The Influencer’s Code
Some have called me a non-conformist. From my earliest days, I’ve marched to a different beat. At 19 years old, I packed my bags and moved from Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Taipei, Taiwan on a five-year journey to learn from Chinese masters and discover the deeper secrets behind Chinese cuisine, discipline, culture, and life. That journey taught me the importance of staying true to my own path, even when that path does not look like everyone else’s.
The Influencer’s Code is a podcast for mission-driven messengers, leaders, speakers, authors, coaches, creators, and everyday people who have faced adversity, walked through hard seasons, and came out the other side with wisdom, resilience, and hope. Through powerful interviews and personal stories, we explore what it takes to overcome challenges, build a meaningful life, and use your voice, story, and influence to impact others.
This podcast is built around one powerful belief: “I did it, so can you.” Each episode is designed to remind you that your setbacks do not define you, your story still matters, and your influence can become a force for good. Whether we are talking about business, family, faith, leadership, personal growth, Eastern and Western wisdom, or building a platform with purpose, the goal is simple: to help you live with courage, build with intention, and turn your life lessons into lasting impact.
The Influencer’s Code
The secret to creating your own show Part 1
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When it comes to creating a show or even a course for that matter your first step is to figure out what you want to use for the knowledge base that you build a show or course out from. There are three different ways you can do that. The first one is with your own knowledge where you sit down and you talk to your audience. Whether it's in a show format, or in a course. You share your knowledge with your audience. The second one is where you find experts around the area that you want to teach on, and you interview them. My recommendation is to find experts around the area that you want to teach in that you have some knowledge or experience with, and pick at least three different people to interview. Now you can combine the interview and the knowledge you get from the interview with your own knowledge to build out teaching points or lessons for your course or show. The third one is where you are more of a reporter, and you find people that are experts in the area you want to teach on and you ask them questions much like a reporter would. And you take the answers giving credit to the person you interview of course, and share the questions and answers with your audience. In today's training I'm going to share different ways in which you can do this.