Today I am joined by Rick Elmore, former NFL player turned entrepreneur, and the mastermind behind Simply Noted; a company that combines the personal touch of handwritten communication with the digital world.
From starting with a fake, early prototype to now running a thriving company, his story is a testament to the power of perseverance and genuine passion.
Tune in now to be inspired by Rick's story and discover the remarkable impact of genuine human connection in the digital era.
About the Rick Elmore
Rick Elmore is an entrepreneur, sales and marketing expert. As the Founder and CEO of Simply Noted, Rick developed a proprietary technology that puts real pen and ink to paper to scale handwritten communication, helping businesses of all industries scale this unique marketing platform to stand out from their competition and build meaningful relationships with clients, customers, and employees.
Founded in 2018 and based in Tempe, Arizona, Simply Noted has grown into a thriving company with clients of various sizes across the country including in hospitality, real estate, insurance, nonprofit, franchise, B2B, and others. Rick has served as the company’s CEO since its founding, for more than four years, and has over a decade of sales and marketing industry experience.
“I help businesses of all industries to stand out from their competition & build meaningful relationships by using unique marketing platform”
Connect with Rick
Website: https://simplynoted.com/
About the Host:
Jim Padilla is the founder and CEO of Gain The Edge - a done-for-you provider of industry-leading sales systems and unicorn sales professionals which he co-heads with his wife and entrepreneurial partner-in-crime, Cyndi Padilla.
Through their unique blend of laser-targeted selling systems, inspirational team-building expertise, and 60+ years of combined sales experience - Jim and his wife have generated over 1/4 bn in sales for a long line of high-level, visionary entrepreneurs.
Jim’s mission is to help purpose-driven thought-leaders untangle themselves from the day-to-day minutiae of seeking leads and sales for their business so they’re free to amplify their impact.
When Jim’s not making dollars rain down from the sky, you’ll regularly find him at the driving range - hitting a bucket of balls. Jim credits his time on the driving range as the main source of his best ideas.
Recently relocated back to California, Jim & Cyndi are immersing themselves in family time with their three daughters & four (soon to be five) grandchildren.
Connect with Jim at https://jimp360.com
If you want to see more great content like this, make sure to subscribe and ring the bell so you will get notified whenever we post a new video. And don't forget to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts.
Hey, opportunity makers. Welcome back to the
Jim Padilla:podcast. You know, in today's digital age, everything,
Jim Padilla:everything is about technology. And the world is trying to
Jim Padilla:replace the human side of things as fast as possible. AI is
Jim Padilla:coming on strong technology is robotics bots everywhere. And it
Jim Padilla:makes you feel like, you know, the human doesn't have the
Jim Padilla:value. You know, even though God says otherwise. And I'm a firm
Jim Padilla:believer that technology should always enhance humanity, not
Jim Padilla:replace it. And, you know, today's guests got a great
Jim Padilla:interview for you. With with with a rockstar named Rick
Jim Padilla:Elmore, who played college and pro sports, jumped into
Jim Padilla:opportunity in it, he's going to we're going to talk about his
Jim Padilla:product. And I think it's something that you should take
Jim Padilla:advantage of and check out because it's something that
Jim Padilla:helps just keep a little thread of humanity just to touch in
Jim Padilla:your business and what you're doing. But really, you know, in
Jim Padilla:the opportunity maker side of things, I'm always wanting you
Jim Padilla:to see, where's the place you can lean in? Where can you go on
Jim Padilla:offense? Where can you take that chance to jump in to solve that
Jim Padilla:problem, be a difference maker, because that's what opportunity
Jim Padilla:makers do. Right? And, you know, we're going to talk about,
Jim Padilla:there's some key components in here that we'll unpack and we
Jim Padilla:will unpack it. In our subsequent episode, we're going
Jim Padilla:to we're going to talk about this piece deeper, we're going
Jim Padilla:to talk about the human side of technology, and how they dance
Jim Padilla:together and how they enhance you in your business and scaling
