Strategic Selling | Roger Martin | On The Homefront

Brief Summary
In this energizing episode of On The Homefront, Jeff Dudan sits down with Roger Martin, the CEO of Thrive More Brands and co-founder of RockBox Fitness and Beam Light Sauna. Roger shares his powerful pivot from corporate pharma to franchise entrepreneurship, breaking down everything from brand psychology and irresistible offers to why light, transparency, and leadership matter more than ever. This episode is a masterclass in building bold brands, leading with intention, and creating health-forward businesses that scale.
Key Takeaways
- Jumping from comfort to conviction: Roger left a successful pharmaceutical career after a moment of deep personal clarity—choosing fulfillment over stability.
- Your brand should be new, not just better: Roger explains why consumers don’t pay a premium for “better,” they pay for “new”—and how to position your offer accordingly.
- Direct-response beats branding (until you’re massive): Small- and mid-sized businesses must prioritize measurable marketing outcomes over vague branding efforts.
- Scarcity and urgency drive behavior: Irresistible offers are built by triggering primal psychology—limited-time deals and high perceived value win attention and conversion.
- Corporate lessons, without the corporate traps: Roger brings best-in-class discipline from pharma but rejects secrecy and hierarchy—building a transparent, accountable culture at Thrive More Brands.
- Infrared therapy is the next wellness wave: Beam Light Sauna is rapidly growing by offering private, full-spectrum infrared experiences that are both luxurious and life-enhancing.
Featured Quote
“If you're trying to be everything to everybody, you're nothing to nobody. You have to pick the corner of the world you're going to own.”
– Roger Martin
TRANSCRIPT
Meet Roger Martin: From Pharma Exec to Franchise CEO
Jeff Dudan (00:01.398)
Welcome everybody. This is Jeff Duden and we are on the home front. As always, this podcast is brought to you by Homefront Brand, simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action and transform their lives, impact communities and enhance the lives of those they care most about. All the while delivering enterprise level solutions to the 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 right here looking for you. And today we are excited to have Roger Martin, CEO of Thrive More Brands, a couple of great franchise brands there on the podcast. Welcome Roger.
Roger Martin (00:48.578)
Thank you. Thank you for having me. I appreciate it.
Jeff Dudan (00:51.15)
Oh yeah, it's gonna be great. I'm so excited about today. We're gonna have a good time. Roger is the co-founder and managing member of the industry-leading health and wellness franchise as Rockbox Fitness and Beam Light Sauna. Prior to Rockbox Fitness and Beam Sauna, Roger Martin was the chief operating officer of an industry-leading pharmaceutical development and manufacturing organization. His prior experience includes serving in the role of president of a large topical semi-solid, whatever that means, and liquid.
CDMO as a national sales director and senior vice president of sales, leading sales and marketing teams, over 500 sales representatives in the specialty and big pharma markets. Roger has extensive expertise in pharmaceutical sales management, leadership, sales force deployment, business development, strategic selling, contract negotiations, business to business service contracting, licensing, and contracted service marketing. And I will say that Roger is an excellent brand guy and an excellent marketer.
because I've experienced that firsthand. Roger holds a bachelor's degree in business from the number one party school in the country, Arizona State University. It's ranked by Sports Illustrated so many times and earned his master's of business administration from Kennesaw State University. Welcome Roger Martin.
Roger Martin (02:07.118)
Thank you. Wow. That's a, that's a mouthful. That's an absolute mouthful. I I'm going to retire now. I think I've done it.
Jeff Dudan (02:12.798)
Well, you've done a lot and you've been a lot of places. So just for all the listeners out there, Roger and I met each other first in 2018, I believe, and got to know each other through some early stage franchising, got introduced by a mutual friend. Roger and I have lived in the same town and our kids kind of grew up in the same circles with some of the same people. So I've had the absolute pleasure to work with Roger.
Roger Martin (02:22.701)
Mm-hmm.
Roger Martin (02:36.033)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (02:40.214)
on a few projects in some of these businesses over the last few years and just super excited for him to expand on really one of the best marketing minds that I've ever been around, really a top shelf executive when it terms to building accountable teams and getting really down to the outcomes that matter and getting talented people to focus on them. So we're all gonna learn a lot today. Roger, would you care to start a little bit as we do on the home front is.
kind of start as early as you're comfortable going back with your journey. We like to try to inform people, uh, and that may be at an inflection point in their life or thinking about entrepreneurship with other people who have made that transition and how it happened for them.
Roger Martin (03:18.35)
Mm-hmm.
From Middle-Class Kid to Corporate Climber
Roger Martin (03:23.05)
Yeah, I'd be glad to. Uh, and by the way, thanks for the intro. I I'm going to call you every morning at 6 a.m. To, uh, just get my day started. That was fantastic. Wow. Um, yeah, so I, I grew up in the Northwest and Spokane, Washington. And you know, I think everybody who's ever interviewed said, I grew up middle-class, you know, or, um, I think I was like middle class, you know, I literally was. And, um, my dad had, uh, his own little car care chemical company. So like, think of, you know, brake fluids and, and
tire mounting lubricants and all that stuff. And he bought it from a manufacturer and then would repackage it and rebrand it as his own. But it's funny cause I looked back and I never thought about my dad being an entrepreneur, had no idea. I just thought, well, my dad's in business for himself. That's, that's what he does. That's what dad's always done. And I had always had, uh, you know, dreams of, of actually becoming a professional musician and being a rock star and all that. So I never really thought about going into business for myself.
until I went to college and went to school at Arizona State, as he said, and decided, okay, I need to get serious about life. I was playing in bands and doing that and thinking about moving to California, but in Hollywood, but said, you know, I don't want to be a starving musician. I love the musician part. I'm not a big fan of the starving part. So I got really serious about business in college. But I always had my sights set on corporate America and climbing the ladder in corporate America.
