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Season 6, Episode 261

The Domino Effect in Networking: Insights from Corey Poirier

39:02

About This Episode

In this episode of The Amberly Lago Show: Stories of True Grit and Grace, host Amberly Lago sits down with Corey Poirier, a Wall Street Journal bestselling author and multiple TEDx speaker, to discuss the art of building meaningful relationships and the power of saying no. Corey shares his unique strategies for securing high-profile interviews, including the importance of patience and creativity, and the long-term approach to viewing relationships as bank accounts. They also delve into Corey's networking tactics, emphasizing the value of integrity and genuine connection in achieving professional and personal goals. Join Amberly and Corey as they explore the secrets to successful relationship-building, the importance of setting boundaries, and the journey to becoming a captivating public speaker.

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Full Transcript

0:02
Amberly Lago

Welcome to the Amberly Lago Show. Stories of true grit and grace. Thank you for tuning in to the Amberly Lago show. And I'm especially excited for you to be here if you have a hard time saying no because we're going to talk about the power of no and how to not burn bridges, how to have some grit and how, how to tap into your purpose and get clarity on your purpose and your mission statement. Not only that, I have a five times TEDx speaker who is the founder of Blue Talk, who is going to teach you how to put together a talk. I think today a little bit we're going to talk about that. I have Corey Poirier here. He's an author. You may have known him from seeing him on the media. He has got a Wall Street Journal bestselling author. He has interviewed over 7,500 thought leaders and so like Deepak Chopra, by the way. So, Corey Poirier, thank you so much for being on the Amberly Lago Show.

1:07
Corey Poirier

Thank you so much. I'm super stoked to be here.

1:10
Amberly Lago

Oh my gosh. Well, you, you share so much. I'm like, there's so much I want to ask you. From grit to the power of no. Saying no because that I want to get to that first. That was really hard for me. I'm an overcoming people pleaser. So how did you come about the power of saying no and to do it without burning bridges?

1:34
Corey Poirier

So I'm also a people pleaser still. I believe, like I'm a recovering, but I believe I'm still a people pleaser. But I learned over time the reason I had to start saying no. And I'll explain this, but the reason I had to start saying no became so important that eventually I was able to overcome my challenge with saying no. And so to bring it back a step, my grandfather growing up was a carpenter with a grade three education. And he always said to me when I asked him about how to be successful in life, he said say yes to everything and just figure out how to do it. And then as I started my journey near that same time, I heard this quote by Richard Branson that it went along the lines of say yes to everything and then figured how to do it later. So here I'm looking at my grandfather, who I looked at as very successful. He actually carpenter of the grade three education, built a fiberglass space shuttle replica to scale.

2:31
Amberly Lago

Wow.

2:31
Corey Poirier

And all he had ever built, his home. He's my view of success. And I'm seeing him say say yes often. Then I Hear Richard Branson saying, say yes often. So I'm like, what am I getting wrong? I guess I'm supposed to say yes. And then. So that's when I started this journey that you mentioned about interviewing high achievers. So the part of why I want to start interviewing people is I became obsessed with what did they do differently than other people that allows them to become so successful. So, interestingly enough, I start doing these interviews, and lo and behold, I noticed that they're saying no on average 20 to 50 times more than everybody else.

3:06
Amberly Lago

Wow.

3:06
Corey Poirier

So I'm like, what's the disconnect? My grandfather says, say yes. Richard Branson says yes. All these thought leaders are saying no. They're not saying say no. They're just saying no. And they have insulation they have people built, you know, put in place that are just designed to say no for them. So I'm like, what am I missing? Yeah.

3:23
Amberly Lago

I call that the gatekeeper. Like, I have. I have a couple people on my team that are like. They're like, no, no, no, no. I'm your gatekeeper. I will say no. They are not. They're not supposed to be texting you. They're supposed to be emailing you. Why are they texting? You know what I mean?

3:39
Corey Poirier

I do. And I. And I have my right hand. Her name is Heidi. We, our sales team recently, like, he's like, one of the salespeople said, well, if they go with a package, can we say they get 45 minutes of Corey? And I was on the call, and she said, you cannot say that. Yeah, they do not get that. And so I have that sort of insulation now. But what happened was. So here's where when you hear that about Richard Branson, you're like, wait a minute. Richard Branson's ultra successful. Why is Corey bringing him into it and saying. He said, well, what really changed for me is I was still stuck in my grandfather saying say yes. And I backed it up by Richard Branson until I finally saw the original quote, which was not what I had been seeing. I had been seeing this fragmented quote, this filtered quote. What Richard Branson said, based on what I've heard since was sayest, everything you love to do and then figure out how to do it later. Those are some pretty big distinction words that you love to do. So then I was like, oh, my gosh. So Richard Branson is probably saying no to most things, too. Now everybody's over here except for my grandfather. And then what I had to realize is my grandfather was a carpenter in a Small town.

