Secret tips to create a strong business presence online, bring high-level teams together, and develop efficient processes that free you up to be the leader you’re meant to be

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TONY MAREE TORREY
is the host of the
Legacy in the Making Show
  

She is also LA's Foremost Success Coach hired by Founders, Financial Professionals and High Achievers AROUND THE WORLD
to turn limitations into strengths, increase competitive edge and create a positive and profitable impact.

LEARN MORE ABOUT TONY MAREE HERE

Find out more about the next Innate Wisdom Business Council Mastermind HERE

SHOW NOTES:

EPISODE:

Learn how Paul G. McManus, Founder and CEO of More Clients More Fun, a lead generation and content marketing agency lands HIGH-VALUE clients using LinkedIn

EPISODE GUEST:

Paul G. McManus, Founder and CEO of More Clients More Fun, a highly successful lead generation and content marketing agency shares secret tips on how he helps million-dollar producers attract more elite level prospects and how you can too.

He also shares his sage experience on how to stop doing low-value tasks yourself and find EXCELLENT resources to inexpensively and efficiently take them off your plate.

EPISODE SPONSOR:

The Innate Wisdom Business Council a professional mastermind that empowers purpose-driven, socially conscious leaders to amplify their instincts, transcend limitations, and leverage their position to increase profits while creating positive change in the world.

IN THIS EPISODE YOU WILL LEARN:

  • How to increase your ability to take on more without becoming stressed out or overwhelmed in the process
  • How to get to where you want to go faster
  • Paul’s favorite book recommendation on hiring a top executive assistant and the best place to find them

How do you attract high-value clients?

Hosts & Guests

Paul G. McManus
CEO at More Clients More Fun

Tony Maree Torrey
LA’s Foremost Business Success Coach

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Scroll for Interview Transcript

Paul G.McManus  0:00  

Every time I’ve made successful transformations, it’s always been because I’ve been open to learning. And I’ve also embraced the change, I realized that I needed to become the person that could do this. And so it wasn’t trying to justify who I am and trying to do that as like it was embracing change was embracing personal transformation. And I’ve always been very successful. I’ve done that.

Tony Maree Torrey

I think it’s a combination of two things. There’s a lot that you can do with your mindset and how you see yourself and then there’s also as you mentioned, the hard-one experience component of it. And I think a lot of that has to do with that. And to your credit you actively went out and you sought coaching, you sought leadership and you sought to build the skills that you recognize were lacking in you as a probably a young bright eyed and bushy tailed CEO. Welcome to the Legacy in the Making Show. I’m your host LA’s foremost Success Coach Tony Maree Torrey, I interview leaders and influencers who have gone beyond the superficial markers of success and claimed true fulfillment by leveraging their positions to create positive and profitable changes in their businesses and beyond. They share their stories and offer real-world boots on the ground experience. That translates into practical advice to apply to your own journey. I invite you to this injection of wisdom and inspiration so you can prevail and leave your own lasting legacy. Welcome to the Legacy in the Making show. I’m your host, Tony Maree Torrey, and I am here today with one of my favorite people, Paul G. McManus. And Paul is the co-founder and CEO of more clients more fun, a lead generation and content marketing agency, which has served over 500, coaches, consultants and advisors since 2015. He’s also the author of the smart million dollar producer, the secret playbook for financial professionals to land high value clients using LinkedIn. Paul is also a client, a friend and a colleague, and I am just so excited to share his wisdom with you here today. Paul, welcome. Please tell us a little bit about yourself and how you got to do what you’re doing today.

