The Entrepreneur DNA

Why Authenticity, Trust, and Brand Are the New Currency in Digital Media | Bob Regular

44 min
Jan 7, 20263 months ago
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Summary

Bob Regular, a digital media pioneer, discusses how authenticity, trust, and personal branding have become critical currencies in modern digital advertising. He traces the evolution of digital media from the mid-1990s through today, emphasizing that successful brands—whether large enterprises or local businesses—must differentiate themselves through genuine human connection and vulnerability rather than generic marketing tactics.

Insights
  • Authenticity and vulnerability are now essential brand differentiators in a noise-saturated digital landscape; consumers gravitate toward transparent, relatable figures over faceless corporate entities
  • Performance marketing fundamentally changed advertising by replacing unmeasurable 'hopes and dreams' with measurable, fact-based ROI metrics that appeal to both large and small business operators
  • Personal branding and company branding are interconnected; leaders like Elon Musk and Steve Jobs demonstrate that humanizing a brand creates stronger customer loyalty than logo-based marketing alone
  • Walled gardens (Facebook, TikTok, Instagram) represent a cyclical return to AOL-style closed ecosystems, but influencer marketing within these platforms has an expiration date without underlying brand equity
  • Building a sustainable competitive moat requires defining a unique selling proposition and authentic differentiation, not just executing daily marketing tactics
Trends
Rise of influencer marketing and creator economy as primary advertising channel, though sustainability questioned without brand backingShift from brand-only messaging to performance-based brand building; major advertisers (airlines, automotive, hotels) now measure both brand lift and direct sales outcomesIncreasing consumer demand for authenticity and vulnerability in brand messaging, particularly from leadership figures and entrepreneursCyclical nature of digital platforms: return to walled gardens (TikTok Shop, Instagram Commerce) mirrors AOL model; democratization of internet previously disrupted this patternLive commerce and shoppable content (TikTok Shop, Instagram) blurring lines between content consumption and transactional behaviorPodcast growth driven by consumer appetite for authentic, unfiltered communication versus traditional media noiseLocal and regional brands increasingly leveraging digital media for measurable ROI, narrowing gap between SMB and enterprise marketing sophisticationEmphasis on founder-led branding and CEO visibility as competitive advantage in crowded markets
Topics
Digital Media Evolution (1990s-Present)Performance Marketing and ROI MeasurementBrand Authenticity and Trust EconomyPersonal Branding for EntrepreneursWalled Gardens vs. Open WebInfluencer Marketing and Creator EconomyProgrammatic Advertising and Ad NetworksContent Strategy for SMBsUnique Selling Proposition (USP) DevelopmentLocal vs. National Brand BuildingLive Commerce and Shoppable ContentVulnerability in Brand MessagingCompetitive Moat BuildingPodcast Growth and AuthenticityDigital Advertising Noise and Signal Clarity
Companies
Infolinks
Bob Regular's current company; connects advertisers with publishers across web, mobile, and CTV platforms using displ...
Google
Referenced as major player in digital advertising ecosystem and search-based performance marketing
Facebook
Cited as example of walled garden platform controlling advertiser-audience curation and native ad integration
TikTok
Discussed as modern walled garden with shoppable content features (TikTok Shop) and native advertising integration
Instagram
Referenced as walled garden platform with native advertising and CEO visibility as brand strategy example
Netflix
Used as case study of performance marketing success; provided daily signup metrics to measure advertising ROI
Blockbuster
Contrasted with Netflix as example of company that failed to adapt to digital media and performance marketing
Amazon
Referenced as e-commerce platform and alternative to walled garden shopping experiences
AOL
Discussed as historical walled garden model that collapsed due to internet democratization; compared to modern TikTok...
Yahoo
Referenced as early digital media platform and search environment for advertising
CompuServe
Mentioned as early internet service provider from mid-1990s digital media era
Warby Parker
Used as example of brand with strong equity that transcends individual influencer promotions
Tesla
Referenced as brand with strong founder-led personal branding (Elon Musk) driving customer loyalty
Apple
Discussed as brand with strong founder identity (Steve Jobs) creating customer loyalty beyond product features
People
Bob Regular
Digital media pioneer and CEO of Infolinks; discusses 25+ years of experience in digital advertising evolution
Justin Colby
Podcast host and entrepreneur; discusses personal branding strategy and authenticity in digital media
Elon Musk
Referenced as example of polarizing founder whose personal brand drives Tesla customer loyalty and brand identity
Steve Jobs
Referenced as example of founder-led personal branding creating Apple customer loyalty beyond product features
Richard Branson
Referenced as founder whose personal brand is associated with Virgin Airlines
Gary Vaynerchuk
Referenced as entrepreneur advocating for consistent digital media presence and personal branding
Quotes
"With digital, it was just facts, man. It was just straight up facts. I sent you an impression. I created a click. You got a sale. End of story. It's facts."
