Your Next Million

Frank Kern

New Frank Kern Podcast with stories, a Frank Kern book, AI Copywriting training, new branding class, client stories, AI ad examples, AI sales letter examples - and more! Frank Kern Mass Control 2026? Maybe. Frank Kern has been advising entrepreneurs like you all day, every day, since 1999. This is his podcast. More at FrankKernPodcast.com. Brought to your by https://ojoy.ai

  1. 2D AGO

    How To Know When People Are Ready To Buy (Klassic Kern)

    Why many successful companies hit a plateau with their digital advertising. By illustrating the "Marketplace Breakdown," Kern explains that most advertisers are fighting over the tiny 5% of customers ready to buy right now. He introduces Intent-Based Branding, a strategy focused on cultivating the 50% of the market that will be ready to buy in 90 days by providing helpful content that addresses their "trigger" problems before asking for a sale. Key Takeaways The Market Split: At any given time, only about 5% of your market is ready to buy now. 50% will be ready in roughly 90 days, and the remaining 45% will take 6 months or longer. The Competition Trap: Most businesses focus exclusively on the 5% "buy now" segment, leading to high ad costs, lower profit margins, and difficulty scaling. Intent-Based Branding: This is not branding for the sake of "getting your name out there." It is identifying future customers and building a bond by being helpful. Identify the Trigger: To capture the 90-day market, you must identify the "predicament" or "trigger" that happens before a purchase decision (e.g., a ceiling leak before an HVAC replacement). The Long Game: By providing value during the research phase, you ensure that you are the first person the customer calls when they are finally ready to spend money. Timestamps 00:00 - 01:25: Introduction: Why successful ad campaigns stop working or fail to scale. 01:26 - 02:40: The Marketplace Breakdown: Visualizing the 5%, 50%, and 45% segments. 02:41 - 03:55: The problem with "Opt-in" and "Buy Now" focused advertising. 03:56 - 05:15: Case Study: Using Intent-Based Branding for an industrial HVAC contractor. 05:16 - 06:40: Identifying the "trigger event" in your specific industry. 06:41 - 07:35: Final advice: Shifting your content strategy to capture the 90-day market.

    8 min
  2. 5D AGO

    How To Create Social Media Campaigns That SELL (Klassic Kern)

    A look at internal strategies where a company spends approximately $1,000 per hour on social media ads for themselves and their clients. Frank outlines a comprehensive framework for creating "social media campaigns that sell" by moving away from aggressive "buy now" tactics and toward a system of intent-based marketing. The core philosophy focuses on building goodwill and trust through long-form content before ever making an offer. Key Takeaways Target the 30-90 Day Window: Most advertisers compete for the 5% of the market ready to buy today. The real profit lies in the 45% who will be ready in the next 30 to 90 days. Long-Form Video (3-6 Minutes): Videos under three minutes lack the depth to build a bond, while those over six minutes often lose social media users' attention. Empathy and Specificity: Don't use generic "motivational" content. Speak directly to the frustrations, desires, and emotions of your specific ideal prospect. Low Production, High Relatability: High-end "Hollywood" production can feel like an ad and trigger resistance. Authentic iPhone-style videos often perform better on social platforms. The Two-Step Ad Sequence: Split your campaign into Value Ads (content-rich, no call-to-action) and Sales Ads (the offer). Only show Sales Ads to people who consumed the Value Ads. Content as a Filter: Use broad targeting and let the video content itself act as the filter. If someone watches a significant portion of a specific video, they have identified themselves as a qualified lead. The Relationship is the Trigger: Sales copy is important, but the relationship and trust built during the "Value" phase are what ultimately trigger the purchase. Timestamps 00:00 - Intro and agency context on ad spend. 01:55 - Targeting the neglected 45% of the market (the 30-90 day buyers). 04:50 - Why long-form video (3-6 minutes) is the sweet spot for building trust. 07:20 - Why you should avoid generic "motivational" content. 09:01 - Being the "narrator" of your prospect's movie. 11:22 - Pre-framing: Controlling how prospects judge your "book" by its cover. 14:19 - Why relationships outperform sales copy every time. 16:21 - The synergy between Value-Oriented Ads and Sales-Oriented Ads. 20:47 - The fundamental question: What must you demonstrate to be true? 24:09 - Q&A: Budgeting for high-ticket services ($2,500+). 26:07 - Q&A: How many value videos are needed before an offer? 28:40 - The "Three Buckets" of audience retargeting (Stranger, Warm, Offer). 32:09 - Why organic follower count is irrelevant in the paid ad game. 34:31 - Using content to replace traditional Facebook targeting and "opt-in" forms. 37:00 - Mathematical breakdown of acquisition costs and ROI.

