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How Will Falconer Stopped Trading Dollars for Hours and Found His Calling
13th October 2016 • The Digital Entrepreneur • Rainmaker Digital LLC
00:00:00 00:38:21

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This week’s guest on The Digital Entrepreneur is all about vitality. His focus is educating dog owners on natural practices that prevent pet illness effectively and sensibly. He helps people who want the best for their animals.

He is … Will Falconer and he is a digital entrepreneur.

In this 40-minute episode, Will and I discuss:

  • His journey to digital entrepreneurship, which goes back to when his cat “Cali” got sick
  • Why he decided to stop “trading dollars for hours” and steps he took next
  • A great story about his audience coming to his defense
  • What moment led to his realization that he could make a difference
  • The important lesson Will learned from his latest online course
  • The tools (both technology and non-technology) that he finds contribute the most to his success as a digital entrepreneur
  • Why he is striving for more balance in the next year

And much more.

Plus, Will answers my patented rapid-fire questions at the end of the episode, which unveiled his productivity hack and the one email newsletter he can’t do without.

Don’t miss it.

Listen to The Digital Entrepreneur below ...

The Show Notes

The Transcript

How Will Falconer Stopped Trading Dollars for Hours and Found His Calling

Voiceover: Rainmaker.FM.

You’re listening to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show for folks who want to discover smarter ways to create and sell profitable digital goods and services. This podcast is a production of Digital Commerce Institute, the place to be for digital entrepreneurs. DCI features an in-depth, ongoing instructional academy, plus a live education and networking summit where entrepreneurs from across the globe meet in person. For more information, go to Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce. That’s Rainmaker.FM/DigitalCommerce.

Jerod Morris: Welcome back to The Digital Entrepreneur, the show where digital entrepreneurs share their stories and the lessons they’ve learned so that we can all build better digital businesses. I am your host, Jerod Morris, the VP of Marketing for Rainmaker Digital. This is episode number 30. This episode of The Digital Entrepreneur is brought to you by the Rainmaker Platform. I will tell you more about this complete solution for digital marketing and sales later, but you can check it out and take a free spin for yourself at Rainmaker.FM/Platform. That’s Rainmaker.FM/Platform.

On this week’s episode of The Digital Entrepreneur, I am joined by someone who is passionate about the health and vitality of your animals. He was a conventional veterinarian for seven years, but felt a calling from within that made him move on. Even though he knew that drugs and surgeries for animals worked for the most part, he felt that something was off, that animals needed a new way to be healed.

Today, he hosts a number of vital animals courses, as he wants to share his knowledge of what practices prevent illness effectively, naturally, and sensibly in order to help people who want the best for their animals. He is Will Falconer, and he is a digital entrepreneur.

Alrighty, Mr. Falconer, welcome to The Digital Entrepreneur.

Will Falconer: Hey! Glad to be here, Jerod.

Jerod Morris: Yeah, it’s awesome to have you here. I’m very excited about this conversation. To get started, I’ve always believed that the number one benefit of digital entrepreneurship is freedom. The freedom to choose your projects. The freedom to chart your course. Ultimately, the freedom to change your life and your family’s life for the better. For you, outside of freedom, what is the biggest benefit that you have derived from being a digital entrepreneur?

Will Falconer: I’d have to say my biggest is reach. I’ve been a homeopathic vet for 25 years now out of my 37 or 38 as a vet. I found myself trying to fix broken animals one at a time who’ve been damaged by conventional medicine, mostly. All man-made disease. In the last five or eight years, I really realized that I’ve got to get out in front of that prevention that’s damaging them and teach on a much wider scale.

Having a digital teaching ability has been huge. Now I’m able to get in front of — instead of one-on-one — 100 people. I’m on the cusp of bringing that up to a much bigger audience.

Jerod Morris: What’s so fascinating about what you’re doing … We hear so much about us as humans how much we’ve been impacted by over-prescription of medication and poor diet, all of these different things. It’s interesting to see you applying that to animals. Are you on the cutting edge of that? Of getting this message out there?

Will Falconer: I am. I think I really stand alone in being — I guess radical is the right word. I’m literally realizing that we’re causing the damage that these animals are then coming back to the vet for. We’re over-vaccinating them. We’re sending them out the door with devitalized food. We’re recommending — “we” meaning my conventional colleagues, I don’t do this anymore — sending them out the door with poisons that kill flees that you were supposed to just drop on their shoulders. That say on the label, “Oh, by the way, don’t get this on your skin. Don’t eat. Don’t drink. Don’t smoke while you apply this to your dog.”