Bob RegularMid-episode
"There is so much noise, not only in noise coming out of your social media, noise coming out of your television and noise coming out of your device, but there's so much business noise."
Bob RegularMid-episode
"Your currency is your trust. That is your outcome. How you develop that trust, I think, is vulnerability."
Bob RegularLate episode
"It's important to mentor. It's important to be mentored. Building a business is exceptionally hard. The ingredient that's really driven the most ability to find success is persistence."
Bob RegularClosing remarks
"I think everyone, whether you're the lawn keeper or you're the big brand, I think everyone has to understand the power of the digital media."
Justin ColbyMid-episode
Full Transcript
Welcome back, the Entrepreneur DNA family in entrepreneurial world. We have a very special guest here. He's been able to revolutionize the digital media space. And what does that mean for you? Well, the same thing that you're either listening to this on or looking at right now as you're watching it is the same place he plays. He plays in the digital media space. He's revolutionized this space and he's had three eggs at doing it. So this man kind of knows what he's doing in the entrepreneurship and digital media space. Bob Regular is here. How are you, friend? I'm great, Justin. How are you? I'm doing great. I'm doing great. As you saw before we started recording, I'm running and gunning today. I love your enthusiasm. It's infectious. I love it. Well, as someone who has a personal brand and someone plays in the digital media space and runs ads and leans into social media, many people out there listening and watching this also do that. more on the voyeuristic side, but we want people to understand how you can actually take advantage of what's out there. And you are the guy that is highly sought after, has been able to kind of change the space of digital media, transform companies, keeping them on the cutting edge, that kind of thing. And so I want to lean into some of the lessons that you've learned in this, you know, multi-decade resume that you've built specifically to the digital media space. Great. So happy to share and thank you for having me on. Love the pod. And it's certainly a pleasure to be part of your infectious experience. You always have some good energy. It's a great thing. Appreciate you. Well, listen, look, I've been incredibly fortunate to be a part of an industry from the very beginning, frankly, that is probably one of the most transformative runs that any space has had. And we're currently seeing it as it reflects on AI. But I got into it in the mid-90s. And essentially, digital media was nascent, non-existent. We had dial-up. We may have had CompuServe, AOL, if you were lucky. Yahoo was getting started. You know, you go back and tell these tales and people scratch their heads and think, you know, how is that possible? That was really only 25 years ago. You know, when you think about it, that sounds like a lot of time, but that goes like a blink of an eye. And that's this whole experience for me started off really with starting a company in the early days of building websites. And that company of building websites sounds so mundane right now. But at the moment, it was like being an AI genius today. We were going around prophesying, trying to convince businesses that you should have a www.com. Like you should have them just looking at us like, why does that matter? What is that? And businesses at the time were not, and this is only 25 years ago, Justin. Businesses at the time did not believe in having a website. They did not ever believe anyone was ever going to transact with a credit card and buy things online. Like heresy. Holy cow, that's not happening. I mean, it was probably not even fathomable. No, it was not fathomable. It was like I was talking, right, a virtual reality of these folks. And so, you know, this was a moment in time in the mid-90s where it was very much the evangelical period, right? You were going around preaching that this is going to be something, not unlike the crypto people today or the AI people today, or everyone is trying to create something out of raw cloth, right? And so that's when I really entered the space and building websites was transformative at the time because you had to bring the businesses, you had to bring the content creators online. Yeah. And so a whole business got created in that. And through that journey in that business, I discovered, you know, the need to monetize these publishers, these sites, the desire, like it's not just enough to build sites with content or e-commerce or whatever. You need to monetize. Yeah. This is a lot of fun and everything, but, you know, ultimately, is there money being made? And so, you know, I kind of pivoted and joined a company basically at the very early, early stages of putting ads on the Internet. And at the time, there were very few websites to put ads on. And so what we started off doing was putting ads on downloadable software. And so as crazy as that sounds, but in the beginning, the most used thing on your on your desktop or your laptop was downloading software that was maybe it's a word processor. maybe it was a utility maybe you know you're really cool college kid and you were downloading napster or a peer-to-peer application you know not not not not pointing that is a name that brings me back wow yeah yeah there you go right so so putting ads building a an ad serving technology that was able to put ads in that downloadable software and people at the time in the late 90s early to that you were still using dial-up i mean i still have the sound dial-up embedded in my brain You know, of course, I could almost replicate it if you give me a minute. Right. Yeah. So it's a sound that none of us will forget. And so, you know, that period of time was a very exciting period because you were creating something from nothing. And you believe that you believe you were building a revolution. Right. That's going to change the way we