Dennis Yu

Surround Yourself with Considerate People

A painful mistake that gives me grief and sleepless nights is working with people who don’t share the same values. Your WHY is not just some fuzzy thing that motivational speakers say. For example, I surround myself only with considerate people who want to help others. I accidentally violated this rule this week and paid for it heavily. You don’t have time to watch your back at every moment or argue with people who try to rationalize away poor performance— since they’re too lazy to level up. Even if they’re super smart, don’t let these people into your circle. People who have an abundance mindset won’t see their gain needing to come at your loss or be afraid of superstars joining the team. Thus, share your values openly— not because you want to be famous but because you want to repel this cancer.

Surround Yourself with Considerate People Read More »

Beware of John Keiter of Durbano Law Firm

I paid him a retainer up front and you can see what happened here. He didn’t get around to advising us, but did review some initial documents before deciding he didn’t want to take the case. We gave him an opportunity to make things right, but he preferred to pocket the money. So that’s why you see the honest reviews from me and past clients online. Instead of fixing his mistake, he sent a serious of angry, emotional letters threatening legal action. I’m not a lawyer, but if I was Durbano Law Firm, I’d just refund the $1,000 instead of desperately trying to hold onto the money while sending these letters. I’d imagine if his time is $400 an hour, he’s burned a few thousand dollars already. This is John Keiter’s letter to me: I would have refunded the retainer and said, “Sorry we didn’t get to work together– best of luck.” To his defense, he did consider returning the funds.But he doubted whether we would see this through. John– this is your proof that we follow through on promises. If you don’t want people to see what you’ve done, it’s not too late to fix it.But at this point, I’m not going to write a bunch of 5 star reviews, as you insisted. That would be unethical, Mr. Keiter. And we want people to see how Durbano Law Firm in Utah operates. [/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column] [/et_pb_row] [/et_pb_section]

Beware of John Keiter of Durbano Law Firm Read More »

Beyond the Smoke and Mirrors: What It Really Takes to Build a Successful Marketing Agency

This is a guest post by Nick Jaworski of Circle Social Inc. Owning multiple 7-figure digital marketing agencies, I never found the typical social media crowd very helpful. There are a lot of smoke and mirrors in the digital marketing world. Fake gurus are everywhere, but even the bonafide have never appealed to me very much. When I started my agency, I wanted to build something meaningful and impactful. And one thing I learned about impact over the years is that the bigger you are, the more impact you can have. I quickly realized that the majority of the experts out there were one-man bands. Maybe they had a couple of VAs or a Community Manager helping them out, but they’re not what I would now consider to be a large or scalable business. As I’ve learned over the years, that’s about as far as most people want to go. Whether it’s fear, lack of know-how, or just no interest in taking on the huge amount of work and responsibility that comes with growth, most agencies don’t make it past the 3-4 person stage.  I’m a big admirer of Dennis and all the work he’s put into helping young people and really having an impact on the world by sharing his knowledge. He also knows what he’s talking about. When I first started my agency, I had so much to learn and, like many in the same boat, scoured the internet for people to learn from. However, all I ever heard were platitudes like “content is king,” “marketing is about building relationships,” or “tell your story.” From the get-go, my agency was focused on return on investment. What really attracted me to digital marketing originally was the data. The fact that I could tie our work to real ROI, where I could prove our value to our clients. This is where Dennis stood out. I could tell from reading his content that he had true expertise in helping real companies. That’s why I was very interested in sharing my experiences on his blog as he’s the real deal. When I entered the realm of digital marketing, there was something glaringly missing from me in the world of social media and marketing influencers I found online. None of them owned large companies with a lot of staff.  Instead, as I started to network and get into the world of business, I saw all these people running 8 and 9-figure companies, but I never saw these people online. These people led or had built huge companies and most didn’t even have a Twitter profile. More than that, many of their companies didn’t either! That told me that following the online social media crowd was unlikely to be the road to success. Speaking with Dennis, I wanted to share a real story of what it truly takes to grow a successful agency. I registered my business in 2016 but didn’t actually launch it till late fall, so almost 2017. By the end of 2020, I had scaled it to a full-service agency with a consulting wing, marketing wing, over 20 full-time, W-2 staff, and a national reputation as the foremost expert in our niche. Our largest client does over a billion dollars a year in revenue, while most land somewhere in the $10-300 million range. That’s a pretty cool success story, but the reality is that it’s extremely rare and it took a tremendous amount of effort, risk, and investment to get where we are today. This article is not going to feed you a lot of BS about overnight successes and “passive income.” It’s going to talk about the never-ending real work and sacrifice that goes into it. Unemployed and Starting the Business I had been a teacher and, eventually, a school administrator ever since I left university. I had developed a reputation as a turn-around guy for schools, someone who could come in and fix failing programs. This led to me being called in by the largest daycare operator in the US to fix one of their most troublesome schools in Indianapolis, IN in 2015.  That turned into a nightmare. It was in a low-income area with lots of drugs and gun violence. We had just had a shooting at the school less than a year before and now the program was on probation by the state for the third time in less than 4 years and was going to be shut down. My job was to come in and turn it around.  After a year of 80-hour work weeks, no organizational support, and the challenge of finding quality teachers willing to work in one of the more drug-infested, violent areas of town for $8 an hour, I finally got the school re-licensed by the state and on track to national accreditation. It was an amazing accomplishment, but I didn’t want to be there. It’d been hell, so I asked for a transfer to a new school. Instead of transferring me, they told me that, since I clearly didn’t want to be there anymore, they no longer needed me. I was let go that day. That was the last straw. I’d been in education and working for other people for nearly two decades. I was burned out. So I decided to start Circle Social. I started it out of my house in-between caring for my daughter. We had just $2,000 in the bank and my wife was only making $10 an hour, so we couldn’t afford daycare. Circle Social was off to a pretty inglorious start. I was writing 1,500-word blog posts at $10 a pop under the company moniker, but really I was just a freelancer since it was just me and these were piecemeal projects. You see, nobody starts a business charging high fees. Most who do are quickly realized to be frauds by their clients. Their business may limp along for even a couple of years but eventually folds. To succeed in business, you have to charge

