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In this episode of Do This, Not That, host Jay Schwedelson welcomes #1 Marketing Expert in United States –  Amy Porterfield. They explore webinar strategies to instantly increase webinar registration rates, boost show-up rates, and other quick win tactics.  Amy also shares the launch of her NEW podcast ‘The Amy Porterfield Show’ and why getting comfortable being uncomfortable is the best way to connect with your audience.  

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Best Moments:

(00:43) Introduction of Amy Porterfield and her achievements

(02:06) Discussion on webinars and their effectiveness

(03:55) The “boot camp” strategy for webinars

(07:48) Tactics to increase webinar attendance

(11:41) Rebranding from “webinar” to “masterclass”

(12:38) Amy’s return to in-person events post-COVID

(14:50) Sharing personal experiences on her podcast

(17:26) Amy’s decision to rebrand her podcast

(24:14) The future of content creation and podcasting (moving toward video)

(25:22) Announcement of Amy’s role at the upcoming Eventastic virtual event

(26:02) Reveal of Andy Cohen as keynote speaker for Eventastic

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Guest Bio:

Amy Porterfield is a digital marketing expert, entrepreneur, and podcast host. She specializes in digital course creation—teaching over 90,000 students—and has grown her business from zero to more than $100 million in revenue. Amy’s podcast, formerly Online Marketing Made Easy, has accumulated over 60 million downloads. Known for her practical marketing advice and personal storytelling, Amy excels at helping entrepreneurs build and scale their online businesses.

AMY Has a NEW Podcast! ‘The Amy Porterfield Show:

The podcast tackles topics in so many important areas such as: how to get more visibility on your offers, how to hire a teammate you trust enough to *actually* delegate, and how to stop second-guessing yourself constantly.

With unprecedented dives into the playbook that runs her business… and candid conversations with experts, leaders, and unexpected entrepreneurs who’ve cracked the code on financial and lifestyle freedom.

Here is the show: https://www.amyporterfield.com/marketing-strategy-podcast/

And FOLLOW Amy on Instagram: @AmyPorterfield 

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Check out our FREE + VIRTUAL EVENTS! -> 

EVENTASTIC.com

GuruConference.com

DeliveredConference.com

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MASSIVE thank you to our Sponsor, Marigold!!

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Transcript
Amy Porterfield:

Foreign.

Jay Schwedelson:

Welcome to do this, not that, the podcast for marketers. You'll walk away from each episode with actionable tips you can test immediately.

You'll hear from the best minds in marketing who will share tactics, quick wins, and pitfalls to avoid. We'll also dig into life, pop culture, and the chaos that is our everyday. I'm Jay Schwedelson. Let's do this, not that.

We are back for do this, not that podcast presented by Marigold. And today is Amy Porterfield Day. What does that even mean? Listen, when you have Amy Porterfield on your show, it's a national holiday.

It should be a national holiday. And if you don't know who Amy is, I don't know who you are, because she is incredible.

She's literally the number one expert in the world for digital course creation. And she's had over 90,000 students. That is like six football teams. That's wild. Okay. When she started business, she started from zero.

She built it up to do over $100 million in revenue. Okay. And her podcast, which is easily my favorite podcast, has had over 60 million downloads. Like, what type of number is that now?

And she's like, why are you saying this? Because it's true. If you said, Jay, you could have anybody on the show. Anybody you want. I'm serious. Any celebrity, anybody. It would be Amy.

Instant what I would say. No doubt. I am an absolute super fan. Amy, I am so happy to have you on the show. Thanks for being here.

Amy Porterfield:

Okay, first of all, you give the best intros ever. And also, you're not a super fan. We are friends now.

Now we talk about how great your hair is, where your kids are going to school, what your wife does, which is one of the coolest professions ever. I wish she was my wife. That sounds weird. I know I have a husband. But we are true friends now, and I'm so honored to be here.

Jay Schwedelson:

I thank you. I appreciate all of that. And I'm not going to do we normally do on these shows where what's the story of your life? What's the meaning of life?