Jim Padilla:and taking advantage of opportunities. But you're going
Jim Padilla:to see in this particular, in this particular conversation,
Jim Padilla:we're going to be talking about just really finding the mean,
Jim Padilla:and jumping in and taking a chance and not having to be the
Jim Padilla:expert of all the things around the solution, just understanding
Jim Padilla:how to pull the right resources and people together to deliver
Jim Padilla:the solution for the marketplace. Because what you do
Jim Padilla:matters, and you deserve to be paid well for it. And you can't
Jim Padilla:get paid well for it if you can't get found. So make sure
Jim Padilla:you're leaning in so that you can become that opportunity
Jim Padilla:maker step in and draw the crowd and say, Hey, I'm here, I've got
Jim Padilla:the cure for what ails you, right? Because that's what we do
Jim Padilla:here, gain the edge, we focus on entrepreneurs that are scaling,
Jim Padilla:that are very much exponential thinking that want great
Jim Padilla:outcomes and want to step in and make a massive difference and
Jim Padilla:deliver on the calling that that you have been put in place to be
Jim Padilla:able to deliver for the people who's who you serve. And we help
Jim Padilla:monetize that for you. We build scaling, we help you scale your
Jim Padilla:mission with sales teams and sales strategies and sales
Jim Padilla:events, and love the opportunity to be able to help you so make
Jim Padilla:sure you check us out in the notes. There's in the show
Jim Padilla:notes. There's There's links and resources for you to be able to
Jim Padilla:reach out, talk to us and see how we might be able to help if
Jim Padilla:that's something of interest. And enjoy the episode. And enjoy
Jim Padilla:the conversation because we have a lot more coming. Give us some
Jim Padilla:feedback. Let us know how this works for you. What kind of
Jim Padilla:questions you have what your what you're taking away from
Jim Padilla:this and what kind of what kind of content you would like to see
Jim Padilla:in the opportunity makers podcast. Right? We'll talk soon.
Jim Padilla:Why don't we just get started with you know, telling people
Jim Padilla:about you? Let's I guess give a quick synopsis of your your
Jim Padilla:journey. Who's Rick?
Rick Elmore:Sure. Yeah, well, my backgrounds in professional
Rick Elmore:sports in college athletics. grew up playing football is
Rick Elmore:fortunate to find a knack for it after a few years. I wouldn't
Rick Elmore:say I was super good at it early on. But I got recruited played
Rick Elmore:at the University of Arizona was a three year search starter
Rick Elmore:under Mike stoops had a good career there I was drafted into
Rick Elmore:the NFL in 2011. Got to live out my childhood dream played for
Rick Elmore:just over three seasons bounced around as a journeyman, like a
Rick Elmore:lot of the guys there. But when I got done and made the
Rick Elmore:transition to corporate medical sales, like a lot of the guys do
Rick Elmore:still had that drive that fire that passion wanted to do
Rick Elmore:something very rewarding, highly competitive. That allowed me to
Rick Elmore:use all the skills that I developed as an athlete over
Rick Elmore:almost two decades. But beyond 2017 You know, after being in
Rick Elmore:medical device sales for almost six years, I was a rookie of the
Rick Elmore:year my first year and then I was either top 1% or top five
Rick Elmore:rep in the company for the last six or five and a half years.
Rick Elmore:Just there's an itch I couldn't scratch. So I went back into my
Rick Elmore:MBA, I still have a couple of classes left, but I started the
Rick Elmore:company based off a lecture that I was in kind of had a light
Rick Elmore:bulb moment when I was sitting in a lecture. So yeah, that's
Rick Elmore:kind of a little bit about my background.
Jim Padilla:Awesome. You know, and that is a common trend
Jim Padilla:right? What I'm always very attracted to athletes. I played
Jim Padilla:junior college baseball. And you know, I love working with
Jim Padilla:athletes because they have an innate understanding of high
Jim Padilla:volumes of preparation. Yeah, yeah. For small amounts of
Jim Padilla:effort, you know, your football, you're gonna practice for 25
Jim Padilla:hours a week to play for seven.
Rick Elmore:Yeah, yeah, it did say an insane amount of film and
Rick Elmore:same amount of practice as gym classroom taking care of your
Rick Elmore:body just to go get, you know, 40 or 50. Snaps if you're lucky.
Rick Elmore:Yeah. So I totally understand that.