I've never thought really about entrepreneurship or doing my own thing, which, you know, now I've been doing that for the last seven years. I would never look back and we can get into that. But yeah, I ended up graduating Arizona state and going to work for Eli Lilly, which is a pharmaceutical company and was, uh, was the guy that was dressed in the nice suit that would come in and, and walk past the receptionist and, you know, kind of anger all of the people waiting patiently to see the doctor. Cause I'd walk right past, uh, you know, with a few little.
ethical bribes of a pin or pads or whatever for the front desk to get back and meet with the doctors and promote the products and sell them on the fact they should write our products versus the competitors. And ended up building my career in that industry, in the branded side of the pharmaceutical industry for 15, 16 years, worked for three different companies. And I think you'd mentioned that at the apex of my career in the branded side of the business.
Roger Martin (05:44.914)
had a span and control of over 500 people and literally, you know, we were just building armies of sales reps to try to influence the physicians to write the product. So that's kind of a short story from growing up in Spokane, Washington, you know, to what I did for about 15 years before moving on to like working for private equity and some other things.
Jeff Dudan (06:04.89)
So what kind of products, Roger, did you rep? Were they statins or, you know, what was the product offerings that you, yeah.
Roger Martin (06:12.414)
Yeah, you know, it's, I, um, it's, it's part of our, our nomenclature now, but believe it or not, my, my first products, one of my first products was Prozac. And so I was in early, in the early nineties, depression, mental health wasn't talked about. Like it just like our job was to educate the physicians on how to recognize depression because now it's common, you know, common knowledge and they put it in the water, but back then it was.
Um, it was a touchy subject. And so we not only had to sell the product, we had to first sell the doctor that yeah, you're actually seeing this in your patients. You're just not recognizing it in your patients. And, you know, maybe they have back pain, but maybe they're that pain is masking something, you know, physically masking something that is mentally occurring. Um, so it was, uh, it was a great, it was a great, uh, product, but, um, a great disease state, I think to, to sell in because
Um, it really taught me how to do solution based selling. You talk about marketing and sale. It really taught me how to help somebody identify a need that they didn't even know they had. Um, and so I'm very grateful for that.
Jeff Dudan (07:20.91)
You were doing exceptionally well in this career. Yes, you had an early exposure to entrepreneurship, even though it didn't manifest in your brain that way with your father. And then was there a point in your career where you just said, enough is enough of this corporate life and I wanna do something and have a little bit more control and some freedom and maybe serve my creation?
desire to build and to create, build a team. Was there a moment that you realized that you were gonna take this leap?
The Barcelona Epiphany: When Corporate Success Isn’t Enough
Roger Martin (07:54.878)
Yeah, yeah. There was a specific moment. In fact, throughout my whole career, it was a 25 years run in Pharma, be it branded or be it working for private equity that owned manufacturers, CDMO, which is really a fancy word for an acronym for contract development and manufacturing organizations. So we made the products for other companies that either didn't have the capability or they were out of capacity. And so I really honed my leadership.
skills and those chops in running these large, large sales organizations. I developed my business, my strategic and business development chops, selling to other companies. We're talking like 12, $15 million contracts I would sign. And then of course, the sales and marketing and side of it, especially the marketing side of it, which is really human psychology. And we can dive into that in a little bit. I had built all these skill sets, but I was fine. I found that I was...
I was making a great living and live very comfortably, but I was also making a lot of other people, a lot more money than I was making myself. And I, you know, and up to a certain point, that's okay, because you're learning on their, uh, you're learning on, on their dime, so to speak. But what, what gets frustrating is when you know, you can actually do it on your own, maybe even do it better, do it faster, do it without some of the
the red tape that you find in other companies. And so I was in Barcelona, Spain. I was in Barcelona, Spain on a full expense account, making a ton of money, should have felt great at this conference. I looked over this sea of nameless faces and had disdain for these people, had actual disdain for these people. And I realized it's not them, it's me. It's me. The issue here is not them.
It's me, I'm unhappy with my own situation and I'm, I'm blaming them and I'm putting it on them. So for two milliseconds, I, I disliked them and then immediately realized, no, I need to make a change in my life. Um, I've kind of climbed to the top of the mountain, climbed to the top of the, the ladder, if you will. But that ladder was leaned up against someone else's building, not my own building, and I knew it was time for a change and within four months of being in Barcelona and having that epiphany. Uh, I had met, uh, another gentleman who became.
Roger Martin (10:19.878)
a business partner in opening up and co-founding Rockbox Fitness. So for me, it wasn't this long drawn out process. It was, of course, a lot of time with my own thoughts, like every person has, and wondering if I should, should I, should I not? There's a lot of risk. I'd be leaving a great multi six figure salary and health benefits and stock options and all that stuff. But then, what do I get on the other side? To me, it was...
kind of this epiphany of, man, I got to get busy living or get busy dying. Like I have got to go. And so within about four months, I had formed this partnership, founded a company, gave notice to my previous employer, worked out a severance package and kind of a workout plan so I could get a successor ready and make sure that they were successful. I wanted to finish impeccably, you know, big part of my, my journey is always trying to finish impeccably and, and did that. And then it was off to the races. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (11:17.244)
I have had the pleasure of observing you and watching you during this journey. I can say your curiosity, you're voraciously reading everything that could possibly help you. I mean, you have really embraced this just search for knowledge and search for things that are going to help you grow this business. It's really been...
They're a joy to watch you go through this. Now, every business has humble beginnings. I did, you know, when I started my restoration business, I know I was on at least a thousand water damages in the middle of the night, uh, doing whatever I needed to do, uh, to do that. I know that, uh, Stacey's Madison with Stacey's Pita chips. I mean, she started in a Pita cart and she had stale Pita's and she took them.
Roger Martin (12:08.13)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (12:12.296)
baked them and put some, you know, tried to just not lose a few bucks and that turned into $250 million business. So when you started Rockbox with Steve, what's the kind of like, you were at the ground floor from a franchise perspective, you had to rebrand the business. Tell us a little bit about that time and what you learned.
Roger Martin (12:15.118)
Yeah.
