Life Lessons Learned in Vegas: Joe Boyd's Story | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this deeply human and refreshingly honest episode, Jeff Dudan sits down with storyteller, producer, and leadership thinker Joe Boyd. From growing up in Appalachian Kentucky to pastoring in Vegas, pivoting to comedy and acting, producing indie films, and eventually leading Leadercast through a major reinvention, Joe shares a journey rich in transformation. Now stepping into his next chapter with Called for Adventure, he unpacks how failure, humor, and self-reflection have shaped his purpose—and how they can help others find theirs.
Key Takeaways
- Reinvention Is a Recurring Theme: Joe’s career path—from pastor to Vegas comedian to film producer to leadership platform CEO—demonstrates that reinvention isn’t failure, it’s evolution.
- Your Calling Often Emerges from Pain: Joe believes that the things that hurt us most are often the keys to what we’re meant to do—and that our failures can become our superpowers.
- Events Should Be Marketing Tools, Not End Goals: Joe explains how Leadercast moved from being an annual event to a full-year leadership learning platform—and how events should feed broader ecosystems.
- The Age of Performance Is Exhausting Us: Social media is turning everyone into performers. Joe argues for authenticity, curiosity, and the ability to step off the stage to find peace.
- The Second Half of Life Is Where Meaning Grows: Joe’s new venture, Called for Adventure, is aimed at helping people—especially Gen X—reconnect with purpose in the second act of their lives.
- Everyone You Meet Might Be Suffering: Joe’s reminder to treat people with grace reflects his pastoral roots and deep human empathy.
Featured Quote
“Almost every day you interact with someone that’s having the worst week of their life—but they won’t tell you. So assume it’s everyone.”
TRANSCRIPT
Joe Boyd’s Wild Ride: From Kentucky Roots to Vegas Chapels
Jeff Dudan (00:03.535)
Joe Boyd, welcome to On the Homefront.
Joe Boyd (00:07.694)
Thanks for having me, excited to chat with you.
Jeff Dudan (00:09.935)
Yeah, so great you're on. Been consuming your content for a while. And I know that the leader cast has been a huge success for you and you've got something new going on. But man, let's get to know you a little bit. So who is Joe Boyd and where does he come from?
Joe Boyd (00:29.006)
Uh, uh, the nice broad question. I, uh, I'm from, uh, I'm an Appalachian kid. I grew up, uh, was born in actually Boyd County, which is my last name in Kentucky. Uh, but, but not related, uh, uh, came from about 13 generations of very poor people. Um, and, uh, when I was 12 years old, my, my dad got, got a promotion. We moved to Columbus, Ohio, which felt like Manhattan because it was so different than Kentucky. Uh, so I, I went to high school there.
Jeff Dudan (00:40.175)
Okay.
Joe Boyd (00:59.182)
I was a church kid, total kind of church nerd and thought, knew I wanted to be a preacher since I was like eight years old and went to seminary to pursue that. And, you know, along the way sort of realized that my belief system that I was discovering as a person growing up was a little different than my religious heritage. So that created some tension in my life. So I worked through that stuff early on at the church. And then,
had a career path that most people think is pretty crazy. So I went to Vegas and worked at a church and then stopped doing that and started doing improv comedy with the second city.
Jeff Dudan (01:37.391)
All right, were you doing weddings at one of those chapels in Vegas, or was it... Weekends and evenings, maybe?
Joe Boyd (01:45.486)
I was at an actual real church, but I do have a wedding chapel story.
I got the only job I've ever been fired from. I don't think I've ever said this on a podcast, uh, was the wedding chapel. Uh, I got fired. I was the backup, uh, officiant at the Luxor wedding chapel in Vegas. Uh, so I would do like two or three weddings a day and they'd always be like nine AM noon and like 1130 PM. So they're all over the place. It was before, uh, iPhone. So I was bad with the calendar.
Jeff Dudan (02:00.303)
All right, hot take.
Joe Boyd (02:24.27)
I totally blanked one. Some poor couple didn't get married because I didn't show up and then I got fired the next day. So my wedding chapel career was about 10 days long.
Jeff Dudan (02:33.295)
Hey, look, half of them don't work out anyway, so you didn't. That's exactly right, exactly right. Well, that's awesome. So we dug out a new Factoid on Joe Boyd today. So awesome. So you're in Vegas and pastoring a church and doing a side gig, and then you went into acting or improv.
Joe Boyd (02:35.982)
Yeah, saving some time.
Joe Boyd (02:43.31)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (02:56.622)
Yes, improv. So I was about in my late 20s, I was really having a crisis of faith in many ways, which is hard, which almost everyone does in their 20s if they think a lot about it, but I would happen to be leading a church, so it was awkward. And I was doing, my wife signed me up actually for improv classes with the Second City to kind of help me because I was depressed. And I confessed to her, like I...
I say I always wanted to be a pastor growing up, but my secret was that I wanted to be on that Saturday Night Live. That's really what I wanted. But it never sounded as noble. So I didn't tell a lot of people that growing up, but she knew. And so she got me, you know, Second City and the Groundlings were the two sort of training centers that most SNL people come from. And nobody was expecting me to make it a career. It was just going to be fun. But I took to it pretty quickly. And within about nine months of training, I was an understudy in that Second City show. And then...
I worked in a show called Tony and Tina's Wedding for three years, which is an improvised show in Vegas. And yeah, kind of overnight, went from working at the church to being a full -time comedic actor.
Jeff Dudan (04:08.335)
So you were married during this time.
Joe Boyd (04:11.118)
I was, I got married super young. We're about to celebrate our 30th anniversary. So we got married at 20 and 21. So, and my line about that is that my wife's been married to four different men with the same social security number. So she's a good woman because I've morphed a lot. She's changed of course too, but especially early on, I was not the same guy she married five, six years in.