communicate, the way we put advertising, the way we communicate with media. And so if I accelerate forward, what I would sort of, without boring everybody with all little details, is this transformative event in 2000 really shaped me in a lot of ways because we had the dot-com crash. And I went from this period from, say, 95 to 2000 where it was euphoric, not unlike, and I'm not trying to draw a parallel, but not unlike the AI euphoria of today, right? It's going to be transformed the world. And then suddenly it crashed and everybody around me had a lot of doubt. Is this really going to do anything, let alone transform the world? And advertisers pulled back, digital media as a growth industry pulled back, and there was all this hate, right? There was this hate about stock destruction, wealth destruction, BCs, right, were getting destroyed. Investors, of course, were really harmed. And so there's a lot of negativity for a long time. Then we had the 9-11 event right after. And that just, of course, piled on to the negativity as it related to doing anything related around growth. And so there's this like period, this dark period, if we call it three years, where there's a lot of doubt. like is this web thing going to be the thing or is it just going to be sort of this cute side hustle that's going on and you know at the time we i was in a business that we were hunkered down and we were you know we had we had unfortunately had to let go a lot of employees and we went and got a studio apartment and set up put up our shingle in our shop and started hunkering down building the business of performance advertising essentially and putting you know ads on websites and selling them to advertisers and figuring out the algorithms and the technologies around serving those ads and getting response. Because at the time, coming off the dot-com crash, coming off 9-11, all advertisers cared about was, if I give you a dollar, will you give me two back? That's right. Period. End of story. Right? And I remember one of my very first advertisers, just going to make you laugh, was two of them. Number one was Blockbuster. nice what did blockbuster care about am i selling in the end right getting consumers into that store and getting them to sign up more blockbuster accounts and then came netflix was am i sending out discs right netflix would literally as an advertiser give us a report every day of how many signups they had to send discs and from the ad and guess who ate blockbusters lunch and just a blockbusters lunch yeah but going back thinking back to those days netflix was far more sophisticated so obviously you know performance marketing took shape right right and i think why aside from the fact that the consumers adopted once we got broadband i think why digital media exploded so much aside from just the google and all those types of things that we know about is every other medium in history has always sold hopes and dreams that they work. Radio, TV, print, you advertise on them. You're not sure if they work, they don't work. It's hard to calculate. It's hard to measure. We come up with all these theoretical concepts about whether or not it's working. But with digital, it was just facts, man. It was just straight up facts. I sent you an impression. I created a click. You got a sale. End of story. It's facts. And advertisers and business owners love that. They're like, wow, we're going from, I have a sales rep telling me hopes and dreams, but I can't measure it, to this is facts. And that was the biggest fertilizer you can imagine, right, driving growth. And those growths happened in, of course, Google environments, you know, Yahoo back in the time environments, even AOL's environment and so on. And at the time, you know, myself and my team were building an ad network. It was called an ad network at the time. We were building an ad network and that ad network connected publishers with advertisers. And so we were creating that exchange of publishers and advertisers coming together to buy the right media, to get the right response. And so it acted as a facilitator between all the parties using technology. And so, you know, my history is building those types of facilitation ad exchange companies over the years. And we've seen insane amounts of innovation, right? When you start to ponder, like, what has happened? We've taken what was in late 90s of me calling someone like you, Justin, going, hey, can I put this ad on your website? And you taking that ad and you posting it on your website manually and then me calling you up in a week and going, is that ad still up? Could you take that down? Right. We've gone from that to mass high frequency day trading of advertising and exchanges doing trillions of requests a day across mass forms like TikTok and Facebook and the open web, programmatic open web in general. And it, there is not a, probably there's not a likelihood you'll find many people as you journey around the world that is not on their device looking at an ad experience or a content experience, right? Like it's mass penetration. I have, you know, it's interesting. I'll take it like the next layer because I'm so interested in it. I don't have any like e-commerce type product where I can go sell per se on Amazon or, well now we have this TikTok shop and these things that I interested to hear your side of this because it seems to be just such a it quite literally the new version of QVC right So you and I are of the age of QVC My mom had it on all day every day This is pre-Amazon, pre-everything. How does that play in? I'm not even talking about AI yet. We can get there. But how does that play into your world, the digital media space where quite literally someone can just be sitting here like this and shopping live. No ads needed. It's just a stream that you go. There's no ad to it. How does that play in your world? Well, so one of the things, you know, in the early days, and it's still very successful today, is a classic display ad or a classic video ad is placed on a piece of content. And that's where I