I want to get into the weeds because you got a lot of good information to share. And what I want to get into right off the bat is webinars.

Okay, do tell me, because there's a lot of people out there that think webinars, they're boring. They're terrible. I hate webinars. They don't work. Why would anybody even think about using a webinar? But you are on team One webinar.

What is it why do you like webinars? Do they actually work?

Amy Porterfield:

Okay, so the reason I love webinars so much is because of how much value you get to give before you ever ask for anything in return. So over a 60 to 90 minute period, you are giving immense value.

You are increasing your trust, your engagement with your audience and you're teaching them something new where they walk away with a new idea, new perspective, new strategy, whatever it might be. So I love everything about webinars. But I will tell you, Jay, webinars have changed.

I've been in this world for 16 years and I've been teaching them just as long. And over the last probably two years, I've seen a really big shift. So I'm going to tell you something that I haven't really talked about a lot.

And I think that webinars alone are not working as well as they have now. There's a caveat.

If you are brand new and you've never done a webinar before, I want you to start out with just solo webinars, meaning I'm going to tell you a strategy. I don't want you to do this strategy unless you've already done a few webinars on your own.

But once you graduate from that, I really do believe that adding a webinar to an experience is what's working. So I'll get to the punchline first. I converted on a webinar at over 25% multiple times now, which the average is between like 8 and 10%.

If you hit 10%, you're doing pretty good. I converted at 25% multiple times because I have moved my webinars into a bootcamp. So can I take a moment and talk about bootcamps?

Jay Schwedelson:

Yes. I'm all in.

Amy Porterfield:

So this is how you increase your conversions and your show up rates and your engagement with webinars. So what I started to do a few years back is I started to create a bootcamp.

A bootcamp is essentially, let's say a five day experience where people sign up, maybe pay, we'll talk about free and paid in a moment. They sign up for your bootcamp, they get in with the promise of learning something new over a period of time.

And so we do a welcome party, then we do three days of live training, anywhere from 30 minutes to 45 minutes, teaching on a very specific topic. They are walking away from each of those trainings with something really valuable.

You are increasing the engagement of your bootcamp, maybe in a Facebook group or some kind of community. You're getting the conversations going, maybe doing some prizes. I mean, in pure J style, you make it really, really, really fun.

And then you do your webinar. So it's a welcome party. One, two, three days of training and then your webinar. When you do it that way, your show up rate skyrockets.

The engagement on the webinar is incredible and it converts like gangbusters because they trust you, they know you, they can be on this journey with you now because they know you're going to take care of them. And the way to increase the conversion is to make it paid. So I get the question. Well, do you have a paid bootcamp? A free bootcamp. You do it for free.

You'll get a lot more people in. You do it for paid. These are people that are paying attention and are more likely to buy.

So I converted at 5% in the total boot camp when I did it for free. And then I converted at 25% in the total bootcamp when I did it for paid.

Jay Schwedelson:

So only the people who go to the bootcamp can go to the webinar?

Amy Porterfield:

Yes, that's the cool thing. So you have to be in the boot camp to actually experience the webinar. Now. I'm glad you asked that question.

I still still invite my general audience who did not sign up for the bootcamp. Once the boot camp closes and it gets started, I then start promoting to anyone who didn't join the bootcamp. I invite them just to the webinar.

That webinar will convert lower, but it's still a lot of people coming in. So I offer both. But I love the bootcamp into the webinar the best.

Jay Schwedelson:

First of all, that's an amazing strategy. I'm totally stealing that. Please let me ask you, are you saying then webinar on its own? Okay, Amy's so great, but I can't do a bootcamp.

I still think about this webinar, but should I not do a webinar as a standalone thing anymore? Is that like a dead thing?

Amy Porterfield:

It's not dead. So I have a good friend, Jenna Kutcher, and Jenna Kutcher kills it with just doing three or four live webinars in, let's say, a week and a half.

Well, actually she doesn't even do that much. Maybe three webinars in about a week's time. And so she still does really, really well. They're not dead.

