The UnNoticed Entrepreneur

Learn how this restaurant waiter turned Linkedin Influencer and international entrepreneur used the law of reciprocity on social media to #getnoticed.

April 28, 2022 Jim James
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur
Learn how this restaurant waiter turned Linkedin Influencer and international entrepreneur used the law of reciprocity on social media to #getnoticed.
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Show Notes Transcript

Cory Warfield shares his insight on how the law of reciprocity helped him transition from the UnNoticed Waiter to an Entrepreneur using LinkedIn. ​


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Cory Warfield: 0:00

It's literally the law of reciprocity. If somebody wants to get a thousand views on a post and a hundred likes they should go through their newsfeed and they should look at a thousand posts and like a hundred of them. And something magical happens when you are liking other people's posts and consuming other content on what's now turned into a social media platform whose business model it is to serve content to people's eyeballs.

Jim James: 0:22

Hello, and welcome to theUnNoticed show. And I'm delighted to have with me, Corey Warfield, who's joining me in a bit of a sort of James cordon style with celebrity he's in a car driving around Chicago. Corey, thank you for joining me,

Cory Warfield: 0:34

Jim it's absolute pleasure. I went unnoticed for a very long time and now I help people to get noticed day in and day out on the platform. I love your show and who you are. So I'm delighted to be here with you today.

Jim James: 0:45

Right. You're very kind. Thank you. And look, you have an amazing background as a, you know, a waiter turned tech entrepreneur, and now you're a LinkedIn influencer with hundreds of thousands of followers. And you've got a podcast is an amazing story. So love for you to share with other entrepreneurs How did you get noticed and have used LinkedIn? Let's talk about that to start with. Okay.

Cory Warfield: 1:10

Perfect. So, yeah, I guess I'll give a quick story and then a little bit of kind of some level of setting that I think many people miss-understand about the platform LinkedIn specifically. so I spent about 20 years of my adulthood working in restaurants as a manager waiter bartender, and the schedule's always changed and it made by really difficult to predict and forecast. And so a few years ago out of a frustration, I created a platform. To help the restaurant staff their employees better. And five years later, we're still kind of a scale up we've raised some money and we've grown the team and product to where it is today. But the way that I was able to raise the money and get the team and get the companies that are using us to notice us was on LinkedIn. And it took me about a year of going all in full time, life savings into the company, launching an MVP to the market. Then I realized that I didn't have all the chops after 20 years in restaurants. And the way that I would really get noticed with social media and Facebook, you know, Facebook is a great place to catch up on family and people you knew when you were in high school, but people really aren't supportive there. People don't want to see others succeed there. I think people go there really to kind of, You know, journal and catalog their own life and just keep up with people and judge them just a little bit, Instagram, nobody cares. Right. I don't have a six pack. you know, and back then it was even less of a six pack man right there. And I, I realized very quickly that LinkedIn was going to be the place for me. And this was about three years ago and people were starting to do videos there. So I just followed suit and started doing videos of myself and nobody cared. Nobody watched them. But what I did is I was tenacious and I kept going and I really started to test the algorithm and AB test a lot of different things out. What time should I be posting? What time zones was I resonating? And what has tags were working? Some of the really simple computer science. And once I started to apply my learnings of the algorithm with the psychology of the platform, which I'll go into in a minute, which I think is just such an underleveraged subject matter. That's where I started to get the attention and the views and the awards and the podcasts and the PR and ultimately the customers and then the investors and then the team. So it was a really just. Transactional way of doing this, where I realized this is where I needed to be. There was a way to really get noticed there and to turn that into a true business development channel

Jim James: 3:38

I will tell you that he's not driving. This is not an autonomous vehicle is in, but I thought I'd just double check. Okay. So you had this sort of insight that LinkedIn would be the place to reach out, but how do you transition from if you're like the waiter to entrepreneur, to fundraiser? Because your history follows you to some degree, doesn't it? On LinkedIn will very much so. So you have to rebrand and reposition yourself. Can you just talk us through how you did that? Corey cause many people right now after COVID maybe have lost their jobs or entrepreneurs in the making or having to really reposition themselves. I'd love to hear how you manage that.

