
Transcript of PAID ADs SECRETS EXPLAINED: HOW I GENERATE $2M A MONTH REVENUE || JASON WOJO || EPISODE 060
The Code To WinningI went to business school, I started learning about the eBay flipping and all that fun jazz. Started seeing shipping costs and packing up my own orders and basically just profit and loss arbitrage. I started pitching local businesses, seven-day free trials, 14-day free trials. I did door knocking. So barbershop, restaurants, home service, full on, stuff like that. Stuff where they could pay me 500 bucks a month for social media management. Back then, I was charging about 500 bucks a month for ads and social media management. I would come there with a and film myself. And then I would take the videos and images back home, export them, edit them, Canva, post, boost post, all that jazz. And then from there to start investing myself a lot more. I started going to events, mastermind. I started getting in bigger circles.
How did you end up recruiting the people that work for you right now?
Right now on Indeed, LinkedIn, Upwork, we'll spend maybe about 500 bucks a day just on ads to get hires, to get applications. The fastest way to acquire A+ talent is by having a brand and actually being good at what you do.
If somebody is out there watching this and wants to try and build a personal brand, what's the first step that you'd be doing right now?
First thing is really figuring out what your voice and brand is. I know that sounds very vague, but let me explain. You have to have this unique counterpart to you.
Those that actually have a limited budget, what would you recommend is the best way to try and use ads effectively with a smaller budget?
I mean, with a smaller budget, it is tough because you have to get out in learning phase. The only way you're getting out of learning phase is if you have 50 conversions in seven days. So you have to get out learning phase with 50 bucks. You got to basically get $7 a lead or less.
The code to winning insights you need today to seize the world tomorrow. Today, we have a guest that I have been looking forward to interview for probably over a year. We finally got him out the house right here in Arizona. Just to give you a brief introduction of our guest today. If you are curious in marketing, in paid ads, in upscaling your brand and also developing and creating a personal brand. This is the episode for you. Jason Wojo is a person that I have been seeing on my platforms, all my platforms. He's very good at paid ads. He's one of the best and experts in this specific field. So we're going to dive a bit more deep into that specific field, go in-depth in terms of marketing, the effective way to upscale, and all that different stuff as well. So again, if you are curious and learning a lot about just marketing and building your brand, this is the episode for you. So without further ado, the man, the myth, the legend, Jason Wojo himself. How are you doing, boss?
What's up, bro? Appreciate it, man. I'm excited. Got me out of the house. Let's run it.
I wanted to just dive in deep about obviously paid advertising. I've seen your content for probably over, probably three years, consecutive. I see a lot of ads just running through. So you really are an expert. You're one of the best that I've seen in that field. I want to talk about just when did you start in this market?
So this I was in culinary school. So that's where I first decided to start my journey when I got out of high school. Went to culinary school, dropped out, realized I hated it. I went up to business school. I was flipping Pokémon cards online. I still do that now. I'm actually starting to push it out more. I was a side business that we just started with our esports team. But yeah, dude, I went to business school. I started learning about the eBay flipping and all that fun jazz. Started seeing shipping costs and packing up my own orders and basically just profit and loss arbitrage. And then from there, I found Ty Lopez's course. So he was talking about SMMA, make 10K a month. I was like, oh, shit. All right, cool. I'll do that. And then I got more into it, started pitching local businesses, seven day free trials, 14 day free trials. I did door knocking. So barbershop, restaurants, home service, salon, stuff like that. Stuff where they could pay me 500 bucks a month for social media management. Back then, I was charging about 500 bucks a month for ads and social media management.
I would come there with a camera and film myself. And then I would take the videos and images back home, export them, edit them, Canva, post, boost post, all that jazz, and built brand. Google my business used to do a lot, too. I built websites, too. So then after that, I was I went home for three months to finish off my degree. I mean, three years, excuse me, to finish my degree. And then from there, I decided to move to Orlando, Florida, and just go all in on it. I was making like three grand a month, give or take. And I was like, I have enough to get a room and a house and a College house because I was a big introvert. I still am. I'm perfectly okay with it. I feel like introverts are the smartest people anyway. But I did... That whole phase of my life was just in a house, doing nothing, even during college, really. I didn't really do much. And then when I went to Orlando and lived with a bunch of college kids, I started making more money. And then I started to enjoy the things in college that I didn't do.
I went through that phase where I liked to party. I wanted to get out and be an extrovert and saw what it looked like to chase and stuff like that. So I did that. And then I got all tired. I got all real quick. And then I started building the business more cold calling, doing all that jazz referrals. And then from there, I started investing myself a lot more. I started going to events, masterminds, I started getting in bigger circles. One of my biggest mentors was Jason Capital. He taught me a ton about copywriting, direct response, funnels, upsells, low-ticket funnels, webinars, like VSLs, all that jazz. I did that. And then I just started really just from there with Like, low ticket. Low ticket was where I had my biggest win for sure.
Can you define what's the difference between high ticket and low ticket for those?
Yeah. So high ticket is basically like group coaching programs, masterminds, one-to-one coaching, done a few services, consulting packages, stuff like that. Low ticket is like $47 mini courses, $27 mini courses, $197 tickets for events. That's like low ticket. For a webinar offer, that's like $497. That's like a low ticket offer. So yeah, I was doing low ticket. I went from $20K a month to near half a mil a month in a couple months because I sold this $100 ad templates offer. It was a $17 offer and with a bunch of upsells. And then I would get people on the phones and close them for one-on-one coaching. Two, three grand. And I was just pocketing 15, 20K a day, just closing deals off the phone. And then I got too burnt out. And I didn't have a team, and understand leadership, understand any of that stuff. And then from there, I I realized that I needed to build leadership skills and understand what any of that stuff meant. I was like, All right, I make money online. I'm a leader. And then everyone around me was like, Dude, you make money, but no one fucking respects you.
