Have you ever wondered what it would be like to have your own kid work with you in your business? Here at DoorGrow, one of our team members is the founder/CEO’s daughter!
Property management growth expert Jason Hull interviews his own daughter AND team member, Madi Sleight. Madi gives a unique perspective on Jason, DoorGrow, social media, and more. If you ever wondered what Jason is really like personally, this episode is for you.
You’ll Learn…
[01:15]Meet today’s guest: Madilyn Sleight with DoorGrow
[05:16]What does Jason even do? Madi’s perspective as a kid and as Jason’s daughter.
[07:45]Joining the team at DoorGrow and Madi’s role on the team.
[05:16]What does Jason even do? Madi’s perspective as a kid and as Jason’s daughter.
[17:45]The program is not a miracle cure… then who is the program for?
[22:15]Jason’s personality according to his daughter and how Jason’s “out there” beliefs benefit the DoorGrow and Scale Mastermind
[27:40]What’s next for Madi?
[32:01]More about Madi and her relationship with her dad
[38:25]Madi learned to mimic Jason’s voice on socials + how she does social media
Tweetables
“I love those clients. I love the ones that just show up to everything and they do everything that we say and they just get the best results.”
“For me, it’s super rewarding to see clients winning and succeeding. Like it’s worth more than money and getting paid to do what I do.”
“It’s crazy that I get paid to just help people win, which is really awesome.”
“I think the first thing that people who are skeptical or unsure need to realize is you’re not selling a magical cure.”
Resources
Transcript
[00:00:00] Madi Sleight: You know, youāve always kind of been out there in your beliefs or like what youāre interested in. Like, And I mean this in the best way possible, youāre kind of like a nutjob.
[00:00:11] Jason Hull: All right, welcome DoorGrow Hackers to the #DoorGrowShow! If you are a property management entrepreneur that wants to add doors, make a difference, increase revenue, help others impact lives, and youāre interested in growing your business and life, and youāre open to doing things a bit differently, then you are a DoorGrow Hacker. DoorGrow Hackers love the opportunities, daily variety, unique challenges and freedom that property management brings. Many in real estate. Think youāre crazy for doing it. You think theyāre crazy for not because you realize that property management is the ultimate high trust gateway to real estate deals, relationships and residual income.
[00:00:50] At DoorGrow, we are on a mission to transform property management business owners and their businesses. We want to transform the industry, eliminate the BS, build awareness, change perception, expand the market and help the best property management entrepreneurs win. Iām your host property management growth expert, Jason Hull, the founder and CEO of DoorGrow. Now letās get into the show.
[00:01:15] All right, everybody, so todayās interview guest that I have with me is Madilyn Marie Hull, my daughter who goes by Madi.
[00:01:28] Madi Sleight: Itās also Sleight now.Ā
[00:01:31] Jason Hull: Oh, oh, thatās right. Sheās married now. So itās Madilyn Marie Sleight. So⦠no? Madi Sleight?Ā
[00:01:40] Madi Sleight: You didnāt have to put in the middle name in there, come on.Ā
[00:01:43] Jason Hull: I know, but like I named you, and I gave you that name, so. Cool. So yeah, gosh, thatās a old habit. Yeah, Madi Sleight. I got to get used to that last name. Iām still not used to it. So Madi Sleight⦠I wanted to have her on the show. I want to have my daughterā sheās my oldestā and I wanted to have her on the show partially because her birthday is tomorrow. Weāre recording this here on February 1st and she was born February 2nd. And itās her birthday tomorrow.Ā
[00:02:10] But Madi also has been working with me. How long have you been working with me?Ā
[00:02:17] Madi Sleight: Itāll be two years in I think Julyā June or July.Ā
[00:02:22] Jason Hull: Yeah. So sheās been going to school, going to college, and doing work with DoorGrow. And so, sheās become a critical part of the team. And so, I wanted to have her on the show because I think it would be really cool for those that listened to the podcast. Those that wonder who Jason Hull is and whatās he really like, you know? Iām also a father, and I am a boss and Madiās gotten to experience both sides of those things the good and the bad. And I thought itād be cool to have you on the show just to help people understand maybe a little bit more about me and that sort of thing.Ā
[00:02:59] So Madi, why donāt you introduce yourself? Tell people with the right name, since I screwed that up already and tell everybody what it is that you do at DoorGrow.
[00:03:10] Madi Sleight: Okay. Well, my name is Madi Sleight. Nobody calls me Madilyn, except for you apparently. But, I am our social media manager here at DoorGrow, and I also just do a couple other little things like I video edit and I create case studies/ testimonials of our clients, showcase their wins, post those to YouTube, and I hand those over to Kyle as well, our kind of marketing guy. And he makes those into these awesome Facebook ads that are our lead gen source right now.Ā
[00:03:40] I sit in on all the weekly calls, the weekly coaching calls with our clients and I take notes and I capture their wins, so I kind of get to know all of our clients on maybe more of a surface level, but itās still really cool. I get to know their names and faces and backgrounds of their businesses. How many doors they add each call. And itās very insightful. Iāve tried a lot of different things in the last year and a half of being at DoorGrow. I tried sales followup for a little bit, tried a little bit of client success here and there. Iāve gotten to learn a lot of things, and I am an advertising major at the university of Idaho.
[00:04:17] And so itās kind of been cool learning, you know, things in lecture about advertising, SEO, sales, marketing, stuff like that. Being able to use that knowledge at DoorGrow. But then also learning things at DoorGrow and being able to put that towards my degree and use that in my classes.Ā
[00:04:38] Jason Hull: Yeah. And I think itās really cool.
