Back when the Internet was young and dinosaurs roamed the earth, there was a new thing called pay-per-click advertising. And it wasn’t Google that invented it, although AdWords would come to rule the space.

7-Figure Small with Brian Clark
Brian Clark is a serial digital entrepreneur who's started several 7-figure businesses -- and one 8 figure business that was recently acquired. Drawing upon his own 20-year evolution from solo to CEO (and back again), Brian provides compelling stories and actionable strategies for ambitious freelancers and creative entrepreneurs looking to live the "7-Figure Small" lifestyle. Notable guests include Seth Godin, Dan Pink, Jenny Blake, Tim Ferriss, Henry Rollins, Laura Roeder, Michael Stelzner, Chris Brogan, Emily Thompson, Darren Rowse, Andrew Warner, John Lee Dumas, Kathleen Shannon, and Gary Vaynerchuk.
Four Steps to Landing Higher Paying Clients, with Ed Gandia
What if you could work the same amount as now, but make more money? Or what if you could work less and still make more money?
A Counterintuitive Key to Solo Success, with Kaleigh Moore
Whether you identify as a freelancer, consultant, coach, or solo entrepreneur, there’s never been a better time in history to accomplish so much as a single-person company. Just your skills, some key technology, and a network of virtual assistants and fellow solos can accomplish big things.
How to Discover Your Ideal Client, with Sarah Jones
The online dating advice space can be fairly sleazy. Self-proclaimed gurus promise the dating-challenged that they’ll quickly become pickup artists if they just follow the system and play the game.
Seth Godin on Succeeding as a Solopreneur
When I look back over my almost 20 years as an entrepreneur, I can point to pivotal moments where advice from Seth Godin got me to the next level. So, when I decided to devote an episode to succeeding as a solo entrepreneur, he was the logical choice.
Can Online Community Help Build Your Business?
The very first Internet buzzword, going way back to the 1990s, was community. As the online world moved forward, things became more tribal than communal, but the idea that the Internet allows like-minded people to come together is profoundly true (in good and bad ways).
Two Keys to Becoming a Webinar Superhero, with Tim Paige
Webinars remain one of the best list-building and product promotion vehicles. The event nature of a live online meetup combined with compelling content is a winner, even if you don’t call them “webinars.”
How Website Personalization Grows Your Business Faster, with Brennan Dunn
Since the beginning of the web, the promise of business websites has been that they are like 24/7 salespeople. Prospects can find you at anytime, get the information they need, and contact you.
From Side Hustle to Digital Domination, with Nathan Chan
Nathan Chan took a familiar route when seeking to escape the corporate world. Like many, he worked his passion project on the side while he paid the bills with a job.
Unleash Your Intuition to Win, with Bernadette Jiwa
It’s all about the data if the pundits are to be believed. The more you know about your customers and prospects, the better your business will do.
The Power of the Company of One, with Paul Jarvis
More and more people are operating solo, outside of the confines of traditional employment. And thanks to technology and a ton of talented independent contractors, the solopreneur can bring in outsized revenue with a company of one.
8 Ways Startups Can Make Money with an Online Audience
Back in 2009, Joe Pulizzi was one week away from giving up his entrepreneurial dreams and going back to a job. It was a dark time, both personally and in the broader economic environment following the financial crisis in the United States.
The State of Freelancing in 2017, with Emily Leach
More than 55 million Americans are freelancers — a full 35 percent of our workforce, according to the 2016 Freelancing in America report. And contrary to enduring myths, it’s not because “they can’t find a job” — it’s a conscious choice based on freedom and empowerment.
How to Find Your Winning Difference
It’s the bane of modern marketing. Any product can be replicated or reverse-engineered. Any service can be copied, leaving only execution as a true difference (which comes after the point of decision).
Three Months of Vacation Thanks to Smart Business Design, With Sean D’Souza
Owning your own business can lead to the lifestyle of your dreams, but only if you’re very intentional about it. Only you can decide what that dream looks like, and only you can implement it.
The Beauty of Recurring Revenue
Just recently, Medium announced the intention to start charging a $5 monthly fee for an enhanced experience at the popular site. Also, Twitter is considering a subscription version of TweetDeck geared toward marketers, brands, and other power users.
3 Conversion Optimization Tactics that Work, with Talia Wolf
As digital marketers, we have websites to attract leads, customers, and clients to our businesses. So it makes sense that the more leads, customers, and clients we attract, the more money we make.