Jim Padilla:How does that translate in your world to
Jim Padilla:business? How do you see that benefiting you? As an
Jim Padilla:entrepreneur?
Rick Elmore:Yeah. So I, you know, I'm a father, now. I
Rick Elmore:would, I'm coaching my son in football. Now, I would advise
Rick Elmore:anybody out there who has kids to allow them to play sports,
Rick Elmore:because you start at an early age developing skills that
Rick Elmore:you're going to use for the rest of your life. You learn how to
Rick Elmore:be a good teammate, a good friend to work hard to work
Rick Elmore:through bumps and bruises, persevere, plan, prepare,
Rick Elmore:compete, right? All these things that if you can develop early
Rick Elmore:on, those transferable skills are massively, massively
Rick Elmore:valuable to anything that you're going to do in life. And that's
Rick Elmore:really what's made me successful is just taking what I developed
Rick Elmore:over my, my athletic career and applied it to everything else
Rick Elmore:that I was doing, I would not say I'm a good, the greatest
Rick Elmore:salesman, I would not, you know, I started a tech software
Rick Elmore:industrial, industrial automation company with no
Rick Elmore:experience but what is allowed me to excel is just having an an
Rick Elmore:innate in massive amount of drive competitiveness,
Rick Elmore:understanding how to overcome obstacles, you know, break
Rick Elmore:through barriers, persevere. And that's what's really allowed me
Rick Elmore:to, you know, be successful in my career in my life after
Rick Elmore:sport.
Jim Padilla:Amen. Yeah, I so resonate with that. And I
Jim Padilla:recommend that for everybody, if you're thinking about, you know,
Jim Padilla:not like you need to have a, you know, it's not like discriminate
Jim Padilla:against anybody else. But in the Learn to have a bias for people
Jim Padilla:who understand the power of preparation, the power of having
Jim Padilla:to sacrifice to get something on the back end. And in today's
Jim Padilla:climate, it's so it's not even rewarded anymore. Like
Jim Padilla:competitions not honored. Hard work, isn't honored. Everybody
Jim Padilla:thinks it should just be ease and grace and peace. Yeah. I've
Jim Padilla:never seen it work that way.
Rick Elmore:When I went to University of Arizona actually
Rick Elmore:redshirted so I was the dummy for the first year, you know,
Rick Elmore:the guy on the practice team, basically. And I really didn't
Rick Elmore:have like real success. Until, like, really good success until
Rick Elmore:my redshirt junior year. So was that year three, you know, so
Rick Elmore:like, I went through a lot, you know, hard times just to get to
Rick Elmore:some success, you know, and I, I mean, I think that's just a
Rick Elmore:great metaphor for life. And a lot of people want things now
Rick Elmore:and I, you know, I'm, I'm a consumer of content, I go on
Rick Elmore:YouTube, I do courses all the time. But it's really hard
Rick Elmore:nowadays. Because everybody makes it seem like it should be
Rick Elmore:easy. Like, oh, I made, you know, $100,000, in the first
Rick Elmore:three months of launching my business, they want to be a
Rick Elmore:guru. But really, what you have to be good at is understanding
Rick Elmore:how to filter out all that noise. If that's true, it's an
Rick Elmore:anomaly. Success comes over time, there's a reason, you
Rick Elmore:know, at least 10 years ago, they talked about the 10,000
Rick Elmore:hour rule, you don't become a professional in something until
Rick Elmore:you're been doing it for 10,000 hours, you have to be really
Rick Elmore:disciplined, you have to have really good filters to
Rick Elmore:understand that there's a lot of noise out there telling you, it
Rick Elmore:should be easier than it is. It shouldn't, it should be hard. If
Rick Elmore:it is hard, you're you're growing, you're learning, you're
Rick Elmore:you're you're overcoming, so you got to live outside that comfort
Rick Elmore:zone and constantly be trying to break through the ceiling.
Jim Padilla:You know, something else that I would have been
Jim Padilla:drawn to you about Rick is very similar to myself. He has every
Jim Padilla:business i First, this is my third, I would say official
Jim Padilla:grownup business, I've done all kinds of side hustles and try
Jim Padilla:different things. But my alarm company, my mortgage company,
Jim Padilla:and now sales organization, all of them I started on accident.