[00:04:40] So, I think the most important thing that I want that you do is more testimonial videos because itās proof, itās evidence that weāre getting results and you get to see this stuff firsthand. Youāre not just behind the paywall and seeing what goes on, but you get to see the inner workings of the business. And so, maybe you could share with people what you thought I did in the business and what you thought I did before you became a team member of the business, what your perspective was and then maybe how that shifted, because Iām sure that was quite a bit different once you got in.
[00:05:16] Madi Sleight: I donāt even know what I thought you did cause for a while, when I was a little kid, you were the website guy. And I thought, āoh, how cool,ā you know, āmy dad made a website for Mr. Gas in my hometown.ā And I was like, āwow!ā You know.
[00:05:30] Jason Hull: Wow, thatās a long time ago.Ā
[00:05:32] Madi Sleight: I know! And I remember that. And so, when you started making that transition into coaching, you knowā and it was kind of a subtle, smooth transition. You started in with your brother. Youāve got family members who are into this kind of stuff, but it wasnāt something that you necessarily shared with me and my siblings all the time. You kind of just would disappear and turn on your busy sign, your neon, sign outside your door of your office. And we were like, āYeah, heās working,ā you know, āheās doing what heās doing.ā
[00:06:02] And it was only until I think two summers before I started working at DoorGrow, when you came to me and were like, āHey, you should try out making a couple social media posts for us.ā And I did ācause I was into design stuff. Only then I was like, what is DoorGrow? What isā what does that even mean?
[00:06:22] That is such a weird term doors and growing? Is it like a plant business? I got really into it. Like I was really curious and I actually like begged him for the remainder of those two years. Like, ādude, Iāll do your social media. Itās a travesty. I will fix it for youā
[00:06:40] Jason Hull: āLet me do it, dad.ā
[00:06:42] Madi Sleight: Seriously! I was like begging him. And even like my sisterā I would be texting my sister and Iād be like, āman, you know, he still hasnāt gotten back to me on this.ā And sheās like, āoh, Iāll go talk to him. Hailey did. Hailey and I would text behind your back and be like, man.
[00:06:58] And that was one of the first things when I, was graduating high school and going off to college, your social media was stillā it was still not great. it was very inconsistent. You guys were probably posting⦠you posted mostly about the podcast episodes, which I still do. But other than that, you were posting maybe once a month or less, not consistently.
[00:07:19] And the branding, the designs and branding were kind of off and it almost made you look sketchy from a social media standpoint, and I honestly, when I was applying to work for DoorGrow, I still wasnāt completely sure what you did. I knew that youāve coached businesses to like become better businesses. And thatās kinda what I told people like, āyeah, heās a business guy who makes other business guys do better.āĀ
[00:07:45] But it wasnāt until I actuallyā I was just desperate for a job at that point, but I applied to DoorGrow and you made me jump through all these hoops, personality tests. I was like, āthis is so my dad.ā Cause you had made me take these personality tests before. You had, you know, human design stuff. This was stuff that he would make my siblings and I do, but I took them again and I was like, āhe makes his applicants do this?ā
[00:08:10] I was like, that is such a thing that my dad would do, but Iām going through. I do all the things. And as I was going, I just started getting more and more excited. I was like, āman, this a lot of hoops to jump through.ā I feel like if I get past all of this, I must be a really cool person.
[00:08:27] Like it started making me more excited to work for you guys, because it was like qualifying me as someone you were hiring. And then I made the little introduction video, and I tried to have fun with it and get like my personality involved. And I remember being so nervous. I was like, āWhy am I so nervous? Itās my dad. Iām trying to work with my dad.ā But I was so nervous all of a sudden. I was so excited. And I rememberā we had different team members at the time like Jon Rayā and you were sending me messages that you had gotten from the team. Like, āMan, I love her video!ā And I got so excited, and going through the trainings that you sent meā you sent me like the company mission statement and the core valuesā I went through those and I read it and I got to learn like what you do and what you stand for. And not only was it coolā cause I got to know you a little bit better on the business side. That was something me and my siblings never really got to experience when we were little, but I also got to know the business.
[00:09:25] And first of all, I learned you were not a scam because I wasnāt sure. Itās an expensive program. You know? Like are people getting value out of it? But people were, and the more like I dove into the client testimonials and I watched, I remember some of my family members at the time being like, āwhat are you doing?ā
[00:09:44] And theyāre like, ācome take a break and hang out with us.ā Iām like, āno, Iām watching all these videos.ā I was like watching them in the background while doing other things. I was watching them and I really got to know the business. And then I got even more excited and I was like, āyou know, this company doesnāt really need me for social media right now. I mean, you did, you needed some social media help, but also you guys were doing just fine. The value was there and people noticed that even without flashy visuals or a really well set up socials page. Although, and I can get into this later, but I do think the social media is helping from what Iāve seen now. I can get into that later if you want, butā¦Ā
[00:10:23] Jason Hull: I donāt, I donāt have to mess with it now, which is really nice. It just gets done. So, yeah. And I donāt really have to spend time on Facebook. I donāt have to spend time on Instagram. So that really did add value. My favorite thing that you do though, is get testimonial videos. I love those and you do a really great job on editing those. So you had mentioned just seeing me work from, you know, I was working from home. Right? And most people, if they have a dad that works, which I guess most people probably do, their dad usually takes off, like leaves and comes back. Like they just disappear, but I was always there and working from home. What do you think that was like for you? Is that different than you think other peopleās experience? Was it weird?.Ā
[00:11:05] Madi Sleight: Yeah, it was weird. I mean, when we were really little, and I mean like second grade, eight years old, you had an office for OpenPotion downtown, you know, and even then when you would go to work sometimesā
[00:11:19] Jason Hull: I forgot about that.
