Mim Watson

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Mim Watson

Mim Watson

@themimwatson

Helping CEO's turn their social media pages into money-printing machines through my multi-social funnel to add another 10-30 calls per month.

Worldwide เข้าร่วม Ağustos 2022
163 กำลังติดตาม563 ผู้ติดตาม
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
I helped an agency add $30k to their annual revenue in 7 weeks. by unlocking another stream of leads with YouTube Most founders think you can’t sell B2B offers with YouTube. So, I recorded an entire breakdown of everything I did to help Mike’s B2B facebook ad agency use YouTube to scale. In the breakdown I cover: → the content funnel that books calls on autopilot → SEO optimisation strategy to scoop up leads looking for your offer → 3-step repurposing that got him 100+ leads on Instagram → YouTube video types that get deals across the line → How to squeeze sales out of existing content with zero new work Comment “Youtube” and I’ll send it to you (just make sure we’re connected)
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Hiring a short-form clipper We need 1-2 short-form clips produced EVERY day You’ll be taking clips from masterminds, youtube videos, podcasts, etc. If you’re interested, fill out the form below ⬇️
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Hiring a copywriter to join my team Must have expressed scripting short-form and long-form videos Drop a link to a video you’ve created below and I’ll reach out
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Hiring a second thumbnail designer to join our team Comment your best work below
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Hiring a video quality checker/ creative director You will be in charge of reviewing videos before they’re uploaded online or sent to clients. We work with some of the largest info products in the space, doing multi-6, and 7-figures a month in revenue If you have a good attention to detail, are fluent in English, fill out the form below 👇 docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAI…
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
HIRING a graphic designer Looking for help with Instagram carousels DROP YOUR WORK BELOW!
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
HIRING Hiring a personal assistant to work 1:1 with my clients and me. ONLY apply if you’re able to think for yourself, don’t need babysitting & are committed to becoming the best possible assistant. Apply below (Link attached)
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Views are NOT EQUAL to money. The biggest mistake I see on YouTube is business owners optimizing for the wrong metric. They're chasing views when they should be chasing relevance, or targeting a tiny niche when they need mass reach. Both work, don’t get me wrong. But your strategy depends entirely on your offer type. Here's the framework I use for my clients: First, ask yourself this… “Who can I sell to?” If your answer is "pretty much anyone who wants to make money, get fit, learn a skill" → optimize for maximum views. People like: - Iman Gadzhi - Tai Lopez - Hamza And all gurus target those types of people, hence that’s why they grew such large followings. However… If your answer is "seven-figure SaaS founders with enterprise sales teams" → optimize for targeted relevance. So you’ll get fewer views, but from the right people. Now here are the strategies I’d choose depending on the answer… Strategy 1: Maximize Views (B2C / Biz Op Offers) Use this approach if you're selling: - Courses and coaching in make money online, fitness, self-improvement - Low to mid-ticket products ($100-2,000) - Anything with a broad target market Your content strategy: - Create content about aspirational outcomes anyone can relate to - Use emotional storytelling and lifestyle elements - Optimize titles and thumbnails for maximum click-through - Cover trending topics in your space - Post 3-4x per week to feed the algorithm Examples of who does this well: Iman Gadzhi, Tai Lopez, Alex Hormozi (when selling courses) The logic is… You need volume because your conversion rate will be lower, but your addressable market is massive. Getting 100K views at a 0.5% conversion rate gives you 500 leads. Strategy 2: Maximize Relevance (B2B / High-Ticket Offers) Use this approach if you're selling: - B2B services and consulting ($5K-50K+ deals) - Enterprise software or solutions - Anything requiring qualified, specific buyers Your content strategy: - Create hyper-specific content for your exact ICP - Use industry jargon and technical depth that filters out casual viewers - Optimize for search terms your ideal clients actually use - Quality over quantity - 1-2x per week is fine - Every video should address a specific pain point your ICP has Examples of topics: "How to reduce churn in enterprise SaaS" or "CFO's guide to scaling operations in manufacturing" The logic here is that you're intentionally filtering out 99% of viewers to attract the 1% who are qualified buyers. Getting 300 views from the right people books more calls than 30K views from everyone. Most business owners default to chasing views because bigger numbers feel good… But if you're selling high-ticket B2B services? Those metrics are actively hurting your business by attracting the wrong audience. P.S. if you want help in deciding what type of content you should post, comment ‘Audit’ and I’ll help