play with my current company, info links where essentially we work with web publishers or mobile app publishers or even CTV publishers. And we marry the advertiser in the form of display or video or native and put the ads in the right place. What we say is the right place, the right time to get the right response. Okay. That's the nature of this current business. What you have in the Facebooks and the TikToks and the Instagrams, and frankly, even the Google environments is what we call walled gardens. OK, these are these are essentially themselves publishers that self-control their ad or e-commerce experience. And they have so many users that they they have a closed walled garden that where they curate their advertisers and they curate their audience and they bring them together. And the thing that they have been trying and doing, frankly, a really great job of over the years is trying to hide the ads from being like an ad experience and make them, the terminology is make them native. Such that they don't feel like an ad. They don't feel like an intrusive experience. They feel like a suggestion or a recommendation. Right. It's really a transactional event. Right. And it's a part of disarming the consumer to feel as though this is just a part of the experience of the content. So when you're on TikTok and you're getting an environment where you're looking at, let's make up an example. I'm like really lately in buying plants. And so if you're on there and you're looking at plants and you got a plant merchant come up and he's got the best pot ever, right? Why must I leave TikTok to go find and buy that pot at some other place? That's right. Why must I leave and go to Amazon? Why? Right. I'm already here. Yeah. Right. So why show me the ad but not show me the product? And so what they're doing is they're bridging, right, friction that used to be there to allow you to shop in the platform, in the walled garden at the moment that you have interest. And then the thing that you really are doing is you're taking your digital currency, which is your intent, and you're showing, hey, I'm interested in plants and pots and I'm transacting. Now you will forever be known as Justin, the plant guy, right? And you're going to get lots of plant ads and all derivative plant products because you've shown your intent. And so this is this is I mean, think how powerful that is compared to, you know, rewind the tape not too long ago. Right. Newspaper ads. You know, it's it's incredibly powerful. So that is what all of us in the space, you know, in particular my company and infolinks, we work on every day in the form of algorithms, in the form of the type of advertisers we bring in. coaching our advertisers to to have messages creatives and products that are interesting to the audience as well because you know if if you go back to that um you go back to that example if you really have lousy pots and you've got really really lousy creative and that's it's just you don't do a good job on that yeah it doesn't matter that you're the plant guy because you being the plant guy looking at that you know it's not very good right so who's your who's your avatar at infolinks my avatar yeah who's your clientele who are you speaking to in terms of like so so we have a great mixture of what what we term brand performance advertisers so these are advertisers that really care about their brand and they have a lot of uh they have a lot of energy they put into the brand, but they also measure the performance that happens not only for their brand lift, but do they sell things? So it could be hotels that they're trying to sell actual hotel rooms and they measure that what they said, heads, their terminology is heads and beds. And you know, you have airlines, right? They're measuring very specifically, are we selling seats? Right? So we're, we spent a million dollars with you. How many seats are we really selling as a result of that? How many searches for tickets did we get from that? It's very measurable and it's very specific. You've got car brands. Let me tell you, car brands are incredibly insightful. The car brands will come and they will measure right down to the local level how many test drives. Right. We put these ads in these locations. We spent this amount of money. How many test drives actually happened? So every major brand is advertising not only to create brand identity and brand lift, but they're getting very specific around, hey, what's the performances? What are the outcomes of this? And is this outcome mattering to me? And it's really no different than your local advertiser, probably landscaper, advertising on Google, spending 50 bucks, 100 bucks a month, trying to get more folks calling up and saying, mow my lawn. I can't imagine being much different at all. You're just talking about business KPIs. I spend a million dollars. What's my return on ad spend? I mean, it's a very basic fundamental for those that know anything about marketing. That's very fundamental. It's 101. That's right. But talk to the guys that might be the, you know, let's use again, gardeners or whatever. Like they have a company, they're online, they want to increase their revenue. Talk to them, like how do the big boys play? How do the airlines play? How do the car companies play? The guys that can spend a million dollars a month or whatever it may be. I think there's probably a lot of trickle down that is the very same thing, just different zeros. Sure, 100%. That's absolutely right. It's different zeros. The thing I can tell you, though, the big difference between local versus national is local is not very consumed with their brand, whereas national is very consumed with their brand, their brand identity, their brand messaging, their brand reputation. They're constantly trying to put seeds in your mind that they exist. They matter. And when you want to do a certain thing, whatever the thing is, they're the go to. What I find with local is because they're budget constrained, of course. They're very practical people, right? Your local