It's just harder to get people to show up and harder to get them convert on single webinars. But I still think before you move into a boot camp strategy, you gotta do a few webinars and get them under your belt.

They still will convert, but then move up to a bigger strategy. So they still very much work. Again, I still do them alone, even without boot camps, but I enjoy the bootcamp experience so much more.

Jay Schwedelson:

So you, you're one of the unicorns out there that's actually charging for webinars. I mean, does that actually work?

Amy Porterfield:

Okay, so to be clear, I don't charge for the webinar. So when I do them for my general audience after the bootcamp closes and they didn't sign up for the bootcamp, those webinars are free.

But I do charge for my bootcamp and. But here's. I'm so glad you asked. It's only $37. $37 for the bootcamp. They get three days of live training.

They get a bonus training, which is the webinar, and they get PDFs and prizes and all the good stuff I talked about. So it's absolutely worth the $37.

Jay Schwedelson:

But.

Amy Porterfield:

But that's the difference. I've done it both ways and I enjoy the paid more, not because of the money, but because of the engagement.

Jay Schwedelson:

So let's talk about engagement for a second.

I think the biggest problem that people have with webinars, I think that we've all turned webinars into like Netflix, like, oh, I'm going to sign up for it. I'm not actually going to go because I'm going to get the on demand link and it's like it's always on whatever. Are you seeing good?

Put aside converting after the fact.

Amy Porterfield:

Yes.

Jay Schwedelson:

Are you seeing good show up rates? Are there tricks to getting people to actually show up live?

Amy Porterfield:

Yes, absolutely. And you have to put these strategies into place. Whether they're the strategies, I'm going to share other strategies. You can't skimp on this part.

So whether you're in a bootcamp or not, let's just say you're not doing the bootcamp, you're doing the solo webinars. Number one, I really do believe that you need to use text messaging. And so we have tried this and different ways.

You kind of got to get used to what's going to work best for you. But the text messaging before the webinar is what is very powerful.

And it might be just sending them quick little tips, but before, but the morning of, they get a text message, okay, today's the day. Set your timer, you're going to get busy, you're going to forget.

Set Your timer and then 30 minutes before, 10 minutes before, once it starts, it makes a huge difference. So text messaging to your webinar registrants goes a long way. Of course you're going to get their phone number when they opt in for your webinar.

The second thing that we always do is a show up live bonus.

So in the marketing, before they ever even sign up for the webinar, we, we're saying, and if you show up live, you get this really cool bonus, something I know that they're going to love that's related to the topic I'm teaching. Usually a PDF, a short video, a short audio, but they are the only ones that get it. So once you show up live, the minute you do this bonus is yours.

And we put it at the top of the chat so everyone that's there live, they can grab it. So they're not asking about it. When I'm trying to do my webinar, that makes a huge difference. Also reminder ads to registrants.

So running any kind of paid ads to just your webinar registrants the day of that they see it the morning of the afternoon of before you go live. So very valuable. Hey, your webinar today is at X time. I'll see you there. And go check your email for the link, that kind of thing.

And then of course, email marketing, I mean I'm talking to the king of email marketing. We definitely do a lot of email reminders.

And if you can include some kind of personalization or just even a video in the email, like a bombbomb video, it's a tool we use. I love a video to remind them. Here's what you're going to learn. Here's why you can't. You have to show up live. And whatever else you want to add.

Jay Schwedelson:

It is absolute gold that you just talked about, you know, giving that bonus content. We call it a 10 to receive and we do with everything. And it drives, it brings everybody there. There has to be a reason to go there has to be fomo.

So you can't get that content piece, whatever you're giving out, unless you attend live. Like you can't watch on demand and then get that bonus thing. You have to be there. Is that the play?

Amy Porterfield:

That's absolutely the play.

And you'll miss the play if you don't use it in your marketing a bunch reminding them, that's one thing we didn't do enough last time or the first time we did it. And we're like, what did we miss? We Realized we didn't even get them excited for it. Also, here's one advanced strategy.