[00:11:21] Madi Sleight: Sometimes even then when you would go to work, youād take me and my sister along with you. And we would like to play aroundā
[00:11:27] Jason Hull: Yeah, I did for a little while. In the beginning, I did have an office, yeah.
[00:11:30] Madi Sleight: And we would play around in the back with your workout equipment while you were working. Even when you had an office. It wasnāt like, like a day job, like a cubicle. We were around. We would play in the shop windows, you know.Ā
[00:11:44] Jason Hull: You have such a good memory. Itās really wild.
[00:11:49] Madi Sleight: I really do. Well, I wasnāt that young. I was like eight years old. That was when I was missing my two front teeth, you know? Yeah, no, I remember. You had the Roomba going around the office. We would tape stuff to it. Anyway, Iām getting off track.
[00:12:04] Jason Hull: I had a robot cleaning for me. So coming in from the outside and then seeingā cause you get to seeā youāre on pretty much every coaching call, I think every coaching call, right? And you take show notes and then you give those to the group in the Mastermind and everybody else. How would you describe what we do now? And like, whatās your perspective seeing what goes on in the business?
[00:12:30] Madi Sleight: Even in just the last year and a half, and I know like weāve really sped up the process of getting things organized with Sarah coming on, but even in just the last year and a half, like from when I started versus nowā The program has been polished and cleaned up the value and the coaching, modules themselves were always there, but now weāre really like getting to polish and refine them and you get to work on making all the fine adjustments and tunings that you want to.
[00:13:00] And itās really cool seeing that happen because as weāre growing and adding more clients, I also see our clients getting more excited. When we made changes to certain documents a couple of weeks ago clients went crazy for it. They were like excited with us over this nerdy formatting change or like changing the order of the program around. The clients get excited, and Iāve gotten messages from clients being like, āHey, can you send me the link to this document? Iām excited to restart it or like to do it over again. I want the newest updated version.ā And so, itās not just something that benefits us on like a organization levelā¦
[00:13:37] Jason Hull: Youāre talking about the Roadmaps roadmaps or the new scripts, or?
[00:13:39] Madi Sleight: I didnāt know if I was supposed to like, go into details on the podcast.
[00:13:43] I donāt know what Iām supposed reveal to the public.Ā
[00:13:44] Jason Hull: Like itās a proprietary secret? Nah.Ā
[00:13:48] Madi Sleight: Itās a secret. Itās for clients only. I donāt know. But no, the clients love the updated grow roadmap. They really did. They found a lot more clarity. And I remember when I was reaching out, you know, āHey, youāre in this program, we updated this.ā
[00:14:03] Theyāre like, āman, can you send me the notes for that call? I missed it.ā Or I get notes all the time because Iāve turned into like the weekly coaching call and note taker. People will message me like, āoh man, Iām so upset. I missed todayās call.ā You know, theyāll be on every other call like, āman, what did I miss? Can you send me the summary directly so I can like study it and take notes? Iām like, wow. Some of our clients get really invested and find a lot of value in just the weekly coaching calls. And some of our clientsā like weāve got a group of them that show up to every single one.
[00:14:36] Jason Hull: Oh, I love those clients. I love the ones that they just, they show up to everything and they do everything that we say and they just get, they get the best results. Theyāre like⦠theyāre the best. Like if I could just have all those kinds of clients, I would just have those and everybody would be rich. We would make tons of money. They would make tons of money. But yeah, I love clients that just do what I say.Ā
[00:15:03] Madi Sleight: No, itās true. And itās nice to watch them, especially like from beginning to end. Sometimes they come in a little bit skeptical, like Jon Schmitt. I remember in the beginning he seemed a little stubborn. I dunno, he was intimidatingat first. But when I got on that interview with him lastā or a couple of weeks ago, he was the most excited and he was just going on and on about how much value he got out of the program and how he just decided to do what you said. And so he got the results and heās now like one of our biggest cheerleaders, he and Sonia and Alex come on the call and Alex as well, his son, Alex is always mentioning how much heās learning. He takes notes and heās learning and he wants to quit his day job and start taking over the property management business.
[00:15:47] And thatās really cool to watch because Iāve been on and Iāve been able to watch a lot of the clientsā journeys from beginning to now.
[00:15:58] Jason Hull: Yeah, you have, and you have a perspective or a lens through which you get to see the business that nobody else has because youāre watching these videos over and over again, probably while youāre editing them and piecing together, and youāre like keeping track of different clips where they share wins on different calls, and then youāre taking these together. So you get to see their entire journey in collapsed time. And so thatās interesting.Ā
[00:16:24] Madi Sleight: Well, I almost get like emotionally attached to these people that Iāve never met. You know, Iāve seen through a Zoom screen every week and Iām just quietly sitting there not talking back and Iām just recording them. Sometimes when Iām watching them and piecing together, putting music to their story and cutting out some āumsā or āand yeahās or āand soās and like putting together this really impactful video, sometimes I get emotional. Iām like, āwow, Iām so proud of them.ā You know, they came so far and itās so cool because I almost feel like I get to know these people on a personal level.
[00:17:00] Jason Hull: Yeah, I mean for me, itās super rewarding to see clients winning and succeeding. Like itās worth more than money and getting paid to do what I do and to be just even a guide and seeing all the success in their journeys. Itās like really, I mean, itās really amazing. I think itās really amazing that I get to have this job. Itās crazy that I get paid to just help people win, which is really awesome. So we like any coach or any business, Iāve had haters. Thereās people that just donāt believe like weāre real or think we just, maybe could be snake oil salesman or something like that. Maybe you could share with people what are you noticing clients are doing?
