Disruptive Thinking and Radical Results | Ryan Alford | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this powerhouse episode of On the Homefront, Jeff Dudan is joined by marketing disruptor, entrepreneur, and podcast king Ryan Alford—founder of Radical agency and The Radcast. From Madison Avenue to Main Street, Ryan breaks down what it takes to craft compelling brand stories, build a magnetic personal brand, and unlock entrepreneurial freedom through creativity, resilience, and speed. With a mix of raw stories, proven strategies, and Southern charm, this episode delivers real value for anyone trying to build something that lasts.
Key Takeaways
- The creative still wins. No matter how advanced your MarTech stack is, it's creative that drives conversion and brand resonance.
- Personal brands boost business brands. Ryan built Radical and The Radcast by first building himself as a brand people trust, follow, and engage with.
- Start scrappy, scale smart. Radical grew from serving yoga studios and dentists to negotiating half-million-dollar podcast deals—through speed, iteration, and reps.
- Podcasting is a long game. Ryan’s Radcast hit #4 on Apple’s Business & Marketing chart—after 350 episodes and six years of consistency.
- Fascinating > Famous. A great podcast guest isn’t always famous—they just need a story or insight worth sharing.
- Limitless mindset unlocks possibility. Ryan and Jeff both reject limiting beliefs, encouraging listeners to rewire what they think is possible.
Featured Quote
“The strength of the wolf is the pack, and the strength of the pack is the wolf.”
– Ryan Alford
TRANSCRIPT
Meet Ryan Alford: Founder of Radical, Host of The Radcast
Jeff Dudan (00:00.692)
I am Jeff Duden and we are On the Homefront. And as always, this podcast is brought to you by Homefront Brands, simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action, to transform their lives, impact communities, and enhance the lives of those they care the most about. All the while delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the home front. So if this sounds like you, check us out at homefrontbrands.com today and start your next chapter of greatness.
building your dynasty on the home front. I will be looking for you here. And we have a exceptional treat today. Welcome Ryan Alford. How are you, sir?
Ryan Alford (00:41.398)
Great, Jeff. It's good to be with you here on the home front.
Jeff Dudan (00:44.016)
Yeah, man. Awesome. I'm so excited about today. I'm a big fan of your show and have consumed it religiously. So for those who don't know, Ryan Alford is a provocateur and inspired leader of the Radcast, a massively successful podcast. He's built a name, a global network, and countless brands on this exact approach to disruptive thinking that generates radical results.
Ryan Alford (00:52.462)
Great, appreciate it.
Jeff Dudan (01:10.484)
From crafting ads on Madison Avenue and pitching Verizon's can you hear me now campaign to growing an eight figure marketing agency and top 10 podcast. He has worked hard to crack the code on what drives real success. And he's all about sharing the cheat sheet too. So I'm gonna dig into that. Through coaching courses, speaking and more, Ryan helps brands and leaders develop courageous thought leadership that challenge assumptions and solves problems others can't or just simply won't.
And he helps businesses trade friction for traction by identifying the white hot insights and human truths that resonate with people and generate action. Ryan, can't wait brother, welcome.
Ryan Alford (01:47.486)
No, it's my pleasure. I, uh, was trying to, I was, as you were talking, I was going, I hope I can, I think I've, it sounded, uh, familiar, but I was like, I think I can live up to everything you said, no, it's all true. It's all true. Guilty guilty is charged. Radical, amazing, interesting. Uh, yes, I'll take it all.
Jeff Dudan (01:57.104)
Is that true? I mean, I didn't get anything wrong, did I?
Jeff Dudan (02:02.748)
Hahaha! Ahhh!
Jeff Dudan (02:09.64)
Awesome, awesome. Well, so our listeners oftentimes are people that are considering an entrepreneurial journey and you have a great one. Would you mind sharing a little bit about your background, how you grew up and so we can get a sense of where all this awesomeness came from.
Humble Beginnings: The No-Money Advantage
Ryan Alford (02:26.114)
Well, it started the product of Steve and Mary Linda. Uh, that's my parents. So, uh, you know, DNA driven as we all are, I guess, you know, I grew up with two entrepreneurial parents, uh, and was born at toll. I tell the joke, uh, often when I go on shows, I try not to repeat everything, but it's one of my favorite lines. They say, you know, there's old money and there's new money. Well, we came from no money. So, uh, it was.
Jeff Dudan (02:28.916)
Hehehe
Ryan Alford (02:54.462)
It was neither, uh, but I did have two entrepreneurial parents that, you know, raised a son and a daughter, you know, how to take care of themselves, how to fend for themselves and how to go get what they want, um, whether by a strategy or accident, uh, they did a great job of certainly instilling in me, uh, you know, the fundamental desire to want more and to seek more and to learn more. And you know, I've watched them work multiple jobs, uh, growing up in
South Carolina, the upstate Greenville where I'm actually home now have talked about some of my world travels, but ended up back here and great place to raise a family and great place where I grew up. And, you know, I watched them, you know, work the day job, but then do side hustles, uh, throughout my life. Um, you know, to provide for us. And I think it made me, uh, both learn from them how to make a dollar.
Uh, and that can happen in a lot of different ways. Uh, but while also one of my key differentiators and I think in that's resourcefulness, you know, figuring it out and how to make things happen and how to get shit done. And I think, um, you know, watch them do that. Perhaps on a lighter level than what maybe my own ambitions ended up being. Um, but anyway, I did all of that and was always resourceful. Um, in.
having some side hustles, baseball cards, or, uh, you know, figuring out how to trade the old mobile 98, my parents gave me, that was my grandmother's first car. That was the car they gave me when I was 16 to turning that into a Jeep CJ five. Three months later, you know, I was, uh, resourceful. You know, my, my parents always gave me a hard time. They said, you know, son, you, you want more than, uh, then I think this family is going to provide for you.
I said, well, I'm going to figure it out. And I always kind of did. I don't, I wouldn't say I live beyond my means, but my means, uh, I'd figure out to get the means to get the life that I wanted. And I think that summarizes a lot of what I've done.
The Power of Resourcefulness: Flipping His First Car and More
Jeff Dudan (04:59.936)
I've man, I'll tell you what, there's a there is a real no money advantage. And I've always said to my kids, I said, I will not steal from you the opportunity to be successful on your own and until you're walking on that tightrope without a net, you really can't you don't have if you don't have a reason to be resourceful and to figure out another way, man, you just you just stop trying. And.