From C-Suite to Scaffolding: The Humble Origins of RockBox Fitness
Roger Martin (12:31.294)
Yeah. Um, you have to do whatever it takes. And I, everybody says that, but it's strategy doesn't bring you to your knees. Whiteboarding sessions don't break your spirit. Actually doing the work and having life hit you in the face time after time, after time, that's when we start to question ourselves as entrepreneurs. And, and I can tell you the first time I said, what in the hell have I done?
Uh, it was 6 AM in the morning. Uh, I was building the first flagship store in Huntersville, this rock box in Huntersville. And of course we have to hang boxing bags. It's a boxing for fitness concept for the listeners that aren't familiar with rock box, it's a boxing for fitness concept. So you've got these two rows of boxing bags to suspend that we now have a rig and it's all professionally done. But back then, you know, however we had to hang those bags, we hung those bags. And what we do is we buy raw steel beams and then
heft those up into the ceiling joint, the kind of the joints across the ceiling of this big 3,700 square foot studio and then put chain around it and then drop that chain. Well, we rented scaffolding and bought these steel beams that weighed God knows how much and there were three of us, three guys putting these beams up. So I was on the bottom on the floor.
This guy named Tommy, who's still with the company today, was in the middle on the scaffold and then on the top scaffolding was Steve. We are literally shoving these steel beams up into the ceiling to get them up there. This thing's heavy and I'm at the bottom. At any time, once I let go of it, I've got no control and I'm looking at the ass into this thing, looking at me and I'm like, if either one of those guys let's go, I'm dead. I'm dead. Then immediately after that...
Steve starts cutting chain with a grinder, you know, no safety equipment, no goggles, nothing. He just goes away and starts cutting the chain and there's sparks going every 6 a.m. There's sparks going everywhere and there's stuff flying around. And I literally think to myself, what, what in the hell have I done, man? I used to get off a plane and there'd be somebody that are waiting for me with a, with a sign to get my luggage, take me to the air, down to the hotel and check me in on what in the hell am I doing here? And it's those times when you realize like the only way out is through, like there's no
Roger Martin (14:55.746)
There's no wait timeout, you know, wait, let me just step back and assess. No, you got to go. You just have to keep going. But I think it's the takeaway for me is I don't care if you were the CEO or the king of a country. If you start your own business, put the gloves on, roll up your sleeves, because it's time to get to work no matter what form or shape that work takes. And too many people are like, well, you know, I was an executive and I'm an executive and that's kind of beneath me. No such thing when you're an entrepreneur.
No such thing.
Jeff Dudan (15:27.86)
Yeah, I mean, we, you know, you might see it in a franchisee, you know, I was, you know, this is a certain thing that needs to get done. Well, I've been a consultant for billion dollar companies before. And well, that's great. But that's not helping you get customers right now. That's, you know, nobody's, it's a gut check for a lot of people, entrepreneurship and a great fulfilling thing. You know, that it just, your accomplishments.
The way that they make you feel about what you've done knowing you went through those are badges of honor now You don't want to you know, you don't want to make decisions that are gonna put you on a ladder under a grinder every single day But sometimes things just need to get done and that could be at 6 in the morning It could be at 4 in the morning. It could be at 11 o'clock at night I mean if there's a time of you know Things just need to get done when they need to get done and the faster that you can if you can get latency
Roger Martin (16:08.556)
Oh no.
Jeff Dudan (16:25.94)
out of the time between a decision and an action. That's one thing I've learned and relearned here lately in my mid-50s, okay? Don't go to a meeting and then come out of it with a list of things to do that, okay, I'll have that for you by next Tuesday's meeting when you could have taken five minutes at the end of the meeting, made a call, sent a text, sent an email, did something to get things going and...
You could have just taken the latency out and because the number of things that you get done quicker that are on target is, it's really about if you get 100 tasks done or 200 tasks done over the course of a week. Yeah, we learned that in the fitness business, right? If, I mean, if you can look at the franchise owners across it and see how many tasks they got done a day and it absolutely is related directly to
Roger Martin (17:08.864)
Yep.
Roger Martin (17:19.516)
results yeah
Jeff Dudan (17:19.9)
you know, the performance of the studio. So yeah, it's related to results. So yeah, I mean, it's doing the right things and making sure, as you said, the ladder is up against the right building, but it's also, you know, I mean, it used to be like, well, I'm going to work, I'm going to work smart, but not hard and no, it's I'm going to work smart and hard. I mean, when you see Mark Cuban say, you know, how, why are you so successful? He goes, well, cause nobody's going to outwork me. I mean, that's a guy. When like, at what point was he making more than.
Roger Martin (17:37.22)
Yep.
Jeff Dudan (17:48.924)
you know, $75,000 a year and had his bills paid. You know, he's still getting after it and all of that. So, you know, before we leave this time of transition for you, I'd be interested to know from your corporate life to your entrepreneurial success, what things translated and you brought with you, and then what types of things did you need to leave behind?
Roger Martin (17:52.641)
Yep.
What Corporate Taught Me (And What I Left Behind)
Roger Martin (18:00.814)
be interested to know from corporate life to entrepreneurial success. What things translated in front of what words?
Roger Martin (18:10.858)
That's a great question, Jeff. Certainly the inspirational leadership, the sales, marketing acumen, the financial acuity, those are skills I'm forever grateful to corporate America for. So people talk a lot of crap about corporate America, including me, but I'm very grateful for what they did for me. I have to be honest. As much stuff as I talk, they...
I, they invested a lot in me. I went, you know, I, I was very fortunate to have a lot of, uh, of, of money and resources poured into me as a young leader. And, but I'm also proud that I gave back, you know, gave a 10, 20, 50 X return on their investment on that. So I brought that with me. What I left specifically, I left behind the secrecy that is so prevalent in corporate America and I'll speak to that.
