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In this episode, filmmaker-turned-brand strategist Jake Isham breaks down what authentic storytelling really looks like in business. Jake has worked with over 150 entrepreneurs and brands, including Grant Cardone, Callaway, and 511 Tactical, creating content that's generated over 1 billion views. He shares practical frameworks for translating product features into compelling narratives, why consistency beats perfection every time, and how founders can overcome the fear of being the face of their brand. If you're ready to stop chasing attention and start earning trust through story-driven content, this episode delivers a human-centered approach to building brand authority. Key Takeaways: [3:02] - The Trust Formula: People do business with people they know and trust. "Know" is just attention—they need to know you exist. "Trust" comes from showing you understand their problem, can solve it, and have proof you've solved it for others. [4:57] - Features to Benefits: Don't communicate what the feature is—communicate the pain it solves. Look at the "why" behind feature requests in customer comments. [8:46] - Build Your Personal Brand: Founders like Elon Musk demonstrate that personal brands transfer from company to company. Most SaaS founders don't stay at one company—building that personal brand allows your audience to follow you. [14:26] - Batch Your Content: You can spend half a day per month and get all your content for that month. It doesn't have to be time-intensive if built correctly. [16:38] - Pre-Production is Key: The biggest growth from 1% improvements comes from pre-production—better questions, better guests, better thumbnails, better titles. [19:48] - Just Show Up: Like going to the gym, you just need to show up consistently. Even 20-30 minutes of pushing weight regularly will yield results. [20:06] - Two Years of Daily Content: Jake's brother posted multiple videos daily for two years before one video got 3 million views in 48 hours—proof that consistency compounds. [22:08] - The Dog Video Problem: Jake's dog video got 10 million views and gained him 180,000 followers—but they wanted dog content, not his actual business content. Make sure content aligns with what you want to be known for. [22:49] - Stay in Your Lane: Your SaaS solves one problem—your videos should address that one thing. Don't talk about unrelated topics just because they might go viral. [24:25] - Interest-Based Content Strategy: Start with what you're willing to do consistently. If you hate writing, don't start a blog. If you love podcasts, start there. [28:30] - You Can't Oversaturate: People who will buy from you will consume content like candy. Those who complain about over-posting aren't your customers anyway. [42:39] - It's Annoyingly Simple: Success isn't about being clever—it's about doing the obvious basic things for long enough. Tweetable Quotes: "People do business with people they know and trust. The 'know' is just attention. The 'trust' is showing you understand their problem and can solve it." "Being on camera is just a skill. We all suck at everything when we start. The only way to get good at it is to do it." "Content is never perfect. It will be a life of 1% improvements. The same way your SaaS is never done." "Unless you sit there and start coding, the app will not be built. Content is the same—just start." SaaS Leadership Lessons: 1. Translate Features into Customer Pain Points Stop listing what your product does. Instead, communicate the specific pain your customers experience and how your feature solves it. When customers request features, they usually tell you why in their comments—that "why" is your marketing message. Example: Instead of "our CRM has date fields," say "Do you struggle to track your first call, shoot date, and release date? Our CRM is built specifically for podcasters." 2. Consistency Compounds More Than Perfection Ship your MVP. Release version 1.0. Start your podcast even if episode 1 isn't perfect. The biggest killer of content (and products) is inconsistency or never starting. Like building a SaaS, each iteration improves—but only if you ship. Jake's brother posted multiple videos daily for two years before one went viral with 3 million views. That's 730+ days of "failure" before breakthrough success. 3. Build Personal Brand as Portable Equity Your personal brand is the asset that travels with you from company to company. Most SaaS founders build, sell, invest, repeat. Elon Musk's audience followed him from PayPal to Tesla to SpaceX. Being the face of your brand isn't about ego—it's about building transferable authority that multiplies the impact of your next venture. Guest Resources: jake@jakeisham.com https://digitalshow.creativemindsoffi... / jakeisham / jakecreativemarketing