Man, and I've had it both ways, man. I mean, I've had it, you know, without money and then with a little bit of money. And I do prefer with, I have to tell you. But, yeah, you know, but I also appreciate the times that we had to go through to kind of bootstrap it together and the sleepless nights and you just got to figure it out because that's really where your courage comes from.
Ryan Alford (05:38.633)
Yes, it is better.
From Clemson Grad to Madison Avenue: A Marketing Journey
Ryan Alford (05:54.698)
You're a hundred percent right. And I think, you know, to be clear, I always had what I needed with my parents, uh, and a little bit of what I wanted. Uh, but I just, but I did learn to get the stuff that I really wanted. I'd have to figure it out for myself. Um, and maybe even some of the things that I had convinced myself that I had needed, like we all do, uh, but ended up being one of the first offers to graduate college with the Clemson university, I did play basketball on a lot of team sports and.
had some D1 and D2 offers and blew up my ankles, both ankles my senior year and sort of limited my D1 prospects, but grew up a Clemson Tiger fan and ended up seeing that dream come true. I graduated from there. And you know, a lot of it, I was a marketing major. A lot of people, I think struggle with knowing, changing, you know, their curriculum and different things like that, their majors.
A lot of times I was self-aware enough to know that I don't, you know, there is a distinction that I talk about a lot of between marketing and sales, but somewhere in that line, I knew, um, I kind of had that, I don't know, human behavior dynamic, the understanding for how to make money, how to motivate people. Um, and so that natural correlation for me was marketing and was one of those lucky enough to stick with that major and go straight into the ad agency business right out of Clemson.
Uh, there were certainly jobs in between, uh, from, uh, washing dishes to, uh, working at a stake out delivery, steakhouse delivery place, uh, while, you know, paying a majority of my way through Clemson, uh, but then did graduate and went on to the ad agency business where I worked at the same agency actually for 13 years. Um, uh, I have no problem working for other people. I did it for a long time.
And made them a lot of money, which I now understand owning my own business, but had the opportunity to work on some of the largest accounts in the world. Started with an office here in Greenville, uh, and then opened their Manhattan business, uh, in the late 2008, nine, 10 period. I moved to Manhattan, worked on Madison Avenue, uh, roughly five years. Verizon wireless, Apple, uh, Samsung, Motorola, Lexus, uh, the who's who of brands.
Ryan Alford (08:17.838)
Uh, first campaign that I did work on, uh, and was involved with was, can you hear me now with Verizon? Uh, the first iPhone launch, uh, really offered in the smartphone era, working with a lot of the smartphone manufacturers and Verizon and others. And then actually ended up working with the NFL on one of the largest sponsorship agreements in the, in history, which was Verizon's NFL mobile app and Verizon being the first, uh, carrier to offer games on the smartphone.
through the NFL mobile agreement. So helped Verizon and the NFL usher that in and around the 2010 marker and was involved in app development and marketing of the app and all the integrations across the smartphones and things like that. But then, touched brands like Budweiser and Lexus and Audi on various campaigns. And I tell people I probably worked on
or had a hand in some of the most recognizable TV campaigns of the last 25 years, when you add up in ad spend, total viewership, impressions and all of those things. And so did that for a long time. And then, you know, came out of that and worked for a couple startups, did a couple things, and then started my own gig at Radical and starting kind of Radical, the Radcast and what I'd call the Ryan Alford personal brand, all at the same time.
in that 2017-2018 and that leads us here today.
Jeff Dudan (09:50.548)
So did you grow up in Greenville proper?
Ryan Alford (09:54.518)
Yeah, I did. I was born and my parents lived in easily for about, till I was four years old. And then I grew up in proper, I was actually born at Greenville General Hospital, which no longer exists. It's not Greenville Memorial Hospital, but I did grow up in Greenville proper my entire life.
Jeff Dudan (10:14.548)
So you went to, so kind of country mouse, moving to the city. What was that adventure like, man? Did you like living in the city?
Moving to Manhattan: Culture Shock and C-Suite Confidence
Ryan Alford (10:24.05)
Yeah. I mean, as much as you can call Greenville a city, the city of Greenville is now. Oh yeah. Are you going to Greenville? Yes. Oh, that was.
Jeff Dudan (10:29.86)
Oh no, I'm referring to New York. When you moved to, yeah, when you went to Manhattan. No, yeah, no, not that, hey, Greenville's a city. Now Greenville was one of the fastest growing cities in the country for many, many years. And it's got what, Mercedes-Benz and all of that stuff there. It's got a lot of great, but it's not Manhattan.
Ryan Alford (10:48.191)
Yes. The transition. No, it is not. That makes more sense as a question. I get it. Yeah. Look, I'll say this. I, it was a change for me, but it was one of that embrace because I think I was always ready for that. Um, I think what, what allowed me to do well, uh,
Jeff Dudan (10:54.58)
Mmm.
Ryan Alford (11:10.066)
in New York was that I embraced the speed and the culture of, I don't know, acceleration combined with creativity suited me well. But then I think my accent and being a Southern guy, you know, that was always a little like, it turned people like, who's this Southern kid in the room? You know, like I'd open my mouth and you know, my accent and there's like, I'm in the C-suite.
of Verizon at 26 years old, like talking campaigns and like, who's this guy talking? And like, and then, you know, I talked long enough and there'd be something smart to actually sit, but it was, it was, uh, I think always like, huh, you know, like turned heads, but then, you know, I like to turn heads with my voice and turn hearts with my work.
Jeff Dudan (11:58.392)
Fantastic. So you talk about marketing and sales kind of tag teaming together, but then at some point, now we talk about MarTech. It is technology-driven marketing and people's attention is so hard to get and the competition for it is so high.
Ryan Alford (11:59.787)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (12:25.532)
evolve inside of that. And when you work with your guests, I mean, are you tying the marketing to their sales piece of it? Or are you are you know, are you delivering the eyeballs for them and then they've got to convert to it? Like what do you like? How does that work for you?
Creativity Still Converts: Why the Big Idea Still Matters in 2025
Ryan Alford (12:40.582)
Yeah. I mean, it, you know, often say marketing rights to check and sales has to cash them, you know, like at a certain point there, I'm not saying marketing's job is done, but nothing crushes great marketing faster than a, than a loose funnel and or sales team that lets it go. So there's definitely an interplay of those things, but I think, you know, for me,
Jeff Dudan (12:47.077)
Okay.
Ryan Alford (13:05.674)
I'll say this and there's studies by the smartest people and some of the largest groups in the world that still show this. Creativity and creative idea and the creative still drives sales and advertising effectiveness, ultimately. What does that mean to me? It means the big idea still matters. It means that we can have all the science and all the funnels and all the...
