as,  "I'm  trying  to  
connect  with  someone."  If  you  can  connect  with  someone  on  an  emotional  and  
psychological  level,  then  you  can  actually  move  them  through  the  process  without  
actually  trying  to  push  them  and  shove  them.  They  will  pull  their  way  through  the  
process  naturally.  That's  something  to  definitely  test  and  I  would  definitely  
recommend.  You  don't  have  to  be  a  top  tier  copywriter.  There  are  some  basic  
elements,  again,  that  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  have  in  your  stories  of  
course.  At  the  end  of  the  day,  if  you  just  tell  a  good  story  and  make  it  personal  and  
they  connect  with  that  story,  you'll  be  surprised  at  the  results  you  can  get.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  I  love  that  point  that  you  don't  need  to  hard  sell  them.  In  fact,  
particularly  with  high  ticket  stuff,  if  people  feel  like  it's  being  pushed  on  them,  
they're  not  interested.  They  have  to  want  it.  They  have  to  think,  wow  that  looks  
great.  I'm  interested  and  feel  like  it's  almost  a  serendipitous  discovery  or  exactly  
what  they've  been  looking  for  or,  "Wow,  this  is  something  new  and  exciting  and  I  
can't  wait  to  get  involved,"  rather  than  feeling  like  they've  just  been  shown  a  
product  catalog  or  something.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  Again,  that's  just  something  just  to  keep  in  mind.  Once  you  have  
your  targeting,  you  have  your  ad,  you  have  good  imagery,  then  it's  really  just  a  
matter  of  launching  the  campaigns  and  testing  them  and  see  which  ads  people  
respond  to.  That's  where  your  images  really  come  into  play.  You  want  to  use  
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images  that  would  be  relevant  to  that  story  or  that  will  stand  out  or  that  would  
catch  someone's  eye.  I'm  oversimplifying  the  process  but  at  the  end  of  the  day  it  
really  is  that  straightforward.  If  you  have  your  interests,  your  targeting  correct,  you  
have  a  good  story  to  go  with  it,  you  have  imagery,  and  people  click  on  your  page,  
that  will  probably  be  the  next  optimization  point.  As  people  are  looking  at  your  ads  
and  they're  clicking  on  your  ads  or  getting  traffic  and  you're  not  seeing  the  
conversions  or  people  aren't  taking  the  actions  that  you  want,  so  they're  not  opting  
in  or  they're  not  registering  for  your  webinar  or  downloading  your  e-­‐book,  then  it's  
probably  a  landing  page  issue.  
  
   One  of  the  things  that  we  like  to  look  at  is  the  continuity  of  that  story,  right?  
Whatever  we  promised  in  the  ad,  whatever  we  said  that  they  were  clicking  on  the  
ad  to  go  and  do,  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  have  continuity  there  and  you  
deliver  on  that  message.  The  whole  purpose  of  the  ad  is  to  get  them  to  click  on  it.  
The  whole  purpose  of  the  landing  page  is  to  get  them  to  take  the  next  step  and  the  
next  step  and  the  next  step.  
  
   When  you're  looking  at  your  sales  process,  your  sales  funnel,  understand  that  each  
component  serves  one  purpose  and  it's  just  to  get  them  to  go  to  the  next  step  in  
that  sales  process.  The  ad  sells  the  click.  The  landing  page  sells  the  opt-­‐in  or  
registration.  After  they  opt  in,  then  your  [inaudible  00:39:27]  does  what  it's  
supposed  to  do  or  the  webinar  in  this  case  would  sell  the  application.  Then  once  
they  take  the  application  then  you  sell  the  product  or  service.  Just  keep  that  in  
mind.  A  lot  of  times  people  make  the  mistake  of  trying  to  sell  in  the  ad.  They're  
trying  to  sell  the  product  in  the  ad  or  they're  even  trying  to  sell  the  product  on  the  
landing  page.  That's  really  not  what  those  sales  mechanisms  are  for.  Those  sales  
mechanisms  are  meant  exclusively  to  service  one  purpose  and  that's  to  pull  people  
through  the  next  step  of  the  process.  Keep  that  in  mind  and  don't  get  too  caught  up  
in  trying  to  sell  before  they  get  to  the  proper  point  where  they  need  to  be  sold.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   You  still  need  to  know  where  they're  going  ultimately  so  you  can  be  sending  them  
in  the  right  direction.  It  really  is  just  about,  you're  just  pitching  for  that  next  step.  
Otherwise,  people,  they  don't  want  to  be  signing  up  for  the  application  call  on  the  
ad.  They've  got  no  interest  in  that.  All  they're  interested  in  is  learning  more  about  
this  offer.  There  has  to  be  congruence  there  too,  doesn't  it?  If  the  ad  is  of  a  happy  
young  person  doing  something  outdoors  and  then  the  landing  page  is  really  
corporate,  there's  going  to  be  a  disconnect  and  people  are  going  to  feel  like,  "Oh,  
[inaudible  00:40:52].  This  is  not  what  I  thought  I  was  getting  in  for."  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yep,  you  got  it  man.  You  got  it.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  Once  there,  we  were  talking  about  the  pixels  effectively  at  each  step  
there,  they're  just  getting  tagged  and  then  we're  able  to  target  them  later,  
provided  we've  got  enough  data.  This  really  is  a  scientific  process,  isn't  it?  It's  
numbers  driven.  There's  a  creative  component  and  you've  got  to  get  that  right.  
You've  got  to  get  the  story  and  the  image  right,  but  really  it's  a  numbers  game  and  
it's  not  a  shoot  from  the  hip  thing  to  do  it  well.  You  might  get  some  quick  wins  
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doing  it  that  way  but  in  the  end  you've  got  to  be  a  bit  of  a  slave  to  the  data  because  
you  can't  make  it  up.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Everything  is  data-­‐driven.  That's  the  beautiful  part  about  marketing  online.  You  can  
measure  everything.  You  can  measure  every  conversion  point  in  the  funnel  and  
sales  process.  It  is,  you  have  that  creative  element  and  maybe  you  also  have  the  
mechanical  element  where  you  are  looking  at  numbers,  stats,  and  data.  I  would  
recommend,  though,  that  you  just  really  understand  your  numbers  because  a  lot  of  
times  we  get  caught  up  in  vanity  numbers.  How  much  am  I  paying  per  click?  What's  
my  CTR?  Really,  those  things  are  relevant  but  the  ultimate  number  that  I'm  looking  
at  is  what  is  my  return  on  investment?  If  I  put  $5  in,  am  I  getting  $10  back?  If  I  
could  put  a  dollar  in  and  get  two  dollars  back,  I  don't  really  care  what  my  CTR  is.  
None  of  that  other  stuff  matters  now.  Granted,  if  I  can  make  adjustments  and  
improve  those  metrics,  it  will  effect  the  bottom  line  overall.  My  main  focus  is  am  I  
profitable?  
  
   I'll  walk  you  through  a  scenario  so  we  can  reverse-­‐engineer  the  process  to  see  
exactly  ...  How  will  we  do  this?  How  will  we  determine  if  our  offer  is  effective?  Just  
sticking  with  the  personal  coaching  thing,  let's  say  we  sell  a  personal  coaching  
package  for  $3,000.  Not  even  $5,000,  let's  say  $3,000  for  a  personal  coaching  
package  where  we  work  with  people,  all  right.  We've  taken  them  through  this  
whole  process.  Let's  say  that  I'm  not  really  a  good  closer.  Let's  say  I  have  to  talk  to  
ten  people  and  only  close  one  out  of  ten.  I  will  hope  that,  if  people  go  through  your  
sales  process,  that  they  would  be  more  qualified  that  you  should  be  able  to  close  
one  out  of  four,  one  out  of  five.  One  out  of  six  is  industry  standard  across  multiple  
verticals  but  let's  just  say  one  out  of  ten.  Then  it  really  boils  down  to,  in  order  for  
me  to  speak  with  ten  people,  how  much  is  that  going  to  cost  me  to  speak  with  
those  ten  people?  
  
   Even  when  people  fill  out  an  application  and  they  schedule  a  call,  you're  not  going  
to  get  100%  show-­‐up  rate.  Let's  just  say  you  only  have  a  50%  show-­‐up  rate.  The  
reason  I'm  giving  you  really  the  worst  case  scenario  is  because  that's  how  I  like  to  
build  my  campaigns.  I'm  like,  "What's  just  the  absolute  worst  we  can  do?"  If  we  can  
make  the  numbers  work  under  the  absolute  worst  case  scenario,  then  we  should  
be  good.  
  
   Let's  say  we  got  10%  close  rate  on  the  phone.  We  only  got  50%  show  rate  so  in  
order  for  me  to  speak  to  ten  people,  I  have  to  get  20  applications.  If  I  know  that  my  
gross  sales  revenue  is  $3,000,  what  am  I  willing  to  pay  to  get  those  20  applications?  
In  this  case,  if  it  costs  me  $100  to  get  one  application,  times  20,  it's  $2,000.  It  would  
cost  me  $2,000  to  make  a  $3,000  sale.  Now,  those  numbers  are  still  profitable.  
They  work,  but  I  understand  that  in  order  for  me  to  make  this  work  with  those  
metrics,  I  need  to  be  at  at  least  $100  per  application.  
  