Paul G. McManus  2:37  

Thank you for having me on your show. Tony Maree, appreciate it. We’ve known each other I think now since 2014 2015. It’s been a while. Yeah, so you knew me before I started my current business. You knew me back when I was running a, you know, three generation family owned company. And since then, in 2015, I decided to get into the world of coaching and marketing. I like to think that I started with small thoughts, although my small thoughts turned out to be quite smart. In other words, when I first got my coaching certification, I was a Book Yourself Solid coach. And immediately I’m like, Who am I to, you know, who am I to hang up my shingle online, who am I to position myself as this expert in coaching or in marketing. And so that was kind of a small thought. And so I decided that Okay, now I’m just going to make my little home here on LinkedIn, I’m just going to figure out LinkedIn, I’m going to be known as the guy that can help people with LinkedIn. And so that was the immediate, I did that that was back in 2015. And that turned out to be probably the smartest decision that I’ve made in the past five or six years, because what I’ve learned since then, is that what really separates you from the crowd, what really gets you traction much quicker, is specificity. And so my specificity was with various skills, you know, I didn’t just help people with business development or marketing, I didn’t just help them with online marketing. I help them use LinkedIn to land high value clients. Originally, when I started, I was focused on helping other coaches and consultants use LinkedIn. But really since 2016, my market found me and the market that found me was really high end, elite level financial advisors. So since 2016, I’ve been working with financial advisors pretty much exclusively, and I have some pretty amazing stories of helping them, you know, become millionaires in their own right. And so it’s been a fun ride.

Tony Maree Torrey  4:39  

Yes. And it’s been really fun to watch you grow, evolve and change. And there was a point in time there where things weren’t so fabulous, right when you were making that transition, and that was when I had the honor of being your coach and helping you shift some things and one of the things What I love about what we did when, when you came to me and we were teasing apart the challenges that you were having with your transition, and some historical stress related stuff, is that we came up with this vision for you. I think before you really even knew before you would really even fully crystallized what it was that you were doing.

Paul G. McManus  5:23  

 It’s interesting, right? I mean, you like anybody who started out bright eyed and bushy tailed about what you’re going to accomplish. And then pretty quickly, you know, reality comes knocking, and you just in skimming as a startup, right? So, you know, I literally started with just an idea, I had a $20 a month budget, I used to run a company to add resources. And then, you know, I literally dropped out without any parachute. And so it’s like, Okay, I got 20 bucks a month, make this work, I got a zoom account, I got I think a MailChimp account, and I just lived off the land in terms of free resources, you know, free LinkedIn account, you know, everything. And in that process, I had two business partners. So I was fortunate to get started with two other people, one of which her name was Anna. And, you know, she was my mentor at the time, she knew a lot about online marketing. So that really helped me speed up my process. But we had a very flawed model, at least at that time. And so the model that we wanted to make happen, or at least I wanted to make happen, was to immediately go into group coaching. And by that I mean, skip in a one to one coaching, skip one to one services, and really build up this online model where people would subscribe to a membership center would do group coaching, they have a training center. I mean, I think a lot of people nowadays, nowadays, that’s the dream, right? You know, that’s how it’s passive income, which leveraged income, it’s all these things. And so it’s very appealing for a lot of people, including myself. What I realized, though, during that first year or two, through a lot of hard work, a lot of effort was that while you can make it work, it’s very difficult. It’s very, you know, it’s very difficult to consistently attract clients and enough numbers so that you can make the numbers fit. And we were charging something like $100 a month for the subscription. And when you take out the cost of advertising, the cost of delivering services, you know, two different partners, at the end of the month, I wasn’t left with it with too much money in my hand. And so,

Tony Maree Torrey  7:22  

and it wasn’t just you either, right? Because you had your wife as well, it wasn’t like it was just you flying by the seat of your pants, you had other people dependent on you.

Paul G. McManus  7:33  

Yes, I’m the primary breadwinner of my family. And so, here I am this, you know, I don’t have children or I have four legged children, but I don’t you know, so it was, I had to essentially provide for myself and my wife anyways, you know, stress started mounting over time, as I saw that the model that we had set upon, wasn’t paying the bills sufficiently, it was proven to be harder work than I had imagined. And I had no interest in getting a job. I mean, I was dealing with a lot of stress, with just thinking, you know, how am I going to pay my bills? How am I going to avoid getting a job? How am I going to do all these things? And it was just becoming very distracting, right? You know, it’s like, it’s funny in those moments where you need to do more stress can completely derail you. So you end up doing less, I could see it was just kind of a vicious cycle. So you and I’ve been friends for a while, and I reached out to you. And you helped me turn it around, and I’ll let you jump in there. 