UTM codes and all this stuff in the world. But if the creative, the ideas, the execution of the strategy in a way that moves hearts, minds and wallets isn't happening, then all of that stuff doesn't really matter because nothing I've seen, I counsel clients, people that I work with, that if you don't have a clear strategy and then a creative execution that ladders to that in an effective emotional way,
Then all the other stuff doesn't matter. So I'm still a big idea guy, creative guy, like what's the creative, you know? And yes, now we've got to then layer on all the digital opportunity things to get attribution and do all of those things and all that matters. But I see a lot of people that have the greatest MarTech stack in the world, but the creative sucks and it doesn't, you can't just, does it resonate? Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (14:28.852)
Doesn't resonate, just doesn't resonate. Yeah. Who cares, who cares?
Ryan Alford (14:32.21)
Exactly right. Yeah. You got to make me care because, and it's just not one ad and one sale, right? It's more complicated than that. It's still more complicated than that. And certainly in 2012, running Facebook ads was easy because it was so targeted and so new. But now that people are aware of that and they're getting hit and their attention is so fleeting, it's not one ad to sale. So thus you got to have a creative breakthrough.
And then you've got to hit them with all touch points across the funnel and then tying all that together. So I have a lot of passion around that very topic. So yeah.
Jeff Dudan (15:08.866)
Yeah, so volume and frequency matters, because you can't just have one great idea in one post and then sit back and wait for it all to roll in. So it's a.
Ryan Alford (15:12.307)
Yes.
Ryan Alford (15:18.166)
That's right. Well, I mean, in, in tonight, the into a media discussion, but like media is reaching frequency, you know, like how many people and how many times layered on with how great the creative is. Cause I can hit you a hundred times and a hundred with the right people. But if the creative sucks or isn't motivating or isn't emotionally driven or doesn't create a brand, uh, marker in your mind, then, um, then all that other stuff doesn't matter, but I, I would still argue that.
Jeff Dudan (15:24.477)
Yeah.
Ryan Alford (15:47.574)
You know, some of the largest brands in the world is kind of are just kind of going to beat it into your head because you see them so often. Yeah, you know.
Jeff Dudan (15:52.608)
Right. So in 2017 and 18, you transitioned to be an entrepreneur. And can you tell us what the drivers in that decision were?
When to Jump: Why Ryan Left Corporate to Launch Radical
Ryan Alford (16:07.338)
Yeah, I think I didn't know it at the time. You know, the agency that I worked at, which was EP and co, uh, or one Penland largest agency in the state of South Carolina still are. Um, and now I have a very large New York presence, but the, it was always labeled as an entrepreneurial company. And they said that, and it was the only place that I had worked. So I didn't know it, but now in reflection, it was. They.
They hired good people and they let them go. And you know, they didn't put a lot of rules and regulations. My boss always told me, I now tell my team two things. One, unless expressly forbidden, it is allowed. There wasn't a lot expressly forbidden. Let me tell you that. Um, and especially when you were driving dollars, I turned a $3 million retainer into 45 million over 13 years, $45 million annual retainer. One of the largest retainers ever.
in the history of marketing and advertising, I would argue for an agency our size, certainly. Uh, and so thus there was a lot of rope given to drive relationships and, you know, my boss always let me go. Like he gave me the tools to succeed. I was not the world's greatest junior account executive, but you know what? I understood how the money got made in the agency. I knew how to make relationships and I was an idea guy.
It's a very good combination within the halls of an agency. And, and so thus, I will say in 27, 2018, I had been primed and readied and it felt in many ways like an entrepreneur within my own agency because I grew my own team, I had over a hundred people that reported to me in many ways. I had my own little mini. Organize. I mean, don't get me wrong. I wasn't now knowing what.
Jeff Dudan (17:38.024)
That's very powerful, very powerful.
Ryan Alford (18:02.266)
money was being made and kind of all the operational things. I certainly wasn't having the benefits of ownership per se, but in a lot of ways, I was given a lot of bandwidth with kind of growing my team, nurturing the team, building the team and doing those, a lot of things that would come with entrepreneurship. And so in 2017, 2018, I knew it was time to use what I had learned combined with a natural drive to build something I could call my own. And I don't know that I've actually ever said this on the podcast.
Cause I try not to make it as much as it may seem with my personal man and others about me, but radical rad is Ryan offer digital. So that's what that, and that was what I was going to call the agency. It was going to be Ryan offer digital. And I said, no, let's call it rad. And I said, you know, I wanted to be about more than me. So I managed made it all radical. So, but, but there you go. That's what it stood for. And I think I was always being primed for that moment ahead of the 2017, 2018 time period.
Jeff Dudan (18:40.264)
There you go. There you go.
Jeff Dudan (19:00.584)
Yeah, I want to unpack what Radical Agency is and where you're at with the Radcast and all that. I will share an anecdote though. There was a great franchisor, his name was Tony Martino. And have you heard of the companies Mako and Amco? Yeah, so Amco was a Martino company and Mako was Martino a Anthony company. So two of the largest brands in the automotive that are, you know,
Ryan Alford (19:16.462)
Of course, absolutely.
Ryan Alford (19:28.938)
Yes.
Jeff Dudan (19:30.596)
international and he just basically did a play on himself. So I don't think it's a bad thing because, you know, building a company that resonates with who your authentic self is, is I think part of the success. I mean, look at Elon Musk. Everybody can see his fingerprints all over it. Jobs, the great ones. I mean, they, they merge themselves with their businesses. You've done the same thing and you have had massive success. So, so, so tell us about radical agency.
what it is, who you work with, and then we'll maybe move over to some podcasting because I have some questions about that.
Radical Agency: Social-First, Video-Fast, and Human-Centered
Ryan Alford (20:05.79)
Absolutely. You know, I started radical. I watched, you know, one thing I was ready to do my own thing. So obviously the drive to be and own my own gig and like all of those things that make people want to be an entrepreneur. But I watched a few things happening in the agency space, the social media space and what was happening. So one agencies were slow to move on the power of video and the democratization that was happening with video.
the speed of content development, the need for constant video resource, the reality that you weren't going to get paid a million dollars for 30 second TV spots. You know, like this was all happening in the 2014, 15, 16, by 2017. Like I'm like, okay, I got to go get on this train because everyone else is moving too slow. Yes, everybody moved to digital. People knew that social media was powerful, but this combination of video
democratization, UGC, and user-generated content, and social media, and the true power of social media, I would argue, even in 2016-17, when I was formulating the ideas and concepts for Radical, was slow on the uptake on the agency side, the bigger agency side, especially. And so I kind of started with this premise of social media is truly king. Video is truly king.
