cover of episode Fast Track Your Brand Growth! - How Small Businesses Can Leverage Celebrities w/Ben Press

Fast Track Your Brand Growth! - How Small Businesses Can Leverage Celebrities w/Ben Press

2024/5/27
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Ben Press: 本期节目中,Ben Press 分享了他从经纪人到娱乐科技创业者的职业历程,以及如何利用名人资源帮助企业发展。他强调了建立信任和真诚的人际关系的重要性,以及永不放弃的重要性。他以Amanda Seyfried出演《妈妈咪呀!》为例,说明了如何通过坚持不懈的努力和人脉关系,克服阻碍,最终达成目标。他还谈到了娱乐行业经济变化对名人与品牌合作的影响,以及如何选择合适的合作伙伴,并通过股权激励等方式建立互利共赢的合作关系。他认为,理解目标受众,筛选合适的合作伙伴,并快速高效地进行谈判,是成功的关键。他还分享了在融资和活动推广中利用名人的经验,以及如何将‘不’转化为‘也许’,最终达成合作。 Rudy Mawer: Rudy Mawer 作为主持人,引导 Ben Press 分享了他的经验和观点,并就名人合作的策略、挑战和机遇进行了深入探讨。他提出了许多问题,例如名人是否适合所有类型的企业,如何开始与名人合作,以及名人合作的益处等。他与 Ben Press 的对话,涵盖了名人合作的各个方面,为听众提供了宝贵的经验和建议。

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Ben Press discusses his impressive career journey, starting from a mailroom position to becoming a top talent agent. He represented major stars and packaged successful projects like "America's Next Top Model" and "Mamma Mia." Later, he transitioned to entertainment tech startups, including Russell Wilson's TraceMe and Cameo, and now consults startups on celebrity partnerships.
  • Ben Press worked his way up from a mailroom position to a top talent agent.
  • He represented stars like Nicolas Cage, Diana Ross, Denzel Washington, and Ariana Grande.
  • He packaged successful projects like "America's Next Top Model" and "Mamma Mia."
  • He transitioned to entertainment tech startups, including Russell Wilson's TraceMe and Cameo.
  • He now consults startups on celebrity partnerships.

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It was my job to know what movie studios were going to be making. And I called up my friend Donna Langley, and I said, I've got your person to star in "Mamma Mia." I heard you're making it. I knew what a success it was as a show, Broadway and all over the world. And she said, don't waste your time, Ben. She goes, I'm so sorry. We already have our person. And I said, I've got the person who's so right for this. And she said, we got our person.

I don't know if I can say this or not, but since it's probably like, it's been so long ago, I can say it, but it was. And I gotta tell you, it's a lesson for life. You know, never take no for an answer and build relationships of trust and authenticity so that if you really need something, and I love asking for things, by the way, I'm a huge asker. No ask, no get. Make sure the ask is grounded

My name is Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast, and I'm here to change the way you see your life in your earpiece every single week. If you're ready to start living the red life, ditch the blue pill, take the red pill, join me in Wonderland and change your life. Hey guys, what's up? Welcome back to another episode of Living the Red Life. Today we're going to talk about acquisitions, how to build great relationships, how to be

build large celebrity brands. I've got Ben with me today. I know you've got an impressive resume. You were part of an acquisition that was bought by Nike. You've worked with some of the biggest celebrities on the planet for many, many years and hosted a bunch of businesses. And you're the

the man to know in the world of celebrities in Hollywood, working with Nicolas Cage, Diana Ross, Denzel Washington, Ariana Grande, the list goes on. And I'm excited to dive in today on how you build those relationships and use celebrities in the business work that you do. Ben, welcome to the show. Thank you very much. Well, first of all, it's a pleasure. Rudy, it's great to be on your podcast. And

Yeah, my quick history is I started in the proverbial agency mailroom pushing a mail cart, literally the lowest of the low at the time ICM, which was one of the biggest global agencies in the world. And I went from mailroom to the assistant to the time the biggest talent agent in the biz, a legend named Ed Lomato, who's since passed away.

um and i in i was my desk was attached to his for four years on every call typed every conversation and then i was finally uh graduated if you will i was promoted to full agent uh i was an icm for 10 years representing major stars like i said i was weaned on you know ed's client list of mel gibson michelle pfeiffer richard gear denzel washington anthony hock and steve martin nicholas cage so forth into madonna it was unbelievable and then i signed ray leota and don sheetal and