Content Marketing that Sells, with Marcus Sheridan
There are plenty of self-proclaimed content marketing experts around these days. The only thing these experts have ever seemed to market, however, is themselves.
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A Digital Nomad at 50?
The Unemployable life is all about being a digital nomad, maybe cruising around the country in a van, trusty laptop at your side, right? Well, for the last 20 years, I can’t say that’s been my experience at all.
The Long Road to Greatness, with Lewis Howes
It can be easy to think that highly successful people have just ended up that way, fully formed. The reality is, almost every person deemed to have “made it” makes the same joke:
“I’m a ten-year overnight success.”
The Hollywood Model for Building Winning Teams, with Shane Snow
Over the last 20 years, the way we work and collaborate has changed dramatically. The promises of a free agent nation from the early days of the internet have become a reality for freelancers and solo entrepreneurs around the planet.
The Entrepreneurial Good Life, with Jonathan Fields
Over the last 12 years or so since I started Copyblogger, I’ve had an amazing journey. Along the way, I’ve also been fortunate to watch the journeys of those who started about the same time, as well as those that broke out in the following years.
Lessons Learned from the Sale of StudioPress
Late last month, I announced that StudioPress, our WordPress design and hosting division, was acquired by WP Engine. It was my first “liquidity event” ever, despite having started a string of companies over the last 20 years.
The Million-Dollar One-Person Business, with Elaine Pofeldt
Listeners to Unemployable are no strangers to the idea that one person, armed with the internet, affordable technology, and a network of fellow unemployable people can do big things. So you won’t be surprised to hear that the number of one-person businesses earning a million dollars or more a year continues to rise.
High Impact Content Marketing, with Peter Abraham
Everyone discovers the power of content marketing in their own way. And ultimately, those who do it well take their own unique path from there.
Entrepreneurial Habits, with James Clear
On his 30th birthday, Steve Jobs sent the following Hindu saying to his friends:
Picking Up the Pieces when a Partnership Implodes, with Jordan Harbinger
It’s no secret that I’m a big fan of partnerships to effectively build businesses without investors. I’ve done it successfully over a half-dozen times.
Conquer the Discomfort of Taking Your Business to the Next Level
We kicked off the year talking about “leveling up” your business in 2018. It sounds desirable (and ultimately, it is), but it can also be a struggle.
The Email Newsletter as Media Platform, with Sam Parr
Email was the original “killer app” — everyone uses it, and that’s why it’s been the absolute best channel for digital marketing and audience building. And yes, that’s still true in 2018.
Specialize to Thrive, with Sara Dunn
When you’re working with clients, the goal is to make great money doing great work for great clients. That’s totally doable, if you take the right steps.
Is the ‘Youpreneur’ Approach the Right One for You?
It’s been almost two years to the day since Chris Ducker last joined us on the show to explain the concept of the “Youpreneur.” He’s been busy since then, running the branded Youpreneur community, and managing to write a brand new book on the subject.
Know Thyself: The Entrepreneur’s Secret Weapon
If you’re out there making it on your own economically, the depiction of entrepreneurism in the media likely has you scratching your head. Everyone other than you seems to have their act completely together, right?
How to Earn More on Every Project with Tiered Pricing
It can be nerve-wracking to negotiate your prices with a new client. Even simply presenting your pricing for the project can cause an uncomfortable squirm.
The Power of Perfect Timing, with Daniel Pink
Perfect timing can mean the difference between success and failure. But how does it happen? Is it blind luck, or some sort of genius skill that’s unavailable to the rest of us?
How to Charge What You’re Really Worth, with Mike McDerment
In January 2003, Mike McDerment was running a small design firm when he finally snapped. He was using Microsoft Word to bill a client when he accidently saved over the invoice. It was at that point that Mike decided to build his own accounting software solution.
Perry Marshall on Smarter Online Advertising
Back when the Internet was young and dinosaurs roamed the earth, there was a new thing called pay-per-click advertising. And it wasn’t Google that invented it, although AdWords would come to rule the space.
Four Steps to Landing Higher Paying Clients, with Ed Gandia
What if you could work the same amount as now, but make more money? Or what if you could work less and still make more money?
A Counterintuitive Key to Solo Success, with Kaleigh Moore
Whether you identify as a freelancer, consultant, coach, or solo entrepreneur, there’s never been a better time in history to accomplish so much as a single-person company. Just your skills, some key technology, and a network of virtual assistants and fellow solos can accomplish big things.