Beyond the Smoke and Mirrors: What It Really Takes to Build a Successful Marketing Agency Read More »

Do you know Tristan Parmley?

If you want to know how to run a 7 figure agency, follow Tristan Parmley. Like me, he’s had personal struggles and been burned in business dealings. He’s one of the hardest workers I know. He ran 10.1 in the 100 meters, by the way, setting his university record on his way to being a champion D1 athlete. He chose a niche– chiropractors, so we started ChiroRevenue in the fall of 2020. He made sure to have people, processes, and platforms– finding others who were strong in the areas he is weak. He sought out partners, instead of seeing “competitors”– believing a smaller piece of a big pie is better than all of a tiny pie. But his desire to win caused him to take shortcuts and ruin his professional reputation. He renamed ChiroRevenue into The Lead Cure and instantly declared he had a 7 figure agency. Go look at the LinkedIn or Facebook for The Lead Cure and you’ll see it’s got the old ChiroRevenue posts still. That’s because he just renamed all the accounts, instead of creating something new. My hope is that Tristan can swallow his pride and repair what he’s done. He’s a bright young man who could still be a success in the future.

Do you know Tristan Parmley? Read More »

4 things to do when your web developer holds you hostage

A friend of mine recently came to me for help. He entered into a contract with an acquaintance for roughly the following: producing videos on a monthly basis of him explaining what he does and how he helps people– building, hosting, and maintaining a new (second) website for me (he owns the URL)– onsite and offsite SEO for this new website– posting content to his Facebook page– hosting his emails– creating a new YouTube channel specific to his new website– publishing his videos to his two YouTube channels (and evidently to other video networks that he has never seen) He continued past his 1-year agreement because some of the videos had gotten really good engagement on YouTube and Facebook. But after he recalculated his growth in the 2nd year, he found that the return on investment was not enough to continue with their service package, so he requested a cancellation. The response he got was that the company owns all of the “creative works” of his brand and his “brand profile” including:– all the videos that were created for him– his new website (though he owns the domain)– the new YouTube channel that was created– and any other created content Here’s my advice: You have a hostage situation, which is a common ploy by unscrupulous web developers.  The other ploy is to lock you out of access, too. I’m not a lawyer, but we have seen this happen a lot.  

4 things to do when your web developer holds you hostage Read More »

How to instantly recognize the experts from the amateurs

Know how to instantly tell an expert from an amateur? The expert spends 90% of their time practicing the fundamentals and only 10% of their time doing “pro” stuff. The amateur spends 90% of their time trying to do the “pro” stuff while ignoring the fundamentals. The amateur marketer chases tricks and hacks. The amateur golfer wants to hit from the black tees. The amateur health nut focuses on fad diets and pills. The amateur author/speaker/coach dreams of speaking on the big stage, instead of quietly honing their craft. Their attention is seeking out celebrities to snap “validation” pictures with celebrities, instead of letting the experts testify to their competence. A true expert has massive depth– like an iceberg with 90% below the water, unseen. True expert publishes because they are compelled to serve and share, with publicity as a necessary evil. A true expert has a loyal following with demonstrated proof of their published how-to process. Are you focusing on merely how you look or on truly improving who are you? The fundamentals of digital marketing are getting your GCT (goals, content, targeting) right. That’s what we teach and what I spend most of my time working on. It’s not flashy, but highly profitable. I’ve taught over 500 workshops in the last 20 years. And nearly every time, the ones we list as “experts” with the “latest” tricks and secret algorithmic updates are the ones that pack the room. But when we actually deliver that material, we lose the audience and they are unhappy– especially the ones who represent themselves as a pro (a clear sign that they are not). Yet when we teach the fundamentals, people say their minds are blown, largely because these are pieces they’ve been missing all along. And then this drives results. Drive for show, putt for dough, as the golfers like to say. I am enamored with folks like Ryan Deiss, Michael Stelzner, and Shawn Collins who teach based on their own execution. They focus on the step-by-step HOW TO, like expert chefs that have time-tested recipes for the most requested meals.