And the hierarchical culture. Now every company needs a hierarchy. It'd be chaos without a hierarchy. Somebody has to be in charge and, and everybody needs to know who they report to, who their performance, uh, who's going to do the performance appraisal, you know, what their responsibilities are. That's important. You need a hierarchy, but a hierarchical culture is not what you need. And that is, that is how all corporate America is built. So, you know,
I, what I found in, is the farther I went up the ladder in corporate America, the bigger my office got and the further away from my team I got, and certainly the further away from my customers I got. And it was this rite of passage that, you know, damn it I had to go through the gauntlet. And so, so show you young Roger Martin, you'll have to do the same thing, but you'll be rewarded with, you know, a bigger office and we'll move you farther away and give you more isolation. And, you know, and a big Oak door that nobody can see through.
And, and, and I hate it. And by the way, um, and nobody will be able to get to you if they don't first go through your direct reports. I hated that. And so corporate America taught me what to do really, really well. And it also taught me exactly what not to do. So when we built our new offices for thrive more, which, you know, thrive more brands is the, the umbrella company over rock box fitness and then beam light sauna beam lights on it is an infrared sauna studio concept that's just taken off like a rocket.
Roger Martin (20:32.33)
So those two brands and then another nutrition brand we have called leverage nutrition that sits under that same umbrella. We relocated our offices to this another place in Huntersville, North Carolina, and we had a very generous outfit allowance from the, from the REIT that owns this company or owns this building. And so we were able to demo the entire inside of it and rebuild all of our offices here. And I had two, two non-negotiables. One, every
wall and office was going to be floor to ceiling glass, including the doors so that it was fully transparent. You could not hide. There was nowhere to hide. And also every office was exactly the same size, including mine. And the offices are all exactly the same size with the exception of there's some are a little deeper just because the windows bow out, but every office is designed to be the same width and every office is floor to ceiling glass and the doors are too. So there is literally no place to hide here. And I purposely,
Located my office right in the middle of the office and in the hallway with all the other executives and the whole team so that I wasn't in the corner because I think that sends a message of We have a hierarchy, but we don't have a hierarchical. That's a word Culture and that anybody can walk into anybody's office anytime. You know, I can see it at anybody's office at any time So, you know the work will get done because there's nowhere to hide so to speak and so great question I think I was
very intentional on bringing a lot of the skills and the traits and all of the knowledge and experience that I was afforded to learn in corporate America, but absolutely stiff-armed and shunned the stuff that makes corporate America get the bad name that it rightly deserves in those two areas.
Jeff Dudan (22:22.74)
I want to move us into an area of your expertise because I know how much you have to share. And I'll do it with a really broad question. What makes good branding and marketing?
Branding vs. Marketing: Why ‘New’ Beats ‘Better’ Every Time
Roger Martin (22:34.126)
Mmm.
Well, there's what makes good branding and marketing is that you've got a, uh, a presence about your brand, your product that is uniquely positioned and differentiated in the consumers eyes. What makes great branding and marketing is a product or service that is so differentiated that it is looked upon as a new way to
get that product or service, not a better way. And so many of us are trying in business to say, yeah, we're better than XYZ. We're better than ABC. And here's why people are used to better and they expect better. I mean, it just, the evolution of business, I expect better, but what they appreciate and what they'll pay a premium for is new. The reason I, you know,
go into a consumer's mind, the reason I haven't been successful at losing weight or the reason I haven't, um, you know, I don't know. And I've been able to run because of, you know, because these shoes are decent, but you know, and they're better, but, but whatever. But when I say, yes, but the, this is a new technology, this is a new way to lose weight. This is a new way to improve your skin. This is a new way. That's why I haven't been successful in the past because I didn't have this.
I didn't, you know, it's never been this. And so you have to position your brand, your service as a new vehicle to bridge that gap versus a better vehicle. People won't pay a premium for better. They'll pay a premium for new.
Jeff Dudan (24:16.296)
That is a subtle but significant differentiation. And what a great answer that was.
Getting down to the tactics now of marketing and lead generation, there's so much in marketing that people get into that I think takes them off the target of the actual outcome. If you look at a franchise platform, and I did this in a meeting on Friday, I had a companywide meeting for three hours, and I really wrote down the seven outcomes that matter, and five
were what the franchisee is going to feel and what they're going to see. And the other two were making sure that we were profitable and that we had a great net promoter score. So it's like, here's five of the seven or having to do with what the franchisee is getting out of the deal and them being thankful and happy to be affiliated with the brand and getting good value and those types of things. So
Roger Martin (25:05.078)
Yeah.
Roger Martin (25:12.791)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (25:23.552)
How do you keep your marketing teams focused on those few outcomes that really matter? Because anytime you get a new vendor, there's going to be ideas and there's lots of things that you can do and you can burn a lot of calories and a lot of payroll doing things that aren't directly attributed to the outcomes that matter. What do you think about that?
How to Build a Marketing Team That Actually Gets Results
Roger Martin (25:46.622)
Yeah, great question. So I'm going to quote Gary Vaynerchuk and I am going to swear. So if you have kids listening, go ahead and just put the earmuffs on. But you know, my, my favorite saying from him is ideas are shit. Execution is everything because everyone's got an idea. Uh, you know, me included, it's the execution of those ideas and in marketing, especially it's failing fast and failing quickly so that you can learn and get better and iterate over and over and over again.
Marketing is not, and let me just back up one track here. So many people and so many, so many, uh, you know, marketing executives confuse marketing with branding. Branding is what Coca-Cola is afforded because they've been around for a hundred years and they just need to remind us that they're there. They need to remind us why we already love their product. Small companies, and I mean any company less than maybe a hundred million dollars in revenue, maybe more, maybe a half a billion of revenue.
really can't afford to brand. They need to market. And market means I'm going to identify a pain point that you have, or I'm gonna accentuate a pain point that I know you have, and then I'm going to show you that we have a solution to that pain point, and then I'm going to, this is the most important thing, I'm going to ask you to take an action. I'm gonna ask you to fill out a lead form, buy a product, schedule a call, whatever it may be, but there's gonna be a pain point, a solution.
And here's how you get access to that solution, at least the first step in that. That's direct response marketing. That's really marketing in its essence. And so many people confuse that and so many, especially small business owners. I don't want to advertise. I don't want to spend money on that because, you know, I can't measure it. You're right. You can't measure branding. It's almost impossible to know the effectiveness of your branding, unless you're looking at a 10 year horizon. But direct response marketing, you'll know within 10 minutes. Once you launch those ads, whether they're working or not.