[00:17:44] Madi Sleight: I think the first thing that people who are skeptical or unsure need to realize is youāre not selling a magical cure. You know, theyāre not going to go through the program and immediately theyāre going to have knocks on their door being like, āHere, take my properties.ā Thatās not how it works. And you know, at first I thought when I first joined the business, I was like, āHow can you make that guarantee? How does this work? You know, are you helping them with SEO, helping them get referrals, but really the program benefits those who put in the work.
[00:18:15] Itās not for people who are just going to watch the videos and then not do anything about it. In fact, most of the program is doing the work. The videos are almost just helpful content to get you going. The program is not the videos, but I feel like some clients come in and thatās what they think, but our most successful clients, our most excited, our mostā I donāt knowā just our best clients, the ones that get the best wins and successes. They just come in, they dive right into the content, they keep their three commitments. They put in as many hours of prospecting they can a week. They get right into it. They just do what you say. They attend the weekly coaching calls. They ask lots of questions. That is something that Iāve noticed is our best, most rewarded clients. They ask a lot of questions. They come on and ask where theyāre stuck. They ask really good, insightful questions.
[00:19:07] And sometimes theyāll take up half the coaching call some of these questions, like 30 whole minutes or 40 minutes. Weāve been going over time a lot lately because weāve been getting really good questions. And then they take what they learned from those calls and they just go implement it.Ā
[00:19:26] Jason Hull: Yeah, itās true. Yeah, we spend a lot of time on those calls sometimes. And I love them asking questions. If theyāre doing the work, they always have questions. And I see my goal as mentor or as coach to just help them collapse time, point them in the right direction, give them enough information to get them moving forward in the right direction and then kind of get out of their way. So the training material in DoorGrow Academy helps them collapse time, especially because it helps them avoid doing the wrong things. Most people are just doing the wrong things or theyāre spendingā every business owner is spending tons of time in their business, but theyāre just focused on the wrong things. And so I think one of the greatest things I think that I provide is just clarity and helping them collapse time. So they donāt waste so much time doing the stuff that isnāt working.
[00:20:15] So they actually spend less time on the phones and less time talking to people overall. In relation to the amount of doors theyāre acquiring than they would, if they were focused on SEO or pay-per-click or content marketing or social media marketing, or pay per lead services. This is all the stuff that people try to do. And then they come to us and we say, donāt spend any money on any of that stuff. In fact, you donāt even need to spend money, and weāll get you growing faster, but it takes work. All of those channels take work. They all take time.Ā
[00:20:48] But none of them could help somebody like John Babiarz add, you know, how many doors has he added in what period?Ā
[00:20:58] Madi Sleight: Right now, our most updated testimonial, which is already out of date because you just had a call with him. He had hit around 200 in under a year of being in the program.Ā
[00:21:10] Jason Hull: 10 months, I think you put on the video?Ā
[00:21:11] Madi Sleight: 10 or 11 months.Ā
[00:21:13] Jason Hull: Yeah, that would be impossible with focusing on lead gen, typical internet based lead generation, like SEO, pay-per-click, content marketing. How many doors did he start at? I canāt remember.
[00:21:25] Madi Sleight: He said he started at 60 or 70. And so about six months into the program. I think he had doubled his portfolio.Ā
[00:21:35] Jason Hull: Yeah.
[00:21:36] Madi Sleight: Donāt quote me on that. Those dates could be wrong.Ā
[00:21:38] Jason Hull: I think I remember our first video used to run ads was 60. He added 60 doors in 11 weeks is what it said. And we just got lucky that he would mention how many he had added so far in the program, which inspired us to actually start tracking with clients, like keep them conscious of that. Like how many doors total, since during the program, have you added? So that we can monitor that and speed it up.
[00:22:01] But yeah. So thatās interesting. What else do you think people should know about. That donāt know me from a perspective maybe as my kid or as boss, but how would you describe me to other people?Ā
[00:22:15] Madi Sleight: I donāt know. itās really interesting. You know, youāve always kind of been out there in your beliefs or like what youāre interested in.
[00:22:25] Like, you tend toā and I mean this in the best way possible, youāre kind of like a nutjob. Like you go out, you love to read books and learn. Youāre constantly on this like self-improvement grind. Youāre always like learning new things and thatās something that you always, youāve always been that way. Youāve always wanted to learn and try new things to figure out like, whatās the best way to do this? Whatās the best diet to eat? Whatās the best workouts? Youāve always kind of got that like innovative mindset in a way. Youāre willing to try like out there experimental things if itās working.
[00:23:00] And I think that also translates into business. Like I wouldnāt say that what weāre doing is crazy here at DoorGrow. I think what weāre doing is just something that helps businesses in general to thrive and to grow. But I donāt think anyone else is really doing it like DoorGrow is. I donāt think so.
[00:23:19] Maybe you would know better.
[00:23:20] Jason Hull: Probably not.Ā
[00:23:20] I donāt think anybodyās doing anything the way that we do it. Not, not exactly. Thatās why all my trainings and with āsecrets.ā Weāve got special, unique ways that Iāve come up with of doing things theyāre similar to what other people might do, but those little differences are where all the magic happens, I think.
[00:23:38] Madi Sleight: And I think in a way, you know, those kind of out there techniques in your personal life and in business, thatās something that benefits DoorGrow and is kind of what this whole thing is riding on is your unique perspective and take on these processes that help property managers add doors and scale their businesses.
[00:23:59] It all kind of comes back to you being just a little bit crazy, just a little bit.