Cory Warfield: 4:16

Absolutely. So I think I was fairly fortunate because as a waiter and bartender and even a manager, you're always on stage, you're talking to strangers anyway. They want to hear about your life, where you're from. You know, what big plans you have just to make the world a better place. So I'm used to putting myself out there and talking, and I'm used to kind of selling without selling people that came into my restaurants were hungry. They knew what kind of food we serve. Right. they didn't have a choice whether I was their waiter or not, they're in my section. So I kind of just approached social media the same way. I'll just put myself out there. And what I did understand is the concept of the red water, blue water, where you don't want to be where everybody else is in the feeding frenzy. And so I started to post early in the morning and late at night because I knew other people were, and I started talking about the restaurant industry specifically because nobody else was, and it was where I came from. But I knew that rather than talking about entrepreneurship or anything like that, that everybody else was talking about, I really needed to differentiate And I think a lot of early, earlier entrepreneurs. Miss miss the Mark on having unique selling proposition. Like you've gotta be different. So that's what I did on LinkedIn. I realized that was a deficit. people weren't really talking about working as shift workers. A lot of people couldn't relate to it though, so I needed to branch out and just. Really not only talk about that niche but also, you know, drop the really wide net and go for the whole buckshot and learned what was really resonating at a bigger level, which was talking about job seekers, how to get jobs, that's the platforms for. but I think what I'll do is I'd like to talk about kind of my apifany on the platform and how to reach people, but I'd love to let you set the stage as well.

Jim James: 5:54

Well, Corey, you're the guests and you're the knowledge. so I'd love to hear what you are going to say next. I think that what, one of the central questions that I think for many people on LinkedIn is how to get the people to come because you could be posting seemingly endless content that you think is valuable. But you're kind of like in a field and shouting and no one's coming to listen. So maybe we can start with the content strategy and the timing, but also how did you get people to find you? Yeah,

Cory Warfield: 6:24

well, everybody thinks that what they put on LinkedIn is valuable. Right. And I'll be honest. It's not almost nothing anybody puts on LinkedIn is valuable. Nobody cares. What's worked for you. In your sales in the past, nobody cares what awards you won at a company. Nobody cares that you're there to help people. They truly don't. Right. And that's where I think people don't understand that if I just put all my teachings out here on LinkedIn, if I just tell people about other people that I know and am really supportive. No, nobody cares about any of that. Right? So the first thing, and I'll get into this in a minute, is law of reciprocity on any social media, especially LinkedIn, what you put out is what you get back. But more so than that fundamentally. And here's where people get it wrong. Everyone's on LinkedIn talking about themselves. what don't people want to hear about others? Right. So everyone talking about themselves, nobody cares about them. People are on LinkedIn for a very specific reason, and then I'll put some bullet points to it, but everyone is on LinkedIn to sell something, to make money, right? More generally they're there to sell themselves, or they're there to sell a product, their coaching, their book. Or their product or themself as a job seeker or a candidate who can do a job because they're a recruiter and they'll make money. Everybody is on LinkedIn to make money. So if I'm on there talking about myself, the only way that's going to resonate with people is if they can make money with it. But all of a sudden, if anyone is on there talking about how to find a job on LinkedIn, that's what people are there for. Wow. Great. All of a sudden, if you start to ask people what they are finding in the job market, how they're selling on LinkedIn, everybody wants to offer their opinion and their advice. People just don't feel like they're asked it there. So conceptually, the whole thing is talk with your audience. Not at them. Everybody's on LinkedIn trying to talk at their audience. And everyone's saying, Hey, look at me. Let me tell you something. And it's so condescending. It's so condescending to say, let me like Jim, you've had an amazing career. You more than almost anyone are qualified to show up and say, Hey, let me tell you about how I grew up in many million dollar market and in this industry or the end industry, let me tell you about these cool cars, right? Like, but no, but you, nobody cares. Right? You're like, you know what, let me get people that, that have cracked the code and let's figure out how to get people around the world that needs the code Pratt. To crack it for free, freely with no expectation. And that's, so that's the law of reciprocity. You're putting it out there. It's coming back to you. People can come find you and look at your profile and go, wow, he's an amazing man. Who's done amazing things without you having to talk about it. And so that's really where I think people don't understand LinkedIn. Yes, it's a social media platform, but unlike Instagram, where people want to see your abs and what you had for. lunch and unlike Facebook, where your ex-girlfriend wants you to know that she's aging gracefully and unlike Twitter, where you go and you talk about the other political party and you'd delete it now or later, because you don't want to be labeled as this or that. Right? Like every platform was for a very specific reason. No, one's on link 10 to do anything, but make money somehow or another. So once people understand that you start putting out content that helps people make money. Hey, how's this for a post. What are you selling? Please drop a comment with Y with why I should buy it. Who doesn't want it? I mean, that's a conversation people want to have on LinkedIn. How about this? Are you looking for a job? I'm going to, I'm going to get a bunch of recruiters to engage with this post drop what's you're best at and the comments. And if you need to be local, or if you can do this remotely and let's get you some jobs, and then the algorithm says there it is. They get it right? That's what LinkedIn is there for it. I've got a friend that was the co-founder of LinkedIn. And I talked to him and he says, the reason that we started this platform is you could look people up and see what their careers like and who they are as a professional before you hop on a call with them. That was it. It wasn't intended as a social media platform. So when people are on there talking about what time they wake up in the morning, what their favorite kind of coffee is, who their favorite author is again. Nobody cares. And it's a really brutal message, but 90% of people don't understand it. So when you're in that 10% of the people who do get it, it's, it becomes this really easy replicable computer science, where you just play the algorithm, give your direct audience what it is that they want on LinkedIn. And then people come to you and I want to give you a chance to jump in, but where we'll go with that is how do you get those people to come to you? And what do you do when they're there? Because it is a free global 24 seven network insight.