Jeff Dudan (04:15.471)
Congratulations.
Jeff Dudan (04:37.167)
Look, it's probably a good thing because you got to keep it fresh. So if you just change yourself out every seven years, that's probably a good deal. But think about it, though. I know a good number of pastors, and that's a high demand career. You're always on call, there's fellowship, there's deaths, there's crisis. So those people work really long hours. They're never called in when, well, if they do a wedding, that's great. But generally,
Joe Boyd (04:41.07)
Right.
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (05:04.111)
there's something going on there so it takes a toll on people and I know there's been quite a few failed marriages as a result of the call and the demands of that job and then of course if you're on the strip you're probably working nights those were night shows would do one or two shows a night. Two.
Joe Boyd (05:17.486)
Yeah, yeah. I did one show a night of six nights a week. And the show actually ran every, it was never dark, it ran seven nights a week, but everybody got a day off, we traded roles. So yeah, but it, I mean, it was great. Apart from the kids were little and I missed bedtime. But I was home until two or three in the afternoon every day and then got home around 11 or before midnight. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (05:42.319)
Yeah, if you had to do an open mic right now, how much you got?
Joe Boyd (05:46.83)
Well, I didn't do a ton of standup, so I can answer that two ways, either zero or as long as you want me to go, so, because I'm an improviser, so if I had to stand up, if I had to do standup right now, I'd just start asking the audience questions and go for it. I think I have the skillset to be an okay standup comedian. I tried it for a little bit, but I found it super depressing actually. It wasn't good for me, my mental health, and it's an interesting kind of.
Jeff Dudan (05:53.519)
Ha ha ha.
Joe Boyd (06:15.438)
I don't know, it was kind of a dark lifestyle. I don't know, it just didn't work for me. Whereas improv, you know, it's more like who's line is it anyway or something like that. So you're there with a team. And so it's kind of fun to totally bomb with your friends on stage. It's pretty awful by yourself. But yeah, I could probably fake it better than most people walking down the street, but not as good as an actual comedian.
Jeff Dudan (06:25.615)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (06:37.615)
Yeah, most of those improv skits, man, if it doesn't work, that's even funnier.
Joe Boyd (06:43.502)
Yeah, yeah, right. And a B plus feels like an A plus because people know you made it up. So it's great.
Jeff Dudan (06:47.823)
I mean.
Jeff Dudan (06:52.271)
That's right, awesome. Well, so you went through that phase and then how did you transition from there into leadership and that career?
From Second City to Soap Operas: Comedy as Therapy
Joe Boyd (07:06.446)
Yeah, it took quite a few more turns to get to that. But I, so I was doing that in Vegas and then, you know, started, I got an agent in LA, it's about a four hour drive. So then I started auditioning a lot. So I was doing my shows and then trying to make it as a, improv people call it a straight actor. It just means like, we don't think we're real actors, but we can pretend to be. So I was getting commercials and soap opera roles and sitcom roles and things like that. So eventually we decided to move to LA to kind of give the real acting deal a shot and.
Jeff Dudan (07:09.199)
Okay.
Joe Boyd (07:35.406)
Spent three years walking into rooms every day that people that were just better looking than me, but looked a lot like me. Like that's what auditioning is. Did that, I think I went on over 400 auditions in three years. Learned a lot about rejection and failure and how a lot of it's out of your control. But landed some okay gigs. Started producing a movie, because I wanted to kind of show what I could do really as an actor, but.
It was an improvised mockumentary, like Christopher Guest style movie, if you're familiar with any of those. It was called Hitting the Nuts, it's a poker movie. And so that was the first film I produced and realized, I think if I was gonna stay in LA, I had more chops really as a producer than an actor. And kind of had the realization I don't think I wanted. I didn't wanna do that in LA at the time. So in a full circle sort of,
coming home moment, came back to Ohio where we started, got a, tried the church job thing again, got a job as a teaching pastor at a large church, and it went really great for about three or four years until I realized, ah, it's still not for me. And ironically had produced that, kind of rated -ard poker movie on the side while I was being a preacher again, which was a fun thing to navigate. And that opened the door to producing some more movies, so.
ended up producing movies here in Cincinnati where I ended up. Actually, it was a little easier here than out in LA and made four or five feature films that had various levels of success. Started production company, left the church job, started production company with my friends and ran that company for 10 years. And it eventually did a lot more sort of corporate video marketing videos for Procter & Gamble here in Cincinnati and Kroger company. So a lot of places like that. Leadercast was one of our clients.
for about 10 years. And so during COVID, the owner of LeaderCast asked me to step in and run that company. And ultimately that's how I became involved with LeaderCast. It's hard to tell that story any shorter than I just did, but that's what got us here today.
Jeff Dudan (09:49.647)
Now here's my takeaway. You have an incredible wife. She's a pain. That's a that's a that's a lot of change. And you know it you have at least some level of explanation you have to do when you're getting ready to make a career change. So you know good on you. You can sell. So so so but the production. Well.
Joe Boyd (09:52.846)
I told you.
Joe Boyd (09:58.382)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (10:06.446)
Yeah. Yeah.
Joe Boyd (10:14.638)
It's not like I was killing it anywhere, right? It's like I'm gonna try something else that might or might not work. We'll see what happens. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (10:19.919)
Well, you know what? It's seasons of life, man. It's so great to have. I'm in many entrepreneurs. We're all the same. It's you. The variety and the newness of something is something that we seek. And I've had four or five lives within a life and they've all been great. They've all been time appropriate. And, you know, now I'm just in this one for right now. But no, very cool. Amazing story.
Joe Boyd (10:28.814)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (10:42.35)
Right. Yeah.
