The UpFlip Podcast Podcast Por UpFlip arte de portada

The UpFlip Podcast

The UpFlip Podcast

De: UpFlip
Escúchala gratis

The UpFlip podcast is where you get to unravel how great businesses are built, how they are run behind the scenes, and how their success can be replicated. We feed on the idea that no matter what the circumstances are, the American Dream is still just around the corner. With over 150+ videos and 50 million views on YouTube, UpFlip has ignited the spark that rekindles the fire of entrepreneurship in its ever-growing 700K+ audience. Through this podcast, we aim at sharing practical nuggets of gold and brilliant advice with you by making knowledge more accessible. For more information about us and our services, please visit https://www.upflip.com.

UpFlip
Economía Gestión y Liderazgo Liderazgo
Episodios
  • 204. The Boring Businesses that Print Cash
    Sep 15 2025

    Imagine going from working warehouse shifts to keep your family afloat to owning a portfolio of over 140 rental units and multiple laundromats. That’s Brandon Turner's real-life story, and it’s one you have to hear. He found a secret most online gurus miss: while everyone’s chasing the same digital dreams, real wealth is hiding in 'boring businesses' with way less competition.

    In this chat with our host Ryan Atkinson, Brandon gets super specific on how he built his empire. He walks us through his playbook for buying a business, using creative finance, and setting up brilliant business scaling systems so he only works a few hours a week.

    If you're looking for a realistic path to passive income, finding business ideas, and achieving genuine financial freedom, this episode is a total game-changer. It’s your sign to stop scrolling and start building something real.


    Takeaways:


    - True wealth is often built in "boring businesses" like laundromats and car washes, which are overlooked because they seem like hard work.

    - The primary advantage of boring businesses is low competition; it's better to compete with five local owners than one billion people online.

    - A single, well-placed laundromat can generate significant income, potentially over $175,000 in net profit per year.

    - These businesses are not passive initially. They require significant front-loaded work to establish robust systems and processes before they can run with minimal effort.

    - To vet a laundromat location, look for a geographic area with around 7,500 people and a renter population of at least 35%, as customers rarely travel more than a mile.

    - Calculate the long-term value of your time. A task that seems menial is worth it if the business's 10-year opportunity averages out to $1,500+ per hour.

    - Many aging small business owners haven't updated their processes in decades, creating a massive opportunity for new buyers to modernize and drastically increase profits.

    - To learn an industry with no experience, offer to work for free at a local business. Most owners will gladly accept free, competent help in exchange for teaching you the ropes.

    - The single most important skill for scaling any business is learning how to effectively manage other people.

    - For a business, you can start this weekend for under $500, considering small engine repair. There is a huge demand, and many repairs are simple carburetor cleanings that you can charge $100+ for.

    Tags: Passive Income, Entrepreneurship, Business Buying, Investmentjoy, Car Wash, Vending Machine, Business Scaling, Boring Businesses


    Resources:

    Grow your business today: https://links.upflip.com/the-business-startup-and-growth-blueprint-podcast

    Connect with Brandon: https://www.instagram.com/investmentjoy/

    Más Menos
    36 m
  • 203. Systems, Subcontractors, and Smart Marketing for First Time Founders
    Sep 8 2025

    Eric Barstow graduated with an economics degree, seemingly destined for Wall Street. Instead, he stuck with the painting business he started in college—a side hustle that was already generating $110,000 a year while he worked only five to ten hours a week. Realizing the massive opportunity and low competition in the home service space, Eric leaned in. Today, he is the co-founder of National Painting Group, projecting $35 million this year, and runs Painting Business Pro. And guess what? He barely knows how to paint.

    Eric’s entire model proves entrepreneurs don't need trade skills to build a multi-million dollar service business; they need systems. His strategy relies entirely on leveraging subcontractors—a method that fixes profit margins, eliminates liability, and perfectly manages seasonal slowdowns. He reveals his exact tactics for finding reliable subs (including his specific Craigslist and paint store strategies) and shares the "Phase Zero" marketing hustle needed to land your first customers, including his scripts for door-to-door marketing.

    He details his proven sales process, including how to use price anchoring and specific incentives to close deals on the spot, and breaks down the financial model required to maintain a 20% net profit margin. If you want to build a highly profitable business without ever picking up the tools, this episode is essential listening.


    Takeaways:

    - You do not need to be skilled in the trade to build a successful trade business; Eric is an awful painter, but he excels at building marketing, sales, and management systems.