[00:24:03] Jason Hull: A learning nut job. So yeah, I think one of the most common things I heard you and the kids say to me growing up is, āyouāre weirdā to me.Ā
[00:24:17] Madi Sleight: You are! And you were, you really were.Ā
[00:24:21] Jason Hull: So, what else would you describe about my personality? And then weāll probably talk a little bit about you.Ā
[00:24:26] Madi Sleight: Well, another thing that I think kind of lends itself to the program and to DoorGrow, but itās totally your personality is youāre very logical in thinking. Youāre very like process oriented. And so you take that crazy and you mix it with this nerd. And then you get this person who can not only come up with these crazy ideas, but can implement them. Like you spend hours in AirTable, creating spreadsheets and processes and crazy like interconnected, intricate spreadsheets and databases. And I donāt know. I donāt know if I could do that, but youāre willing to figure that out. You think itās fun and itās ācause youāve kinda got that like nerdy side as well, but youāre very logical oriented and I think that helps our clients as well.
[00:25:15] Itās got pros and cons. You tend to think less emotionally and more logically. You donāt bullshit or beat around the bush. You tell our clients what needs to get done. You push them to succeed and youāre okay telling them the uncomfortable truth, even if they donāt want to hear it.
[00:25:33] Jason Hull: Yeah. Thatās true. Do you think Iām too harsh?Ā
[00:25:36] Madi Sleight: Um, you know, there are times where itās appropriate and times where itās not. In your personal life, sometimes Iād be like, man, youāre just a robot.Ā
[00:25:45] Jason Hull: Personally, Iām probably too harsh sometimes..
[00:25:48] Madi Sleight: Sometimes youāre a little too logical. Me and my siblings come to you like, āoh my gosh, Iāve got this emotional problem.ā and youāre like, āitās okay. Just read a book. Here, take this book on self-improvement. And weāre like, āI just needed you to listen!ā But I think your clients need to hear it, so.Ā
[00:26:09] Jason Hull: Yeah, I think Iāve gotten better with that over time that, I mean, I used to be really, really analytical and logical and truth was all that mattered, you know, so. But yeah, I think the challenge of that is youāre constantly bombarded by emotional challenges if youāre too logical. So I had to learn how to feel things and empathize more and more over the years. So Iām up there in years now, you know.Ā
[00:26:39] Madi Sleight: How old?
[00:26:39] Jason Hull: I think I turn 45 this year, so.
[00:26:42] Madi Sleight: You think? You donāt know?
[00:26:43] Jason Hull: Yeah, no, I do. I turn 45 this year, so. All right, so thatās enough about me. So letās just talk a little bit about you. So how old are you turning tomorrow?Ā
[00:26:58] Madi Sleight: Iām turning 20.Ā
[00:27:00] Jason Hull: 20? And your birthdayās on 2/2/02. And youāre turning 20 on 2/2/22.Ā
[00:27:11] Madi Sleight: Yeah, itās also Groundhogās day.Ā
[00:27:15] Jason Hull: Oh, okay. So what whatās with the twos, Madi?
[00:27:19] Madi Sleight: I donāt know. Itās my lucky number. I was also married and I graduated in 2020, so.Ā
[00:27:25] Jason Hull: Yeah, a lot of people did not like that year.Ā
[00:27:28] Madi Sleight: You know what? It was okay I guess. I also did not like that year all the time, but hey, still the twos. Two is my lucky number.Ā
[00:27:40] Jason Hull: Yeah. So whatās next for you? Like youāre going to school now. Youāre doing a little part-time with DoorGrow. What gets you excited about the future?Ā
[00:27:49] Madi Sleight: I donāt know. Iāve always been very future oriented, you know, even since I was a freshman in high school, I was getting 4.0 not because I want it to, or because anyone expected me to, but because I wanted to get scholarships for college and I accidentally became valedictorian by doing that. I was willing to give it to the other girl that was salutatorian. I literally said, sheās student body president. She can have it. They said it doesnāt work that way. I was like, okay. But I just wanted the scholarships. I was always very future oriented.
[00:28:23] And so I took a bunch of credits in high school, college credits. And so now Iāve kind of fast-tracked through college. Itās only my second year, but Iāve got junior standing. And so I donāt have a whole lot of college classes left to take, I donāt have very many semesters left and at this point in my college career, Iām not taking any gen ed courses anymore. Iām taking all the fun, you know, journalism and mass media courses, taking a lot of graphic design, a lot of media ethics. And right now, I actually applied and I made it onto the schoolās national advertising competition team. So Iām working with a team of like nine or 10 other people right now, and weāre working on a creative brief sent to us by Meta for the Meta Quest 2 VR headset.
[00:29:13] Jason Hull: Formerly known as Facebook?.Ā
[00:29:14] Madi Sleight: Yeah, Facebook. You know, all that good stuff. And so I get to actually come up with a whole advertising campaign with this team and I was given the producer role, which basically means I get to boss everybody around, which is something Iām good at. I have been told.Ā
[00:29:29] Jason Hull: You are. Youāre good at that. You used to boss around your siblings.
[00:29:32] Madi Sleight: I know, I know. And itās a little bit of a control freak. But I think this role suits me really well and Iām able to help our two presidents and I work very closely with them and theyāve already decided that I talk so much that Iām going to be the one presenting in person.
[00:29:51] I guess I volunteered by talking a lot in our meetings. But no, Iām excited and this is something that I feel like will benefit my future, my resume. And I was very excited to be working for DoorGrow and getting relevant experience toward the field Iām going into, the digital design space or the desktop publishing, advertising sphere.
