Your Marketing Dude

Mike Cuevas

Mike Cuevas has scripted, edited, and distributed over 2,000 videos for small business owners across the country. He builds full‐service video marketing systems — handling message strategy, editing, ads — so business owners don’t need large teams to grow.His mission is to help people amplify their voice with authenticity and consistency, turning video marketing from overwhelming to manageable.

  1. 4d ago

    The Kitchen Table Close: How to Build a Referral Real Estate Business | w/ Amanda Divito Parle

    The Bottom Line: How do real estate agents build a business on referrals instead of leads? According to Amanda DiVito Parle, leader of DiVito Dream Makers and one of Colorado’s top-producing teams, the answer is relationships built through simple, consistent actions repeated over a long period of time. Birthday calls. Handwritten notes. Client events. Hand-delivered gifts. A listing appointment process that starts at the kitchen table before a single price is discussed. None of it is complicated. Almost nobody does it consistently. The agents who do build businesses that run almost entirely on people who already know and trust them, and those clients send everyone they know. As Amanda puts it, content starts the conversation, but trust is what earns you a seat at the kitchen table. The Kitchen Table Close: How to Build a Referral Real Estate Business Most agents spend their entire career chasing new leads. Amanda DiVito Parle spent hers going deeper with the people who already knew her. The result is one of Colorado’s top-producing real estate teams, built almost entirely on repeat and referral business, running on a set of habits that sound almost too simple to be the whole answer. Birthday calls. Handwritten notes. Client appreciation events. Hand-delivered gifts. A listing appointment that starts at the kitchen table before anyone talks price. None of it is complicated. Almost nobody does it consistently. And that gap, between what people know they should do and what they actually do, is exactly where Amanda built her business. Who Is Amanda DiVito Parle? Amanda DiVito Parle began her career in 2003 after spending much of her childhood in her family’s real estate business. Today she leads DiVito Dream Makers, one of the top-producing teams in the Denver Metro market. She has served on the Board of Directors for the Jefferson County Association of REALTORS, as President of the Builder-Realty Council of Metropolitan Denver, has been named to REALTOR Magazine’s 30 Under 30, and earned the REALTOR of the Year lifetime achievement award from the Denver Metro Association of REALTORS. She also hosts her own podcast, At the Kitchen Table with ADP. She is someone who has actually built what most agents say they want to build. This episode is worth paying attention to. Build Your Brand Around Them, Not You This is where Amanda starts, and it reframes the whole conversation about personal branding. Most agents build their brand around themselves. Their production numbers, their awards, their headshot. Amanda’s point is that the strongest brands are built around the client, what they want, what they’re trying to achieve, and what their life looks like after the transaction. People don’t hire the most impressive agent. They hire the one they feel most connected to. A brand that reflects the client’s aspirations creates that connection