And I was like, Oh, sick. Okay. Because when I grew up, dude, I was poor. Not like, der poor, but my parents made $80,000 a year. In New York. Yeah, in New York, which is poor, but it's mid-class, I would say. I feel like 80 to 120K in New York is mid-class. So Yeah, that's just the way I grew up. And then I started realizing, Hey, I need to be a bit bigger person, post-content. I was just running ads to low-ticket, but I didn't have any brand on the side of it. Most people who noticed me now had been following me for three, four years, but I've been in the game for seven. So no one really knew how I was for the first three years. I didn't really do shit. I was just making money selling low ticket, selling one-to-one consulting because I approved the concept. It was easier to close people on the phone because they bought the thing that I sold. So I was like, Hey, you bought my low ticket? Let me help you build yours. It was an easy Now it's so hard to sell in our space. That's why I have multiple offers.
I don't know if you are in tune with some of the campaigns I run, but I have Gun For You ads. I have a webinar offer, I have low ticket, and I have Scale Your Ads, which is our events. So I have four different assets of our business that allow people that enter the ecosystem in multiple facets. So now what I've been seeing more than ever is that we're in a trust recession, so no one is coming for shit. Exactly. So it's like, you're talking about YouTube and Google and PerfMax, all these campaigns that are great to have dialed them because they just build more trust or more search intent-based. With Facebook, bro, I'm going in front of you and I'm like, Do you have any idea who I am? Well, if you don't, here's who I am. But Google and YouTube is like, I'm looking for help with Facebook ads.
Exactly.
So it's just like, we spend I don't know, maybe 14,000 a day on Facebook just for my sales team and my agency. And what we're seeing right now is like, Dude, TikTok is giving us a higher ROI than Facebook. And it's like, Bro, it's weird as hell. Tiktok gets me a seven X return. Facebook is getting me about a three to four. Youtube retargeting and Google retargeting, get about a 20 to 30 X return. Oh, yeah. And that's just retargeting, though. So for everybody who thinks that that's wild, there's no cold traffic on Google yet. There will be soon because basically, dude, we got this software that every time you go to my landing page and you click play, it pulls your Facebook data. Really? Okay, so it's called eBoov. He's one of my friends, Vince Reid. He owns eBoov, and it's this cool video player. So you might use YouTube embedded for videos on a landing page, or Wisteo, or Vimeo, or Sprout, wherever the hell these platforms are. It's all shit. It's all shit ass. Eboov, you click play, and basically, I just grab all your data. And then if I combine it with OpenSend, if you know what OpenSend is?
No. So eBoov is the video player. Opensend is this line of code that goes on your landing page. And regardless if you opt in or not, I can pull your name and email phone on it. So now I could just shoot it over to my setters in my sales team, and I can call you, and you never opted into my landing page.
That's interesting.
So we combine eBoov with OpenSend. Bro, man, I'm a big homebody, but I will shit on all these marketers online, bro. The shit that we do right now is absurd, and I don't really talk about it much. I'm only touching the surface.
And for Can people get access to that, right?
Is it like-They can. It's just expensive. All right. It's just expensive. Scare money don't make money. Opensend, we pay 8,000 a month. Eboov is like, it's 300 bucks a month and $2,000 set up fee. So eBoov is great, dude. If you're going to get anything off the ground, run Eboob.
And do you do high ticket or low ticket sales right now? Both.
Okay. So we'll have low ticket. So basically, low ticket will run to $27 course. I have two of them, Digital Product Millionaire, and then I have Webinar Starter Kit. Okay. Those two will run, and then we have still low ticket, we have Scale Your Ads, which is our event coming up July 26th. That is $47 to $197 for tickets, and that's going to be in Miami at the Ritz Carlton. So we run that, and then we just get a bunch of people in a room, and then we sell them. And that's really it. We got some cool guest speakers, too. I got Tana, I got Brandon Carter, I got Daniel G. Tana Kvester. Tana Kvester. That's exciting. And then we have Hyde Ticket, which is our webinar offer, done it for you ads, social media management. We have AI setters, we have email management. We have website builds, CRM builds. Jeez, bro. Anything you could think of, we have.
And then the question I had, what is one of the most underestimated thing that entrepreneurs have concerning paid ads? What don't they know?
They don't know what they want to know because they don't want to spend the I need to find the answer.
Nobody wants to spend the money, which is ridiculous because everything you do, when you did the masterminds, when I do the masterminds, when I do the connections, every time you go to those places, even if you don't get the information that you strive to get, you still end up meeting the people.
They're going to end up like, I'm not going to-Pro, the relationships and just the simple fact you have to be a part of the community to get it. People expect to put a dollar in and get a shit ton of money out. And that's what people always have expected. I'm like, Dude, that's why I am who I am now now, and I'm a big homebody. And there's a reason why, is because I'm just tired of being the person who tells people things, and they don't do anything with it. It's exhausting. It's like, Yo, here's how you do X, Y, and Z. Dude, I can go in any business right now, and if I just had access to your credit card, I could probably get you to a quarter million a month within six months. It'd probably just take me six months. The problem is that no one wants to give up the card, and no one wants to put down their ego. Now I'm in this place where I go over surface-level stuff on free content and podcast, but I won't tell you that I'm in the real shit. No one, no one, bro. And everybody online will sell it.