landscaper is most likely actually putting plants in the ground. He's a very practical person. She's an operator. Yeah, they're an operator. And as an operator, they look at advertising in an operational way. And so they say, I'm going to spend $100. I better get $150 back right now. Yes, exactly. I don't want to hear about it coming in two weeks from now. I want it right now. If it doesn't work and I don't get a phone call right now, I'm out. That's right. And so where that limitation comes, because it's budgetary, is they struggle to build a brand for their particular company, their landscaping company, to give any sort of reputation value from their digital media. And most of their reputation value comes from word of mouth. And so if I was ever to advise, you know, this metaphorical landscape company that represents all these smaller medium sized businesses that use digital media is you will see exceptional results beyond your competitors. If you also care about brand creation and you keep on the gas because the brand creation takes a lot of time. Yeah. Is there so much freaking noise? The noise is incredible. So brand creation is, let's use TikTok as a medium, go and create endless amounts of cool videos and photos of great work you do and constantly show people, not because you're trying to sell your lawn mowing services right now, but because you do a great job, right? show folks you do a great job all the time so it starts to lodge in people's brains right that when you think about good landscaping you know justin colby's good landscaping company is amazing we should think about him right in case study it right to your point like people love to see what that what that thing the company the what they get like what do you get if i pay you to mow my lawn and if i go search you on tiktok and you have 400 videos of the freshly mowed lawn I know what I'm going to get. I'm going to just hire you. Hey, can you come do the same thing for Mylon? That's right. A hundred percent. And the other thing I would advise these companies, and I've, I've lived this too, through, through marketing is, you know, all due respect, landscaping is boring and most businesses are boring. Like most of us are passionate about our businesses because we're in it. Cause it's ours. It's our baby. It's ours. It's our baby. It's like our kids. Like when you go around bragging about your kids and most people rolled their eyes, Like I don't want to hear anymore. Right. But listen, right. They're boring, but to you, they're really valuable. You have to remember they're boring. So you need to make this content and these ads interesting. And frankly, if possible, humorous and fun. Totally. Because man, there's nothing worse than like these, you know, somebody taking their self dead seriously about being the best landscaping company, putting grass mowing. It's like, come on, man. I don't Right. And so, yeah. So I advise, you know, I advise advertisers and marketers like all the time, like, don't take yourself so seriously. Come on, like relate to the audience, relate to the audience. Let's talk brand. I'm a big, big brand advocate. Now, in my space, I'm not an airline in an auto industry. These are very big, large companies. But you're bringing up a point that I believe 99% of my audience will be able to really understand. Who owns Alaska Airlines? What's the CEO's name? Who owns Virgin Airlines? Right. The shareholders. Right. Richard Brantz. Of course. Yeah. Who owns Chevrolet? Okay. Who owns Tesla? Right. Right. So I, I, I lean into the, some of the obvious ones. Well said. Because I actually believe in our day and age, this moment, it's a trust economy. We got to get back to and people will transact with not and I want you to oppose me if you don believe this but like they also want to have a human component behind it people love elon like i i promise you my my apple phone likely does every single thing a samsung does right but i loved my boy steve jobs right and i just bought into him and to this moment even though he r.i.p i am so full commit to that, that like to this day, I'll still watch motivational videos of his Harvard speech. And you know what I mean? So let's talk about the power of a brand. Cause I think it is a, even when you are a bigger company, if you're out there listening, you're big, if you don't have a representation, I'll bring it even full circle. Instagram CEO now is being seen infinitely more on Instagram than I've ever seen him over the last seven years of being on Instagram. Why, in my opinion, in my opinion, because he's realizing the same thing I'm kind of pointing out that the face, the human component, the trust economy is needed right now. Sure. And a brand, a company that is faceless to some extent, I'm going to make the argument. I'm not the expert you are. I believe you will go further down the path longer with more success with a human component to a brand. So I agree with you 1000%. And I'm going to give some context around it. Okay, you're absolutely right on the money. Okay. What's happened as a result of the story I told, which is that we've exploded in the last 25 years, where basically digital media is everybody's life, right? There is very few that are not consuming hours of digital media every day is the amount of noise is insane and incalculable the quantity of impressions that a consumer sees in the run of a day of messages photos icons whatever whatever signal you want to say is is is in the trillions a And as a result, right, the term we use in advertising is frequency. The frequency is so high. Yeah. There's so much signal that you're really actually pointing out with personalization. You know, Elon, Steve Jobs, these are personalizations, right? Is people are dying to actually see authenticity of signal. Dying. Gosh, that resonates. And so with that need, when you are drowning in an ocean full of noise, right, looking at that one thing that gives you, to your point, trust, but at least gives you clarity, clarity, right, is something you'll grapple on to. And I