The gentlemen’s agreement that netted 210,000 subscribers. [Steal this play.]

By cdelprincipe@hubspot.com (Curt del Principe)

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“SMASH that like button,” the host says, and your eyes roll back so far you can see your own medulla. “And don’t forget to subscribe!”

If you make videos, podcasts, or social media posts, you know you should be encouraging engagement. But if doing so makes you feel like you need a shower, this story is for you.

Today, the producer of My First Million shares how they turned boring engagement farming into shared language that their audience willingly (and joyfully) spreads — netting 200k subscribers in the process.

The team calls it “The Gentlemen’s Agreement.” And you should absolutely try something similar.

Gentlemen, behold.

Entrepreneurs Sam Parr and Shaan Puri didn’t set out to be podcasters or YouTubers.

“They were operating in the mindset of ‘We’re creating this for us, and if people watch it, great,’” says Arie Desormeaux. “They weren’t identifying as content creators.”

So when the show started to organically pick up followers, they had to decide whether to do all the things that content creators are “supposed” to do: Ad breaks. Engagement farming. Begging for subscribers.

Desormeaux is a senior producer for HubSpot Media and one of the minds behind the ongoing success of My First Million, which currently boasts almost 900,000 followers.

But it didn’t start that way, and she shares with me the thinking behind one of their early moments of explosive growth.

“Instead of doing something we should be doing, just by default, we decided to make it a funny exchange, and then turn that into a bit that’s also a value add. We’re going to turn it into something that becomes part of the language of the audience.

So, instead of the typical ‘like and subscribe,’ Parr and Puri came up with the Gentlemen’s Agreement. Here it is in Parr’s words:

“If this is the first episode you’re listening to, you get this one for free. But if it’s the second episode or more that you’ve listened to, here’s our Gentlemen’s agreement. You go to whatever app you’re on, and you click ‘subscribe’ or ‘follow’ or whatever it is.

“We make this for you. We’re your little laboratory rats. We’re doing all this crap for you, just go and do that for us.”

The Inclusion Factor

The effect was nearly immediate, with the show picking up 210,000 subscribers within a matter of months.

And while it’s nearly impossible to say this was the sole reason in isolation, Parr himself described the Gentlemen’s Agreement as “the biggest needle mover.”

Screenshot showing MFM's audience growth following the Gentlemen's Agreement

It wasn’t simply that listeners were honoring the agreement. They were sharing it.

“You’ll see it in the YouTube comments. You’ll see it on LinkedIn,” Desormeaux says. “It becomes almost inside baseball for people who know. It’s become a proper noun. And that creates an inclusion factor.”

That inclusion factor …read more

Source:: HubSpot Blog

      

Aaron
Author: Aaron

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