Ariana Grande work with and I signed Amanda Seyfried. And some of my highlights of what I did is not only did I get films and TV series for these people, but I packaged America's Next Top Model for Tyra Banks, who I represented. I got Mamma Mia for Amanda Seyfried, which is still to date, I think the biggest musical comedy hit in Universal's history. And I'm just very proud of what I did. And it was very exciting working with these incredible artists. And then I pivoted to the world of

entertainment tech startups, one of which my first one was Russell Wilson's Trace Me. It was a celebrity fan engagement site. I left being a talent rep to go head biz dev for them. And it was incredibly exciting. And we were acquired by Nike, as you mentioned. And then I advised Cameo, which is now worth over a billion dollars. And

And then I also co-founded an online platform called, an online network called Joy Sauce in 2022. And now I have a consulting business where I represent, I basically get to marry my agent experience and venture experience. And I represent startups that want to partner with celebrities.

Yep. I love that. And, you know, that's obviously one of the reasons I wanted you on the show, because that's what I do, right? It's working with celebrities, building brands, and often encouraging thousands of people that listen and follow me and work with me and that we consult for about not sleeping on the whole influencer celebrity route. I mean, it's one of the fastest ways to grow your brand to reach

And I think what's interesting with the celebrity side is a lot of people seem to think, and I know this from speaking to members, that you can only work with a celebrity if you're a billion-dollar company, right? And I disprove that being an entrepreneur that's not a billion-dollar company just yet. And I've done very well doing so. I've made millions of dollars in the last year and a half working with celebrities.

And obviously it's grown my brand and opened a lot of doors for me. So let's start there, right?

What do you think about that? Do you think celebrities can be accessible to the everyday basic entrepreneur that's starting out? A hundred percent. And there's an interesting evolution in this whole world. And I'll go back because the history lesson is fascinating and it teaches how we got to where we are today. And the quick lesson is, is when I started in the business, the biz, quote unquote, back in the early 90s,

It was unheard of for major celebrities to do any kind of brand work, what have you, that would domestically be shown. You could have Arnold Schwarzenegger or any major star at the time go to do a commercial in Japan or do some brand work internationally, but God forbid it got shown here, it would be terrible, supposedly, and would hurt their cred. That Berlin Wall got torn down so long ago. So now you have celebrities...

Totally accessible for brand opportunities. And let's face it, there's something else going on, which is just simple economics. The entertainment industry has completely crashed in between COVID and the strikes. When I started in the biz, Disney, the Disney Studios released 22 films a year.

Right now, they are at an absolute minute fraction of that. So the opportunities, just take that and extrapolate, the opportunities have all folded in. So there's not that much, frankly, for an opportunities for celebrities to get paid the kind of money they used to and do the volume of work. So guess who filled the gap? - Business friends, entrepreneurs. Yeah, I think that's why I,

started transitioning some of my brand and what I do to building these brands with celebrities because some of the celebrities, the Kardashians and others, building these billion-dollar brands. So I think a lot of the other celebrities are going, they're just entrepreneurs.

they go to an event and they will chat, right? And share ideas and what they're up to. And they're, you know, they're probably at the Oscars and chatting and whatever, and talking about this other billion dollar, you know, jewelry line or skincare line or alcohol line. And, you know, just like an entrepreneur, they have that itch where they're like, why am I not doing that? Why are they doing it? And I'm not doing it. And,

And yes, I think the opportunity to leverage celebrities in building a brand is so accessible now because they're trying to do it themselves. But they also see the potential from doing it in terms of more like shout outs and influencers. So how would you start? You know, if someone's listening, they're, you know, making a couple of million or starting their brand out, try and explain like how would they ever get started with this?

Well, first of all, let me move back. I want to just explain that there's something I call LF. It's the Lamborghini factor. And what that is, is these celebrities gather at these events. You've named a few of them. And somebody says, yeah, I have equity in this. And I, you know, I'm involved in that. And the other ones around the table or by the bar or you name it, or in the yoga class think, oh, I got to get one, you know? So it's literally the same as someone pulling up at the Lamborghini and say,

I got to get one. You know, it's the same kind of magnetic pole. It's got to get mine. So to go just human psychology. Right. And I think a lot of people like I know a decent amount of celebrities now, not at the level you do, but more than the average show. And they're all normal people at the end of the day. Right. So they have jealousy. They have egos. And, you know, and then they wonder why can't they do that? Right.