before the first conversation even happens. Repeat and Referral Is a Consistency Game Amanda is direct about this. There is no secret strategy. There is no hack. The foundation of a repeat and referral business is consistent communication with the people who already know you, repeated over years. Birthday calls. Not texts. Actual calls. Handwritten notes on move-in anniversaries. Personal check-ins that have nothing to do with asking for business. These things work because almost nobody actually does them. They stand out because the bar is so low. Most agents know they should do this. They start for a few weeks, get busy, and stop. Amanda built a system around it so it happens whether she feels like it or not. That’s the difference between an intention and a business. Client Events That Actually Work Amanda runs client appreciation events, and she makes a point that I think most agents miss about why they work. The event itself is almost secondary. What matters is the reason to reach out before the event, the conversations during it, and the reason to follow up after. One event creates three or four natural touchpoints with people in your database who might have otherwise gone two years without hearing from you. She also talks about something she calls Popeyes drops, hand-delivering personal gifts directly to clients. It sounds small. The impression it leaves is not small. In a world of automated email sequences and generic social media posts, someone showing up at your door with something thoughtful is genuinely memorable. Physical Marketing Still Works This might be counterintuitive in 2026 but Amanda makes the case clearly. Direct mail, hand-delivered gifts, and physical touchpoints stand out more now than they ever have because everyone else went digital. The inbox is crowded. The social feed is crowded. A handwritten note on someone’s counter is not crowded. It sits there. People see it multiple times. Their spouse sees it. It creates a physical reminder of who you are and what you did for them in a way that an email simply cannot. Amanda uses physical marketing as a complement to digital, not a replacement for it. Together they cover every channel the people in her database might actually be paying attention to. The Kitchen Table Consultation This is the part of the episode I think every listing agent needs to hear. Amanda starts every listing appointment at the kitchen table. Before the tour. Before any conversation about price. Just sitting down with the sellers, understanding their situation, what their goals are, what their timeline looks like, what matters most to them about this move. Most agents walk in, tour the house, and jump straight to pricing. Amanda’s process builds trust and gathers information before any of that happens. By the time she sees the home, she already understands the people inside it. She also never brings a pre-made CMA to the first appointment. She believes pricing should come after seeing the property, not before, and she builds a second appointment into her process specifically to present pricing. That second meeting creates additional trust and positions her as someone who takes this seriously enough to do it right. Never Assume You Have The post The Kitchen Table Close: How to Build a Referral Real Estate Business | w/ Amanda Divito Parle appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    35 min
  2. Jun 20