Now, remember, I've been doing webinars for 16 years and I have a big audience. So I wouldn't do this if I was just a year or two in. But if you've been doing webinars for a while, I, I don't do replays. Not always.

In the bootcamp, they get the replay because they're special. But for my general webinars, last year, for my biggest launch, we did not give replays. And that increased show up as well.

Because here's the cold hard truth. They say they're going to watch the replay. A tiny, tiny percent actually go watch the replay.

So when we took the replay out now, we saw more people show up live.

Jay Schwedelson:

I mean, I agree with everything you're saying. I think on demand equals no demand. I mean that is, it's just, it crushes performance. All right, I have a question that's off script about webinars.

I'm curious your opinion. I believe the word webinar itself is stained. It's gonna say it.

Amy Porterfield:

Yeah.

Jay Schwedelson:

Boring. So like, you call stuff different things. Like you, I, I see that. Like, are you, like, how do you handle that?

Amy Porterfield:

Yes. So we have stopped using the word webinar in our external marketing for many, many years now. The word we'd like to use is masterclass.

I think it's probably overused and we all need to come up with something different or new. It can't be something so weird that people don't know what you're talking about. So masterclass people know. We've called them workshops before.

That tends to be a little bit more interactive when we do so. But I stay far away from the word webinar.

It's just been used too much and people know you're what you're going to do and they know you're going to sell to them. But I think people know you're going to sell to them anyway. That doesn't matter. It's how much value you give from the get go.

Jay Schwedelson:

Yeah, I hate the word. I mean, no one wants to put a webinar on their calendar. It's like the worst.

Amy Porterfield:

It's so true. So true.

Jay Schwedelson:

So I want to do a little bit of a turn here as it turns to events. You know, pre Covid, you were doing some in person events. Then Covid hit and you took like, I don't know, like a four year pause.

Yes, right on in person events. But then I saw towards the end of Last year. Wait a minute. Amy's going and hanging out with people and doing events again?

Are you back on the in person event train?

Amy Porterfield:

I am to an extent. So I am an introvert to my core. I am not as fun and exciting as Jay.

Jay Schwedelson:

So, like, don't believe you. You say this all the time.

Amy Porterfield:

I don't believe for ask my husband, I promise. He's like, oh, my God, you can't even handle small talk. I can't do it. And. But so, Jay, have you done physical in person events?

Because you'd be incredible.

Jay Schwedelson:

I've never put a physical one on myself because it's like, I don't know, it feels like such a heavy lift. That's why I'm like, I want to hear how you do it.

Amy Porterfield:

Well, you're already crushing it with your summits and your virtual, so I don't think you need to. But I used to do really big events and I always dreaded them. They were so expensive. But then when I was there, I loved it. I'm that kind of introvert.

I hate it up to the point that I'm like, why don't I do this more? So those were incredible. Incredible.

But this time around, because maybe I'm getting a little older and I don't want to do those big, huge things anymore.

We've done smaller events, so I have a group called the Millie Club, and it's a group of 30 women in a club with me wanting to hit the million dollar mark. So I do two days of live events with them to kick off our six month club.

I have a mastermind now and I do three live events with them, all in Nashville. So I live in Nashville and I don't really love to travel that much for business anymore. So they all come to Nashville.

But I love it and it allows me to really connect with people. I did start to miss that, Jay. Really connecting with people, learning who they are, what they're about, having real relationships.

So I keep them very, very simple. We don't have lots of bells and whistles. We really just focus on the content and the connection in the community.

But we do try to wow them with, let's say, nice dinners or fun activities like during the two days. But we do keep it really simple.

Jay Schwedelson:

So tell me what is like, okay, you've done this one, you know, team building thing or whatever activity at your event and everybody loved it and we became BFFs. Give me the Amy Porterfield secret little thing to do it at an event.

Amy Porterfield:

Oh, that's good. Jay. I'm not extremely good at them. You might be, but I think. Let me think. So I've done just. I've done three now in the last year.

