How did you get your start?
Cliffs:
- Was playing online poker - Ran into Josh, mentioned above, discovered IM.
- Very first Adwords campaign I setup was running at like a 300% ROI, made more money the first week than I did in over a month at my job at the time. Thought I was obviously an internet genius, quit my job.
- Campaigns dried up shortly after. Didn't want to go back to a day job. Started doing freelance writing (and a lot of other stuff) to make ends meet.
- Realized the pay sucked. Teamed up with a programmer on a script. Wrote a sales letter and made a decent amount of money (more than I'd ever made in a month). Sold the site shortly after because of complications with the partner, etc. This was back in probably '07.
- Someone told me the copy was good and that it was a pretty insane conversion rate - recommended I look into becoming a copywriter. After hearing what it paid, I decided it'd be worth a shot.
- Did well with that, started becoming obsessed with both copy and strategy. Things just kind of evolved from there.
There's a lot of other details there, but that's the short version.
Do you enjoy what you're doing? Are you happy with your life?
Yeah, I really do enjoy what I do. And besides the occasional slump I'm happy with life. Looking back, the times where I'd get down on myself, etc, were the times I was spending 14 hours + a day alone in front of my computer. That's a big reason I really like to get outside and working with people face to face, etc.
How did you handle mistakes (i.e. business downturns)?
Really I try to look at them as learning experiences. When things go bad for me, it's ALWAYS my fault.
Maybe I wasn't producing enough value. Sometimes I'd get lazy/complacent. A lot of times it's been bad money management. Deciding to go on a month long vacation or whatever. Sometimes it's expecting too much out of other people, people I hire, etc.
But I always look at a failure as a win. You learn from them and you do better the next time. I like that Michael Jordan quote "I've failed over and over again in my life, and that's why I succeed."
I should clarify that when I've failed, it's always on my own projects. Under-estimating a budget for developing something. Not reinvesting enough revenue back into the business. Getting in over my head with menial tasks, things like that.
With clients I have a very good track record. And that's most likely because there's a much bigger moral obligation there for me to make sure they succeed. So I only work with businesses who I'm 99% confident that I can help dramatically. I only focus on my strengths. I play it somewhat safe, I only bring strategies I've seen work over and over again to the table, I don't experiment on their dime.
And when you see a business doing zero marketing, or bad marketing, but a great product and a proven market, it's almost impossible to not make them more money by doing even the simplest of things, like mailing a letter or actually monetizing their website/leads, etc.
So with clients I always look for guaranteed wins. Businesses where I know for a fact I can bring them a quick and easy payday.
With my own stuff I tend to experiment more. And I tend to screw up a lot of the administrative/business side of things. That's why I enjoy clients. I get to do what I'm good at, they get to handle running the business.
A quick story about bouncing back. A few years ago I was kind of on a perpetual 6-month road-trip. I took a huge gamble on a project and I woke up in a spot where I was almost out of cash to pay for gas, a hotel - most people would see it as a bad situation.
I had a buddy with me and he was like "Dude, wtf?" Understandable. I told him everything would be fine by tomorrow. I hopped online, sent some emails, got on Skype, was introduced to a really successful guy I'd never met, closed a deal that night and had a wire come in that just about covered the entire mistake before morning. I went on to work on a bunch of projects with him, he's still a good friend today.
A lot of times I have way too much gamble in me. Going broke doesn't scare me (although it should). But I can always find an offer to mail, or get in touch with my contacts and find a way to bounce back.
If I had kids/obligations beyond myself, I wouldn't be able to take chances like that. And I'll have those kinds of obligations soon. I've made a lot of mistakes, and I'm not saying being willing to lose everything is a personality trait I'm proud of or that I'd recommend - although I've taken many chances that paid off too.
I have a lot of things working against me. I'm ADD like crazy. I jump from one thing to another. I don't plan things out. I'm horrible with managing money. I've had $20K+ months and found myself almost broke the next.
I'm a perfectionist to a fault in a lot of areas, meaning 50%+ of the things I've invested in/worked on never make it to launch. I've let lists that were an easy mid-high $x,xxx or more a month completely rot. I'm insanely disorganized.
The last 15 hours of my working life I've been shopping for talent and dumping money into a business (online software as a service product) that I haven't even decided for sure if I actually want to develop.
So when I said in the first post "Anyone with an open mind and a good head on their shoulders should be able to accomplish a whole lot more in a lot less time than I have", I meant it.
That being said, I have no regrets, and yeah, I'm very happy and grateful that I get to do what I do. It's given me a perspective where I see unlimited opportunity in the world, and I'm always excited to get to work and see what's coming next.