    AI Can Replace A Lot. It Will Never Replace Your Relationships

    The Bottom Line– Can AI replace the relationships that drive a real estate business? No. According to Mike Cuevas, founder of Your Marketing Dude, this is the one thing AI cannot touch no matter how advanced it gets. AI can write content, build a property website, and automate follow-up. It cannot replace the trust, familiarity, and history you have built with the people who already know you. Most clients still hire someone they know, someone they trust, or someone they were referred to, and that has not changed with any previous technology shift and will not change with this one either. The real risk is not AI itself. It is neglecting your relationships while you get distracted by the tools. Learn the technology, use it to work faster, but never let it replace the one thing that actually gets you hired. AI Can Replace a Lot. It Will Never Replace Your Relationships. Every few months a new wave of panic moves through real estate. AI is going to replace agents. The job is going away. Better start worrying. I want to give you the one thing I actually believe, with total conviction, after sitting with this for a while. AI can write your listing descriptions. It can build you a property website in minutes. It can edit your videos and draft your follow-up emails. It can do a lot of things faster and cheaper than you can. It cannot replace the relationship you have with the person who already trusts you. That is not a hopeful talking point. That is the actual ceiling on what this technology will ever be able to do, and understanding that ceiling is the difference between agents who panic and agents who get ahead. The One Thing AI Will Never Be Able To Do Let me say this as plainly as I can. AI does not have a relationship with your clients. You do. It does not remember that your client’s daughter just started college, or that they mentioned wanting to be closer to their grandkids, or that they trusted you with the hardest sale of their life five years ago. It does not show up to the kid’s birthday party. It does not send a handwritten note when someone’s parent passes. It cannot sit across the table from someone who is scared about the biggest financial decision of their life and make them feel like everything is going to be okay. That is not a small gap. That is the entire business. Real estate, and honestly most service-based businesses, run on trust that gets built slowly, over time, through actual human contact. AI can speed up everything around that relationship. It cannot manufacture the relationship itself. The Real Threat Was Never the Technology Every disruptive technology in real estate has followed the same pattern. Online listings were supposed to kill agents. Zillow was supposed to kill agents. Video marketing changed the game and plenty of agents ignored it and got left behind. AI is following the exact same pattern. It is not going to replace the role. It is going to widen the gap between agents who adapt and agents who don’t. I built an entire property website using AI in a matter of minutes while prepping for this episode. That capability is available to every single agent listening right now. The agents who learn to use it well are going to move faster, produce more content, and stay more visible than the ones who sit this one out. Relationships Are Still the Whole Game Here is the thing that AI cannot touch, no matter how good it gets. Most people still hire someone they know, someone they trust, or someone they were referred to. That has been true for decades and it is not changing because a chatbot got smarter. AI can help someone find you faster. It can help you create more content, answer questions, and stay visible. But when it comes time to actually choose who to work with on one of the biggest financial decisions of their life, people choose familiarity and trust. That part of the equation is permanently human. Personal Branding Just Became Non-Negotiable If there is one thing I want every agent to take from this episode, it is this. Personal branding is no longer optional. Your brand is what creates trust before the conversation even starts. It is your defense against every disruption that comes next, AI included. When someone already knows your face, your voice, and your perspective before they ever call you, price objections soften and competition becomes almost irrelevant. There are really only two ways to build a recognizable brand at scale. Consistent content creation, and deep relationship nurturing with the people already in your world. Both require showing up. Neither can be outsourced entirely to a machine. Content Is Non-Negotiable Too You cannot build a personal brand without creating content. That is just the math of it. Content is how people discover you, remember you, and build trust with you before they ever speak with you directly. AI can absolutely help here. It can help you write faster, edit video, repurpose long content into shorter clips, and stay consistent without burning ten hours a week. What it cannot do is replace your actual voice, your perspective, or your personality. The agents who let AI become their entire brand are going to sound like everyone else using the same tool. The agents who use AI to amplify their own voice are the ones who will stand out. AI Should Amplify Your Brand, Not Become It This is the line I want every agent to hold onto. Use AI to work faster. Let it handle the repetitive, time-consuming parts of marketing. But do not let it replace the parts that actually make people trust you. Your opinions. Your experience. Your sense of humor. Your specific way of explaining things. Those are the things AI cannot generate on your behalf, because they are yours. The post AI Can Replace A Lot. It Will Never Replace Your Relationships appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    21 min
  3. Jun 13