So to answer your question, Rudy, my advice to the person out there who wants to start that celebrity connectivity for their brand and be able to get that boost as a result, a couple of things that are really important to take into effect, and I do this with my clients. It's very important to understand what your demographic is going to be. Who are you distributing to? Who are you speaking to? Whose eyeballs do you want on you?

You know, is it 18 to 32? Is it, you know, what is the demo? Is it male-leaning, female-leaning? Anyway, that being said, you then break down a list of top 20 celebrities that speak to that demographic. Who are they?

who are the ones and then you do some vetting because god knows you don't want a morality clause to get in effect and uh you know you want to get somebody who's got a background that shows that they're going to be reliable and not end up in prison while you're working with them and uh by the way very big possibility in this world and then uh and then what uh what you got to do is you you determine with with the brand who you're going to go to and because it's

a level of celebrity that they must be shown the respect that you go to them exclusively. You can't fan out to five or six at the same time. Not to mention, so many of them are represented by the same people. They're gonna be in a staff meeting saying, "I got an offer for this." "Well, I got that offer." And it's gonna be mayhem. You have to go exclusively.

So there is an urgency to get through it as quickly as possible because if someone passes or as I like to say declines to pursue, you know, a pass is so final. You can always go back to someone if it's not really a pass. But

Let's say they do decline. You want to know fast because, you know, a fast no is very respected. I hate slow no's. So give it to me fast if it's not going to go and I'll go to the next choice. Now, that being said, once once a celebrity says, I will engage with you.

You have to determine the level of equity, possible upfront money. Usually, because I work with startups, upfront money, because they're startups, is not going to

gonna move the dial immensely, it's a carrot, but the equity factor is very important. So oftentimes I, as an agent, I put together so many deals and it's natural I do the same here where there are thresholds. It used to be the case with backend deals with feature films. If it reaches X amount at the box office, you get this much. The same thing here with the celebrity's involvement. At certain thresholds, they get rewarded with even more equity.

but significant C-level equity. And frankly, it's that simple. And I will tell you, there are so many celebrities out there who, and by the way, when I say celebrities, it can be in the buckets of pro athletes, field entertainment,

musicians, you know, all different, just in general under the umbrella of celebrity. This is, this is frankly, this is the next iteration of the industry. This is where it's all going. Brand connectivity to the point where, you know,

When TV started out in the 1950s, there used to be something called Texaco Star Theater. It was TV sponsored by, at the time, Texaco Gas Company. And they presented stuff. Well, we're now in the next version, the next generation of, frankly, Texaco Star Theater. You have...

celebrities now presenting to you on behalf of brands the same way they used to in black and white little TVs. We're just that much more sophisticated about it. But frankly, it's the same. It's the same methodology.

Okay, good. And I think last question before we go into all your other ventures and lessons is what, like in 60 seconds, give me three of the biggest benefits of someone actually doing this, right? So they give equity, someone comes on the board or the face, right? What are some of the, obviously the exposure and credibility, but are there any other benefits? Yeah, let me break it down for you. I think of it in three different, three different

Not one being more equal than the other. You have the fact that a celebrity can be involved in a brand, especially startups, which is really where I spend a lot of my time because I just love that energy, in

in fundraising, you know, in the raise, if you insinuate the celebrity in the raise, it is, I'll give you an example. When I headed BizDev for TraceMe, founded by Russell Wilson, Russell was involved in that process. He had founded the company, but he was in the rooms. And let me tell you something, when you have people who are potentially going to write you a check and they get to interface with somebody like Russell Wilson, you know, those that

the care and you obviously want to focus on the ones that do and and work your superpower or in business they call you know your unfair advantage um that is put the celebrity in the room for those raises and it's going to be

very successful. I've seen this happen time and time again. The next silo is activations. I work with a number of companies, AI in particular, but also some actual good old fashioned hard brands, if you will, that you can touch and hold. And if you have an activation and you have as part of the deliverables of the deal with the celebrity that they show up, and I'm making this up, but show up in

Philadelphia or Atlanta or wherever for that activation, big deal. The press that comes out of it, again, at the end of the day, you partner with a celebrity for the eyeballs that it'll attract. And obviously, it all has to be genuine and authentic. It reflects the proclivities of the celebrity. It reflects who they are. You know, you don't want someone from out of left field that makes no sense, of course.