Jim James: 10:50

And Cory, that was what I was going to ask you next was that if you're putting that content out and maybe give us a specific example of a quality post, as you can do that, because you've talked about the need to create content that is more sort of interactive and interrogative rather than sort of selfish. Can you give us a practical example? And then yes. Now do people then find that because people I think have been experimented with polls, for example, with what are your three best piece of advice for this and may not get anywhere. So how does that work?

Cory Warfield: 11:24

Yeah, so I think what, it would be challenging for me on a podcast with this wide and broad of an audience to say what kind of posts would do well. But what I can say generally is. the very short videos do well. and really high quality, still images do pretty well when they're accompanied by a question that there's actually a what's in it for someone else to answer, but with the sort videos, it has to catch the attention of the audience instantly. And it's got to either make them say, well, make them say, ah, or make them laugh instantly because people are going through their newsfeed and there's 10,000 posts that are vying for their attention. How do you get them to stop? Right. And it's it, some of it's set first mine as well. And if you ask the question that can draw people in, but a lot of it is visual, but I think what's more important than that even is understanding how important the headline on LinkedIn is. The headline is what's bright underneath your name, and everybody gets it wrong. People will say I'm vice president of sales at Hertz. or people say I'm here to help. Or people will say top podcast or hosts. Right. People will say all kinds of things that no one is on LinkedIn to fight. Nobody is on LinkedIn to find a business development manager, Hertz. If they were, they know where to find them period, nobody's on there to find a top podcast or no one went to LinkedIn. Boy, Whoa. I wonder how I could find a top podcast or so that headline needs to be so many people are on there looking for someone sees that and goes, well, there he is. There she is. I've been looking for this person. That headline needs to start a conversation. And the amazing thing about that is it can be whatever you want and it can resonate only with people that you know, it'll resonate with. And then every time you engage with anyone, anywhere on LinkedIn ever your headline and your name and your little picture come up. Whether it's commenting under their stuff. So now you can go to a company you want to work for it. You can go to the company on to sell something to, you can go to a professional that you want to have a conversation with. You can go to a prospect that you just want to send you a connection request is everything in this world should be inbound, right? It's very doable. If you're using psychology to get everything on LinkedIn, to be inbound. That headline is so important. So mine says something like restaurant worker turned tech entrepreneur, you know, or waiter turned waiter, Trintech people everyday, reach out and go, wow. I saw that. How am I may had to talk to you? And who are they? They're people looking for restaurant tech, go figure. I started a technology company that serves them into the restaurants. That's my ideal client. How powerful when those people come to talk to me, I'm not prospecting them. And I have now taken the approach. I'm almost blow them off. They have to chase me down. So they want what I'm selling by the time they get on my calendar, they've already decided they just want to know how much it costs and how I'm going to help them roll it out and what it's going to do for their life. And that's what that's how I get my clients from my coaching. That's how I get my investors for my various initiatives. I'm launching my own cryptocurrency. I've got people I changed a couple of the headlines on Twitter and I think Tik TOK. I to talk about the Cory coin coming out and people are already having those inbound conversations and I'm able to deflect those to my teams, but it's all about getting that headline out there. Right. And very soon when we drop this coin, my, my headline is gonna say something about that. And I'm going to have more inbound conversations daily than I know what to do with.