Tony Maree Torrey  8:35  

I just brainwashed him. We spent some time together. And we teased apart the aspects of the things that were stressing you out, came up with kind of a new plan and a new vision for you, right. And then one of the things I do with a lot of my clients is, I do what I call the under the hood work. And then I sent you home with a specific hypnosis recording for you to listen to consistently. And in that hypnosis recording, we included this vision that you had come up with as we were going through the process and taking the stress off things. Paul, you got more clarity, right on what it was that you really wanted to create, you had this lovely vision of coasting along on a luxury yacht, and that’s kind of where it started. And then that vision evolved as we progressed through the work we were doing. And you realize that you were not alone on that luxury yacht, that you were fishing and that you had big nets, and you were raking in the nets. And inside those nets were dollars and lots of them. And then the other piece of it was that you realized that actually it wasn’t just you fishing that you had your clients fishing to and that  you were teaching them how to fish. 

Paul G. McManus  9:55  

Yeah, no, it was the perfect metaphor. And you know, to me, just that idea of yacht just represents it’s not that I want to be a yacht owner, because I think that would probably not be the smartest thing for me to do. But just the idea of the yacht has always appealed to me, you know, just as a metaphor, ultimately, where I get the most joy is in helping others really become create freedom, you know, in the way that I help them create freedom is to do business development, through marketing, through systems through coaching to help them go from where they are to just a lot more abundance. And so it was just the perfect metaphor. And after that, even though I’m still trying to figure things out for myself, it’s interesting, that metaphor kept me moving forward, even during my lowest points, if you will, it ended up just shortly afterwards. And over time, opportunities started presenting themselves, I got better and better at my craft, I switched my business model. Really, since then I have 100% confidence that what I’m doing is the right thing, and that I’ll never have to go and get a job. 

Tony Maree Torrey  11:03  

The cold spot in the pit of the stomach for every entrepreneurial spirit out there,

Paul G. McManus  11:12  

I would rather work 80 hours for myself than 40 hours for someone else, right?

Tony Maree Torrey  11:16  

Yeah, I totally get it.

Paul G. McManus  11:19  

So we’ve all experienced together this global pandemic. And the people that I’ve been working exclusively with for the past three or four years now is financial advisors, specifically ones that are focused on life insurance and advanced tax planning and things of that nature. In their case COVID-19 and the shutdowns have completely disrupted their ability to grow their business. And the reason for that is that most of them are many of them are used to doing networking in person doing dinner seminars, where they invite people out, you know, to a dinner event, and they pay for it. And they essentially do a presentation. And those are probably the two most common ways that they had in their toolkit to bring on new clients, take all that away, and they had to come online, some adapt online, some were successful, but I think the majority had avoided doing things online. And they had no other choice but to embrace it, which was good for me, from a very selfish personal standpoint, because I was already helping advisors, specifically online, specifically on LinkedIn, be very successful, I had some amazing success stories with advisors, you know, helping them go from making a couple $100,000 of commission a year to making a couple million dollars a commission. And so I knew what I was doing, I had built a reputation for myself in the financial services industry, for being able to help them since June of you know, a probably had the best business of my my life, helping them specifically use LinkedIn to prospect to build their brand online, and to essentially land what I call high value clients.

Tony Maree Torrey  13:02  

It is a great testament to understanding how when you really do get in alignment with what it is that you’re supposed to do. And you continue on that path, that oftentimes what happens is that you find yourself being poised to, to take advantage of situations that are otherwise for other people appear to be extremely difficult. And there’s always opportunity in crisis. And I think so much of how it is that any of us respond and bounce back to this is to do with the luck, which comes to those who are prepared, and you had a lot of preparation. And then just how you think about these things, whether you look at this as a terrible, horrible thing, or whether you look at this as some opportunity to take a step back, take a look at what it is that you’ve been doing with your life, with your business with your career thus far, and see what this is calling forth in you. What are your thoughts about that?

Paul G. McManus  14:10  

Yeah, I would definitely agree that I was well prepared. And so you know, I didn’t have to scramble being one of the reasons that I got so many new clients was that other marketing organizations in the industry, they were trying to figure stuff out, you know, they had spent so much time helping advisors with dinner seminars that, you know, when suddenly they shifted gears and said, Hey, you know, we can teach you how to do things on LinkedIn, they had no credibility. They were struggling, they were trying to find solutions, and they were giving their advisors a lot of bad advice. And so because I’ve built up the reputation over a number of years, it was very natural for people to trust me and to work with me. I think for me it was interesting, just as an individual level, you know, as the demand for my services surged. I’ve always had the mindset that I’m a leader, I’m a CEO, do work with people one to one. But you know, primarily where my strength is, is in more high level bringing teams together, and helping teams manage processes. And so even though my business grew quite dramatically and rapidly, I had that skill set as well, which is to bring the right people I, you know, quickly hired people, I quickly was able to train them effectively. And so we were able to grow with the surge on demand quite well with very minimal hiccups.

