Avsnitt

  • Book a call with John: ⁠https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440⁠



    Casey loaded a real job posting into ChatGPT and told it to act like the CEO interviewing John, without revealing who they were. John had two goals: figure out who he's talking to, and get the job. The company turned out to be Beast Industries.



    In this episode, John walks through the exact tactics he used: refusing to enter the interviewer's frame, mirroring from Never Split the Difference, asking more questions than he answered, and diagnosing the problem the founder has been wrestling with in the shower. The big risk: telling Jimmy that the biggest mistake he could make is becoming Jimmy the businessman instead of Jimmy the YouTuber. Most hires fail because the person hiring can't say what success looks like. Job interviews are sales calls. Treat them that way.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - The challenge: get a job from a mystery famous CEO

    01:06 - Why your job in any interview is to be memorable

    03:12 - Refusing vague questions and forcing clarity

    05:44 - The mirroring technique from Never Split the Difference

    20:36 - Spotting the clues that point to Mr. Beast

    27:06 - Why asking more questions than you answer builds trust

    36:09 - The risky bet: diagnose the founder's shower problem

    40:33 - Why Jimmy the businessman is hurting Jimmy the YouTuber

    44:55 - The real reason most new hires fail

    48:46 - The final score and where John tanked



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    ⁠https://www.attentive.com/⁠

    ⁠https://fuego.io/⁠

    ⁠https://www.socialsnowball.io/⁠

    ⁠https://redo.com/⁠



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOSH SUGGS:

    ⁠https://www.streettalk.com/⁠

    ⁠https://x.com/joshsuggss⁠

    ⁠https://www.instagram.com/joshsuggss/⁠

    ⁠https://www.instagram.com/streettalk/⁠



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/⁠

    ⁠https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle⁠



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :

    ⁠https://szaniewski.com/⁠

    ⁠https://www.instagram.com/theszef/⁠

    ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/



    This episode was produced by ⁠Podcast Boutique

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most AI projects in e-commerce are shiny object syndrome. The dream of the one-person, one-billion-dollar company is real, but it probably isn't your company. Meanwhile, 50% of Americans are now more concerned than excited about AI, and customers can spot AI content from a mile away.



    In this solo episode, John walks through six reasons you probably shouldn't use AI in your business, then flips it and shows exactly how he uses it to make money without wrecking the brand. The framework: out-of-the-box tools first, then human in the loop, then human on the loop. Avoid the fully autonomous dream. The biggest unlock isn't replacing your team. It's making sure your day-to-day execution team isn't the one tasked with figuring AI out.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - The truth about implementing AI in your business

    01:16 - Six reasons not to use AI (people genuinely don't like it)

    07:18 - Why AI projects become the worst shiny object

    09:39 - The one-person billion-dollar company isn't yours

    13:04 - Why a human has to be accountable when things go wrong

    20:26 - Human opinion is the scarce resource in the age of AI

    30:29 - Why AI is still worth using anyway

    44:00 - The Jones Road case study: 25% lift in profit per visitor

    49:38 - Why your execution team shouldn't be your AI team

    53:09 - Human in the loop vs on the loop vs out of the loop



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:

    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/





    This episode was produced by Podcast Boutique

  • Saknas det avsnitt?

    Klicka här för att uppdatera flödet manuellt.

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most founders dabble in all four marketing channels and wonder why they're stuck under $2M. There are only four channels that get an e-commerce brand from zero to $2M. Pick one and ride it all the way before you think about a second.



    In this solo episode, John walks through the framework live with Casey, mapping every brand into one of four buckets based on what you have (time or money) and what your product is (differentiated or not). He covers real examples across SSDs, Jacklings chili, bandages, and Neurogum, then closes with the 100-day rule: commit hard, or move on.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Why dabbling in four channels keeps you stuck

    01:43 - The only four channels that get you to $2M

    02:00 - The matrix: time vs money, differentiated vs not

    03:39 - Time and a non-differentiated product: TikTok Shop influencers

    12:18 - Money and a differentiated product: Meta ads

    16:24 - Money and a non-differentiated product: Google ads

    20:15 - Time and a differentiated product: organic content on TikTok

    22:55 - Why now is the golden window for organic

    30:30 - The fashion exception: when clothing is differentiated and when it isn't

    36:38 - The 100-day rule: commit hard or move on



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:

    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most of what you see people doing with AI online doesn't make them money. It just looks cool. In this episode, John and Bart show the AI workflows they actually use across Dad Gang and Solus Bands - the ones that ship emails, build product pages, find collabs, and surface breakthrough ad ideas.