4:43
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

4:44
Corey Poirier

It's a lot different than when you're running a business or you have a thousand people at your door. He was working for one client, and he was getting referrals like crazy because they loved him. He was one of the nicest men ever. But he was saying, yes, yeah, I'll do that. No worries. I can take that on. Of course, that was working for him.

4:59
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

4:59
Corey Poirier

Because he had one client, one job, and that was the job he was working on. So when I finally realized that what might work for my grandfather wouldn't work for me because of the world I was going into, and then I looked at the people who I was inspired by and wanting to become in some ways, then I started realizing they're all saying no. So that was a long way to say that's where it started. So then I had to figure out, how do I say no? And then most importantly, how do I say it without burning a bridge? And to summarize that really quickly, if you've heard of Shalene Johnson.

5:28
Amberly Lago

Oh, yeah, she's a friend of mine.

5:30
Corey Poirier

Okay. So Chalene, you know, back in the day, she had this book that just came out called Push. And I was interviewing her about the book, and I asked her about this. I said, you know, you're so busy, you're running this big empire. How do you juggle it all? And then she told me this story about how I forget. I think the number might have been like, she had like 600 classes that were taking place all over the US and she also had this Turbo Jam craze that was happening. All these DVDs selling with Beachbody. And so she said she kept getting asked by the local instructors if she could take over their class. And it was just, it wasn't feasible. But she was saying yes, I believe, because again, same idea. I feel bad saying no. So finally, either somebody told her or she realized herself she had to say no.

6:13
Amberly Lago

If she was gonna grow, she had to say no a hundred percent.

6:16
Corey Poirier

I think even her father said something to her. I can't remember what it was, but her father made this comment and she said it was like a ticking time bomb that kept reminding her, you have to start saying no more. So what she did, which is the no burning bridges part of it, is she figured out a way to say no that would make it hard for somebody to hold it against you. So what she started saying was, you know, Brett and I run a family driven business. And so whenever we take something on, we have to make sure that, like, I'm not taking something on that's gonna interfere with plans he made.

6:45
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

6:45
Corey Poirier

Or he's not saying yes to something that's gonna interfere with plans I made. So when somebody would call, she would explain that and say, so if you don't mind, I'll talk to Brett. I'll get back to you in two days and let you know if I can do it. If I can't, I'll find somebody else or I'll try to find somebody else who can help. Would that be okay?

7:00
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

7:00
Corey Poirier

And by doing that, how do you get mad at somebody for saying, I just gotta make sure I'm not overbooked.

7:04
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

7:05
Corey Poirier

Or I just want to make sure I'm not going against what we've already made. Plans wise as a family. And so I started finding my version of that for any circumstance. And that allowed me not to burn bridges.

7:15
Amberly Lago

Well, I had a client years ago because I was training. I was in the fitness industry for 26 years. And although I had trainers that worked with me or that I had hired on to help me onboard some new clients and stuff like that, there were some days I was still training 14 clients in a day. So that means 14 hours of my day, I was on the gym floor working with a client. And, I mean, I would set someone up on the treadmill and run back to the back in five minutes, scarf some food, go back out like, you know, it was. And I actually had this one client that said, you know, every time you say yes to someone else, you're saying no to yourself. And that really stuck with me. I was like, oh, yeah, I'm, like, helping everybody around me until I am burning the. I mean, I'm burning the bridge with myself. I mean, I'm burning myself to the ground. I'm going to hit burnout. All the burns. And so that really hit me. So that helped me. But I also do think it helps when you do have somebody on your team that can politely say no in a way. And I have a lot of people that reach out to be on the show, and I tell them no in a way that is. It's something that's really true to me that I say, you know, my team reaches out and says, look, we would love to have. They sound like they're on a very interesting path and they're doing amazing things. But Amberly likes to have people on her show that she knows them or she's experienced their work, so she'd like. She looks forward to getting to know you more, which is all the truth. And you know, hopefully you'll keep listening to the show and hopefully we can have you on sometime in the future rather than just not answering them or. And sorry if you've reached out to be on the show and you didn't get an answer. Maybe I didn't get your email. You know what I mean? But it's the truth. Like, I would love to have everyone on the show, but there's just like, you know, there's just not enough time. So I think that's powerful. But it's also a way to protect yourself mentally and physically and to grow your business 100%.

9:35
Corey Poirier

And I always say to people it's better to practice it now when you don't maybe need to say no as much than it is later. Meaning if you can't do it now, what's going to happen when you get overwhelmed? And so right now, I mean, it's not abnormal in a week for me to have eight people reach it and say, will you endorse my book? And Tuesday will you write the forward?

9:54
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

9:54
Corey Poirier

And I mean, that's a lot. Like, if I were to say yes to all that, that's 20 hours, 30 hours, like, for me to do it properly because I have to read each book. If you do it properly.