From Film Producer to Faith Leader… Again
Jeff Dudan (10:48.687)
And the production background as it relates to something like leader cast which was very high production value is and Is that why that was such a good fit for you? But I guess you had been they had been a client for a while So you you knew the ins and outs of the show?
Joe Boyd (10:51.886)
Thank you.
Yeah, for sure. And I mean, you're not supposed to have favorite clients, but they're one of my favorites. I just really resonated with the message that they had. And in some ways, you know, my church life was always in bigger churches, like churches with five, 6 ,000 members. And I was used to kind of that weekly kind of presentation in a big stage and leader cast.
Jeff Dudan (11:09.231)
All right.
Joe Boyd (11:25.902)
is that's kind of the engine that drove that machine was a yearly event like that. So it just felt really in my skill set, combining what I knew from church and also what I learned as a production. And it was coming out of COVID very much a startup and I'm an entrepreneur. I mean, it'd been around 20 years, but it had to be reborn. So that's kind of what I signed up for. And it was hard.
It's a struggle. We got it in a good place now, but it was a great company with a great legacy. 22 years started by John Maxwell way back in the day in Atlanta. And the business model needed completely changed. It needed changed before COVID, but COVID kind of almost killed it. And so it took a lot. It took like the height of my ability to sort of lead to get it where it was. And...
Jeff Dudan (12:02.031)
Okay.
How Joe Boyd Took the Helm at Leadercast
Joe Boyd (12:19.822)
To continue with our theme two weeks ago, I stepped down as CEO at LeaderCast. So I ran it actively for two and a half years. My hope was always to be able to step down really as soon as I could and handed it over to a team that's way more qualified than me now to run that kind of company. But I felt like I probably had it in me to turn it around and get it where it needed to go. And I think I did it, but it was a struggle. And now I'm at a season in my life where really, although,
I haven't actually actively started a brand new thing for 13 years because the production company sort of morphed into Learcast. So I'm actually pretty excited right now to start something new.
Jeff Dudan (13:02.959)
I love to chat about that. One or two questions on LeaderCast. The scope of offerings there, I know it's an event, but is it also masterminds, classes, programs, materials, other things like that?
Joe Boyd (13:18.958)
Yeah, it's basically an online leadership learning portal now. So the events are still our sort of engine that drives us, but the big transition was taking it from an event company to a 24 -7, 365 leadership development platform. So that's what we've done with it. So, you know, it's a lot of companies, organizations, government entities will buy seats for their folks and you'll be able to go in.
Jeff Dudan (13:23.439)
Okay.
Joe Boyd (13:47.694)
You get the art events for free if you're part of the subscription service, but you also get a ton of classes, kind of like masterclass around leadership from some really well -known and smart folks, and lots of other sort of self -directed leadership videos and content that you can use.
Jeff Dudan (14:06.639)
Got it. Awesome. And you're moving into a new season of life. I get the sense, Joe, that you've got a real heart for people. It seems to be kind of a thread. Yeah, well, I mean, well, yeah, but if you want to enter, my experience is that people that want to entertain, people that want to be in front of the group have something to say and they want to have people to say it to.
Joe Boyd (14:18.862)
I think I do. Yeah, I do. I'm an introvert, but I do. Weirdly, but yeah.
Introducing Called for Adventure: A Community for the Second Act
Jeff Dudan (14:35.599)
So now you're moving into this new venture called Cald for Adventure. What's that about?
Joe Boyd (14:43.662)
Good question. Like a good improviser, I started it 13 days ago. So it's a, I did a vision. Yeah, I did a vision exercise back in August last year. That was a, that I had done stuff like this before, but I've been putting off doing this because I knew I was, I knew that I really was not in the right place career wise.
Jeff Dudan (14:48.143)
Okay, awesome. Well then we called you at the right time.
Joe Boyd (15:08.782)
Um, and I was kind of afraid to do it, but I did it and it was basically a riding exercise to see where you want to go in three to five years. And I, I was shocked what came out of it in some ways. Like it totally makes sense now, but, uh, what I wanted to do is help people find their unique calling in the world and, uh, take that, you know, a big heroes journey and kind of Joseph Campbell, uh, fan and nerd and this idea of crossing the threshold and receiving a call from adventure and playing a little bit of the role of mentor in that hero's journey. When, when.
Jeff Dudan (15:28.111)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (15:38.03)
Every time in a great story, every time the hero is presented with a call, they always deny it. They're scared. They say no. And usually a mentor comes along and says, no, you got this. And they usually give them a sword or some super power to use. So I fancy myself, I guess, not that I'm super smart, but I'm old now. So 51, I just turned 50. Oh, it's my birthday today. Happy birthday to me. Thank you. I appreciate it. 51.
Jeff Dudan (16:01.871)
Happy birthday. How is it? 51. Nice.
Joe Boyd (16:06.542)
Yeah. So, you know, I feel like I've got, uh, I'm at a pretty, I'm at that great age where I'm, um, I'm old, but not old yet. You know what I mean? Like I got some energy still in the tank. Um, and a lot of, a lot of failures in life lessons. So called for adventure .com right now is basically a daily blog that I'm doing and collecting folks that are really interested in finding their calling. This summer we'll start doing, uh, in -person workshops, uh, that I've been sort of.
piloting, figuring out to help people kind of go away for a weekend and come out kind of knowing what's next for them. And so, but I said since day one, you know, I'm not going to pretend like I'm not an improviser. Like there's a basic direction we're heading. There's a clear like north star that I'm going to help people find their unique calling and live a grand adventure. But in terms of business plan, we're making that a little, making it up a little bit as we go with the people that want to be a part of it.
Jeff Dudan (17:02.223)
Who do you expect is going to resonate with the program?