    Bart designs full Dad Gang launch emails in Manus in about 22 minutes of real time with two minutes of focused attention, then builds the matching PDP and homepage banner from the same project. John walks through his Banger Builder skill that feeds creative humans information in stages so the breakthrough idea actually shows up, and a 10-minute Claude app called Creator Scout that filters for comedians and collab partners by niche, follower count, and follower overlap. The take: don't use AI to generate the work. Use it to prompt the humans who can.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Why most AI demos don't make you any money

    02:25 - Dad Gang's lean team and what AI actually unlocks

    03:06 - Designing a launch email in Manus in 22 minutes

    08:00 - Why multitasking finally works now

    16:29 - Building project instructions over time instead of upfront

    19:29 - The Banger Builder: using AI to prompt creative humans

    22:12 - Why AI won't generate your banger but can set it up

    26:28 - Avatars, pain vs moment buying, and format mapping

    46:29 - Building a full PDP in Manus, pasting it into Gem Pages

    51:34 - Spinning a homepage banner from the same project

    55:36 - Why Claude wins for interactive MVPs

    56:36 - Creator Scout: a 10-minute app to find collab partners

    58:36 - The Dad Gang collab play using follower overlap

    65:39 - Automating influencer seeding with computer use



    Learn more about our sponsors:



    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:



    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    You're one banger ad away from changing your business. Under $2M, it's almost always one creative that resets the trajectory of a brand. The problem is the system every DTC brand builds for paid social is built for more, not better. More UGC, more creators, more volume. That works until it doesn't.



    In this episode, John builds a real ad from scratch with comedian Kyle Reho for Dad Gang. Brand brief to customer avatars to concepts to a full mockumentary script. The process surfaces five or six low-lift ideas and one bigger swing worth shooting, all in about 40 minutes. The takeaway: you don't need the agency that made the Purple Mattress ads. You need one funny person, $100 to $200 an hour, and a brief that feeds them information in stages instead of all at once.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Why one banger ad is worth more than 100 UGC pieces

    01:24 - Why more volume stops working

    02:38 - Building an ad live for Dad Gang

    03:00 - Starting with brand ethos, not the product

    10:43 - How customer avatars actually unlock ideas

    17:08 - The still-cool-dad angle and where it leads

    20:11 - Reframing dad as a league you want to play in

    23:13 - The jealous-wife skit concept

    27:24 - Picking the right avatar with pain vs moment buying

    34:29 - Choosing the format: skits, pod clips, green screen, reactions

    37:31 - Building the mockumentary script beat by beat

    50:08 - The hat as a uniform - landing the punchline

    55:10 - How to actually run this with comedians for $100 to $200 an hour



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:

    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most ecommerce founders try to build a brand by running better ads to a product page. They obsess over conversion metrics while ignoring the thing that actually makes a brand stick: a story consumers connect to and repeat back to each other.



    In this episode, NJ Falk, managing partner at Athletic Propulsion Labs (APL), breaks down the six or seven story threads APL uses across every product launch, campaign, and piece of content. From the NBA ban that became the foundation of the brand, to designing sensory language instead of spec sheets, NJ explains why most ecommerce brands hit a scale ceiling and what it actually takes to build a brand customers love saying out loud.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - How APL turned an NBA ban into their brand foundation

    01:00 - The origin of Athletic Propulsion Labs and the Concept One

    03:00 - Never waste a crisis: turning a ban into performance credibility

    06:00 - The six story threads APL uses for every product launch

    09:00 - Why specs do not sell and sensory language does

    11:00 - The Japan pancake trip that inspired a midsole

    13:00 - Tongue-in-cheek tech stories like Run Naked

    18:00 - How to keep your founder story fresh after telling it 100 times

    22:00 - Gym to street to life and the versatility thread

    26:00 - Social proof, awards, and editorial validation as a story bucket

    30:00 - Should you build the story first or the product first

    42:00 - Aspirational identity as the thread in everything you make

    46:00 - A simple T-chart framework for brand storytelling

    53:00 - How to expand into a new sport or category authentically

    01:03:00 - Why brands hit a scale ceiling without a real brand



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:

    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most ecommerce brands treat email like its own revenue channel. They obsess over campaign metrics while missing the bigger opportunity — using retention to lower acquisition costs, improve customer experience, and increase lifetime value.



