Attracts Better Clients with Video | 073
The Profit Connections PodcastJuly 01, 2026x
73
34:3247.42 MB

Attracts Better Clients with Video | 073

What if the problem isn't that you're creating content... it's that your content isn't supporting your business goals?

In this episode, Sharon Galluzzo sits down with David Vance, founder of Expound Media, to discuss how entrepreneurs can use video marketing, branding, and strategic content to increase visibility, credibility, and clients. David shares insights from years of experience helping service-based business owners create content that not only looks professional but also moves people toward meaningful business decisions.

The conversation explores the difference between influencer content and business content, why consistency matters more than perfection, and how strong visual branding helps audiences recognize and trust your business. David explains why many entrepreneurs focus too heavily on views and vanity metrics while overlooking the real goal: creating content that supports growth and conversion.

This episode is a valuable reminder that successful content marketing isn't about getting the most attention, it's about attracting the right people and creating a clear path toward becoming a client.

Key Takeaways:

  • Visibility without strategy doesn't create growth: Content should support business goals, not just generate views.
  • Consistency builds recognition: Repeated exposure to your brand helps audiences remember and trust you.
  • Video creates stronger engagement: Video continues to outperform static content when it comes to attracting attention and driving action.
  • Brand consistency matters: Consistent colors, visuals, messaging, and presentation help build credibility.
  • Content should support client acquisition: Every piece of content should help move people closer to a business decision.
  • Influencer strategies don't always work for businesses: Business owners need content designed for conversions, not just attention.
  • Human connection is a competitive advantage: Authentic conversations and real stories outperform generic, templated content.

Unlock the Secrets to Building a Resilient and Profitable Business at the Profit Connectors Club - https://profitconnectors.club/

About David Vance:

David Vance is the founder of Expound Media, a full-service production firm focused on creating video and media content that allows small businesses, speakers, and personality brands to attract more ideal audiences, grow their list like never before, and close more high-ticket sales.

About Sharon:

Sharon Galluzzo, Profit Growth Strategist at Profit Connections, is the author of several Amazon Best Selling books including “Legendary Business: From Rats to Riche$.” She ran a successful multi-six figure, award winning business for more than a decade before selling it for a profit. In her more than 19 years as an entrepreneur, Sharon has coached professionals across the country from franchisors and solopreneurs to businesses on the verge of expansion.

http://sharongalluzzo.com/

https://www.facebook.com/sharonagalluzzo/

https://www.instagram.com/sharon_galluzzo/

https://www.linkedin.com/in/sharongalluzzo/

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Sharon Galluzzo:

The profit doesn't happen by chance, it

Sharon Galluzzo:

happens by design. Let's dig in. And today we have a juicy guest

Sharon Galluzzo:

with us. David is an expert in an area that is becoming

Sharon Galluzzo:

increasingly and more increasingly important in our

Sharon Galluzzo:

businesses. That's our visual presentation. How we show up on

Sharon Galluzzo:

screens today. I have with us David Vance of Expound Media,

Sharon Galluzzo:

and we're going to talk all things video and production and

Sharon Galluzzo:

promotion with regard to what video can do for us and how we

Sharon Galluzzo:

should use it to best move our businesses forward. Welcome,

Sharon Galluzzo:

David.

David Vance:

Thank you, Sharon. That was that all sounds so

David Vance:

exciting. I'm excited to dig in

Sharon Galluzzo:

now. I told David that I trusted him enough

Sharon Galluzzo:

to give you his own bio today, so let's let's hear it. David,

David Vance:

yeah, my name is David, as Sharon said, I'm the

David Vance:

founder of Expound Media, comma LLC. We are a full-service

David Vance:

creative agency located here in North Carolina. We are a premium

David Vance:

option for service-based entrepreneurs, speakers, and

David Vance:

experts to develop personality brands, and basically we create

David Vance:

visual elements, lead magnets, videos, now landing pages,

David Vance:

basically anything people look at for the service-based

David Vance:

entrepreneurs, so that they can get more visibility,

David Vance:

credibility, and high-ticket clients, ultimately.