They'll sell it. They'll be like, Coaching, group. Bro, I don't have any coaching offers. I have no group coaching programs, no one on one. I don't sell Bizup. And people always say, dude, you make all this money. Why don't you sell coaching? Why don't you sell Bizup? Because I don't want to create competition. I don't want anyone to know the shit that I spent. Fucking, I have to check my Google Excel sheet, But if I were to look at all the things I spend coaching on and all the things I've done with mentors, I'd probably spend 800 grand on just mentors and coaching. I just don't want anyone to know for $2,000, for $10,000. I went through too much trauma and shit to learn. I'm just going to keep it myself. I'm just going to gatekeep. And if you're a loyal paying client, then you'll get it. But if you just want to follow and people might watch this and be like, Dude, that's crazy. That's absurd. Why are you gatekeeping? Because you're not going to do shit within any way. I can go on here and get a I can give you everything that I did to get to a million a month.
No one's going to use it, even if it was fucking free.
But then when you said people, if they pay the right amount of money, do you have a subscription base where you have a course where people can actually get access to that? Because I know you say you do do it yourself ads.
So the done for you is our biggest offer. I don't have anything. The only thing that I do have is my one on one private.
What does the done for you do, though? It just does the ads?
Yeah, we just do your landing page as your offer, your ads, It's your creatives, your scripting, your tracking. Every single traffic source, we run for you. Okay. We give you your videos, we edit them. Like, bro, it's literally done for you 95 %. Wow.
And how much does that cost, if you're familiar with my meaning?
It ranges from 3K to $5,500 a month. Okay. And then there's my one-on-one private. The one-on-one private is, I have, I don't know, 18 clients on the shit right now. I got 18 clients who I just run their ad campaigns. So they just want access to me. They're like, Dude, I just want I need you to run it. I don't want to talk to you at all. Just take it off my end. These are business owners doing like half a million a month, a mill a month. They just don't want to touch something. They don't want to know nothing about it. So I'm like, All right, cool. I put this private package together. Basically, what it is, is it's 15,000 a month, and then you pay me a second $15,000 a month. If I make you an extra half a million a month or I double your revenue. Okay. So that's how that offer divvies up. And that's where most of my money comes from. Because the agency does over a mill a month. I'll do like 800 grand a month just on one on one private. And then I have load taken all that.
And we're basically scraping two mill a month right So that's where the revenue basically is derived.
Makes sense. And obviously, you end up building a team. Was that when you ended up moving here in AC? How did you end up recruiting the people that work for you right now?
That was just through brand. Okay. I went all... So there are certain sources to where we hire. So right now on Indeed, LinkedIn, Upwork, we'll spend maybe about 500 bucks a day just on ads to get hires, to get applications. The fastest way to acquire A+ talent is by having a brand and and actually being good at what you do. Exactly. So if you're getting your business off the ground and you're looking for good hires, I hate to be the one to tell you this, but unless you have a partner who puts money up, you're not going to find A players who just see your shit vision and shit foundation and quit everything they're doing to work for you. What they need to see is this person has a really cool network. This person is running events. This person is trustworthy. This person posts godly how many times a day, and now I trust him. Or I see this guy over my feed. I want to work for him. So many people talk about him. He has a lot of results. Reviews on Google are good. There's multiple façons of how you track A plus talent.
But you can't just wave money in people's faces and expect them to come work for you because they're only money hungry. They're not mission or core oriented into their actual core values. There's nothing else there that motivates them.
That's facts, man. It's facts. I like that. What would you say is the most effective way of doing ads? And that you've seen results come out of it as well. Is it which platform is the best? Would you say YouTube?
To be honest, man, it's not about the ad, it's about the funnel. The actual sales process of what divvies up an offer is what dictates every other result. So for example, dude, our webinar offer does better than every other funnel. Interesting. So all the webinars that we run get better results than a regular book or call funnel. Wow. Dude, I'll go on a webinar, for example. Last week, I did this. I went on a webinar and I spent no money on ads. I do spend my ads, but I'll break this down if you have context. So I spend about maybe a thousand bucks a day running ads to school. The school is this group we have where we get a thousand people. We spend a thousand bucks a day. We'll get about maybe like 90 people a day to join, and we just stock this group of people. We Take those 90 people and run them through a weekly webinar. So they opt in for school. They get a bunch of free courses and content, and then they join the weekly webinar. And that weekly webinar is where I pitch a $6,500 offer. $6,500 offer, that gets pitch to them.
If I get 700 people a week, I'll get 100 people to show up on the I'll easily close like 35, 40K on a webinar off $7,000 in ad spend. So I'll run that for $7,000, and all the people that join school are free. And if I get one buyer, that's it. Let's say it stunk shit, and I got one, no sales commissions, 20 % payroll. I'm close to break even, and those people got my school group for free. That's the way I look at it. It's like a self-liquidating weekly webinar.
Interesting.
Last week, I have 116,000 people on my list. Now, 60,000 of them don't have D&D on and all that shit. And then X amount, you can't text. I texted only 3,000 people, got them on a webinar real quick, and still did 25K. So I sold four people on the offer. I'm like, Dude, it's this thing where It's like, Bro, the webinars, you sell one to many, you build more rapport. If no one trusts you, they're going to trust you after an hour. And that's why I do podcasts. I like doing podcasts. I made the joke that I like to stay at home, but I only leave the house for a couple of reasons, bro. I'm either doing a podcast, running my event, playing basketball, or I'm going to get a stock of cigars. I like showing them my back to my car and just fucking half naked enjoying my fucking life. That's the way I roll. So that's what I do now. Or I'm speaking at someone else's event.
I love that, man. Right now, somebody watching right now, Jason Wojo, you, Tana, fear the guys are just very well known and have been very consistent in the game for X amount of years. If somebody is out there watching this wants to try and build a personal brand, what's the first step that you'd be doing right now?
First thing is really figuring out what your voice and brand is. I know that sounds very vague, but let me explain. You have to have this unique counterpart to you. For me, for the longest time, dude, I didn't have a brand. It was just like, this guy runs ads. But now I'm starting to pick up this brand where it's like, there's a couple of facets. One is the guy that's all over my feed. Two is the guy with the mustache. And three is the guy that hates on the gym. Those are my three things. It's like, dude, the crazy part is, bro, is this guy made a video about me about a month or two ago. Dude, this can be an interesting topic.
