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  • Ep 2: Now We Have a Name
    2026/02/27

    This is the one where it got real.

    We came back with a name, a platform, and a mission. But more importantly, we came back with a question that every entrepreneur needs to answer before they post another piece of content: who are you actually talking to?

    Jesse breaks down the PVP Matrix, a framework for evaluating your ideal client based on three variables: Personal fulfillment (how much do you enjoy working with this type of person), Value to the marketplace (how much do they actually value what you bring to the table), and Profitability (how profitable is the work). Score each on a scale of 1 to 10 and suddenly the guesswork disappears.

    Ronnie gets honest about what 25 years in the auto industry taught him the hard way. In the beginning, he'd work with anyone who had a pulse and wanted a car. Survival mode. Transactions. Looking back, he served everyone, which meant he served no one. The real growth came when he stopped selling his process and started selling the outcome. Nobody needs to know how many cars are on the lot or how financing works behind the scenes. They need to know they can sit down for one hour and pick up their Escalade on Tuesday with a bow on it.

    We also went deep on AI as company culture, not a tool you experiment with, but a truth you build around. Ronnie issued a proclamation to his team: every engagement ends with one question: how can AI help me think through this? Not to replace the human decision, but to increase the capacity of the thinking behind it. Jesse reinforced it by calling the refusal to leverage AI what it is, entrepreneurial self-abuse.

    The conversation shifted to something personal when we talked about the military-to-entrepreneur pipeline. The discipline that comes from service is a superpower but only when it evolves. The same structure that kept you alive in uniform can keep you stuck as a civilian if you don't learn to think beyond the framework. We shared our stories, from trophy stores to deployments to VHS tapes mailed across the Atlantic, because every entrepreneur's journey starts somewhere unexpected.

    And we landed on something that ties the whole episode together. The platforms are free right now. The tools are free right now. The attention is available right now. If you're waiting for the perfect moment to start building your authority, you're watching the wave from the shore while other people are already riding it.

    This is Episode 2. We have a name now. And we're just getting started.

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    1 時間
  • Ep 1: The Episode Before the Name
    2026/02/15

    Before there was a name, before there was a logo, before there was a strategy — there was a conversation. This is the episode that started it all.

    Jesse Bullock of Bull's EYE Consulting and Ronnie Haskins of RH Auto Brokers hit record before they had a podcast name, a format, or even a clearly defined plan. What they did have was a shared conviction that the debate about whether entrepreneurs should be building a digital presence is officially over. In 2026, that conversation is closed.

    What came out of that first raw, unscripted session is a masterclass in what it actually looks like to start before you're ready. Jesse and Ronnie dig into the VCP framework — Visibility, Credibility, Profitability — and how it applies not just to in-person networking but to the digital landscape where your reach is no longer limited to the 50 people in a room. They talk about the equalizer that social media has become for small business owners who once had to compete with massive ad budgets just to be seen.

    Ronnie shares how seven years of building his YouTube presence taught him that traditional ROI isn't always the right measuring stick. His viewership jumped from 7,000 to 17,000 in a single week simply by showing up consistently. Not because of a viral moment, but because of discipline. Jesse breaks down the consumer journey from awareness to interest to consideration, and challenges entrepreneurs to think beyond just creating content — to actually build an infrastructure that nurtures leads and drives conversion.

    They get personal. Ronnie talks about working the graveyard shift at a steel foundry at 16 years old and how that experience shaped his refusal to settle for the conveyor belt. Jesse shares a similar story of not fitting into the traditional education system and choosing the military over the assembly line. Both paths led them to entrepreneurship, and both came with a lifetime of lessons about grit, reinvention, and showing up when nobody's watching.

    Jesse introduces the D.A.W.G. framework — Discipline, Accountability, Warrior Ethos, and Grit — as the mindset required to endure the entrepreneurial journey. Ronnie adds his own perspective: failure isn't falling short, failure is never trying at all. Every setback is a lesson, every lesson fuels the comeback.

    They acknowledge the elephant in the room — this episode is messy, it's all over the place, and they hadn't even figured out what to call the show. But that's the point. Every massive platform started exactly like this. Two people in a room talking about something that matters. If you're waiting for the perfect moment to start building your brand, this episode is your proof that the perfect moment doesn't exist. You just hit record and go.

    This is where The Authority Hour began — before it had a name, before it had an audience, and before it had any business being as valuable as it turned out to be.

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    53 分