   Let's  keep  walking  backwards  and  say,  "Okay,  well,  what  do  my  numbers  need  to  
be  on  the  front  end  in  order  for  me  to  be  at  $100  per  application?"  Let's  say  I  pay  
$10  for  a  webinar  registrant.  Let's  say  I  put  200  people  on  a  call,  so  that's  $2,000.  I  
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get  200  registrants  but  I'm  only  going  to  have,  if  I'm  using  an  automated  webinar,  
let's  say  I  have  the  worst  case  numbers,  50%  show-­‐up  rate  on  the  automated  
webinar.  I'm  actually  only  going  to  have  100  people  on.  If  I  only  have  100  people  
that  actually  attend  the  webinar,  then  I  need  to  close  at  at  least  20%,  meaning  out  
of  that  100,  I  need  to  get  at  last  20%  of  those  people  to  fill  out  an  application.  That  
means  that  that  conversion  mechanism,  that  webinar,  needs  to  do  a  really  good  job  
of  at  least  getting  people  to  complete  the  application  in  order  for  me  to  hit  my  
numbers.  
  
   If  I  fall  below  that  and  I'm  only,  let's  say,  at  a  10%  close  rate,  then  I  know  I'm  in  the  
red  and  I'm  going  to  either  have  to  reduce  my  cost  per  webinar  registrant  or  
increase  my  conversion  rate  or  increase  my  close  rate  or  increase  my  show-­‐up  rate.  
You  can  play  with  each  of  those  metrics  to  see  where  you  can  increase  it.  
Obviously,  the  more  you  can  tweak  the  front  end  of  the  funnel  the  better.  If  you  
can  reduce  the  cost  per  registration,  if  you  can  increase  the  conversion  rate  on  the  
actual  webinar,  then  you  can  make  those  numbers  work  all  day.  That's  how  I  would  
walk  through  that  process  to  look  at  the  economics  of  the  actual  campaign  to  see  if  
it  even  makes  sense.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Great,  yeah.  This  is  one  reason  why  you  need  to  be  something  high  ticket  because  
if  you're  trying  to  sell  something  for  $100  at  the  end,  even  though  it  seems  like,  
"Oh  it's  cheap.  Lots  of  people  should  buy  it,"  a  lot  of  people  just  aren't  interested  in  
buying  anything  at  all  today.  You've  got  to  have  something  relatively  high  ticket  in  
order  to  make  a  lot  of  this  work.  If  you're  selling  really  cheap  stuff,  you'd  probably  
use  a  different  sales  process.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Absolutely.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   You  might  have  a  $10  widget  in  the  Facebook  ad  itself  and  not  have  all  these  steps  
because  of  the  conversion.  While  doing  it  this  way,  you  get  to  tweak  each  part  of  
the  process  and  really  get  scientific  and  go,  "Look,  you  know  what?  My  webinar  
isn't  converting  like  it  needs  to  do.  I'm  getting  great  clicks.  They  seem  qualified,  the  
ones  I'm  talking  to  are  great  and  I'm  closing  at  a  high  rate,  but  I'm  just  not  getting  
them  signing  up  to  apply.  Let's  try  [inaudible  00:48:26]  this  webinar  or  let's  change  
the  offer  and  get  really  serious."  You  can  break  it  down  and  sometimes  it's  only  a  
few  words  in  the  offer  makes  all  the  difference.  Unless  you  have  the  discipline  of  
knowing  your  numbers  and  having  repeatable  processes,  then  that's  impossible.  It's  
all  guesswork  and  you  just  can't  improve  it.  Whereas,  with  this  way,  you  can  get  it  
to  work  then  you  can  scale  it.  If  you  can  turn  a  dollar  into  two  dollars,  then  you're  
putting  thousands  of  dollars  in.  Whereas,  if  you're  turning  two  dollars  into  one  
dollar,  you've  got  to  fix  it  before  you  scale  it  up.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  exactly.  That's  why  you  start  with  a  small  budget.  $50  to  $100  per  day  and  
then  once  you  get  it  dialed  in,  you  know  your  numbers  are  working,  then  you  can  
scale  it  up  to  $500  to  $1000  per  day.  It's  all  a  numbers  game  at  that  point.  Once  
you  know  what  your  numbers  are,  a  lot  of  people  are  like,  "I  hear  people  spending  
$2000,  $5000  a  day.  How  do  they  do  that?"  Well,  they  know  their  numbers.  They  
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 15 of 18
know  how  everything's  going  to  back  out.  You  want  to  spend  as  much  as  possible  
when  you  know  what  the  backend  holds.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   For  sure.  It's  also  worth  pointing  out  these  need  a  reasonably  high  profit  margin  
product  too.  The  example  you  just  ran  where  it's  costing  you  $2000  to  get  a  
customer  and  you're  charging  $3000,  if  that's  highly  labor-­‐intensive  to  deliver,  
that's  probably  you  don't  want  to  be  selling  too  much  of  that.  Whereas,  if  you're  
selling  an  online  course  that's  costing  you  hardly  anything  to  deliver,  then  you'll  
take  that  all  day  long.  Making  sure  the  product  is  high  profit  margin  is  important  if  
the  customer  acquisition  cost  is  high.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Again,  building  on  the  worst  case  scenario  now,  we  do  numbers  much,  much  better  
than  that.  I  like  to  give  an  example  because  here's  the  thing.  When  you  first  launch  
a  campaign,  especially  if  you  haven't  driven  any  traffic  to  it,  you  can  expect  the  
worst  case  scenario.  You  have  to  understand  your  buying  data.  One  of  the  things  
that  normally  disheartens  a  lot  of  people  when  they  first  run  Facebook  campaigns  
is  like,  "I  did  all  these  things.  I  built  it  out  like  I  was  supposed  to.  I  got  my  funnel  
right.  I  swiped  the  best  funnel  sequence  and  it  bombed."  Well,  the  truth  of  the  
matter  is  that  most  campaigns  bomb  when  you  first  launch  them.  You're  just  
buying  data  to  see  how  bad  it's  going  to  bomb  and  then  you  fix  it  from  there.  There  
are  some  instances  where  if  you  may  have  run  traffic  before  or  maybe  you've  done  
joint  ventures  or  JV  traffic  and  you  have  some  metrics,  it's  going  to  make  it  easier  
for  you  because  you  have  at  least  a  baseline  to  start  with.  When  you  have  no  
baseline,  no  nothing,  understand  that  the  whole  purpose  of  the  campaign  is  just  to  
buy  that  data.  Then  once  you  purchase  that  data,  you  have  that  information.  Then  
you  can  make  those  tweaks  where  necessary  to  where  you  can  turn  it  into  a  
profitable  campaign.  
  
   Like  you  mentioned  previously,  depending  on  the  type  of  offer  because  there  are  
some  instances  where  you  may  not  have  a  high  ticket.  You  may  have  a  low  front  
end  of  $100  or  maybe  a  tripwire  with  an  upsell.  In  those  cases,  the  whole  objective  
is  to  break  even  on  the  campaign.  If  you  can  break  even  on  that  campaign,  then  
anything  you  sell  on  the  backend,  that's  $1000,  $2000,  $3000,  whatever  the  case  
may  be,  that's  pure  profit.  A  lot  of  these  front  end  funnels  that  you  see  where  
people  are  doing  free  book  giveaways  and  all  these  different  things,  they  
understand  that  my  objective  isn't  to  make  money,  I  just  want  to  acquire  a  paying  
customer,  understanding  that  once  I  acquire  that  customer,  60  days  down  the  road  
this  customer  is  going  to  be  worth  X  amount  of  dollars.  My  lifetime  customer  value  
may  be  worth  thousands  of  dollars  at  that  point.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   You  can  do  that  at  such  scale  and  also  be  building  up  your  data  and  your  pixels  
where  you  can  then  say,  "Well,  I'll  have  more  of  them,  thanks.  I'll  go  out  and  target  
people  who  I  know  convert  in  my  offer."  It  really  is  this  incredible  feedback  loop  if  
you  can  get  it  right.  I'll  tell  people  that  I've  spent  plenty  of  time  doing  Facebook  ads  
and  it  is  not  as  easy  as  it  looks.  Sometimes  you  get  a  win  and  you  think,  "Oh  this  is  
going  really  great!"  and  then  it  fizzles  out.  The  big  difference  I  see  is  that  discipline  
to  follow  a  process,  to  really  get  clear  about  what  the  interests  are  and  work  the  
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 16 of 18
numbers.  It's  a  very  different  skillset  to  what  entrepreneurs  have  generally.  To  be  a  
great  coach  or  entrepreneur  or  consultant,  often  there's  a  lot  of  feel  to  it.  People  
need  to  take  risks.  They  need  to  be  creative  and  that's  not  the  game  that  you're  
playing  when  you're  doing  optimization  for  something  like  this.  It's  a  different  
skillset  but  the  discipline  can  pay  off.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Yes,  big  time.  Patience,  discipline  are  definitely  two  key  factors  when  it  comes  to  
running  Facebook  ads.  Just  like  anything,  it  takes  time.  It  takes  practice.  I  honestly  
believe  that  buying  media  is  one  of  the  best  skillsets  that  you  can  develop  next  to  
copywriting.  If  you  can  write  copy  that  converts  and  you  can  buy  media  or  drive  
traffic  to  that  copy,  you  can  pretty  much  write  your  own  check.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  You've  given  us  tons  of  valuable  information.  You've  explained  it  in  a  
simple  way  but  it  really  is  pretty  high  level  stuff.  What  if  people  want  to  know  
more?  How  can  they  learn  more  about  what  you  do  and  how  your  business  works?  
Or,  do  you  have  any  other  training  that  they  should  check  out  if  they  want  to  take  
their  Facebook  skills  up  a  notch?  
  