Why Gen X Still Matters—and Needs a Mission
Joe Boyd (17:06.894)
You know, that was the, uh, I had a hunch it might be people about my age. Uh, and, uh, when I was talking about it with my marketing savvy friends before I launched it, they said, who are you going to target? You should target, you know, millennials and, and Jen wine, uh, cause they, they're younger. They really need to know what to do with their lives. I was like, I can see how this would appeal to them, but I also feel like, you know, first of all, nobody targets Gen X for anything. Cause we don't exist evidently. Uh, people have completely forgotten about us, which is what they predicted.
But we're about the same age. When our parents were this age, there were two bestselling books. One was The Purpose Driven Life by Rick Warren and the other was a book called Halftime by Bob Buford. And they were both about for boomers entering their 50s. It was kind of, it was that time that they started to ask, what's life all about? What's my purpose? I got a lot of time left, hopefully. And I feel like I would like to kind of play that role for my generation a little bit. I don't need to be the only one, but I feel there's a place for me.
to kind of help people say, okay, you know, and of course everyone's life stage is different, but a lot of us that chose to have kids in our twenties, they're getting, they're starting to leave the house and they're saying we could live to be 120. I don't know if I can, but you know, some of us still got 70 years left. We should probably figure out what to do with those years, right? And how about at least the next 20, at least the next 20 we should figure out. But.
Jeff Dudan (18:26.255)
Yeah, I'm I feel like my I'm watching reruns all the time now, I don't know about another 50 or 70 years of this I It would have to get it would have to get really interesting Joe. Oh bad
Joe Boyd (18:37.422)
I hear you man.
Yeah. Yeah. But that's what fires me up. It's helping. And, you know, so far it's only been a couple of weeks, but just the folks that have connected, had about 500 people connect, sign up to be a part of it with no marketing or anything, just kind of word of mouth. So I'm pretty happy about that. And just kind of, I said going in, I don't care how many people are a part of it. Let's just find like -minded folks and start to figure it out together. And it really wanted to grow into a community, not just kind of an online platform.
Jeff Dudan (18:47.919)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (18:53.359)
Okay.
Jeff Dudan (19:13.903)
What kind of unique challenges do people have today that maybe in your time as a pastor has really changed? Everyone talks about, of course, social media, the internet. We have a disrespectful culture now where people have moved from online into in -person to be overtly disrespectful, and it seems to be.
More so than it used to be, especially when I grew up. I mean, it was, I mean, you didn't talk back to parents. You didn't do that kind of stuff. So, you know, there's a lot of work to do here in the space that you're talking about. What types of things are you detecting today that were maybe a little bit different than in your leadership roles of churches that you were dealing with?
Everyone’s Performing: Social Media, Shame, and the Lost Art of Presence
Joe Boyd (20:11.15)
Yeah, you know what, I mean what comes to mind first is like I don't...
I feel like everything's more performative. And it does tie in, I think, to social media, or that we're constantly trying to capture moments, especially ourselves in our best light. And that's very normal. Like, if our parents had social media, they would have done the same thing. It's very human. I think there's an intersection with...
Jeff Dudan (20:20.815)
Mm.
Joe Boyd (20:45.262)
the technology we have now and our human instinct to have people want to like us and see us in our best light, that is sort of making everyone a bit of a performer in a 24 seven away. And that as a performer myself, like I know you can't live on stage all the time, like, and it'll destroy you. And then you, you live, you know, for approval and likes. And one of the things,
Jeff Dudan (21:04.847)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (21:12.526)
I just did a, my blog today was 51 things I believe are 51. And the first one was, I know one of these is wrong, I just don't know which one. That's the first thing I believe. But, you know, one of them was that nobody is thinking about you as much as you think they are. Like, and the other thing is that's a good thing. You know, people will say, like, you know, I forgot to say a happy birthday to so and so, so I'm afraid to talk to them.
They don't know. Like, and if they do, then what a weird friend to have that would be mad about that. Like, I just think there's like, I think we are constantly assuming because of the world we live in that everyone, the people wake up in the morning, look at their phone and say, what's Joe doing today? But, but they don't, they don't like, and I think they're, I think maybe I don't want to age you, but when we were growing up, we still had those insecurities. I did. Uh, but it, it was in real time and it was with real face to face.
Jeff Dudan (21:54.639)
Right.
Jeff Dudan (22:08.111)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (22:09.678)
And that was still hard enough to deal with. So I feel like the other thing I would say is we talk a lot, and we should, we talk a lot about kids growing up this way and how detrimental it is, but my parents are that way. They're in their seventies. Like it's, we're all that way now. It's not just kids. And so I think we need to like, it's going to take discipline at some level to use the do not disturb on our iPhone and to go on a walk. You know what I mean?
Jeff Dudan (22:35.695)
Well, yeah, man. And like, I just wrote down a few comments and, you know, and part of it is, I think we used to be more present because we didn't have a choice. I mean, it was like when you're out, you don't have a phone.
and you're out, your parents can't get you unless they start calling around people's house looking for you. You're with the group you're with. As Dion Sanders said at our conference, he's like, be where your feet are. Be present. And I think he hits on that because so many people aren't, man. You're looking at your phone, you're with, you see it all the time. I see it in my family, man. There'll be times I'll look around, we're sitting in the same room together, everybody's looking at their phone. It's like, hey,
Joe Boyd (23:06.83)
Yeah, yeah.
Jeff Dudan (23:21.583)
And for me, I don't have a big friend group like everybody I know is here. So I don't have to look at my phone. They're all in the room. Anybody anybody who's going to text me or Snapchat me is sitting on the couch right now. But and then I saw something on the Internet today or maybe my wife was sharing it with me last night. But yeah, she was listening to a podcast and there was a study that said kids that grew up being outdoors.
Joe Boyd (23:26.862)
Yeah, yeah.
