Category: Podcast

Get Out of Your Comfort Zone! Overcoming the First Hurdle of Starting a Business

On Episode 92 of The Edge of Innovation, we’re talking with entrepreneur Paul Rush, about how to get out of your comfort zone and overcome the first hurdle of starting your own business!

Sections

The Motivation Behind Making Money
Overcoming Shyness as An Introvert
The Romanticizing of Business & Entrepreneurship
What Paul Rush Did With His CS & Music Degrees
Starting a Company For the First Time
A Lot to Learn: The First Hurdle When Starting Your Own Business
Doing What You Know You Have To Do Even When It’s Hard
Establishing Trust With People in Meaningful Ways
A Crisis of Faith in Humanity
The Pull of Entrepreneurship
Music Downloading: The Beginning of an Era
How To Fund Your Startup: Get Out of Your Comfort Zone
Principals of Product Development
Closing
More Episodes
Show Notes

Get Out of Your Comfort Zone! Overcoming the First Hurdle of Starting a Business

The Motivation Behind Making Money

Paul Parisi: Well today I’d like to welcome Paul Rush from Substantial.

So, let me ask you a question. The end point saying, “Okay, I’m going to go to school for computer science and music.” But you talked about entrepreneurship and that’s sort of the art of money-getting. How to get money. What was your motivation? What did you want? Why did you want money when you were a teenager? Did you not have that?

Paul Rush: Well, we were not a wealthy family, but it wasn’t for the desire of money. It was almost like this interesting or fun game to play. There were certain things that I wanted with the money.

Paul Parisi: Did you go out and get a job mowing lawns, or doing something to say, “I want that resource. I want that utility that that money does.” Were you motivated to do that?

Paul Rush: Yeah, it’s like a nerdy answer but I did get jobs all through high school and it was mostly to be able to get closer to computers or to buy books and things.

Paul Parisi: I think that’s an important thing to realize because I wanted to work as quickly as possible. I got a job at fourteen.

Paul Rush: Yeah, same.

Paul Parisi: I went in relentlessly with the owner of that business every day after school, “When are you going to hire me? When are you going to hire me? When are you going to hire me?” Because, I wanted to buy stereo equipment. And that developed my ability or the drive to do something. I’m not at all a money-grubbing kind of person. That’s not what drives me, but it was, “Oh, gee. I want to get that computer. I want to do this. Well I need the resources to do that.”

Overcoming Shyness as An Introvert

Paul Parisi: Because you highlighted computer science and music and I can imagine a musician being very introverted and going off to college and learning that and coming out very introverted. The same thing with computer scientist. They’re very introverted. They’re not the best social people in the world.

Paul Rush: For sure. Yeah.

Paul Parisi: But you had a radical approach to that because you’ve also mixed in entrepreneurship and that’s social capability. I’m trying to identify what caused you to get outside of that box because you could have been really pigeon-holed in that.

Paul Rush: Yeah, well, I was never really in love with the computer stuff just for computers. It wasn’t like a programming fascination. It was that networking thing. It was really about the fact that computers could really let you connect to people that you could never connect to in the, quote on quote, “real world.” So, I think I had a bit of that to begin with.

Although, of course, like most geeky teenagers, I had a lot of shyness to overcome but I really wanted to. That said, I know now, I know entrepreneurs who come from all different walks and a lot of them are extremely introverted. I think probably more fifty to sixty percent, I would say are introverted. But they have a desire, generally speaking, across the board, to engage with reality and to understand how human beings work.

Because at the core of every single business is an understanding of human psychology and why people buy things, why they desire something over another thing. So, there’s a lot of the human factors that go under business. I don’t know if I always hear people talking about that but it’s super important.

The Romanticizing of Business & Entrepreneurship

Paul Parisi: Also, I think there’s this romanticizing on business and entrepreneurship and innovation that people think that it’s luck or it’s easy. Frankly, I’ve never done something more difficult than start a business.

Paul Rush: Yeah.

Paul Parisi: It’s not just the market, it’s the people. It’s the product. There are just so many levels that it is all encompassing.

What Paul Rush Did With His CS & Music Degrees

Paul Parisi: So, you went off to school. Where’d you go?

Paul Rush: Carnegie Mellon.

Paul Parisi: Great school. So, you came out with a CS degree and a music degree?

Paul Rush: Yeah.

Paul Parisi: What are you gonna do with your life?

Paul Rush: Well, I had my one and only job for about six to nine months. I was recruited by a company called Trilogy that was an internet.com poster child of excessive spending and hilarity. So many amazing people at this company and they’ve gone off to do a ton of entrepreneurial stuff. This group is a special group of people, but it lasted only about six or nine months and then I started my first real company. So, it was pretty much right out of the gate that I was interested in business.