    In this episode, Sammy Tran breaks down what actually drives growth for ecommerce brands today. From subscriptions and retention marketing to AI-generated content and owned audiences, Sammy explains why brands focused only on short-term revenue are falling behind — and what smart operators are doing differently.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Why most ecommerce brands use email wrong

    06:24 - Landing pages, pop-ups, and conversion strategy

    07:00 - Why ecommerce testing gets complicated fast

    14:43 - The reality of running a marketing agency1

    5:07 - Agency incentives vs effective marketing

    28:44 - Why retention revenue fuels growth

    31:51 - Building better subscription experiences

    32:05 - Loyalty systems and retention tools

    39:51 - Why brands need audiences they own

    40:05 - The rise of owned marketing channels

    01:11:37 - Using customer feedback to improve products

    01:11:50 - Finding patterns in customer responses

    01:19:10 - AI-generated content becoming the norm

    01:19:18 - Why human creativity will stand out more

    01:21:36 - Final thoughts and closing remarks



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/https://fuego.io/https://www.socialsnowball.io/https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:

    https://scalable.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/

    https://www.youtube.com/@RyanDeissOfficial



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART:

    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Wondering why you're more buried in work than you were a year and a million dollars ago?



    You hired helpers. Not operators.



    Ryan Deiss founded DigitalMarketer.com, trained 120,000 marketers, and now runs 17 companies doing $250M+ a year. In this episode, he walks through how he'd actually scale any brand from $1M to $30M+ — from the hire that unlocks scale to the three engines that power e-commerce businesses.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Introduction

    00:48 - Does EOS work in e-commerce?

    08:13 - The worst stage of any business

    09:09 - 3 engines every e-com brand runs on

    21:42 - Mapping your business for scale

    26:01 - Scaling without losing time with your family

    36:00 - Why founders never feel like they’re making enough

    40:50 - Identity shifts as you scale

    48:17 - The first role to hand off (and one you shouldn’t)

    57:23 - How to hire for an undefined role

    01:01:54 - What to focus on at each stage of growth

    01:10:37 - Should you scale, sell, or raise at $30M?

    01:17:44 - Do lead magnets work in e-commerce?



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH RYAN DEISS:



    Instagram @ryandeiss

    YouTube @ryandeissofficial

    X @ryandeiss

    Website : https://scalable.co/

    LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryandeiss/
    Free Book Get Scalable: https://www.getscalable.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :

    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Most of the e-commerce industry has written UGC off in 2026. Here’s why you shouldn’t.



    In this episode, StreetTalk founder Josh Suggs breaks down the one content format outperforming everything else in e-commerce ad accounts: street interviews. He shares where it fits in your media mix at every budget level, why the brands trying to do this in-house keep failing, and his formula that converts customers in just 40 seconds.



    If you're running paid ads in 2026 and haven't tested this yet, you're leaving revenue on the table.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Introduction

    01:17 - StreetTalk’s origin story

    07:53 - How they scaled so fast

    17:41 - The early hustle

    21:21 - Leveraging your way to success

    27:09 - The business move that failed

    33:02 - How Expo West changed the business

    34:16 - The street interview formula

    38:12 - Why street interviews convert so well

    39:55 - Making money as a StreetTalker

    42:18 - Why street interviews belong in your ad account

    43:29 - How to allocate a $5–$10K content budget

    47:42 - Why brands struggle to replicate this in-house

    50:28 - Street interview concepts for real products

    59:45 - Creating a show around your brand



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOSH SUGGS:

    https://www.streettalk.com/

    https://x.com/joshsuggss

    https://www.instagram.com/joshsuggss/

    https://www.instagram.com/streettalk/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :

    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    Stuck between $2M and $30M and asking yourself, "What are the big brands doing that I'm not?"