But and finally, there's the bragging rights. You get to go and and brag away that you have Celebrity X on board with you. Truly skin in the game partnership. This is not I pay them to do some posts and they go away. No, this is actually in, you know, in for what's the phrase in for a penny and for a pound in it. And that that says a lot.

yeah i think that's great and i think it's a great way to look at it because i've talked a lot in the past and had other people on about you know doing influencer posts and shout outs and collabs but you know the equity sort of more board of advisors sort of route is uh great because you get all those benefits that you don't get if you're just paying 50k to do an ad with them and some reposts right um so

So I'd love to know now, obviously, we talked about the celeb side, but for the second half, you know, you are an entrepreneur in yourself. You've built a lot of this through connections and all your other skills. Talk to us about some of those big projects, the runway and all, you know, these things like talk, talk about all these shows and what you've done there.

I appreciate that. Well, I'm going to give you an example and this sort of is a parable for how I approach everything, but this is what it looked like in action. And I took this lesson and put it in my venture experience, now my consulting experience, but certainly in my agenting. And it's one particular story that happened in the late 2000s. I was representing a young actress who to this day is doing unbelievable work, Amanda Seyfried. And she had at the time

a movie called Mean Girls that she had wrapped had not been out there yet. So it didn't get the benefit of like how amazing she was, audiences seeing that, but she had done it, which was a great get at Paramount Film. And I had heard because it was my, my,

job to know what movie studios were going to be making and get in there and push our clients, push my clients. And I called up my friend Donna Langley, who to this day is still amazing. She's been running Universal for a long time and brilliantly. And I called Donna and I said, I've got your person to star in Mamma Mia. I heard you're making it. I knew what a success it was as a show, Broadway and all over the world.

And she said, don't waste your time, Ben. She goes, I'm so sorry. We already have our person. And I said, come on. I've got the person who's so right for this. And she said, we got our person. I mean, I don't know if I can say this or not, but since it's probably like it's been so long ago, I can say it. But it was Mandy Moore, who's a terrific actress. She said, we got Mandy. We're all the way down the line on her deal. And I said, do me a favor, which, by the way,

so much of my career success has come from favors from friends. Again, based on relationships, trust. And I said, can you just do a favor for me? See her. Just sit in the room. Give me half an hour. So she said, okay. Because I knew her going back to when she used to work at New Line. We have a long history. And walked her into Donna's office.

and the meeting happened and after the meeting she said okay we're setting up a screen test and i said i told you and sorry mandy moore i know it didn't go to you but the long story short is amanda got it and it is it was massively successful she was amanda's in the second one there is a third one now of course meryl streep was in it played her mom i went to go visit the set uh in in london and it was one of the great most glorious kind of

affirmations of why I do what I do that lesson the lesson of never take no for an answer to work a relationship to make something happen around the know if you will and frankly I always used to say what is no no spelled backwards is on

Yeah. It's telling you something. And I got to tell you, some unbelievable things have happened, by the way, not just to me, to colleagues of mine who practice the same thing. We all were raised in that environment. Many of them still agents today. Dear friends of mine who are doing unbelievable

unbelievable work for their clients. And I got to tell you, it's a lesson for life. You know, never take no for an answer and build relationships of trust and authenticity so that if you really need something, and I love asking for things, by the way, I'm a huge asker, you know, no ask, no get, you know,

make sure the ask is grounded in trust. You're not pulling someone into something that they never want to be a part of or you wouldn't want to muddy them in. It's something legit. And, you know, because you don't have many asks left if you screw with people. So...

i think what's fascinating is i love the not taking no for an answer um the the relationship capital side right and i always it's funny i train my staff you know so many times we're hosting events and sorting flights and venues and issues with that and getting vendors in and and all the time i hear no they can't do it no they can't refund it no it wasn't refundable no the vendor can't make it no we can't get someone at this short notice

And I make them, you know, all the time ring back up and I speak to them and I say, how do we make this happen? Right. And I literally just ask. That's like one of the things I do is I just ask the person on the other end of the phone that already said no. I said, so how can we make this happen? And then it's funny because it's just like once you empower them and it switches the brain, then the staff member all of a sudden said, well, we don't normally do this. We could do this or maybe we could just do two hours. And it's just funny how people

most people in society just accept to know, right? Like all my staff do it pretty much and most people in life. Whereas you go, well, how can we just get her in the room for 10 minutes, right? And then it's like, boom. And I, you know, Rudy, I so appreciate what you just said. You know, we were young agents. We always were taught turn no's into maybe's and maybe's into meetings. Yeah. Okay.

It's all about getting now there's a little bit of a cliche about Hollywood and meetings being the end all. No, meetings are useless if you don't use them to an end. However, you got to get to the meeting because ain't nothing going to happen if you don't get that meeting. Yeah, I would say my team like we have a big branding team and everything. And they're always like, really, we got this person. They're willing to do it or whatever. What's next? I'm like, don't worry about that. Just get me on the Zoom call. That's it. That's your only job. I can handle everything from there.