Paul Parisi: So, what was it? That the company was faltering? You said they’ve done really well so were they part of the bubble and it burst, and you had to find something to do or you were just like…

Paul Rush: No, no.

Paul Parisi: So, you’re nine months out of school and you’re going to start a business.

Paul Rush: Well I wanted to start a company right away but I felt like I, quote on quote, “should go do something.”

Paul Parisi: So, your parents must have thought you were crazy? Or had they learned already?

Paul Rush: I think they already knew that. I was super strong-willed. I didn’t want to take money from them. I wanted to figure out how to make my own way. So, by the time I was doing all this they were just kind of nodding their heads and following along. I’d been doing fine and supporting myself, so they weren’t panicked at that point. But I was very lucky to have parents who were very progressive and accepting of following something. I don’t know what that would have been if I had said, “I’m going to tour South East Asia as a yoga disciple.” They might have had something different to say but fortunately that part worked out.

Paul Parisi: So, what year was this about?

Paul Rush: This is ‘99.

Paul Parisi: So, at the height of the bubble.

Paul Rush: Yeah, but I left that company before that.

Starting a Company For the First Time

Paul Parisi: But you’re starting a company. Are you crazy? If you’d done it a year and a half later maybe you would have been crazy. You started it as the bubble was about to burst. What did that company do?

Paul Rush: It was consulting for the music industry, so we ended up getting hired to build technology systems for a bunch of music companies. The biggest one was a very large product – Sony Music. Ironically, they were basically building iTunes. About six years or so before iTunes launched. And I learned there that large companies, to the benefit of entrepreneurs and people with vision and perseverance, they have no idea how to get out of their own way. Watching Sony at work from the inside was baffling. No group talked to any other group and the politics were impossible and their relationship with the other big labels was just abysmal. Hilarity ensued.

Paul Parisi: Well, I hear you and I’ve observed it firsthand. But it’s really sad in a lot of ways because there’s so much potential that is squandered in that friction that occurs. And it’s very sad in my opinion.

Paul Rush: I don’t know if its being an entrepreneur or being an engineer or both, but you wind up looking at the world and seeing so much – I don’t want to say wasted but I’ll just say that for now – wasted energy and human potential and time and resources spent on things that you know aren’t going to go anywhere. Dysfunction and organizational problems stop things from actually happening that could be and you can see it in government. You can see it in companies. You can see it probably in groups of friends. People really limit themselves and each other and it’s very frustrating.. You can find examples of this everywhere even if you’re just thinking about traffic like a place like Los Angeles. Think about the number of man years of effort wasted every day, just people sitting around in traffic.

Paul Parisi: Yeah, absolutely!

Paul Rush: It’s horrible. Certainly, in big companies.

Paul Parisi: So, you did this consulting. Was it your consulting company? Is that what you did?

Paul Rush: Yeah and then I hired a bunch of friends and then we were off to the races and making a good amount of money.

Paul Parisi: But this is a huge shift because you went from being a computer scientist programmer and a musician, to running a business. Those are vastly different things.

Paul Rush: Yes. They are.

A Lot to Learn: The First Hurdle When Starting Your Own Business

Paul Parisi: Were you initially good at it or did you have a lot to learn?

Paul Rush: I think the first big lesson that I learned was, you know, you start a company. You’re really excited. You’ve got some friends with you and then nothing happens. There’s no business. There’s nothing to do. I was sitting wondering why money wasn’t coming in and I made some phone calls and sent some emails and it was kind of hard to find clients.

And, I realized pretty early on that if you want to be successful in life, you had to put the effort in. You had to leave your surroundings. You had to get out of your comfort zone. I feel like a lot of people don’t even make this first hurdle but I think that’s the first big hurdle for whatever industry you’re in. So, leaving my house and going, talking to strangers and calling random people was a thing I had to do because after a month or two of not doing that, money was starting to run out.

There’s that beautiful thing in entrepreneurship that I’m sure you know about, when your back is up against the wall, you start figuring out how to solve problems. And, so, that was a revelation. It was hard. It was very hard work and it was scary putting yourself out there that way but that early lesson, that’s probably like the single – well there’s probably a lot of single biggest lessons – but that’s such a huge one.

Doing What You Know You Have To Do Even When It’s Hard

Paul Parisi: Let me dig into that. So, did you intrinsically know that you had to do that, but you were avoiding doing that? Or did you not have a clue?

Paul Rush: I think, I didn’t know it then, I heard that that’s what you’re supposed to do and then I avoided it like the plague.

Paul Parisi: Did you have someone coming along side you, an advisor to say, “Hey Paul. You really got to do this.” Or was it just like, “The world’s collapsing! I don’t know what to do! What do I do?!”