And, and digital marketing has made a market, it's made marketing a marketer's dream because you get instant access. So like infomercials of years past, they were way ahead of the game. Yeah, they were cheesy, but they were way ahead of the game because they would ABCD test so many different, uh, promo clips and they just have a different one 800 number at the end. So they would know which ad was working depending on which one 800 number was called. Well, we've taken that to the, to the, to the 10th.
Roger Martin (28:11.05)
iteration through digital marketing where we can know which creative, which piece of a creative content, which headline, which copy works and in which combination. And so, you know, it is the real key to leading a great marketing team is to push them to test things again and again and again and measure it with a real outcome, meaning what is my cost per lead? What is my ROAS? Which is a
acronym for return on ad spend. So if I invest a thousand dollars in ad spend, do I get $3,000, $4,000, $5,000 of revenue out of that? And you can even have a ROAS of 0.5. If you know you'll make it up on the long-term lifetime value of the customer, that's not how we operate, but that's, that's still a viable strategy. But all of these can be measured granularly. So marketing is not fluff. Branding can feel like fluff and any company that's
you know, less than half a billion probably shouldn't be spending money on branding, but marketing itself is it's an art, but it's much more a science now, much, much more a science. And you, you measure it and you lead people the same way you would operations. What's our throughput and operations? What's our, our defect creating operations? You know, what is our, uh, cost of good, you know, our cost of, of creating the good, you can do the same thing with marketing now, but I think people have this
outdated mindset of branding being the same and it's apples and oranges
Roger Martin (29:44.392)
Did that answer your question? I'm sorry, kind of, yeah, okay.
Jeff Dudan (29:44.673)
You often talk, oh, it was brilliant. It was brilliant, brilliant. And I would like to follow up on that and say, okay, you're running these ads, direct response. One of the things that I've seen you do, and you mentioned infomercials and it brought it back to my mind. So I go to an infomercial. I now want the chamois because...
You know, I've just spilled something and I'm out of paper towels and these will be here tomorrow because they're on Prime So they might even be here tonight. So I want I want the sham. Wow, but on that sham. I went for Marshall You're gonna you're gonna see just if you like you can't not want these things, right? It's it's like it's new. Like you said, it's a new technology
It's so much better than anything else. You can wash your car. You can wash your dog. You can clean up everything. They're gonna last forever. You hang them out to dry. And oh, by the way, here's an irresistible offer. The irresistible offer is we're gonna send these to you. You can make four payments of $2 or if you don't like them, return them back. Just pay one small shipping and handling charge, which probably is three times what it cost them
Roger Martin (30:37.105)
Yep.
Jeff Dudan (31:02.9)
to make anyway and ship them back to us and we'll give you a full refund. So how can you possibly lose? You just call this number right now. And if you, but oh, by the way, if you don't call today, then that offer's no good. So, you know, I've seen you construct irresistible offers that are really good for the consumer. And it's, you're putting themselves saying, okay, how can I de-risk this transaction for the consumer? What's the irresistible offer that I can put together?
Roger Martin (31:02.964)
Yep.
Roger Martin (31:23.318)
Mm-hmm.
Jeff Dudan (31:31.944)
And how did you come to that thinking about offers? Because really in my career, we knew what we did, we knew what the competition was, but we weren't as sophisticated in offers as I think we could have or should have been. We didn't think about it as deeply as you do in these really consumer retail type businesses. What can you share with the audience about irresistible offers and how they might be able to think about that?
Irresistible Offers: The Psychology Behind ‘Yes’
Roger Martin (31:58.078)
Yeah. Um, wonderful question. So I, again, I'm, I'm grateful because I was afforded the opportunity to get a deep look into the infomercial world between 2007 and 2016. When I worked for, um, this topical semi solid manufacturer, um, because we supplied many of these companies that had like proactive actually, you know, you know, it was a, uh, an acne medication. So Rodan and fields, I w we supplied them. And so I got,
birds-eye look into how they would create their offers. And I could see what they would charge and what we were charging. And so I knew what their cost of goods was and just how they set these offers up, which was great because I was able to bring that to Rockbox and Beam. It's really built on two principles. And if as a consumer, we're all consumers of many things, it's fun to watch how you're being marketed to if you kind of can see behind the curtain, two things drive our behavior, scarcity and urgency.
And it goes back to the caveman days. I just recently gave a talk at a conference out in Las Vegas on this. And it was funny when I got off stage, so many people came up to me and said, gosh, this has been happening to me my whole life. And I didn't realize it was happening to me. You know, I was being marketed to this way, but I can see it so clearly now. Scarcity and urgency. When, if you go out to caveman days and we were all, you know, in a clan, in a cave, there was true scarcity. If, if, you know, not to be sexist here, but you know, back then the men would go do the hunting and the women would go do the gathering.
And if the women didn't gather berries and roots and come back with something, or the men didn't kill either a small animal, or if they had, you know, more risk tolerance, a big animal and bring it back, you would starve to death. And so the, our ancestors who understood scarcity, like we have got to take action now because there's only a limited amount of food available, if we don't, we're going to die and the people who, the ancestors who understood that
They propagated and there are ancestors and we're here because of that, right? They truly understood scarcity. So it's completely hardwired in our DNA. It's not something you choose to believe in or not. It is in our DNA and forever will be case in point. Why did toilet paper go on a, on a run? And, and, you know, there was this whole, you know, run on toilet paper during COVID because it started to happen. And then that scarcity mindset came in and that hard wiring came in and man, we cleared the shelves out.