All these things are adding up. It’s been a complete correlation line in my graphing of this situation where the more an animal visits a vet, the sicker they end up being because of all these interventions. There’s a huge parallel.

Jerod Morris: That’s a vicious unfortunate cycle. My goodness.

Will Falconer: Yeah.

Jerod Morris: What’s the response been? Have you found that these messages are met with some skepticism, or do you think that because we’re all starting to see this in our own lives as humans that people are receptive to it with their animals too, like it makes sense?

Will’s Audience Comes to His Defense

Will Falconer: Yeah, it goes both ways. I have a lot of following on my blog. I’ve been blogging now for about five years at VitalAnimal.com. A lot of people are resonating with the message. They’re saying, “This guy’s honest and he’s shooting straight, and he gives us all sorts of free information. We trust him. We really like what he’s saying and we trust him.”

I wrote a blog post that spoke about a client who wrote me and said, “I get shakes when I go to my veterinarian because she does this and she does that. If I miss a vaccination by a month, she makes me go through two more.” I wrote a blog post called something like: “Have You Been Abused by Your Veterinarian?” She was, basically, and it was her story.

Conventional colleagues piled in and said, ” It’s a bad thing he’s doing,” and yet they didn’t have anything substantive to add to the conversation. I had a pile of people on Facebook who were giving me negative reviews. And then, lo and behold, the magic happened, which was my community jumped to my defense. I was busy making a course. My latest course is out now, and I was busy building it, and I didn’t have time or, really, inclination to keep up with all the chatter on Facebook.

My community came to my defense and said, “Tell us what you’ve got that says we should be vaccinating — every year — our dogs.” They had nothing except screams and protests that, “He’s saying bad things,” and yada-yada-yada. They took the high road, my people did. They ended up forcing the hand of these people, and these people withdrew their negative reviews. It was really brilliant.

Jerod Morris: Wow! The power of content and authority. That is when you know that you have a great audience, when they come to your defense like that. That’s phenomenal.

Will Falconer: Yeah, it really was. I looked late at night one night before falling asleep and I said, “Just let me see how this is going.” All the negative reviews were replaced with positive reviews. It was just like, “Wow, that’s amazing!”

Why Will Decided to Stop “Trading Dollars for Hours”

Jerod Morris: Wow. That is awesome. Let’s go back. I want you to take us back to before you became a digital entrepreneur. What were you doing and what was missing that led you to want to make a change?

Will Falconer: As I mentioned, really just working one-on-one. I’ve been a specialist in this field. There’s just a relatively small handful of us who are certified veterinary homeopaths. Like everybody in a busy veterinary practice, we’re busy with patients. That’s where I was buried. I consult with people both long distance on the phone and I consult with people here in Austin where I live.

If I was out of the office — I like to travel to India and spend a few weeks or a month — my income would go to zero because I was there trading hours for dollars. That’s life before digital entrepreneurship. Afterwards has been totally different. One of the test cases was a few years ago when some affiliate income and some ebook sales pretty much replaced my month away with a darn near amount of income. I went, “Okay, this is doable.”

Jerod Morris: Wow. Very cool. Now, there’s a story that also helped lead to an epiphany. I think I was reading it on your website. Could you share this story of how your own cat Cali led to your “aha” moment?

Will Falconer: Oh, yeah. This is when I was really just a budding homeopath. I was probably in the middle of round two of studies that went five segments in a year. My own cat came struggling back home. A teenage bride who’d had her kitties die within her womb. She came in dragging herself and skinny. We hadn’t seen her for a few days, and this foul-smelling discharge was coming out of her womb. Boy, in the old days I would have hammered her with all these antibiotics. I just said, “No. I know that homeopaths of old have cured things worse than this with nothing but homeopathic remedies. Let’s give this a run.”

I found a particular remedy that read really well for her symptoms and I gave it to her. It’s a remedy made especially for things that happen during the puerperal period, meaning around the birth period. Lo and behold, she just turned around, on a dime almost. These things don’t go away in an hour, but it seemed like literally within hours she was perking up. The discharge slowed and started to smell more normal.

Within just a couple of days, she was back up eating full-on and acting totally normal. I went, “Okay. That’s the power of this medicine? There’s no way I’m going back to the old style of drugs and harmful things.”

Will’s Journey to Digital Entrepreneurship

Jerod Morris: How important do you think that personal story of yours — that personal connection that you have — has been in telling your own story and then attracting people? Getting people to be attracted to you and trust what you say.