Sharon Galluzzo:

And I, full disclosure, I do work with

Sharon Galluzzo:

David. I've known him far longer than I worked with him. He is

Sharon Galluzzo:

actually a.. he's when you talk to him, you will get.. I think

Sharon Galluzzo:

you'll get this through this interview today. He's a deep

Sharon Galluzzo:

thinker, and he sees things in a really unique way, and his

Sharon Galluzzo:

ability to do interviews, his ability to pull out of you

Sharon Galluzzo:

information that he can then use to market you that he can use to

Sharon Galluzzo:

build your, your back end in terms of of your videos and your

Sharon Galluzzo:

visual presentations, like he said, he does social media,

Sharon Galluzzo:

he'll do landing pages, he does all of the things that you need

Sharon Galluzzo:

done, and he does it in a really unique way, and David, talk a

Sharon Galluzzo:

little bit about how you have structured your business so that

Sharon Galluzzo:

it's user friendly and not time heavy on on the part of the

Sharon Galluzzo:

business owner.

David Vance:

Yeah, absolutely. Five years ago, or ish,

David Vance:

whatever, I started the company, it was really specifically video

David Vance:

production, right? You know, I come from a career in high-level

David Vance:

TV production, and then was creative director for a large

David Vance:

coaching firm. So, the general algebra that I had done is

David Vance:

people want their stuff to look better, they want cool videos,

David Vance:

everybody's got campaigns and stuff, they just want to plug in

David Vance:

nice looking video, so that their stuff is more credible,

David Vance:

and that it converts better. And what we found was that we would

David Vance:

produce a lot of stuff, people would like it, and then not

David Vance:

deploy it in any way. So the idea behind our how the company

David Vance:

evolved is to be one stop shop partners for people, because I

David Vance:

wanted to remove the chore aspect of all of this. A lot of

David Vance:

our clients are in the early scaling phases of things,

David Vance:

generally below one and a half million in gross, so creating

David Vance:

the assets needed to stand out, and you know, I use content and

David Vance:

assets interchangeably. Creating the cool looking stuff to stand

David Vance:

out becomes really time intensive. It becomes really, it

David Vance:

becomes really arduous to even if you're not producing every

David Vance:

aspect of yourself to find freelancers to do to to explain

David Vance:

what you're doing to create projects for all of this, so the

David Vance:

gamble that we made is that if we made enough good stuff on a

David Vance:

consistent basis, we could package that and work with

David Vance:

people long term, because nobody really needs just one thing,

David Vance:

they need consistent content coming out, so like you were

David Vance:

saying, we package it interestingly. Most stuff leads

David Vance:

with interview and video production. We'll generally do a

David Vance:

full day in studio with somebody and get enough interviews where

David Vance:

we create enough content, and then for three, four, sometimes

David Vance:

six months, we have enough rock content that we can then

David Vance:

transmute, we can turn into different things, and we can

David Vance:

create things one after the other, and on demand as people

David Vance:

need them, without having to bother people, because my

David Vance:

biggest pet peeve in creative industries, as well as in

David Vance:

entrepreneurial industries, is. Email tennis, right? That we all

David Vance:

end up playing this game of, well, I need this from you

David Vance:

before I can do this, before I can do this. So we want to make

David Vance:

all of this as streamlined as possible, and make things that

David Vance:

people love.

Sharon Galluzzo:

That's awesome. And yeah, you do. He does

Sharon Galluzzo:

things. Expound media will do days where they have a beautiful

Sharon Galluzzo:

professional studio set up, and then he'll have days where he

Sharon Galluzzo:

just records you from your laptop, so there's a.. it's..

Sharon Galluzzo:

it's a mixture, and it's not such a heavy lift on always

Sharon Galluzzo:

having stuff available. Now, everybody has a camera in their

Sharon Galluzzo:

pocket these days, David. They can just walk around and record

Sharon Galluzzo:

whatever they want to record, and you're able to take those

Sharon Galluzzo:

things and add them in with the more professional things, the

Sharon Galluzzo:

more set up things that you do, and explain why that's a benefit

Sharon Galluzzo:

and advantage.