And we've got to do it faster, cheaper, better. And the idea and the iteration chain has got to go in order. Now you have to layer on like ideas and a lot of other things with those, but that was sort of the fundamental shift for me. And so started radical and very quickly, you know, with myself and two people to start the three, four and five, we're, we're generating hundreds of pieces of content quickly. Fast. I had video, you know, resources on staff. I had overseen resources and editing. You know,
I had kind of built a lot of contacts in the business and the who's who of people that were starting to get in this train. And I had created the, you know, anyone, uh, young might not get this, but your old ride will get the Rolodex of now the iPhone, uh, contact list of, of the best of the best resources that were kind of in this same mindset that understood the speed, the iteration, the cost of all these things needed to go down.
Jeff Dudan (22:20.233)
Yeah.
Ryan Alford (22:30.494)
And then layering in my own brain, I think from an idea standpoint, I often joke because you have to build your own. Uh, that's the thing. You could do all these things for other people for a long time. And that credibility comes with you. But Verizon didn't jump ship to radical the one man Ryan Alford shop. Pepsi didn't come to the right, you know, because you have to build the team. You have to build the credibility within your own walls. And so, but I do joke all the time that some of my early clients, you know, I had a dentist that I actually got.
took viral, did 500 million impressions as the dancing dentist. That's a long story. But I'll say, my early clients got some of the best world-class ideas of any clients ever, because I had done these things, but then here I am working with some local outfit, and they're paying me $3,000 a month. And I mean, I'm not like Tootie Mo and Horan, but I'm like, some of the strategies I even wanted to deploy, I'm like, I gotta remember, this is a local yoga studio.
And, uh, we're not going to be able to do, uh, you know, I'd like to temper my own, uh, drive, but I think, you know, some of the ideas were bigger than the clients, maybe, uh, which means they probably weren't the best ideas, but I always had to, but, you know, so you have to learn those things as an entrepreneur, especially when you've worked. So one thing starting as an entrepreneur is you're 21. You don't have all these things that you've learned to done, but it's another, when you start later in life, uh, when
Jeff Dudan (23:29.801)
Right.
Early Clients, Big Ideas: How the Dentist Went Viral
Ryan Alford (23:54.114)
you realize you still have to build that credibility for your own company, your own business. And so, you know, but radical now is, you know, we talk about a time where we don't believe in B2B or B2C. We believe in B2H, business to human. And we try to bring it back to the consumer and the human at the end of the day. That's a big, big approach for us when we talk to clients, because a lot of what we see is speeds and feeds and all these things. And I'm like, look, I know that a business, a B2B transaction,
is what's more complex than buying a t-shirt online. I get it. But you know what? Until this world is driven by all run and owned by robots, there's a human on the other end of that communication. And it's amazing. They go, you know, you're right. Yeah, right? But we try to unlock that for customers and clients and do our messaging through that, combined with what I would call the best suite of the MarTech and all those things. We got all that. We got that checked.
but we're gonna give you big ideas, a lot of content, and a lot of video on top of it.
Jeff Dudan (24:56.584)
Capacity building for entrepreneurs is very hard to justify, but you gotta take those yoga studios and those veterinarians and dentists and all these people because you're training your team and a team doesn't start executing until they've had some reps on them. So, you know, and fortunately or fortunately it comes out of your pocket while you're building all that and those early clients, oh man, yeah.
Ryan Alford (25:19.926)
muscle memory, you got to build muscle memory. And it's like, I've, you know, build a team and we've got a great team now, you know, but like, they don't know what they don't know. And I don't know everything, but we've got to go through the trials and tribulation tribulations together while also learning that capacity. Like you said, you know, you can't, you can't bench press 50 pounds until you've bench pressed 30, you know, like, you know, or, or 300 until you've done 200. So.
You got to work your way to it. And I'm, you know, I'm probably like every entrepreneur, like I like to move fast and I like to move speed. And sometimes I get, you know, frustrated, but I'm like, did I go, you know, have my Zen moment and, uh, drinking energy drink. I'm like the opposite of that. I have my energy drink. So they'll go like take it out on something else.
The Radcast: From Zero Listeners to Top 5 on Apple
Jeff Dudan (26:09.716)
So Radcast, is it one property or I know I saw something online. You've got your vacay hat on. So you've got a vacation podcast, I think, coming out or something similar. So what is the landscape of Radcast?
Ryan Alford (26:24.234)
Yeah. Uh, we start, I'll talk to you about, you know, crawl, walk, run, right? You know, where we started from the bottom. Now we're here. The, uh, quote my favorite rap song. The, uh, we started as a podcast when I started back to like the premise of radical three things. Okay. I knew what radical needed to do, but as a company for how to market the company, three things needed to happen. One.
I got tired of looking on social media and all these gurus and I'm talking to you too, Gary Vee, because I've done way more than you in the ad agency business, but you came from wine. I'll give you that. But like, you know, all these people that look and I give it, I like Gary. I'm joking. He's at Mars Excel. He's got like $400 billion agency or something like that. So no, no credit taken from Gary. But I'm just saying like a lot of gurus that weren't Gary, you know, all this stuff on mine. I'm like marketing ninja, marketing wizard. I'm like, wait a second. I thought I was the marketing.
wizard, but no one, I got a hundred followers on Instagram. This is like a 2016 and I'm like, okay, I got a two, three things. When I started my agency, I need to be more known because the more known you are, the more it helps your company and not just to be known. I like, there's all these guys online. They're like that bash personal branding because they go, you could be known, you know, but it starts with having the, I'm like, yeah. I mean, the premise is you got to be known for something and have a skillset. So yes.
So getting myself more known, getting the agency, so thus raising my profile or raise the agency's profile and how else to do that would be the podcast. So I started the Radcast when I started Radical and I started heavily investing in my own personal brand. I would say I'll even admit it, you know, the first, any money we made the first year with Radical was pretty much 100% thrown into my personal brand in the podcast because we were playing the long game for how to build and raise.
Again, the high tide raises all ships. Ryan Allford profile grows. The Radcast profile rises. Radical rise, right? All played together. So started podcast business and marketing, the Radcast 2017, 2018. Um, we had 50 listeners the first six months, 49 of them were my mom. Uh, and, uh, and so, you know, it's like, but look, I was playing a long game. I knew that it.