Tony Maree Torrey  15:31  

I’d love to hear more about that, because I’m pretty sure many of our legacy makers would like to A: have that problem where they’re in a situation where they need to scale. And oftentimes, that is a place having worked with many founding CEOs, as we do reach these places in our businesses growth trajectory, where our inability to scale actually impacts our ability to take things to the next level. So what are some tips and tools and keys, you could give someone who’s hoping to be in that position where they’re, they’re going to need to take things to the next level?

Paul G. McManus  16:08  

I don’t have an easy answer, because I gave him some advice, obviously, or definitely, but I don’t know if I’m the easy answer. It also comes down to preparation, right. And so my previous life wasn’t running this 100 plus year old company that had you know, 1520 employees at any given time as the CEO. And while the service that we provided them was very different. It was my laboratory, it was a place that I learned, I remember when I first started, and this was, you know, right out of college and was a family business. So yes, nepotism, you know, has its place. I came in, I wanted to improve things, I saw so many problems, but I didn’t have the people skills at the time. And so I ended up alienating most of the existing employees, and half of them either left over the course of the next year, or the other half weren’t all that happy with me. And so I made it my job to become a much better leader. And I, you know, just took it as a challenge that I would study, not learning, I would practice. And I did that. And so you know, I got into Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People got into a bunch of other things. And I’m really proud of the fact that I believe I became an excellent leader over the subsequent years, something where that now is a key strength for me. And so when this opportunity came around, really this past June, and my business was growing, one of the people that I was partner with, you know, his question for me, because he had known me in that role. And his question for me was, you know, can you handle this because he was worried about letting people down and not being able to scale. And that was, I remember, so clearly, that was the thing, I have a very strong belief in my ability to do this. That was true. I knew it because part of hard earned experience, have the skill set. And so I had a very strong belief that I could be successful, and it proved itself out. And so I think going back to the question of mindsets, I mean, you know, really, it’s what your identity of who you willing to be, oftentimes has a strong influence over the results that you say,

Tony Maree Torrey  18:02  

I so agree with you about the identity component. And it can oftentimes be the piece that is the most difficult for us to shift, yet has the greatest rewards once we do. And oftentimes, it is just, I think it’s a combination of two things, there’s a lot that you can do with your mindset and how you see yourself. And then there’s also, as you mentioned, the hard won experience component of it. And I think a lot of that has to do with it. And to your credit, you actively went out and you sought coaching, you sought leadership, and you sought to build the skills that you recognize were lacking in you as a, as a probably a young bright eyed and bushy tailed CEO,

Paul G. McManus  18:50  

owner, son to right. Remember it then. And every time I’ve made successful transformations, it’s always been because I’ve been open to learning. And I’ve also embraced the change, I realized that I needed to become the person that could do this. And so it wasn’t trying to justify who I am and trying to do that as like it was embracing change was embracing personal transformation. And I’ve always been very successful. I’ve done that, I’ll point out that the one skill that I’ve really further developed and this might be more useful for people that don’t necessarily have that experience that I did is that this year, I’ve really become that much better at working with virtual assistants or executive assistants. And that too, is a skill set. That’s something that I think for, especially for a founder or any leader. I mean, really, regardless of the size of your company, whether you’re kind of more than that’s just getting started or whether you’re already very experienced and successful. Your ability to work with an executive assistant effectively is something that makes a huge difference on your productivity and especially as you’re scaling your ability to take on more work, without becoming overwhelmed or stressed out in the process, the metaphor that I love is kind of like it’s a, it’s a tennis metaphor, where at some point, you have so many balls coming at you that it just gets exhausting to try to have to return all the balls. But when you see that you win, you can hire and train and work with an executive assistant. And now you don’t have to return all the balls, and you can focus on the ones that are really more in your sweet spot. You know, that’s one of those skill sets, that is incredibly important.