think that you see that in the rise of the podcast movement. You see that, right? It's like obvious, right? You see that in the rise of the political movement. people are grappling and attaching on to authenticity and clarity of signal and voice and it's all because the quantity of noise is so insane that as humans as people right like we are we are a social species we want others right we want to be connecting one you and i right now we're connecting we're relating so i think in the form of a media world digital media and you've got a brand and you've got a company. And when you just are a logo or when you're just a sale 20% off, or when you're just a, you know, a, a physical box store, it's a very impersonal thing. It's not that you won't transact with it. It's just not special. It's a lot of still a lot of noise. So I think what you've done both with your podcast and the references you've made is you've, you've been able to personalize your signal. You brought clarity and most important you bring authenticity and that is like always going to beat out the other one that's the generic logo right that's just kind of humming along running marketing routines like 20 off this week and you know rebates and you know we've got the best tires you know with with perfect treads and right yeah you know so yeah i think you're right on the money you've, you've identified the truth, right? And I go back to what I said about the landscaper, that person needs to build brand. That's right. Because landscaping is impersonal. Who cares? I really, I do want my grass cut and I want it to look nice, but you know, that's that, those are table stakes. And so I think that's, that's where I come at it from. I would agree. And here's what I've seen in my own personal side and not sure if you follow me on my social side, but like I've become increasingly more authentic and transparent. And what that has done for me over the last call at 45, 60 days, I would never have thought complete transparency, complete authenticity plays in the same realm. Meaning I had no idea the type of feedback and engagement I would get with with more authenticity and transparency, which is where I believe more businesses should be. Right. I mean, again, the government and all these other things, but I don't want my show to get canceled. So we'll stay away from this. But, you know, listen, I think everyone, whether you're the lawn keeper or you're the big brand, I think everyone has to understand the power of the digital media. And this is where, you know, Bob and his company, I would highly encourage you to reach out to bob he's an incredible human as you guys are seeing uh and going to info links if that's something that you're you're looking for um i think everyone should have some level of a digital imprint on a very consistent basis and i don't need to be all gary v on you but yeah sure if you just think about the concept of what gary is talking about sure it could just not be more true these days. But, and what you say is absolute truth, but unfortunately, a lot of the people who run businesses that could be that face are folks that will not play well in having that brand, right? You can love Musk, but he's a polarizing figure, right? You can like or hate Trump, but nobody will argue with me that he's a polarizing figure. That's right. And so on. And you can go down the laundry list, even of his time, even jobs internally and around his sphere was a polarizing figure. A hundred percent. Right. And so, you know, a big part of building that personal brand, if you go down that road, whether it's for your brand of a United Airlines or it's your brand of a Tesla or whatever, or it's your personal brand, right? Like, you know, you have to also be relatable in a way, right, that the consumer and the audience wants to relate with you or or you're repellent. And if you're repellent, of course, is you're better off just being a logo in a generic organization that no one quite knows that you're a repellent right behind. That's right. And so, you know, I think sometimes what you get is these folks that are repellent that want to be out. And then you get these other folks that are like really perfect for it. And they're too, too, too humble and shy, right. To be out. And so you get this bipolar narcissism that goes on. Right. And, and I think it's just one of those things that a person, let's say this metaphorical landscaping company, they have to be very real with themselves. Right. How am I going to represent this brand? You know, who am I to represent the brand? and I will I do a good job or will I just be repellent and, and nobody will want to deal with me. Uh, you know, I smile cause we're bringing up landscaper. So I have an incredible landscaper here at my house. And if I'll shoot you straight, he throws himself on a camera and it's not going to go so well, it's not going to go so well. So you're, you're not wrong now. So play into certain strengths, right? I mean, you gotta have some level of like common sense about it. Um, But I'll be honest, even the storyline of authenticity can really take shape. I mean, there's someone in my space, in the real estate space, literally was in federal prison. Oh, wow. And is now one of the larger educators in our space, which you're like, how does that? He did this stuff and he went into federal prison. Yeah, but he's being authentic. He's being real. And he's going to give it to you the way you need it to be given versus the fluff and the makeup and all that kind of stuff. Right. And so, again, transparency, authenticity, you know, we can move on from the subject. I think more people really genuinely need to lean into it. And it just does. But it's the same. Listen, you don't need to be doing this podcast. Think about you. Think about Bob right this second. Does your company need you to do this right now? No, no, for sure not. But you understand what it could possibly do. Does it gain Bob more attention? Does it gain info links more, uh, uh, you know, awareness a hundred percent for sure. And