Jim Padilla:And all of them I started with a without any qualification. It
Jim Padilla:was just, I think I can do this, I can make this work, you know,
Jim Padilla:jumped into the opportunity. And you know, you've done similar
Jim Padilla:things, especially with your company. What's the thing about
Jim Padilla:you that made that that made that make sense?
Rick Elmore:It's passion for it, you have to be obsessed
Rick Elmore:about it, you have to love it, you have to believe in it. To
Rick Elmore:make anything work, it's an incredible amount of work,
Rick Elmore:especially for those first five years. That quick success is not
Rick Elmore:real. That's something that really helped me get this going.
Rick Elmore:You know, when I was sitting in my my marketing class ma MBA,
Rick Elmore:you know, the light bulb moment came off. And you know, the
Rick Elmore:professor said he was in I was in a sales role. He said
Rick Elmore:handwritten notes at a 99% open rate. I just thought it was such
Rick Elmore:a good idea. But really when that, you know, seizure, they
Rick Elmore:call it the entrepreneurial seizure when that moment comes
Rick Elmore:over you and you just All these emotions and excitement for what
Rick Elmore:you're doing is when you see at work. So I think when an
Rick Elmore:entrepreneur tests a product, they see how it works. And they
Rick Elmore:believe in it, you get really excited about it. But the
Rick Elmore:problem is, is just, you know, understand that excitement is
Rick Elmore:going to fade. You start like, lifting up, you know, picking up
Rick Elmore:rocks, like, oh, like, this is gonna be a really hard thing to
Rick Elmore:overcome. And then you got to figure out how to get over it.
Rick Elmore:And then the next step, like, oh, what's behind this door? Oh,
Rick Elmore:that's a really hard obstacle to overcome, too. But I just think
Rick Elmore:you gotta be really passionate about your product, you have to
Rick Elmore:be really disciplined in your lifestyle. And you have to be so
Rick Elmore:committed to the purpose of what you're doing, that nothing's
Rick Elmore:going to shake you. And I think that's what's really helped me
Rick Elmore:be successful.
Jim Padilla:Yeah, I heard this quote two different times in my
Jim Padilla:life. And it's interesting. One was, when I first the first day,
Jim Padilla:I showed up for my sex ed for my second or junior college
Jim Padilla:baseball, and, you know, Coach told us, today is going to be
Jim Padilla:the most excited you're ever going to be. Because from here
Jim Padilla:on out, it's work. And, you know, I made it and then oh,
Jim Padilla:crap, now I gotta go earn it. And, and then I've also heard
Jim Padilla:John Maxwell talk about that in leadership, when you when you
Jim Padilla:pull a new team together, and you and you love that you share
Jim Padilla:a vision, and this moment is the most excited you ever going to
Jim Padilla:be about it? Because now it's about the work.
Rick Elmore:Yeah. Right. That's That's definitely how it isn't
Rick Elmore:starting a business that you're excited to get started. But you
Rick Elmore:know, seeing all those athletes on TV, you don't realize are
Rick Elmore:these you know, these? What do you call it actors? They've gone
Rick Elmore:through decades, decades of failure, trying and failing,
Rick Elmore:trying and failing? Well, try fail, improve, try fail,
Rick Elmore:improve, right? And it's always funny like that, that feeling
Rick Elmore:you have when you start something, but it's the people
Rick Elmore:that can you know, keep going when that feeling is gone?
Rick Elmore:Because that feeling is going to be gone? Quick? Yeah.
Jim Padilla:Sure. Yeah. So I want to start talking about I'm
Jim Padilla:talking about your company. But the one one last thing before we
Jim Padilla:talk about the specifics, is, again, as somebody who started,
Jim Padilla:like you said, jumped into a company that you did not really
Jim Padilla:you did not have you were not the expert, you're not the
Jim Padilla:technical expert, etc. How do you turn that into a win by
Jim Padilla:stepping into a space that you're unfamiliar? And now
Jim Padilla:you're you've got something that's, that's rolling?
Rick Elmore:Well, I think, you know, I talk to my wife about
Rick Elmore:this all the time. And she's the one who actually tells this to
Rick Elmore:me, she sees it more than than I do. She's like, No
Rick Elmore:entrepreneurs, there's just entrepreneurships in your blood.