Jeff Dudan (23:49.327)
were remarkably happier than the kids that didn't. And I think the inference is that the kids that were outdoors had less time that they were just going from screen to screen to screen, and they were actually out there. And they had developed a little bit more patience. Not everything's going to happen right now. I'm in a hunting stand, or I'm fishing, or I'm doing some of these other outdoor activities. And they become a little bit more resilient, or they're...
You know, like for me, even at my advanced age, and I'm older than you a little bit, but I have the same problems with social media that I'm not immune to it. And I'm constantly going down the rabbit hole and saying, you know, that was just 30 minutes that I just absolutely wasted. And now my brain's tired and I should know better than that type thing. But we're all susceptible to it.
Joe Boyd (24:42.958)
Yeah, and it also doesn't do a lot of good to like, I don't know, to pile on, we're all addicted to it at some level. So it's, when you're struggling with an addiction, you don't love it when there's someone in your life constantly telling you to stop. You gotta figure it out on your own, right? So I think one of the other things I wrote today is I just think curiosity solves a lot of problems. And it -
Jeff Dudan (24:52.559)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (25:01.551)
That's right.
Joe Boyd (25:12.782)
So when you feel like something needs to change instead of telling yourself or others around you, we need to, instead of saying, okay, we're not gonna use our phones from seven to nine PM every night. And then the kids are just upset with you for two years. Let's ask questions with the kids if they're old enough to process about what do you all think we could do without our phones? What would be fun for you? Like really trying to approach things from curiosity versus.
we should be doing this or we shouldn't be doing that. Because in my experience, nothing makes people want to do things more than when you tell them they shouldn't do it. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (25:48.527)
Oh, 100%. Yeah. I'll tell you, I went to Seinfeld in New York, and he was at the Beacon Theater, and it was a gift, and I went with my wife. And here's a 69 -year -old guy. There was a warm -up act. She was good. She was a popular comedian, and she did well. And before she even got off the stage, he came sprinting out there.
at 69 years old, grabbed the mic stand, swung it around his head, put it down like a matador, and just commenced to just crush for like an hour. But the first thing that he did was everybody, because he's one of the few comedians, big time comedians, that doesn't make you put your phone in the bag. So now you go to a show and it's, you know, Chappelle and all, you know, it's like, hey, you put your phone in the bag.
Joe Boyd (26:44.302)
Yeah. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (26:45.679)
They don't want their bits getting out there so that people don't feel cheated when they come to see them. They'll put the crowd work out there online, but they won't put whatever their bits are right now. And so all these phones are up. And he's like, sure, go ahead, take a picture. He goes, you and your phones, you're never where you are. Here's what you're doing. You're going to take this video, you're going to miss my show, you're going to take this video, you're going to send it to somebody, and they're going to say, nice.
Joe Boyd (26:53.166)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (27:15.951)
He goes, and then the first time you're going to get to watch the show is eight years from now when it comes up in your memories. And then that's when you're going to get to watch the joke. And it was like everybody's phone just like he shamed them into putting their phones down. And I don't think I saw another phone up for the entire show. I put mine away and I would like I felt like I'm not going to pick it up and get a picture because and we sat there and had the best time just being present and knowing that we weren't going to have a recording of it.
Joe Boyd (27:22.03)
All right. Yeah.
Shame, yeah.
Joe Boyd (27:37.998)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (27:46.031)
or any of it. It was about 30 % stuff I'd heard before, but about, you know, the rest of it seemed relatively new, but it was really interesting. It was such a mature way to handle it, and it's probably why he's the best.
Joe Boyd (27:54.733)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (28:00.685)
Yeah, very smart of him, quite calculated. He's kind of a neurotic freak, but in a good way, I think. I actually don't mind. We saw Bruno Mars in Vegas a couple months ago and they took our phones. And he did a song called, I Took Your Phones Away. That's how he started the concert with the song that he wrote. And it's actually kind of nice. I was like, oh, because I was holding it. So I knew no one was using it.
Jeff Dudan (28:03.407)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (28:08.527)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (28:13.647)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (28:19.279)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (28:23.919)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (28:27.374)
but uh... it was kind of nice to like i mean you want is at home that i can walk like a lot of some
Jeff Dudan (28:27.375)
That's right.
Five Years From Now: Joe’s Vision for Life and Leadership
Jeff Dudan (28:32.527)
Yeah, yeah. So play it forward for me five years for you, Joe. You took time to write the vision. Can you give us a little bit of insight into what's in it?
Joe Boyd (28:43.598)
I did.
Joe Boyd (28:48.014)
Sure. It was five years, so four and a half years from now. I was doing three things. I was launched this called for adventure and that was my main sort of career outlet. And it was primarily doing these workshops around the world, doing some keynote speaking with it and then helping folks online find their calling and making a living with that. My wife's a travel agent. So...
about a third of my time was spent traveling with her. She gets all the, she's going to Hawaii tomorrow, I'm not. So part of my dream is to have a job where, right, I get to go on about 30 % of the trips right now. She does great. So she gets, and she turns things down. So she could be gone 20 weeks a year on free trips. And so I'm like, I want a job where I can do that or don't have to work all the time. So I'm.
Jeff Dudan (29:25.455)
Well, that's a happy birthday for you, sir.
Jeff Dudan (29:34.991)
Mm.
Jeff Dudan (29:40.495)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (29:46.318)
In five years, I'll be traveling with her more. And then my, uh, the thing, so the, the visioning exercise that I did, you write for 20 minutes without taking your hand off the page. About as if it is five years in the future. I learned it from a man named Ari Winesweg, who's actually going to speak at, at leader cast this year. Um, so it was a, towards the last word where my hand started to cramp like 10 minutes, 15 minutes in. And I was like, I don't have anything else to say. And what was interesting as I, uh,
The last things I wrote was about producing a comedy show in Vegas and moving back there, at least having a place there. So according to my vision statement in five years, I'm getting ready to put up a comedy show in Vegas. Let's see how it goes.
