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

    A Simple Question With Big Results (Klassic Kern)

    A powerful case study from Frank's private client group. He dives into the "Best Buyer" concept—a fundamental strategy that helps businesses achieve massive revenue growth by narrowing their focus to the right segment of the market. Executive Summary Frank discusses the story of Daniel, a professional services provider in Germany who specialized in lead generation and sales systems. By identifying which client segment yielded the highest profit with the least resistance, Daniel was able to generate approximately $40,000 in sales in just two weeks. Key Concept: Identifying the "Best Buyer" The "Best Buyer" is the prospect or customer who fulfills four specific criteria: Highest Net Profit: They bring in the most money after expenses. Shortest Time: They move through the sales cycle quickly. Least Sales Resistance: They are easier to close and require less "convincing." Easiest to Reach: You can get your message in front of them without massive hurdles. The Case Study: Corporate vs. Owner-Operator Daniel's business was split between two distinct categories of customers. Frank helped him analyze the efficiency of both: Category Value Sales Cycle The Verdict 1. Large Corporations ~$20,000 6 Months High value, but extremely slow and high resistance. 2. Owner-Operators ~$15,000 2 Weeks Lower individual value, but much faster cycle and higher volume. "It makes more sense to focus on [owner-operators] because you'll get more of them and you'll get them faster." — Frank Kern Main Takeaway "Ask yourself who your best buyer is... the person that's likely to pay you the most net profit with the least amount of sales resistance in the shortest amount of time."

    7 min
  2. 5D AGO

    A Two Step Formula (Klassic Kern)

    Frank's streamlined approach to scaling a business without the "extraneous stuff" that leads to burnout. As a "rainmaker" for his Private Client Group, Kern specializes in helping ambitious business owners strip away the noise and focus on the single most effective path to their goals. The Core Philosophy: One Big Thing Many business owners approach growth by trying to implement a million different ideas at once—new funnels, new products, and complex strategies. Kern argues that the real secret to hitting revenue goals is simplicity: getting rid of everything that doesn't serve the primary objective and focusing on one single thing at a time. The 3-Step "Low-Hanging Fruit" Formula Kern outlines a repeatable framework designed to generate significant revenue quickly: Step 1: Identify the Low-Hanging Fruit – Look at your existing customer base or prospects and identify what they truly want but aren't currently getting. Step 2: Pluck the Low-Hanging Fruit – Make a direct, appealing offer to those people. Often, this is a "Done-For-You" (DFY) service that solves a problem they already have. Step 3: Grow More Low-Hanging Fruit – Replenish the "garden" by creating a system (like a simple educational funnel) to find more prospects who fit that ideal profile. Case Study: $900,000 in Sales Kern illustrates the power of this formula through a story about his client, Nigel, an established information seller in the UK: The Opportunity: Nigel's customers were buying information on how to do things but secretly wished someone would just do it for them. The Action: Nigel sent a simple letter to his existing customers offering a "Done-For-You" version of his service. The Result: This single move generated $900,000 in sales. The Scale: They then built a simple funnel to provide education and offer this high-ticket service to new prospects, creating a dependable growth system. Key Takeaways for Your Business "Stop trying to do a million things. Identify your low-hanging fruit, pluck it (make the offer), and then focus on finding more folks just like those buyers." Simplify Your Strategy: If you are feeling overwhelmed, it's likely because you have too many choices. Focus on the one that yields the highest return. The Power of "Done-For-You": Many customers are willing to pay a premium for results rather than just information. Upgrade Your Clientele: Focusing on high-ticket, high-value offers can improve the quality of the clients you work with every day.