[00:30:14] So I donāt know. For a while, I feel like after I graduate, you know, Preston, my husbandās still going to be in school, and so heāll still be going to school. So Iāll just be sticking around and working with DoorGrow full-time and will stay.Ā
[00:30:29] Jason Hull: Ooh, thatāll be cool.Ā
[00:30:30] Madi Sleight: I know youāre excited. He keeps trying to get me to drop out by offering me a salary.Ā
[00:30:39] Jason Hull: Yeah. āCause Iām obviously a huge fan of college. I went to college, but I feel like nowadays itās not really as useful as I donāt really even look at applicantsā college degrees. I really donāt. I just look at experience and skills. Some people do, but yeah, I would love to have more Madi in the business because itās a good thing.
[00:31:03] Madi Sleight: After I graduate, Iām just going to be sticking around here, saving up money for whateverās next. Weāve got a good area. Weāre close to Washington advertising agencies and stuff like that. Thereās lots of internships and possibilities. So I donāt know. Iām happy, you know, with what I do at DoorGrow right now, I wouldnāt mind branching out and trying new things when I go full time. But for now, Iām just excited to stay within this industry of, marketing, advertising, graphic design area and I like working from home.
[00:31:34] And so thatās something Iāve kind of gotten used to, but thatās kind of whatās next for me, Iām excited to keep taking classes at the university. Itās a small college the journalism and mass media college, weāre small. A lot of my classmates are the same in every class. A lot of my professors are the same, but theyāre very experienced.
[00:31:52] A lot of them are experienced journalists and advertisers, marketers, PR people, know what theyāre talking about, at least I think so.Ā
[00:32:01] Jason Hull: All right. So everybodyās like heās throwing her some like easy, slow balls. What do you feel like is my biggest challenges or my biggest deficiencies or whatnot?Ā
[00:32:14] Madi Sleight: In the business or in general?
[00:32:17] Jason Hull: Oh, well either one.
[00:32:21] Madi Sleight: Well, I mean, like I said, itās something that youāve been working on and something that youāve improved upon, but the emotional aspect was something that I personally had an issue with growing up, especially being the oldest, being very hard-headed and stubborn and also very emotional. All of your kids are very emotional.
[00:32:39] So thatās something that youāre going to haveā¦
[00:32:43] Jason Hull: Yeah, I think of all of them, youāre the least emotional out of all of them.
[00:32:49] Madi Sleight: Which is funny because Iāve actually gotten more in tune with my emotions as Iāve gotten older, but Iām also just better at regulating, I think, than some of my siblings.
[00:32:59] Jason Hull: Yeah, perhaps yeah. I mean, you are the oldest. Iām also an oldest. Right. And I think thereās a sort of a personality type attributed to the oldest child. But yeah, I know that the things that Iāve always seen in you, the gifts that I see in you is that you have a really great memory. Like you remember like history from even when youāre really young, like you bring up stories and it sparks, like it helps me remember and Iām like, oh my gosh. I canāt believe she remembers that. Even when youāre a really young, itās really quite weird. You remember a lot of details. I think also you would always take control. If there were a group of kids playingā we would go, I would take you to the community swimming pool, for example. And you would immediately just start meeting people and you would organize everyone into doing a game or doing something like you would immediately, you were taking charge.Ā
[00:33:50] And it wasnāt like something you were ever pushed to do, you just did it. Youāre just driven to do that. Youāre like, this is what I want. I want to have fun. And I want to be in charge and get everybody doing things and you would just do it. And every kid would then be playing and like doing what you wanted them to do. Even with your, you know, your sister right under you Hailey, you would tell her likeā You would play games, which would be like some sort of role-play like pretending to do stuff.
[00:34:15] And you would tell her what to say. Youād be like, āI will have a blah, blah, blah. And then you say blah blah blah blahā¦ā and then she would be like, āblah blah blah blah.ā and she would just like, say it. Eventually, I think that wore thin.
[00:34:28] Madi Sleight: Yeah, she got sick of it real quick.
[00:34:31] Jason Hull: Eventually that wore thin. And she no longer tolerated that, but yeah, you would always like take charge. You were always really outgoing, like naturally, like talking to people and whatnot. And you were just, you were such a fun kid. You were just so fun. What was interesting about you growing up is you would just break out into song. You would make up songs while like, while we were driving or while we were doing things, you just sing about what you were seeing and what was going on. And it was really, really stinking cute.
[00:35:04] Madi Sleight: You want to know whatās funny? You want to know whatās really funny? So I remember that when I first came on at DoorGrow, you pulled up my DISC assessment. And you were like, āman, this is really interesting.ā Itās something about like your natural or your taught personalities, you know?Ā
[00:35:19] Jason Hull: Yeah. your natural score versus yourā
[00:35:22] Madi Sleight: like adapted.