Or is it a ball of busters?
No, I'm not. No. That's the thing. A lot of people have asked me, Yo, dude, I've seen a lot of content about you. I'm like, Bro, I've never been on Baller Busters. No one really talks shit about me, and you only get hate from people who are below you. Straight out. Precisely. So this guy made a video. His name's Tony. He got on a A sales call with me, tried to basically click baby. I ran this special offer through text message because some people might be like, Why are you taking sales calls? I don't take sales calls. Don't worry. I did a special offer. I was like, Yo, if you pay this amount of money, get on the phone, and then I will show you what our offer looks like. So they paid this deposit or whatever. And this guy gets on the call. He's starting to pick my brain about my offer. I start realizing halfway through the call, this guy isn't here to buy. He's here to funnel hack the shit out of us right now.
Interesting.
So he gets on the call, and basically, he takes the recording, And he's like, Yeah, dude, my friend Jamil used you. And he said that he didn't a great experience. I was like, sick, dude. I go into Hyros into their account. I don't mind talking about this shit. I go into their account, and he had about a 1. 8 to 2. 2 Two Roas on the front-end with his brand Astro Blaster. I got all the screenshots and all the proof. For two months, he signed for a six-month agreement for a 10K a month offer that I was running at the time. Now it's 15K a month. I can talk about the one-on-one private. Did it for 10K a month for two months, decided to back out and basically blocked his bank account from me and said that what I was doing was not working. He didn't finish his part of the agreement. And then on top of it, the 997 that I was telling him the pitch, I was like, Dude, you need to have an ascension. You need to have something else after the 997. We can't just make money on a 997 front-end webinar.
You got to have something else on the back-end. And he's like, No, I don't want to do it, Coach. I don't want to do this. I don't want to do that. I was like, Okay, cool. Then you're just going to make money off the 997, dude. I don't know what to tell you. And then he missed webinars for three weeks, made this video And the crazy part is, bro, is that we made more money after he was talking shit.
It's all just a case sometimes.
It is. So I was like, Dude, keep going, keep going. And it's funny because two weeks ago, I sent him a screenshot. It's like a laugh. I was like, Dude, thanks for my biggest month ever. And he was like, Oh, dude, blah, blah, blah. Basically just snickering back. I was like, Bro, when you get hate, you just make more money. That's why now I'm just okay with the whole gym brand, how I made those videos. That shit's hilarious. So It's funny. You could be loud, but you could also be the quietest person in the room. You could be loud with your brand and the videos you make, but I'm just really quiet, personal. No, but you see, I've met people that are very close to Tate as well.
As much as it may be a very loud personality out there, many people that say they're close enough to say it's probably usually the most quiet is when there's no cameras around, a very introverted person, but it also knows what to say to get the targeted audience as well. So some of the people, like an I'm introverted, extroverted is what I call those people. They know when to speak, but they don't speak all the damn time. Does that make sense? It's being calculated. It's almost like you're playing chess. Every single move is a chess piece.
That also alludes to why our ads have done well for so long. I will purposely do things in videos that make people comment or get mad. I'll purposely not shave, and I'll do ads so that people can comment, Oh, he doesn't shave. I'll purposely leave pimples on my face. I'll purposely do things that trigger the actual avatar. Cars. Interesting. I'll also do things where I'll be in front of my car. I'll make a video, I'll piss people off because the more engagement your ads get, the higher they rank on the feed. If I'm running ads and I just make simple ad images, They'll do well, but then they stop doing well after a certain amount of time. They do really well off the rip, and then the consistency lies in and it starts to decline because there's not enough hate and shit in the comment section. Interesting. Quick hack I'll give everybody is if you go on your Instagram and Facebook and you I put these things in called hidden words or banned words, you can get more people to comment on your post and the banned words won't show up in the comment section, but it will count towards your engagement score.
Wow, I never knew that.
If I go on Facebook and I put... I know all the comments, by the way, that I usually get. I had ChatGPT scraped all my comments, what's the most commonly used words? They are skinny, scant, Hitler, all this shit. I'll take all that and I'll upload them. Then when people come and I get a notification, but it blocks it from the public.
Interesting. I never knew that. That's fascinating. I know you and I, we spoke about it earlier on. Right now, we're at the market where people aren't so trustworthy. They're not willing to end up spending on ads as well. With those people that are necessarily stingy without seeing the potential in that, but also those that actually have a limited budget, what would you recommend is the best way to try and use ads effectively with a smaller budget?
I mean, with a smaller budget, it is tough because you have to get out in learning phase. The only way you're getting out of learning phase is via 50 conversions in seven days. So you have to get out of learning phase with 50 bucks. You got to basically get $7 a liter less with 50 bucks a day with low budget ads. And the funny part is I know people who talk about this thing now. Everyone's got this new mechanism now where it's like someone came out with this program. It talks about low budget ads. And I'm like, dude, all these coaching programs teach you how to be cheap and a shitty business owner. They don't teach you how to run ads, build a team, build systems, a role duplication, why there's breakpoints at 1 million, 3 million, 7 million, 10 million. All these things that no one teaches. My girlfriend bought this program from somebody. It was like 10K. It taught them how to run DM ads for a hundred bucks a day. I'm like, bro, you need to learn how to build a team, have systems, have a good product, have role duplication, how to build an actual customer journey, and how to do all this shit.