Roger Martin (34:20.47)
Because God forbid we were the odd man out without that because, you know, and there's many other things we could have used for toilet paper. It didn't matter. It would, we needed the toilet paper because there was a scarcity potential for scarcity of toilet paper. So it's, it's still alive and well today. And then urgency is you've got to take action now because it's a perishable offer, it's a perishable item. So, uh, be it a concert ticket, because once that concert happens, it's over and for ends forever gone. Be it.
a sale on something. You know, I'm actually in the middle of writing a book right now. And I use this as an example because I'm trying to use franchising for every example. So I use it as an example for urgency, car sales. There's always a car sales event for Toyota, Ford, whatever, on Memorial Day. I mean, just take it to the bank. There's going to be a Memorial Day sale for special deal on that pickup truck that you had your eye on. But if you don't take action by Monday...
That's that price is gone and it's back to regular prices. So you feel compelled to take action, go to the lot and take advantage of that special deal. Even though, you know, July 4th, there's going to be an independence day sale only to be followed by a labor day sale. Right. We know those are coming and we know that we have that opportunity, but because we have this urgency from the caveman days, I have to go out and hunt. Now I have to hunt because there's scarcity. I'm starving to death, but I have to go now because I don't go now.
Then my window to find food before I truly start the death is over and I die. Right. And it's, it goes back to that hard wiring. So that same type of reptilian brain makes us go to the car lot on Memorial Day when we damn well know Independence Day is right around the corner with the same deal. So marketers use that. I use that to our advantage to get people to take action. Now, the great thing about our businesses with Rockbox fitness and beam light sauna is we're, we're selling things that help people live a better
healthier life, a happier life, a life with lower anxiety, better health, more confidence. We're not selling cigarettes to kids. So I don't feel any reservations about using the principles of scarcity and urgency to my best ability and to my team's best ability to drive behavior because we're doing the right thing. But people, consumers should be aware that is what drives their behavior and that's okay. Amazon Prime, they literally made up a holiday to get you to create...
Roger Martin (36:48.486)
to take action because of urgency, right? It's Amazon Prime's two days. You know there's damn good deals, but it's only two days. It's a completely made up holiday, but we still fall into that trap and buy more than we probably should because of urgency.
Jeff Dudan (37:05.268)
Roger, you've mentioned beam light sauna several times. I am a huge fan of infrared sauna. I started going four times a week about seven months ago, and I also paid attention to my diet and worked out as you should. But I'm down 25 pounds, and I do think that the sauna has had a definite impact in the way that my body metabolizes food, the way that, you know, my...
My body's working in general. I feel good about it. I feel great getting out of it. It's a pleasurable experience. It's a reward to go into the sauna after a workout. And Beam Light Sauna is a franchise offering and it is just sweeping the country right now in every major market. And so, you know, tell us a little bit about, number one, what's new with Beam Sauna, because what is new with Infrared? And then,
Roger Martin (37:59.568)
Mm-hmm.
The Power of Light: Why Beam Light Sauna Is Booming
Jeff Dudan (38:03.964)
I would love for you to just talk a little bit about the science of it, anything that you care to share, because every time that I hear you talk about it, I'm just blown away by, you know, really like, like what a great modality this is for people in their health.
Roger Martin (38:18.87)
100% agreed. So again through Fortuitous Events, I ended up meeting a woman named Cynthia Wagner who had a pilot, I called a pilot, it was her studio, I called a pilot because it was our first studio, but they had a studio here in the local area that was a private infrared sauna studio, meaning you went in, you have your own private room with its own infrared sauna cabin in there so you can enjoy a 40-minute session. In that session for 40 minutes, because the saunas that
full spectrum, meaning they're near mid and, and far infrared rays. And those are all the safe, healthy wavelengths that the sun puts off, but none of the bad, no UVA or UVB, you're not going to get tan when you go in there. So it's only the healthy, safe light. And we need light of course, that are emitted from the sauna. And so each wavelength kind of operates on a different spectrum. And then what that means is,
like the near infrared when you go in there and by the way, it's a lot lower temperature. So it's not like a right. Most of us, um, on this podcast have been in a regular sauna, which, you know, they're hotter than hell. It's 190 degrees. You can't wait to get out. You know, if you survive 10 minutes, it's like you won and, and it's not enjoyable, but you know, you get benefits from it, but it's not enjoyable. An infrared sauna is, is around 135 degrees. We offer people, you know, free use of an iPad to go in there to watch their favorite show or listen to their favorite music. Um, and it's just a much more enjoyable experience.
And we, and being white sauna is kind of, it is an elevated brand. It's a premium experience. We provide all the towel service and cool mental afterwards and very, uh, elevated, you know, beautiful studio. So it's kind of a treat when you go in there, but you're getting a ton of health benefits from it. So yes, it's some self care and it feels a little indulgent, but you're doing great things for yourself. Um, the near infrared is going to penetrate just your dermis or epidermis. And so it's going to cause healthy cell turnover in your skin.
The reason a baby looks so beautiful and has the most beautiful skin is because their cells are turning over at, you know, infinitesimally faster than a guy my age or guy your age. And that's why we start to age and have wrinkles and don't look like we did when we were really young. So the near infrared is going to cause healthy cell turnover and boost collagen, which you know, collagen is kind of the word of the year. But it's important because that's going to make our skin look more robust and glow and feel great. And of course,
Roger Martin (40:45.122)
You know, most women have a very expensive skincare routine. So this can help boost the results of that, or even, you know, they can use the less of those products. Um, the mid and far infrared are going to go deeper into your body and they actually warm you up from your core, from the inside out. So instead of a regular sauna, that is just super hot air that makes you hot. And then you start to sweat. Infrared actually penetrates into your body, warms your core and then push, literally pushes the toxins out in your sweat.