David Vance:

Yeah, we know that if we can get, or if we can have

David Vance:

studio footage, that's obviously ideal for us, and most of the

David Vance:

people who work with us, we know that's not realistic, right, and

David Vance:

we don't want perfect to get in the way of really good when a

David Vance:

campaign comes from it. Generally speaking, a remote

David Vance:

shoot can take as much as, as little as one minute for

David Vance:

somebody to snap something up to about 30 minutes, and it follows

David Vance:

a similar thing to a studio production. What we would

David Vance:

normally do with something shut on webcam is add more animation

David Vance:

to stuff, pulling people out. The question that we're always

David Vance:

asking is, how do we make this look more professional, look

David Vance:

like it's higher dollar, and look like it's on brand? Right,

David Vance:

so we would incorporate a lot more brand colors, pulling

David Vance:

things from the website, and create something that looks more

David Vance:

like a social media ad from these remote shoots. In that

David Vance:

way, we try to keep a consistent level of quality, and this sort

David Vance:

of coalition of, if that's a word, a harmony of design, both

David Vance:

visually and messaging wise, so that everything looks basically

David Vance:

on the same level, regardless of if we shoot it in studio or

David Vance:

shoot it on a webcam with people,

Sharon Galluzzo:

and it's really important whenever you are

Sharon Galluzzo:

building a brand, whether it's a personal brand, and some

Sharon Galluzzo:

business owners want a personal brand, or the brand of your

Sharon Galluzzo:

business, and whenever you have consistency of your colors and

Sharon Galluzzo:

your fonts and all of that stuff, when you have that

Sharon Galluzzo:

consistency across the board, then whenever somebody sees your

Sharon Galluzzo:

stuff, they recognize it before you even say anything, and

Sharon Galluzzo:

that's talk about why that's really important, David.

David Vance:

Yeah, I mean, there's the pretentious creative

David Vance:

artists version of this that could go into it. I think the

David Vance:

bigger thing is that there is an undercurrent in a lot of these

David Vance:

industries that we're playing, and especially online

David Vance:

entrepreneurial world, where people are so coached by people,

David Vance:

where there's been this doctrine of delivering the bare minimum

David Vance:

on things, and I mean, you know, we're in very crowded

David Vance:

marketplace right now of people demanding attention from things,

David Vance:

so the easiest way to elevate the things that you're putting

David Vance:

out and to give yourself credibility on a consistent

David Vance:

basis in your social media is to have those branded elements. You

David Vance:

don't have to be an expert on it. You can hire somebody who

David Vance:

is, or just have the basic color correlations going on. The

David Vance:

innate thing that you're wanting to convey through brand harmony,

David Vance:

through getting those colors on everything, of everything

David Vance:

looking similar. You've actually got a great brand internally. We

David Vance:

all love your colors a lot, but just picking one and sticking

David Vance:

with it is going to create that visual identity, because

David Vance:

remember the first things people are clicking on now aren't

David Vance:

websites in almost all in almost all industries. Now, the first

David Vance:

click is going to be one social media or another. I know yours

David Vance:

is Facebook, ours is Instagram. As we track it, so we want

David Vance:

consistent content that looks the same, feels the same, and

David Vance:

creates the brand image that we're trying to create, because

David Vance:

ultimately that's what a client journey is,

Sharon Galluzzo:

and what's it? Yeah, what's important in terms

Sharon Galluzzo:

of why this, you know, why, why the brand identity, why the

Sharon Galluzzo:

keeping of the colors, and that kind of thing, is you know, when

Sharon Galluzzo:

you're on social media, most of the time you're scrolling,

Sharon Galluzzo:

right, and you want to, it's a way to stop the scroll, and it

Sharon Galluzzo:

takes a human adult, and these numbers are old now, so it might

Sharon Galluzzo:

even be more, at least seven times, to be exposed to your

Sharon Galluzzo:

information before they're ready to even look further, so if

Sharon Galluzzo:

they're scrolling by and they always see that my social. Media

Sharon Galluzzo:

is, oh, it's always that you know that purple gold or purple

Sharon Galluzzo:

orange and teal colors, they, that always comes up whenever

Sharon Galluzzo:

you see my social media, as you're scrolling through. Oh,

Sharon Galluzzo:

yeah, there she is again. I'm going to stop and see what she

Sharon Galluzzo:

has to say, or, you know, what, I'll just keep scrolling, and

Sharon Galluzzo:

what it does is it builds up that memory in your, in your

Sharon Galluzzo:

brain, so that you've seen it before, you've seen it before,

Sharon Galluzzo:

you've seen it before. Now, oh, maybe now today I'm going to

Sharon Galluzzo:

actually look at that video, or I'm going to make sure I always

Sharon Galluzzo:

stop and watch those videos, because I know who they are, and

Sharon Galluzzo:

I know what they're going to provide. Some of my favorite

Sharon Galluzzo:

things on social media. I will stop and watch silly videos.