Exactly. Exactly. And it's just about... Because once you're in the room, come on, then it's all about you. And if you have the confidence and belief in what you're expressing, you know, it's... You know it's going to happen. You have the intention to make it happen. And I have to say, you know, the taking no for an answer. First of all, people...

I have worked for so long with no people. When I say no people, they love to say no. It's a test because if you take the no and go away, you've just made their life a whole lot easier by going away. And it wasn't worth their time anyway because you weren't passionate enough to lobby for what you were going for. You just took their no.

I mean, it's like in baseball, you're taught never to swing at the first pitch. And it's the same thing in this world. Never take the no. Yeah, I think that's a great lesson. And I mean, as entrepreneurs, for some of us, it's in our DNA. For others, I like even our coaching clients, I have to say, you know, go back, figure it out, go again, go again, you know, until you...

And I explain it, I give this analogy in marketing and sales and websites. They go, if you have one dart and you have to get a bullseye, what are your odds? Okay, now if you have two darts, now four darts, now eight darts, now 12. And I go on and then they start to get it. And I'm like, that's business, that's marketing, that's landing pages, that's ads, right?

like don't limit yourself with one dot try and have 20 and you've got much higher chance of success and and then i go if you believe that to now be the case the question is how can i throw 20 dots as fast as possible because the next world these people throw one a year and then wonder over five years why they've not been successful when i throw one a day right and i'm like that's why i'm 32 and built all this because i go go go it's amazing

Amazing. And by the way, you keep keeping the red in your hair. Nobody's going to know how old you ever are because it'll just be red. That's fantastic. So I'll give you another example of something that's going on right now. I have the distinct privilege. It's really, it's been awesome working with

with an amazing company called official ai okay i i really love being in the ai space uh i feel very fortunate to be on that wave that first wave of ai um and

I have been going around and talking to major celebrities in all of the aspects I explained, all different iterations of celebrities to onboard them onto Official AI's platform. It's a marketing platform where major advertising agencies come to Official AI to have brand partnerships with celebrities for Gen AI online campaigns. It's all generative AI campaigns. Anyway.

We are talking to celebs and onboarding them onto the platform. And I am getting a lot of yeses, a lot of very enthusiastic yeses. But as I would have absolutely expected, I'm getting a lot of fearful, you know, I don't know, you know, AI. It's very scary. And I get it because from the celebrity standpoint, and by the way, I'm sure it's more than just celebrities who are feeling this, but

because the strikes that recently happened here, the writers strike, the actors strike, it was so much of it was predicated on AI and I understand that.

AI has gotten a bit of a stink about it in this community because it's not understood and fear is dropping in the decision making. And I get to explain, basically ride into town with the white cowboy hat and say, "We're the good guys. We are the good guys." And yes, there's always a nefarious take on anything.

I get it. We got to take that bad stuff down, but the good guys are where you want to align because it's not going away. So

It's been a lot of fun to evangelize about it in that way. Like I said, I feel really fortunate because my God, imagine being around in the early days of the internet and being able to... I heard an interview with Jeff Bezos, it was fantastic. And I use this a lot in my conversations. He had to raise the first million for Amazon and it was hard as hell. And he went hat in hand to his friends and he got 25 grand here, 50 grand here, ultimately got to a million.

And by the way, imagine those people, how much they've made since. But he said the biggest resistance, this is fantastic, was that he had to explain to each one what the hell the internet was. They didn't understand. So to be in that era and that position on that wave of the internet in the early days, I feel like we're there with AI right now and it's very exhilarating.

yeah ben i think uh it's awesome to kind of you know see your blend of the celebs and the personality you know working with the personalities and the negotiations and then bridging it into business because i really think that's only getting bigger so i

You know, this is we're out of time for today, but this has been awesome to kind of not only for the members to see the celebrity side, but then, you know, I think some of that entrepreneurial trait, not taking no for an answer. And and especially with some of these big deals and life changing celebrity partnerships. And, you know, I think you have to start with the power of belief and then just go all in and not take that no for an answer. So thank you so much for coming on.

and sharing that and guys I hope you enjoyed today's episode all of Ben's links and what he's up to now will be in the show notes and yeah go out there make it happen get a celebrity on your team and see how it changes your business Ben I appreciate it guys take care and keep living the red life