Jeff Dudan (28:35.648)
Hahaha
Ryan Alford (28:43.042)
that it would take time, but I literally started doing two episodes a month, five years ago. And I said, we're going to keep doing this and we're over, you know, 350 episodes now, now we're there. This weekend, we hit number four in business and marketing on the Apple podcast network. We gave her 450,000 downloads a month and we've created a show that's actually worth listening to now. And, uh, you know, I got better. The show got better. Our guests got better.
We bring on celebrities and well-known people and famous founders and, you know, we're going to have Jeff Duden on. And so like all the best people are on. Exactly. Yes. And, uh, and you know, it came along with it and now I'm verified on every platform. I have over a million followers across every social media platform. If you add them all up, tick, talk, Twitter, uh, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn. Um, probably missing something YouTube. And so.
Jeff Dudan (29:18.888)
That's right.
Ryan Alford (29:40.562)
All of those things have kind of, you put them on a chart, radical, the Radcast and Ryan Offers personal brand, they all have over time grown together. Now we had to be good at what we're doing, of course, but you know, knowing and hoping that we had that alignment, which we did, uh, then the rest has kind of played out.
Posting with Purpose: Personal Brand as a Trust Accelerator
Jeff Dudan (30:05.232)
interested to know for personal reasons how much posting you do outside of the podcast content I know that you cut up the content and you've got great bites out there and you do what you need to do with that how much does your personal posting on weekends at home stuff like that play into it
Ryan Alford (30:24.394)
Yeah, I mean, it's huge. Like at the end of the day, people do business with those that they know, they like, and they trust. And social media allows you the ability to do that. And look, I'll admit in any given month, it might skew 70 to 80% some of that podcast content, but I try to keep it more than that 50 to 60% where the rest is me talking about a current event.
or me showing as much as I'm comfortable showing with my kids and my wife and my family who are very important to me. And like, so if you go to ryanolford.com, you're gonna see a taste of all of that because my family's very important to me. I have four boys. And so, and I don't hide from that. I don't, you know, some people get nervous about, you know, sharing their kids' stuff and all that. I'm not sharing every personal moment, but I do share that. We spend a lot of time at the lake. I show that. And so I want people to see the real me, that this is what you see is what you get.
for good, bad, or indifferent, and it's going to attract those that are like-minded. And you don't, it helps kind of in a way cut through some of the filtering that needs to happen anyway. Cause sometimes if you go into something cold or don't know, you have to learn that, okay, we wouldn't have worked well together because we weren't like-minded. We kind of get to knock a lot of that out. Cause a lot of people that kind of call on me have already seen all that. They kind of know at least 30% of what they're going to get.
ahead of time and I like showing that side because look, part of me is legacy because I want to leave behind a record of what I've done for my kids, for my family, but I also want to inspire and make people want more for their own lives. And so sometimes that might be cringy stuff that people doesn't like. I'm in a nice car. I want my nice boat with all that. I try not to be too much of that because I think that looks inauthentic sometimes, but I also want to show.
the good, the bad and the ugly of entrepreneurship and family raising and everything else in between.
Jeff Dudan (32:27.644)
Yeah, it's everything. The people that I follow on a regular basis, I feel like I know them. And if I walked up to them on the street, that we would just continue with the conversation that we've had online, which is them talking and me listening. So, so, so podcast is, is podcasting for everybody. When is it, when is it right? Do people come to you and you just be like, you really shouldn't do a podcast.
Ryan Alford (32:42.926)
100%.
Should You Start a Podcast? Ryan’s Hot Take
Ryan Alford (32:57.142)
think it's more it's usually more right than it's wrong. I don't think it's like 5050 I think because here's how I answer that question Jeff. So
I used to answer in a different way because I used to go, you know, it takes a certain personality to do this. And I still think that some of that's true, but here's the thing. Everybody attracts a different audience. And so somebody that might not have the weird culmination of Southern deep accent voice like me that might resonate with certain people made that isn't necessary because there's a sec, a large segment of people that want the more timid or, you know, like
approachable like maybe like voice and they learn better from that type. And so everybody's got to type. So, you know, tomato, like, I think it's probably more, yes, an opportunity than it is no, it's probably like 85. The only time I say it's not an opportunity is just if you have to kind of unlock the ability to be comfortable talking, like if you just can't.
make yourself comfortable talking in sentences or doing like what we're doing here now. It gets difficult to carry it on. No matter, I don't think it necessarily takes a certain type of voice or personality anymore, but you do have to kind of unlock the ability to feel comfortable talking about your expertise in a way. So it's more of those things than it is style.
Jeff Dudan (34:27.672)
So you mean like a 60 minute podcast edited down to 11 minutes wouldn't work for pauses wouldn't work that well
Ryan Alford (34:35.559)
I don't think so. Uh, uh, because the software now will take all the ums out, you know, I, I'm very conscientious of those. I try to keep them out, but I have my markers too. Like my editors, they have my kind of, what do you call them, throw away words or something and they, and I've told we've, we edit those out now. Like I have these, like a couple of them. I've gotten rid of most of them having done 300 something episodes now, but I have my ones I'm like, just, just set the filter up to remove those.
Jeff Dudan (34:39.889)
Well, yeah.
Jeff Dudan (35:03.36)
Transitional words are a problem for me. I got extra words everywhere. I'm throwing word salad out all the time. Well, you got right to the point of what I wanted to ask. In doing research for this podcast and researching some guests, I've had some great guests on and they had a podcast and I would go to their podcast and they're literally speaking to this narrow set of people.
Ryan Alford (35:04.995)
Transitional words, that's what it is. Yes.
Ryan Alford (35:14.593)
Yeah.
Broad vs. Niche Podcast Strategy: What's Right for You?
Jeff Dudan (35:31.108)
The audience is just so specific and so targeted and it's for specific people that are in this and doing that or interested about that. It would not have broad appeal, but yet they do it and they have a lot of followers and they're very successful and it serves their purpose versus a broad reach podcast. I've listened to several of yours. I was listening to one today and it was extremely entertaining and it was current events and all kinds of stuff on there.
And it was just, but you could tell it was just more of a broad, uh, outreach. And, and it would be very palatable, very nice to listen to on a car ride or, or going somewhere because it's easy going and it's not going to give you a bunch of homework in your head and it was just very entertaining. So how do you, uh, so, so depending on what your audience is, this is just a communication method, it can work for anybody.
Ryan Alford (36:12.907)
Yeah.