    There’s No Deal Problem. There’s a Deal Structure Problem. Creative Financing with Chris Prefontaine

    Is there still opportunity in today’s real estate market for agents and investors? According to Chris Prefontaine, founder of Smart Real Estate Coach and a 4 time best selling author, the answer is yes, but the opportunity looks different than it used to. Through strategies like owner financing, lease purchases, and subject-to deals, agents and investors can structure deals that create three separate paydays: cash up front, monthly cash flow, and profit at the back end. Millions of homeowners own their properties free and clear and many are open to creative terms instead of demanding all cash. The market does not have a deal problem. It has a deal structure problem, and the agents who learn to solve that problem are the ones building lasting wealth instead of one time commission checks. There’s No Deal Problem. There’s a Deal Structure Problem. Every year, most real estate agents walk past several deals that could change their financial life. Not because the deals aren’t good. Because the agent doesn’t see themselves as the buyer. They see a seller who needs a discount, can’t qualify for a traditional sale, or has a property that doesn’t fit the typical buyer pool. So they either pass on the lead entirely or hand it off to an investor for a referral fee. Chris Prefontaine has spent decades showing agents and investors a different way to look at those situations. And in this episode, he makes the case that the opportunity in today’s market might be bigger than ever, if you know how to structure the deal. Who Is Chris Prefontaine? Chris Prefontaine is the Chairman and Founder of Smart Real Estate Coach, a four time best selling author, a former Forbes Business Council member, and a three time Inc. 5000 honoree for fastest growing companies. He has helped students across North America complete hundreds of creative real estate transactions. And he has done it while navigating the 2008 housing crash, 9/11, COVID, and a near tragic family event. His business was built to survive any market, because it had to. Most Agents Are Sitting on Deals They’ll Never See Again Here’s the uncomfortable truth Chris opens with. Most agents come across multiple investment-worthy opportunities every single year. A seller who can’t get their price through a traditional sale. A property that needs work nobody wants to finance. A free and clear home owned by someone who doesn’t need a lump sum, they need monthly income. These situations get passed over constantly. Not because they’re bad deals. Because the agent was trained to think like a salesperson, not a principal. Chris’s challenge is simple. What if you took some of those deals down yourself? Why Creative Financing Is More Relevant Than Ever There’s a perception that creative financing, things like owner financing and subject-to deals, are fringe strategies. Something you’d only see in a late night infomercial. Chris makes the case that the opposite is true right now. With interest rates where they are, more sellers and more agents are open to creative solutions than at almost any point in recent memory. Millions of homeowners across the country own their properties completely free and clear. No mortgage. No bank to satisfy. And a meaningful number of them don’t need all their equity in cash today. They need income, certainty, or a buyer who will take care of the property they spent decades in. That is an enormous, largely untapped pool of opportunity. Owner Financing: A Win for Both Sides Owner financing means the seller acts as the bank. Instead of the buyer getting a traditional mortgage, they make payments directly to the seller under agreed terms. Chris breaks down why this can be a genuine win-win. The seller can often get closer to their asking price than they would in a discounted cash sale, while receiving steady income over time, sometimes with favorable tax treatment. The buyer gets terms that don’t depend on a bank’s approval process, which matters enormously when rates or lending standards make traditional financing difficult. Chris shares a real example of a 30 year owner financing deal in the episode that illustrates exactly how the structure works in practice and why both sides walked away satisfied. The Three Paydays Model This is probably the single most important concept in the episode. Traditional real estate income looks like this: you do the work, you get a commission check, and that’s it. One payday. Creative deals can be structured to generate three: Chris’s point is that wealth isn’t built by transactions. It’s built by structure. Three smaller, well-structured deals can create more lasting financial impact than ten traditional commission checks, because the income doesn’t stop after closing. Subject-To Deals: Access to Rates That No Longer Exist A subject-to deal means the buyer takes ownership of a property while leaving the seller’s existing mortgage in place. The buyer makes payments on that existing loan, often at an interest rate dramatically lower than anything available today. Chris explains why this strategy has become significantly more valuable in the current rate environment. Millions of homeowners are sitting on mortgages at rates from a few years ago that simply aren’t available to new buyers. Subject-to investing allows buyers to essentially step into that existing, favorable financing. It requires careful structuring and proper disclosure, which Chris addresses directly in the conversation. But done correctly, it’s a legitimate and increasingly relevant strategy. Think Like a Problem Solver, Not a Salesperson One of the more important mindset shifts Chris talks about is how to approach a seller conversation in the first place. Instead of walking in with a listing presentation, the goal is to understand the seller’s actual situation. What do they need? Cash now? Monthly income? To be free of the property without the hassle of repairs and showings? Sometimes the right answer for that seller is a traditional listing. Sometimes it’s a creative purchase. The agents who win in this space are the ones who diagnose the situation first The post There’s No Deal Problem. There’s a Deal Structure Problem. Creative Financing with Chris Prefontaine appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    30 min
  4. Jun 6