    38 min
  3. MAR 20

    The ONE THING My Most Successful Clients Have In Common! (Klassic Kern)

    The fundamental difference between struggling entrepreneurs and those who achieve exponential growth is this... Moving past the "mindset" clichés, Kern explains that the most successful businesses aren't in the product or service business—they are in the capital multiplication business. By treating marketing as a mathematical system and prioritizing long-term data over short-term "quick money," business owners can create predictable wealth. Key Takeaways The Core Belief: The most successful entrepreneurs understand they are ultimately in the business of multiplying capital through a repeatable process. Marketing is Math: While often viewed as "unsexy," the ability to understand your numbers—specifically the return on ad spend—is what separates winners from losers. The Quick Money Fallacy: Struggling marketers quit if they aren't profitable on day one. Successful marketers are willing to take a short-term hit to acquire a customer, knowing the back-end revenue will result in much higher long-term returns. Buying Data: Every dollar spent on advertising provides data. Even if a campaign doesn't return immediate profit, the information gained regarding messaging, audience, and offer is an invaluable asset. The Investment Paradox: Many entrepreneurs are terrified of "losing" a few hundred dollars on testing ads, yet will readily spend thousands on courses and seminars that offer no direct data on their specific business. Timestamps 0:00 – The "unsexy" truth about marketing and math. 0:26 – Introduction to Frank Kern and his "Next Million" philosophy. 0:45 – The "One Big Thing" shared by successful clients: Multiplying capital. 1:30 – Why people avoid the math of marketing and the trap of "something for nothing." 2:30 – The used car salesman analogy: Multiplying capital through a process. 3:30 – Warren Buffett vs. Digital Marketing: Comparing rates of return. 4:30 – Avoiding the fallacy of "quick money" and embracing the long-term play. 5:30 – The power of being "negative" in the first month to win in the sixth month. 6:30 – Buying the "Crystal Ball": Using advertising spend to acquire market data. 7:30 – Why this concept applies to any industry, from medicine to manufacturing.

    8 min
  4. MAR 17

    The Winners Are Slow (Klassic Kern)

    Are your ad campaigns crumbling? Is your marketplace becoming too competitive to turn a profit? In this episode, marketing legend Frank Kern breaks down the primary reason most ad campaigns fail: rushing the sale. Frank introduces the concept of the "Three Piles" of prospects and explains why the most lucrative opportunities lie not in the immediate buyers, but in the massive "middle pile" that your competitors are completely ignoring. Key Takeaways The "Right Now" Trap: Most advertisers fight over the 3% of people ready to buy today, leading to sky-high costs and thin margins. The Power of the Middle Pile: The largest segment of your market consists of people who will buy in the next 60 days to one year. This pile is less competitive and far more profitable. Intent-Based Branding: A strategy focused on demonstrating value by actually helping people before asking for money. The Long-Form Video Strategy: Use educational content to identify interested prospects and lower your acquisition costs. The Framework: Intent-Based Branding Frank outlines a simple but effective workflow for capturing the market: Identify the Audience: Pinpoint the "middle pile" of prospects. Analyze Needs: Ask what they want, what their frustrations are, and what emotions are tied to those frustrations. Demonstrate Value: Create long-form video content that solves a problem or demonstrates your expertise. Measure Resonance: Use social media metrics (view costs) to see if your message is landing. Low cost = high resonance. The Retargeting Phase: Once a prospect consumes a specific percentage of your content, move them into a retargeting database to receive direct offers. Memorable Quotes "Transforming your business isn't about doing a million different things. It's about finding one big thing and then leveraging that." "Demonstrate you can help them by actually helping them."

    5 min
  5. MAR 10

    Who Are You? (Klassic Kern)

    A personal story about grandfather Raymond Smith, and the valuable lessons he learned from him about work ethic and success. Using his grandfather's 1983 Jeep Scrambler as a backdrop, Frank explores the importance of being someone truly impactful to your audience and customers. Episode Highlights Introduction: Frank introduces his grandfather, Raymond Smith, a self-made millionaire and former Jeep dealer with an eighth-grade education. The Jeep Scrambler: Frank showcases his grandfather's restored 1983 Jeep Scrambler, which holds deep personal value and serves as a reminder of his grandfather's legacy. Lessons in Hard Work: Frank recounts his teenage years working for his grandfather, who would pick him up early in the morning and task him with manual labor, such as knocking down walls with a sledgehammer. Work Ethic and Value: Through these experiences, Frank's grandfather taught him that success is earned through hard work, creating value, and perseverance. Connecting with Your Audience: Frank emphasizes the need to be "monumentally impactful" to followers and customers, creating a lasting association with transformation and benefit. The Core Question: Frank poses the essential question: "Who are you to the people that follow you?" and challenges listeners to consider who they want to be and can be to their audience. Key Takeaways Success isn't about doing a million things; it's about finding and leveraging one big thing. A strong work ethic and the ability to handle difficult tasks are fundamental to achieving your goals. Building a meaningful and impactful relationship with your audience is key to long-term business success.