Sharon Galluzzo:

There's, I think it's called The Break Room Chronicles. I'll be

Sharon Galluzzo:

honest, it's two women, and one of them lip syncs, and the other

Sharon Galluzzo:

one kind of dances in pink heels. And I don't care what

Sharon Galluzzo:

song they're doing, I will always stop and watch it,

Sharon Galluzzo:

because there's.. they have a repetitive thing that's always

Sharon Galluzzo:

funny, I have that kind of sense of humor, so that when you're

Sharon Galluzzo:

building your brand, if you have that consistency, that somebody

Sharon Galluzzo:

will go, oh yeah, that's them again, they'll stop, they'll

Sharon Galluzzo:

watch, they'll interact with that thing if they, if it

Sharon Galluzzo:

resonates with them, so it's really about, you know, your

Sharon Galluzzo:

voice and what is resonating, and what, why is your voice and

Sharon Galluzzo:

what you're presenting out there, and consistency, what

Sharon Galluzzo:

will that get you in terms of connecting with people on

Sharon Galluzzo:

socials?

David Vance:

Yeah, I think what you pointed out is really

David Vance:

important. There's also this this element on social media

David Vance:

where there's a lot of trainings right now, trying to get people

David Vance:

to follow influencer formulas and chase vanity metrics, and I

David Vance:

believe it's hurting a lot of people who are trying to scale

David Vance:

businesses, because the metrics that influencers care about are

David Vance:

different, the look of what they're doing, and their end

David Vance:

goals are different, they're trying to find brand

David Vance:

partnerships to get Gucci bags, whereas a lot of our clients,

David Vance:

and I think a lot of your viewers, are ultimately trying

David Vance:

to create a brand that leads people towards making a high

David Vance:

ticket decision, sometimes in the multiple 10s of 1000s of

David Vance:

dollars. So, any training, when people are talking about voice,

David Vance:

I would be wary of anybody trying to push somebody to chase

David Vance:

TikTok trends or social media trends specifically to get raw

David Vance:

viewership. It's always fun to watch a number uptick from it,

David Vance:

but I always recommend to people when we're looking at voice to

David Vance:

create things for the internet that are reflective of a

David Vance:

something that you like and can support. People are always

David Vance:

looking for templates, and the most interesting things that you

David Vance:

can create are things that are interesting to you, because that

David Vance:

means they're probably interesting to your specific

David Vance:

audience. Also, the voice that people are creating on social

David Vance:

media needs to be one that is positioned in such a way that

David Vance:

sets somebody up towards understanding that what they're

David Vance:

offering is a premium service, so everything that you're

David Vance:

creating has to have some version of, if not luxury, then

David Vance:

at least value behind it. Some people will try to channel their

David Vance:

voice through a very accessible image and try to be people's

David Vance:

friends. I think there's an elevation of voice that you have

David Vance:

to see when building a brand for a small business.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, I like what you said about influencers

Sharon Galluzzo:

and talk, I'll ask you to talk a little bit about influencers,

Sharon Galluzzo:

but I literally watched a video yesterday about an influencer

Sharon Galluzzo:

who was he made his name on social media doing something

Sharon Galluzzo:

really cool with mirrors, and he said this video popped up and he

Sharon Galluzzo:

said, "Hey, you probably haven't seen me for a while. I thought

Sharon Galluzzo:

I'd reintroduce myself, and he literally told a story about the

Sharon Galluzzo:

fact that he wanted, he wanted eyes on his videos, that was his

Sharon Galluzzo:

goal, and he did get that, but he also, he also ran a business,

Sharon Galluzzo:

he also did some other things, and what that influencer track

Sharon Galluzzo:

did not do for him was build those other things, because

Sharon Galluzzo:

everyone was just looking for his mirror videos, and he was

Sharon Galluzzo:

really talking about, you know, I, he said I got what I wanted,

Sharon Galluzzo:

what I wanted was a lot of people watching my videos, so he

Sharon Galluzzo:

didn't want anything beyond that, he didn't plan beyond

Sharon Galluzzo:

that, and so he found as, as that sort of influencer that he,

Sharon Galluzzo:

it wasn't fulfilling in his like complete life, his business, and

Sharon Galluzzo:

what he wanted to promote that way. So just tease a little bit

Sharon Galluzzo:

into that influencer position, and you did a little bit on why

Sharon Galluzzo:

we're different, but just. A little bit on that influencer

Sharon Galluzzo:

piece.