Rick Elmore:You know, I think what makes a really good entrepreneur, is
Rick Elmore:somebody that can understand what their strengths are. And
Rick Elmore:for me, it's sales and marketing, I just, I'm really
Rick Elmore:good at you know, the sales and marketing wasn't good at
Rick Elmore:building websites, or building robots or building software, I
Rick Elmore:had to find people to do that. But in order to be successful,
Rick Elmore:you have to, you have to be able to build a team around you,
Rick Elmore:that's going to help you go far. If you want to go fast, you can
Rick Elmore:go alone, but if you want to build a business, that's going
Rick Elmore:to be an awesome business and thrive and hopefully be
Rick Elmore:something that can be acquired someday, that's, you know, the
Rick Elmore:goal of our company, is you have to build a really great team
Rick Elmore:really good. A lot of systems and processes. And you just have
Rick Elmore:to set up those goals and attack them. But what we've been really
Rick Elmore:good at is finding the right people, basically, researching,
Rick Elmore:developing and attacking what we want to go after, and having the
Rick Elmore:right people to help us do it. But yeah, I'm no expert in
Rick Elmore:robotics, or building software, or trying to figure out how to
Rick Elmore:do 10s of 1000s of handwritten notes, a data warehouse, I had
Rick Elmore:to hire a lot of people. So it cost a lot of money, ignorance
Rick Elmore:can cost a lot. So make sure before you jump into something,
Rick Elmore:you really do think it all the way through. But it's been
Rick Elmore:really fun. And I think anybody who's a true entrepreneur is
Rick Elmore:going to be excited about whatever opportunity they're
Rick Elmore:gonna go into. Because all the growth that comes out of it,
Rick Elmore:there's nothing like it, you're gonna get 40 years of, of growth
Rick Elmore:out of five years of being an entrepreneur. And I would never,
Rick Elmore:I wouldn't trade that for any other career out there. It's
Rick Elmore:been very rewarding, doing what we've been doing for the last
Rick Elmore:almost...
Jim Padilla:Yeah, I'm a firm believer, I don't know anything
Jim Padilla:that develops you more as a human. Yeah, in
Jim Padilla:entrepreneurship.
Rick Elmore:Well develops you technically, mentally,
Rick Elmore:emotionally. It's gonna test you on every level. You know, you're
Rick Elmore:gonna have all those night like those sleepless nights, and
Rick Elmore:you're gonna have all those doubts, and you got to learn how
Rick Elmore:to overcome all of that. And that security of that w two,
Rick Elmore:that's not there. So you got to wake up and make it happen every
Rick Elmore:day.
Jim Padilla:So simply noting, first, tell us what is simply
Jim Padilla:noted, so the listeners can understand. And then why did you
Jim Padilla:put everything on the line to start this business with no
Jim Padilla:experience jump into something real because you were what was
Jim Padilla:the need that you were solving?
Rick Elmore:Yeah, so great question. So simply notice a
Rick Elmore:handwritten note platform. And what that means is that we've
Rick Elmore:built the world's only purposely built writing robot. We've spent
Rick Elmore:over $850,000 into this amazing technology. But what we do is
Rick Elmore:help companies integrate and automate. So think of like a,
Rick Elmore:you know, a payroll system or like a web form, or CRM or
Rick Elmore:whatever. When things are happening, we can help people
Rick Elmore:automate it, birthdays, anniversaries, so we help
Rick Elmore:companies automate it, or scale it. So like, right now we're in
Rick Elmore:the holidays, you know, companies are sending 10s of
Rick Elmore:1000s of holiday cards, their employees or customers. So, you
Rick Elmore:know, we help them integrate automated or scale it. And
Rick Elmore:really, why this was started really was just a need. When I
Rick Elmore:was in that marketing class, I was trying to think of ways to
Rick Elmore:be more successful trying to apply everything that I was
Rick Elmore:absorbing in my MBA. And I had a marketing professor said, going
Rick Elmore:through, you know, a lot of the marketing stuff, direct mail,
Rick Elmore:cold call, you know, email, digital, everything was super
Rick Elmore:nominal, very low. Any end of the lecture saying handwritten
Rick Elmore:notes have a 99% open rate I was like, and I was knocking on
Rick Elmore:doors trying to get doctors to talk to me. And I was like, Man,
Rick Elmore:if I can get in front of that doctor 99% of the time, like,
Rick Elmore:I'm going to be so much more successful. So what we did is we
Rick Elmore:flew some technology in from South America worked with a
Rick Elmore:mailing house here in Phoenix, who wrote like a cheap little
Rick Elmore:robot in from China. And after about a month of trying to get
Rick Elmore:this thing to work and putting together some handwritten notes,
Rick Elmore:we sent them out, like really fake, really bad early on,
Rick Elmore:really bad product. But we sent them out to some doctors that I
Rick Elmore:couldn't work or I have wasn't working with. And I got 28
Rick Elmore:doctors to call me back, which was, you know, as a sales rep,
Rick Elmore:having a customer call you is a big deal. And these doctors were
Rick Elmore:like, like First off, like, Hey, Rick, this is really cool. Like,
Rick Elmore:nobody ever sends me a handwritten note. So they were
Rick Elmore:automatic, like, automatically was on their good side, right?