Sam  Bell:   Absolutely.  You  can  head  over  to  adagencysecrets.com.  I  have  a  training  webinar  
where  I  go  over  some  case  studies  and  I  actually  go  a  little  bit  more  in-­‐depth  about  
our  process  and  some  of  the  things  that  we  were  able  to  accomplish  with  some  of  
our  clients.  That's  just  adagencysecrets.com.  I  think  I  pulled  up  the  site  somewhere  
here.  I  don't  know  if  it's  still  there.  Yeah,  there  it  is,  adagencysecrets.com.  You  can  
just  go  check  it  out  and  you  can  register  for  the  training  and  it's  a  lot  of  good  
information  that  I  think  everyone  will  find  valuable.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic  Sam.  We  really  appreciate  your  time  today.  I've  certainly  learned  
something  and  I  appreciate  your  down  to  earth  and  simple  way  of  explaining  
what's  a  pretty  complicated  topic.  I  think  it  will  leave  lots  of  people  feeling  inspired  
about  the  potential  to  use  Facebook  ads  to  get  more  clients  in  their  business.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Absolutely  man,  my  pleasure.  Thanks  for  having  me  and  my  biggest  thing,  everyone  
go  out  there  and  take  action.  Implement  and  test  this  stuff.  The  information  that  
I've  shared  is  definitely  practical  and  you  can  get  some  results.  It's  just  taking  action  
on  it.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  Thanks  again  and  I  look  forward  to  chatting  with  you  more.  Appreciate  
your  time,  mate.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Sounds  good,  Dallas.  Take  care.  
  
Dallas  McMillan:   Bye.  
  
Sam  Bell:   Bye  bye.  
  
  
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 17 of 18
How	
  to	
  get	
  Clients	
  with	
  Facebook	
  Ads	
  for	
  Coaches	
  &	
  Consultants	
  with	
  
Sam	
  Bell	
  
	
  
Interview URL:
http://digitalinfluence.com.au/how-to-get-clients-with-facebook-ads-for-coaches-consultants/
Video URL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzjN6GTbscQ
See more Digital Influence Interviews:
http://digitalinfluence.com.au/interviews
     
2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 18 of 18
  

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How to get Clients with Facebook Ads