Paul Rush: If I remember, I don’t think I had anybody at that time who was really in that role. I did later for sure, but I think I was just reading business books as much as I could and probably reading business books instead of going and getting clients and at some point this same advice sunk in which is, “I gotta hustle. You gotta make something happen.” Otherwise you’re just sitting around.

Paul Parisi: So, how did that go for you? On one hand you’re an introvert because you’re a computer scientist and musician. But you were seeing that the web was a way to connect people, so you seem to be somewhat of a people person in these two fields. So how did that go?

Paul Rush: It went a lot better than I expected and I think that’s one of the things about saying hi to strangers and talking to random people that our society is losing a little bit by being so connected through devices.

Establishing Trust With People in Meaningful Ways

Paul Parisi: We see both those connections.

Paul Rush: Right. These immaterial non-substantive connections. They’re teaching us that that is the way to live. And the reality is that we’re still these biological creatures that have not evolved in the last hundred thousand years in any meaningful ways. I feel like everyone really needs to keep this in mind when they’re thinking about how we make decisions and how we connect with each other, that our systems of behavior have been basically coded from a long time ago when we were tribal and it was super important to look at someone and see, “Can you trust them?”

And I’m sure you know how important it is for business, to establish trust with people. Both people you’re working with on teams, as well as people that are going to be giving you money to provide a service or product. And the way that you do that most effectively is by sitting down with people and that’s why we still do so many meetings in person. Even video calls are not high fidelity enough to develop real relationships.

So, it was really about that. Getting out there and starting to meet people in person. And it turns out that people want to meet. Some people don’t. The more busy people don’t want to meet because they don’t have enough time. Or sometimes they do and you have to figure out how to get on their schedule or how to get in their face. But in general, people want to connect, and it seems scary to get out there and it seems unapproachable if you’re younger and you haven’t done it before, but it’s something that is immensely valuable to practice and get good at.

A Crisis of Faith in Humanity

Paul Parisi: Okay. So, you built this consulting company. You have your friends in there. You figured out that, “Oh my gosh. I’ve gotta go risk, put myself out there to get the business.” And I imagine you got business.

Paul Rush: Yup.

Paul Parisi: So, you closed some business. You did the work. You delivered. You felt good about that.

Did you sell that company? Did you spin it down? Does it still exist? What’s the next step? What’s the next thing?

Paul Rush: Yeah, I ended up doing so well with it that – and I was so idealistic at the time, this is embarrassing to say because I was like 22 I think – I was really jaded with where technology was going. It didn’t seem like it was about having fun, discovering things and building cool things, so I just hung on to contracts for a while, but I basically spun it down and decided to do music full time.

Paul Parisi: Okay, so that’s interesting. Was that a crisis of faith in technology or how would you characterize that?

Paul Rush: it was a crisis of faith in humanity. And I still think I have this. Silicon Valley, at that time, was so money obsessed and so money hungry, that it felt like it was warping the original sort of nobility and wonder that was associated with exploration of technology.

Paul Parisi: So, that hasn’t changed would you say?

Paul Rush: No, No. And if anything, it’s gotten several orders of magnitudes intensely focused toward money. Little did I know at the time that it would continue that time forever.

Paul Parisi: Well, yeah.

Paul Rush: Or at least the next fifteen years.

Paul Rush: Musician Years

Paul Parisi: So, you went into music. What does that mean? You started playing music or what was that.

Paul Rush: Yeah, I was helping out a company in Berlin called Native Instruments, that did music software. I’d gotten deeply into electronic music and DJing and audio production and I was playing festivals and it was like entering into another life.

Paul Parisi: It sounds like a fun.

Paul Rush: Yeah. As fun as things are in life. I mean, it sounds fun on the outside but it’s tiring and it’s difficult and full of ups and downs but at times, totally incredible! That was such a fun time in life.

Paul Parisi: But something happened, and you switched back into business and entrepreneurship?

The Pull of Entrepreneurship

Paul Rush: Yeah, I couldn’t stay away. I couldn’t stay away from the pull of just having so much background in technology and being kind of in love with it. So I ended up talking to some record labels and asking them if they’d want to put some of their music online to sell. It was originally for DJs. That was the idea and it was a platform to sell people music online before iTunes. Mp3s. Because a lot of people were now DJing with either laptops or CVs so they were needing sources of music.

Paul Parisi: Okay, so this is a great opportunity to discuss how much were you selling the music for?

Paul Rush: I think it was a dollar an MP3.

Paul Parisi: That was very wise at that time. That was revolutionary!

Paul Rush: A dollar to three dollars maybe, was the most expensive.

Music Downloading: The Beginning of an Era

Paul Parisi: And so, why aren’t we talking to Steve Jobs right now? Why aren’t you as rich? He’s passed right now but he’s a fairly successful example. Wouldn’t you have had it before him?