And so I think the thing. Well, this is so wild. This is what I mean by keep it simple. But I do have a story of what not to do.

I haven't done anything spectacular or over the top, really fun, but I've given them what they want, paying attention to what they're paying for and why they came. All they really love the most from me is my Q&As. So it's a room of get.

It's 25, 30 women that they get to ask me any question they want about how I've built my business and every mistake I've made. The connection and the behind the scenes is what they come back for. They tell me all the time and that's what they love.

And every single event, I said, what do you want more of? They want more Q and A. So that feels great to me that I found the right people that truly want to learn from me.

But let me tell you about what not to do. So my first mastermind that I did, the first event I did after that four year hiatus, the first night we all came together, no one knew each other.

So it's a high end mastermind that we work together for a year. No one has met each other yet. They come to Nashville, they're very nervous, they're very awkward, like I would be.

And I do a sit down, like two hour dinner. It was like crickets.

Jay Schwedelson:

Oh, no.

Amy Porterfield:

Oh, my God. I was mortified. I'm like, what is happening? And I got feedback after. Don't ever do that again, Amy. Don't do that to us. We didn't know each other.

We were nervous. We were out of our comfort zone. A lot of people who joined masterminds is their first time and they don't know what to expect.

I'm pretty sure most of them hated it. But if I did that on the second night, these women would have been chatty, chatty, chatty. I couldn't have shut them up. It's not.

It doesn't take that long to get people to connect with in person. Especially if you do. These are things I do to get them to connect. We do, of course, introductions, but we do small group conversations.

We break out and have discussions about different things. We have longer lunch so they can all talk to each other. We do a cocktail hour at the end of the day. Lots of just connection points.

I should have waited for the two hour sit down, like five course meal till they knew each other.

Jay Schwedelson:

Oh, my God. See, that's gold though, because I think that people are just doing the dinner and they think that's the way and that's it.

So just being able to kind of work through it. I love that. And I'm going to attend. Even though I'm not invited, I'm going to attend because I'm breaking in. I'm going to be the guy.

Amy Porterfield:

Okay. I want you to be a guest speaker. Would you ever consider it?

Jay Schwedelson:

Of course I'll be there.

Amy Porterfield:

You're on my list.

Jay Schwedelson:

Oh, nice. All right, I want to do a hard turn now. I want to talk about your podcast because I don't understand something.

You're the one who inspired me to do this podcast. Okay? You've been doing it for a long time. You've had. You've done over 700 episodes. That gives me such anxiety, I can't even begin to tell you.

And 60 million downloads of things like top of the charts. And then you announce on your podcast, hey, everybody, I'm changing my podcast.

Instead of online Marketing Made Easy, I'm going to be rolling out the Amy Porterfield show. And I need to understand why you're crushing it. What was the reason? What was the thought process? What do we have to look forward to?

Amy Porterfield:

Well, when you ask me that way, it makes me very nervous, Jay. I hope I didn't make a mistake. It literally comes out the day we're filming this. It comes out next week.

ght. When I think about that,:

I remember, Jay, the first time I did my very first episode, I did a keynote and I had it on my computer and I clicked a button and read everything on each of the slides as a podcast episode. That's episode number one. I wouldn't go back and listen to it. It and oh, and true fashion for you, it was about list building. So you gotta love that.

So the why I want to why I decided to transition the podcast.

ifferent person than I was in:

The rapid growth of what we can do in online businesses is incredible. And you're going to quickly. And I have. And so. But also my audience has.

So I have been known for teaching newbies from the start how to start an email list, not how to advance an email list, how to start a digital course from scratch versus how to optimize it. So that's what my podcast was. Online marketing made easy.

It was very much for people getting started, but then started to evolve a little bit beyond that. But I'm ready for a higher level conversation. I'm ready to get deeper into topics that just with a title like that kind of puts me in a box.

So I want to bring guests on that. You might not expect that I could really expand in entrepreneurship in online marketing beyond just the basics of what to do.

And so I just thought I need a new way to let people know we're going to have new conversations. The great thing, though is I kept it in the same feed.