  • 1. Interviews with Influencers by Dallas McMillan   How  to  get  Clients  with  Facebook  Ads  for  Coaches  &  Consultants  with   Sam  Bell     Interview URL: http://digitalinfluence.com.au/how-to-get-clients-with-facebook-ads-for-coaches-consultants/ Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzjN6GTbscQ See more Digital Influence Interviews: http://digitalinfluence.com.au/interviews    
  • 2. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 2 of 18 Dallas  McMillan:   Okay.  Well  hello.  Welcome  to  Digital  Influence.  Today,  I'm  interviewing  Sam  Bell   and  we're  talking  about  Facebook  ads  and  how  you  can  use  them  to  attract  clients   and  grow  your  business.  Thanks  for  coming  on  the  show  Sam.  Great  to  talk  to  you   today.     Sam  Bell:   My  pleasure  man.  Thanks  for  having  me  and  I'm  excited  to  share  some  awesome   information  that  people  will  find  useful  when  it  comes  to  running  Facebook  ads  for   their  business.     Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah,  I  really  appreciate  you  coming  on  the  show.  I  sent  a  bit  of  a  call  out.  I  sent  a   call  out  to  heaps  of  my  friends  and  colleagues  on  social  media  and  asked  them  to   recommend  someone  who  had  proven  results  attracting  clients  on  social  media   advertising,  specifically  Facebook  ads.  I  started  talking  to  Sam.  It  was  really  evident   quickly  that  he  had  some  great  experience  here  and  both  high-­‐level  understanding   so  he  could  help  us  understand  how  it  works  on  the  big  picture.  Also,  he  could  give   us  some  really  specific  advice.  Unlike  most  of  my  interviews,  Sam  is  going  to  be   really  diving  in  and  showing  us  really  practical,  tactical  stuff  today  which  will  be   helpful  for  anyone  who  is  already  doing  ads  or  wants  to  get  started,  wants  to  know   how  it  works.  This  won't  be  a  talkfest.  It  will  be  some  practical  information  that  you   can  use  immediately  and  see  how  things  actually  go  together.     Sam  Bell:   Awesome,  awesome.  Excellent.     Dallas  McMillan:   Sam,  tell  us  a  bit  about  your  business.  What  is  your  business  model?  What  do  you   do  for  people  and  how  did  you  get  into  it?     Sam  Bell:   Sure,  just  real  quick,  I  own  a  digital  marketing  agency  called  PPC  Boutique.  We   specialize  in  running  Facebook  ads,  Google  display,  and  YouTube  ads  specifically  for   coaches,  consultants,  author/speakers,  info-­‐marketers,  and  service  providers,   specifically.  I've  been  doing  this  for  quite  some  time  actually.  Before  I  started  my   agency,  I  actually  was  a  real  estate  investor.  I  used  to  buy  and  sell  a  lot  of  real   estate  in  the  metro  Atlanta  area.  Around  2006,  2007,  I  really  started  leveraging   social  media  and  web  2.0.  This  is  when  it  was  really,  really,  really  new  at  the  time.  I   started  leveraging  it  to  actually  market  and  sell  my  properties.  From  that  point,  I   actually  created  a  training  program  educating  other  real  estate  investors  how  they   can  also  leverage  web  2.0  technology  and  social  media  so  that  way  they  can   actually  create  a  brand  and  start  marketing  their  businesses.       From  there,  I've  actually  managed  to  get  into  the  whole  real  estate  info-­‐marketing   world,  if  you  would,  and  done  some  joint  ventures  with  some  people  and  built   some  relationships.  Through  that,  I  actually  started  doing  some  consulting  for  a  few   people.  Around  2009,  Google  did  a  big  ban  on  Google  AdWords,  so  a  lot  of  people   who  depended  upon  Google  at  that  time  as  their  main  lead  generator  for  leads,   they  were  basically  out  of  business.  I  actually  started  doing  some  consulting  work   and  helping  people  either  get  their  accounts  back  active  or  get  them  back  on   Google  where  they  could  actually  run  their  campaigns  compliantly.    
  • 3. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 3 of 18   From  there,  my  agency  just  evolved  to  where  we  actually  started  doing  it  for   people  on  an  ongoing  basis.  Obviously,  once  Facebook  opened  up  their  ad   platform,  we  expanded  over  there.  It  actually  has  shifted  over  the  years.  When  we   first  started,  we  were  probably  80%  Google,  20%  Facebook.  Now,  it's  the  other  way   around  where  it's  80%  Facebook,  20%  Google.  Google  still  has  a  ton  of  traffic  but   since  then  we've  been  very  fortunate  to  work  with  other  people  outside  of  the  real   estate  investing  vertical  and  other  verticals  and  just  really  see  a  lot  of  data.  Just   really  determining  what's  working,  what's  not  working  because  things  change  so   fast  but  there  are  also  some  core  marketing  principles,  especially  when  it  comes  to   marketing  online,  Facebook  specifically,  that  just  work  regardless  of  what  changes   they  may  make.     Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic  and  that  definitely  is  a  critical  element  that  things  are  changing  all  the   time.  You've  got  to  be  on  the  ball  but  also  your  marketing  fundamentals  have  to  be   there.  It  doesn't  matter  what  you  do.  You  can't  just  use  the  latest  tricks  if  you  don't   have  your  marketing  fundamentals  right.  Even  my  own  business,  you've  realized   years  later,  "Oh  my  god.  Of  course  that  didn't  work."  I  was  missing  the  most   obvious  things  about  nicheing  or  my  message.  Having  both  of  those  in  place  is   critical  and  that's  something  that  you're  going  to  help  us  understand  today.  Looking   forward  to  it.       Tell  us  about  how  Facebook  is  different  from  Google  Ads  because,  in  a  way,  they're   offering  different  things,  aren't  they?  With  Google  AdWords,  mostly  people  are   searching.  They  were  already  looking.     Sam  Bell:   Exactly.     Dallas  McMillan:   It's  common  lead  generating  whereas  with  Facebook,  it's  often  they're  not  looking   at  all  and  it's  more  demand  generation  where  suddenly  they're  thinking,  "Oh,  gee,   maybe  I  should  do  that,"  which  they  probably  weren't  thinking  five  minutes  before   they  saw  your  ad.  How  are  they  different  and  why  is  one  better  than  others  in   different  situations?     Sam  Bell:   Sure.  That's  a  good  question.  Basically  what  it  comes  down  to  is  intent.  Essentially,   with  Google,  when  someone  actually  goes  to  Google,  they  actually  type  in  a   keyword.  They  actually  have  a  much  higher  intent.  Therefore,  they're  much  more   qualified  in  terms  of  where  they  are  either  in  the  buying  process  or  research   process.  The  probability  in  terms  of  them  actually  converting  is  also  much  higher,   as  well.  With  Facebook,  you  don't  have  the  intent  but  you  have  a  much  better   targeting  in  terms  of  demographic  and  psychographic  and  really  just  understanding   exactly  what  it  is,  what  emotional  and  psychological  triggers  will  get  someone  to   respond.  Even  though  the  intent  is  different,  if  you  understand  how  to   communicate  with  people  on  Facebook  and  you  really  understand  your  avatar  and   your  targeting  is  correct,  you  can  get  just  as  high  conversions  if  now  higher   conversions  from  Facebook,  as  well.     Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  I  must  say,  Facebook  marketing  is  the  marketing  medium  that  makes  the  
  • 4. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 4 of 18 whole  concept  of  the  client  avatar  so  much  more  valuable  than  other  mediums.   We've  all  seen  the  exercise  to  work  out  who  your  ideal  client  is.  It's  a  38  year  old,   married  man  who's  got  two  kids  with  dogs  called  Roger  and  he  reads  this  and  does   that.  How  do  you  actually  use  that  information  if  you  don't  have  access  to  those   marketing  channels.  Whereas,  with  Facebook,  if  you  know  they  like  something,  if   you  know  they've  got  a  dog,  you  can  actually  target  those  things  really  directly.  To   me,  Facebook  ads  are  really  the  first  time  that  it's  almost  worth  filling  out  the   avatar  with  complete  seriousness  because  you  can  pretty  much  target  everything   that  would  go  into  an  avatar  with  Facebook  ads.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  That's  the  beautiful  part  about  Facebook.  They  have  so  much  data   on  their  users  and  you're  able  to  really  leverage  that  data.  They  do  a  good  job  of   really  sharing  that.  One  of  the  things  that  have  also  really  made  Facebook  even   more  powerful  from  a  marketing  perspective  over  the  past  year  or  so  has  been  the   implementation  of  their  Facebook  pixel.  Now,  they've  had  conversion  pixels  for   some  time  but  the  new  Facebook  pixel  which  allows  you  to  really  optimize  and   target  based  on  that,  they've  done  a  really,  really  good  job.  Their  algorithm  is   extremely  strong  once  you  get  that  pixel  seasoned  enough  and  you  get  enough   data.  They  actually  make  your  job  much  easier.  If  you  have  your  targeting  and  your   messaging  correct  on  the  front  end  and  you  get  enough  conversion  data  once  that   data  in  that  pixel  is  seasoned,  then  it  almost  becomes  easy.     Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah  and  it's  something  that  I've  only  really  started  to  see  the  power  of  recently   and  partly  with  the  new  pixel.  We  should  just  say  a  pixel  is  just  a  tracking  code  so  it   tells  Facebook  that  someone  has  visited  your  website  or  viewed  one  of  your  ads  on   Facebook.  What  you  can  do  is  you  can  work  out  the  people  who  are  already  clicking   through  to  your  page  and  then  target  people  like  them.  Then,  as  you  get  more   dialog,  the  people  are  getting  to  the  page  and  opting  in,  you  can  target  people  like   the  people  who  are  opting  in.  Then,  eventually,  as  you  get  enough  data,  you've  got   enough  buyers,  you  can  target  people  who  are  like  your  existing  buyers.  When  we   say,  "like,"  it's  largely  based  on  how  they  perform  with  other  Facebook  ads.  That   brings  us  on  to  one  of  the  other  tricks  of  Facebook  marketing  in  that,  very  often,   you're  targeting  people  who  like  another  provider  in  you  industry,  one  of  your   competitors.  If  you  wanted  to  sell  webinars,  you  might  be  targeting  Amy  Porterfield   because  she's  already  successfully  selling  webinars.  That's  the  shortcut  to  targeting.   It's  not  always  about,  "I  want  a  male  from  13  to  48  years  of  age  who  lives  here  and   has  this  job  description."  It  can  be  they've  clicked  on  this  ad  almost.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  That  brings  up  a  very  good  point  and  really  which  is  one  of   probably  the  most  important  things  is  really  just  understanding,  again,  who  is  your   target.  Then,  also,  understanding  your  niche  too.  Within  a  niche,  you  have  a  certain   demographic  that  have  a  higher  propensity  to  either  buy  or  take  whatever  specific   action  that  you're  looking  for.  The  better  that  you  understand  your  niche  and  your   vertical  then  the  easier  it  is  to  also  understand  your  avatar.       There's  actually  a  few  shortcuts  that  we  use,  I  guess  you  could  say  a  few  hacks,  if   you  will,  that  allow  you  to  bypass  that.  You  mentioned  one  of  them  already  is,  if  