    5 min
  3. APR 17

    The Most Important Question In Marketing (Klassic Kern)

    Frank Kern explores the fundamental question that drives successful marketing: "What must we demonstrate to be true in order for somebody to want to do business with us?" He argues that transforming a business isn't about complexity, but about finding "one big thing" and leveraging it through clear, undeniable proof of value. Key Takeaways The Core Question: Every advertisement should aim to prove a specific claim that makes the customer's decision to buy logical and easy. Leveraging the "Big Thing": Instead of doing a million different tasks, focus on one significant advantage your product has and build your strategy around it. Specific Case Study - Desalination: Frank discusses a polymer filter for a $13 trillion global desalination market. To win, the company must demonstrate two things: total chlorine resistance and a 75% reduction in power consumption (using only 25% of the power of standard systems). Hyper-Targeted Awareness: For high-ticket industrial sales, awareness can be built by running demonstration ads to everyone within 50 miles of a plant, targeting where the employees likely live. The Service Provider Strategy: For consultants, attorneys, or agencies, the goal is to demonstrate empathy and the ability to help. The most effective way to do this is by actually helping them through useful, long-form content. The Action Plan Identify the single biggest problem your prospect faces right now. Determine what you can show or do for them that alleviates that frustration. Package this "proof of help" into a long-form video. Run the content on social media and retarget those who watch it with specific offers. Memorable Quote "The best way you can demonstrate you can help people is by... actually helping them." — Frank Kern

    5 min
  4. APR 14

    Zero Resistance Marketing (Klassic Kern)

    Frank Kern dives deep into why traditional online advertising models are failing and how "friction" is the silent killer of big campaigns. Frank introduces his Intent-Based Branding framework—a method designed to build authentic relationships with your audience by delivering high-value content directly where they are, rather than forcing them through complex funnels. Key Takeaways The Friction Problem: Forcing potential customers to visit opt-in pages and join email lists before providing value creates a barrier that often prevents the sale. The Real Sales Driver: Sales are driven by the relationship and trust built when a customer consumes your content. Intent-Based Branding: A strategy that focuses on identifying your ideal customer's frustrations and providing immediate advice through video content on social media without an initial "gate." Data-Driven Messaging: By using social media ads, you can measure exactly how much it costs to have someone watch your content, proving whether your message resonates with the market. Compressed Sales Cycles: Delivering value upfront allows you to build a retargeting audience of engaged viewers who are more likely to convert faster and at a lower cost. The Intent-Based Branding Framework Identify: Define your ideal customer and their core frustrations. Educate: Create simple video content that offers real advice to solve those frustrations. Deploy: Place that content directly on social media (Facebook, YouTube) as a paid ad. Retarget: Show offers to the specific audience that has already consumed and benefited from your content. Memorable Quote "Why would we want to take somebody and put a big barrier in front of them if we want them to view content from us that's going to cause a good relationship to be built? It doesn't make logical sense." — Frank Kern If you found this episode helpful, please share it with a fellow entrepreneur!

    6 min
  5. APR 7

    The Winners Are Slow (Klassic Kern)

    The common pitfalls entrepreneurs face in an increasingly competitive marketplace and a strategic alternative to the typical "hard sell" approach. Key Discussion Points: Stop Rushing the Sale: The primary reason marketing campaigns fail and ads crumble is that businesses are rushing the sale. Most focus on the small percentage of people ready to buy right now, ignoring the much larger pool of potential customers who are not yet ready. Intent-Based Branding: This strategy involves identifying potential customers and providing them with something valuable before asking for a sale. It demonstrates that you can help them by actually helping them. Identifying Customer Needs: To effectively use intent-based branding, businesses must understand their target audience's desires, frustrations, and the emotions tied to those frustrations. Using Long-Form Video Ads: Once you understand your audience's needs, use that information to create long-form video content. Social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube can provide data on how much of your content people are watching, which helps you gauge its effectiveness. Strategic Retargeting: Instead of showing sales ads to everyone, wait until someone has consumed a significant portion of your helpful content. Then, retarget that specific audience with your offers. Actionable Insights: Focus on the Larger Market: Shift your focus from the immediate buyers to those who will be ready to make a decision in the next 60 days to a year. Demonstrate Value First: Before asking for money, provide something of value that addresses your audience's problems. Analyze Your Ad Data: Use engagement metrics (like video watch time) to refine your messaging and ensure you're resonating with your audience. Target the Right People: Use retargeting to present offers to people who have already shown interest by consuming your content.