    Nik Sharma worked with $100M brands like True Classic, Jolie and Eight Sleep, and he knows why most brands stall before they ever get close. In this episode, he breaks down exactly what the brands that speed-run to $100M do differently and the moves you can make to get unstuck.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Introduction

    00:29 - What makes a brand reach $100M in e-commerce

    04:15 - Eight Sleep case study: how they got so big

    07:58 - Why second-time founders hit $100M faster

    12:17 - Budgeting for marketing you can’t track

    22:09 - Top vs. bottom of funnel marketing: what most brands get wrong

    24:19 - Creating effective advertorials

    29:04 - Why some successful brands stall before $100M

    43:04 - Five marketing channels that work in e-commerce

    46:15 - How to leverage AI without getting distracted

    58:53 - Shiny object syndrome and your role as founder

    01:01:19 - How to start a new brand with $50,000

    01:09:24 - The one factor that differentiates $100M brands

    01:13:31 - What most founders don’t know about scaling



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH NIK SHARMA:

    https://www.nik.co/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrniksharma/

    https://x.com/mrsharma



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :

    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    You're not an influencer. You're not famous. You started a business to sell a product. So how does a personal brand actually help you?



    In this episode, podcast growth expert Kev Michael breaks down exactly how a personal brand drives sales without turning you into a full-time content creator. You'll learn the #1 mistake e-commerce founders make when building a personal brand, the content that outperforms almost all other ads, and the paid strategy most brands are still wasting money on.



    Stay for the live workshop of real e-commerce brands to see step-by-step how to build show concepts from scratch no matter what you sell.



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Introduction

    01:44 - What most founders get wrong about “personal brand”

    07:22 - Can you build a YouTube channel or podcast with a small team?

    08:13 - The paid ad strategy that actually works

    13:20 - The ROI of podcasting and finding your show's premise

    18:45 - How to build your from scratch (a real-time case study)

    31:39 - How to stand apart from other channels33:30 - Why it's hard for some brands to find their audience

    42:35 - Workshopping the DadGang podcast

    51:51 - Do you need to publish weekly?

    59:41 - The 3 waves of podcasting ROI

    01:02:42 - When to give up or change your strategy



    Learn more about our sponsors:

    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :

    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Book a call with John: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/squeeze-page1712742970440



    In e-commerce, you're poor until you're rich. This episode is about everything that happens in between.



    Hosts John and Bart answer the real questions you want answers to: Is e-commerce right if you have a family? Do you need to out-hustle everyone? And what's actually happening when you're burned out, doing $2M in revenue, and only paying yourself $50,000?



    Topics discussed:



    00:00 - Introduction

    00:57 - Is e-commerce worth it when you have a family?

    11:38 - Why John has never launched his own e-commerce brand

    15:12 - Easier ways to make money than e-commerce

    20:19 - How much time and hustle is necessary in e-commerce?

    27:49 - The upside of e-commerce (it’s not money)

    33:21 - Burnout at $2M: why you’re not making a lot

    37:19 - How to break past the $2M threshold

    46:06 - Do you have to give up your dreams when you have kids?

    54:33 - When e-commerce feels worth the sacrifice (& how to pay yourself)



    https://www.attentive.com/

    https://fuego.io/

    https://www.socialsnowball.io/

    https://redo.com/



    🔗 CONNECT WITH JOHN:



    https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-coyle-1bb231120/

    https://www.tiktok.com/@johnjhcoyle



    🔗 CONNECT WITH BART :



    https://szaniewski.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/theszef/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/bart-szaniewski-374b1141/

  • Sorry for the bad audio, we considered not publishing, but ultimately decided the episode was value packed so we went ahead and published it.



    Try Attentive: https://www.attentive.com/

    Try Fuego: https://fuego.io/

    Download Your Free Checklist: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/pos...

    What would successful founders actually do if they lost everything tomorrow?

    In this episode, a room full of 7- and 8-figure business owners breaks down — honestly and tactically — how they would rebuild from zero if their money, skills, network, and businesses disappeared overnight. This isn’t theory. It’s real-world thinking from operators who’ve already built and scaled multiple companies.

    The conversation covers the exact skills worth learning today, how to accelerate success early in your career, and why network, reps, and timing matter more than most people realize.

    You’ll hear practical frameworks for rebuilding wealth, choosing the right opportunities, and positioning yourself to win — even starting with nothing.