And no one wants to teach it. You want to know why no one wants to teach it? Because it doesn't get conversions. It's boring. If I made an ad and I was I'm going to teach you how to build your hierarchy and build your team's SOPs and how to hire the right CMO and how to hire the right CEO and replace yourself and make sure your payroll is even 25 % of your gross revenue No one's going to opt into that ad because it's boring. But if I make an ad and I'm like, Here's how to make 10 grand in 30 days using this one simple ad. Now I get people to click because they're just idiots. They don't understand what a business is. They're clicking all the shit that people don't need. It's just making sense. How to build the highest converting funnel? Take my templates. That's not a business. That's one aspect out of like 80. You need to have a good offer, good journey, good infactuations, good copy, good storytelling, good unique mechanism, and then your funnel. What about the VSL? How does the tracking set up? Do you have your tags from GA4?
All these things that actually matter. And then you run it with a Facebook page that has no posts and you're like, Oh, yeah, I should do well. I I was told that the landing page is all that matters. It's like, dude, it's crazy, bro. You got to post every day. You got to have a good email list. Where's your welcome sequence? Browse abandonment. Where are you tracking everything? Where's your UTM parameters? All these things that actually build a business. And then they actually get onto a sales call. Where's your setter? Where's your salesperson? Where's your pitch deck? Why is your offer not converting? Does your contingencies suck on your guarantee? What are all these things that are breaking in your business? Then people have these bold guarantees, and you see all these businesses crashing with these guarantees, these stupid ass guarantees. Guarantee you 15 clients in 30 days, blah, blah, blah. Then you hop on the sales call, bro, and they're like, You must have 10,000 followers. You must have this. You must have all these contingencies, or the guarantee is removed. And now they're click baiting you. And it's like, dude, the only thing we sell in our ad is we will run your ads for you.
We've done this for seven years. We've done nine figures online. We don't say any guarantees in the ads because that's FTC uncompliant. You can't do that stuff. The only guarantees you can have are a setup fee with the ROI basis. So you have to charge a set up fee and then you say, Hey, listen, you're going to pay X amount, and then you pay your second payment when you make an ROI back. But you can't say ROI guaranteed. Like, dude, all these offers I see in the space are ruining that trust recession that we were talking about. 100 %. When you see all these guarantees and shit, dude. It's very thankful for me because I run such a very integrated, compliant business that I'm not worried about shit.
Dude, I love that so much. I want you to give me my personal advice. So right now, we're about to touch, I think by the end of the week, we'll probably be 40K subs. The goal by the end of the year is 100 plus. But then the entire purpose is trying to do courses. We're trying to draw. We're going to do low ticket sales as well. But at the same time, there's another show that I'm going to be starting co-hosting. It's going to be a side hustle show for the things and people that have experienced certain stuff as well. But it's going to be live, YouTube Live. I've seen people that have such a less amount of subs, but just build a community where people are doing super chats and they're just building as well. What advice would you give me? What's the first thing I I would not do the second show.
I would focus on what you're good at, which is one thing. Do not get distracted. That's everyone's fuck up.
But that's what I'm trying to say. After I touch 100, that's the thing, because right now we're consistent in releasing almost every day.
And by next week-So these podcasts go up, and this is what got you to 40,000 subs. Yes. Just keep doing this. Don't do anything else. Why would you do anything else? You got to 40,000 subs. You got more subscribers on YouTube than I did. Why would you stop the thing that got you to 40,000? Because you're getting shiny object syndrome. Why do another show about side hustles when you could just do the same shit now? You could just have her plug in live and we could just do the same shit live. Interesting. And put up a board and let us just run through questions.
But isn't it the fact of diversifying where people just feel so I was stagnant. I don't want to try and innovate and stuff like that?
So you could take this and this could just be a whole lot better. Why don't you take this, go live, and maybe you have people start buying your programs on how you've done this, and you could teach about Google ads, and you could teach about the side also on this, and then just do these on Yai. Do these on cool. Go rent out a fucking skyscraper bar or something and do them there and go live and then turn into a kick and turn into a YouTube live and start streaming and go on Twitch and do that instead. When I look at building a business, bro, you have built the core foundation of our economy, which is attention. You get views, you get people to watch your stuff. The last thing you should be doing is doing something else. Why do I only run a marketing company? Because I don't bore you with all the other shit that you don't know I run because I don't want to market it. Once you buy from us, then you'll find out about it. That's the last thing I would do, bro. I would go harder on this. I would put ads behind this and take your videos of things you want to pitch and just put them on pre-roll in front of your podcast.
Just run pre-roll lives on YouTube, pitching the thing that you're selling, do many pitches during the podcast of either a sponsor or you do something in the description, and then just keep capitalizing on this, bro. Exactly.
No, I love that. I love that. I think you're actually spot on because I think that's what happens with people sometimes, especially when they start businesses. It's like, oh, my gosh, let's jump into that. Now that I've done solo, let's do roofing as well. And then before you know what they're investing there, everything starts collapsing as well. So I love that advice. So I appreciate that. Which goes in segues to my next question, actually. You've worked with multiple clients, and you've seen success of many. And from those that were really successful in utilizing and transforming conversion, making sure they get revenue in whatever they're doing, and those Because that startup just, I had a bad experience. This is so awful. What was the difference between the two?
Different between the good and the bad client? Yes.
What if those were good? What if they do differently?
They just shut the fuck up and listen. That'd probably be the first thing. That's definitely the first thing. So first thing is the first thing. When they don't listen, they're a pain in the ass. Two is unrealistic expectations that they never got from us. So what happens is this. First month, they're running ads, they're the bad client, and they're like, I'm only getting a 1. 5 return. I see all these ads of you online and these testimonials, and they're making more money than I'm doing. What's the catch? They had a different business in you. They were a different person. They had a different offer, different landing page, different ad, different copy, different new business, different sales team, different setter. You just suck right now, and you need to get better. Either you're not fulfilling on your offer correctly. Did you build an Ascension product? What's your team like? Oh, you got a bunch of people in Pakistan doing shit. Okay, makes sense now. Why they're not enjoying the client experience? You're trying to be cheap with VAs or your product sucks and you tell all these people that it's great. There's so many things where you reveal the hood on somebody.