Jim James: 14:42

Well, you know that in England, you're going to have a problem because the Cory here is coronation street. So when you allowance the current, the Cory coin, everyone's going to think that coronation street has got its own money since leaving Europe now. Corry just go back then. If we can. Cause we only got another five minutes left. You've got your content that you talk about being interactive and asking questions and solving problems for people. But now what is that then found? And now are you able to attract such an amazing audience, what you call inbound? Because that seems to be the missing art of most people's LinkedIn strategy.

Cory Warfield: 15:19

Yeah, well, so the good news is that's the easiest question to answer and the easiest strategy to implement. If somebody wants a poster, there is to get 10 likes and a hundred views. They should scroll through a hundred posts in their newsfeed and like 10 of them. Right. It's literally the law of reciprocity. If somebody wants to get a thousand views on a post and a hundred likes they should go through their newsfeed and they should look at a thousand posts and like a hundred of them. And something magical happens when you are liking other people's posts and consuming other content on what's now turned into a social media platform whose business model it is to serve content to people's eyeballs. Something really magical happens when you spend a little bit more time on the site. And when you're intentionally and deliberately engaging with other people on there, it's magical, they come to your profile, right? And they look at your about and what you've done, and they look at your content and it's just this law of reciprocity. And if you think about it on a very conservative side of things, if you shoot, you give 90% more than you're expecting. on the social media platform and you give people some likes and some comments and you're thoughtful and you're engaging with other people. It does come back to you and it comes back to you very quickly. And so now when you're strategic, especially engaging with second and third connections, so that your name gets out to people that you are not already familiar with and to it comes back to you, I mean, instantly and and in a big way.

Jim James: 16:42

And Cory can I just ask you a question about technology? Do you think that's necessary to do that as an individual? Do you use a tool for that outreach?

Cory Warfield: 16:53

No. So I, not only do I not use any tools nor do I recommend them, I'm not even familiar with any anymore. The algorithms and the computer science picks up on those and it penalizes pattern matching and automation and anything like that. And I need to have that personal relationship. So, you know, whether I have 250,300,000 followers on a certain platform or whatever it is, I'd rather ignore people's comments or messages accidentally and have them just kind of extrapolate that I'm probably too busy. Rather than have a computer. Somebody else? I have people in my team that I just like people too, but I don't have them respond as to me either. I figure my personal brand is my asset is my currency and I have to be very guarded with that. And I like the personal touch. Now that Senate Cory connects, we are building a growth path that addicts Grammarly does. So when you're on social media, it will give you a little tips and tricks. Hey, maybe you shouldn't move this hashtag. Maybe you should engage with this post. but it's only putting opportunities in the user's hands that they can then do personally as well. It's not automating anything.

Jim James: 17:55

That's a really interesting feedback that. You should still be authentic. And that's kind of a recurring theme in all the conversations I'm having that while sort of automation and personalization at scale is possible. We still have to be intimate and directly personable with people, or we lose that connection. Right. So that's essentially a good humanist message So Cory If people want to find out more about you? You've got Cory connect. You've got the Cory coin coming out. You also have mentees you, you help people that want to learn how to use LinkedIn, how can people find you?

Cory Warfield: 18:31

Yeah, so right now, in most channels, I am both personally. And now with my team representatives, Cory connects, so it's C O R Y C O N N E C T S. That podcast is on virtually every channel by the same name. So Cory connects is a great way to kind of see what I'm up to and to get involved in, again, in different capacities. I have different team that helps me handle things like PR and the clients for the growth coaching and things of that nature. I'm involved with a platform called influencer active as well. Right now that's offering influencer marketing to you know, solopreneurs and startups as well. That's pretty cool. We just launched and have been doing some fun things there. I am a managing director with founder Institute. We do have an international presence as well. So anybody that's in the founder Institute that work or thinking about starting a company, that's a great place to go. And I can be found on all the social platforms under my real name. Cory Warfield Cory W a r f i e l d And I always try to respond to everyone that I can with the caveat that I can't respond to everybody. So patience is a virtue and I always appreciate it.

Jim James: 19:38

Cory Warfield. Thank you so much. Joining us today from his car in Chicago, you've been listening to the unnoticed show and I think really the key takeaway really about LinkedIn and focusing on that is the need to have reciprocity as your guiding light, right?

Jim James (2): 19:52

that you should be willing to give and to share and to serve. And to some degree, trust the platform and the Goodwill of others to bring back to you.

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