    🔥 What You’ll Learn In This Episode

    ✅ The fastest path back to success if you had to start over
    ✅ Why skill acquisition beats chasing business ideas early on
    ✅ The role mentorship, jobs, and environment play in accelerating growth
    ✅ How networking creates opportunities when everything else fails
    ✅ The smartest next move after selling a business (but not retiring)
    ✅ Why consulting can be the ideal transition after an exit
    ✅ How AI and emerging technologies create new leverage today
    ✅ Modern Meta ads strategy if organic growth didn’t exist
    ✅ Dropshipping, lead generation, and validation-first business models
    ✅ The mindset shift required to rebuild momentum from zero



    💡 Key Takeaways
    • Early careers should focus on skills and reps, not status.
    • Keeping overhead low gives entrepreneurs more “shots on goal.”
    • Strong relationships often matter more than tactics when rebuilding.
    • Consulting and community-driven businesses can create clarity after exits.
    • Cultural shifts — especially AI — create massive opportunity for those willing to immerse early.

    The episode also dives into real tactical discussions around SMS marketing changes from Apple’s new messaging filters and how brands can adapt to maintain deliverability and engagement. 



    If you’re an entrepreneur, operator, creator, or aspiring founder trying to figure out your next move — this episode is packed with high-signal advice from people who’ve already done it.

    👉 Watch until the end for rapid-fire answers on business models, marketing strategies, and unconventional opportunities founders are quietly exploring today.

  • Try Attentive: https://www.attentive.com/

    Try Fuego: https://fuego.io/

    Download Your Free Checklist: https://www.thedivenewsletter.com/pos...

    You’re not out of ideas — you’re out of creative systems.

    In this episode, we break down one of the biggest bottlenecks holding brands back: scaling creative when the founder is doing everything themselves.

    From shooting ads, editing videos, and generating ideas to managing production — many founders become the constraint in their own growth. So how do you scale creative output without hiring a massive team or increasing overhead?

    We sit down to solve this problem in real time and walk through practical strategies to help founders produce more ads, unlock new angles, and build repeatable creative systems.

    You’ll learn how to turn your community into a content engine, build scalable social content formats, use AI to multiply assets, and increase output without long-term hiring commitments.

    If you run a brand, manage paid ads, or create content at scale — this episode shows how to increase creative volume without burning out.



    What You’ll Learn

    ✅ How founders accidentally become the bottleneck in creative production
    ✅ How to scale ad output without hiring full-time employees
    ✅ Why community-driven content is an unfair advantage
    ✅ How to crowdsource ideas and content from customers
    ✅ The best formats for repeatable social content
    ✅ Ways to generate 50–60 creative assets per month
    ✅ How to use AI workflows to multiply static ads into dozens of variations
    ✅ When to use freelancers vs. full-time hires
    ✅ How to build ongoing “social show” formats that drive growth
    ✅ Systems for increasing creative volume before major scaling periods (like Q4)



    Key Topics Covered
    • Scaling creative with low overhead
    • Founder-led marketing vs. team-based production
    • Community-led brand building
    • Creative ideation frameworks
    • Format-based content strategy
    • AI tools and automation workflows
    • Static ad amplification strategies
    • Creative testing and volume strategy
    • Building repeatable content engines



    Who This Episode Is For
    • DTC founders and operators
    • Performance marketers and media buyers
    • Creative strategists and editors
    • Agencies scaling ad production
    • Brands preparing to scale paid spend
    • Anyone producing ads or content at scale



    About the Show

    This podcast breaks down real growth challenges from operators, founders, and marketers — and solves them live. Each episode focuses on practical strategies for scaling brands, improving marketing systems, and increasing performance through better creative and execution.

    Subscribe for more conversations on creative strategy, DTC growth, performance marketing, and brand building.

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    What do you do when your brand is growing fast… and then suddenly hits a wall?

    In this episode, we break down a real-time business speed run where a fast-growing consumer brand faces stalled momentum caused by inventory constraints, pricing issues, and misaligned incentives.

    Instead of panic decisions—cutting spend, freezing growth, or randomly changing strategies—we walk through exactly how to reset momentum intelligently.

    You’ll learn:
    • Why most brands panic during slowdowns (and why that usually makes things worse)
    • How to think about growth when you’re supply constrained
    • The right way to pre-sell offers without blowing up trust or margins
    • How to raise prices without killing demand
    • Why “cracked offers” can secretly destroy profitability
    • How to realign teams when growth pauses
    • The difference between optimizing vs accelerating
    • How to bottle demand so you can release it later at scale
    • What to focus on when paid ads aren’t an option
    • How to create a momentum shift in as little as 20 minutes

    This conversation is especially valuable for:
    • E-commerce founders
    • Brand operators
    • Growth marketers
    • Performance marketing teams
    • Anyone scaling subscription or DTC businesses

    If you’ve ever felt stuck between wanting to grow and being unable to push harder—this episode gives you a clear mental model for what to do next.