How to Discover Your Ideal Client, with Sarah Jones
The online dating advice space can be fairly sleazy. Self-proclaimed gurus promise the dating-challenged that they’ll quickly become pickup artists if they just follow the system and play the game.
Seth Godin on Succeeding as a Solopreneur
When I look back over my almost 20 years as an entrepreneur, I can point to pivotal moments where advice from Seth Godin got me to the next level. So, when I decided to devote an episode to succeeding as a solo entrepreneur, he was the logical choice.
Can Online Community Help Build Your Business?
The very first Internet buzzword, going way back to the 1990s, was community. As the online world moved forward, things became more tribal than communal, but the idea that the Internet allows like-minded people to come together is profoundly true (in good and bad ways).
Two Keys to Becoming a Webinar Superhero, with Tim Paige
Webinars remain one of the best list-building and product promotion vehicles. The event nature of a live online meetup combined with compelling content is a winner, even if you don’t call them “webinars.”
How Website Personalization Grows Your Business Faster, with Brennan Dunn
Since the beginning of the web, the promise of business websites has been that they are like 24/7 salespeople. Prospects can find you at anytime, get the information they need, and contact you.
From Side Hustle to Digital Domination, with Nathan Chan
Nathan Chan took a familiar route when seeking to escape the corporate world. Like many, he worked his passion project on the side while he paid the bills with a job.
Unleash Your Intuition to Win, with Bernadette Jiwa
It’s all about the data if the pundits are to be believed. The more you know about your customers and prospects, the better your business will do.
The Power of the Company of One, with Paul Jarvis
More and more people are operating solo, outside of the confines of traditional employment. And thanks to technology and a ton of talented independent contractors, the solopreneur can bring in outsized revenue with a company of one.
8 Ways Startups Can Make Money with an Online Audience
Back in 2009, Joe Pulizzi was one week away from giving up his entrepreneurial dreams and going back to a job. It was a dark time, both personally and in the broader economic environment following the financial crisis in the United States.
The State of Freelancing in 2017, with Emily Leach
More than 55 million Americans are freelancers — a full 35 percent of our workforce, according to the 2016 Freelancing in America report. And contrary to enduring myths, it’s not because “they can’t find a job” — it’s a conscious choice based on freedom and empowerment.
How to Find Your Winning Difference
It’s the bane of modern marketing. Any product can be replicated or reverse-engineered. Any service can be copied, leaving only execution as a true difference (which comes after the point of decision).
Three Months of Vacation Thanks to Smart Business Design, With Sean D’Souza
Owning your own business can lead to the lifestyle of your dreams, but only if you’re very intentional about it. Only you can decide what that dream looks like, and only you can implement it.
The Beauty of Recurring Revenue
Just recently, Medium announced the intention to start charging a $5 monthly fee for an enhanced experience at the popular site. Also, Twitter is considering a subscription version of TweetDeck geared toward marketers, brands, and other power users.
3 Conversion Optimization Tactics that Work, with Talia Wolf
As digital marketers, we have websites to attract leads, customers, and clients to our businesses. So it makes sense that the more leads, customers, and clients we attract, the more money we make.
Content Marketing that Sells, with Marcus Sheridan
There are plenty of self-proclaimed content marketing experts around these days. The only thing these experts have ever seemed to market, however, is themselves.
9 Daily Habits for Business Success
Everyone loves a good listicle right? The entrepreneurial space is littered with 3 tips for this, 7 tactics for that, and of course the rock steady top 10 tips for “what have you.”
Designing Your Lifestyle with Entrepreneurism
I was in Austin last week speaking at a conference, and I had an interesting conversation with one of the other speakers. It’s a guy I’ve known for years on the web writing circuit.
The Two Keys to Successful Delegation
As I’ve repeatedly admitted, the inability to delegate earlier in my entrepreneurial journey was my achilles heel. I worked too hard, paid too little attention to my family, and generally wasn’t happy.
Are Automated Marketing Funnels a Fail?
We ended last season with an Unemployable episode featuring Darren Rowse of Problogger, in which he and I lamented that the kind of human connection that fueled the early blogging movement seemed to be getting drowned out with tactics and technology.
Succeed by Serving an Audience, with Emily Thompson
Emily Thompson is no stranger to the independent business life. She started off with an Etsy shop, and soon began helping other indie business people build their own platforms with web design and coaching.
The State of Social Media Marketing, with Michael Stelzner
Back in the early 2000s, social media was a very different thing. The term came out of the Web 2.0 movement, and the primary components were blogs.