    The Niche Everyone Overlooks: How to Build a Real Estate Business Serving Seniors with Debbi DiMaggio

    🔥 Episode Summary The Bottom Line How do real estate agents build a business in the senior niche? According to Debbi DiMaggio, a top 1.5% nationwide agent with 35 years of experience, and Mike Cuevas of Your Marketing Dude, the answer is to lead with service and education before sales. Seniors and their families are navigating some of the most emotionally complex transitions of their lives. The agents who succeed in this space are not the ones chasing commissions. They are the ones who show up with patience, build a complete support network of movers, attorneys, estate specialists and downsizing experts, and invest in relationships long before anyone is ready to move. As Debbi puts it, the riches are in the niches, but only if you are willing to serve first. Most real estate agents spend their entire career trying to work with everyone. Debbi DiMaggio spent hers going deep on one group nobody else wanted to serve. The result? Nearly 35 years in the business, top 1.5% nationwide, and a reputation that generates more referrals than she can handle. The niche is seniors and later-life transitions. And if you think that sounds limiting, this episode will change your mind. Who Is Debbi DiMaggio? Debbi DiMaggio is a partner at Corcoran Icon Properties and Marketing Director of the Piedmont and Oakland offices, where she leads a team of over 80 agents. She co-founded Highland Partners during the 2009 downturn, has represented high-profile clients alongside everyday families, and is a published author of four books. She’s also deeply committed to the communities she serves, supporting causes like UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital and actively mentoring the next generation of real estate professionals. But what I wanted to talk to her about was something more specific: how she built a business around a niche most agents overlook entirely. The Riches Are in the Niches This phrase gets thrown around a lot in real estate. But Debbi actually lives it. The senior market is one of the largest and most underserved in real estate. Baby Boomers are the largest generation of homeowners in American history. They’re sitting on decades of equity. And they’re navigating some of the most emotionally complex transitions of their lives. They don’t need a salesperson. They need a trusted advisor. And most agents are too focused on quick transactions to build that kind of relationship. That gap is where Debbi built her career. Not Everyone Is Built for This Debbi is direct about this: the senior niche is not for everyone. Working with seniors and their families requires patience that most agents don’t have. It requires genuine empathy for people who are often leaving homes they’ve lived in for 30 or 40 years. Sometimes the client isn’t even the senior. It’s the adult children managing a parent’s transition from a distance, under stress, with complex family dynamics in the mix. If you’re in this for the commission check, you will wash out. The agents who thrive here are the ones who genuinely care about helping people through hard moments. Educate First. Sell Never. One of the most powerful things Debbi talks about is how she built her reputation through education, not marketing. She ran seminars. She hosted community forums. She put together panels of experts including attorneys, fiduciaries, downsizing specialists, and estate sale professionals, and brought them together to serve the community without any pitch at the end. The philosophy is simple. Teach people. Help them understand their options before they need to make decisions. Show up consistently and generously. And when they are ready to move, you are the only person they trust to call. It’s a long game. But it’s one that compounds. Every event builds relationships. Every relationship generates referrals. And the referrals come pre-warmed because the community already knows who you are. Serve Long Before People Are Ready This is the part most agents struggle with because it requires patience that doesn’t show up on a commission statement. Debbi talks about clients who attended her seminars two or three years before they were ready to sell. They showed up, gathered information, maybe came back the following year. And when the time finally came, they called her. She had been serving them for years without a transaction in sight. And that is exactly why she was the only call they made. Most agents give up on a prospect after 60 days. Debbi plays a decade-long game. That’s not inefficiency. That’s strategy. Build the Team Around the Client One of the most practical things Debbi covers is the importance of building a complete support network around senior clients. Selling a home after 35 years is not just a real estate transaction. There is stuff. There are memories attached to that stuff. There are family members with opinions about the stuff. There are estate sales, donations, movers, cleaners, contractors, attorneys, and fiduciaries all involved before anyone signs a purchase agreement. Debbi built relationships with every one of those professionals. When a client comes to her, she can handle the entire transition, not just the listing. That is what makes her indispensable in a way that no amount of advertising ever could. Words Matter More Than You Think Here’s a small thing Debbi mentioned that actually says a lot about her approach. She doesn’t call her clients seniors. She talks about helping people step into their next best chapter. That reframe is not just semantics. It changes the emotional tone of every conversation. Instead of a conversation about loss and decline, it becomes one about possibility and intentional living. The agents who understand that real estate is an emotional business, not a transactional one, are the ones who build reputations that last. Conversations Beat Presentations Debbi talks about how she evolved her community events from formal presentations into open conversations. Instead of standing at the front of a room and lecturing, she facilitated discussions. She asked questions. She let people share their own experiences and concerns. People remember conversations. The post The Niche Everyone Overlooks: How to Build a Real Estate Business Serving Seniors with Debbi DiMaggio appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    40 min
  5. May 30

    Stop Trying to Sound Perfect. People Want the Real You.