Paul Rush: There’s many answers to that. A lot of people had this idea of doing this. The most practical answer is that Steve Jobs and Apple are hardware company and a lifestyle company with broad regions and strategic inter connections among their products that are incredible, which we all know. But this company, I was dedicated to this niche audience.

And at the time, I was again being struck by the idealism of the head that I was in, and really wanted to sort of liberate the world of audio producers for the DJ community. And that’s just a very small market. At the same time, you’re competing with lots of file sharing.

It was so easy. You could reach out into the ether and pull down hundreds of tracks that were just released. There was no SoundCloud. There was no anything else. All the discovery channels, you got the music for free first and then you had to make the leap to go buy it. Sites were not navigable. There was no real discovery products other than going to the record store and using file sharing.

So, this is a classic problem of an idea a little bit before it’s time. There are companies that do this now that do okay but they’re very small, in the tens and twenties of millions of revenue. And also, just the market dynamics. The fact that you could go get free music somewhere. And then once you’ve got that, there’s no real reason to buy.

Paul Parisi: Was that a problem that you guys fought against? That they could just go to Nabster and download it?

Paul Rush: Yeah, it was that. It was discoverability. It was getting people to pull out credit cards and payment systems were not super sophisticated. It was a very different time than today. We forget. It’s very easy for humans to get into this trap and think the world has been like this for a long time but there were no smart phones. There were clunky music players. There was no way to pay easily online, so it was a totally different world.

Paul Parisi: So, when iTunes started to come out, what was your reaction?

Paul Rush: I mean the same thing that happens any time a person is starting a business and they see a competitor come out, especially one that’s much bigger. It was an “Oh my god! Oh my god! The sky is falling! This is the end!” And then you realize that they’re not going to do the same thing that you do or there are ways to have competitive advantage. But it was a great legitimizing moment at the same time, because suddenly there is this force in the world that was changing the buying behavior and that’s a big thing.

In the world of getting new products to market, if you want to change the way consumers think about the product or category, it can be very challenging because you’re going to have to teach people a new behavior. To adopt it and share it. So, sometimes there are cases when large companies help you with that and it winds up helping you out. I mean in our case it didn’t. We ended up shutting the company down in a couple years. There was a lot of work put in and not much output.

How To Fund Your Startup: Get Out of Your Comfort Zone

Paul Parisi: Now was that funded? How was that funded? Was that VC or…?

Paul Rush: Seed funding. Yeah, I had raised money.

Paul Parisi: Was that friends and family or was that just angels?

Paul Rush: Oh no, no, no! I reached out to a very well-known internet founder mobile, who I had read an article on, who was very interested in music. And I cold-called the guy and flew to where he was. And I got a meeting with him.

Paul Parisi: Really?!

Paul Rush: And he funded me on the spot.

Paul Parisi: Really?! Wow! That’s cool! What an experience. That’s cool!

Paul Rush: I never would have been able to do that had I not learned the lessons at the first company around getting out of your comfort zone. I think, one of the cool things to keep in mind about when you’re selling someone something – whether you’re trying hire someone – this is all sales. Whether you’re hiring someone, looking for funding, or trying to close a deal with a buyer, really understanding their headspace and what they’re motivated by makes it a lot easier to do this. So, knowing this guy was super interested in music was just a huge leg up and when we met, we connected almost instantly. If I had approached other buyers, which I did, there’s just no way to bridge the gap or the, “I don’t know who you are and I don’t know why this would be interesting to me at all.”

Paul Parisi: Right. Then you have to get into the numbers and the economic value and then there’s the interpretation. There’s nothing filling the sales beyond the numbers and that’s not very good.

Principals of Product Development

Paul Parisi: So, now, we’ve talked about iTunes and one of the things that I think that was clever about what Apple did was they provided a circumstance where you could want something and get it very easily at a very low cost. Buying music. And that’s really the insight. Oh, there’s great industrial design. There’s great software design, and all that but they got out of the way and you come down to the thing where the person says, “I want this, and you can fulfill that right now and I can do that for a buck.” It’s not buying a fifteen-dollar CD anymore. I can get what I want fairly inexpensively, and I think that’s the wisdom of the whole Apple. That’s one of the most amazing things about the whole Apple ecosystem.

Paul Rush: Yeah, Apple does this very well. I think one of the principals of product development that is worth keeping in mind when you’re building something, is that the amount of friction a customer experiences in the journey, will determine in large part how successful you are. Our jobs as product developers and product designers is to lower that friction as close to zero as possible. And I think that’s what music companies were really struggling with for a long time. They had convoluted systems to buying music online digitally, that had all sorts of restrictions and the file sharing services were frictionless. You just get on there, type in name and suddenly you have something and I think it is amazing what customers will do if you provide something that is at least frictionless, or more frictionless. Less friction than what exists actually becomes a plus now.