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Everyone tells you to start YouTube, but nobody shows you the actual roadmap from zero to your first booked call. Here's the exact 5 phase process to go from "thinking about YouTube" to posting your first video this week. Phase 1: Validate Your Audience (30 minutes) Don't create content for an audience that doesn't exist on YouTube. Go to vidiq.com and search 5-10 problems your ideal clients have. Check if those keywords show 500+ monthly searches… If yes, continue. If no, YouTube might not be your channel right now and you should focus on LinkedIn, paid ads or cold outreach first. Phase 2: Understand Your Offer Type (10 minutes) This determines your entire content strategy. Ask yourself: "Who can I sell to?" If the answer is "anyone interested in [broad topic]" → you're B2C/broad market. Optimize for views. If the answer is "specifically [detailed ICP description]" → you're B2B/targeted market. Optimize for relevance. Phase 3: Content Strategy Framework (1 hour) Map out your first 12 videos before filming anything. Use this split: - 8 SEO-optimized videos targeting specific search terms (use Vid IQ to find these) - 3 case study breakdowns showing client results - 1 broader story video about your journey or methodology For each video, write: - Target keyword - Working title - 3-5 bullet points of what you'll cover - The specific CTA (what action you want viewers to take) Phase 4: Film Your First Video (2 hours) Pick your easiest topic from your content list. This should be something you could explain to a client in your sleep. Setup: - Phone on a tripod or stack of books at eye level - Natural light from a window or one cheap LED panel - Cheap microphone from Amazon ($30-60) - Clean background Script: - Write out your hook word-for-word (first 30 seconds) - Bullet point the main content - Write out your outro CTA Film it. Yes, It'll feel awkward. Do 2-3 takes of the intro until you get one you like, then roll through the content. Phase 5: Edit and Post (1-2 hours) - Cut out long pauses and mistakes - Add your hook, content, outro together - Export in 4k Or, hire a pro to edit for you. Either works. Just get your foot in the door. Upload to YouTube: - Title starts with your target keyword - Description repeats the title in the first line and includes related keywords - Add 10-15 relevant tags using rapidtags.io - Create a simple thumbnail (use Canva free tier) Now the reality is… Your first video will not be perfect. Your first 5 videos will probably be awkward. By video 10-15, you'll actually be decent at this. Most people never start because they're waiting for perfect conditions. Meanwhile, someone with an iPhone and a decent microphone is posting their 20th video this week and booking calls from it. The difference between thinking about YouTube and actually booking calls from YouTube is just starting with what you have right now.
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Faceless YouTube channels will NEVER book high-ticket B2B sales calls. I see founders trying to hide behind these AI stock footage and voiceover videos, thinking they can build trust without showing their face. But it doesn't work, and here's why. See, when someone is about to spend $10K-50K+ with you, they need to see the person they'll actually be working with. They're not buying a product off a shelf or an Apple store. They're entering a business relationship with YOU specifically. A faceless channel tells prospects you're hiding something or you're not confident enough to put yourself out there. Neither of those signals inspires trust when large amounts of money are involved. The psychology of B2B sales is simple... people buy from people they trust, and trust comes from familiarity. When prospects watch 15-20 minutes of you explaining concepts on camera, they start to feel like they know you. They've seen your personality, heard how you think, and imagined what working with you would be like. You can't build that connection with stock footage and a voiceover. “But I'm camera-shy and uncomfortable on video." Well, let me ask you this... are you also phone shy and uncomfortable on sales calls? Because you're going to need to talk to these people eventually. If you can handle a sales call, you can handle filming a YouTube video. Actually, YouTube is easier because you can do multiple takes, edit out mistakes, and refine your delivery. Sales calls are live with no second chances. Hiding on YouTube while showing up on sales calls makes zero sense honestly. If anything, being on camera beforehand makes your sales calls easier because prospects already feel comfortable with you. Your competitors who are showing their faces and building real connections are closing deals while you're hiding behind animations wondering why YouTube isn't working. Get on camera or don't do YouTube at all. And if you need help with the whole process, DM me ‘STRATEGY’ and i’ll send you a free strategy on how to start
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Your best clients are your biggest stalkers. But if you're strategic about it? You can use this behavior to accelerate your entire sales process. You see, before spending $10K-50K with you, prospects want to validate three things: - Can you actually deliver results? - Do you understand their specific problem? - Will you be someone they can work with? And which medium answers all these questions best? YouTube. Why? Because they can see you explain complex concepts, watch your personality, and evaluate your expertise through long-form content. So when they come to you on sales calls… They're already pre-sold and educated about your process. Now that’s all great, but how do you actually create content that will work in your favor? Well, here’s how: Step 1: Create Your Nurture Video Library You need 4-6 videos specifically designed to warm up cold traffic. These aren't your regular content videos, they're