Jeff Dudan (30:31.823)
Oh man, that would be outstanding. You know, events, there was a lot of consternation about events, about trade shows during COVID. Everything moved online and people said this is just the way it's gonna be from now on. But my experience is that trade shows and events are just making a strong comeback right now.
Do you, what have you seen with LeaderCast? I know that you just stepped down as the CEO, but what's been the trends? And then I'm really interested, anything that you could share if somebody was out there wanting to put events on, like what's the funnel to get somebody connected? Is it pitch the event first and then you get people into the programs or?
You know, how do people enter that environment? Like, what's the entry point for people inside of an ecosystem like LeaderCast?
The Truth About Events: Building Ecosystems, Not Just Crowds
Joe Boyd (31:36.75)
Yeah, I mean, first of all, trade shows are back for sure. Lederkess is not a trade show. There's always, you know, the, I guess there's the cynical part of me a little bit that's like, you know, on the company dime, we get to go to somewhere warm and sell our stuff and listen to a few people. And it's not bad. That's the way the world works. And I've enjoyed a trade show myself from time to time. But part of what makes the economy of a trade show work is that it's really networking.
Jeff Dudan (31:44.047)
Right, right.
Jeff Dudan (31:58.639)
Sure.
Joe Boyd (32:05.742)
and cross selling, right? That's a huge part of it. Leadercast was never that. It was just a leader cast. It was just a leadership event that the like revolutionary thing about leader cast 20 years ago was it was simulcast all over the world. So we did this big event in Atlanta with 5 ,000 people in an arena. And then at one point we had almost a thousand what we called host sites around the world that would show it at the same time. So 20 years ago, it was kind of a big deal to be able to pull all that off. Satellite.
Jeff Dudan (32:32.431)
Yeah. And that was when Maxwell, was Maxwell involved with it at that point in time?
Joe Boyd (32:37.71)
He started the first year or two, then my buddy Jeremy Kubitschek took it over and he's the one that really built it out. He's with Giant Worldwide now. Jeremy's a great guy. But, but so the original pitch of Leadercast worked, worked great until it kind of didn't, which was going to like smaller chambers of commerce, more rural areas and other places and saying, look, you can't afford to have Peyton Manning and you know, Seth Godin and whoever on your stage, you know, that.
Jeff Dudan (32:41.999)
Okay.
Joe Boyd (33:06.478)
There were years, LeaderCast probably spent half a million dollars on honorary. So the pitch was you'll never get these people to come to your Chamber of Commerce in Iowa, but you can have them live on video. And then really LeaderCast started these little, a lot of chambers. There was like franchises. So they would actually make a little bit of money at it. They would license it from us, put it up in their community. People pay 30 bucks ticket to come see it, that kind of thing. And it was really working great that way.
Jeff Dudan (33:31.855)
Sure.
Joe Boyd (33:34.318)
2016, 17, then started to decline a little. And I think in our world, what really shifted was we still have some folks that do that. They love it. It works for them. It's great for them. But a lot of other people saying, look, we were doing like, before COVID, we were doing eight to 12 events a year and Leadercast was one of them. And we're trimming that down to three or four. Like that we were doing too many. So it's not that in those, in that chamber world, a lot of them were hearing back.
It's just we don't want to have a full -time person to do all these events. We're just going to do a few So for us what what what we and the other thing that shifted for us is we start having a lot more private we say private but like companies and organizations That wanted to license our content just to show to their people they weren't trying to make money off of it or do their own event You know NASA's one of our biggest clients Home Depot Marathon oil like They just want to show it to their 5 ,000 people and so we
Jeff Dudan (34:09.583)
Got it.
Joe Boyd (34:34.254)
We started to see that these companies still like the idea of it feeling like an event, but they kind of do want people to be able to watch it at their desk or at home. So for us, that's what shifted. But it had started to shift just in the culture pre -COVID and then COVID sort of really changed it. I would say, I don't even know if I answered your question, but that's where we're with LeaderCast. But for folks that want to just do events,
You know, I just think that you need to know why and generally the best events, usually the event itself is not where you're looking to get the bottom line ROI, right? So you might do a big event, but you have, it feeds something else. I think it's pretty hard to do like a huge leadership event unless you have.
Jeff Dudan (35:19.279)
Right.
Joe Boyd (35:27.79)
someone like a Mark Cuban or someone behind it, like some face that you can draw in, like Dave Ramsey does his pretty well, I'm sure. That guy makes money all the time. But I would say it can fall into the money pit category if you just want to put on something really cool and get people there. It's a lot like when I was producing movies, actually. They used to say you should have at least equal your production budget for marketing. So a lot of people would make an independent movie for $5 million and then have no money for marketing. Nobody's ever going to see it.
Jeff Dudan (35:37.039)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (35:57.103)
Mm.
Joe Boyd (35:57.934)
So I think there are some similarities there. But I love the X2 conference in Utah. And that whole thing is just a leader to get folks interested in their product, which it's totally filling because I can't remember the name of the product right now. The one that does surveys for... I'll think about it in a minute. So anyway, that's a lot of rambling. But that's how I would think about...
Jeff Dudan (36:17.967)
Ha ha ha.
Joe Boyd (36:27.022)
event stuff and you know it's obviously concerts are back, comedy's back, all this stuff's back. But I think in the business world, some of it's a little different than the entertainment stuff. For whatever reason, just feels that way to me. It's not all the business conferences didn't come back. It's a little harder sledding.