    The most common mistake real estate agents make with their marketing has nothing to do with their budget, their platform, or their posting frequency. It’s this: they try to sound like a real estate agent instead of sounding like themselves. They copy the scripts. They use the industry phrases. They post the polished headshots and the market update graphics and the just-listed photos. And then they wonder why nobody is responding. Here’s the thing. Your audience isn’t looking for the most professional version of you. They’re looking for someone they actually trust. And trust doesn’t come from polished. It comes from real. That’s the conversation I had with Arynne Crane on this week’s episode of Your Marketing Dude. Who Is Arynne Crane? Arynne Crane (pronounced “Erin”) is a Realtor and certified real estate strategist serving DC, Virginia, and Maryland with over 15 years in the industry. Her background spans marketing, design, architecture, and property management, which gives her a perspective on real estate that most agents don’t have. She’s also the kind of person who actually practices what she preaches. Her marketing is genuinely her. And it works. Why Polished Is Killing Your Business There is a version of real estate marketing that looks great on paper. Professional photos. Clean graphics. Consistent fonts. Every caption proofread three times. And it’s completely forgettable. Arynne’s point is that when you strip out all the personality in the name of looking professional, you also strip out every reason anyone has to choose you over the next agent. You become interchangeable. And interchangeable agents compete on price. The agents who build real businesses aren’t the ones with the best-looking Instagram grids. They’re the ones who made someone laugh, or feel seen, or think about something differently. That’s what sticks. Your Sphere Already Wants to Work With You This is the part of the conversation that I think most agents need to hear. You have a list of people right now, friends, family, past clients, neighbors, people you went to school with, who would absolutely work with you or refer you if they thought of you. The reason they’re not is simpler than you think. You went quiet. Arynne talks about how consistent communication with your sphere is one of the highest-leverage things you can do in real estate. Not a newsletter blast. Not a market update. Just showing up, being a person, letting them see what you’re up to. It keeps you top of mind in a way that no ad ever will. You don’t need to go viral. You need the 50 to 200 people who already like you to remember you when someone they know needs an agent. Consistency Beats Viral Every Single Time There is a version of social media marketing that is completely about chasing the algorithm. What’s trending. What format gets the most reach. What the biggest accounts are doing. And for most agents, it’s a trap. Arynne’s take is that consistency with your actual audience, the people who already know you, is worth ten times more than a post that goes viral with strangers. One client from someone who trusts you is worth more than a thousand views from people who will never call you. Show up. Be yourself. Be consistent. The trust builds over time whether or not any given post hits. Stop Trying to Appeal to Everyone This one makes a lot of agents uncomfortable because it feels like leaving money on the table. But Arynne makes the case that trying to market to everyone is what actually costs you. When your message is generic enough to appeal to all buyers in all situations at all price points, it’s specific enough to connect with nobody. Your personality, your quirks, your opinions, the things that make you distinctly you, those are not liabilities. They’re the filter that attracts the right clients and repels the ones who were never going to be a good fit anyway. Let them self-select. Storytelling Beats Selling. Every Time. Nobody wakes up excited to receive marketing. But people do wake up and scroll through their phones looking for something interesting. The agents who win on content are the ones telling stories. Not market updates. Not rate comparisons. Stories. The client who almost gave up. The house that had three failed inspections and closed anyway. The neighborhood nobody was looking at three years ago. Stories create emotional connection. Emotional connection creates trust. Trust creates clients. It’s a longer path than running an ad, but the clients it produces are better in almost every way. Humor and Personality Are Underrated Real estate is serious. It’s the biggest financial decision most people make in their lives. And that’s exactly why a little humor goes such a long way. Arynne talks about how being funny, or honest, or just a little self-deprecating, cuts through the noise instantly. People remember you. They share your content. They tag their friends. Not because you said something profound about interest rates but because you made them smile. Professional doesn’t have to mean personality-free. The agents who figure that out have a huge advantage over everyone still posting stock photos and market statistics. Community Is the Long Game This is something Arynne lives, not just talks about. She’s deep in her local market in DC. Not just selling houses there. Actually involved. Going to events. Knowing what’s being built, what’s changing, what the neighborhood actually feels like day to day. That’s hyperlocal knowledge you can’t fake and can’t buy with ads. And when someone is trying to decide between two agents and one of them clearly knows and loves their community, there’s no competition. Community involvement builds the kind of credibility that takes years to build and is almost impossible to take away. The Real Point Real estate is a relationship business. It always has been. The agents who forget that and chase reach, followers, and algorithm wins usually end up grinding harder for less. The agents who double down on The post Stop Trying to Sound Perfect. People Want the Real You. appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    34 min
  6. May 16