strategic pieces that address specific points in your sales process. So… - Problem identification video: "The 3 signs your [solution] is broken" - Method explanation video: "Why most [industry] approaches to [problem] fail" - Case study video: "How we helped [client] go from [before] to [after]" - Objection handler video: Address your #1 most common sales objection - Client interview showing emotional transformation Step 2: Map Videos to Your Sales Process Each video should be deployed at a specific stage when prospects need that exact information. For example, after initial contact (LinkedIn/email response), send your problem identification video as a free guide… Or after they book a call, send your case study video via Calendly automation… Or when someone hits you with an objection, send your objection handler video, framing it as a breakdown of your methodology, etc. Step 3: Integrate With Other Channels Every piece of marketing you do should point back to relevant YouTube content. - LinkedIn posts should link to related videos - Email sequences should embed or link videos at key points - Your website should have case study videos prominently featured - Paid ads should drive to landing pages with video content This creates a flywheel where someone might see your LinkedIn post, watch the linked YouTube video, then get retargeted with an ad that brings them back to another video… And by the time they’ve booked a call with you? They’re already sold by your content. Step 4: Track Which Videos Drive Calls Add UTM parameters to video links you send manually, and check your YouTube analytics to see which videos people watch before booking calls. Double down on creating more content similar to your highest-converting videos. If you want us to handle all of this FOR YOU, from A-Z, so all you have to do is sit down every month for a few hours and record… Then DM or comment ‘SCALE’ below, and let’s talk
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
I’ve been asked this question almost a million times now… "how long until YouTube starts booking calls?" And my answer is always the same. It depends on 3 factors most people ignore. Factor 1: Your Presentation Skills If you're comfortable on camera and can explain things clearly, you'll see results faster. If you're stiff, reading scripts, or sound unnatural, it'll take longer because prospects won't trust you enough to book. Now obviously you’ll get better over time with this… But if you’re already good at presentation and delivery, you’ll naturally see results faster. Factor 2: Your Existing Traffic If you're already running LinkedIn outreach, paid ads, or have an email list, YouTube accelerates everything immediately. You can send your existing leads to videos and start seeing results within weeks. If you're starting from zero with no other channels, you're playing the long game of SEO and organic discovery. That typically takes 2-4 months before consistent calls start coming in. Factor 3: Niche Specificity Broad content takes forever to gain traction. Hyper-specific content for a defined ICP can start booking calls from the first few videos if you're ranking for the right search terms. For example, "How to grow your business" will take months. "How to reduce churn for B2B SaaS with 100+ enterprise clients" can book calls immediately because you're speaking directly to your ideal client. So the answer? If you're using YouTube as part of an integrated strategy and specific content, 4-8 weeks. If you're starting cold with no other channels, 3-6 months. Where are you in this timeline? Let me know down below
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
Most business owners optimize their YouTube channels for either views or conversions, but never both. But the businesses booking 20-30 calls per month while also growing their audience use a specific content mix that maximizes both metrics simultaneously. Here's the exact ratio that works: 75% Targeted Content (Your Revenue Engine): This is hyper-specific content for your exact ICP that might not get massive views, but books calls consistently. Characteristics: - Addresses specific problems your ideal clients search for - Uses industry jargon and technical depth - Optimized for SEO and search rankings - Gets 200-2,000 views but high conversion rates Example titles if you're targeting SaaS founders: "How to reduce churn in enterprise SaaS without discounting" "Why your sales team can't close enterprise deals" "The CAC problem killing B2B SaaS companies" These videos might only get 400 views, but if 20 of those viewers are qualified prospects and 3 book calls, that's a 15% conversion rate on relevant traffic. 25% Broad Content: This is content that appeals to a wider audience in your industry, grows your subscriber base, and increases brand awareness. Characteristics: - Addresses common problems many people face - More aspirational or emotional storytelling - Broader appeal beyond your specific niche - Gets 2,000-20,000+ views with lower conversion Example titles for the same SaaS audience: "How I scaled from $0 to $500K ARR in 18 months" "The biggest mistakes I made building my SaaS" "Why most startups fail in their first year" These videos might get 5,000 views, but only book 2 calls directly. However, they're growing your audience and bringing in new people who will later watch your targeted content and push them to your target ICP The best part is? Both of those content types work together… So the way the funnel would work is someone discovers you through broad content (the growth engine), subscribes because they like your style, then later searches for a specific problem and finds your targeted content (the revenue engine). Or they find you through targeted SEO content, book a call, then watch your broad content to get to know you better before the meeting. See how everything works in unison? This keeps you visible to your core audience while periodically attracting new people to your channel. Most business owners optimize for vanity metrics (total views)... or get obsessed with only creating content that directly books calls. The 75/25 rule lets you have both.