But when the Apple iTunes store launched, you just had the name and you’d buy something. Credit card was on file and it was as seamless transaction. And it’s so weird that the music industry didn’t get that that was what they need to do for so long.

Paul Parisi: Well, that’s the definition on innovation. Well, not the definition but the imperious for innovation is doing something differently in different ways. And it seems that innovation and entrepreneurship are inextricably bound and in their very fabric of everyday life. You have to innovate, and you have to be entrepreneurial.

Closing

Paul Parisi:Well, we’ve been talking with Paul Rush today of Substantial. And he’s been joining us from Seattle. We’ve had a great conversation about both entrepreneurship and innovation and businesses he’s been in.

I’d be interested in feedback from our listeners, other areas you might like us to explore. Whether it be science fiction or people problems or things like that.

Well, thank you for coming on and I’m sure we’re going to invite you back.

Paul Rush: Looking forward to it. Thank You.

More Episodes:

This is Part 2 of 3 our interview with Paul Rush. Stay tuned for Part 3, coming soon! We’ll be talking about the ups and downs of running your own business!

If you missed part 1, “The Basics of Business & Entrepreneurship” you can listen to it here.

Show Notes:

Business Advice From An SEO Expert

On Episode 90 of The Edge of Innovation, we’re talking with SEO expert Jeremiah Smith. He’s Founder & CEO of Simple Tiger and he’s sharing his business and entrepreneurial advice with us!

Sections

How Jeremiah Got Into SEO
Jeremiah Smith: “Living My Dream”
How Jeremiah Started His Own Business
Jeremiah’s Business Lessons Learned
Advice For Starting Your Own Business
Jeremiah’s Business Book Recommendations
What’s With The Name “Simple Tiger?”
Closing Advice
More Episodes
Show Notes

Business Advice From An SEO Expert

How Jeremiah Got Into SEO

Paul: Welcome to another edition of The Edge of Innovation. Today we’re talking with Jeremiah Smith with Simple Tiger. He’s the founder and CEO. So, you’re an SEO company.

Alright, let’s shift gears a little bit here. This is The Edge of Innovation. While we’ve been spending a lot of time talking about – and I think very useful time – talking about how to do this incredible, important aspect of our web presence in SEO. We’d like to talk to people about why did they start a business? What in the world led them to do this? I’ve likened starting and running your own business as one of the hardest things you will ever do in your life. So, you told us a little bit about the mom and pop that you were working for and you learned SEO. Did you have an aha moment there and say, “I’m going to do this for the rest of my life?”

Jeremiah: Absolutely! It’s so funny that you asked me that because that’s exactly what happened actually. So, my mother was doing the book keeping for that company and she actually was the one that connected me with the company to begin with. They saw a website that she was showing them that I built, and they loved it. They wanted my web design ability, so I did that for them. Then I did the SEO thing because they asked for it.

And when I kind of got this little hunch that I’d seen the leads coming through the site ever since I built it and then did the SEO for the site and was actively working on it every day and I got really curious. I’m looking at the analytics and I see these big names that have come through. That these are guys that I’ve actually met out in our show room and shook their hands. And I generated them on my effort, playing on this little laptop in my office over there. And I was like holy cow its really cool! Something hit me that this is very, very real. This is, at the gut, at the core of a business and these guys are standing out in the showroom with a semitruck out in the loading bay area getting loaded up with twenty ATVs.

I was like, there’s so much value in what I’m doing here, and I got curious at the end of six months and I went and had my mother pull a report for me out of QuickBooks and I said, “Look. Here are the leads that we’ve generated from the SEO effort so far. I’m able to track those because again, this was about 12 years ago, so this was the early days of SEO. Google Analytics data was so wide open. You could get anything you wanted out of it. And so, I knew all these leads came in, out of all these different keywords and so I said I need to look at the books and see what kind of revenue these kinds of people gave us.

And so, she showed me. She generated a report, handed it over to me, I saw that two million dollar increase in revenue and my jaw hit the floor because I knew what they were paying me, which was peanuts compared to that but it was a good living for me at the time. I didn’t care and there’s no hate there at all. I was totally happy and blessed with it. But I saw the value. The proportion of what they paid me to what I was able to deliver through that effort and that was when I said, “I am on to something. I’m on to something that I think I can help a lot of other businesses with and this is what I want to do.”