So don't you think I'm letting go of those 60 million downloads or this beautiful audience that I have?

And so it's just in the same feed, branded new, new conversations, new energy, but a lot of the same stuff that I'm known for and what has gotten me to where I am today.

Jay Schwedelson:

Well, I have to tell you, I'm very excited about the new show. Not just because I'm staring at you right now. It'd be awkward if I didn't say that.

Amy Porterfield:

Right?

Jay Schwedelson:

I'm genuinely excited about it because I love all the marketing tips and you share such tactical stuff on your show, your current show, and I love that. But I think my favorite episodes are where the way that you always describe it, I love this, is that you come on and you'll share scars, right?

Things will happen in your life and you wait until you kind of figured them out. They're not like open wounds.

And then you come on the show and say, listen, this happened and I'm going to share with you how I work through whatever. And you're sharing like legit real life stuff. And it could be about anxiety, it could be about relationships.

I mean, like, and I'm always like, I cannot believe she's doing this episode. So here's the thing I don't understand, and this is for real because I have a hard time with this. You're very successful, okay?

You don't need, like when celebrities, I mean, not that you're like, you know, up there with Lady Gaga, but, you know, in my mind, you're getting up there, right? When celebrities get famous, they start to share less and less and less. And now you've had success. Why are. Why you're sharing more like, I love it.

I'm all in. But. But why?

Amy Porterfield:

So I have to tell you, it hasn't been easy. So I'm the kind of girl that if I just had to talk about business all day on. On the platforms and on my podcast, I'd be most comfortable.

It's very uncomfortable sharing my depression, my anxiety, all the mistakes I've made. But here's the thing. I believe that, and I learned this from a woman in my mastermind, and I believe that we are in a trust recession.

I think it's really hard right now to earn people's trust with AI and with all the different noise online and the media telling us a million different things, people are not as trusting as they were even five years ago. And so because of that, I know I have to let people in, behind or beyond. Just, I can teach you how to do a webinar.

They want to know, well, really, who are you? Can I trust you? Are you a woman of integrity? Will you share the good, bad, and ugly? Because if you're only sharing the good, something's wrong.

And I learned that because I know who I follow. I want to know all the things.

Like, when we were talking about your family and your wife before we came on, I was like, oh, this is the stuff I live for. I like to know it. And so it just brings people closer. And I finally realized I love when other people do it. Why am I not doing it?

So I don't do it tons and tons. It's not like a big fake. Like, let me tell you about my sob story.

It's just when it fits into what I'm teaching, I will absolutely let people in, more so than I ever have before.

Jay Schwedelson:

You know, first of all, the phrase trust recession is. Is incredible. And it makes you. Not that you're not believable, but it makes you more believable.

Like, I want to listen to you more on the regular marketing stuff because I feel so connected to you about the. About the life stuff. But, like, do you sit around and do you have, like, a filter on yourself? Like, okay, I can't share that. That's, like, crazy.

And then you're like, wait a minute. That's actually what I should share, because it is so, like, whoa, Like. Like, do you have, like, a meeting with yourself?

Because how do you figure out?

Amy Porterfield:

Absolutely. I have moments that I think I shouldn't say that. Like, I've stopped the recording, and I say, that's cringy or that's too much or that's crazy.

And then I usually think, like, I did a podcast episode the other day, and I told this story how there was this guy in line, and he was telling me about this cool thing and then told me I probably couldn't afford it and I should probably look for another option. The guy didn't even know me. He could afford it, but I probably couldn't. And I said to him, well, good thing I'm rich. And he was appalled.

And I told this story in longer, of course. But that's cringy that I literally told someone, well, good thing I'm rich.

But I wanted my audience to embrace making money in a different way and be more open about talking about it. So I didn't want to tell someone that I said that, but I did tell them all I said that because it proves a point.

So when I'm a little uncomfortable, that's when I know I probably should share it.

Jay Schwedelson:

See, I subscribe that, you know, we have to all get comfortable being uncomfortable. I mean, that is. That's where it's at.