Jeff Dudan (36:33.775)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (36:48.111)
Yeah, I'm thinking about it the same way as you. So I've got a business partner that does trade shows, but their real get is leads, people that might want to get into a business. And I don't know the economics of it, but I assume it's a loss leader. And there's heavy marketing around it. You want to get people walking through. You got education going on there. So you want to stack the value. So there's all kinds of seminars going on all the time. That's well -publicized.
you can get in there, you know, how to get an SBA loan, how to do this, how to do, you know, just all the different topics that people might be thinking about are happening two or three at a time in different breakout rooms around the floor and stuff like that. And then there's other people that I know that are moving, doing a lot of acquisitions in different industries. And I mean, they give away a lot of content to get these businesses in their orbit.
Joe Boyd (37:40.334)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (37:46.031)
and just to be able to spend two or three days with them. And maybe it's only two or 300 people in the room, but that might represent 100 target companies that they might want to partner with or something like that. So I think to your point, an event is not the objective. An event is a sales tool. And yeah, yeah, it's marketing spend. However, for me,
Joe Boyd (38:09.582)
It's a marketing spend. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (38:15.823)
I'm I'm very susceptible to those environments because that's really where you get deep your full when I go to something like that, man I'm fully engaged. I feel like I'm getting value and You know even with all the business I've done I'm like well I'll be lucky if I can get to talk to these people that you know are up on the stage or you know having You know sharing their experiences and whatnot. So yeah, it's an it's an interesting time for all the technology and this kind of goes to where
Joe Boyd (38:23.086)
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (38:44.591)
I just answered a question for somebody that came in on one of our feeds and I don't even know what it was, but I did, we had a podcast on AI and the question was, what are the jobs in the future and the careers that you're gonna hire salaried people, that companies are continue to hire salaried employees for versus what's gonna get eliminated with AI? And I really don't know from a,
the perspective of saying which, I mean, I know that AI is doing a lot of coding, it's creating a lot of copy, it's writing a lot of content, it's launching campaigns, and it's doing all this kind of stuff. That being said, if you don't look at it, sometimes it doesn't make that much sense. It's not, you know, it's not, you know, a machine still doesn't have the ability to say, this is an interesting hook. It says this clips the right length, the right amount of people are talking.
Joe Boyd (39:33.966)
Yeah, yeah.
Jeff Dudan (39:43.758)
I heard these words, but the clip you look at it and it's like, well, as a human, I'm not at least been interested in what that thing kicked out. But if you go all the way back to Google and how Google built their company, and there's a great book called How Google Works, and smart creatives. So as we go forward in this world, people not that have the answers, but people that can ask the better questions are going to be the ones that.
Joe Boyd (39:58.894)
Mm -hmm.
Jeff Dudan (40:13.679)
are of high value and then it gets right back down to we're tribal people. So getting face to face with people, hanging out with people, people that are warm and they can smile, they can build relationships. Like those are the types of skills that are gonna come back and be, I think, of the highest order of importance. Because a lot of this other stuff that you used to have to spend a year coding a program, like you ask the right question now, it'll spit it out for you.
You know, build me Tetris in code and here it comes. So it's interesting. And I think for a lot of people, and then because of there's all different personality types and learning styles out there, people that, I mean, it really can create a lot of, I think confusion or angst about what people should do with their living, especially now. And I think that's why I get so many questions about that. You get these young...
Joe Boyd (40:46.478)
Right. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (41:11.855)
18, 19, 20, 21 year olds. It seems to be a particular amount of people that actually get my book discernment because it's kind of targeted towards them or, you know, consuming our content and they're questioning. They're trying to figure out like, okay, you're an older guy. You've been around a little bit. Like tell me where to go and what to do and where to focus. And, you know, I'm not really sure that I have the right answer all the time for them.
Joe Boyd (41:41.838)
You probably don't, nobody does. But you know, I...
Jeff Dudan (41:41.967)
which I guess is no, no, I don't, which.
Joe Boyd (41:48.206)
So, you know, I, well, I hate to keep going back to my list today, but one of them was AI is going to destroy us or it's not, I don't know. That's one of the things I believe. Like, it was just so early, like we don't, it's like, it's like you're, I mean, it's like the internet being born. No one could actually predict, of course, we know it's gonna disrupt our lives. We know that for sure. We know it's gonna bring opportunity and we know it's going to,
automate things that are going to take jobs away. We know that for sure. That's what always happens when we, that's what there aren't a lot of wagon wheel salesmen anymore because of Henry Ford. So like we know that's going to happen. So I think there's some like common sense things. Like I don't know if I'd send my kid into get a coding degree right now, but I also think we, you know, I'm still pretty big fan of like pursuing your, your passion.
Jeff Dudan (42:28.303)
That's right.
Joe Boyd (42:45.294)
Um, and there will, I think there will always be a way to do that. Um, I think paralysis would be the weird, the thing that I would worry about with younger folks is that they, they don't do anything cause they don't know where it's going because when none of us knew where it was going ever, you know, those of us, I think, I think about like things like COVID obviously, and then like 9 -11 folks our age, you know, none on September 10th, uh,
everything's normal and then one thing happens that really directly affects a lot of people but not most of us and then it our whole world has changed forever so we're all it's always we believe in a myth of like predictability right and so AI is just one of those things that's showing us no you can't predict it but you got to keep going keep marching can't be stagnant.
Jeff Dudan (43:41.135)
Yeah, oh man Ray Dalio have you ever seen his 28 minute video called on principles the little Caricature thing so if you go to YouTube and you google Ray Dalio principles, there's this 28 minute video I watched it the year I sold my businessman. I watched it like 50 times It's the greatest 28 minutes by the way. He's pretty sharp made a few bucks and he it He talks about you know the mistake that he made
is that he in making and bankrupting his company early basically was because he didn't look far enough back into the patterns. And if he only would have looked back far enough, he would have seen that the pattern was there, but he didn't look far enough back. And people's biggest mistake that they make is believing that the immediate future is going to be some small variation on the immediate past.