10:04
Amberly Lago

If you do it properly. Now, I'll tell you what I, I have actually, because I remember being on the road speaking at events and in the middle of. Actually we talked about Kyle. I was doing a collaboration book with him and my book had, was. Had just come out and everybo was like, you have to promote it on this and do it. And I was in the middle of speaking at an event and somebody had reached out who I really love and they were like, can you endorse my book? And I was like, I'm going to be completely honest with you. I'm swamped. And you know I love you. If you will give me a synopsis of your book and give me some samples to choose from that I can kind of edit, I'd be happy to do it because I've. I didn't want to say no to her, but I knew there's no way I have time to read your whole book and do all these things. But it takes a lot of time when you're writing the forward to somebody's book or you're doing endorsements and you're doing it in the right way. So.

11:03
Corey Poirier

Yeah, agreed. And I will say, I mean, that happens a lot. Even people that I know like and trust, and I know they like and trust Me that will say, same idea. Can you send me a synopsis? I've seen both sides. So do you know who Neale Donald Walsh is?

11:18
Amberly Lago

I don't.

11:19
Corey Poirier

He wrote Conversations with God.

11:20
Amberly Lago

Oh, I have that book. I should know that offer. I have that book.

11:25
Corey Poirier

Well, Neil, he did an endorsement of the book. He said, can you send me the book? And he literally read it in a night and came back and told me, I like this, I like that. So his thing is, I'm not gonna endorse it unless I read it front to back and agree with everything in it. But then I've had other people, you know, I won't say the name now, since I said the opposite scenario, but really big name who said to me, corey, can you just tell me what the book's about? Like, we were. He said, call me tonight. Tell me what the book's about. I told, oh, that sounds like my buddy Augie Augmentino's books and his writing. He said, that sounds like a similar style. He goes, can you take. Do you have a second phone? I said, yeah. He said, record this. And then he gave me the endorsement from what I just told him. So it was almost like a synopsis, like you said. And basically he verbally said the other to me. He said, now turn that into something and send it to me. Make sure I can take a peek at it. And that's how he did the endorsement. So I will say, a lot of people don't realize that there's nothing wrong with that.

12:17
Amberly Lago

And I will only do that with people that I know like and trust. Trust that I've known for a while. I won't just do that if I'm like some, you know, Joe Schmo off the street comes up and says, you know, will you endorse my book? That I have no idea who that.

12:33
Corey Poirier

Trust me, it's a good book. Trust me.

12:35
Amberly Lago

Yeah, trust me, it's a good book. Because what people don't realize is when you do endorse that book or you do write the forward for that book, you're tied to that person. So if people Google your name or that person's name, your name can come up. So you better make sure there's somebody that you want to, like, really collaborate with.

12:57
Corey Poirier

Well, I want to touch on one other thing about the no and how to actually know what a yes and a no could be for you. But I will say, and we don't have to go there, but we could circle back to it. But one of the things I get asked about A lot is, how do you get that big name endorsement? How do you get that person on your show? How do you get that person to even listen to you? And I believe it's like a domino effect. It goes back to what you said. I believe it's that if somebody knows the person that knows, likes, and trusts you, they'll listen more. So in other words, I kind of say it's like a domino effect. Like the hardest one I ever got, the hardest interview I ever secured was Jack Canfield from Chicken Soup, the Chicken Soup for Soul co creator. And I always say it was the biggest domino knockover because I had nothing. I had nobody to reference, and we had no listeners on my show. I was going to his team with zero listeners, and Jack didn't do podcasts. And this was like 22,002, when podcast wasn't even really much of a thing.

13:50
Amberly Lago

Oh, wow.

13:51
Corey Poirier

And so I had to get jacked. But once I was able to get Jack, then I was able to go to Mark Victor Hansen, Jack's writing partner, and say, oh, we had Jack last week. We'd love to have you on the show. Then when I had the both of them, I was able to go to Dan Sullivan from Strategic Coach, because he's their coach.

14:03
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

14:04
Corey Poirier

And so, I mean, I didn't mean to go down that road, but you

14:07
Amberly Lago

mentioned it is so true. Because I know when I started my podcast and I had zero listeners, I remember, you know, reaching out and being so nervous about reaching out to, like, Dr. Aaron Haskell, who I was like, I was doing it in a studio at first, and it was a live radio show where people could call in, and she said yes. And I was like, oh, my gosh. And then Heather Monahan, who I barely knew at the time, but she. I knew she was going to be in town and I said she was going to stay at the BE in Beverly Hills. And I was like, hey, Heather, you know, I just live right down the street and I could. Would love to have you on my show. And I remember I had this handheld recorder and being so nervous and not. I was so intimidated. Did the recorder, was it working? And we. She met me in the lobby and we went to her hotel room and we recorded the podcast. And. But she took a risk on me. But once I had her on, then Trent Shelton said yes. And once I got Trent Shelton, then Maye Musk said yes. And then, you know, it was just this domino effect. Then people were like, how'd you get Ed Mylett on your show? And how'd you get John Gordon on your show, like, all. And. And it is a domino effect, but you have to have, like, once you get that one big name. And look, I just wrote a new book, and just. It was so hard for me to ask for endorsements. I have endorsed so many people's books and written so many forwards, and it was so hard for me to ask for endorsements, but I did. And do you know who Coach Michael Burt is? Do you know who Coach.