    - Leveraging subcontractors instead of employees is the most efficient way to scale a service business, as it fixes your margins (fixed price per job), reduces liability, and allows you to scale up or down instantly with seasonal demand.

    - Find reliable subcontractors by posting ads twice daily in both the "general labor" and "skilled trades" sections of Craigslist, or by approaching painters in unmarked vans at local paint stores.

    - In "Phase Zero" (getting from $0 to stability), focus only on marketing that generates leads quickly, such as door-to-door sales and lawn signs. Avoid long-term plays like SEO or vehicle wraps.

    - A highly effective lawn sign strategy is placing them near high-traffic retail areas (like Costco or Whole Foods) on a Friday afternoon, as city workers are unlikely to remove them over the weekend.

    - Use "price anchoring" in your sales process. Before showing the contract, verbally tell the customer the typical price range for a job their size (e.g., "A house like this is usually about $6,000") to reset their expectations.

    - Create urgency and close deals on the spot by offering incentives that also benefit your business, such as a small dollar amount discount (never a percentage) if they sign that day or agree to take an urgent open spot on your schedule.

    - You should aim for a 20% net profit margin. A healthy budget allocates 50% to labor/materials, under 10% to marketing, 6-7% to sales, 6-7% to project management, and 7-8% to overhead.

    - The market size is irrelevant; success depends on implementation. Eric has clients doing millions in revenue in towns with populations as small as 27,000.

    - Build the business around your desired lifestyle from day one. By setting firm constraints (like working only 30 hours a week or never on weekends), you force yourself to build efficient systems rather than just working more hours.


    Tags: Business Skills, Service & Consulting, Subcontracting, Marketing, Home Service


    Resources:
    Grow your business today: https://links.upflip.com/the-business-startup-and-growth-blueprint-podcast

    Connect with Eric: https://paintingbusinesspro.com/

    Más Menos
    33 m
  • 202. Franchising vs Starting Your Own Business: What’s the Better Path?
    Sep 1 2025

    Alex Smereczniak's entrepreneurial journey began in college, where he scaled a simple laundry service into a $300,000 a year business with a single, brilliant marketing hack. That early success was so powerful that he walked away from a prestigious corporate job after just 18 months, convinced the 9-to-5 was a broken system. His next venture led him into the world of franchising, where he uncovered its dark side: an industry filled with biased brokers and misaligned incentives. To fix this, he built Franzy, a revolutionary AI-powered marketplace known as the "Zillow for franchises," designed to bring transparency and data-driven matching to aspiring entrepreneurs.

    In this episode, Alex demystifies the path to successful business ownership and breaks down who franchising is truly for—from the corporate warrior seeking an exit to the investor looking for a profitable side hustle. He provides a clear roadmap for starting a business, detailing how to secure financing through options like SBA loans and identify the business ideas that genuinely align with your lifestyle goals, and explains the myth of passive income.

    Tune in to learn how to avoid costly industry traps and leverage a proven playbook to find the franchise that will build your future.


    Takeaways:

    - A single clever marketing angle is more powerful than a large budget; Alex turned a $30k business into $300k with one strategic move at student orientation.

    - Don't wait for the "perfect time" to start your business, as it will never come; the best time to take the entrepreneurial leap is always today

    - Franchising can nearly double your chances of success, with 85% of franchises surviving past five years thanks to a proven playbook and support system.

    - Define your personal "why" before buying a business; true wealth is aligning your work with goals like lifestyle and happiness, not just chasing the highest profit.

    - Be skeptical of franchise brokers, as their large commissions from specific brands can create biased recommendations that benefit them more than you.

    - Business ownership is more accessible than you think with financing options like SBA loans and using your retirement funds tax-free via a ROBS rollover.

    - AI platforms are disrupting the old franchise model by providing unbiased, data-driven recommendations, removing the need for biased brokers.

    - The idea of passive income from a new franchise is a myth; success requires consistent, hands-on effort, especially in the beginning.

    - A corporate job can be the perfect catalyst for entrepreneurship by revealing the flawed systems you want to escape and build something better for yourself.

    - Accelerate your success by surrounding yourself with mentors and peers who are already further along on the entrepreneurial journey you wish to take.


    Tags: SaaS, Entrepreneurship, AI, Passive Income, Franchising


    Resources:

    Grow your business today: https://links.upflip.com/4oZ9D1w

    Connect with Alex: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-smereczniak-%F0%9F%A6%81-40310329/

    Más Menos
    35 m
Todavía no hay opiniones