Ryan Alford (36:22.794)
Yeah. I'll say this. I'll, I'll use, you know, my own show in answering the question, which is I want to be the Joe Rogan business podcast. I don't mind throwing Joe Rogan's name out there. Like a business podcast on its, in its own premise is going to be limited on some level because it's in that category. Right. But I do want to be the business podcast that anyone and everyone could take.
both entertainment, knowledge, and insight from. And so, because I'm playing the long game and that's why it took five years for the podcast to take. I knew that, I knew that our broad approach would take time but I didn't need revenue from the show, year one or year two. I just need, and I'm still playing the long game with my personal, I just believe the more known Ryan Alford is, the better it will be for the long-term business.
of the agency and Ryan offered. And so the, I'm playing a different game. Some people, if they're broad or, you know, targeted hyper targeted niche, because look, they do see podcasts as a business development channel, they want to monetize more quickly. And so the more hyper niche you get, the faster you'll get to those goals. And I know that and I coach clients that work with us to get there faster to niche down.
which is the opposite of what I do. Because now the Radcast is a Radcast podcast network. We have multiple shows under our, I'll talk a little bit about vacay in a second. But when I'm talking with the client, depending on what your goal is from the show, will determine how niche or how specific you get with topic and guests.
Fascinating But Not Famous: What Makes a Great Guest
Jeff Dudan (38:11.892)
The slope of the line is long and flat for a while, generally, I would expect. But if you get more specific, you can target those people and those people are gonna be specifically interested. I wonder though, when you have a narrow podcast, if...
the duration where people listen to it is shorter because you're talking about the same exact stuff all the time. I mean, unless you're just into South American dung beetles and this is the dung beetle podcast. And I don't even know if, I mean, I don't even know, it could be, it could be. I gotta see what current events we have, but it could be, you know, I mean, I don't know if they're even from South America, but you know, but you.
Ryan Alford (38:44.373)
I'm so glad this isn't that, but yes. Yeah.
Ryan Alford (38:55.533)
I don't either, but it sounded good.
Jeff Dudan (38:57.2)
you would exploit that entire audience relatively quickly. And so, and for the Homefront show, I mean, it's all about informing entrepreneurs. So it's a business podcast, it's about entrepreneurship, it's about journey, it's about dealing with fear, it's how people decided to do great things and what were the drivers and how they dealt with that. That's for us, that's the change that we wanna make in the world. And it directly ties to what we do on an everyday basis.
Ryan Alford (39:01.197)
Yes.
Ryan Alford (39:24.95)
Well, this is because you guys have access to some of the best brand and franchise opportunities in the world. And so you talk about entrepreneurship and what that means. So people learn, you know, what the ins and outs of those are, but then you have a backend solution, which is we have the greatest, one of the best franchising opportunities across a number of brands. So all that slatters together, right?
Jeff Dudan (39:45.796)
It does, but I don't have any misconceptions that we're gonna somehow have a million followers by the end of the year.
Ryan Alford (39:51.57)
No, yeah, it's a long game, even if no matter how specific you are, but you know, when you tie those things together with is what is goal versus topic. Um, it typically will lay out your strategy for you. You know, it becomes pretty clear. And if it's not, then you hire someone like us or, you know, you go hit Jeff in the DMS and someone smart will teach you that.
Guest Selection & Strategy: Borrowing Influence and Building Trust
Jeff Dudan (40:19.252)
How does guest selection play into all of this for you?
Ryan Alford (40:23.146)
Yeah, it's huge. Yeah. Especially, um, back to those goals for us, broad, uh, desire of audience. You know, I mean, obviously we're about, I mean, we always have to go listen to ours, we tie it back to Mark. I mean, you're going to hear Mark. Like we'll talk about current events and all those things, and you're going to get a marketing lesson for me on something. I get all, I'll say it all the time. I get on my, I'm going to get on my soap box for a second. I tell the team, I'm like, I'm get on my soap box about something.
Jeff Dudan (40:39.732)
Mm-hmm.
Ryan Alford (40:51.626)
You know, and I'm going to tell them, you know, the marketing perspective on it. So you're not going to miss that, but getting the guest selection is big for us. Cause you know, I I'm a big person, like circle COI when I do in my coaching, like with branding and stuff like circle of influence. So you've got borrowed interest circle of influence. Um, if you want your circle of interest, if you have a low COI, then you need to borrow from others. You need to, these, these circles need to overlay.
And in the ones that are bigger than yours, you're bringing them on yours. Because once you have a large show, when I had a small show, I'm trying to borrow influence because I need bigger Danes with bigger audiences than me to help give me credibility and interest. And that's what it helps you do. So the bigger the name in your field or industry for us, that might be celebrities or athletes or famous founders like Jeff Duden, but like there's, but that's what we have.
to do to make our show interesting to broader people. And if you've got a smaller, more niche target, you still want the big, back to those dung beetles in South America, the biggest specialists known on the face of the earth on that topic. And so it's wildly important.
Jeff Dudan (41:57.225)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (42:07.136)
And by the way, that person's widely available for shows. Largely, largely open. Just telling you. I'm not going to lie.
Ryan Alford (42:14.571)
Jeff, DM Jeff right now and ask him about where to find the dung beetle. Yeah, but like it's important, but I will say this. All right. I try not to talk out of both sides of my mouth, but occasionally I'll turn this way for this comment.
Jeff Dudan (42:19.088)
I'm getting canceled by the dung beetle groups.
Ryan Alford (42:36.862)
A lot of goodwill comes from having guests on your show. And I've had names and you'll see them that, that are not just strategic, but if I want to extend or have a relationship with someone that may not do anything for my show, I'm never going to threaten the success of my show over something like this, but sometimes a strategic relationship and what
the goodwill that you can get from having the show, you'd be amazed at the power of what that does with a relationship. And that can't be understated, not just to get something out of it, but because it gives you power in helping someone or making someone feel a certain way. And you can't underestimate what that can do, both literally or just how it can make someone feel.
Jeff Dudan (43:36.34)
What would be an example of that?
Ryan Alford (43:39.41)
Uh, I think you've met someone that maybe is getting started. Like I'll say maybe on the end of you've met someone that's getting started in a certain field and it's, maybe it's not going to like blow up your audience, but you've got a good place in the heart for them. You feel really good about them, but they need an opportunity. So you can showcase them and create that opportunity for them, especially if they leverage the right way, they create content, they amplify it. They do all those things.
So that would be maybe the charitable, but giving way of using that. And the other thing might be strategically from a relationship, Roger Jones has a lot of great contacts and strategically could help me in different ways, but Roger Jones isn't really known or isn't really the greatest talker of all time.