15:53
Corey Poirier

Oh.

15:54
Amberly Lago

Oh, we have a studio audience here today. Yes. We were at an event that's familiar.

16:00
Corey Poirier

Every other person you mentioned, I know.

16:01
Amberly Lago

Yes, yes. Coach Burt and I, we shared the stage at an event. And. Yeah. And my friend Brian Gelke was like, you got to meet coach. I got to introduce you to him. Well, anyway, I love this man, and he was the first person that I, like, reached out to, and I was so nervous, I sent him a voice memo, and I was like, hey, coach dude, I've written this book, and do you think you could do a. Some praise for it if I make it easy on you, blah, blah? And he is the nicest guy. He was like, well, hello, sunshine. Of course I'd be happy to do that. And I was like, whew. I was, like, sweating, you know, I mean, with each person. And then Ed Mylett wrote praise for the book. John Gordon wrote the foreword. Did you know that? Yeah, it's. Well and freaking John Gordon. I cried when he said yes to that, by the way. I cried. I cried on the phone with him. Yeah.

16:55
Corey Poirier

Yeah. Well, I'll tell you, one of the things, for me that this latest book was a fictional parable. And so, you know, there's a part of me always, I think, like, who

17:03
Amberly Lago

wrote praise for it? Let me.

17:05
Corey Poirier

Let's see. James Redfield, who wrote Celestine Prophecy. Mark Victor Hansen.

17:10
Amberly Lago

Oh, I love Mark. He was on my podcast.

17:12
Corey Poirier

Oh, really? Lisa Nichols.

17:14
Amberly Lago

Oh, I love Lisa.

17:15
Corey Poirier

So, Lisa, we put on the back cover. That was the choice of the publisher. They wanted her in the back.

17:19
Amberly Lago

Well, she's in. She's amazing. She's like, one of my favorite speakers in the world.

17:24
Corey Poirier

Yeah, we have her coming on for our boot camp that we do twice a year. We have her coming on in February. And so one of the biggest. Well, one big one, too, was guy named Richard Paul Evans. He wrote the Christmas Box, which was. And, oh, the Noel Diaries. That was on Netflix last year, the biggest Christmas movie. He wrote the book for that. So he has. 46 times. He's 46. New York Times bestsellers oh, that's all? Yeah, that's all. And he said whenever I asked about the foreword, he said, corey, I haven't written a forward in 13 years. And so I thought, okay, it's going to be no then. And he goes, but it's a yes. And so what happened was I went to his writer's retreat and we told him about the book. And he said, this was. And it's in the book. So I'm not saying something that he said privately, but he said while my wife and I were there, I told him the story behind the book. It wasn't even finished yet. And he said, I'm gonna put it this way. And then he said it in front of the class, too. He said, if you don't finish writing that book, I'm gonna buy the rights off your wife and write it for you.

18:22
Amberly Lago

Wow.

18:23
Corey Poirier

But why I bring this up is because that was the validation. Cause I always thought, okay, well, maybe I can market a book, but being a writer is a different thing. And then, so when I had Neil, Donald Walsh, James Redfield, and Richard all say it's a good book, that was like the biggest validation maybe ever in my life. But Richard wrote the foreword, and he mentioned that it reminded him of Og Mendino, who. I'm a big Og Mandino fan, reminded him his writing. And then at the end, he said, I told Corey, if he didn't write the book, I'm going to. So that's how he finished the foreword. But that's kind of who helped with the book. As far as endorsements, there's. There's other ones. Anthony Trucks. I don't know if, you know, Anthony is.

18:58
Amberly Lago

Anthony's a friend of mine.

18:59
Corey Poirier

Okay. Yeah, so Anthony did. And trying to think off top of

19:03
Amberly Lago

my head, but we have so many friends in common.

19:06
Corey Poirier

But I think that, well, Heather Monahan, I've had in the show multiple times, too.

19:10
Amberly Lago

When am I going to be on the show?

19:12
Corey Poirier

Well, I want to make that happen as soon as possible. Yesterday.

19:15
Amberly Lago

Do you like how I'm putting you on the spot?