David Vance:

Yeah, we actually had a similar experience where

David Vance:

we had a fractional account with a law firm type thing, and we

David Vance:

grew the social media following really well based on their

David Vance:

stated goals, but they were having very little conversion

David Vance:

into even free consultation from them, what they, and I'll accept

David Vance:

my level of responsibility from, had done was exactly that,

David Vance:

right. So that's the other end of it, that they had spent a lot

David Vance:

of money on creating a thing, or things they wanted to create,

David Vance:

because they had a marketing consultant who wanted to get

David Vance:

them organic viewership on TikTok, but ultimately they're,

David Vance:

you know, they're family office lawyers, right? It's not where

David Vance:

their audience is, and viewership doesn't convert over

David Vance:

to what they're ultimately looking to achieve. So, content,

David Vance:

content is important. Getting it out consistently is important,

David Vance:

but there is that there is that facet of remembering what your

David Vance:

ultimate goal is through all of this, finding the key points

David Vance:

that you want somebody to find after a speaking gig, or after

David Vance:

downloading a free resource, or just googling for what you're

David Vance:

doing, and always keeping in mind that your body of work is

David Vance:

at some point going to have to get towards having somebody make

David Vance:

a decision to get on a call or give you a credit card, right?

David Vance:

So an influencer doesn't have to worry about that, whereas

David Vance:

unfortunately, or fortunately, depending on how you think of

David Vance:

it, we as small business owners absolutely do,

Sharon Galluzzo:

yeah. I love that, and I think it's really

Sharon Galluzzo:

important to have that distinction, because I think

Sharon Galluzzo:

sometimes, as business owners, you know, we're following that

Sharon Galluzzo:

shiny object. Oh yeah, all I have to do is get more views. If

Sharon Galluzzo:

you're getting more views on something that doesn't directly

Sharon Galluzzo:

tie or make that jump into what it is you're doing, then you

Sharon Galluzzo:

have eyeballs, but, like you said, you don't have that

Sharon Galluzzo:

traction, you don't have people calling you and making

Sharon Galluzzo:

appointments with you and doing business with you specifically,

Sharon Galluzzo:

because you've chosen sort of a more entertainment route, not

Sharon Galluzzo:

that your content can't be entertaining, but it also has to

Sharon Galluzzo:

have a purpose. So, what is that? What's that look like when

Sharon Galluzzo:

you're actually mapping out what do you, what do you actually

Sharon Galluzzo:

want from your content?

David Vance:

Yeah, it's an interesting time we're in, or

David Vance:

especially what we're entering into in that 10 years ago, when

David Vance:

we were looking at social media campaigns, their full marketing

David Vance:

campaigns, there's a lot of function on volume, right, of

David Vance:

you're going to win this, we're in the attention economy, every

David Vance:

business coach learned the word attention economy and said it a

David Vance:

whole whole whole whole bunch, and some of them made a lot of

David Vance:

money saying those words out loud. Well, right now, what do

David Vance:

we do in an attention economy when technology is making a game

David Vance:

that we can't really win on volume, right? And there's some

David Vance:

people, my peers, people are trying to play that game, the AI

David Vance:

game, whatever, of you know that I have people showing me things

David Vance:

that can generate random posts every two hours, and I don't

David Vance:

think for our clients that is functionally what we want, like

David Vance:

we can probably get raw viewership, but we're never

David Vance:

going to compete, so then we ask what the competitive advantage

David Vance:

that we have in competitive or in a competitive marketplace for

David Vance:

social media content, and I think that's the humanness of

David Vance:

people, especially when you're a human forward brand, someone

David Vance:

they like yourself, you know, somebody like a, an attorney,

David Vance:

somebody, anybody selling high ticket services, where you're

David Vance:

answering the question of why would I work with you

David Vance:

specifically. Then we do know algorithmically for social media

David Vance:

there's a big gap between posting three times a week at

David Vance:

least and not posting three times a week, so there is a

David Vance:

number in the sand, but we're starting to see this movement.