So I put it on my resume and I said I do SEO full time and stuck my resume out there on Career Builder and it got picked up a couple weeks later by an agency in Atlanta called 360i and 360i – I didn’t know who they were at the time – but when I went in for my first interview, I walked down this long hallway with all these plaques on the wall that said MBC, MTV, E*TRADE, LG Electronics, Sports Illustrated, and I was like, oh my god, this is the big league. So those were my clients when I went on to work there and I took everything that I knew from helping that small mom and pop shop in to working at that agency and noticed that the difference was not that big between what I was doing before and what I learned there. It was just scaled up dramatically based on the budget that these clients had. So that was really the only difference.

Paul: Wow!

Jeremiah: And after that, I realized not only is this valuable but the playing field is level and it’s based on your pace – What can you do? What resources do you have at your disposal? You could leverage all those for SEO and you can see equal sized results.

Jeremiah Smith: “Living My Dream”

Paul: Interesting. So, when you were growing up, did you think you’d own your own business? What was your vision for your future?

Jeremiah: Thanks for asking that. So, it’s funny, when I was a little kid I liked to take this little kitchen set thing that I had. It was like a little kids Fisher Price thing. A little plastic stove and refrigerator, sink and everything. And I’d drag it out to the edge of the street where my parents lived, and I’d take some of my toys that I didn’t want anymore and write some prices on them and stand out there all day and wait for someone to stop and buy one of my toys. No one ever bought anything from me except Mom and Dad. They’d come through and give me a quarter for a plastic dinosaur or something. I loved that and so did my brother. He did the exact same thing. We both did that all the time. Didn’t get much for it but we loved doing it.

Traveling around with mom, she was doing bookkeeping for different clients. I’d go to all these different businesses that she worked for and I loved the variety of going into these different businesses as a kid. Just getting to see them, you know. And she would talk to me about how the business worked. I would watch her balance her checkbook and keep her gas receipts and charge those to her clients and things like that. I just learned a lot about business by kind of watching that happen. And then my father being an actor, he was the self-starter and he had to really sell himself for roles. He had to put everything he had into making his roles something that he could win. And so, I was really just kind of a self-starting, business motivated person.

When I was about to graduate high school though, I was deeply interested in robotics and I thought that I was going to go to school for robotic engineering after high school. But my math grades were terrible. All of my grades were terrible. I had a terrible time in school so my prospects looking at Georgia Tech, robotic engineering degree was just shot. They weren’t going to happen. So right after high school, I did a semester of college, maybe a semester and a half, before I discovered SEO. Then I just dropped out of college and did SEO and it wasn’t until a few years later, that I realized, wait a second, I’m doing robotic engineering on the largest robot in the world! And I didn’t even think about it at the time!

And then fairly recently, about three years ago, I got pulled into the University of South Florida to do some honorary guest lecturing on search engine optimization to senior level marketing students in the marketing program there. And so, it really hit me that I came full circle from failing school pretty much and dropping out of college, to actually teaching college at a very high level on robotic engineering and so now I’m living my dream, knowing that I’ve accomplished that.

But I have to say that I don’t look backwards and see a lot of my personal efforts that led up to that. Based on my faith, I kind of see God’s hand at work and so a whole lot of divinity in that case.

How Jeremiah Started His Own Business

Paul: Very cool. So, you made the crazy decision at some point to start your own business. You were sort of doing it as one person, but there’s a big difference when you hire your first employer, your second employer and you actually realize you’ve started a business. Tell me a little bit about that because you were working at this… you made it to the big leagues and you were working for somebody else. But now you own your own business so how did that happen?

Jeremiah: Yeah, so while I was working for the agency that I mentioned earlier. I really loved it. I gained a lot of intelligence working for that agency. A lot of corporate expertise and understanding and got to dive really deep into working with large brands and playing the corporate brand. But after a very short period of time, I knew I did not fit that corporate model. It just wasn’t for me. And this was around the time that the four hour work week came out and I read that and it totally just shattered everything that I was doing at that agency and so I decided to start trying to shift things a little bit. I approached the agency with some ideas for doing allowing remote work and some other stuff. And my ideas kept getting shot down and so I got demotivated.

I was building this consulting practice on the side, and I was helping clients on nights and weekends. And eventually just decided, “I’ve got to grow my consulting practice into my own agency.” I had Simple Tiger then, but it was still just a little consulting business. It wasn’t until I brought on my brother Shawn, and he and I really joined forces and decided to actually start hiring a team and kind of adding more clients and offering a service that included implementation and production of content, links and things like that – Beyond just the consulting that I had been doing so far. So, when we decided to do that, we opened a whole new can of worms which was building a marketing agency and that was really fun. But I never expected to be here, to be honest. I didn’t plan to be here, but I would not want to be anywhere else. I absolutely adore what we’ve been able to create together and what we’ve been handed.

Jeremiah’s Business Lessons Learned

Paul: So, what would be… Well, I’ll ask that in just a moment. But what’s your business lesson learned or unanticipated event or “Oh my gosh! I didn’t realize that part of business!” Or staring your own business?