19:16
Corey Poirier

Yeah, no, yesterday. We made that happen yesterday. And so as far as the one thing I want to mention about that, because I think this is something probably you get asked often is, how did you get this name or that name? One of the things I get often, too, from people is, hey, can you. I'm launching a show. Can you send me over Lisa Nichols phone number?

19:32
Amberly Lago

Oh, I don't do that. I don't pimp people.

19:35
Corey Poirier

And so my answer is always that's going to be a hard no.

19:38
Amberly Lago

Yeah, I do say no to that. I'm very protective of my relationships.

19:46
Corey Poirier

And so here's what. So here's what I was going to add about what I do. So whenever people ask, how did you do this? I said, I'll give you the sexy answer. And the non sexy answer meaning, like, how did you secure this name or that name? Well, if I go to Jack Canfield, the sexy answer is I found out, I went to Jack's team and they said, it's going to be probably no. Corey. He's saying no to nine out of every 10 interviews. He's not promoting anything right now. And they said, but keep checking in. And so what I did was I said, okay, so this was the strategy. Here's the sexy. And then I'll tell you the non sexy that nobody wants to do. But it's really what the bigger picture is. But with Jack, what I did was I went on his website and said, who's endorsing Jack that I can get to? And I found Dan Sullivan. Now, Dan Sullivan's with strategic coach. It'd be harder probably to reach Dan now than Jack because he does a lot more stuff. Behind this is him and Joe Polish do a lot of stuff together. But at the time, Dan liked my interview, or, sorry, Dan liked an interview he did with Darren Hardy from Success magazine. So my interview style was similar. And I said to his team, he said it was his favorite interview on the air. Here's my interview style. And I sent my clip and Darren. And so they eventually said yes. And so I knew that Mark Victor Hansen and Jack both paid Dan to go to his coaching events once a year. So they were like his co. He was like their coach. So I got on Dan on the show and I brought up Jack a few times. And then Dan said, you know, Corey, Jack would love the show. You should tell him. Dan said he should come on the show. So I took that clip and I sent it to Jack's team. And I said, even Dan, Jack's coach, thinks that he should be on my show.

21:11
Amberly Lago

Whoa.

21:12
Corey Poirier

And they replied. They replied with a link and said, cory, you've beaten us into submission. Here's the link. And that's the sexy answer. Okay, That's a sexy way, creative way, what have you. So I say to people, be creative. Find a sexy way. There's a friend, John Talarico.

21:28
Amberly Lago

You know John, I've heard of the name. I don't know him.

21:30
Corey Poirier

John. That's what he did with Bob Proctor. He said he wanted to kind of work his way into business with Bob Proctor. Kind of like Napoleon Hill said in Think and Grow Rich, he wanted to do with Edward C. Burns. And so what John did was he went to Bob Proctor's events. Bob always played the song I Can See Clearly Now. So he found out who the original singer was. He was still alive. He reached out to their family, convinced them to sign a record to Bob. He framed it and left it at Bob's next event at the front. And Bob and him end up becoming best friends. And so creative. That's the sexy way. That isn't still the short way, but it's sexy the longer way, which nobody wants to hear from me, is what I do is I look at each relationship like a bank account. And so if I'm building a relationship with Mark Victor Hansen, I'm depositing into my relationship with Mark. So in other words, when I first meet him, I'm like, how can I start building up my deposit so that I have a positive deposit in the account? And so whenever I first met Mark, we did an interview. Then not much later, then a year later, I interviewed Mark. And on the show, he said, do you know of other podcasts that would be a good fit for. We just launched our book. Crystal and I launched it called Ask. And it was during COVID he was on.

22:38
Amberly Lago

Him and his wife were on my show for that book.

22:42
Corey Poirier

So at that time, you know, he was. He was looking for big shows, but he said on the air to me, is there any other shows? And I thought, that's. So, like, here's the guy from Chicken Soup with Soul saying, do you have other shows? So I said, you know what? I'm going to overwhelm him. So I got him on 25 large shows in about two weeks. And they said, corey, enough. We're overbooked now. But the reason I bring that up is I did that. And then I didn't say, hey, Mark, can you do this for me? I didn't do anything. Then I. Like, six months later, I was working on a documentary. I said, hey, Mark, would you and Krista like to be in the documentary? He looked at names. He goes, yeah, we'd like to be in that. All our friends are in it. So then I did that, and I did maybe six or seven things, and then eventually I said, hey, Mark, would you be willing to endorse my book? He said, yeah, buddy.

23:20
Amberly Lago

Yeah.

23:21
Corey Poirier

But what I'm saying is, I deposited all those times without ever asking for a withdrawal.