it takes one person listening to this part one whose friend is, you know, cause I know your clientele typically is a, is a bigger brand, bigger business, but who owns a, you know, 200 store franchise of a restaurant that might say, Oh my God, I heard this guy, Bob on Justin's podcast, go reach out to him. He gave the info. Does that make sense? The thing that, you know, we take away from this authenticity portion of it, right? It's about defining and advertising, let's say digital media and building brands on behalf of entrepreneurs. You know, I also think it's a very important ingredient into why do you have a successful business or not? And, you know, as you have all these entrepreneurs listening, I think one of the things that I've taken away is not only when you, as an advertiser, build a brand, you need to bring that authenticity in order to be successful. But I think how you build your business always does better when you take that authenticity and create something really unique that's differentiated. You know, we have these fancy terms, as you know, in entrepreneurship, right? Build a moat. You should have a moat. How big is your moat, right? Like you can sit into VC conversations all day long and you'll say the word moat repeatedly, right? No, I mean, there's no one else in the world talking about the word remote except us in the entrepreneur and VC community. And what it really, you know, the reason that it stands out is again, with all the noise, you have noise in the internet world that's related around messaging right For sure But you have noise in building a business And the thing that really helped me after I acquired Infolinks really grow Infolinks from sort of a struggling position to a very successful position was to take what I've learned from marketing and advertising and say, how can I make this business truly unique for the advertisers and build a moat, sorry for the cliche, but build something authentic and unique and different that allows it to thrive and not just hustle every day, right? Trying to just get by. Yeah. And so I think it all comes together, right? The story of marketing is about that authenticity and the story of building a business as an entrepreneur and finding success. It's not an easy one. As you know, you almost have to be insane to be an entrepreneur, right? It's a hard journey, but if you can build something that's got that differentiation, that specialness, then you will always find your way to success. You will always get there. It's when you are lost and aren't quite sure why I'm special, why it's special, what am I doing different? Whereas again, these are cliches a little bit, right? But where's my value? Yeah. It's a hard question, right? Just like the landscaper positioning himself on TikTok, right what is your value is your value just that you're a landscaper or do you do something special right when you landscape is your specialty you're amazing at cherry trees and you you know shape them in amazing crazy ways whatever right why are you different and why are you special and why is your business model different and special to build that moat and i think that's the biggest lesson Like I'm at a stage now in this organization, in this business where I'm constantly refining and working on with my team and with my investors. How do you keep making it more special so that you get there? And that I find is harder than the day-to-day blocking and tackling and operations. Could you substitute the word special, which I think I understand what you're saying. But like in the sales world, you might call it the unique selling proposition. A hundred percent for sure. What makes it special unique selling? Like, why is anyone going to use you pay for you? Right. Right. Versus the next guy. That's right. And if you can define that, you know, people say riches are in the niches. If you can niche down into what makes you special, even though you're still an airline, you're still an automotive car company, like the cars drive. Okay. The air, you know, the planes fly. okay, but what makes you special? Man, is that a big takeaway from this episode? It's so important. It's so important. And I go back to, and sorry to keep repeating myself, there is so much noise, not only in noise coming out of your, you know, your social media, noise coming out of your television and noise coming out of your device, but there's so much business noise. There are so many businesses vying for your attention, your business trying to be special that when you have so much duplication, right? You being that beacon, right? That unique selling proposition you're defining, what makes you special is your sauce. Oftentimes from entrepreneurs or business or investors at the time, Hey man, what's your sauce? Like what's your sauce? What would you buy into the, I'm leaning into this. I'm curious, just as a friend and wealth of experience, I'm leaning into some of the sauce needs to be transparency of the failures. My special sauce is I'm going to help you avoid the mistake, whatever this thing is. I feel like that world of, again, going back to this trust economy and the need for it, I think that plays. What do you think as far as a brand? Transparency, here's what I did and it sucked. Authenticity, here's how I can help you avoid that or get the better part of what that happened. Does that make sense? 