  • 5. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 5 of 18 you  know  some  of  your  competitors  or  who  are  some  authority  figures  in  that   specific  marketplace  and  you  know  that  they're  already  marketing  or  selling  a  very   similar  product  or  service,  you  can  very  easily  target  those  individuals.  The   challenge  sometimes  though  happens  when  you  want  to  go  into  a  certain  market   or  vertical  and  you  might  not  actually  be  able  to  target  that  specific  person  on   Facebook,  even  though  they  may  have  a  big  audience  or  a  big  following.  It's  weird.  I   don't  know  exactly  why  Facebook  does  that  but  there  are  some  instances  where   you'll  go  to  a  page  and  that  page  may  have  over  a  100,000  likes.  When  you  go  to   actually  target  as  an  interest,  it's  not  available.  You  may  see  another  page  that  may   only  have  30  to  40,000  likes  and  you  can  actually  target  it  as  an  interest.  I  believe  it   has  to  do  with  the  algorithm,  how  many  people  are  actually  talking  about  a   particular  subject  and  it's  just  based  on  the  amount  of  likes.  I  know  that's  part  of  it   but  there  are  some  ways  to  actually  leverage  that  and  find  alternative  targeting   sources  that  you  may  not  have  been  aware  of  previously.  I'm  happy  to  share  some   of  that  on  the  call  today.     Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  Perhaps  we  can  start  off  just  by  talking  about  the  big  picture  process  of   how  we're  using  Facebook  ads.  This  is  something  I've  talked  to  other  specialists   about  and  I  cover  in  my  training  but  just  tell  us  how  most  of  your  clients  use   Facebook  ads.  Where  do  they  sent  them?  What  do  they  get  them  to  do?  How  do   they  eventually  turn  them  into  a  customer?     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  that's  a  great  question.  The  majority  of  our  clients,  again,  are  coaches  and   consultants.  For  the  most  part,  we  use  the  webinar  model.  Basically,  we  have  a   Facebook  ad  driving  people  to,  just  not  a  webinar  but  an  automated  webinar.  I   want  to  make  that  distinction.  Basically,  we  have  an  automated  webinar  that  we're   driving  people  to.  They  register  for  the  webinar  and,  essentially,  the  call  to  action   on  the  webinar  is  for  them  to  complete  some  application  or  survey  which  pre-­‐ qualifies  that  lead.  Then,  from  there,  they  generally  have  a  phone  consultation  or   strategy  session  at  which  they're  presented  with  the  opportunity  to  enroll  in   whatever  program  or  service  that  our  client  is  offering.  That's  pretty  much  the   standard  model,  especially  when  you  have  big  ticket  products,  anything  $1000  plus.       Granted,  you  can  actually  sell  products  that  are  $1000  from  automated  webinars.   The  challenge  is  that  when  you're  going  to  code  traffic,  there's  no  relationship   established,  the  offer  has  to  be  really,  really  good.  Generally,  the  higher  the  price   point,  the  more  time  you're  going  to  have  to  spend  to  really,  not  only  establish   rapport  and  authority  and  trust,  but  to  really  show  the  benefits  and  features  of  the   product  or  service  to  where  someone  would  be  willing  to  spend  $1000  plus  and  not   really  have  that  relationship.       When  you're  selling  higher  end  services,  it's  a  much  lower  barrier  to  entry  for   someone  to  pre-­‐qualify  and  then,  from  there,  have  the  opportunity  to  speak  with   them  on  the  phone.  That  way,  you  can  really  build  that  relationship,  establish  the   authority,  address  any  concerns,  and  then  hopefully  close  the  sale  over  the  phone.     Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  Another  huge  benefit  of  talking  to  your  clients  like  that  is  you  get  to  work  
  • 6. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 6 of 18 out  what's  wrong  with  the  offer  too.  Perhaps,  you're  almost  selling  people  the   wrong  thing.  By  the  sales  process  that  you  use,  the  sales  conversation,  you  can   actually  ask  what  are  you  paying  for  it?  Make  sure  you're  hitting  them  in  your  ads,   in  your  landing  page,  in  your  webinar  because  if  you  try  and  do  everything   automatically  and  just  have  a  purely  online  business,  you  don't  get  that  client   contact  which  you  need  to  develop  a  high  value  product  that  people  are  prepared   to  pay  $1000,  $5000,  $10,000  for.  Understanding  the  customer,  always  the  key  to   marketing,  sales,  and  great  product  development.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  Absolutely.  Some  people  use  different  sales  mechanisms.  We've   just  found  webinars  to  be  the  most  effective  and  then  using  an  automated  webinar   model  because,  what  we  found  through  testing,  is  with  live  webinars,  the  good   thing  about  live  webinars  is  that  you  do  have  a  very  specific  date.  The  challenge  is   that  the  more  time  that  someone  has  in  between  the  time  that  they  registered   from  the  time  they  attend,  your  attendance  rate  is  going  to  be  much  lower.  It's   going  to  be  decreased.  On  average,  with  live  webinars,  we'll  see  anywhere  between   a  25%  and  maybe  a  40%  attendance  rate,  40%  obviously  being  on  the  high  end.   What  automate  webinars,  just  in  time  webinars,  the  way  that  we  structure  them,   we  see  anywhere  between  50%  to  70%  attendance  rate  on  the  regular.  That's   pretty  common  ground  actually.  If  you  see  with  low  50%  on  an  automated  just  in   time  webinar,  then  there  may  be  something  off  with  the  messaging.  Your   attendance  rates  are  definitely  going  to  increase.  The  beautiful  part  of  it  is  that  it   actually  has  to  be  present  to  give  that  webinar  live.  You  can  actually  do  a  really,   really  good  webinar  one  time,  deliver  the  goods,  prove  that  it  performs  and  it   converts,  and  then  once  you  know  that  this  one  performs,  then  you  can  then  take   that  and  then  put  it  into  an  automated  evergreen  format.     Dallas  McMillan:   Okay,  awesome.  Of  course,  the  big  question  then  becomes  how  do  we  get  people   to  this  webinar?  That's  really  where  the  Facebook  ads  come  in,  isn't  it?     Sam  Bell:   Absolutely,  absolutely.  The  webinar  and  having  that  conversion  mechanism  is  just   one  part  of  the  equation.  Then  you  actually  have  to  get  in  front  of  the  right   audience,  the  target  audience,  in  order  to  make  sure  that  you  are  showing  your   offer  to  people  who  have  the  highest  probability  to  actually  convert  into  a  potential   sell.  That  really  boils  down  to,  again,  knowing  your  vertical  or  your  market,  and   then  also  knowing  and  understanding  your  demographic.  Like  I  said  previously,   there  are  a  few  ways  that  we  actually  use  to  shortcut  that.  If  you  remember  when   we  first  started  the  call,  we  talked  about  the  power  of  Google  and  how  people  who   are  actively  searching  on  Google  have  a  specific  intent.  The  good  part  with  Google   is  that  if  I  go  to  Google  and  I  type  in  a  keyword,  I  have  an  intent  that  I  am  looking   for  a  particular  product  or  service  or  something  to  that  effect.  We  actually  leverage   this  to  find  targeted  interests  on  Facebook.  I'll  be  happy  to  walk  you  through  that   process  if  you're  interested.     Dallas  McMillan:   Yes,  sounds  great.     Sam  Bell:   All  right,  awesome.  
  • 7. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 7 of 18   Dallas  McMillan:   I'll  just  raise  the  screen  here  and  we'll  have  a  bit  more  view  of  your  Facebook  ads   manager  account.  Great,  looks  good.     Sam  Bell:   All  right,  can  you  see  my  screen?     Dallas  McMillan:   Yes.     Sam  Bell:   All  right,  excellent.  One  of  the  things  that  we  like  to  do,  we  actually  just  started   going  to  Google  and  looking  for  keywords.  I'll  walk  you  through  the  thought  process   here.  For  example,  if  I  was,  let's  say,  a  fitness  coach  or  expert  and  I  wanted  to  find   people  who  were  actively  seeking  out  a  fitness  coach.  I  would  actually  start  with   Google.  I'll  explain.  This  will  make  more  sense  as  I  go  through  it.  I'll  go  to  Google   and  I'll  type  in  "fitness  coach."  Let's  see  fitness  coach  online.  Basically,  what  I'm   looking  for  is  I'm  looking  for  the  top  sites.  I'm  looking  for  the  top  organic  sites  that   are  ranking.  The  reason  is  because  these  are  the  sites  that  get  a  ton  of  traffic  for   these  specific  keywords  that  also  have  a  very  high  intent.  Why  does  that  matter?       Well,  most  sites  that  show  up  in  the  organic  listings,  if  they  get  enough  traffic,  then   they  also  generally  have  a  pretty  big  organic  following.  Most  sites  that  have  a   pretty  big  organic  following  also  have  a  Facebook  page.  What  I'm  really  doing  is  I'm   using  certain  keywords  to  find  sites  that  will  have  the  type  of  visitors  that  have  high   intent  that  also  have  a  page  that  I  can  potentially  target.  Does  that  make  sense?     Dallas  McMillan:   Yes.     Sam  Bell:   Excellent.  Let's  see.  Fitocracy,  so  this  says,  "How  to  get  started  as  an  online   personal  trainer."  I  don't  want  that.  I'm  actually  looking  for  a  personal  trainer,   right?  "Gives  you  a  private  coach,"  so  this  may  work.  Born  Fitness  Coaching  with   Consultation,  Just  Go  Fitness,  Free  Personal  Trainer.  Here's  what  I'm  looking  for.  I'm   looking  to  see,  do  they  have  a  social  presence.  Generally,  they  will  have  some  link   to  their  social  media  account  on  their  site.       Here  we  go.  All  right,  Fitocracy.  I  just  want  to  see  how  many,  all  right,  they  have   61,000  likes,  right?  We  know  that  anyone  that  is  interested  in  Fitocracy  are  people   who  are  actively  looking  for  a  personal  trainer  or  a  fitness  coach  of  some  sort,   right?       Born  Fitness,  personalize  your  fitness  and  diet  plan  now.  Again,  same  thing  here,  all   I'm  looking  for  really  is  just  the  social  and  seeing  what  type  of  following.  35,000   likes,  okay.  Meet  your  goals,  right?  Basically,  anyone  that  finds  these  sites   organically  are  more  than  likely  my  ideal  prospect.  I'm  doing  this  for  sake  of   example.  However,  you  will  want  to  obviously  read  some  content  on  the  site  and   just  make  sure  that  the  information  on  here  is  what  your  target  prospect  would   potentially  be  looking  for.  This  looks  like  it  is.  It  doesn't  have  as  many  likes  but   that's  okay  because  even  when  we  come  across  sites  that  do  not  have  a  big   following,  that's  okay  because  you  can  still  leverage  their  social  presence.  