Bro, there's just so many things. We had a guy this morning. Good example, dude. This is why, man, I fucking stay inside more than ever. These people online that try to take stuff and then they run with it and they think that they can get away. We had a guy this morning, bro. He used to fight for our country. I'm like, Oh, dude, this guy's got to be nice. He's got to be a nice person. He fought for our country, really down to earth person. Yeah, no, that was complete and utter bullshit. He basically comes on our ecosystem, takes our ads for a month, and then kicked us out of all the accounts. And he said, Oh, I'm going in a different change. I'm going in a different direction. And I was like, Dude, you took all our stuff and ran. And I thought that you were nice because you fall for our country. Like, dude, I do not take anything for face value anymore. Words and actions don't matter. When you swipe for your credit card, that's the only vote that actually is going to make any sense anymore. So now I have to detach myself from outcomes and just stuff like that.
It's just Like, ridiculous.
That's fascinating. I guess you get to see people's true colors as soon as they get something out of you as well.
One of the biggest... So I read Matthew McConae's recent book, and one of the things he talks about is he's like, Dude, everyone will show you their true colors. Just give them time. And the crazy part is that most people don't give them time because they're impatient. So they just assume that everything's great. You got to give people time, and they'll show you what their true colors are.
That's so sad. But now we've seen the utilization and the transformation of AI and also, you see automation. Where do you think that's going to be happening in terms of disrupting the paid ad industry?
I mean, dude, the AI thing, I use it for efficiency, but I wouldn't use it to replace my marketing and copy and offer knowledge. It's very hard to see AI replace really good marketing. You can't make a Hollywood-like ad with an AI. It just doesn't add up. We've tried it. We're not naive to it, and it just doesn't perform better. It doesn't do the same storytelling. It's good for ideation. It's It's good for writing like email and SMS follow-ups and help with other aspects of the offer. But what it's not good at is building out a campaign from start to finish. It's just not. It's not the same thing. People are using this AI thing with the moving in the lip moving and the lip sync. It looks so fake, dude. Like the AI ads where you're standing there in front of the camera and you're trying to talk to and supposed to AI it, it just doesn't look realistic. And also the biggest thing with AI for our business, it's different because I don't want to use AI against you as the prospect because what are you going to think your whole campaign is going to be?
Ai. And they don't want that. Exactly. So I'm in a different B2B niche where that just does not work well. If I said, Hey, I'll plant an AI setter in your business, now it's more feasible. It's a lot easier. But if I said, Hey, your whole marketing campaign from the voice to the landing page to the person they speak to on the phone is all AI, they're not going to want a refund. They're not going to like it.
I couldn't agree more. And I think that's the new trend that's been happening. And personally for me, sometimes it was randomly... I'm not from South Africa. I told you about this. I don't know if you've done any other safaris down there, but right now, there's all these AI safaris just taking away from the actual, the videographer and their actual experience.
Ai safaris?
Yeah, you've seen a lot popping up on social media, and it's the worst thing.
Wait, so the tiger and the giraffe and shit are fake?
Are now being fake, yeah. That's my point. It's like everything has just become more automated.
Fuck inside. Bro, I literally don't understand that at all. That's like me going on a cruise and getting it It's ridiculous.
I think it's been heading down there, and I think that's the problem right now. I think if people can just utilize it effectively, it can become an asset, but it can also become detrimental if it's not done and utilize perfectly.
We're losing human touch, too. Dude, all this stuff where you can fabricate what someone looks like, too. Ai edits to a pick. No wonder why dating is so tough now. I'm fine. I'm in a relationship. I'm not worried. But dude, I see a lot of my friends, bro, they struggle with relationships Because they're so disconnected because their personalities are shit because the internet told them that it was okay to act that way. And they're not really authoritative figures that deserve a partner or deserve a spouse. They're just like, they're degenerates. And they think that, oh, they're funny or, oh, they have a good personality. It's so fabricated, bro. It's so crazy.
Man, that's crazy.
It's like, dude, the whole dating scene is just so shit now. There's all these apps and expectations and what a man should and should not.
What a woman is. You know what I'm saying? What a man should cash a piece of all, where it should be, what height she should be, and all this different stuff, what he should be able to do.
Meanwhile, you're a baby mom. Women are doing this whole thing now where it's like, yeah, I don't want to date a guy that's shorter than me, or I don't want to date a guy unless he's 6 feet tall. What do you bring to the table? What does that even mean? I'm 6 feet. That's cool, but I don't want to be presented my value based on my height. Are you stupid? It makes no sense, dude. It's It's crazy. And then women complain all the time. They're like, I can't find a man. I'm like, Yeah, because you act like one yourself. No one wants to date themselves.
Yeah. I interviewed a relationship coach, actually, because she's a Scandinavian born in Russia, But she was talking about the essence and the importance of femininity and how women should be able to embrace that. Because right now, there's a bit of a conflict of interest right now where they're trying to take up male roles. And it's just been conflicting because she's just talking about how you embrace your nature as a woman, all these characteristics that make you women, women and men, men. That's why they coincide. They work perfectly well together. So not a goal of topic, but I couldn't agree with what you were saying, by the way. Man, you've done over for clients as well, about over 150 million, obviously, in terms of paid ad revenue, what's probably been the biggest lesson in that time frame and that figure, specifically for you and your business?
I think the most important thing I learned is that if you If you just think it's one problem, you're probably wrong. All the businesses that have done the best with us, they're open to us solving other problems for them.
Interesting.