    How to Win Clients Your Competitors Don’t Know Exist with Jan Roos

    Most businesses think they need more leads. They’re wrong. You’re already getting leads. People are calling, filling out forms, shooting you a DM. The problem isn’t that nobody knows you exist. The problem is what happens after they reach out. Somewhere between “I’m interested” and “I’m a client,” the ball gets dropped. Nobody called back fast enough. The follow-up stopped after one email. The intake process was so clunky it felt like applying for a mortgage. That’s the real leak. And until you fix it, spending more on ads is just pouring water into a bucket with holes in the bottom. That’s what Jan Roos breaks down in this week’s episode of Your Marketing Dude. Who Is Jan Roos? Jan isn’t a theory guy. He’s managed over $10 million in ad spend working with some of the top personal injury law firms in the country and founded CaseFuel to help businesses stop bleeding revenue out of their own pipelines. His book Beyond Intake is the playbook for turning your intake process into a growth machine. In this conversation he gets specific in a way most business owners never do. The Problem Nobody Wants to Own When numbers are down, the first thing people blame is marketing. The leads are garbage. The platform changed. The algorithm is broken. But Jan has been inside hundreds of businesses. And almost every time, the leads weren’t the problem. What happened to those leads after they showed up was the problem. Missed calls. Emails that sat for two days. A voicemail nobody checks. One follow-up email and then nothing. That’s not a marketing failure. That’s an operations failure. And you can’t out-spend an operations problem. The Clients Your Competitors Already Gave Up On Every day your competitors are running ads, posting content, fighting for the same pool of people who are actively looking right now. But there’s another pool they’re completely ignoring. The person who reached out six weeks ago and never heard back. The inquiry that came in Saturday and got a reply Tuesday. The prospect who said “I need to think about it” and was never followed up with again. Those people are yours for the taking. Your competitors already wrote them off. Jan calls it the hidden opportunity in your pipeline. You don’t need new leads to go after it. You need to actually work what you already have. How Fast You Respond Is a Bigger Deal Than You Think This one makes people uncomfortable because it’s so fixable and so ignored. The first business to respond to a new inquiry wins the client most of the time. Not first in a few hours. First in minutes. Someone fills out your contact form at 2pm and you call them back at 5pm? You’re not getting that client. The person who called at 2:05pm already has them. When you respond fast, you’re telling the prospect something: I take this seriously. Your time matters to me. You made the right call. When you’re slow, you’re sending the opposite message whether you mean to or not. Intake Is Not Marketing. And That’s the Whole Point. A lot of business owners blur these two things together. They’re not the same. Marketing gets someone to raise their hand. Intake is everything that happens after that. The first call. The form they fill out. The consultation. The emails back and forth. The whole process of getting someone from curious to signed. Most businesses have invested a ton in marketing. Nice website, paid ads, social content. And then a prospect calls, gets bounced around, sits on hold, and quietly moves on. The marketing worked. Intake blew it. Jan’s entire framework is about fixing that gap. Because once intake works, the math gets really interesting. You can double your revenue off the leads you’re already getting. You just have to stop losing the ones you paid good money to bring in. Follow-Up Is Where the Money Is Hiding Most deals need five or more touchpoints before someone signs. Most businesses quit after one or two. That gap is enormous. And it’s not because prospects aren’t interested. It’s because life is busy and they moved on. They’re still interested. They just forgot about you because you stopped showing up. Good follow-up isn’t pushy or annoying. It’s just being consistent. A check-in. Something useful. A quick message to see if they got their question answered. That’s it. The businesses Jan works with that build a real follow-up process see their conversion rate jump without spending another dollar on marketing. Systems Beat Hustle Every Time The fastest-growing businesses Jan works with aren’t necessarily the biggest spenders or the loudest brands. They’re the ones who built real systems around their leads. When you have a system, you always know where leads are. You know how many are converting at each step. You can see exactly where things are falling apart and actually do something about it. Without a system, you’re guessing. And guessing keeps you stuck. Jan talks about using actual data to find the weak spots in your funnel. Not gut feel. Real numbers. Because you can’t fix what you don’t track. So What Do You Actually Do With This? Stop blaming marketing for an intake problem. Look at your response time. Look at your follow-up process. Count how many touches you’re actually making before you give up on a lead. I’d bet money you’re sitting on more revenue than you realize, and it’s not coming from new prospects. It’s coming from the people already in your pipeline who just needed someone to actually show up. Listen to this episode, then go look at your own process honestly. You’ll find something worth fixing. 👉 Listen to the full episode here (embed your player above) Get Jan’s book: Beyond Intake Connect with CaseFuel: casefuel.com KEY TAKEAWAYS TIMESTAMPS 0:00  Why visibility matters but isn’t the whole answer 1:10  Introduction to Jan Roos and CaseFuel 2:30  Why chasing more leads is the wrong move 4:05  The post How to Win Clients Your Competitors Don’t Know Exist with Jan Roos appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    45 min
  7. May 9