    8 min
  6. MAR 6

    Why The AI Apocalypse Can Make You RICH

    Let's pull back the curtain on the "AI gold rush" to reveal a staggering reality: last year alone, businesses lost $285 billion on failed AI initiatives. While social media is flooded with "get rich quick" app builders, the corporate world is facing a massive ROI crisis. Brought to you by - http://www.ojoy.ai The Trillion-Dollar Opportunity in 2026 We are currently standing at the precipice of an AI Apocalypse. But for those who know how to navigate it, this represents the single greatest economic opportunity in history. As traditional job markets face a "tsunami" of disruption, a new class of AI Producers is rising to claim the future. Key Highlights From This Episode: The Failure Rate: Why 95% of the $300 billion spent on AI last year failed to produce a return on investment. The 2025-2026 Layoff Wave: Analysis of the 1.17 million U.S. layoffs in 2025 and why companies like Amazon and Meta are pivotally shifting toward AI-integrated roles. The 0.05% Club: Why only 1 out of every 2,000 people actually knows how to build consistent, functional AI applications. The "Magic Trick" to Prompting: Why you should stop telling AI what to do and start asking it how to train itself. Trillion-Dollar Projections: Why the IDC and Pearson project up to $6.6 trillion in losses for the U.S. economy due to AI illiteracy. Critical Stats & Data Mentioned: Statistic Source/Context $285 Billion Total money lost on failed AI projects last year. 1.17 Million U.S. workers laid off in 2025 (Challenger Gray Report). 2.5x Profitability Increase in revenue for companies properly using AI (Accenture). $300 Million Meta's contract offers for top-tier AI talent. "AI is hitting the labor market like a tsunami, and most countries and most businesses are not prepared for it." — International Monetary Fund (IMF) The Producer vs. The Consumer By 2027, if you haven't mastered the ability to make AI work consistently, you risk becoming irrelevant in the white-collar workforce. This episode breaks down how to move from a Consumer—someone who just uses ChatGPT for recipes—to a Producer who can build automated workflows, research tools, and content engines. What's Next? Are you ready to join the 0.05%? Stop watching the "30-second app" tutorials and start learning how to think differently about human-AI collaboration.

    11 min
  7. MAR 3

    Want To Be A Great Copywriter? Keep Doing This ... (Klassic Kern)

    The human tendency to seek "hacks" and "loopholes" instead of doing the basic, consistent work required for success. Using personal stories about health and business, Frank explains why the simplest solution is often the most effective—and the hardest to start. Key Takeaways Avoid the "Hack" Trap: Humans naturally seek systems, shortcuts, and loopholes to avoid difficult, obvious truths. The Power of Consistency: Whether it is losing weight or writing sales copy, the secret is simply doing the work every single day. Accepting the "Punch": Success requires getting in the "metaphorical ring" and being willing to fail and get back up again. Volume Leads to Expertise: Mastery, such as becoming an expert copywriter, comes from repetitive practice over a short, intense period. Episode Highlights The 45-Inch Waist Wake-Up Call Frank shares a personal story about a recent doctor's visit where he was confronted with a 45-inch waistline. Despite his immediate instinct to search Amazon for a "hack" or a shortcut, the solution was the one he already knew: eat less and work out more. Business Success is No Different When Frank needed to raise capital for a new company investment—specifically a Rolls-Royce Phantom 8 for client experience—he didn't look for a new "secret" system. Instead, he sat down and did the fundamental task: he wrote a sales letter. The 30-Day Mastery Challenge Frank recounts the story of an 18-year-old student who wanted to be a great copywriter. The advice was simple: write a sales letter every day for 30 days on any topic—from duct tape to water. By doing the work consistently, the student became an expert in just one month. Memorable Quotes "There is always going to be a simple solution... eat less, work out more, and number three, of course, consistently." "There is nothing that is going to make it easier except to quit. If you want to be a champion, you just have to get in the ring." "Step number one: do the work. Step number two: refer to step number one."

    6 min
5
out of 5
19 Ratings

About

New Frank Kern Podcast with stories, a Frank Kern book, AI Copywriting training, new branding class, client stories, AI ad examples, AI sales letter examples - and more! Frank Kern Mass Control 2026? Maybe. Frank Kern has been advising entrepreneurs like you all day, every day, since 1999. This is his podcast. More at FrankKernPodcast.com. Brought to your by https://ojoy.ai

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