David Vance:

It's called the vinylization of online communities, right? It's

David Vance:

asked the question of why does somebody buy vinyl in a world

David Vance:

where Spotify exists, and our forecast for what's coming up in

David Vance:

2027 and through the end of the decade, is that we'll go into

David Vance:

these smaller, more insular ecosystems, right, that we're

David Vance:

not going to want our social media content, our videos, our

David Vance:

YouTubes to resonate with wide audiences, which is a game of.

David Vance:

Again, that's tough to play, harder to win. We're wanting to

David Vance:

create rabid fans on things and create real specificity of

David Vance:

message, of tone, of things like that. So that's the overall

David Vance:

thing that we're looking at from it. Video continues to be our

David Vance:

number one metrics. We were just monitoring it on our monthly ad

David Vance:

meeting. We're still seeing video ads outperform what static

David Vance:

ads by factors of five to seven times on cost per dollar, cost

David Vance:

per acquisition. So we're still wanting to see a lot of video,

David Vance:

but really, I would urge any coach watching this, or anybody

David Vance:

who's in that service-based things, to start returning to

David Vance:

some level of thoughtful pose, short form video, and knock our

David Vance:

out 12 posts a month, and they'll be looking good. That

David Vance:

was a long answer to a short question.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Give very great, thoughtful answers. I

Sharon Galluzzo:

started this with what a deep thinker you are, and you know

Sharon Galluzzo:

David - he's very modest. He didn't say this, but you are.

Sharon Galluzzo:

You have recognition for your interview skills. Share some

Sharon Galluzzo:

about that.

David Vance:

Yeah, I was named the number one interview in the

David Vance:

country. Interviewer,

Sharon Galluzzo:

he's the number one interviewer in the country.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, that he's so modest. It was

David Vance:

very impressive, but you know, interviewing is

David Vance:

not that hard. Well, you know, you're interviewing me, so I

David Vance:

don't want to say it's not that hard. Interviewing is just about

David Vance:

curiosity, right? No, making people look good. A lot of the

David Vance:

content we create is from interview, which I think is a

David Vance:

differentiator for us, because a lot of creative firms are built

David Vance:

around marketing scripts, templates, and getting the words

David Vance:

right, whereas I think it's easier to be able to talk to

David Vance:

people on a human level, and it's easier to create something

David Vance:

compelling when somebody is having a human conversation than

David Vance:

when they're paying attention to the commas in their script, so

David Vance:

for that reason, most of the videos I think we are on like an

David Vance:

8020 split nowadays. Most of the promos we create, and a vast

David Vance:

majority of the social media content comes from having

David Vance:

conversations like these and getting to getting past the

David Vance:

syntax and into the actual content of what people are

David Vance:

trying to say, how they're trying to move people in, what

David Vance:

they're trying to do in the world.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, I mean, it's like David is very good at

Sharon Galluzzo:

asking probing questions, so that you're saying the things

Sharon Galluzzo:

that your audience wants to hear, as opposed to what was

Sharon Galluzzo:

that marketing stuff that I came up with, and what are the exact

Sharon Galluzzo:

things that I'm supposed to say that sometimes can trip us up,

Sharon Galluzzo:

and by working with someone like David, by having those interview

Sharon Galluzzo:

questions, you're getting into the heart of what you do, as

Sharon Galluzzo:

opposed to, you know, up here in your head thinking about what

Sharon Galluzzo:

does the script say. So I think that's a really powerful

Sharon Galluzzo:

differentiation.

David Vance:

Yeah, absolutely, and it's, it's interesting

David Vance:

creating short form video content for enough, enough

David Vance:

people, and it's always fascinating to interview

David Vance:

somebody who's never been interviewed in a long term, in a

David Vance:

long form interview format like that, because one of the things,

David Vance:

especially when I'm working with a new client on things, is to

David Vance:

try to break down some of the key word isms behind things of

David Vance:

getting past the left brain, especially when I'm working with

David Vance:

engineers or attorneys, often getting to a point where they

David Vance:

can say what they mean and say it in a way, ideally, that they

David Vance:

sound passionate about it or sound interested in what they're

David Vance:

doing, because that's going to be more compelling in long-term

David Vance:

social media than even the best script that I could write for

David Vance:

somebody.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, absolutely. So, David, I have a

Sharon Galluzzo:

question for you. Every business owner has a moment when things

Sharon Galluzzo:

didn't go as they planned. What is the moment in your business

Sharon Galluzzo:

that didn't go as you expected, and that forced you to change

Sharon Galluzzo:

how you operate?