But I need to have Roger Jones on strategically to create a place for us to have a dialogue and to build a relationship and to him to feel like a million dollars and that will pay dividends.
Jeff Dudan (44:49.588)
for sure. I have also found people that are fascinating, but not famous. And I had a guy, he was a trained interrogator. And it just, he knows his stuff inside and out, and he's worked in loss prevention, getting confessions and hostage negotiations. And he's doing very well, but not a big following, but man, was that an interesting
Ryan Alford (44:55.079)
Exactly. That and that's yeah.
Jeff Dudan (45:17.458)
Every bit of that was worth listening to.
Ryan Alford (45:20.45)
Grace, my assistant's in the room. I'm gonna tell her to write down that fascinating but not famous because I'm gonna use that. I will say that is the filter that I use. I love that. Don't charge me too much for that one. But no, but that's a great approach. No, but I love that because that is, I've never said it that way, but that is what I do.
Jeff Dudan (45:28.4)
Tag me in that tweet. Yeah.
No, you can tweet it, just tag me. I'll have to set up my Twitter. I'll go set up a Twitter. Then you can do it.
Ryan Alford (45:49.462)
I'll send something to grace or I'll talk, you know, we'll, and they'll be like, why? I'm like, because I just find her really interesting. And I think our audience, no one will know who the heck it is, but if they really listen, they're going to get a lot from it.
Jeff Dudan (46:02.952)
What else do you want people to know about the Radcast and the other properties that you're developing within it?
What’s Next for The Radcast Network
Ryan Alford (46:08.466)
I mean, you know, uh, the Radcast has grown as big, but that's why we created the podcast network. Uh, we bring on, um, one of the largest shows in Nashville. I can't name it right now, uh, that are going to come under our umbrella, trying to build out the network to create synergies with sponsors and everything's like that opportunities. Um, and so we've got the trademark for the Radcast, which is kind of some of the timing around all this. We're going to be ceasing to system about seven shows. Sorry.
Not sorry. Uh, the, uh, you know, Radcast was a popular name, I guess, for podcasting. Too bad you started after me and you have the name, but sorry, not sorry. The, uh, but, uh, so we've got that going on and you know, so if you're listening, you've got a nice show. You want to get on the umbrella. You can reach out the, uh, we're going to be just, and they're not all the same. They're gonna be different genres and different things like that. We've got a system and we've kind of manufactured and
Jeff Dudan (46:39.584)
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
Ryan Alford (47:07.91)
engineered a platform for doing these things. And so we're helping other shows, we're bringing shows under that umbrella. And then so that's what that feeds into kind of the scope slash expertise of the agency of radical. You know, we've kind of honed in on a few different channels, and that's one of them, where we have expertise. And so we do buying and planning for media and sponsorships, we're negotiating a half a million dollar sponsorship deal for a show.
and that won't be doing anything with the Radcast network or even the Radcast, but other shows and things like that. So, um, we have a broad specialization under podcasting, uh, that kind of all ladders up and that's where all these interplay of things kind of come together. And so like founder, personal branding, that's another thing, you know, we've created the playbook, what I've done for my own brand the last six years, we do that for founders, uh, or, you know, anyone that wants to grow and invest in making themselves more known.
I have trademarked, it pays to be known.
Jeff Dudan (48:08.98)
One thing I share with people is that success is not around or backwards. It's through and the next evolution. There's always a next evolution to every business. And the, the Redcast group that you're putting together is just right on the shoulders of the work that you've done for five or six years in building this platform and it makes perfect sense. And you've, you've earned the right to have that success. Sorry to those seven people with the names. They're going to have to change, but
You know, happens to the best of us. It's just a, it's just big boy business. So everybody will be fine. None of it's fatal, but what a, you know, what a, what a testament to what you've done. All right. Can I get your hot take on some current events? Tighten the sub.
Ryan Alford (48:40.952)
Ha ha.
That's right.
Submarines, Metaverse, and Other Hot Takes
Ryan Alford (48:50.455)
Let's do it.
Uhhh...
bleeds it leads. I mean, that's why I mean, like if it's tragedy, and like that's, I mean, it's terrible. But innovation is great. But I'm never going up in a rocket or going down on a sub until they've can prove to me that it's like whatever airplanes are 99.9% chance of never crashing.
Jeff Dudan (48:58.135)
Yeah man, that I took.
Jeff Dudan (49:20.516)
Yeah, well, first of all, I've seen the videos of that thing. You're six foot five. So you sitting cross legged in that thing for eight hours. That's not who is that working for? You would, you would be charged double and you'd be laying, you'd be laying along the edge while everybody else is sitting there. It's, it's horrible. It's horrible. I used to think that, that when I could afford it, that I was going to go to space. And now that I'm 55 and I can afford it, I'm not.
Ryan Alford (49:32.791)
Yeah.
Yes. No, I'm not. I mean, it's a tragedy, but it's just like, yeah, I would never. Yeah. It's horrible.
Ryan Alford (49:46.155)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (49:49.748)
that interested in going.
Ryan Alford (49:51.31)
No, I'm not either. I'm like, I just, I can watch the video. I mean, don't get wrong. If it was, if an airplane could fly to space as safely and is, and there's been how many flights to now, like billions of flights, like, okay, fine. But not until then.
Jeff Dudan (49:54.909)
Yeah!
Jeff Dudan (50:05.664)
All right, so this whole thing is giving me the idea for an app. And so when you go down in that sub, right, you have this little window to peek out of, but you're really watching outside on television screens. So, I mean, you might as well just go to the internet. You're going to get the same exact pictures. You're sitting in your living room doing it. So my wife and daughter are in Spain right now, and they're sending me all these crappy pictures of like Columbus's tomb and all this stuff. So what I think I think.
Ryan Alford (50:09.559)
Alright.
Ryan Alford (50:18.6)
Yeah.
Ryan Alford (50:33.026)
stuff that you could go.
Jeff Dudan (50:34.02)
Yeah, so what I think should happen is, is your phone just follows you around. And then it loads the best pictures from the internet into your photos on your phone. So those are the ones that you upload. You don't have to take them. Now, if you want to be in them, I guess maybe it could just stick you right in them. But I mean, there's so much. I guess it is.
Ryan Alford (50:48.247)
Yeah.