[00:35:24] Jason Hull: Yeah your adapted score.Ā
[00:35:25] Madi Sleight: And you brought up something that was kind of unknown to me at the time that I was an adapted people pleaser, like my people pleasing score it was really, really high. I had been taught or expected to do that, but it was naturally pretty low. And thatās, been in the back of my mind for like the last year and a half. And thatās something that Iāve been working on. And as Iāve been like more myself and less worried about what people think⦠my poor husband. We have this inside joke. And I mentioned this when I was in Austin. The, āoh, is that your song? Is that your song?ā Because I will be doing laundry or Iāll be cooking and Iāll be like, āitās time to do the laundry. Iām doing the laundry going to fold some socks.ā And like, Iāll just startā Iāll just start like singing and dancing and heāll look at me and heāll go, āis that your song?ā
[00:36:12] Iām like, āthatās my song.āĀ
[00:36:13] Jason Hull: āThatās my song.āĀ
[00:36:15] Madi Sleight: So now that Iām like getting more into like my natural personality, Iām like reverting back to how I was, singing and dancing and coming up with stupid little jingles when I was a kid, So itās really funny.Ā
[00:36:30] Jason Hull: Itās kinda like that inner child work. Like youāre just, youāre becoming more comfortable being that authentic version of yourself. Itās funny. Cause like I wrote songs, and I would make up songs all the time, like about things. Like sometimes the kids will still, like, if theyāre making chicken nuggets, will sing āchicken nuggets.ā
[00:36:49] Madi Sleight: I do that! I do āthe chicken nuggets.āĀ
[00:36:52] Jason Hull: āI want eat chicken nuggets, I like to eat chicken nuggets.āĀ
[00:36:57] Madi Sleight: I do that every time. I canāt believe you remember that..Ā
[00:36:59] Jason Hull: Yeah. I mean, as a parent, youāve learned ways to get your kids inspired to do things because this is something that I learned a long time ago, but whenever we fail to inspire, we always control. And so itās hard to control people. if it were easy, everybody would do it. Iām going to control everybody and make the world around me, do what I want. But thereās a lot less friction when you can inspire people to do it and song is sometimes a way to get kids to do things.
[00:37:24] So well. All right, cool. Is there anything else people should know? About you? About me? About DoorGrow?Ā
[00:37:33] Madi Sleight: I donāt know. Iām happy where Iām at. And I think as weāre growing our team, you know, we just hired Ashlee and she seems like a really good fit. And I get along with everyone on the team super well. Weāve got a good, fun dynamic, even Adam, you know, Adamās a little more shy than Kyle.
[00:37:50] Kyleās a little rambunctious. Yeah. No, everyone like fits really well. And I get along with everybody and I like the company culture. I thought originally, you know, I kind of had this like inner fear that working with my own dad would be a nightmare.
[00:38:06] Jason Hull: Yeah.Ā
[00:38:06] Madi Sleight: Yeah. That was something that I was worried about. But honestly, I think itās been good because I donāt know how often we would get to communicate otherwise, but now we talk to each other on a daily basis. Sometimes I get sick of you. Sometimes I do. sometimes Iāll be in the huddle at [7:30] in the morning and Iāll be like, āIām too tired for this,ā but I think itās helped us like grow together personally.
[00:38:28] And I also just learn a lot from you and from the business. And I think itās a really good opportunity for me.Ā
[00:38:35] Jason Hull: Yeah. I love having you in the business because, you know, a lot of times parentsā I feel like I have a lot of stuff that I know that I would like to get into my kids, but thereās not really a vehicle to do that, but getting your kid in business with you and in doing things because I want everyone on the team to grow, but of course I want my daughter to grow as well.
[00:38:56] And so, you know, itās being able to see you develop and grow. Is even more rewarding, you know, for me. And itās really rewarding to be able to share some of that stuff thatās in me that I would love all my kids to have, which are heavily connected to values and the things that I care about.
[00:39:19] And. You know, interacting and dealing with people and whatās effective and contribution and all the things that youāve heard. Hereās whatās really genius about you that I should point out. So when you started doing social media posts, you had listened to some of my podcast and youād listen to things. Youāve learned my voice, which is really weird. Like thereās AI software out there now, which we now can play with a little bit that actually can learn our voice and it can speak. And it can make the sounds that sound like me, right? Thereās like an AI version of Joe Rogan out there. For example, it sounds exactly like them. Itās like a deep fake, like, itās crazy. You can sound just like him and itās AI, people can type in words and it can spit out someone elseās voice. Right.Ā
[00:40:03] You learned to pretty much do that by just watching the videos, but in text, right. So when youāre creating posts and content, every now and then Iāll read something Iām like, well, thatās kind of a little different than how I say it, but whatās really weird is most of the time I would see posts or things that you would post and I would look at it and then I would feel like I needed to like it because I was like, thatās great stuff. I love that. I mean, itās silly that I love like things youāve gotten from what I say, but I didnāt write it and Iām reading it going, āyeah. I resonate with thisā obviously. And so itās really funny.Ā
[00:40:40] And then Iām like, oh, thatās silly. I shouldnāt be liking my own stuff. Thatās weird, but I didnāt post it, you know? So itās really awesome to see that you were able to encapsulate the voice. How are you able to do that when other people havenāt?
[00:40:52] Madi Sleight: Well, the weird thing is I started out making this, like this kind of like a reservoir, like a doc of all these different quotes on all these different topics.
[00:41:00] So if I needed a caption for something about a topic, Iād look and Iād go, oh, and Iāll just copy and paste it. So I really did justāĀ
[00:41:08] Jason Hull: So you have a Jasonās quotes database?Ā
[00:41:11] Madi Sleight: I do, and I keep adding to it, but now I started off doing direct quotes and then I started like, āHmm, I donāt like the way he said that. I feel like thatās inproper grammarā So I like tweak it a little bit. Yeah, no, āI feel thatās not the right word. I think he meant to say this.ā And so I like put in little things that start tweaking it. And now what I do is I actually, like, Iāve gotten way more efficient and like more quick at getting social media posts out there.
[00:41:37] āCause Iāll go into this reservoir. and I have pages and I know exactly where everything is and Iāll be like, āoh, this is a good line. Iāll throw that in there. This is also a good line. Iāll throw that in there.ā you know, make something up as well to go along with it. Itās almost bad because weāll be in the coaching calls and youāll be talking about something and Iāll be like, āI could regurgitate this quote on this topic because youāll be trying to say it and Iāll be like, āI know exactly what heās trying to say.ā because youāve said it before. One thing thatās helpful is your views on a certain topic, like letās say SEO, or referral partners or this or that, you say mostly the same things about the same topic in most of our calls. And so I kind of picked up on that.