    Watch until the end for the full breakdown of how to fix a stalled brand without panic.

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    How to Scale to $100M+ Without Breaking Your Brand

    What actually changes when a brand moves from early traction to serious scale?

    In this episode, we break down the exact questions brands start asking on the road from $0 to $100M+—the questions that separate brands that plateau from brands that keep compounding.

    We cover:
    • The exact ad channel mix we’d run when scaling toward $100M+
    • When (and how) to introduce brand spend without killing performance
    • How to scale without losing your core customers
    • Why most brands hit a ceiling even when revenue is growing
    • The real tradeoffs between performance vs brand marketing
    • How fast-growing companies think about team structure, media, and messaging

    This isn’t theory or generic marketing advice. These are real conversations happening inside 8- and 9-figure brands as they scale.

    If you’re a founder, operator, or marketer trying to grow past your current ceiling—this episode will change how you think about growth.

    🎯 Perfect for:
    • Founders scaling past 7 figures
    • Performance marketers managing large budgets
    • Operators navigating brand vs performance decisions
    • Anyone building a long-term, defensible brand

    Chapters:
    00:00 – Why scaling breaks most brands
    02:41 – The difference between growing revenue vs growing a brand
    06:05 – The exact questions brands start asking past 7 figures
    10:12 – The $100M mindset shift most founders miss
    14:28 – Performance marketing vs brand marketing (what actually changes)
    18:47 – The exact ad channel mix for scaling toward $100M+
    23:36 – When to start spending on brand (and how much is too early)
    28:14 – How brands lose their core customers while scaling
    32:09 – Scaling without killing trust, loyalty, or positioning
    36:18 – Team structure, decision-making, and growth bottlenecks
    40:41 – Final advice for founders scaling past their current ceiling
    44:12 – Subscribe :)

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    We put 20 minutes on the clock and build a $1M business from scratch for a stranger, live and on the spot.

    In this episode, the “stranger” is the host, and the product is an all-natural meal bar that combines:
    • 20g of protein
    • 100mg of caffeine
    • Sweetened with honey
    • Built for busy, high-performance people who want energy and fuel in one snack

    The problem?

    The founder tried running Meta ads, but after COGS, they were losing money.

    So in this episode, we break down exactly how we’d take this product from “friends and family sales” to a scalable brand, using a real plan focused on:
    • Organic-first growth
    • Boosting content strategically (not just “running ads”)
    • Subscription framing without killing conversions
    • Founder-led content and real-world taste test content
    • Fixing the offer so the unit economics can actually work

    If you’re building a consumer brand (especially food or supplements) and wondering how to get out of the “I’m spending money but not scaling” trap, this episode is the blueprint.

    Subscribe if you’re enjoying these breakdowns, because we’re going to keep bringing more real strategies you can apply immediately.

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    Meta ads are still working, but most brands are making them way harder than they need to be.

    In this episode of The Checkout Podcast, we go pure tactical on Meta Ads: what’s working right now, how to test creatives without blowing up your account, and why most people obsess over “structure” when the real game is decision-making and creative systems.

    We break down the real fork in the road that every brand and media buyer has to choose:

    Do you dedicate spend to every creative test?
    OR
    Do you drop new creatives into proven campaigns and let Meta pick winners?

    Whether you’re running Advantage+, scaling a brand past 7-figures, or stuck in the cycle of constantly tweaking things out of paranoia, this episode will give you a clearer framework to make decisions with confidence.



    What You’ll Learn In This Episode
    • Meta ads in 2026: what’s actually changing and what’s not
    • The two testing philosophies that control everything in your ad account
    • When testing everything will tank performance (and when it helps you scale)
    • Why most brands are overcomplicating campaign structure
    • How to know if your tactics are outdated without ruining what already works
    • How to find winning ad angles faster than ever (even if you feel stuck)
    • The 50/30/20 creative framework (internally proven → outside inspired → outside-the-box)
    • How top brands stay consistent while still finding new winners

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    Why Most Founders Fail — And How to Avoid the Same Mistakes

    In this episode, we break down why the vast majority of founders and small businesses fail—and more importantly, how to avoid becoming another statistic.