Creating a Productized Service, with Dan Norris
A few weeks back, we looked at a process that you can use to transform your business. The example I gave was for a freelancer to “productize” an aspect of their services into a neatly packaged product with a defined scope and pricing.
Answers to Smart Business Questions, with Chris Brogan
This week, we’re shaking things up a bit. I took to Facebook and Twitter and asked for questions related to running and growing your business — and got a bunch of really good ones.
The Psychology of the Entrepreneur, with Sherry Walling
What comes to mind when you think of an entrepreneur? Maybe it’s the gregarious and frenetic hustler, as personified by my friend Gary Vaynerchuk.
A Crash Course in Copyright for Creators
You might notice from the title of today’s episode that I have a thing for alliteration. That’s a copywriting technique, which is not what we’re talking about today.
Enhance Your Freelance, with Jennifer Bourn
Attracting and working with clients can be challenging. Implement the right practices and processes, though, and you can design a stellar small business and lifestyle.
Become an Expert Interviewer, with Andrew Warner
Last week we talked about the power of positioning when it comes to starting a podcast. We also touched on how sponsorships can become just one of the lucrative sources of revenue that comes from growing your audience.
The Four-Step Process that Transforms Your Business (Without Knocking Yourself Out)
Work on your business, not in it.
Start Your Successful Podcast in 2017, with Jon Nastor
It’s been a year-and-a-half since I started Unemployable. And it’s just been recently that the show has started to take off.
The ‘Pulp Fiction’ Technique for Engaging and Persuasive Content
You’ve seen Pulp Fiction, right? It’s the classic 1994 black comedy crime film written and directed by Quentin Tarantino.
Blogging is Back, with Darren Rowse
In the beginning, there was blogging. And for businesses looking to build an audience that helped grow the bottom line, it was good.
Creating Online Courses to Level Up from Freelance, with Carrie Dils
Many freelancers dream of the day that they’ll have sources of income other than from client work. Some hope to stop taking clients for good in favor of selling online training instead.
Content Curation in an Age of Fake News, with Dave Pell
It’s been almost two years since I started Further, my curated email newsletter about personal growth. And there’s no mistaking that the project was inspired by Dave Pell’s NextDraft.
Tim Ferriss on Finding and Focusing On What Truly Matters
Tim Ferriss broke into popular consciousness nine years ago with the release of The 4-Hour Workweek. He’s gone on to create a series of books based on the “4-Hour” concept.
Gary Vaynerchuk on Playing the Long Game
Back in 2006, Gary Vaynerchuk started a daily video show that turned wine criticism on its head. More importantly, it took his family wine business from $3 million-a-year to a $60 million-a-year ecommerce juggernaut.
Steal Like an Entrepreneur, with Austin Kleon
The other day I was listening to the “classic alternative” channel on SiriusXM. Message of Love by the Pretenders was on.
It’s Your Duty to Design the Life You Want, with David Kadavy
Many people go out on their own in pursuit of the perfect lifestyle. Of course, “perfect” is entirely subjective.
Host Your First Virtual Conference, with Bailey Richert
Virtual conferences have been around for years. They provide the education of a live event, without the expense of travel, hotel, and other “real world” costs that live events bring.
Understanding the Brain Science Behind Effective Persuasion, with Roger Dooley
The ancient Greeks — notably Aristotle — used anecdotal observation to nail much of what we know about persuasion. The fundamentals of the art haven’t changed much in 2300 years, because human nature hasn’t changed, even as the context in which we operate has changed dramatically.
Create Your First WordPress Product, with Chris Lema
In just over a decade, WordPress has become the most popular content management system on the web. And as with any hugely popular open source movement, there are plenty of for-profit companies providing premium themes, plugins, hosting, and support.
Tips for Crowdfunding a New Product (Or Your Entire Business), with Khierstyn Ross
As you likely know, crowdfunding is a way to raise money for a project or venture by pulling contributions from a large number of people, usually online. In 2015 alone, crowdfunding generated an estimated over $34 billion (USD) worldwide.
How to Build a Business that Sets You Free, with Sol Orwell
Startup, raise money, cash out, repeat. That’s the narrative that Silicon Valley feeds you.
SEO that Grows Your Business with John Jantsch
Of all the components of a holistic online marketing strategy, search engine optimization (“SEO”) seems to mystify many the most. And it’s true that years back, the key to ranking well in Google was a form of dark art.