Their ads are doing well, but their sales team sucks. Okay, buy sales training.
So in other words, just seeing an iceberg before it actually crashes.
Yeah, and they're okay with investing in beating the actual curve before it hits. So they just move with speed, bro. It's all urgency. People are under this connotation. And this is the worst customers, bro. The ones who buy something and they expect the world from it for the one thing, and they take forever to make the buying decision. That's why the course industry gets so much shit, because the person who took three weeks to buy because they had to think about it, they had to talk to their dog, their cat, their husband, all this, they had to get on 13 sales calls to find out the solution. They buy it because it's the cheapest, which then in turn becomes the shittiest.
Because usually, with my experience with the door-to-door, they get the cheapest, but they expect the top of the range treatment.
Basically, it's a beer-wallet wine taste. That's really what it is, bro. And that's where the worst customers come into play. They're like, They have a beer wallet and wine taste. And that's just the way most of the world is, bro. The way the shit is. People also want to know too much. When they buy something from you or me or anybody, they Who do you ask the most questions. I'm like, dude, let us handle this shit. Shut up. Just pay us. Here's what it looks like. And just get the fuck out of here. Why are you asking so many questions? It's funny because some of my sales guys will come over the house and they like to chill me. I like to I'm nice to all the people. I'm very intimate with me. Not intimacy. Don't run with the shit. We have intimate relationships. Very personable. Go to dinner, vacation together. We know everything from head to toe about each other. These people know that I'm a really nice, nice, nice person. And it's because there is a mutual level of respect that comes with relationships with people who are just too busy to have a shit done.
It's the way the world works. The biggest thing that they see that they wish that they got on the phone was the way that I I take sales calls. If I go on a call right now for a software, let's say, I got on one this morning, and the guy's like, What's going on? How's your day? I'm like, Bro, I'll be honest, man. No one gives a shit how my day is going. How much is this shit? He's like, It's three grand. I'm like, All right, cool. Here's my card. He's like, You know what you're getting? I'm like, I I need to know what I'm getting. I just saw the website. It looks fucking good, bro. I get it. I don't need to know what it is. I don't need to know what the features are. I don't need to know when the onboarding call is going to be. I don't care if it takes two weeks to onboard me. I'm patient. I don't care. I'd rather get on this call for a minute, get it over with, then be on for 30 minutes and waste your fucking time. So here's my card. Charge me.
I'll talk to you guys. Send me an email, onboard, peace the hell out. And that's how my calls go. He's like, Bro, I wish we got prospects like that on the phone. I just don't want to sit there for 30 minutes and talk about random shit that no one cares about. The software does this. All right, cool. I'm in. I just look at things so differently. And that's the point about the best clients is that those clients get on the phone. They're like, Dude, I'm in. I've been following you for two years. My marketers suck. I don't want a bunch of people from freaking Pakistan and India, dude, just run my stuff. I'm like, Cool. Here's what it costs. Four months, 15K. They're like, Dude, I'm in. Here's my card. I'm like, Thank you. Have a good one. They're not sitting, they're going, So how many ads do I get? How many creatives do you make? Do I have to record the videos? No shit, dude. You have to record the videos. And it's really this thing, bro, where you look at two paradigms. You look at bad client, good client. The biggest differentiation is common sense.
Hands down, bro. And common sense is not common anymore. While you're driving, while you're eating food, ordering at a restaurant, Dude, I was at a restaurant yesterday, and I ordered something from the menu. I was like, Yeah, I would like Wagyu Meetballs. She's like, You want that as an advertiser? I'm like, Bro, no shit. It says it on the menu, Appetizer Wagyu Meats. And then you're asking me, Do you want this as an app? I'm like, That's why you make $7 an hour. All right, fucking next. It's like, dude, it's this shit across the board. There's no common sense. And while driving, bro, there's so many accidents. People driving with burnt-out tail lights. They don't have their lights on at night. They're trying to eat while driving. Like, bro, the common sense is dead, bro. It's just so dead. It's so bad, man. It's terrible.
Maybe you can resolve the problem by writing for four offers. Jason, what do you think about that?
Dude, I would love to have a common sense 101 course. I feel like that would... Swear to God, dude. You know, it's funny. I actually have the domain. I bought it years ago. Really? What's his domain name? It's Common Sense Course, and I have Common Sense 101. I always thought about dropping a Common Sense course.
No, you're lying. For real?
Swear to God, I have it. If you go on GoDaddy, it's I have it. And then, dude, my friend called me yesterday. He's like, Dude, me and my girl having problems. I went to this pool party yesterday with a bunch of my friends, and there was a bunch of women there. My girlfriend got mad. I'm like, No shit. She's going to get mad, dude. There's a bunch of half-naked women at a pool, and you didn't invite her, and you went there on your own with your friends that are a bunch of guys who are single. What do you think, dude? Like, of course, she's going to be mad. It's crazy, bro.
No, dude. I love it, brother. I had a quick question now onto the entrepreneurial space. What's probably been the It's the biggest lesson for you as an entrepreneur over time as well?
Biggest lesson. Penny saved is not a penny earned.
That's powerful. There's money behind that. And I think everything that's been mentioned, if I would just summarize it, going out there and just investing Investing. At the end of the day, whether you're doing a brand, whether you're doing a course, everything is about investing into yourself as well, because you are paying for somebody that's had the experience by helping you get the shortcut to try and avoid what they are currently that they face as well. And I I think that's what I want people to understand, especially with the results I've seen in terms of pay-off. I was very skeptical of it. I'm like, Why should I pay? I can organically grow. It does. It can happen. But you're not at the space where your traffic can end up running through Mr. Beast and all these people that actually have a brand where the one post disrupts the market.