Tony Maree Torrey  20:28  

I totally agree with you. One of the things that I noticed with many of my CEOs, my founding CEO clients is that initially, when they started off, they had to wear a lot of hats, because they were chief cook and bottle washer. And then they reach a point in their growth where they maybe have some people under them. But oftentimes, people don’t start out with that executive assistant hire that you’re talking about, which I actually think should be one of your very first hires in your business. But oftentimes, people hire for like technical skills or whatever also important. But then you find yourself in the position as a CEO, where you’re still doing a lot of the day to day operational things that you no longer should be doing as you become a stronger leader and voice and decision making maker for your company and for your population of employees. And so I love what you’re saying about that? Have you got any specific tips for what you found worked well when you were hiring for that role?

Paul G. McManus  21:36  

I consider myself a lifelong learner, I love to read books, especially about business. And I love to you know, anytime I see a problem or challenge, I’d like to, you know, get books about it. So I can figure it out, right? I mean, there’s you can learn so much by experience, we can also speed up that cycle by learning from other people. And so one of the books that I got this past year that I recommend to anybody is this one right here, I don’t know if you can see it, but it’s by Michael Hyatt. Your World-Class Assistant. And so with my I’ve had assistance before, Mm hmm. And I’ve had mixed results. And this is previous to reading this book. And so I just had the mindset that this is something that I need to get better at, and I want to get better at. And so I start by reading this. And literally, this hire that I’ve had her name is Virginia, I’ve heard a lot of people in the past, but she’s probably been my best hire to date. And I think I just came in with a mindset of you know how to handle the relationship well, and it’s remote, he’s out. And you know, she was in New York originally. Now in Texas, I’m in California. So it’s a completely remote relationship. It’s been a game changer. I mean, my The other aspect of that is that I have a strong belief that I can train someone to do the job, even the job that I typically do, and so essentially been able to train her on most of the things that I had been doing, which she does just as well, if not better now. And essentially, it’s freed up my time to focus on those higher value added activities that really drive the needle further. So if you don’t have experience, get the right resources. I recommend that book, that the other one and this is I think maybe interesting for viewers is, you know, it’s where do you find the right people, and I’ve tried a variety of sources of trade going overseas, you know, sometimes people from the Philippines before, up until now always with a little bit of disappointment. And so in this case, I’ve been hiring Americans. I have been hiring people in the US. And in my mind, I wanted someone who had flexibility could work from home has experience and I found the cycle hire my mom.com as just theoretically, it makes sense, right? You know, it’s like you have these women who you have these great experiences and careers, but because of life circumstances, they’re at home. And so they work remotely, but they’re very knowledgeable and experienced and so worked out very well. 

Tony Maree Torrey  23:59  

Yeah, I love hiring my mom.comlm and I recommended that to any number of my clients because I think you’re right it there’s just some cultural thing that’s happening there that’s really beautiful is probably even more so since the pandemic there’s probably even more resources available there of people that are having to stay home to school, their children, and probably more women going Oh, whatever job it was that I was in that demanded me being there in person I no longer want to do and it’s and they’re just they do they have a breadth of experience. And so yeah, you know, and we have by no means have any, like financial affiliation. Maybe we should try to.

Paul G. McManus  24:46  

It’s interesting, because about a year or two before I’d used them and I made a bad hiring decision. But this time, they had this BAM service where you could pay them I think was like $500 and they would do the screening for you. They actually had like Your HR department, they do the screening and and they give you a zoom recording of like, you know, four or five people who they think given your description would meet your needs. And so I have four or five people, I could tell that there was one that really stood out to me. And that was the one that I hired. I think the other thing is, you know, I know we all have constraints, but being willing to invest in professional services, and experts that make things happen that much more quickly for you, but also can help you get those better results, that’s also been a shift for me this year is that I’ve just invested more and other people to help me get where I want to go that much faster.

Tony Maree Torrey  25:36  

I love that. And I do want to just say, having watched you, as a client, as a friend, and as a colleague, because we have done some projects together, I can definitely bear witness to the fact that you have grown massively as a leader and grateful you’ve introduced me to some of my best clients, because we’ve just got this great co working relationship that, you know, we know that we’ve got complementary skills and can help various groups of people, I help with the mindset and the confidence and you know, you’re working with visibility components, and I help people overcome their blocks with visibility. And so together, we’re really having some fun helping, in particular, at the moment advisors just take advantage of this shift and positioning themselves as influencers.