Rick Elmore:Because I was impressing them with something that wasn't
Rick Elmore:normal. And they're like, hey, this offer sounds good. Like,
Rick Elmore:let's set up a lunch and talk about it. And those 20
Rick Elmore:handwritten notes or what have or responses, I got $280,000 in
Rick Elmore:sales, when my monthly quota was about $50,000. My whole team was
Rick Elmore:going nuts. My company is going nuts. Like I was going nuts.
Rick Elmore:Like that's when like the entrepreneurial seizure was
Rick Elmore:like, This is it. This could be a business. I knew it would
Rick Elmore:work. I got $20,000 in commission. I was like,
Rick Elmore:businesses on autopilot. Like, let's go, this is gonna work and
Rick Elmore:I just saw a need. I was just like, business is so impersonal.
Rick Elmore:It's always an ass. It's all digital. It's all noise. Like
Rick Elmore:there's nothing out there like this. So got to work, did some
Rick Elmore:research, there was a company that's no longer around that was
Rick Elmore:focusing on the wedding industry. I was just like, that
Rick Elmore:is the worst thing you should do. Because there's bride Zilla
Rick Elmore:as anybody who has been married and planned a wedding. That and
Rick Elmore:then there was like a company that's still around today. But
Rick Elmore:they're more focused on b2c. And I was like, That is terrible to
Rick Elmore:like, people don't have the budgets. Like why isn't anybody
Rick Elmore:doing this for business? Like they have the systems, the
Rick Elmore:processes, the budgets? So yeah, it's been fun. I just I believed
Rick Elmore:in it so much. You know, I grew up without a phone, I got a cell
Rick Elmore:phone. I was 16. So writing handwritten notes was, you know,
Rick Elmore:common, like coaches who recruited me sent me handwritten
Rick Elmore:notes. Those are keepsakes. I played for the San Francisco 40,
Rick Elmore:Niners in 2012. So when when I left, Jim Harbach sent me a
Rick Elmore:handwritten note like that's literally like in my bookcase at
Rick Elmore:in my office at home. So it's like, such an appreciated
Rick Elmore:powerful thing that we can do. In an era where it's it's so
Rick Elmore:impersonal nowadays, it's all digital, you know? So I just wanted...
Jim Padilla:As you say that that's a trip because my
Jim Padilla:daughter and I had a little struggle, like, about 15 years
Jim Padilla:ago. And we didn't talk for a couple of years. And then she
Jim Padilla:wrote me a Father's Day note, a couple of years later, I still
Jim Padilla:have this right here on my desk.
Rick Elmore:Right? It's, it's empowering. It's powerful. It's
Rick Elmore:it's, it's emotional, it connects with you differently,
Rick Elmore:right?
Jim Padilla:Definitely. Yeah, it just does it, you know, and
Jim Padilla:it does it. To me, it just means more. I mean, I have you know, I
Jim Padilla:got we have all of our reporting, and every we have all
Jim Padilla:our dashboards and all of our digital, but I have all my sales
Jim Padilla:tracking stuff right here on flip charts on the wall. You
Jim Padilla:know, I just touch tangibility. Yeah, to me matters.