23:25
Amberly Lago

Exactly. And that's why people. I actually write about this in my new book because I write about relationships and I write exactly about this situation where so many people will like, I'll have a friend that'll go, hey, girl, how are you doing? I heard you weren't feeling very well. I hope you're feeling good. Well, by the way, can you introduce me to Ed Mylett and Jamie Kernlima? And I'm just like, oh, that's what it was really about. And I'm just like, no. And they're like, well, how did you get on Ed's show? And it was the same. I never asked him for anything. I was just always there to support him, add value, build the relationship was more important to me than being on a show. And then one day he asked me to be on a show and I was like, dream come true. Yes, that's a yes. But it was the same thing. I focused on the relationship, and how can I add value to that relationship? There wasn't a shortcut. Like, I didn't. Because there are. I can only imagine how many people reach out to him wanting something, you know? And I was like, I'm not going to be that person who just wants something and asking for something. You know what I mean? So I think that's so important and a great lesson for everybody listening, whether writing a book or wanting to get on a podcast or wanting to meet someone, it goes for anybody. And so I want to talk about, Man, I could talk to you all day, and we are going to run out of time. And I want to talk about Blue Blue talks because I have a lot of people in my mastermind. All the ladies in my mastermind. Well, I would say 90% of them want to get on stages. The other 10%, 1. Natalie Gardner, who I just had on the show, I was like, oh, yeah, and you're going to be speaking at the Unstoppable Success Summit in April. And she goes like a deer in headlights. I'm like, yeah, you're going to be on stage. You know, did she not know? She knows, but it still hasn't quite, like, sunk in. I'm like, yeah, you're going to be doing it.

25:42
Corey Poirier

Okay.

25:43
Amberly Lago

And so there's a lot of people that do want to get on stage, and. And it's really hard as a speaker that wants to be on stage if they don't have any pictures of them on stage, they don't have any video of them speaking on stage, you know, and you've done five TED Talks. And I feel like, once you do one big talk and it's a really great talk, then you get another one, and then it's your chances of getting another one and another one and another one are easier. Not always easy, but easier than just trying to pitch when you've got nothing. And so I know there's a lot of people listening that are like, well, how do I do it? What do I do? And so you have created Blue Talks, what, five years now that you've had it. Tell me exactly what that is and how it helps somebody who wants to get on stage and share their message and really increase their influence.

26:37
Corey Poirier

Absolutely. Well, I will say it's probably important to know the backstory. And so why I launched Blue Talks is whenever I started, I was that same person you just described. I'm like, how do I get started? How do I get the first paying gig? Actually, in fact, even how do I get a gig? Like, how do I get somewhere to speak, even if I'm paying to do it? Like, it was just really hard. And now we're going back to 2001. Ish. So, I mean, it was a bit different. There was only like.

27:03
Amberly Lago

So you started when you were like 10?

27:06
Corey Poirier

Yeah, no, nine, actually. Thank you, I appreciate that. But I mean, the media wise, it's not like today. New media, we call it. There wasn't this new media. It was like, you need to get on. Insert big name here. Abc, NBC, New York Times, what have you. So for me, that's when I was starting. There was no shortcuts, really. And to get on even the smallest, like, local media, I almost had to beg 17 friends to get one little, you know, little article in a local newspaper. And so it was really hard. And then the speaking side, I was told by. I remember this couple told me one time that I met at a well, caps meeting in Canada, but it'd be the same as the nsa, the National Speakers association, they said, oh, if you build it, they will come. And I'll tell you, to this day, I still did. Not my experience, but I went into the woods. I said jokingly, went into the woods and started building it. Nobody even heard the hammer. So, like, I came from a really strong sales background. So I'm like, this is going to be easy. And it wasn't. So to make a long story short, back then, when I couldn't find any bookings, I couldn't find media. I said, if I ever get this figured out, I want to help other people get this figured out. It's much the same way When I started in sales, I started selling photocopiers door to door, and they brought me in a VHS tape of Zig Ziglar, and that was all I had for sales training. And that was with the 48th largest company in the world at the time. And my whole sales training was $30 Zig Ziglar tape. So at that point, I said, if I can help salespeople figure out this thing easier in the future, like a Fortune 500 company should have a training program. And they didn't. And I said, if I can help people figure this out, that's what I want. So that's why I started getting into speaking myself. I started doing sales training and speaking, and so much the same way. When I got into that, I said, same thing. If I can help people, I want to figure that out. So that was what my plan was. But I'm one of those people, and whether this is right or wrong, I'm not one of those people that reads page two and then start teaching you page one. Like, a lot of people do that now. It's like, what I mean by that is, hey, let me show you how to make a million dollars on their Facebook ad. And meanwhile, you find out later they've never made 100,000. I'm not that guy. If I'm gonna teach you that, I have to have done it five times. So with speaking, I had this great idea of what I wanted to do, but I was not prepared to do it until I had done it a lot. And, well. And so I just started it. I said, I gotta build it first. So I went out and started plugging away. My first year as a speaker, I left a software sales role where I was getting paid six figures to wake up, and I thought, I'm going to replace that in a year. Didn't happen. So my first year, it was a struggle. I did a lot of free talks. Talks where I was, like, getting the dinner, you know, dinner.