Not everyone's going to be Hermosy. Exactly. It's like, Hermosy's content's great. It's in porno, it's valuable. He does a very good job of production and all that jazz, but not everyone's going to just post eight pieces of content in a day and be the next hour for Mosey. So you have to have that paid ad supplement.
And that's why I want to agree with you because people go to these seminars and they're like, Post every day. But I'm like, buddy, you've been stuck on 100 followers for the last two, three years. Do something. Boost it. Do something instead And the problem is that if they don't see a win there, they're not going to see a win somewhere else.
Exactly. Because now they're in the fear-based mode. Fear-based thinking instead of results-based thinking. So it's like, I've been posting for three years, I haven't gotten results. What makes me think that this thing for 15K is going to get me results? And that's where they start losing faith in the actual thing that they're being pitched because they got an ego around the fact that they think that they know their business the best, but their business sucks, so they don't know anything. It's this weird cyclical cycle, dude. It's obscure, but it's the way people operate.
Now, before we even conclude, is there any hacks that are very simple, common sense and very basic that a common person might not be able to pick up in terms of ads? In other words, let me rephrase it properly. What advice or how do you help clients emotionally connect with their audience when ads can feel so transactional?
I mean, that's just a mix of offer and storytelling. Okay. So there's your offer, which is like, what do you do in one sentence? What's your result-driven promise? And then there's storytelling. How do we link the offer to a story that then emotionally effectuates them to a CTA that makes it okay to click and be a part of that journey? That's the only thing that's different that we do is we just do really good storytelling. You have to have a story. When I go to my events and I tell my story about how I had huge growth hormone deficiency and how I didn't make any money and how no one fucking cared about what I had to say. And then I started investing in myself when I even had less money and I still made it work. And I started spending money on ads when I was making three grand a month and all this shit. And I got all the screenshots, everything to back it up, everyone's like, damn, I'm not doing enough. So the storytelling is what really helps out a ton. And it's got to be a relatable story to where they are and who's in the room.
And that's where reading the room makes a huge difference. Some people make ads, and then And they start complaining about lead quality. They're like, Oh, the leads aren't that great. Because I'm like, Dude, you need to say in the ad, If you're a coach doing 10 grand a month, here's what I can do for you. Instead of just saying, Here's what I can do for you. You need to be specific with who the hell you're targeting, and then the story will then back it up. And then when they get on the sales call and the whole pitch is a story backed by the mechanism that you developed, now they're balling in. It's easier to sell with a unique mechanism and a story that actually backs up what your claim is and your results have been promised than anything else. But most people's offers are very like, baity. It's very like, click bait, guarantee, get a ton of money really quick. It's just weird. That's why people have lost trust in what the story is and the mechanism and why the offer even makes sense.
Wow.
That's the hardest part for people to digest.
That's powerful. I can't believe it's almost like being an hour right now, but just get Jason Roger to open up, maybe. You have a whole podcast episode right there now. I appreciate that. But before we conclude, I'll ask all my entrepreneurs, the amount of entrepreneurs that I've met. I just love the fact that before we conclude, I've met, like you, Tana Dre, all these guys that are doing super well, that are super young, one of the things that all have in common is that you've spent so much money in investing in yourself in terms of mentorship. So I wanted to just add that as well, because where you guys are at right now, yes, it's great, but there's people that helped you get there and you paid them to get there. You know what I'm saying? So as you conclude, I wanted to tell people, Insights you need today to seize the world tomorrow. My podcast is called The Code to Winning. Everyone's got a different answer for this. But for Jason Wojo, what does the term winning mean for you.
It's probably one of my favorite quotes. Is winning for me is just a consistent flywheel of just being able to not cry in the storm, but dance in the rain. I think that's That's why the biggest thing. A lot of people bitch too much of the things that just no one cares about, and you might as well just take it in, deal with the shit, and just move on. If you decide to go in a business, you're always going to have problems. Winning is just you being able to say, Hey, listen, I took a couple Ls. Let me just get a W. The Ws are, if you turn a W upside down, it's an M. And the M stands for momentum. So if you ride momentum, momentum's energy, you just keep growing and scaling. But if you let a bad L hold you down, then you're fucked. It's over. It's a wrap. That's it.
Awesome. If you could let our viewers know whether they could get a hold of you if they want to try and upscale, get paid ads, because we're going to have the link in the description section, by the way, for all the automated form of ads that you guys are currently doing. If you let our viewers know whether they could get a hold of you, please.
Yeah. So you guys can go to Instagram at the Jason Wojo. You can also go to our website, thewojomeedia. Com, to see if you qualify to work with us. And we also have our Scale Your Ads events. You can just go to Google, search Scale Your Ads. You'll find all our upcoming events, which are one-day paid ads intensives, and they're very affordable. And we hope to see you guys at one of the events.
Awesome stuff. The quote-winning Insights You need today to seize the world tomorrow.
What does it take to turn a rebellious college hobby into an eight-figure marketing empire? In this episode, we dive into the incredible story of Jason Wojo, the founder of Wojo Media, who went from culinary student to digital marketing powerhouse.
By age 25, Jason had already helped over 1,300+ businesses scale to six figures, generating $125M+ in online sales through strategic ad campaigns. From selling Pokémon cards in college to managing over $30M in annual ad spend, his journey is a masterclass in turning passion into profit.
We break down his four core pillars of success , irresistible offers, high-converting pages, omnipresent ad targeting, and data-driven tracking that consistently produce 4:1 returns for clients across 90+ industries. Jason also shares how leadership, mindset, and smart systems helped him overcome burnout and scale sustainably.
If you’ve ever wondered how top marketers build multi-million dollar agencies from scratch, this episode reveals the blueprint. Learn how Jason Wojo transformed from a college dropout into one of the most effective digital advertisers in the game, and how you can apply his strategies to scale your own business.