How to instantly recognize the experts from the amateurs Read More »

I don’t get paid enough and my job sucks

My boss constantly chases me down, wondering where I am or what I’m doing. But that’s because I’m not motivated– and once I get a raise, I then might consider starting to work again. I complain that I don’t know what’s going on in the company, but I’m also not around to listen and don’t read any of the updates. And I spend my time whining– especially with other employees– since I want them to agree with me. I figure that if there are a bunch of people who are unproductive and complaining, then I’m safe, as are all of them. So instead of working, I dwell on all the excuses for why it’s not my fault and why I’m underpaid. Meanwhile, my co-workers and managers are having to do my job for me. I’ve never managed a team before, but I feel confident in dispensing my unsolicited advice on how to manage a company. And while I may be fired for not doing my job, I’ll claim that it was personal reasons. I’ll start my own company and later find out how hard it really is. But then it’s too late to come back with humility, so I think.

I don’t get paid enough and my job sucks Read More »

What I’ve learned going through 20 of the most popular course-selling courses

I think I’m going to throw up. The number of people selling courses on how to sell a course is mind-boggling. And I’ve forced myself to go through about 20 of the most popular ones to see what they’re doing. Here’s what I’ve learned if you’re curious: + 95% of this is hype designed to make you salivate– like dangling a steak in front of a stray dog that hasn’t eaten a full meal in weeks. + The endless Lambos, exotic travel vids, and “freedom” is a total lie– yes, there is a lot of money to be made, but you still have to work and invest, like any other real business. + The people selling the courses don’t have experience in producing actual results other than claims of how much money they’ve made in getting people to buy their course on how to sell a course. + I could offer a course on how to make $1,000,000….. Interested? The price is $1,000,000, of course, lol. + I’ve sat through the 90-minute “live” webinars, waiting patiently through the “struggle”, “lifestyle breakthrough to riches”, and mindset motivation (I’m an ordinary guy who did it, so you can, too)… to eventually get to real value. But alas– it never comes. + There is a shred of truth to the “$375 million a day of online revenue being made per day– claim your slice” argument. But this is just another flavor of the “make money online” biz opp. Same clown, different circus– sucker born every minute. + The reason you only hear from the sole figurehead and nobody else is that their students aren’t winning. I’ve Googled to find their reviews and it’s not pretty. + But if I get you excited enough, you’ll not do the due diligence– since you’re panting about what you’d do with that extra $57,383 a month. You need to buy TODAY to get the 3 bonuses and 50% off the price. Would you buy heart surgery from the self-proclaimed surgeon offering it at 50% off, today only? + Yes, imposter syndrome is real– that the pros feel they aren’t really experts. But for the 99% of people who feel they don’t know enough to be competently able to dispense advice– you’re right! You could watch as many “motivational” videos to pump yourself up as a newly minted surgeon– but that extra confidence won’t stop you from killing your patients. + Would you trust someone who says they can teach you how to start a heart surgery business in just 6 modules you watch over the weekend– so you can start operating tomorrow? $2,000 is a great price if you can make $500,000 or even $700,000 a month, while actually healing patients. + And when you look over the course outline, what you find is 90% of the content is more “mindset” and teaching you how to sell the very same way you were just sold– instead of actually teaching you the practice. This is called a PONZI scheme. And many of these folks will go to jail– you watch. Thus, they’re just repackaging our Facebook ads course + PLF + perfect webinar for their particular niche– 5,000 people all selling the same thing– hope. So why not skip past all that expensive, heart-breaking fluff to get to the actual meat– to go to the source? You don’t have to drop $2,500 to attend yet another seminar (unless you enjoy feeling perpetually “motivated”), since the information is already online and almost all of it is free. I want to see YOU actually win, so I provide most of our methods free– in the same way you can go to the library to read medical textbooks and journals. The surgeons aren’t gasping at HEART SURGERY SECRETS taught only at midnight in a medical school. I want to teach you the fundamentals from my 23 years and 70,000 hours of digital marketing experience– and I was running million-dollar-a-day teams before these children were even born. The folks who actually are making money online– we all know one another and we have actual teams, processes, customers, overhead, and stuff you’d find in any type of real business– online or not. Does any of this resonate with you?

What I’ve learned going through 20 of the most popular course-selling courses Read More »

Scroll to Top