[00:42:23] And so even if I donāt have something in my beautiful reservoir, I just know what you would say. Like, I dunno.Ā
[00:42:30] Jason Hull: Youāve heard me talk so much and heard me say so much, you know. Iāve worked with some coaches and mentors. I had one coach I worked with for like three years and it got to the point where on calls. I knew what he would say. Like, I could answer the question for people on his behalf. Yeah. So do you think you could coach clients? Do you think thatās something that you could do? Youād be like, I know what Jason would say. This is like, what he would say.Ā
[00:42:52] Madi Sleight: Well, itās funny because when I was doing like the client outreach for a little bit, you know, messaging all of our clients every week, sometimes Iād get a question and I would be able to confidently answer it. And other times, more rarely I would send them over to you but because I know your viewpoint on most of the thingsā and that also helped when I was doing sales followup, because I started off and theyād ask me questions, like āhow much does the program cost? What do you do?ā And I couldnāt confidently answer.
[00:43:17] But now I can. And I donāt think Iām to the point where I could take over the weekly coaching calls yet. I think I need to go through our program kind of like what Ashleeās doing right now. And like actually go through, take notes and become more familiar with the content of the program itself. But I donāt think Iām too far behind that honestly because I listen to you for an hour, twice a week, plus meetings and huddles. And I post to your personal and to our business, social medias every single day. And Iām looking at your quotes every single day. Every time Iām creating social media content, Iām going through. āHmm. You know, whatās a good topic for this post.āā
[00:44:02] Whatās something we havenāt, you know, put on social in a while.ā and I look at your podcast episodes and see what kind of content you put up there. And so thereās a lot of information. If somebody wanted to impersonate you, I donāt think itād be that hard. Thereās enough information out there.Ā
[00:44:20] Jason Hull: Thereās a lot out there..
[00:44:21] Madi Sleight: And the more that I consume just doing my daily tasks or weekly tasks, the better I get at, you know, mimicking your style, your voice on social media.
[00:44:32] Jason Hull: Cool. Yeah, I think itās just really kind of weird to see when I see stuff that looks like I did it, but itās actually you, but itās like I did it, which is really strange. Cause I donāt remember doing it, which is the weirdest thing Iām like, āI donāt remember doing that, but that sounds exactly like something I would say.ā
[00:44:52] Madi Sleight: Most of the time it is something you said.Ā
[00:44:56] Jason Hull: Thatās why. Sometimes I donāt even remember saying some things. Youāll post something. Iām like, āthatās really good! Did I actually say that?ā Yeah. So, all right. Well, I think this has gone on long enough, and I appreciate you coming on and being willing to do this and kind of share your perspective on me.
[00:45:16] And I think itās probably fun for everyone to hear a little bit about you.Ā
[00:45:20] Madi Sleight: I think that the people listening to this podcast should go check out our socials. You know, we donāt get a ton of engagement. Weāve been getting higher numbers. Iāve checked the percentages. Theyāve gone up. Weāve gained more followers, but I think our social media content is pretty good. So if you could go check it out, thatād be really great. Youāre gonna find a lot of regurgitated quotes from my dad, but a lot of itās good information, especially for property managers. If youāre like struggling to grow doors or feel like youāre stuck at a roadblock or you canāt scale your business, thereās a lot of little tidbits of sneak peaks of what we kind of talk about in the program on our socials, lots of short paragraphs.
[00:45:57] Little things, I take little gold nuggets from your podcast and put them on socials. So I think thatās something that could be nice for someone to get into if they donāt have a lot of time to listen to your podcast or to do a ton of research on DoorGrow,Ā
[00:46:13] but also go check out our YouTube channel and our clients success videos. Iām going to be posting more this week as I get them refined to make some revisions and get them up there. Weāve got some really awesome client wins and people should expect a lot more client success videos in the coming year and in the next few months, especially because Iāve got a lot of content to get up there and to get out to people so we can show off how awesome our clients are.
[00:46:42] Jason Hull: Yeah. I just got to get you to quit college and make videos full-time so I can get more of them out of you faster.
[00:46:52] Madi Sleight: Iām too far in, at this point. I just gotta finish it. You donāt have to wait that long. I promise I will work full time when I graduate.Ā
[00:47:05] Jason Hull: Well, Iām looking forward to the time where you can go full time. Cause thatād be awesome and Madi, I love you. I adore you. A dad couldnāt have had a better first kid and you were just, youāve always been so fun. You always get my jokes and I really appreciate having you in the business. And thanks for coming on the podcast.Ā
[00:47:26] Madi Sleight: Yeah. I donāt know. I love working for DoorGrow and I like working with you, believe it or not.Ā
[00:47:32] Jason Hull: I believe it. All right. And I think everybody else listening does too well, everybody else, I appreciate you hanging out with us. This is about an hour, this will be a long episode. And until next time to our mutual growth bye everyone.
[00:47:47] Jason: You just listened to the #DoorGrowShow. We are building a community of the savviest property management entrepreneurs on the planet in the DoorGrowClub. Join your fellow DoorGrow Hackers at doorgrowclub.com. Listen, everyone is doing the same stuff. SEO, PPC pay per lead content, social direct mail, and they still struggle to grow!Ā
[00:48:13] At DoorGrow, we solve your biggest challenge: getting deals and growing your business. Find out more at doorgrow.com. Find any show notes or links from todayās episode on our blog doorgrow.com, and to get notified of future events and news subscribe to our newsletter at doorgrow.com/subscribe.
[00:48:34] Until next time, take what you learn and start DoorGrow Hacking your business and your life.
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