    What People Really Expect from Their Agent with Tori Keichinger

    🔥 Episode Summary In this episode of Your Marketing Dude Podcast, Tori Keichinger breaks down what today’s consumers actually expect from their real estate agent—and why so many professionals are missing the mark. Drawing from her experience leading marketing at Century 21, Tori shares how client expectations have evolved beyond transactions into experience, trust, and emotional connection. She explains why visibility, brand perception, and consistent communication are no longer optional—they are the foundation of winning and retaining clients. This conversation challenges agents to rethink their role—not just as service providers, but as guides in one of the most emotional decisions of a client’s life. 👉 It’s not just about closing deals—it’s about delivering an experience people remember. 💡 Key Takeaways 1. Clients Expect More Than Just Transactions 2. Experience Is the True Differentiator 3. Trust Is Built Before the First Conversation 4. Visibility Drives Opportunity 5. Consistency Beats Occasional Effort 6. Emotional Intelligence Is a Superpower 7. Communication Gaps Kill Deals 8. Brand Is More Than a Logo 9. Marketing Should Reflect Real Value 10. The Best Agents Create Memorable Experiences ⏱️ Key Timestamps 👤 About Tori Keichinger Tori Keichinger is a seasoned brand builder, media strategist, and marketing leader who serves as the VP and Head of Marketing at Century 21 Real Estate. With over a decade of experience in the real estate industry, she specializes in creating bold, emotionally driven campaigns that deliver measurable business impact. During her time at CENTURY 21, Tori has played a key role in elevating the brand’s global presence, leading to award-winning work—including an Emmy Award—and innovative media strategies that resonate with today’s consumers. 🌐 Connect with Tori Keichinger 🚀 Final Thought Clients won’t remember every detail of the deal…but they will remember how you made them feel. 👉 Don’t just focus on the transaction.👉 Focus on the experience. Because that’s what turns clients into lifelong advocates. The post What People Really Expect from Their Agent with Tori Keichinger appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    29 min
  8. Apr 25

    How to Get Your Website or Landing Page to Convert With Irwin Hau

    🔥 Episode Summary In this episode, host Mike sits down with Irwin Hau, the “Website Whisperer,” to break down why most websites fail to generate leads. Irwin explains that high-converting websites aren’t built on design alone—they’re built on conversion psychology and how the human brain processes information in milliseconds. From first impressions to user behavior, every detail either builds trust or drives visitors away. They explore key concepts like the “CRAP Principle,” the importance of your H1 tag, and why your website should function like a 24/7 salesperson, not just a digital brochure. Whether you’re a small business owner or running a large brand, this episode reveals how to stop losing “invisible” leads and start converting traffic into real opportunities. 👉 Your website is either a bridge to your business—or a barrier. 🔑 Key Takeaways 1. Most Users Are Looking for a Reason to Leave 2. First Impressions Happen in 0.05 Seconds 3. Your Website Should Be a Salesperson—Not a Brochure 4. The “CRAP Principle” Drives Conversions 5. Your H1 Tag Must Be Crystal Clear 6. Friction Kills Leads 7. Social Proof Builds Instant Trust 8. Mobile and Desktop Users Behave Differently 9. The “Invisible Lead” Problem 10. Clarity Beats Cleverness ⏱️ Key Timestamps 👤 About Irwin Hau Irwin Hau is the founder of Chromatix, an Australian web design agency established in 2009 that specializes in conversion-focused design rooted in human behavior and psychology. Known as the “Website Whisperer,” Irwin helps businesses accelerate their sales process by improving website performance and lead generation. Beyond his work in digital marketing, Irwin is a mentor, hobby illusionist, and passionate student of human behavior. He’s also an avid golfer, health enthusiast, and proud father who enjoys bringing positivity and energy into everything he does. 🌐 Connect with Irwin Hau ✨ Final Thought You can spend thousands driving traffic to your site…but if your website doesn’t convert, you’re wasting every dollar. 👉 Stop guessing.👉 Start converting. The post How to Get Your Website or Landing Page to Convert With Irwin Hau appeared first on Your Marketing Dude.

    33 min
4.7
out of 5
89 Ratings

About

Mike Cuevas has scripted, edited, and distributed over 2,000 videos for small business owners across the country. He builds full‐service video marketing systems — handling message strategy, editing, ads — so business owners don’t need large teams to grow.His mission is to help people amplify their voice with authenticity and consistency, turning video marketing from overwhelming to manageable.

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