Paul G. McManus  26:34  

Yeah, if I can, I want to ask you a question. Because we haven’t worked on this project together, linked influencer. And part of that is doing exactly what you just said, which is, I’ll get them set up with, you know, working with you to do a recording and to do all these things. But, you know, can you share some of the challenges and struggles that you’ve seen in terms of visibility. And

Tony Maree Torrey  26:58  

I’ve been through my own journey with this, I think I have shared with you that when I was a little girl, I was pretty vivacious. And I used to get into trouble for speaking up too much or being too noisy in class. And I actually had one teacher who taped my mouth shut, and stuck me in the corner. You know, literally, if there’d been a dunce cap, she probably would have put that on. But it was that kind of like shame humiliation component that is totally illegal now, but back in the day, that was something that teachers could get away with, because there was no reportability. And it actually happened twice. And so I have this little girl inside of me that thinks I’m going to get into trouble. And I’m going to be shamed and embarrassed every time I open my mouth. And so I’ve had to do a lot of work with that and with her to make sure she doesn’t put the kibosh on my ability to be in front of the camera. So that’s probably a unique story to me. I don’t know that happens many people. But we do know that there is a huge fear associated with public speaking with visibility. And I believe a lot of that ultimately comes down to it is a survival threat. Because anytime we potentially do something that other people our tribe disagrees with, we risk our very survival in ancient times. And so those parts of our brains still activate and go warning will Robinson warning, this is a dangerous thing to do, don’t do it. And so mostly what we’re working with is just they’re really worried they’re going to say and do the wrong thing. They don’t know what to say. They have no idea what kind of content they’re going to share. And in particular, in the financial advising world, you’ve also got the compliance components and things like that to take into account as well. And then the other thing I would say is just really overly perfectionistic it’s, it’s hysterical. You know, we we advise people on how to really make this pretty simple and easy, right? Because it can be very simple and easy. And yet almost always the first time people just put in so much effort to try and get it right including writing incredibly long scripts for themselves. It’s like no doing with bullet points because when you talk extemporaneously trust me, you know your topic.

Paul G. McManus  29:37  

And what better person than you though to help them with that because of your your own personal experience and maybe different reasons for it, but you have your excellent guide there. And it’s so important because I mean, I know I can do some basic speech coaching, I can give people feedback, but I don’t have the skill set like you do, to go that level deeper and to get into those those deeper level concerns and fears and triggers and what not. And so part of what I do in helping people get more clients, especially high value clients using LinkedIn is that they have to be willing to be visible, they have to put the most part be willing to be on camera. And the reason for that is that in the online world, you have to be able to create an impression you have to establish it sounds cliche, but it’s it’s so true. Know, like, and trust, right? If you don’t establish know, like and trust, those higher value, clients are not going to give you the time of day. So you have to show them before they ever scheduled time with you before they ever come to your office, that you’re someone that they want to know that they feel that they like, and that they feel that they can trust. And there’s nothing that compares to being on camera. And so the second part of that, though, and you’ve mentioned this is that if you come with a scripted version of what you want to say, it comes across as robotic, and so you’re not, you know, you might be saying all the right words, but you’re not going to establish know, like and trust, because now you know, you come across the wrong way you’re robotic, you know, I don’t relate to you as a human being. And so the value that you bring, and that we bring, and helping people be natural, and then helping them use that content to be visible in places like LinkedIn, it’s so valuable.

Tony Maree Torrey  31:21  

Yeah, and the other thing that I would say is really valuable is the accountability component. Like we all know the difference between our body, when we are responsible for our own physical fitness, as opposed to the kind of body we create, when we have a personal trainer that we work with twice a week. I know for me, I’m definitely noticing the absence of orange theory fitness, when I had an appointed time, and I would go with my daughter, and so you know, and another person that I had an agreement with. And so,you and I, we’ve talked about this too, because we don’t always do as much of our own content marketing as we could. So Paul, and I actually do this together now in order to be able to create our content too so we definitely are walking our talk in terms of A.the problems and B.the solution.