29:36
Amberly Lago

Well, you know what? Thank you for sharing that. Because I think so many people think, oh, well, I'm going to be a speaker, and I'm just going to start making $100,000 a talk, $100 or $50,000 a keynote. And it's like, that is not how it was for me. I was speaking at anywhere people would have me. And I'm talking, like, recovery meetings. I spoke at Betty Ford. I spoke at churches, network groups, chamber of commerce, anybody that would have me. Rehab centers, doctors, clinics. Like, I'm like, yep, I'm your girl. I'll be There. I'll be there.

30:13
Corey Poirier

Yeah, yeah. I mean, what we try to do is help people shortcut that, but there's no. The only way. I didn't know well, and I didn't either. Right. So. And the only way there is through sometimes, meaning even if we give you all the shortcuts, at some point you still have to deliver.

30:29
Amberly Lago

So.

30:30
Corey Poirier

So what happened with me is. And it's probably good, I think, honestly, Amberly, that I started the way I did because I wasn't there yet. Meaning I wasn't ready like my first talks were. I did. I got a community college to let me start doing teaching a business studies course, and it was a sales course. And I often joke and say it's ironic it took me a year to sell them on it. But I started teaching it and I wasn't great. And so I had to get better, in my opinion, to be at the level where I should be charging. And so I think it happened the way it was meant to. But again, to make a long story short, it was three years of me trying to build up to finally replace my income I already had. But what happened is I figured out a couple of little hacks. And once I figured those hacks that went from my second year was like basically or third year, I got to six figures for the first time, second year, multiple six figures, and never looked back solely from speaking. And it was these little tiny tweaks that nobody was teaching. All my favorite teachers weren't teaching them. And I came across them and I'm like, oh my gosh, this is it. This is what I've been missing. So then I still went another four or five years building it. And it got to the point where I was doing 200 paid talks a year, which, you know, that's pretty substantial for a non celebrity speaker. And then at that point, enough people were asking me every almost day, how are you getting paid to do this? And how are you getting paid so much? What I found fascinating, which nobody wants to talk about, was that a lot of the people that were doing that were the ones that had sought after speaker on their profile or along the way told me, oh, it's an easy business. We're coming to me saying, how are you doing it? Oh, I've been doing it, but I only get like once every booking, every three months, I'm not getting paid. But they were telling the world they

32:02
Amberly Lago

were a sought after speaker. Speaker.

32:04
Corey Poirier

So what happened was I put together a self study program. Here's how you build a speaking business in A box. Because I thought I don't have time to like to handhold. And the irony is, I always say, now, metaphor wise, all those people want to be in the car, but nobody wants to be behind the wheel. What do I mean by that is a lot of people signed up for the program and took it, but they didn't necessarily want to do the lifting involved in building a speaking business.

32:26
Amberly Lago

Yeah, yeah.

32:27
Corey Poirier

So that's where blue comes in, by the way.

32:28
Amberly Lago

That's where blue comes in. And that's what I have noticed as well. Like, no, you got to actually do the work too. You got to put in the reps. But yes. And so tell us about blue a little bit. We're almost out of time and I

32:41
Corey Poirier

could just talk to you. I wondered about that.

32:42
Amberly Lago

I know, I know. They're like waving me over there, like, you're almost out of time. And I also want. Real quick, I want to get a question from our studio audience. We've got. How about Brian? Would you like to ask a question, Brian?

32:56
Amberly Lago

Sure. So you were talking about when people get started. You're absolutely right. It's hard to know because when you first get started, you do everything for free. But you don't think like, well, I need to pay a videographer. But then there's no videos of you. There's no pictures of you. So if someone was to want to get started, what do you think is the thing that they should start doing earlier? They should invest in themselves. In that will pay off faster than just thinking, well, I'll wait till I have the money to do something.

33:22
Amberly Lago

Videographer.

33:23
Amberly Lago

That's what I was hoping you're gonna say, but I'm curious.

33:26
Corey Poirier

No, it's such a great question. And that ties to what we were talking about as. As far. Far as why we literally eventually launched Blue Talks was because of all those things that you do need that people don't have. And I will say, even when we start working with people, let's say they're in a book with us and we're like, can you send along your headshot? And they're like, what's that? You know? So, like, people don't have this stuff. And so what I found was, first and foremost, when people hire speakers, the number one reason they say they hire speakers is they saw them themselves and love them.

33:55
Amberly Lago

Yeah. The second reason that's mainly how I get hired is through referral, or somebody has heard me speak and they hired me from that. Yeah, yeah.

