Noah Kagan
Noah Kagan

@noahkagan

23 Tweets 4 reads May 11, 2024
A few months ago, a high schooler sent me a 19-page slide deck on how I could improve my content.
Now he runs all our social and email marketing.
Here's how he landed a $150k job with me (and how you can use the same "Pre-Work Method" to create opportunities):
It’s 2006.
My buddy Dave McClure introduced me to a guy named Aaron who was building a product called mint.com (at the time it was called MyMint).
I was super impressed. “This is the best product I’ve ever seen,” I told him.
I noticed he was looking for a Director of Marketing - so I pitched him on why I would be a great fit.
He laughed at me. “But you don’t know anything about marketing.”
Fair point.
So I spent the next week creating a 6-month marketing plan and launch strategy.
Over 80 hours of researching online, reading Seth Godin’s books, and working on this plan for FREE.
I reached back out to Aaron and said, “If you like this plan, I’ll execute it for 3 months and then you can pay me a six-figure salary.”
He LOVED it! He hired me, we executed the plan, and it crushed.
Only 3 years later, Mint sold for $170 to Intuit.
This “permissionless” strategy works if you want to land a job, get clients, or even sell a product.
Most people ask, “How can I help you?” or “What can I do to work with you?”
The problem with that approach is that by asking without showing, you’re actually making them do MORE work to figure out how you can help and if you’re any good.
Since Million Dollar Weekend has been out, I get hundreds of DMs like this a day.
The probability that someone will go out of their way to figure out who you are and what you can do is much lower than if you showed them that you can do the job.
Think, “How do I make this a no-brainer for them?”
Here’s how @Jayyanginspires, a high schooler convinced me to pay him $150,000+ to work with me.
Jay reached out to Jeremy, my former Creative Director for our YouTube channel with a 19-page pitch deck that broke down all the things that sucked about my social media and email.
He also created 9 pieces of content that was ready to be published.
That showed me two things:
1. He had done his homework
2. He knew what he was talking about
Now Jay runs all our social and email marketing - and is making more than his teachers while in high school.
Another example:
5 years ago, @jeremyjohnmary reached out and wanted to help with my Instagram.
At the time, Instagram wasn’t my priority.
But he kept sending me examples of content that I could post immediately.
He said, “Why don’t you let me run your Instagram for free for two more weeks, and if you like it you can start paying me.”
Jeremy eventually became my YouTube producer and helped me grow the channel to over 1,000,000+ subscribers.
The key lesson?
Don’t offer to do the work, just do it.
The coolest thing about this approach is you don’t have to have any experience or money to get started.
All you have to do is put some effort BEFORE you reach out.
If you do this enough times, I promise you you’ll get 6-7-figure opportunities.
A lot of people may think that doing free work isn’t worth it because they don’t know that they’ll get paid.
Instead of viewing it as free work, see it as pre-work.
Best case? You get the job.
Worst case? You learn and build your portfolio.
Last example:
@MitchellLandon saw that I was doing a charity bike ride called SumoRide. He asked if he could volunteer for it. He did such a phenomenal job that I asked him to volunteer again.
He established trust and showed that he was a hard and smart-working person.
Now Mitchell runs content and helps with influencers at AppSumo.
Just do 1% more to stand out. It doesn’t have to be anything super huge.
• Create a video
• Make a pitch deck
• Publicly break down someone else’s work
Some of these people may not respond. Sometimes the timing isn’t right.
But eventually, by repeating this process, you’ll build a portfolio of work to showcase and people will start coming to you because of your work.
That’s the power of pre-work.
Rooting for you,
Noah 🌮💚
PS.
Jay used a similar approach that I used to become Director of Marketing at Mint (with nearly zero marketing experience!)
If you want to see the pitch decks we both used - link below! 🤝
noahkagan.com
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