David Vance:

Yeah, one stands out early on, a lot of our early

David Vance:

marketing came from trade shows and event sponsorship stuff. We,

David Vance:

we paid for a $6,000 booth in Orlando with cuts it. Was called

David Vance:

something like the Total Health Conference, or something like

David Vance:

that. Their marketing and sales conversations had talked about,

David Vance:

you know, there would be a lot of doctors there who tend to be

David Vance:

good clients for us, there would be a lot of practitioners,

David Vance:

people creating health-based services and things, and they

David Vance:

said there would be 8000 people over three days, and getting to

David Vance:

Orlando, paying for flights for me, and or me and my employee,

David Vance:

paying for hotels, paying for all of that, we were probably 10

David Vance:

grand in the pocket, and over three days, there were 180

David Vance:

people, or so, that showed up to the conference, which was a

David Vance:

first for me, because generally people will couch things, and

David Vance:

there were there were near riots from sponsors, and no one could

David Vance:

figure out if this was an intentional scam or an

David Vance:

unintentional scam, but something happened from, and it

David Vance:

took me a long time to be able to write that off mentally,

David Vance:

because it, it in the moment, I was like, okay, surely somebody

David Vance:

will make this right, and nobody had any intention of making, or

David Vance:

of making it right, so that was my first encounter with a big

David Vance:

marketing swing that was just totally a totally a bummer on

David Vance:

things, and how did that,

Sharon Galluzzo:

how did that change what you did moving

Sharon Galluzzo:

forward? Then,

David Vance:

yeah, number one, it it made me realize I needed

David Vance:

to have cash reserves on things, and just have a mentality that

David Vance:

no one thing can ruin us. In things, you have to take swings

David Vance:

on some things, but you gotta have enough money to play, and

David Vance:

you gotta, you know, in black jackets, you talk about play the

David Vance:

shoe, not the hand, right. So that's one thing. The other

David Vance:

thing is being this might be pessimistic, but being more

David Vance:

selective about the things that we're sponsoring. Early on, I

David Vance:

was throwing money at just about everything on things, anybody

David Vance:

who had a spot for me, I would take it, but it really led to a

David Vance:

philosophy of finding the right ways to spend money for

David Vance:

exposure, conversion, lead generation, rather than just

David Vance:

spraying it all over, so those two major things. The other

David Vance:

thing is we ended up finding reining in the ways we were

David Vance:

marketing on things. We do a lot less in-person, in-person expo

David Vance:

hall stuff than we used to, so it just changed philosophically

David Vance:

a lot of the things of who we trust, what we do, and a real

David Vance:

streamlining of the lead acquisition process.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, and you know this is something that I

Sharon Galluzzo:

was told in one of my trainings was that respectfully promoters

Sharon Galluzzo:

are liars. They are telling you their ideal of who they want to

Sharon Galluzzo:

have in the room. I had a similar experience, however, I

Sharon Galluzzo:

did get some of my money back, because that was the deal, where

Sharon Galluzzo:

they promised us hundreds of people, and it happened to be a

Sharon Galluzzo:

really rainy weekend, it was a multi-day event. We never, I

Sharon Galluzzo:

think, we had 60 people, including all of the vendors and

Sharon Galluzzo:

speakers at the event. So, yeah, they things don't always work

Sharon Galluzzo:

out when you're, when you're investing in one of those big

Sharon Galluzzo:

things. So, yeah, you need to have a strategy around how are

Sharon Galluzzo:

you? How many people did they have last year? What worked? Ask

Sharon Galluzzo:

other people who were there, did they really get what they said,

Sharon Galluzzo:

you know? Did they get the results that they were

Sharon Galluzzo:

promoting? That's a huge one. Have to sort of take everything

Sharon Galluzzo:

that a promoter who is wants you to join their whatever with a

Sharon Galluzzo:

small grain of salt, and you need to have, like David said,

Sharon Galluzzo:

that discernment of figuring out, is this a good investment

Sharon Galluzzo:

for us, and looking at, you know, being being really

Sharon Galluzzo:

proactive, having all of your ducks in a row before your

Sharon Galluzzo:

money, your time, do the research on the event, do you

Sharon Galluzzo:

know, do all that homework before and build that sort of

Sharon Galluzzo:

template, that system before I commit to this event. I'm going

Sharon Galluzzo:

to find out all of these things, I'm going to find out these

Sharon Galluzzo:

things about the event, I'm going to look into my finances,

Sharon Galluzzo:

I'm going to make informed decisions, not knee-jerk,

Sharon Galluzzo:

excited, e. Go driven decisions.

David Vance:

Yeah, I think you're right in asking the right

David Vance:

questions, because your leads have to come from somewhere, so

David Vance:

you're going to be paying somebody money in some capacity

David Vance:

through it. But the question, especially for a virtual

David Vance:

sponsorship, which is more common now, I basically won't

David Vance:

take one without a minimum guarantee, and that's what I'm

David Vance:

doing all of my conversion math based around it. Everybody will

David Vance:

talk about tickets sold from things. The other thing, like

David Vance:

you were saying, is asking somebody who's sponsored in the

David Vance:

past through or through things, what was your experience like

David Vance:

there? The other question I would have people ask, if

David Vance:

they're interested in sponsorships, as their cold lead

David Vance:

generation thing is ask people where their tickets came from on

David Vance:

things, because a big, a big red flag is if all tickets came from

David Vance:

their list affiliates or some sort of giveaway on things,

David Vance:

because that means that their show up is going to be much

David Vance:

lower than what they're going to tell you optimistically, and

David Vance:

in-person event, like you were saying, is like I want to see

David Vance:

three years now worth of things, or endorsements from something

David Vance:

like a content marketing world, or something, they're not going

David Vance:

to give you a minimum, but they have the stats to, or they have

David Vance:

the numbers to show you of what you can expect. So, barring some

David Vance:

sort of act of God, they're going to replicate something

David Vance:

like that.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Yeah, that's great advice. I love that. And

Sharon Galluzzo:

David, you said that you have a gift for our listeners. Can you

Sharon Galluzzo:

share that with

David Vance:

us? Yeah, you can go to expoundresource.com and

David Vance:

download our video marketing starter guide. It's everything,

David Vance:

it's a combination, it's 15 easy pages of if you don't know where

David Vance:

to start with video marketing for your social media, email,

David Vance:

and landing pages. It tells you everything that you should make

David Vance:

and win, so go download it. I think it's good.

Sharon Galluzzo:

I love it. That's a great gift, especially

Sharon Galluzzo:

if you're looking at this, you know, you're actively doing

Sharon Galluzzo:

videos, or you're starting to do videos. It's a great resource to

Sharon Galluzzo:

get you focused, get you streamlined into what you need

Sharon Galluzzo:

to focus on first and the most important things. So, thank you

Sharon Galluzzo:

for that awesome gift, David. And also, we will have it in our

Sharon Galluzzo:

portal, Profit Connectors dot club, that's Profit Connect

Sharon Galluzzo:

Doors, because you're doing the connecting, Profit Connectors

Sharon Galluzzo:

dot c l u b, that's our portal, that's our community. You go in

Sharon Galluzzo:

there, it's free to join, and you'll get David's gift

Sharon Galluzzo:

information about David, and also this interview, and all of

Sharon Galluzzo:

our other podcasts that we've recorded so far, and all of the

Sharon Galluzzo:

gifts from the previous guests that we've had. So, you go to

Sharon Galluzzo:

Profit Connectors dot club, you can grab that gift. And thank

Sharon Galluzzo:

you so much for being here with us today, David. You always have

Sharon Galluzzo:

such incredible insight and valuable information, and so it

Sharon Galluzzo:

was my honor to have you on the podcast today.

David Vance:

Thank you, Sharon. It's always fun to talk to you

David Vance:

anytime.

Sharon Galluzzo:

Thanks for joining us. Remember to build

Sharon Galluzzo:

with clarity at Lead with Purpose. And thank you for

Sharon Galluzzo:

joining. We'll catch you next time. Thank you. there's the

Sharon Galluzzo:

button.