Ryan Alford (50:55.802)
Isn't that, is that what deep fakes are? And like, but yeah, it's like, I guess when experience is truly no longer mean anything, I guess it's not the photos as much as the actual being there, but didn't that what the promise, the promise of the metaverse sort of like ultimately and is like being anywhere is on, you know, when it's actually filled real and not called cartoon world.
Jeff Dudan (51:07.816)
Well, being there is different.
Jeff Dudan (51:17.469)
Yeah.
Yeah, it's people are people still flocking to the metaverse. Did you?
Ryan Alford (51:25.11)
No, we, we panned it from day one on the Radcast. That's that I'm going to go to my grave on that. I'm sure it'll be something one day, but we panned it from day one while everyone else was saying it was the greatest thing ever. And sure enough, here we are. And it's sort of being panned everywhere.
Jeff Dudan (51:40.708)
All right, well, Ryan, today is National Coconut Day in the United States. What are you doing to celebrate?
Ryan Alford (51:46.418)
Oh, I'm definitely having a pina colada. Yes.
Jeff Dudan (51:49.084)
Oh, there you go. Fantastic. And then who do you have in the cage? Zuckerberg or Elon Musk?
Ryan Alford (51:59.678)
I think Musk would take Zuckerberg. I don't know. Yeah. I, yeah.
Jeff Dudan (52:01.128)
Do you think so? I think, see, I think that's unpopular. However, he's gonna figure out a move. Like I think.
Ryan Alford (52:09.098)
I think he's smarter than Zuckerberg. I think Zuckerberg's, oh, you're wrong, they're both highly intelligent. I have no idea what their IQs are. I think Musk is a little more of a brainiac, deep down, and a more creative thinker. I don't think Zuckerberg's that creative of a thinker. He's just a, you know, I think he's had one big idea, and the rest have kind of been, I don't know, so-so. It's my opinion. I think Musk has got a lot of them.
Jeff Dudan (52:11.348)
Think so.
Jeff Dudan (52:22.974)
Yes.
Elon vs. Zuckerberg Cage Match: Ryan’s Bet
Jeff Dudan (52:33.552)
Yeah, well, yeah, I think he would have a strategy that he has a well thought out strategy, it has physics, well true, or there'll be some physics involved and it would just be this.
Ryan Alford (52:42.764)
Yeah. Yeah, or he'd creatively work himself out of it.
Ryan Alford (52:48.694)
We've got a chip in his brain, right? So he's probably could figure out how to get themselves like super strength for like five minutes. I don't know. He's been like trying to mind map the whole brain. I think so. Like he's, I think he's on another level, like on the intelligence sphere, then, and I don't love everything that he does. I mean, but I think he's wildly intelligent.
Jeff Dudan (52:53.884)
Does he? Is he doing the check? Is he putting...
Jeff Dudan (53:02.597)
Oh yeah.
Jeff Dudan (53:08.88)
Well, you know, I'm not sure, you know, mentally what, you know, how, how his brain works, but it's a testament. I kicked off a training this morning and I talk about limiting beliefs because the decisions you make and the limitations that you put on yourself, that you actually believe, put you right exactly where you are today. And if you could remove those people that somehow just don't have those limiting beliefs are so free to be able to do great things.
Ryan Alford (53:20.959)
Yeah.
Limiting Beliefs and Why They’re the Real Enemy
Jeff Dudan (53:36.04)
And I don't know, it's a, and I think you have some control over to the extent that you expand your opportunities by releasing or reducing some of your beliefs and inhibitions. I really do. Yeah, man.
Ryan Alford (53:52.942)
100%. Right. That's, uh, that'd be in the Orion offer playbook or of, uh, of, of definitely mantras.
Jeff Dudan (54:00.444)
Yeah, who would believe that we would have the lives that we have today, that we get to be sitting here doing this? It's awesome. It's amazing.
Ryan Alford (54:05.326)
I know. Bless beyond compare, but you do have to remove limits from your mind. Because if I wouldn't be sitting here, if I listened to either myself, what no, and I shouldn't say myself or anyone else, because I thought it was crazy to include my wife about the podcast and everything else about how the path to get to certain places.
Jeff Dudan (54:13.62)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (54:26.)
Yeah, I was starting my first big business and I had someone very influential in my life. Tell me the business is never going to work. All the subcontractors in this town are already working for somebody else. OK, that's like, oh, I won't be able to get the work done as a contractor because they're all working for somebody. You know, you need to all of them. There's no there's nothing I can do. Oh, well, I thought I had a good idea. I guess not.
Ryan Alford (54:42.607)
Yeah. All of them.
Ryan Alford (54:50.994)
I hate words like all never, you know, it's like, cause it's, it's just not true. Like it's not. So.
Jeff Dudan (54:54.025)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (54:59.968)
It's not. All right. Ryan, I've got one big sentence we like to wrap up with, or a question for you. If you had one sentence to make an impact in someone's life, what would that be? Do you have an impact sentence or advice you go to? What do you tell your kids?
Ryan’s Impact Sentence: The Wolf and the Pack
Ryan Alford (55:16.618)
You know, I, there's two, I have a few, I'll use my, uh, the strength of the wolf is the pack and the strength of the pack is the wolf and as someone that likes to do everything themselves, you can't get where you need to go without a great team. But the great team is limited by how limiting the teammates are. So you got to have both. And so.
Jeff Dudan (55:28.834)
Oh.
Ryan Alford (55:44.118)
That's one of my favorite things. And I think it, it really makes your wine work when you understand what it really means.
Jeff Dudan (55:49.628)
Yeah, I love that. That's fantastic. Ryan, how can people reach you?
Ryan Alford (55:56.222)
Ryan Allford, that's one L a L F R D.com has all my stuff. I'm at Ryan Allford on every social media platform. You start searching R Y N A L F R D. You'll see that blue check next to every one of them before you could buy it. And you'll know it's me, but all my stuff's there. You can get linked to the agency, the podcast, the Radcast is obviously search and that's pretty unique. It'll pop up as well on all the platforms.
Jeff Dudan (56:27.044)
Ryan, you are fascinating and famous. And I thank you for investing time with us today on the Home Front.
Ryan Alford (56:33.878)
Hey, Jeff, my pleasure, man. I can't wait to grow our relationship and I would love to reciprocate and have you on the Radcast.
Jeff Dudan (56:41.348)
I'll love to do it. It's going to be fantastic. And as always, this podcast is brought to you by Homefront Brands, delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the Homefront where it counts. So if this does sound like you today, check us out at homefrontbrands.com and start your next chapter of greatness, building your dynasty on the Homefront. I will be sitting right here looking for you. Thank you for listening.

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