This one’s different. The client was US — my own company.
After nearly a decade in business, we were stuck at what Simon Sinek calls “the 3% problem”: anyone can get the early adopters and innovators who inherently understand bleeding-edge thinking.
We couldn’t break through to the mainstream.
What we had:
What we didn’t have:
The diagnosis:
We were speaking a language only insiders understood. Our complexity was real depth, but it was also a barrier.
We had the 3% who “got it.” We couldn’t reach the other 97%.
We picked up a new team member. Another company wanted to hire him too — for about $10K/month to do one weekly SEO webinar.
I made a counter-offer that made him look at me like I was on drugs:
“You can have our new team member for that $10K. But you also get me, my marketer, a full course for your membership area, and a WordPress plugin — all included. No additional cost.”
Immediate yes.
What he thought I was doing:
Desperately trying to place our team member by throwing in extras.
What I was actually doing:
Buying access to his distribution system with our value.
The critical insight:
These weren’t random website visitors. They were committed buyers who’d already invested in the parent product.
When they discovered OUR content inside, they attributed high value to it because they’d paid to access it.
The trade:
They got credibility and substance. We got distribution and pre-qualified buyers.
What we delivered:
The strategic layers:
My marketer’s role:
The conversion funnel (disguised as teaching):
We gave and gave. And it paid back in ways I couldn’t count.
Revenue: 5x increase in one year
Overhead: ZERO additional costs
Just a little extra time spent in that other membership area.
What we gained beyond revenue:
The framework discoveries:
Through this partnership, I learned:
Discovery 1: Name things simply
Our bleeding-edge concepts needed simple labels. Once people could grasp the entry point, they appreciated the depth.
Discovery 2: Explain things simply
Complexity is a feature, not a bug — but you need a simple pathway in.
Discovery 3: Give away massive value in partnerships
The more we gave, the more we got back. Reciprocity at scale.
Discovery 4: Context determines perceived value
Free webinars = tire-kickers who didn’t value it. Same content inside a paid membership = “biggest gems” that drove conversions.
The content didn’t change. The context did.
This is Jay Abraham’s framework on steroids.
Traditional thinking: “Charge what you’re worth. Protect your IP. Don’t give away too much.”
Strategic thinking: “Trade value for distribution. Use their infrastructure. Give generously to pre-qualified audiences.”
I wasn’t selling my time for $10K/month. I was buying access to thousands of qualified buyers with my expertise.
What 1:1 clients would have cost:
To reach the number of people we reached through that partnership, we would have needed:
What the partnership delivered:
5x revenue with no additional costs = infinite ROI on the partnership.
We never “sold” on the webinars. We taught.
But the architecture was designed to convert:
People sold themselves by experiencing our value and wanting more.
Same webinar content delivered two ways:
Free public webinar:
Inside paid membership:
The content was identical. The context created the value perception.
Lesson: WHERE people find you matters as much as WHAT you teach them.
We’d been stuck at 3% because our complexity scared people away.
The partnership forced simplification:
The revelation:
Our depth was our competitive advantage. But depth without accessibility is invisible.
Simple entry → complex value → loyal customers.
1. Distribution beats content (when you have both)
We had amazing content for a decade. We stayed at 3%.
We got distribution through partnership. We 5x’d revenue in one year.
Content is necessary. Distribution is sufficient.
2. Give more than seems rational in strategic partnerships
I offered him 3 people + course + plugin for the price of 1 team member.
He thought I was desperate. I was strategic.
The value I gave bought something I couldn’t purchase: access to his entire ecosystem.
3. Context determines value
Same content, different context = completely different perceived value.
Free = low commitment, low value perception. Paid environment = high commitment, high value perception.
4. Partner with people who have what you lack
We had: expertise, content, systems thinking. They had: distribution, marketing infrastructure, conversion.
Together we were both more valuable.
5. The “shallow end of the pool” strategy works
Simple concepts get them in. Deep thinking keeps them engaged. Connected systems make them customers.
Don’t hide your complexity — provide an accessible entry point to it.
This partnership taught me the framework that unlocked everything else:
You don’t need to reach everyone yourself.
You need to reach the right people who already have everyone’s attention.
This is leverage thinking:
The magic formula:
Your expertise + Their distribution + Massive generosity = Revenue multiplication with zero overhead increase.
This is how you break past the 3% ceiling.
This was years ago. The specific partnership eventually ran its course.
But the framework it taught me became the foundation for everything I built after:
These principles don’t expire.
And now, with AI Profit Engineer, I can teach this same strategic thinking — how to identify leverage points, orchestrate partnerships, and build distribution systems that multiply your value without multiplying your overhead.
I don’t take on agency clients anymore.
But I teach the strategic thinking that made this (and dozens of other case studies) possible.

AI Profit Engineer
(handles the heavy lifting)

No-Click Content Strategy
(launched Jan 2026)

Certified Profit Engineer
(opens Mar 17, 2026)