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
ChatGPT is RUINING your YouTube content. I can spot AI-written scripts from a mile away, and so can your prospects. Now the problem isn't that AI is bad at writing... it's that it can't capture your actual personality, your specific expertise, or the way you naturally explain complex topics to clients. Because when you let ChatGPT or Claude write your entire script You end up sounding like every other generic business channel. Same AI phrases like "And here's the best part" "But wait, there's more" "Here's where it gets interesting" "Here's the thing..." "But there's a catch..." “The bottom line is” “Picture this” This makes you sound like a robot reading a teleprompter. You lose the natural pauses, the examples that come from real experience, and the personality that makes people want to work with you specifically. AI is a fantastic tool for research and first drafts, don’t get me wrong. Definitely use it to outline your main points, gather industry stats, or structure your argument. But the actual words coming out of your mouth need to be yours. Your expertise comes from the hundreds of client conversations you've had, the patterns you've noticed, the specific objections you've overcome. ChatGPT doesn't know any of that. Use AI to assist, not to replace your voice.
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
You can waste MONTHS creating YouTube content for an audience that isn't even on the platform. That’s why before you post a single video… You NEED to validate if your customers are actually using YouTube to search for solutions… Here's how to do it in under 5 minutes: - Step 1: Sign Up for Vid IQ Go to vidiq.com and create a free account. The free tier gives you pretty much everything you need for this research. Once you're in, click on the "Keywords" tab in the sidebar. - Step 2: Test Your Industry Terms Type in 3-5 core problems your ideal clients face. Not your solution, but their actual pain points. Examples: If you're a Facebook ads agency: "Facebook ads not working" or "reduce Facebook ad costs" If you're a sales consultant: "improve sales team performance" or "increase close rate" If you're a CRM provider: "best CRM for small business" or "sales pipeline management" You get the point… - Step 3: Analyze the Search Volume Vid IQ will show you monthly search volume for each keyword… → 1,000+ monthly searches = strong signal your audience is actively looking for solutions → 500-1,000 monthly searches = decent opportunity, especially for niche B2B → Under 500 monthly searches = might not be worth building a channel around unless you have multiple keywords in this range - Step 4: Check the Competition Click on any keyword and select "Search on YouTube" to see what's currently ranking. Look at the view counts on the top videos… If videos are getting 2K-10K+ views consistently, that's validation that people are watching this content. Also, check if the top results actually answer the search query well. If they're low quality or off-topic, that's your opportunity to create something better and rank. - Step 5: Find Related Keywords In Vid IQ, scroll down to the "Related Keywords" section. This shows you what else people in your niche are searching for. Look for patterns… For example, If you see 5-10 related keywords all with decent search volume, that's a strong indicator your audience is active on YouTube. “But what if my keywords don’t show up??” Well, if none of your industry terms show meaningful search volume, you have two options: Option 1: Pivot your keyword strategy. Instead of searching "enterprise software solutions", try "why our sales team can't close deals" or other problem-focused phrases your customers would actually type. Option 2: YouTube might not be your primary channel right now. Focus on LinkedIn, cold outreach, or paid ads first until you have enough traction to make content marketing worth it. The goal isn't to force YouTube to work for your business… You can’t force your viewers into a new platform. The real goal is to validate whether it's worth your time based on where your customers are actually searching for help. Run this research process today and you'll know in 5 minutes whether YouTube deserves a spot in your marketing strategy.
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Mim Watson
Mim Watson@themimwatson·
🚨 Hiring: Preditor (Creative Producer + Editor) For an 8-figure SaaS founder who is looking to scale his personal brand. You will own the end-to-end production for his personal brand content. From filming -> editing -> publishing. *Must be based in Dubai, UAE. Salary: $60-80K/year For more info, click the link attached below
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Bishop B
Bishop B@Banjo_Dr·
This was me after working 58 hrs in a 72hr period (10hr rest in 3 days) because of severe manpower shortage. I almost collapsed mid-surgery and had to drink coke using NG tube as straw so I could stand long enough to complete the case. Now I'm finding out I'm "useless" on X.
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Mr 1-5@MIKassim

1.6m per month for those useless people? 😂😂😂

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