Jeremiah: Hmmm. That’s a good question. I think that being the somewhat visionary entrepreneur that I am, where I have these little ideas in my mind of what I’d like to create, having those get shot down so many times by the harsh realities of the world, was at times, demotivating. But it has, over time, educated me to realize that the world wants a thing and will pay for it, so you build it and you win money and sometimes that may not be as enjoyable to do because it may not be as enjoyable as the big grand grandiose idea that you originally had. But in doing it and in building it, on the way to delivering it, once you start to see it work and once you start to see people happy with what you’ve created, it suddenly can become much more enjoyable, especially given that the great idea that you had was just getting shot down. It was not getting validated.

So for me, I think you know, I started Simple Tiger as an agency that did everything. It was web design, logos, business cards, it was awful. I was doing way too much. When I narrowed it down to SEO, that helped me a whole ton. Simple Tiger actually started growing. And then we narrowed it down from just SEO to just software companies, Saas companies specifically. It got super narrow and I was able to have basically almost the exact same conversation on every call with clients and deliver better results, deliver a deeper product, a more innovative solution on everything, every time, for each new client to the point now, our customer success is so high and so strong that I am just elated every time I sign on a new client because I know I’m about to have a new best friend or a new happy customer. Whereas before there was a lot of heartbreak in everything because I was kind of managing a mess that I created and not really delivering happiness to my clients as much. So, I think for me, to answer your question, the challenge and the “ah ha” moment was, for me, to develop something the world wanted versus something I wanted to develop. If that makes sense.

Advice For Starting Your Own Business

Paul: Yep. I get it. What would be your best piece of advice for somebody out there saying, “I want to do that?”

Jeremiah: If by “that” they mean start a marketing agency?

Paul: No, I mean more general than that. There are all sorts of specifics in every different vertical and people are probably listening and saying, “No, no, tell us that.” No I mean, really everybody has their own ideas for businesses or those that have them, have them. What would be your advice, warning, caution, whatever it might be?

Jeremiah: So, for me, from my angle, my last name is Smith and I often times think of myself as what you would consider kind of an old-fashioned smith. A trade person who works with their hands to create something. A technician to a degree. And so, I think of myself as a technician often times. And sometimes, if I really want to get into a groove with my agency, I just jump in at the technician level and do some technical work and I’m like, “Ahhh!” I feel like I belong. It just works for me. I think that’s just in my blood, so my recommendation is probably going to come from that angle.

If you find yourself doing some level of technical work, whether you’re with a company or you’re an employee of a company or an organization or you volunteer in some area of your life. Maybe you’re not doing some technical work for your professional trade or anything like that but you’re doing technical work in some volunteer area or you’re consistently helping family or friends or something like that. And it’s something that you actually, when you get into it, you just know that you’re good at it. I recommend crafting something around that.

It’s something like, there’s this Venn diagram but it’s made of three circles, if you can kind of envision this with me for a moment. One circle is something that you’re good at. Another circle is something that you enjoy doing and then the third circle is something that the market itself wants. Alright. Now the market wanting it doesn’t mean there’s no competition there. A lot of people hear that and think, “ohhh, no competition.” No, you want competition, trust me, because if there’s no competition there, you’ve either struck gold which is highly rare or there’s no money there. No body wants it. So that third circle has to be a good market.

In the middle of these three circles – what you’re good at, what you love doing, and what the market wants – is what I think you ought to build a business around. And if that business is just you, doing freelance consulting work for a while, do just that. And don’t build anything else out of that unless, at some point, you feel compelled to move on to the next step and grow up from a consulting company into something else. But for me, actually, I got to be honest, while I love running my agency as it is right now, my second favorite job I ever had was when I just did consulting and Simple Tiger was not producing content, not implementing things. I was just consulting companies. I really, really enjoyed doing that.

Now during those days, I was the technician and I was the only guy so if anything was wrong, it was one hundred percent my fault. Nowadays, I run my agency and I try to remain humble where I can, so if something does go wrong at my agency, I still take responsibility for it. And I’m still to blame for it but in those days there was not a system there was just me. So, it was a little stressful and if I didn’t go out and do sales, I didn’t have sales. And so that was really hard too. But yeah that’s what I would do. I would look at that tri-circle Venn diagram I came up with there and find out what’s in the middle and then build a business around that.

Jeremiah’s Business Book Recommendations

Pual: Now, good business books or books that you would recommend reading, one or two?

Jeremiah: One or two? That’s tough. Well, coming from the marketing angle, one would definitely be, “Start with Why” by Simon Sinek, which if you want to, you could just watch the Ted Talk. Its eighteen minutes. Look up “Simon Sinek Ted Talk Start With Why.” Then the second one is probably, “Tribes” by Seth Godin, where he talks about knowing your tribe and appealing to your tribe. Your audience basically is what he means. So those are my two favorite business books from a marketing perspective.