Rick Elmore:Yeah, that's, I mean, that's what we're trying
Rick Elmore:to do. I mean, everything we do is genuine, it's real pen,
Rick Elmore:right? There's a lot of companies out there that will do
Rick Elmore:like a laser printed font, but we're just you know, we're one
Rick Elmore:tiny step below, you know, if you were actually doing it, but
Rick Elmore:yeah, you know, if we're doing our job right, it's gonna look
Rick Elmore:as authentic as possible. It's gonna look like you sent it. So
Rick Elmore:that feeling that you have right there with that hindered no But
Rick Elmore:we're trying to automate that and scale that for our clients.
Jim Padilla:Awesome. Amen. So what's the real payoff on this?
Jim Padilla:Then? You know, I mean, why it's cool business? Great, you know,
Jim Padilla:like you got you covered that your own niche. But why is this
Jim Padilla:matter?
Rick Elmore:I just think it's something that's not around.
Rick Elmore:Well, starting a business number one was extremely important to
Rick Elmore:me, I wanted to prove that I can do it. I wanted to challenge
Rick Elmore:myself. And this was the best way to challenge yourself as a
Rick Elmore:young adult is trying to build a product, build a company, and
Rick Elmore:see if you can be successful doing it. But I just believe so
Rick Elmore:much in the product. It's, it's, it's the last thing, you know,
Rick Elmore:really in the world that I believe that people think that
Rick Elmore:can be genuinely automated. Like, you can automate
Rick Elmore:everything else emails, text, phone calls, voicemails, gifts,
Rick Elmore:like, but it all looks like it was automated, you know, this
Rick Elmore:doesn't. So I just think there's a real need for it, especially
Rick Elmore:today, especially after post COVID. You know, a lot of the, a
Rick Elmore:lot of the interactions are, are not in person as much anymore.
Rick Elmore:So I feel like people are craving something that's more,
Rick Elmore:you know, tangible and personal these days.
Jim Padilla:Definitely. So how can people get a chance to check
Jim Padilla:this out? And and who's the right person that do you do you
Jim Padilla:do is most beneficial for someone who's doing a volume
Jim Padilla:play? Or is this work for small business too.
Rick Elmore:So yeah, our websites great for anybody. So
Rick Elmore:there's simply no.com, anybody can go on there and send one
Rick Elmore:card create their own card, we try to help businesses just
Rick Elmore:because they have the systems in place to automate it. So they're
Rick Elmore:more of like a ongoing client. But our website is great for
Rick Elmore:anybody to send once and 10 500 No, a lot of our corporate
Rick Elmore:accounts will contact us directly, so we can be a little
Rick Elmore:bit more hands on. But if they go, if you guys go to our page,
Rick Elmore:you know, our simply noted homepage, just in the top right
Rick Elmore:hand corner, you can request a free sample, and we actually do
Rick Elmore:a really nice job of putting together this big kit that we
Rick Elmore:send you before you even spend $1 with us. Lots of handwriting
Rick Elmore:samples, you know, case studies, writing styles, different, you
Rick Elmore:know, things, you know, flyers and stuff. So, I would just
Rick Elmore:advise anybody who's remotely interested to go request a
Rick Elmore:handwriting sample, because if you don't need it, now, there's
Rick Elmore:gonna be a time in the next six to 12 months, like, hey, you
Rick Elmore:know, I need to send that handwritten card and I don't
Rick Elmore:have a stamp, I'll just go to these guys and let them take
Rick Elmore:care of it for me.
Jim Padilla:You know, we we have not had the opportunity to
Jim Padilla:engage the simply noted process yet, but I think we're
Jim Padilla:definitely definitely attracted to it. But here's another
Jim Padilla:perspective on it, guys, just to think about this, we just, Cindy
Jim Padilla:and I just got a message from a client, just a couple of days
Jim Padilla:ago, we sent out we sent out cards to everybody there and we
Jim Padilla:send them out individually. And we always put something custom
Jim Padilla:on it. So they don't ever feel like this was a blast. We had a
Jim Padilla:client to just call and left call this the other day because
Jim Padilla:she got a call a car for Thanksgiving. And she thought it
Jim Padilla:was just going to be a hey, Happy Thanksgiving from gain the
Jim Padilla:edge. And she turned it over. She had just done a TED talk.