34:03
Corey Poirier

So the referral, I was going to say is second. The Third is they watch a video of you speaking. But the challenge is most people don't have a good quality speaking video. So to answer your question, I would say the most important thing to have if you want to get paid to speak, is a great speaking video. Obviously a website can be crucial, but I think a video is more important even than the website. So a video of you speaking, just say in a perfect world, at the very minimal, a video of you speaking for a certain amount of time, 20 minutes, 10 minutes with nothing else, is gonna still do the trick. In a perfect world, maybe you have also a sizzle reel where there's people talking about what they loved about your talk. You can capture those rated an event. You do. So it's all those things that are gonna sell me on why I should trust you to speak in front of my audience. And I need to see you to do that. So video is crucial. If you're a bestselling author, I can then as a meeting planner, I can promote. We have a Barnes and Noble Amazon best selling author here today. If you've done a TEDx, I can say, oh, and she's also done a TEDx talk. So to me, you put them in every order you want. I would say the most important is the speaking video. Beyond that, you want to have accolades like whatever that looks like you've written for Forbes or Entrepreneur, you've been profiled in this place, you are a best selling author of this book. And in a perfect world, it's a book that's on the topic you're going to speak on. And so it's all of those things. And quite honestly, because we were gonna talk with Blue Talks, that's what we do. We basically make that stuff easy so you don't have to do that. Like we get you speaking at an event, let's say like at mit, we film it. So now you can say you spoke at an event at mit. Wording is important. Don't say MIT brought you in, but you spoke at an event at mit.

35:39
Amberly Lago

That is important. That's good.

35:40
Corey Poirier

It's very important because words matter and I'm all about integrity. But then you have a video view, highly polished, multiple angles, 4K footage that you can leverage forever. We get you in a book series where maybe you co author it with Dr. Joe Vitale. And so then you can say co author book with him.

35:56
Amberly Lago

Joe changed my life. Okay, go ahead.

35:59
Corey Poirier

But that's kind of the idea is what we're trying to do is the things you're saying. What do I Need first. What should I have first? We're trying to make it so it's a one stop shop that you come and work with us. And I'm not joking when I say this. In four months you can have a bio that says, I shared the virtual bill with Deepak Chopra and Les Brown. I co authored a book with Dr. Joe Vitale. I'm a Barnes and Noble, Amazon best selling author. I spoke on stage at mit. Here's a video of me speaking. What I always say to people is, what do you think your website looks like if you have those things on it versus not having them? Another thing is because we rebroadcast, we're on connectv out of Hollywood, Apple, Roku, Amazon. So now imagine being able to say you've spoken or you're featured on Apple, roku, Amazon in four months. This stuff took me almost 20 years and cost me hundreds of thousands of dollars. And so I mean in a nutshell,

36:46
Amberly Lago

you can use those logos also on your website.

36:49
Corey Poirier

That's exactly it. They say an as seen on banner which is the same as those logos. They say that that can increase your credibility by up to 70%.

36:58
Amberly Lago

Oh, I'm sure.

36:59
Corey Poirier

Which is why Tony Robbins and Jack and all these guys have them at the top of their website. They know they wouldn't spend their time, all the years they put in and put those logos on the top if they weren't important. So hopefully they answered the question. But I think all that stuff is important and it's not a pitch for why you should work with us to do that. But whoever you work with, you need to have video. You need to have something that proves that you're the go to person which could be a book. And you need to have credibility that.

37:24
Amberly Lago

Yeah. That you're speaking my language. That was awesome. Well, man, I could just talk. I'm going to have to have you back on because I could just talk to you all day. So thank you so much for being on. Tell people if they're like, okay, I want to do that. I need to get my sizzle reel or my speakers reel. I want to get video of me at Harvard or wherever big place. How can they find you for blue talks and how can they find you?

37:52
Corey Poirier

So I'm going to give the answer that's probably not the normal answer I'm actually going to. Which is weird. I know I'm going to give my email address to make things easy. I know that's abnormal. Most people say, here's my website. Go there. Reach out in the contact form. I want to be a little more personal today. I remember Tom Zigler was on my show one time and he gave an email address and then Bob Berg did the same and they're the only two people I ever remember doing it. So I'm going to try to follow that suit. So it's pretty easy. It's Corey, which is C O R E Y L U B L u Talks, which is with an S on the end dot com. That's where people can if they want to reach out and say this is something I'm interested in. Beyond that, if you want to search me, I mean you can Google Blue talks, you can. Coryporiermedia.com is my main website so you can go to all those places. But if you really just want to go direct, send me an email.

38:37
Amberly Lago

Okay? You are so awesome. Thank you so much for being on. Thank you for flying in, thank you for being here. Thank you to our studio audience.

38:46
Amberly Lago

Woo hoo.

38:47
Amberly Lago

And thank you for tuning in to the Amberly Lago show and we will see you next week.

Pain to purpose to joy.

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