  • 8. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 8 of 18     Here's  another  one,  Changing  Shape.  Let's  see  how  many  likes  Changing  Shape  has.   They  have  around  2,000.  All  right,  this  is  a  good  start.  Then,  what  we  do  is  we  go   from  here  and  then  we  use  the  Facebook  tool,  Audience  Insights.  If  you're  not   familiar  with  Audience  Insights,  Audience  Insights  is  a  Facebook  research  tool  that   allows  you  to  look  for  specific  interests  and  see  the  demographic  in  that  interest,   see  the  psychographic,  also  see  income  data,  the  behavior  of  those  individuals  on   Facebook.  What  I  want  to  start  doing  is  I  want  to  start  qualifying  these  particular   pages  and  see  if  they  are  a  potential  target,  right?       I'm  going  to  start  here  with  Fitocracy  and  see  if  they  are  an  interest  that  I  can  target   on  Facebook.  They  are.  You  see  that  came  up.  Now,  I  can  see  the  demographic.  It's   right  down  the  middle.  51%  women,  51%  men,  career-­‐building,  lifestyle,  most  of   these  people  have  a  college  education.  49%  of  them  are  married  and  they  excel  in   IT  and  technical  and  arts,  entertainment,  sports,  media.  Okay.  Now,  here  is   something  interesting  that  you  want  to  pay  attention  to.  Fitocracy,  I'm  looking  for   an  affinity.  They  have  an  affinity  of  1,317.  What  this  basically  means  is  the  higher   the  affinity  the  more  engaged  these  people  are  with  this  page.  We  generally  look   for  pages  with  an  affinity  of  50  or  above  so,  to  have  1,317  affinity,  means  that  these   people  are  very  highly  engaged,  which  is  a  very  good  thing  for  us.       Activity,  so  activity  tells  me,  do  these  people  click  on  ads?  Do  they  like  pages?  From   what  I  can  see  here,  yes  they  do.  Most  of  them  use  both  desktop  devices  and   mobile  devices.  When  I  actually  go  set  up  my  campaigns,  I'm  actually  going  to   target  both  of  those  placements  so  that  way  I  can  maximize  my  exposure.       Household,  so  they're  mostly  homeowners.  That's  good.  I  can  see  that  the  average   median  value  of  their  home  is  $200,000  and  $500,000  so  these  people  also  do  have   money  to  spend,  which  is  also  pretty  important  because,  if  we're  targeting  people   and  they're  all  broke,  that's  not  necessarily  a  good  thing  if  we're  looking  to  sell  a   product  or  service,  especially  if  it's  pricier.  Then,  also,  they  do  have  an  affinity  to   use  credit  cards  66%  of  the  time,  okay.       Retail  spending,  online  purchases,  basically  this  would  be  a  good  interest  to  target.   That's  really  how  we  use  the  intent  of  Google  to  find  high  ranking  organic  sites  and   then  to  begin  to  drill  down  and  determine  if  they  have  a  audience  that  we  could   potentially  target  on  Facebook.  This  is  how  you  can  reverse-­‐engineer,  if  you  will,   using  Google  to  find  targeted  interests  that  otherwise  you  probably  never  would   even  target.  I  just  did  this  off  the  cuff.  I've  never  heard  of  Fitocracy  in  my  life  so  this   is  something  that  I  probably  would  have  never  found  otherwise.     Dallas  McMillan:   To  some  degree,  you  can  also  find  other  keyword  ideas  and  marketing  phrases   because  you  know  what  those  people  ...  The  people  that  like  that  page  like  what   they're  saying.  They  like  what  they're  doing.  They  like  what  they're  offering.  You   can  look  at  their  marketing  messages  and  even  their  product  offerings  and  think,   "Gee,  maybe  I  could  offer  something  similar  to  that."  It's  a  great  way  to  see  what's   already  working  in  the  market  that  people  are  responding  to  and  responding  at  a  
  • 9. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 9 of 18 high  rate.  You  can  spend  ten  years  trying  to  build  a  Facebook  following  and  never   get  that  engagement.  Or,  you  can  model  someone  who's  already  killing  it  with  that   level  of  affinity  and  save  yourself  a  lot  of  time.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  You  can  also  see  other  pages  that  they  like.  More  than  likely,   there's  other  pages  that  they're  associated  with,  as  well.  You  can  take  a  look,  like   you  said,  at  their  content,  see  what  type  of  content  they're  putting  out  there,   which  content  is  really  getting  the  most  engagement.  That  gives  you  an  idea  of   some  of  the  things  that  you  may  want  to  consider  posting  on  your  page  or  things   like  that.       You  can  even  take  this  a  step  further  and  leverage  and  find  similar  pages  to   Fitocracy.  This  is  one  of  the  strategies  that  we  use  here  in  our  agency.  There's   actually  a  site  called  Find  My  FBID.  Basically,  what  this  site  does  is  it  reverse-­‐ engineers.  It  basically  converts  the  actual  name  of  the  page  into  the  numeric  ID   that  Facebook  uses  to  identify  that  page.  I'll  show  you  why  that's  important  in  a   minute.  For  Fitocracy,  this  is  the  numeric  ID.  Why  this  is  relevant  is  because   Facebook  really  does  provide  us  with  all  the  data  that  we  need.  There's  actually  a   query  that  you  can  use  within  Facebook  to  find  pages  that  are  similar.  I  can  say,   "Facebook,  show  me  pages  that  are  similar  to  the  Fitocracy  based  on  the  page  ID."   Now,  Facebook  has  given  me  a  list  of  other  pages  that  I  could  potentially  target   that  are  very  similar  and  are  going  to  also  have  very  similar  audience  that,  again,  I   otherwise  probably  would  have  never  even  considered.       The  one  that  is  most  similar  is  CrossFit  Invictus.  Then  we  have  Jim  [inaudible   00:28:00],  Rock  Tape,  Steve  Paleo  Gods.  Look  at  this.  You  see  the  correlation?  Born   Fitness,  wasn't  this  the  guy  that  was  in  the  organic  result,  right?  Nia  Shank,  Quest   Nutrition,  these  are  all  potential  interests  that  I  could  go  and  check  and  see  if  they   are  available  to  target  that  we  otherwise  would  never  have  even  ...  I've  never  heard   of  any  of  these  other  than  Born  Fitness,  which  we  just  Googled  a  few  moments  ago.   It's  a  very  effective  strategy  and  tactic  that  anyone  can  apply,  regardless  of  the   vertical.  That  was  just  off  the  cuff,  one  keyword,  but  you  can  really  dig  deep  and  do   a  lot  of  research  and  find  very  good,  high  affinity  targets  and  interests.  The  beauty   of  using  this  strategy  is  that  most  people  aren't  aware  of  it  so  those  interests   probably  won't  have  anywhere  near  the  competition  of  some  of  the  maybe  bigger,   broader  interests  that  you  would  potentially  go  after.     Dallas  McMillan:   Great.  For  any  marketer,  this  is  just  the  dream  in  terms  of  being  able  to  find  related   content  and  look  at  how  ...  They're  doing  your  market  research  for  you  in  way   because  they've  got  their  audience  already.  You  can  see  what  posts  people  are   responding  to  and  model  those.  We  can  do  more,  can't  we?  We  can  actually  go  and   target  those  pages'  most  engaged  followers  with  our  ads  and  get  our  content  right   in  front  of  them.     Sam  Bell:   Yep,  exactly.  Then,  through  the  power  of  the  pixel  because  my  strategy  is  to  get  as   very  focused  and  targeted  as  possible  on  the  front  end,  season  the  pixel  with  those   really  highly  hyper-­‐targeted  people,  and  then  once  I  get  enough  data,  my  pixel  is  
  • 10. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 10 of 18 then  seasoned  with  the  best  of  the  best,  the  most  engaged  people.  When  I  tell   Facebook  to  go  out  there  and  find  and  optimize  for  me  based  off  this  pixel,  they're   going  to  find  the  most  hyper-­‐targeted,  most  engaged  people  because  of  the   targeting  that  we  did  up  front.     Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  You're  picking  the  right  people  at  the  beginning  but  then  you're  filtering   or  refining  them  and  just  the  cream  of  the  cream  is  who  you're  targeting  at  the   end.  Instead  of  that  classic  story  that  half  the  money  I  spent  on  advertising  is   wasted,  you  don't  know  which  half,  and  of  course  really  it's  99%  of  the  money  is   wasted,  instead  you  can  filter  it  down  just  to  the  few  percent  of  people  who  are   most  likely  to,  not  only  be  interested,  but  to  click  and  even  to  buy  and  just  market   to  those  people,  or  them  and  your  best  guess,  and  have  large  numbers  of  them  as   well.  Rather  than  just  having  your  handful  of  people,  you  can  use  that  lookalike   audience  to  expand  it  to  hundred,  thousands,  or  tens  of  thousands  of  people.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  A  beautiful  part  is  that,  as  you  scale  out  and  use  those  lookalike   audiences,  even  if  you  scale  it  to  2,000,0000,  3,000,000  people,  once  you  have  that   pixel  data,  you're  telling  Facebook  to  optimize.  Even  though  you  have  a  pool  of   3,000,000  people,  Facebook  is  only  going  to  show  your  ads  to  those  people  that  fit   the  criteria  based  on  the  data  that's  on  your  pixel  anyways.  That's  really  how  you   scale  out.  You  can  target  broad  interests  and  things  like  that.  However,  I've  found   this  strategy  to  be  much  more  effective.  Obviously,  at  the  end  of  the  day,  you   always  want  to  test  so  go  see  for  yourself.  Test,  play  around  with  it,  but  you  don't   need  big  budgets  to  do  this.  You  can  do  this  with  very  small  budgets  to  start  and   scale  out  as  long  as  your  numbers  work  for  you.     Dallas  McMillan:   For  sure  and  it's  worth  mentioning,  for  people  who  haven't  done  a  lot  with   Facebook  ads,  is  that  Facebook  actually  optimizes  each  campaign  based  on  who  is   responding.  As  more  people  engage  with  your  ad,  it  gets  a  better  idea  who  to  show   that  ad  to  in  the  future.  Your  ads  can  improve  over  time  in  performance  when  they   first  start.  That's  what  the  seasoning  process  partly  refers  to.  It's  Facebook   gathering  data.  This  is  huge  amounts  of  data  that  it's  basing  its  calculations  on,   much  more  than  we  can  handle  ourselves.  It's  almost  a  big  data  type  thing  because   it's  referring  to  a  lot  of  the  other  ads  that  have  been  run  in  the  same  niche  as  well,   looking  at  audience  behaviors.  It  pretty  much  knows  the  people  who  are  not  only   going  to  click  on  the  ad,  but  then  who  are  going  to  put  their  email  address  in.  That's   something  we  just  didn't  have  access  to  previously.       Awesome,  so  where  to  we  go  from  there?  We've  got  our  audience  list.  What's  the   next  step  in  the  process?     Sam  Bell:   Sure,  so  once  you  have  your  targeting  down  and  you  understand  who  your   audience  is,  then  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  are  creating  the  right  message.   Understanding  that  with  Google,  we  can  be  very  direct  in  our  marketing  because   the  intent  is  there.  With  Facebook,  Facebook  is  social.  People  are  not  on  Facebook   to  buy,  to  find  a  fitness  coach.  We  really  want  to  use  the  medium  that  resonates   most  with  people  on  Facebook  and  that's  stories.  You  want  you  ads  to  look  native  
