Ollie Richards advocates for running paid ads for a lead magnet, then immediately offering a low-cost digital product ($50-$100) to new leads. Revenue from this product "liquidates" the ad cost, making lead acquisition essentially free and scalable, turning high-ticket coaching into pure profit.
Instead of offering free webinars or guides to build an email list, charge a small, 'no-brainer' price like $27. While this may result in a smaller list, the audience will be more engaged, more valuable, and more likely to purchase future offers because they have already demonstrated a willingness to pay.
Instead of paying for leads, buy established, profitable media outlets at low multiples (3-5x EBITDA). These brands, like Flying Magazine, generate profit while also serving as a powerful, trusted top-of-funnel engine for your other data or product businesses.
A sophisticated paid acquisition strategy involves spending enough to acquire a customer at a cost equal to their first month's payment. Profitability is achieved in subsequent months and through referrals, enabling aggressive, uncapped scaling by focusing on lifetime value (LTV) over immediate ROI.
Instead of optimizing for profit from day one, focus on creating a massive flow of leads with a low-friction offer. Once you have consistent demand ('flow'), you can then introduce 'friction' (like higher prices or more complex funnels) to monetize that established audience.
Even when a prospect rejects your primary service, you can recover acquisition costs and generate revenue. Offer a free, low-threat consultation (e.g., a 'lifestyle review') where you can sell a different, complementary product (e.g., supplements). This strategy effectively turns a lost lead into a paying customer.
Split tests reveal that leads from free offers convert at the same rate and ticket size as those from paid offers. The primary difference is that free offers dramatically lower lead acquisition costs (by 5x or more), making them more profitable. The "freebie seeker" stereotype is largely a myth.
By engineering your model so that the gross profit from a new customer in their first 30 days exceeds your acquisition cost (CAC), you can fund marketing on an interest-free credit card. The customer's own payment repays the debt before interest accrues, creating a self-funding growth loop.
Media companies can scale paid acquisition infinitely by selling a low-ticket digital product (e.g., a guide) on the thank-you page after a free newsletter signup. If even a small percentage buys, the revenue can offset ad costs, making subscriber growth free or profitable.
When ad performance breaks at scale, the problem isn't your bidding strategy; it's that you've saturated the 3% of the market ready to buy now. To grow, you must target the other 97% with broader, less direct hooks and lead magnets that educate them first.
The common myth is that low-ticket buyers are low-quality leads. In reality, someone who pays for a small product is often more qualified and converts to a high-ticket offer at a much higher rate than someone who only consumes free content, like a webinar.