Building Your Virtual Team with
Jess Ostroff
As the leader of a virtual company of over 65 people located around the world, I wouldn’t have it any other way. Of course, I had a lot of help from my partners getting to this point over the last 6 years.
The Stoic Entrepreneur with Ryan Holiday
We’re all familiar with the stereotyping of Millennials. Like my own once-denigrated Generation X, “these kids today” are lazy and entitled, right?
How to Find Your Next Big Thing with Jenny Blake
Entrepreneurs and independent business people are always working on the next thing, often on the side while we maintain our current income. And as your mind begins to see the world in a more entrepreneurial way, you’ll spot opportunity everywhere.
Henry Rollins on Entrepreneurial Art
Henry Rollins is an actor, author, spoken-word artist, and musician. You likely know him as the iconic lead singer of seminal punk band Black Flag, which kicked off his enduring career.
The Economics of Artistic Integrity
Whenever we get a heavy snow in Boulder and I share a photo of my buried patio, you’ll see an ornate, flame-carved fire pit in the shot (filled with snow, naturally). It’s a custom design crafted out of recycled propane tanks by artist John T. Unger.
How to Use Interactive Challenges to Build Your Email List and Business
Jadah Sellner and her husband had a simple dream – to own their own business while spending as much time as possible with their young daughter. The couple’s child center on the Hawaiian island of Kauai seemed ideal … until it wasn’t.
Turning Your Process Into a Product
When it comes to creating digital products, software, ebooks, and online courses are what come to mind. But have you ever considered turning how you do what you do for clients into a product?
Creatively Breaking the Rules of the Art Business, with Hugh MacLeod
There are a lot of artistically-inclined people in the world of freelancing and creative entrepreneurship. Writers and designers come immediately to mind. Hugh MacLeod of Gaping Void is certainly an example of a literal entrepreneurial artist.
How to Turn a Personal Liability into an Entrepreneurial Asset
A month or so ago, we discussed the idea that entrepreneurs may have to be a little crazy to succeed. That perhaps the ability to execute on innovative ideas might come from a mental illness or psychological baggage that is turned into a positive.
The Dark Side of Scale
On Unemployable, we talk a lot about leveraging virtual teams and collaboration in order to achieve more. And we talk about building an audience that allows you build a bigger business than you could otherwise.
What Real Entrepreneurism Looks Like, with Rand Fishkin of Moz
Today we’re talking to Rand Fishkin, founder and Wizard of Moz. Confident, successful, and the person you want to be like some day … right?
Steal Like an Entrepreneur, with Austin Kleon
The other day I was listening to the “classic alternative” channel on SiriusXM. Message of Love by the Pretenders was on.
Are You Doing the Work You Were Born For?
Do you believe we were all born to do a certain type of work? More importantly, do you feel you’re doing what you were born to do?
How to Cultivate Authentic Expertise, with Jordan Harbinger of The Art of Charm
Have you seen the film The Big Short? It’s about the investor bets made against the U.S. housing market due to negligence and fraud involving mortgage-backed securities, which ultimately led to the “Great Recession” that began in December of 2007.
When to Shift Your Side Hustle Into Your Main Thing
As we’ve discussed before on the show, everyone at every level usually has a side hustle going on. It’s the process by which we leverage what we’re doing now to do the next, bigger, and more gratifying thing.
When ‘Solo’ Goes Wrong
It’s an amazing time to be a solopreneur. Affordable technology plus the reach of the Internet allows for outsized profits by a “company of one.”
Are Entrepreneurs Literally “The Crazy Ones?”
The saying goes that there’s a thin line between genius and insanity. But do successful entrepreneurs actually parlay mental illness into innovation?
Why Freedom Beats Money and Status
Freedom is a primary theme of Unemployable. Not everyone wants to “disrupt” and “dominate.” Rather, they want to do the things they want to do, and live the life they want to live.
Chris Brogan on Simple Systems for a Better Business and Lifestyle
We’re big on systems and processes at Unemployable. Naturally, that’s the topic of the first lesson in the free Profit Pillars course that members gain access to when they join the tribe at no charge.
Seth Godin’s Top Tips for Freelancers
When I started my first business in 1998, it turns out I did a lot of things right. It wasn’t until May of 1999 when I read a book called Permission Marketing that I realized what I was missing, which led to my first successful business.
Dan Pink on the State of Free Agent Nation in 2015 (And Beyond)
In 1997, a young man quit his job to become a writer. In January 1998, an article he wrote entitled Free Agent Nation appeared in a young magazine called Fast Company, and a career was launched.
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