100%. Wow. Super. Absolutely. I mean, that is right. Your currency is your trust, right? That is your outcome, right? Is you develop trust. How you develop that trust, I think, is vulnerability, right? That vulnerability, your willingness to communicate, let's say socially or whatever methodology you're communicating to your audience or your customer base, that vulnerability is awareness for them, understanding whether or not you're someone that can be trusted. To your point, there's a real estate, successful real estate person that went to prison and they're leveraging their vulnerability and their experience to say, this is a teaching moment. I'm just guessing now, but my guess is this is a teaching moment. Yeah. And you can learn from me and you can trust me because I learned from that. Right. I would agree. And I don't know how, I mean, this is why you make the big bucks with these big companies. I don't know how an airline or a car company does that. Right. Um, but there's ways I have to assume just thinking about the mistakes they made. Let's just use a car company, uh, seatbelt mal-and-function, something terrible happens, taking that as a unique selling proposition of, or what makes you special now is, hey, we learned from this. Here's now how we make our cars invincible. And I don't know. I think there's a play. Yeah. It's very hard for a large, national, massive brand that essentially looks at their leadership as, in some respects, transactional. Yep. Now I get that. They go. There's a lot of fear of making the face of the brand, right? Or the voice. the brand. So there's a little bit of that that happens, but there's a lot of worry about making that happen at a very large national level. On a local level or a regional level, it's a lot easier. Jobs and Musk are very distinct, you know, rarity when it comes to that, right? It's definitely an anomaly, not a common thing. So, you know, I would say this authenticity and this vulnerability to build trust is important about the brand and the product and how the product is introduced, which is why when you think about how TikTok is raged or Instagram is raged in success, it's the influencers that are demonstrating authenticity and vulnerability and enthusiasm for a product, right? They're trading on that currency that got people that get people to buy that product. That's right. They're almost like local advertisers, right? Or local merchants in the form of trust. And I think that's worked exceptionally well. We've seen a booming industry from that in the marketing space. However, I think that's got a timeline as well, because you see that as the consumer starts to say, yeah, you know, like, it seems like everybody coming on here is selling something. That's right. Right. It's a gold rush. I call it a gold rush. That's my take on it. I think it's a total cash grab total. And I could be wrong. I'm not the expert in the space. I just, I think it's great. I think it's brilliant, but I find it to be a gold rush and they'll have an expiration date on that. Right. Because if you don't actually build a brand around it, in my opinion, right? Going back to the brand, if you're just transactional and Justin Colby is always selling you, you know, these glass cases all the time, but the glass cases don't have a brand like, uh, Warby and Parker, right? Then no one's going to be able to find Warby and Parker's glass cases. You just have Justin selling it. Right. And so I think it's just a transactional gold rush that Warby and Parker doesn't actually benefit from because no one knows the brand behind it. No one can Google that. Does that make sense? And this goes back to my original statement. Remember I said they're walled gardens, right? They're walled in, right? The brand is walled in. The transaction is walled in. The influencer is in the wall. It's almost like, hey, man, we've got this wall and everybody's in it. And this is where you're going to exist and transact and get your information and buy your product. And you're never getting out. It's really remarkable. But that's where it is. and life comes full circle. We started there. We started there with AOL. You know, it may be pre-generation of everybody listening, but AOL was just a big walled garden where you went and you saw the information and the messaging had buttons and you could buy and so on and so forth. It was a walled garden. And the reason that AOL basically collapsed was the democratization of the internet. Everyone broke out and they just wanted their own personalized experience on the web. And now we're going back to walled gardens. Cyclical. Cyclical. Yeah. It's cyclical, right? Yeah. It's cyclical. Uh, brother, any, any last words that you can give advice or the best, best, um, advice you've been given to the entrepreneurs out there? Uh, wow. That's a, that's a, that's a quick, I would, I would like to say that it's important to mentor. It's important to be mentored. It's important to mentor, you know, building a business is exceptionally hard. It's exceptionally stressful, right? It is, it is filled with more challenges than it is, uh, you know, good times. No doubt. So, you know, other entrepreneurs understand that. And so it is a bit of a lifestyle, right? And I think that part of what makes it easier and better is community. And I highly recommend, you know, the entrepreneurs listening, if you're older and, or, or even if you're not right, take somebody under your wing and mentor them or act like a self-help group even, right? But that community of mentoring or being mentored, I think is a very important ingredient to getting through because the ingredient, at least that I've seen, that's really driven the most ability to find some success is persistence. And this persistence, right? Sometimes it's very hard to have unless you have cheerleaders. Yeah. And so being mentored, mentoring, being there for people, giving them good insights to get through it all, right? And get to the promised land you hope is the promised land. That would be the thing I would like to leave anybody listening with. Brilliant. Brilliant. I love it. Well, guys, if you thought Bob was pretty good here and gave some good inside tips on branding and marketing and even just being a mentor to someone else or getting mentorship, please share this with two people because I thought this was an incredible episode. That is Bob Regular. This is Justin Colby. This has been The Entrepreneur DNA. I appreciate you guys. Give this a five-star review. Bob, appreciate you. And we'll see you in the next episode. It was a pleasure. Thank you. If you like the show, please take a moment to rate, review, and subscribe. It really does help the show to grow. Thank you for listening.