Jim Padilla:And she turned it over. And there was a picture of her with
Jim Padilla:her TED Talk and logo. And it was congratulations. We're
Jim Padilla:proud. Right. And it moved her because she was like, Wow, you
Jim Padilla:guys. Are you paying attention to me? Yeah. Yeah. And
Jim Padilla:obviously, it wasn't the handwritten note, but it was it
Jim Padilla:was, but that's what the handwritten note does. Right. It
Jim Padilla:gives that I'm taking the time to do something for you.
Rick Elmore:Yeah. Yeah. Like, and that's really, you know,
Rick Elmore:what it is hard to do nowadays is that everybody's being pulled
Rick Elmore:in different directions. So it's hard to give people five
Rick Elmore:minutes. So I think that's like what you were just explaining
Rick Elmore:this is showing that you're paying attention and that you
Rick Elmore:care and it's just a meaningful, thoughtful way of doing it.
Jim Padilla:Amen. So what would be your your wisdom to people
Jim Padilla:who are listening for hungry, wanting to solve problems
Jim Padilla:wanting to, you know, take a take a piece of the burden of
Jim Padilla:the marketplace? But it's a little fearful right now,
Rick Elmore:Yes. You know, I was, you know, just get started
Rick Elmore:The thing I told anybody who wants to start a business,
Rick Elmore:you're never gonna have all the answers were five years in. And
Rick Elmore:every time you solve a problem, there's going to be three new
Rick Elmore:problems to figure out. So just getting started is the most
Rick Elmore:important thing that you can do. Because you don't it's just like
Rick Elmore:compound interest. You know, just a little bit of work every
Rick Elmore:day adds up and before you know it after 12 months, you're gonna
Rick Elmore:be so incredibly proud and shocked of how far you came
Rick Elmore:versus if you tried to wait 12 months and try to figure it all
Rick Elmore:out. So I tell everybody, get started. Because it's, it's what
Rick Elmore:it's going to take. It's just work. You're never going to have
Rick Elmore:it all figured out. Also, you know, be really, you know, don't
Rick Elmore:take massive risks. Don't you know, I follow the bullets in
Rick Elmore:bowling ball technique. You know, you do fire a bunch of you
Rick Elmore:know, you have one bowling ball, you have one say you have
Rick Elmore:$10,000 to start a business, you know, make $50 investments $100
Rick Elmore:investments Test test test test test until you can point that
Rick Elmore:cannon exactly where you need to go. And you have that one ball
Rick Elmore:to fire. So, do a lot of tests before you go crazy and go, you
Rick Elmore:know, make some massive investment. Yeah, I would say
Rick Elmore:those are the three things I would recommend anybody who's
Rick Elmore:thinking about starting a business.
Jim Padilla:Awesome. So go to simply noted, comm all of Rick's
Jim Padilla:information will be in the show notes so you can get access to
Jim Padilla:him on LinkedIn, all the places to find him and as well as get
Jim Padilla:to simply know to go check it out. Just Just look at doing
Jim Padilla:business a little differently. And I cannot make enough of a of
Jim Padilla:a stand in a statement for not trying don't lose connection
Jim Padilla:with the human side of business. And we were trying to digitize
Jim Padilla:ourselves out of everything. And we got to hang on to the few
Jim Padilla:things that we can still do to keep people feeling important
Jim Padilla:and unique and special in business because otherwise we're
Jim Padilla:all heading in the wrong place.
Rick Elmore:What's well said I couldn't have said it any
Rick Elmore:better.
Jim Padilla:Outstanding. Rick Elmore, appreciate you, man.
Jim Padilla:Really glad you do. You stopped by the show and for the
Jim Padilla:opportunity makers out there. And you are definitely an
Jim Padilla:opportunity maker and we'll see it well and looking forward to
Jim Padilla:the next version or the next iteration or what comes after
Jim Padilla:this. So excited for it and appreciate the time and good
Jim Padilla:luck in 2023.
Rick Elmore:Thanks for having me on, Jim. Appreciate all