From a business perspective, I’m just going to leave “The 4-Hour Workweek” and its hall of fameness. That would be one of them, but I don’t want to recommend that one because everyone would probably say that. Something by Peter F. Drucker. “The Effective Executive” most likely would be one of my number one business books. Absolutely incredible and eye opening and some simple things about business.

And then actually some of the writings by Edward Deming as highlighted by Tony Robbins in his book “Awaken the Giant Within.” I recommend that book personally. I think it’s a fantastic book but in that book, he goes into Edward Deming and defining some business principals and Edward Deming’s business principles were just stellar and they’re so awesome and they’re still completely applicable today. I think they’re elegant. I think they’ll probably apply for the next fifty to a hundred years potentially, so I’d highly recommend people study that.

Just a quick highlight and a reason why you should study Edward Deming. He went to the big three auto manufactures in the 60s and said, “Hey, here are some things that you guys should do instead of what you’re doing right now, that are going to make you behemoths in the automotive industry forever.” And this was the 60s. The automotive industry was booming. We just came out of the 50s, where we had this kind of credit thing being created and people were buying cars on credit now and they couldn’t manufacture cars fast enough in the US. So, the three auto manufactures laughed him out of the room. So, he went to Japan, and he talked to Honda, Toyota and Nissan, who nowadays are eating our lunch. They listened to him. They paid him, and they implemented what he said. So, I think you should listen to Edward Deming. He’s incredible. He will teach you things that apply to your tiny small business all the way up to Toyota sized companies.

Paul: Excellent. Yeah, I’ve had a lot of experience with Deming and he definitely has some insight. Some amazing insight.

What’s With The Name “Simple Tiger?”

Paul: Okay, final question. Maybe. We’ll see. What’s with the name Simple Tiger?

Jeremiah: Ah. Good question and I like it. My father always used to call me “Tiger” growing up. And when I was thinking about starting a marketing agency or consultancy, I wanted a name that would stick in someone’s mind. And so, one of the key things or components you could have in marketing is something that’s not conceptual but is concrete. So, think “Apple.” Right? That sticks in your mind. You see it visually. Tiger was that for me. I wanted to carry with it a differentiator that applied to business that wasn’t so esoteric as tiger. How do you apply “tiger” to business? I wanted to take something complex, like search engine optimization, and simplify it and make it simple. And I wanted to apply the 80/20 principle, the Pareto Principle to everything. And I saw that as simplicity. And I saw simplicity as this art form where if I can master simplicity in what we do, then that would make me happy and so Simple Tiger thus was born. “Tiger” kind of carrying the effective component of our brand and “simple” kind of carrying the, I guess, the simplicity element of our brand.

Paul: Cool. Very cool.

Closing Advice

Paul: Well, we’ve been speaking with Jeremiah Smith of Simple Tiger and he’s an SEO expert and they’re an SEO agency and as you can tell there’s a lot of value here, in what he said. So, as you’ve been listening, we’ve been throwing out book names and different things you should go and look at. All of that will be in the shownotes so I encourage you to look there. You’ll find links to Simple Tiger and a way to actually contact Jeremiah. So, Jeremiah, thank you very much! Is there anything you want to close out and say as we sort of wind down here?

Jeremiah: I guess, if I could just leave everybody with one marketing maxim, it’s something I really like. I think the CMO of Ammex said this about branding specifically. So, if you’re dealing with your brand messaging right now and everything right now, this is just a really cool piece of advice. It’s really simple. “Be clear, not clever, be different, not better.”

And I love that because the idea there is that a lot of brands try to come up with some clever name or clever lingo or clever brand messaging and end up confusing people and not actually connecting. So, instead of being clever, just be clear. Be very clear about what it is that you do and who you are. And then, don’t be better, be different because better is completely subjective but different is very objective and you can speak directly to a person’s concerns if you can differentiate yourself into their category. And then, that’s how you can appeal to people. So that my favorite marketing kind of maxim.

Paul: Very cool. Well, I want to thank you. Thank you for spending the time with us. And who knows, maybe we’ll have you back soon.

Jeremiah: That would be awesome. I’d be happy to come back. Thank you so much for everything, Paul. It was an honor to be here.

Paul: Alright, thank you.

More Episodes:

This is the Part 5, the final episode of our podcast with Jeremiah Smith!

If you missed any of the previous episodes from our conversation with him, you can listen to them here:
Part 1: An Introduction to SEO With Jeremiah Smith
Part 2: SEO: Google & Artificial Intelligence
Part 3: SEO: How To Create Content For Your Business
Part 4: Is SEO Always Worth It?

Show Notes:

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