    John Coyle (VP of Marketing at Royo Bread), Nick Shackelford (Partner at Brez) and Bart (Co-Founder of Dad Gang) answer real questions submitted by listeners and share hard-earned lessons from building, scaling, and surviving multiple businesses across e-commerce, agencies, SaaS, and brand building .

    This is not surface-level motivation. It’s a deep, honest conversation about choosing the right business, building leverage, avoiding burnout, selecting co-founders, and understanding what actually fuels long-term success.



    Topics Covered in This Episode

    How do you choose the right business to start?
    We break down why most people fail before they even begin—often by choosing ideas without skills, leverage, or real-world exposure. The group explains why working for the right company or starting a “boring” business can be the smartest move early on.

    Why most founders burn out (even after they “win”)
    Burnout doesn’t always come from losing—it often comes after success. The hosts share personal burnout stories, including moments where they physically couldn’t bring themselves to work, even after major financial wins.

    The real role of passion vs. skill
    Passion alone isn’t enough. This episode explains how to pair what you care about with what you’re actually good at—and how ignoring that balance leads to frustration and failure.

    Solo founder vs. co-founder: what actually works
    We dive deep into:
    • When you should start solo
    • When a co-founder becomes necessary
    • Why complementary skills matter more than equal skills
    • How poor alignment destroys otherwise great businesses

    How to find the right co-founder
    From moral alignment and trust to lane separation and incentives, this episode outlines what healthy partnerships actually look like—and why most people rush into the wrong ones.

    Why you shouldn’t try to learn everything at once
    Trying to master fulfillment and sales and marketing at the same time is one of the fastest paths to failure. The conversation breaks down how to simplify early and build leverage instead.

    Founder motivation & infinite fuel sources
    One of the most powerful parts of the episode: the idea that burnout happens when you’re running on the wrong fuel. Learn how to identify what truly motivates you—and how to design your work around it.

    Female founders in male-dominated industries
    We tackle a tough but important question: are female founders losing deals because of gender bias? And if so, how can that be turned into a strategic advantage rather than a disadvantage?



    Who This Episode Is For
    • First-time founders trying to choose the right business
    • Agency owners stuck at six figures and feeling maxed out
    • Solo founders debating whether to bring on a partner
    • Entrepreneurs dealing with burnout, loss of motivation, or stagnation
    • Anyone trying to build a business that supports life—not consumes it



    🎧 Why You Should Watch the Full Episode

    This conversation is raw, unscripted, and grounded in real operator experience—not theory. If you’re serious about building something that lasts, this episode will help you:
    • Avoid common early-stage traps
    • Make better long-term decisions
    • Understand yourself as a founder
    • Build businesses that align with your values and energy

  • Try Attentive: https://www.attentive.com/

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    Growing fast should feel like winning.
    So why do so many founders end up more stressed, less profitable, and questioning their own decisions as revenue climbs?

    In this episode, we break down one of the most uncomfortable but critical questions founders face as they scale:

    Are you actually building a better business — or just hiring your way into chaos?

    The conversation starts with a real founder scenario:
    • Revenue is up 200% year over year
    • The company used to be profitable
    • Now it’s losing money
    • The team’s solution? Hire more people

    From there, we unpack what’s really happening beneath the surface.

    This episode covers:
    • The hidden danger of overhiring during growth
    • Why “we need more people” is often a symptom, not a solution
    • How to tell if a role is actually contributing to revenue or profit
    • The difference between scaling output vs scaling overhead
    • When losing money can make sense — and when it absolutely doesn’t
    • Why chasing top-line growth can quietly destroy founder clarity and decision-making
    • The mental and financial cost of “speedrunning” to $100M
    • How experienced operators think about stress, risk, and sustainability
    • Practical frameworks for hiring lean without stalling growth

    You’ll also hear candid takes on:
    • The myth that bigger teams automatically mean better execution
    • Why many brands hit a wall around certain revenue milestones
    • How to think about hiring when you’re not a multi-time operator
    • The difference between scaling with confidence vs scaling in survival mode

    This is not a hype episode.
    It’s a reality check for founders who are growing fast and wondering if the pressure they feel is normal—or a warning sign.

    If you’re a founder, operator, or growth lead asking yourself:
    • “Should I slow down?”
    • “Did I overhire?”
    • “Am I building something sustainable—or just expensive?”

    This episode will help you think more clearly about what comes next.