I mean, even I heard you talk about something the other day about how you believe the future of content and the future of podcasting, which I agree with, is video. And you're very like. You call yourself an introvert. I think that's garbage. I don't believe you.

But that you don't actually love doing the video stuff, but you're doing it because you have to, Right? Because that's the only way to do it.

Amy Porterfield:

Yes. It's so true. And so, like, I. If you told me we never, like, why does every podcast need to be videoed now? Why? Back in the day, Jay, it was so good.

You never had to worry about. And as a woman, you got to worry about how you look, and so you just do. And so not all of us can have your hair. Okay. So it takes us a little longer.

Jay Schwedelson:

So good hair, too.

Amy Porterfield:

I don't love it, but I. I just embrace it.

And there's, you know, as an entrepreneur or anyone building a business or building anything, there's a lot of stuff we don't want to do, but there's so much stuff that is so rewarding when we do, and it's worth it, and that's kind of the lens I look through.

Jay Schwedelson:

Totally. I'm so on board with all that. All right, I want to. One more hard turn here, which Is you. I've twisted your arm. And you have agreed. Okay.

To speak at our new event. It's this virtual event. It is free. It is called Eventastic.

It's going to be the world's largest event about all things events, webinars, in person events, virtual events, you name it. And you're speaking there to share all the stuff about all this event stuff. First of all, are you excited about this?

Amy Porterfield:

Okay. So excited. Like, I have never spoken at an event like this. And so also, I know your events are very exciting. Have you already announced the theme?

I don't know who's even speaking there. Like, I need some details.

Jay Schwedelson:

Okay. So, by the way, this is the first anybody's hearing that you're speaking at this event. So this is a big announcement that we have you.

This is a huge gap. But we haven't haven't told you, so I want to get your reaction.

We wanted to find a celebrity, like a real celebrity to be our keynote, but a celebrity that knew events. And so we've locked in the celebrity. And our keynote is going to be Andy Cohen.

Amy Porterfield:

Stop it. You're lying. Stop it. I am obsessed with Bravo.

Jay Schwedelson:

I know. That's why I didn't want to tell you. So before Amy and I went on, I go, do you know the keynote of Fantastic is? She goes, no.

I go, cool, we're going to do it on the episode.

Amy Porterfield:

I feel like my cheeks are getting red. I'm really excited. Like, I feel like I'm going to be in the same room with him, though. I know I'm not. Hello, Real Housewives.

One of my most favorite, favorite series ever. What? How did you get Andy, do you know? Oh, my God, I hope he's not drinking on the show.

Jay Schwedelson:

You know, he loves drinking Shotsky with him. Would you. We. We gotta make that happen, please.

Amy Porterfield:

Why aren't your events in person?

Jay Schwedelson:

I know, right? So no. So you're saying what celebrity does anything to do with events? And we're like, oh, he has Bravo Con.

Which, by the way, I want to go to Bravo Con.

Amy Porterfield:

Same. Let's go together.

Jay Schwedelson:

Yeah, 100%. And so he was like, yeah, I'm all in. Because it's an event about events, and I love events. So we are so amped up to have Andy Cohen and you.

Those are the only two speakers we've announced so far.

Amy Porterfield:

Okay. That is so cool. Oh, my gosh, Jay, you get the best speakers. Oh, that's so cool.

Jay Schwedelson:

That's cool.

All right, so everybody's got a red shirt of Ventastic.com, but more important than that, you must listen to Amy's new show, the Amy Porterfield Show. I. I am so amped up about this. I cannot wait. What else? Everyone should go to amyporterfield.com anything else people should do? What should they do?

Amy Porterfield:

No, I just so appreciate you shouting out the new show. I'm really excited about it. So thank you. And Jay, it's always a pleasure to be on this show. I have so much fun and I cannot wait for the event.

Jay Schwedelson:

Thank you. Well, you're the best. Can't wait to talk to you soon. Appreciate you being here. See you soon. You did it. You made it to the end. Nice.

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