So the heavy metals, the impurities, all the junk that's in our food supply and our water supply, it pushes that out at a rate seven times more detoxifying than a regular sauna. So not only, and that's going to help with pain relief. It's going to help with weight loss. It, you know, sitting in there watching Netflix on an iPad, you're going to burn up to 600 calories, which is a whole lot more fun than running on a treadmill for 40 minutes, right? So you'll, you'll burn calories. You're going to relieve pain. You're going to boost your immunity because it's going to raise your core temperature three degrees. So.
that fires off your immunity system in a great way. Um, and it just re it reduces stress when you're in there for 40 minutes without the world beating you up. You really find time to breathe and relax and, and kind of recalibrate. So we found that the members of beam, the individual studios, it's changing their life. Just like we found rock box fitness to, you know, people will come up and hug us and cry and say, I've lost 30 pounds. I feel amazing. We're starting to see that same response from the members at beam and
And it's a technology that's been around since the 60s and 70s. That's when a baby is born prematurely, they have to go into the NICU, the neonatal intensive care unit, just to make sure they're safe and that they can recover and start to flourish and grow. They are warmed in those little beds by infrared light. That's how safe infrared is. They warm neonatal premature babies. So it's been around for...
you know, decades and decades, it's just now coming into the consumer use and you have a Kardashians and LeBron James and Steph Curry posting about it. So, um, it's not a fad. It's an absolute movement that will be a permanent movement as a, an additional way to augment your health. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (42:58.0)
my body has become accustomed and trained so that when I get into the sauna, within three minutes, I am letting loose. I'm creating a small reservoir on the floor of the sauna. And of course, it's all properly cleaned and sprayed down, proper dwell time, everything's cleaned down. And then really after 20 minutes or 30 minutes or so, I feel like I'm tapped out a little bit.
Roger Martin (43:10.205)
Sure, sure.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Roger Martin (43:24.81)
Yep. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (43:26.704)
So it doesn't have to take 45 minutes to do. Sometimes I'll stay in there the full 40 or 45, just because I want to finish and I have high goal orientation and I'm like, I'm gonna get 38 minutes under the lights or whatever. But truth be known, I've accomplished what I needed to accomplish in that probably first 20 or 25 minutes. And I know that it's made a positive impact in mentally and physically.
Roger Martin (43:29.186)
Hmm
Roger Martin (43:37.728)
Yeah, sure.
Jeff Dudan (43:55.392)
and it's really been an important part of my health regimen. So congratulations to you on really having the vision. And then, and you talked about an elevated experience. So you walk into a beam, and I know that we've been in all different flavors of these types of studios, because there's a couple other ones out there. Beam, head and shoulders, it's not even close. I mean, it is so, the customer experience is so much higher than anything else that I've been in.
Roger Martin (43:58.38)
Yeah.
Designing Elevated Experiences: Inside a Beam Studio
Jeff Dudan (44:24.848)
in terms of these types of studios, what kinds of things have you done when you walk into a beam that people might notice?
Roger Martin (44:31.082)
Yeah. And I have to give a hundred percent credit to Cynthia, the, the original founder of beam. It was called something different back then, but I have to give her a hundred percent credit because of her aesthetic eye and just the way she, she comes from kind of a high end salon, again, elevated experience type retail environment. And when you walk in, you know, think clean white Apple store, you know, it's, we, we shunned the dark.
waterfall, you know, spa where it's just kind of that weird vibe. This is very modern, very accommodating. And when you come in, you know, it is absolutely, I don't want to say sterile cause that sounds cold, but it's, it's clean and simple to the point of being almost austere so that when you come in, you know, everything has been perfectly sanitized, perfectly clean, because we want to set the customer, the members mind at ease to know that
We've got it. Like we've got you just show up. We'll take care of the rest. And you know, I know I get really passionate when I talk about being, when I talk about rock box, but I, you know, if we just juxtapose that against the beginning of this conversation, remember I spent 25 built 25 years in a career where I was, you know, in one way or another selling pills that treated people, but never cured them. You never wanted to cure them because then they wouldn't buy the medicine anymore. And you know, as I pivoted in life in my mid forties,
into entrepreneurship, there's two lessons. One, you're never too old. You are never too old. And you talk about continual learning. I'm learning at a faster rate at 53 years of age than I definitely did in my 20s or 30s or 40s. Whoever's listening, don't let anybody talk you out of making a massive pivot in your life at any age because you will find that wealth is built in the latter parts of your life. Learning accelerates in the latter parts of your life.
And honestly, the joy in your life will accelerate as you embrace this because you have wisdom, right? You have wisdom and it allows you to enjoy it. But, you know, I built my career selling pills that treated people whenever it cured them. And so now I've, I've pivoted into preventative care, health and fitness, you know, boxing for fitness with rock box, preventative care with self care with sauna, infrared sauna, and you know, a man who is healthy has a thousand wishes.
Roger Martin (46:56.434)
I want this, I want that, I want to achieve this, I want to do that. The man without his health has one wish, one wish. And if so many more people can start to get on the bandwagon of, I need to take care of myself now, not when I get sick, you know, invest in your health now, invest a little bit in your health now, or spend a whole lot on it, you know, later when you're sick. Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (47:22.004)
so well said. Let's double click on one thing, on the marketing and branding, and really your leadership and Cynthia's leadership in that way was interesting. It had come up and said, what is the word in this marketplace that we wanna own? Is it sweaty or is it perspiration or whatever, all of that. And it was clear that the word was light. And...
If you think about it, man, everything inside of the beam light sauna has to do with light. When you wake up in the morning and you go outside and the sun's coming up, you're basking in the light. When you want to feel, you know, if you're a dog, you want to feel good, you go lay in the light. And so that warmth and that light, I think that was a brilliant piece of brand positioning.
Roger Martin (48:03.894)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (48:15.5)
and has proven to be a really good differentiator, something that's new and exciting, and I just wanted to compliment you for that. Any comments on that?
Roger Martin (48:22.622)
Yeah, thank you. Um, you know, if you're trying to be everything to everybody, you're nothing to nobody. Right? So you have to, you have to pick your the corner of the world that you're going to own. And you're right. So many other brands talk about sweating and, you know, just perspiration, which is kind of nasty light, light is pure and we're going to go beyond. We already have gone beyond just the infrared sauna.
Jeff Dudan (48:44.276)
Yeah.
Roger Martin (48:49.894)
into dedicated red light therapy rooms. Um, blue light is another that helps with acne and other, and rosacea and other skin conditions. And we're getting into these other light modalities. So we wanted to own light. We want everything around light and go be going beyond that, you know, come hell or high water, we will turn beam into a verb. Meaning, you know, when, when a woman's going to go to the sauna, she's not going to tell her husband or her friend.