Will Falconer: I think it’s huge. They know I’ve been over that road, and I have so many cases in my history now that I can pull from. People who I’ve never met who write me and say, “I went through this and I found a homeopathic vet, a colleague of yours, and they pulled my dog out of the fire. He got so much better.”

Or, a common one is, “We changed my dog who was struggling and struggling with the veterinary treatments of the day, and we finally just said, ‘Enough. We’re not going to anymore.’ We took him off a cereal food — a kibble they call it — and we put him on a raw food diet that’s balanced and more like what a wolf would eat. Slowly but surely he climbed out of the trenches and he got better. He’s never looked back, and we haven’t had any more drugs since. We didn’t need any.” I get stories like that to pull from all the time.

Jerod Morris: Tell me about the milestone or moment in your career as digital entrepreneur that you’re the most proud of.

Will Falconer: Probably it would be this very last course that launched. I set my price at a higher price point. It scared me a little bit because I’d had a nice turnout. I think my first course was only $197, and then my second one doubled that and it went up to $497. I had a few tiers. This one, I said, “I’m really going deep on this. I want to teach people how to raise their puppy from even preconception — which homeopathy can affect — all the way up to the first year, which is where all the decisions are made that could affect the trajectory for the life. I’m going to charge $997 and see how we do, because I think it’s really worth a lot, especially when you contrast it with what could be spent from chronic illness that results from prevention done wrongly.”

I had not as much as I figured would come in, but the people that came in — there’s 54 students — they were enthralled to be in and to be learning from Dr. Falconer. “We’ve heard so much about him.” Several of them had taken courses. I gave my past alumni a nice hefty discount. Probably one of the funniest things was a golden moment. Once the cart closed, I still had a day to release the course to everybody. I said, “Now, it’s coming out tomorrow, so hang in there. We’ll all get together. You can chat on Facebook and introduce yourself.” Someone got on Facebook and said, “Now I know what an iPhone launch is like when I’m waiting in line for the latest iPhone. I’m so excited to be here.”

Jerod Morris: That’s awesome.

Will Falconer: It’s continued. We did our first live webinar over the weekend and we’re on week two now, and everybody is just enthused and really happy to learn the stuff. There’s no mention of, “it’s too high-priced.” We’re getting value transmitted here. It’s real obvious. That’s probably the pinnacle of my digital entrepreneurship so far.

Jerod Morris: How important was it for you as you were making the case for this higher price to really contrast it against what people might have to pay at a vet? That seems like it would be a really important case to make, especially as you’re trying to go up to that higher price point. Is that something that you tried to do?

Will Falconer: Yeah. It was definitely a part of my sales page. In my pre-launch videos, the last one of … I did three in Jeff Walker’s style. In the last one, I interviewed an old client from 20 years ago who Skyped with me from Mexico where she was with her pack of dogs. She basically told the story about how what I taught her 20 years ago has served her through three generations of Akitas, these big dogs that are just fury love balls. She said, “You know, we really don’t have any veterinary expenses.” I said, “How has that affected your budget?” She said, “It’s big. It’s huge.”

“We originally came to Dr. Falconer, because we had this dog who was going down the tubes and conventional medicine seemed to be making things worse. He used homeopathy and it turned the tables and everything got well. But what we learned about raising animals stayed with us, and we were determined to do a differently for the next couple of generations.”

That story alone was really a golden opportunity. I brought it out again in the sales video and in the sales copy to say, “The commonest disease of our time is now allergies. Allergies are a chronic disease. It means your dog is going to be scratching and chewing and making holes in her hide and losing hair. Between allergy testing and allergy treatments and years and years of really no cure, you are going to quickly spend thousands of dollars.”

The other part of the equation was I had many people who had come to me after trying conventional medicine to cure these chronic cases and they’d say, “I’m really sorry to be finding you so late, but we’ve already spent multiple thousands of dollars and our dog is still not well.” It was easy to bring that forward and say, “That’s what you’re looking at if you do this prevention wrong.”

Jerod Morris: Wow. Those are some great testimonials to have.

Will Falconer: Yeah. They really were.

Jerod Morris: On the flip side of that, tell me about the most humbling moment in your career as a digital entrepreneur. And most importantly, what you learned from it.

The Moment that Led to Will’s Realization That He Could Make a Difference

Will Falconer: It was humbling to see that I had a message that was resonating with people. I started out blogging to the ethos. I didn’t really have any list. There was almost nobody reading my stuff, and yet I just kept plugging away. I was following Copyblogger at that time and I was just saying, “I’m going to give free content and valuable content and I’m going to keep at this, and something’s going to come of...

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