Paul G. McManus  32:20  

I think we created a whole new service by the fact that we needed it for ourselves. 

Tony Maree Torrey  32:26  

Yeah, pretty much. And this is the reason why we did it is because you know, we’re solving problems, you’ve solved the problem in terms of helping people expand their network on LinkedIn, create meaningful connections and setting appointments through that process. And then we wanted to amplify that. And one of the reasons why we needed to do that is to make sure that we hit that know like and trust component. Do you want to talk about the third piece of the trilogy?

Paul G. McManus  32:58  

Sure, yeah. Well, we’re here is a piece of software called more clients, more fun club, you can find it more clients more fun club.com. Essentially, it is a piece of software that helps people get up to 10 times more visibility on LinkedIn, essentially, we figured out the LinkedIn algorithm, and we use it to our advantage. And so anytime that people that are part of more clients more funding club, post on LinkedIn, now they get up to 10 times more visibility, they get up to 10 times more people viewing their videos, they get massive social proof in the form of 15 to 30 people liking it, giving genuine comments, having discussion, and then you know, that can all be repurposed and put back on the person’s profile. So that when a complete stranger, possibly someone that’s checking you out, shows up and you know, where do they go? First thing we do is we Google and what does Google show it shows our LinkedIn profiles, either the first or second search result. I was actually looking at this just before this call, I googled you, and your LinkedIn is first. That is literally your representation to the world. And so there’s a number of different components there. But one is video content that you post there that’s featured there. And the goal of that is to show you as you know, is to maximize the know like and trust so that people feel comfortable reaching out to you

Tony Maree Torrey  34:29  

I have had the great opportunity to interview some pretty amazing people. I’ve interviewed billionaires, people that are very, very successful. Yes, as Paul white. present company included. And it kind of I have to admit it kind of feels good when I go look at their profile and connect with them on LinkedIn and I go, huh, my content is getting way more attention than theirs. And some of them have like whole teams that are doing it right. And I’m like, neh neh

Paul G. McManus  35:05  

I was just looking at someone else’s profile today. And you know, someone that I interviewed interviewed on my podcast before, and I put the post in the in the post party on more clients more fun club on LinkedIn. And sure enough, it was, you know, she had it featured on her profile. It’s like, the visibility that you get from LinkedIn in all the right circles. I mean, it’s amazing.

Tony Maree Torrey  35:26  

Yeah, that’s awesome.

Please tell us where people can find you. Obviously, more clients more fun club is one of the places where your work is being brought to the world. But tell us more about where people can find you.

Paul G. McManus  35:39  

So of course on LinkedIn, I go by Paul G. McManus, the middle of the G is my middle initial. If you don’t use the G, I end up being an axe murderer out of Ireland. So you know, branding is important all to more clients more fun club is just for the software. So if you’re interested that you can go there, probably the thing that I’m most proud of recently is my new book, I published this in the past six months, I believe.

Tony Maree Torrey  36:07  

And those who are listening, not watching that’s called SMART Million Dollar Producer.

Paul G. McManus  36:13  

The secret playbook for financial professionals to land high value clients using LinkedIn. If you’re selling any type of high value service, if you’re a coach, if you’re a consultant if you’re a financial professional, but essentially, you know, you deal in advice or influence and you need people to trust you. And you sell higher value services. I recommend it. You can find it on Amazon. But you can also go to my website, which is smart million dollar Producer book.com.

Tony Maree Torrey  36:41  

You shared some really great gems with us here today. Thanks so much for taking the time and well i’ll talk to you soon. Sounds good.

Paul G. McManus  36:49  

Thanks for having me.

Tony Maree Torrey  36:52  

I’m glad you tuned in to the Legacy in the Making Show. If you’re genuinely interested in creating positive change in your business or your life or on a more global scale, I invite you to connect with me at Tonymaree.com. That’s Tony with a Y Maree with two E’s. When you get there you’ll find the Path to Purpose Master Plan, the truly brilliant method to make sure you’re clear on why you’re here. This is the absolute critical foundation to honing your instincts and leaving a legacy you’ll be proud of. You can also find out about the Innate Wisdom Business Council which is an opportunity to evolve your vision in the company of like-minded leaders and much much more. Thanks for listening. Remember to subscribe to the podcast and we’ll see you next time.

 

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