  • 11. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 11 of 18 meaning  you  want  them  to  look  like  regular  news  feed.  You  don't  want  them  to   look  like  ads.  You  don't  want  them  to  stand  out  and  scream,  "I'm  a  marketing  ad.   Click  on  me."  You  want  it  to  actually  be  more  subtle  and  engaging.  The  images  you   use  are  important,  however,  you  want  them  to  look  almost  organic,  if  you  will,  just   like  it  was  their  friend  sharing  it.  You  want  to  tell  stories.  You  want  to  talk  about   things.       For  example,  I  might  write  an  ad,  and  just  to  stay  in  line  with  this,  I  might  write  an   ad  that  says,  "I  was  struggling  to  get  myself  in  peak  performance  shape.  I  have  my   20th  anniversary  class  reunion  coming  up.  I  was  just  worried  that  I  wasn't  going  to   have  the  same  look  that  a  lot  of  classmates  saw  when  they  saw  me  20  years  ago.  I   started  doing  some  research  online  and  I  came  across  this  guy  over  at  Born  Fitness.   I  was  absolutely  blown  away  with  some  of  the  results  that  they  got.  I  said,  'What   the  heck.  Let  me  go  ahead  an  give  it  a  try.'  I  went  and  I  subscribed  to  their  email   and  I  downloaded  this  e-­‐book.  I  was  absolutely  amazed  at  some  of  the  practical   things  that  were  in  the  e-­‐book  that  I  was  able  to  implement  and  get  in  my  peak   look  and  feel  in  time  for  my  reunion.  I  think  you  would  really  like  it.  You  should  go   check  it  out  and  see  for  yourself."     Dallas  McMillan:   Yeah,  cool,  so  it's  very  personal.  It's  still  obviously  got  some  personal  intent  there   but  it  is  conversational  and  it's  talking  to  someone  one  on  one.     Sam  Bell:   Exactly.  You  want  to  incorporate  stories  and  people.  If  you  really  think  about  it  at   the  end  of  the  day,  humans  pass  knowledge  down  through  stories  and  story-­‐telling.   When  you  market  on  Facebook,  if  you  think  in  terms  of  a  storyteller,  you  think  in   terms  of,  not  so  much  of,  "I'm  selling  something,"  as  much  as,  "I'm  trying  to   connect  with  someone."  If  you  can  connect  with  someone  on  an  emotional  and   psychological  level,  then  you  can  actually  move  them  through  the  process  without   actually  trying  to  push  them  and  shove  them.  They  will  pull  their  way  through  the   process  naturally.  That's  something  to  definitely  test  and  I  would  definitely   recommend.  You  don't  have  to  be  a  top  tier  copywriter.  There  are  some  basic   elements,  again,  that  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  have  in  your  stories  of   course.  At  the  end  of  the  day,  if  you  just  tell  a  good  story  and  make  it  personal  and   they  connect  with  that  story,  you'll  be  surprised  at  the  results  you  can  get.     Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  I  love  that  point  that  you  don't  need  to  hard  sell  them.  In  fact,   particularly  with  high  ticket  stuff,  if  people  feel  like  it's  being  pushed  on  them,   they're  not  interested.  They  have  to  want  it.  They  have  to  think,  wow  that  looks   great.  I'm  interested  and  feel  like  it's  almost  a  serendipitous  discovery  or  exactly   what  they've  been  looking  for  or,  "Wow,  this  is  something  new  and  exciting  and  I   can't  wait  to  get  involved,"  rather  than  feeling  like  they've  just  been  shown  a   product  catalog  or  something.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  absolutely.  Again,  that's  just  something  just  to  keep  in  mind.  Once  you  have   your  targeting,  you  have  your  ad,  you  have  good  imagery,  then  it's  really  just  a   matter  of  launching  the  campaigns  and  testing  them  and  see  which  ads  people   respond  to.  That's  where  your  images  really  come  into  play.  You  want  to  use  
  • 12. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 12 of 18 images  that  would  be  relevant  to  that  story  or  that  will  stand  out  or  that  would   catch  someone's  eye.  I'm  oversimplifying  the  process  but  at  the  end  of  the  day  it   really  is  that  straightforward.  If  you  have  your  interests,  your  targeting  correct,  you   have  a  good  story  to  go  with  it,  you  have  imagery,  and  people  click  on  your  page,   that  will  probably  be  the  next  optimization  point.  As  people  are  looking  at  your  ads   and  they're  clicking  on  your  ads  or  getting  traffic  and  you're  not  seeing  the   conversions  or  people  aren't  taking  the  actions  that  you  want,  so  they're  not  opting   in  or  they're  not  registering  for  your  webinar  or  downloading  your  e-­‐book,  then  it's   probably  a  landing  page  issue.       One  of  the  things  that  we  like  to  look  at  is  the  continuity  of  that  story,  right?   Whatever  we  promised  in  the  ad,  whatever  we  said  that  they  were  clicking  on  the   ad  to  go  and  do,  you  want  to  make  sure  that  you  have  continuity  there  and  you   deliver  on  that  message.  The  whole  purpose  of  the  ad  is  to  get  them  to  click  on  it.   The  whole  purpose  of  the  landing  page  is  to  get  them  to  take  the  next  step  and  the   next  step  and  the  next  step.       When  you're  looking  at  your  sales  process,  your  sales  funnel,  understand  that  each   component  serves  one  purpose  and  it's  just  to  get  them  to  go  to  the  next  step  in   that  sales  process.  The  ad  sells  the  click.  The  landing  page  sells  the  opt-­‐in  or   registration.  After  they  opt  in,  then  your  [inaudible  00:39:27]  does  what  it's   supposed  to  do  or  the  webinar  in  this  case  would  sell  the  application.  Then  once   they  take  the  application  then  you  sell  the  product  or  service.  Just  keep  that  in   mind.  A  lot  of  times  people  make  the  mistake  of  trying  to  sell  in  the  ad.  They're   trying  to  sell  the  product  in  the  ad  or  they're  even  trying  to  sell  the  product  on  the   landing  page.  That's  really  not  what  those  sales  mechanisms  are  for.  Those  sales   mechanisms  are  meant  exclusively  to  service  one  purpose  and  that's  to  pull  people   through  the  next  step  of  the  process.  Keep  that  in  mind  and  don't  get  too  caught  up   in  trying  to  sell  before  they  get  to  the  proper  point  where  they  need  to  be  sold.     Dallas  McMillan:   You  still  need  to  know  where  they're  going  ultimately  so  you  can  be  sending  them   in  the  right  direction.  It  really  is  just  about,  you're  just  pitching  for  that  next  step.   Otherwise,  people,  they  don't  want  to  be  signing  up  for  the  application  call  on  the   ad.  They've  got  no  interest  in  that.  All  they're  interested  in  is  learning  more  about   this  offer.  There  has  to  be  congruence  there  too,  doesn't  it?  If  the  ad  is  of  a  happy   young  person  doing  something  outdoors  and  then  the  landing  page  is  really   corporate,  there's  going  to  be  a  disconnect  and  people  are  going  to  feel  like,  "Oh,   [inaudible  00:40:52].  This  is  not  what  I  thought  I  was  getting  in  for."     Sam  Bell:   Yep,  you  got  it  man.  You  got  it.     Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  Once  there,  we  were  talking  about  the  pixels  effectively  at  each  step   there,  they're  just  getting  tagged  and  then  we're  able  to  target  them  later,   provided  we've  got  enough  data.  This  really  is  a  scientific  process,  isn't  it?  It's   numbers  driven.  There's  a  creative  component  and  you've  got  to  get  that  right.   You've  got  to  get  the  story  and  the  image  right,  but  really  it's  a  numbers  game  and   it's  not  a  shoot  from  the  hip  thing  to  do  it  well.  You  might  get  some  quick  wins  
  • 13. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 13 of 18 doing  it  that  way  but  in  the  end  you've  got  to  be  a  bit  of  a  slave  to  the  data  because   you  can't  make  it  up.     Sam  Bell:   Everything  is  data-­‐driven.  That's  the  beautiful  part  about  marketing  online.  You  can   measure  everything.  You  can  measure  every  conversion  point  in  the  funnel  and   sales  process.  It  is,  you  have  that  creative  element  and  maybe  you  also  have  the   mechanical  element  where  you  are  looking  at  numbers,  stats,  and  data.  I  would   recommend,  though,  that  you  just  really  understand  your  numbers  because  a  lot  of   times  we  get  caught  up  in  vanity  numbers.  How  much  am  I  paying  per  click?  What's   my  CTR?  Really,  those  things  are  relevant  but  the  ultimate  number  that  I'm  looking   at  is  what  is  my  return  on  investment?  If  I  put  $5  in,  am  I  getting  $10  back?  If  I   could  put  a  dollar  in  and  get  two  dollars  back,  I  don't  really  care  what  my  CTR  is.   None  of  that  other  stuff  matters  now.  Granted,  if  I  can  make  adjustments  and   improve  those  metrics,  it  will  effect  the  bottom  line  overall.  My  main  focus  is  am  I   profitable?       I'll  walk  you  through  a  scenario  so  we  can  reverse-­‐engineer  the  process  to  see   exactly  ...  How  will  we  do  this?  How  will  we  determine  if  our  offer  is  effective?  Just   sticking  with  the  personal  coaching  thing,  let's  say  we  sell  a  personal  coaching   package  for  $3,000.  Not  even  $5,000,  let's  say  $3,000  for  a  personal  coaching   package  where  we  work  with  people,  all  right.  We've  taken  them  through  this   whole  process.  Let's  say  that  I'm  not  really  a  good  closer.  Let's  say  I  have  to  talk  to   ten  people  and  only  close  one  out  of  ten.  I  will  hope  that,  if  people  go  through  your   sales  process,  that  they  would  be  more  qualified  that  you  should  be  able  to  close   one  out  of  four,  one  out  of  five.  One  out  of  six  is  industry  standard  across  multiple   verticals  but  let's  just  say  one  out  of  ten.  Then  it  really  boils  down  to,  in  order  for   me  to  speak  with  ten  people,  how  much  is  that  going  to  cost  me  to  speak  with   those  ten  people?       Even  when  people  fill  out  an  application  and  they  schedule  a  call,  you're  not  going   to  get  100%  show-­‐up  rate.  Let's  just  say  you  only  have  a  50%  show-­‐up  rate.  The   reason  I'm  giving  you  really  the  worst  case  scenario  is  because  that's  how  I  like  to   build  my  campaigns.  I'm  like,  "What's  just  the  absolute  worst  we  can  do?"  If  we  can   make  the  numbers  work  under  the  absolute  worst  case  scenario,  then  we  should   be  good.       Let's  say  we  got  10%  close  rate  on  the  phone.  We  only  got  50%  show  rate  so  in   order  for  me  to  speak  to  ten  people,  I  have  to  get  20  applications.  If  I  know  that  my   gross  sales  revenue  is  $3,000,  what  am  I  willing  to  pay  to  get  those  20  applications?   In  this  case,  if  it  costs  me  $100  to  get  one  application,  times  20,  it's  $2,000.  It  would   cost  me  $2,000  to  make  a  $3,000  sale.  Now,  those  numbers  are  still  profitable.   They  work,  but  I  understand  that  in  order  for  me  to  make  this  work  with  those   metrics,  I  need  to  be  at  at  least  $100  per  application.       Let's  keep  walking  backwards  and  say,  "Okay,  well,  what  do  my  numbers  need  to   be  on  the  front  end  in  order  for  me  to  be  at  $100  per  application?"  Let's  say  I  pay   $10  for  a  webinar  registrant.  Let's  say  I  put  200  people  on  a  call,  so  that's  $2,000.  I  