And that's like, I see that so clearly now and I think that way. And it's like, well, you know, we can spend all this money because we're just gonna make more. And it's always gonna, I said, there's no guarantee that what's been happening or happened to you once is going to happen again. And, you know, so the, you know, this, you know, people, and of course we wanna get comfortable.
We don't like things that change that much, but the rate of change that we've learned to accept since really 2007 when all the fangs came out and phones and all of this kind of stuff. But it's potentially accelerating and at an accelerating rate here. And I think to your point, what I really like about Call for Adventure is that it puts...
Joe Boyd (45:27.598)
Oh.
Jeff Dudan (45:37.199)
sense of purpose into people's minds regardless of what the universe gives them and I've said to my kids over and over again I've said to anybody who asked me everybody needs an adventure in life I had one you had several including working at a chapel in Vegas I mean like that's such a great story
Joe Boyd (45:59.854)
Yeah, getting fired.
Jeff Dudan (46:04.527)
Right and uh, and like how many people can claim? That that they did that and what'd you learn and what are the people you met? I can't even imagine some of the couples that came in what they're You know their stories and did you did you talk to them and ask them? Like what do you want me to talk about or was it pretty much just?
Joe Boyd (46:20.686)
That was such a weird gig. It was 50, they did four weddings an hour. So you could do, there's 15 minute weddings and they'd choose if they wanted religious or secular and off you go. And that was it. That was a weird job. I might've purposely subconsciously got fired. Cause I don't know if I could have done it for very long. But yeah, I mean, I think the...
Jeff Dudan (46:35.023)
Nice.
Jeff Dudan (46:44.911)
Yeah.
Pain, Purpose, and Porch-Worthy Wisdom
Joe Boyd (46:49.102)
One of the things I do deeply believe is that it's our failure and the pain that we go through that actually is what informs our life call, which is part of why it's a little easier for me to work with folks that have had some measure of pain and failure. Because I think looking back on it, that...
There's something about having gone through that that shapes us in a specific way that's unique to us, that then propels us to do something about it into the world. And I think if we don't do something about it with our positive instincts, we will end up doing things about it in a negative way. So for me, when I talk about being called for adventure, it's a lot of work, some work in what you've done well in your life. You need to take that into account.
But it's a lot of work and especially the repetitive sort of failures in your life and the things that you've had to learn the hard way, you know, for many people creates a passion to help other folks through that sort of thing. And so the, you know, I'm a pretty simple guy in that sense of I think we're here to help each other along and that we actually in the second half of our life, whatever that is,
where most of our meaning actually comes from. I was offered my dream job several times throughout my life, five years after I wanted it. And I turned it down half the time. I was like, eh. So there's something about ambition that gets you to a point of realizing, kind of like it's a little meaningless, a lot of the stuff we chase after. That's very Ecclesiastes to go back on my biblical roots. Everything's a chasing after the wind, right?
But that's such a beautiful day when you realize that because in our own insignificance we start to build back a significant role for ourselves to kind of help people along so I Sound like a pastor again. I guess that's what I'm doing. I'm just a secular pastor at this point
Jeff Dudan (48:51.279)
Well, so I mean, it's, yeah, well, look, it's a little bit about letting go to regain a toehold again in a better place.
Joe Boyd (49:00.91)
Yeah, yeah. And there's nothing more, always talk about failure gives you humility and wisdom. And it's actually the only, it's the only way to get it. If you've met anyone that feels like they've never failed, they probably have, but they feel like it. You don't want to be friends with them, they're the worst. They have no, like no humility, no wisdom. They've just been successful their whole life. The people you want, when you sit on the porch with, or when you're an old man, on your rocking chair, sitting on the porch,
Jeff Dudan (49:08.655)
Yeah.
Joe Boyd (49:30.638)
You want to be the one that the neighborhood kids want to come up to and talk to because A, you got stories, but B, you're approachable because you've learned that these kids are worth my time, right? And then, and you're humble. You don't want to be like hiding in your private jet. You can have one, but you want to be accessible to the world. So that I want to create a bunch of folks that have that kind of spirit about them or help them become that.
Jeff Dudan (49:41.807)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (49:47.855)
now.
Jeff Dudan (50:00.079)
Joe, that's awesome. I'm excited for your new venture. How can people get in touch with you?
Joe Boyd (50:07.63)
I'm pretty active on LinkedIn, Joe Boyd, and then calledforeadventure .com right now. It's just a link to my sub stack. So you can sign up for free. There's an option to pay. That's just to kind of be supportive. You get everything for free. So if you go to calledforeadventure .com, give me your email address and I will appropriately bother you about 9 a .m. Eastern every work day. With something. All right.
Jeff Dudan (50:31.247)
Nice, outstanding. And if Joe, last question, if you had one sentence to speak into somebody's life and make an impact, what would that be? I know you just did 51 of them.
Joe Boyd (50:46.798)
do.
Jeff Dudan (50:48.815)
Pick a good one.
Joe Boyd (50:57.39)
Try not to make it a rant.
Jeff Dudan (51:01.007)
Go for it.
Joe Boyd (51:03.054)
Almost every day you interact with someone that's having the worst week of their life, but they won't tell you. So assume it's everyone.
Jeff Dudan (51:12.015)
That is beautiful. I love that. Yeah.
Joe Boyd (51:13.518)
Yeah, it's about grace. It's about treating, treat everyone the way you would want to be treated on your worst day. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (51:24.559)
Love it. Well said. This has been Joe Boyd with Jeff Duden, and we have been on the home front. Thanks for listening. Thanks, Joe.
Joe Boyd (51:36.366)
Thanks, man. Not a brute. Appreciate all the time.
Jeff Dudan (51:38.767)
Yeah, man.
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