Stop posting ‘how to’ videos.
Start posting ‘how I’ videos.
Example:
‘How I signed 3 clients in 2 weeks with ONE video.’
Stories sell.
Tutorials don’t.
↓ Steal this script:
I think the easiest and the most meaningful way to stay consistent on social media is sharing what you simply WANT to share not what you think will get views.
@madsf88 the best investment imo is sharing your journey online, it's the creator era, as AI takes over everything, only humans with followers will make money.
Can I be honest for a sec?
Scaling an agency isn't a straight line up.
Some months you feel like a genius. Some months you check your bank account and wonder if you should just go get a job.
I’ve got this goal pinned on my wall: $12k/mo liquid. Dubai.
Every video I edit, every script I write, every client call I take is a brick in that road.
It’s easy to look at the "gurus" making $100k/mo and feel behind. But they were exactly where I am right now. They just didn't quit when it got boring.
If you’re in the messy middle right now, where the work is hard but the payoff hasn't fully hit yet...
Just keep stacking bricks. God doesn't give you the dream without giving you the ability to achieve it.
We move.
Hot take: The "YouTube is saturated" crowd is just lazy.
It’s not saturated with good content. It’s saturated with boring, copy-paste guru advice and AI voiceovers.
Be human. Be helpful. The bar is actually on the floor right now.
in this legendary video, Alex Hormozi ranked every social platform based on one thing:
Which ones actually make you money.
He didn’t rank them by views, virality, or followers.
He ranked them by:
• who’s on the platform (income + buying power)
• how fast you can grow
• how deep people consume your content
• how well the platform converts
• and how much actual traffic + revenue it generated for him
After breaking down YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn, X, Facebook, podcasts, and email…
He put YouTube and Instagram in S-tier.
Why?
Because both drive huge traffic for him
(YouTube = highest-quality leads, IG = highest volume).
But here’s the part everyone missed:
Hormozi is ranking platforms for his business model —
not yours.
For him, omnichannel + extreme volume makes sense:
YouTube → Attention
Instagram → Traffic
LinkedIn → Credibility
Email → Conversions
Podcasts → Depth
Books → Distribution
But if you’re a coach, agency owner, consultant, or anyone selling a high-ticket service…
You don’t need seven platforms.
You don’t need to be everywhere.
You need one place where people spend enough time with you to trust you.
And that’s why YouTube isn’t just S-tier —
it’s S-tier alone.
• 89% of $100K+ earners use YouTube
• 8.5 min avg watch time
• 60% of Hormozi’s high-ticket applications originate from YouTube
• 3–4× higher conversion than every other platform
Instagram gives you impressions.
TikTok gives you reach.
LinkedIn gives you status.
Only YouTube gives you the time needed to turn strangers into buyers.
That’s why I believe Hormozi’s ranking is right…
but incomplete.
If you sell transformation, expertise, coaching, or a service with real depth,
YouTube isn’t one of your platforms.
It is the platform.
It's crazy to me that people are still burning hours on discovery calls with people who aren't ready to buy.
What if they showed up already pre-sold?
That's what one strategic YouTube video does.
It handles the entire "convincing" part before they ever book.
They watch you solve their problem for 15 minutes.
They see how you think.
They decide you're their person.
The sales call becomes a formality.
That's the every day reality for our clients and they're < 1000 subscribers.