  • 14. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 14 of 18 get  200  registrants  but  I'm  only  going  to  have,  if  I'm  using  an  automated  webinar,   let's  say  I  have  the  worst  case  numbers,  50%  show-­‐up  rate  on  the  automated   webinar.  I'm  actually  only  going  to  have  100  people  on.  If  I  only  have  100  people   that  actually  attend  the  webinar,  then  I  need  to  close  at  at  least  20%,  meaning  out   of  that  100,  I  need  to  get  at  last  20%  of  those  people  to  fill  out  an  application.  That   means  that  that  conversion  mechanism,  that  webinar,  needs  to  do  a  really  good  job   of  at  least  getting  people  to  complete  the  application  in  order  for  me  to  hit  my   numbers.       If  I  fall  below  that  and  I'm  only,  let's  say,  at  a  10%  close  rate,  then  I  know  I'm  in  the   red  and  I'm  going  to  either  have  to  reduce  my  cost  per  webinar  registrant  or   increase  my  conversion  rate  or  increase  my  close  rate  or  increase  my  show-­‐up  rate.   You  can  play  with  each  of  those  metrics  to  see  where  you  can  increase  it.   Obviously,  the  more  you  can  tweak  the  front  end  of  the  funnel  the  better.  If  you   can  reduce  the  cost  per  registration,  if  you  can  increase  the  conversion  rate  on  the   actual  webinar,  then  you  can  make  those  numbers  work  all  day.  That's  how  I  would   walk  through  that  process  to  look  at  the  economics  of  the  actual  campaign  to  see  if   it  even  makes  sense.     Dallas  McMillan:   Great,  yeah.  This  is  one  reason  why  you  need  to  be  something  high  ticket  because   if  you're  trying  to  sell  something  for  $100  at  the  end,  even  though  it  seems  like,   "Oh  it's  cheap.  Lots  of  people  should  buy  it,"  a  lot  of  people  just  aren't  interested  in   buying  anything  at  all  today.  You've  got  to  have  something  relatively  high  ticket  in   order  to  make  a  lot  of  this  work.  If  you're  selling  really  cheap  stuff,  you'd  probably   use  a  different  sales  process.     Sam  Bell:   Absolutely.     Dallas  McMillan:   You  might  have  a  $10  widget  in  the  Facebook  ad  itself  and  not  have  all  these  steps   because  of  the  conversion.  While  doing  it  this  way,  you  get  to  tweak  each  part  of   the  process  and  really  get  scientific  and  go,  "Look,  you  know  what?  My  webinar   isn't  converting  like  it  needs  to  do.  I'm  getting  great  clicks.  They  seem  qualified,  the   ones  I'm  talking  to  are  great  and  I'm  closing  at  a  high  rate,  but  I'm  just  not  getting   them  signing  up  to  apply.  Let's  try  [inaudible  00:48:26]  this  webinar  or  let's  change   the  offer  and  get  really  serious."  You  can  break  it  down  and  sometimes  it's  only  a   few  words  in  the  offer  makes  all  the  difference.  Unless  you  have  the  discipline  of   knowing  your  numbers  and  having  repeatable  processes,  then  that's  impossible.  It's   all  guesswork  and  you  just  can't  improve  it.  Whereas,  with  this  way,  you  can  get  it   to  work  then  you  can  scale  it.  If  you  can  turn  a  dollar  into  two  dollars,  then  you're   putting  thousands  of  dollars  in.  Whereas,  if  you're  turning  two  dollars  into  one   dollar,  you've  got  to  fix  it  before  you  scale  it  up.     Sam  Bell:   Yeah,  exactly.  That's  why  you  start  with  a  small  budget.  $50  to  $100  per  day  and   then  once  you  get  it  dialed  in,  you  know  your  numbers  are  working,  then  you  can   scale  it  up  to  $500  to  $1000  per  day.  It's  all  a  numbers  game  at  that  point.  Once   you  know  what  your  numbers  are,  a  lot  of  people  are  like,  "I  hear  people  spending   $2000,  $5000  a  day.  How  do  they  do  that?"  Well,  they  know  their  numbers.  They  
  • 15. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 15 of 18 know  how  everything's  going  to  back  out.  You  want  to  spend  as  much  as  possible   when  you  know  what  the  backend  holds.     Dallas  McMillan:   For  sure.  It's  also  worth  pointing  out  these  need  a  reasonably  high  profit  margin   product  too.  The  example  you  just  ran  where  it's  costing  you  $2000  to  get  a   customer  and  you're  charging  $3000,  if  that's  highly  labor-­‐intensive  to  deliver,   that's  probably  you  don't  want  to  be  selling  too  much  of  that.  Whereas,  if  you're   selling  an  online  course  that's  costing  you  hardly  anything  to  deliver,  then  you'll   take  that  all  day  long.  Making  sure  the  product  is  high  profit  margin  is  important  if   the  customer  acquisition  cost  is  high.     Sam  Bell:   Again,  building  on  the  worst  case  scenario  now,  we  do  numbers  much,  much  better   than  that.  I  like  to  give  an  example  because  here's  the  thing.  When  you  first  launch   a  campaign,  especially  if  you  haven't  driven  any  traffic  to  it,  you  can  expect  the   worst  case  scenario.  You  have  to  understand  your  buying  data.  One  of  the  things   that  normally  disheartens  a  lot  of  people  when  they  first  run  Facebook  campaigns   is  like,  "I  did  all  these  things.  I  built  it  out  like  I  was  supposed  to.  I  got  my  funnel   right.  I  swiped  the  best  funnel  sequence  and  it  bombed."  Well,  the  truth  of  the   matter  is  that  most  campaigns  bomb  when  you  first  launch  them.  You're  just   buying  data  to  see  how  bad  it's  going  to  bomb  and  then  you  fix  it  from  there.  There   are  some  instances  where  if  you  may  have  run  traffic  before  or  maybe  you've  done   joint  ventures  or  JV  traffic  and  you  have  some  metrics,  it's  going  to  make  it  easier   for  you  because  you  have  at  least  a  baseline  to  start  with.  When  you  have  no   baseline,  no  nothing,  understand  that  the  whole  purpose  of  the  campaign  is  just  to   buy  that  data.  Then  once  you  purchase  that  data,  you  have  that  information.  Then   you  can  make  those  tweaks  where  necessary  to  where  you  can  turn  it  into  a   profitable  campaign.       Like  you  mentioned  previously,  depending  on  the  type  of  offer  because  there  are   some  instances  where  you  may  not  have  a  high  ticket.  You  may  have  a  low  front   end  of  $100  or  maybe  a  tripwire  with  an  upsell.  In  those  cases,  the  whole  objective   is  to  break  even  on  the  campaign.  If  you  can  break  even  on  that  campaign,  then   anything  you  sell  on  the  backend,  that's  $1000,  $2000,  $3000,  whatever  the  case   may  be,  that's  pure  profit.  A  lot  of  these  front  end  funnels  that  you  see  where   people  are  doing  free  book  giveaways  and  all  these  different  things,  they   understand  that  my  objective  isn't  to  make  money,  I  just  want  to  acquire  a  paying   customer,  understanding  that  once  I  acquire  that  customer,  60  days  down  the  road   this  customer  is  going  to  be  worth  X  amount  of  dollars.  My  lifetime  customer  value   may  be  worth  thousands  of  dollars  at  that  point.     Dallas  McMillan:   You  can  do  that  at  such  scale  and  also  be  building  up  your  data  and  your  pixels   where  you  can  then  say,  "Well,  I'll  have  more  of  them,  thanks.  I'll  go  out  and  target   people  who  I  know  convert  in  my  offer."  It  really  is  this  incredible  feedback  loop  if   you  can  get  it  right.  I'll  tell  people  that  I've  spent  plenty  of  time  doing  Facebook  ads   and  it  is  not  as  easy  as  it  looks.  Sometimes  you  get  a  win  and  you  think,  "Oh  this  is   going  really  great!"  and  then  it  fizzles  out.  The  big  difference  I  see  is  that  discipline   to  follow  a  process,  to  really  get  clear  about  what  the  interests  are  and  work  the  
  • 16. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 16 of 18 numbers.  It's  a  very  different  skillset  to  what  entrepreneurs  have  generally.  To  be  a   great  coach  or  entrepreneur  or  consultant,  often  there's  a  lot  of  feel  to  it.  People   need  to  take  risks.  They  need  to  be  creative  and  that's  not  the  game  that  you're   playing  when  you're  doing  optimization  for  something  like  this.  It's  a  different   skillset  but  the  discipline  can  pay  off.     Sam  Bell:   Yes,  big  time.  Patience,  discipline  are  definitely  two  key  factors  when  it  comes  to   running  Facebook  ads.  Just  like  anything,  it  takes  time.  It  takes  practice.  I  honestly   believe  that  buying  media  is  one  of  the  best  skillsets  that  you  can  develop  next  to   copywriting.  If  you  can  write  copy  that  converts  and  you  can  buy  media  or  drive   traffic  to  that  copy,  you  can  pretty  much  write  your  own  check.     Dallas  McMillan:   Awesome.  You've  given  us  tons  of  valuable  information.  You've  explained  it  in  a   simple  way  but  it  really  is  pretty  high  level  stuff.  What  if  people  want  to  know   more?  How  can  they  learn  more  about  what  you  do  and  how  your  business  works?   Or,  do  you  have  any  other  training  that  they  should  check  out  if  they  want  to  take   their  Facebook  skills  up  a  notch?     Sam  Bell:   Absolutely.  You  can  head  over  to  adagencysecrets.com.  I  have  a  training  webinar   where  I  go  over  some  case  studies  and  I  actually  go  a  little  bit  more  in-­‐depth  about   our  process  and  some  of  the  things  that  we  were  able  to  accomplish  with  some  of   our  clients.  That's  just  adagencysecrets.com.  I  think  I  pulled  up  the  site  somewhere   here.  I  don't  know  if  it's  still  there.  Yeah,  there  it  is,  adagencysecrets.com.  You  can   just  go  check  it  out  and  you  can  register  for  the  training  and  it's  a  lot  of  good   information  that  I  think  everyone  will  find  valuable.     Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic  Sam.  We  really  appreciate  your  time  today.  I've  certainly  learned   something  and  I  appreciate  your  down  to  earth  and  simple  way  of  explaining   what's  a  pretty  complicated  topic.  I  think  it  will  leave  lots  of  people  feeling  inspired   about  the  potential  to  use  Facebook  ads  to  get  more  clients  in  their  business.     Sam  Bell:   Absolutely  man,  my  pleasure.  Thanks  for  having  me  and  my  biggest  thing,  everyone   go  out  there  and  take  action.  Implement  and  test  this  stuff.  The  information  that   I've  shared  is  definitely  practical  and  you  can  get  some  results.  It's  just  taking  action   on  it.     Dallas  McMillan:   Fantastic.  Thanks  again  and  I  look  forward  to  chatting  with  you  more.  Appreciate   your  time,  mate.     Sam  Bell:   Sounds  good,  Dallas.  Take  care.     Dallas  McMillan:   Bye.     Sam  Bell:   Bye  bye.      
  • 17. 2016-11-15-FACEBOOK-TRAINING-WITH-DALLAS Page 17 of 18 How  to  get  Clients  with  Facebook  Ads  for  Coaches  &  Consultants  with   Sam  Bell     Interview URL: http://digitalinfluence.com.au/how-to-get-clients-with-facebook-ads-for-coaches-consultants/ Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PzjN6GTbscQ See more Digital Influence Interviews: http://digitalinfluence.com.au/interviews