    5 min
  6. APR 3

    How To Know When Your Market Is Ready To Buy (Klassic Kern)

    Here's a high-level strategy for capturing the "forgotten" middle of your market. While most advertisers exhaust their budgets fighting over the 3% of people ready to buy this second, Kern reveals how to identify and educate the 50% of prospects who are 30 to 90 days away from a purchase. By identifying "Indicators"—events that accelerate a prospect's need—you can build trust through Intent-Based Branding before your competitors even know they exist. Key Takeaways The Market Split: Every market is divided into three groups: those ready now, those ready in 30–90 days, and those who will never buy. What is an Indicator? An indicator is a specific event or experience your prospect undergoes that signals a more immediate need for your solution. The "Offline to Online" Rule: If a marketing tactic works effectively offline (like direct mail for home security), it can often be scaled faster and cheaper online. Intent-Based Branding: This involves identifying your target market, providing useful educational content, and then retargeting those who consumed it with a specific offer. Real-World Examples of Indicator Marketing Kern illustrates the power of indicators through three distinct industries: Industry The Indicator (The Trigger) The Strategy Home Security A recent break-in in the neighborhood. Scan police reports and mail neighbors while their "desire for safety" is peaked. Junk Removal Moving out of or into a new home. Target people planning a move with content on "how to pack" or "organizing a move". Car Sales A teenager getting their learner's permit. Educate parents on the "7 must-have safety features" for teen drivers. The 3-Step Execution Plan If you want to implement this in your own business, follow this framework: Identify the Indicator: Ask yourself: "What is happening in my prospect's life that would cause them to need my service now?" Create Educational Content: Do not pitch yet. Instead, provide genuine help related to their current frustration or goal (e.g., "How to plan a move so it's not awful"). Retarget with an Offer: Once they consume the content, you know they are facing that indicator. Run retargeting ads with a branded offer that solves the problem. Memorable Quote "The name of the game, as always, is this concept of Intent-Based Branding... identify a target market, put very useful content in front of them... if they consume that content, it means they're probably interested in whatever it is we have." — Frank Kern Looking to refine your own indicators? Think about the "Statue of Garfield with the broken tail" in your customer's life—that piece of junk they finally realize they need to throw away. Catch them at that moment, and you've won.

    6 min
  7. MAR 31

    How Do I Know If An Agency Is Any Good? (Klassic Kern)

    The four essential criteria for selecting a social media advertising agency. Frank warns against agencies that make empty promises and explains why a deep understanding of your business and your customers is the only way to ensure a successful partnership. Key Takeaways Honesty About Risk: A reliable agency will never guarantee a 100% success rate. Every new campaign is a calculated gamble, and "maybe" is the most honest answer to whether a campaign will work. Business-First Approach: The initial conversation should focus on your business model, customer value, sales process, and KPIs—not a generic pitch deck about the agency's history. Customer-Centric Strategy: A great agency prioritizes understanding your customer's frustrations, emotions, and needs to create effective ad copy and targeting. Focus on ROI, Not Vanity: Avoid agencies that prioritize "vanity metrics" like impressions or "eyeballs." Look for an insistence on tracking tangible results like opt-ins, calls, and sales. Timestamps [00:00] - Introduction: Why choosing an agency is a difficult decision. [00:53] - Criterion #1: Why "Maybe" is the only honest answer to "Will this work?" [01:40] - Criterion #2: The importance of the agency asking about your business and KPIs. [02:53] - Criterion #3: Why the focus must shift to understanding your target customer. [03:49] - Criterion #4: Insisting on accountability and measurable data. [04:44] - The "Kiss of Death": Why you should run from vanity metrics like impressions.

    6 min
4.8
out of 5
170 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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