Hey, I'm going to go sauna. She's going to say, I'm going to go beam. And once you turn your brand name, your company name into a verb, you've won. We don't search things. We Google it, right? We don't make a copy. We Xerox something. And when your brand name becomes a verb, the competitive moat is so wide and so deep that you can focus on, you know, building many, many other, other things. And, and, and beam will be the verb people use when they refer to infrared sauna.
Jeff Dudan (49:49.392)
is so brilliant and in my household my wife and I are both members and we will say that we are going beaming. And so you've got it, it starts with a movement right? Somebody has to start the movement. That's great. Roger you mentioned you're in the process of writing a book. I don't mean to pry but do you have a working title?
Roger Martin (49:55.24)
There you go. Yup. Love it.
Roger’s Upcoming Book: The Anti-MBA for Entrepreneurs
Roger Martin (50:04.994)
Mm-hmm. Sure.
I don't. It's funny. That's, uh, gosh, as late as yesterday. So I'm, I'm about, I don't know, 40,000 words and that's, I think it's 160, 70 pages at that point. Um, and I just, yesterday I was asking my wife and I was bouncing some things off of her and she, she's a great sounding board piece. She'll just, she'll just go, no, she just gives me the straight dope. So I don't have a title yet, but it's all around business. And, um, it, you know, a lot of people write books on leadership, the right books on
marketing, which certainly I could have done. But what I've done is, and what I'm really focused on doing is almost taking all the stuff they don't teach in business school. And again, you mentioned earlier, I have an MBA, that in a quarter today, we'll get you a cup of coffee. Actually that in five bucks, we'll get you a cup of coffee today. But I've just found in business that in entrepreneurship, the learning curve is a right angle and you pay the dummy tax.
Jeff Dudan (50:57.086)
Right.
Roger Martin (51:06.006)
You pay the dummy tax by not knowing what to do. And my goal is for finance, for leadership, for sales, independently of marketing, um, operations. I've broke it down into chapters. And my goal is that anybody could pick up this book, whether you're an experienced business person and doing great, you'll take nuggets from it. You'll take learnings from it. Or if you're that, that person that is looking to make the jump and get into entrepreneurship.
and are wondering about business ownership, it will be, I don't want to say a roadmap, it will be a companion guide for you as you go through, because you're going to have to do it. Again, ideas are great, execution is everything, you got to jump into the deep end of the pool. I can't jump into the deep end of the pool for you, nor can you. Each individual has to do it themselves. But what I want to have for them is this companion book that when they're working through a financial issue or they're working through a marketing issue, they could go back to this book and say,
Let me read what he wrote about branding versus marketing or about direct response or about scarce in urgency or about operations and how to measure through, you know, what are the good KPIs for that? And all the other, what I've tried to do is filter out all the other crap for better, like a better word that academia talks about and all of these ex McKinsey consultants write their books about because they never did it. And the one thing I'll say is, you know, it ain't bragging if you done it and I've done it. So.
I feel confident I can speak to it from and speak the language of the person that doesn't want to get bogged down in academia and, and all the theories that are out there. Here's what you actually just need to know. Here's the real stuff you need to know. The rest of it, it's nice to know, but you don't need to know it. Here's what you need to know.
Jeff Dudan (52:52.764)
Yeah, I can't wait to read it. I think it's going to help a lot of people. I think it's going to be a wild success because I know the way you operate. You're going to go right at the outcomes and there's not going to be, there will not be wasted words in there and I'm sure there will be people that when the student is ready, the teacher will appear and it'll be the Roger Martin book on getting things done. So very excited to see that come out. So that's fantastic. So.
Roger Martin (53:00.066)
Yeah
Roger Martin (53:18.75)
Yeah, thank you. Thank you.
Jeff Dudan (53:22.108)
Roger, this has been amazing. One last question, and I will ask you, if you had one piece of advice to share that you could impact somebody's life with, what might that be today?

One Final Thought: It’s Never Too Late to Start
Roger Martin (53:33.422)
It's never too late to start. It's never too late to start and you will never regret making that decision. So if there's anybody listening who is on the verge of becoming an entrepreneur, if there's anybody who's an entrepreneur and is trying to level their business up to the next and know they have to take some risk, they have to take action to do that. It doesn't matter if you're 65, 35, whatever, it is never too late to start. So just go jump.
jump into the deep end.
All right. Awesome.
Jeff Dudan (54:06.448)
I'm in, I'm inspired. Awesome, fantastic. Roger, thanks for being on. How can people get in touch with you if they wanna learn more about what you're doing with Thrive More Brands or anything else you've got going on?
Roger Martin (54:17.386)
Yeah, yeah. So thrive more brands.com. You can go there. It shows all of our brands. If you have a business that you're looking to franchise that may have potential. I would love to talk to you about that. If you're looking to become a franchisee of one of our brands, that's the place to start. And if you just want to learn a little bit more about us and what we're doing, thrive more brands.com. And then of course there's rockboxfitness.com and beam lights on a beam is spelled with two E's. Those URLs of course, we'll, we'll show you what we're doing for those independent companies.
Jeff Dudan (54:46.272)
Fantastic Roger, always a pleasure. I always learn something from you and I know that our audience will as well. Thank you so much for being on.
Roger Martin (54:53.13)
Hey, thanks for having me, Jeff.
Jeff Dudan (54:56.0)
Outstanding and as always, I am Jeff Duden and we are on the home front, simply building the world's most responsible franchise platforms and home front brands and Thrive More brands, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action to transform lives, impact communities and enhance the lives of those they care the most about. So if this sounds like you today, check us out at homefrontbrands.com or thrivemorebrands.com today and start your next chapter of greatness, building your dynasty on the home front. Roger and I will be sitting right here.
looking at our inbox waiting for you. Take care, Roger. All right.
Roger Martin (55:27.33)
Take care, see ya.

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