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  <title>The Episode About Math? (Klassic Kern)</title>
  <description>Why You’re Actually in the Math Business Frank breaks down a hard truth that most entrepreneurs avoid because it isn't &amp;quot;sexy&amp;quot;:&amp;amp;nbsp;Business is a math game. Whether you are selling vitamins, courses, or cars, success comes down to understanding the multiplication of capital through the leverage of assets. Frank shares a cautionary tale of a marketing funnel that looked good on paper but failed the &amp;quot;math test,&amp;quot; and explains why your focus should be on acquisition costs rather than just &amp;quot;pretty&amp;quot; sales letters.  Key Takeaways 1. The &amp;quot;Sexy&amp;quot; vs. &amp;quot;Unsexy&amp;quot; Side of Business   The Asset Leverage: Business is ultimately about multiplying capital by leveraging assets like ad copy, web pages, and sales systems.   The Math Blind Spot: Entrepreneurs often obsess over the creative (sales letters, offers) but ignore the underlying math that determines if a business is even viable.   2. Case Study: The $500 Course Trap Frank discusses a client’s plan to use direct mail to drive traffic to an online funnel:   The Cost: Sending a 4-page sales letter first-class costs roughly $1.00 per piece.   The Funnel Math: 1,000 letters → 500 readers → 250 website visits → 50 opt-ins.   The Problem: At $20 per opt-in, the client needed a 4% conversion rate on a $500 product just to break even. Without a backend or higher price point, the business model was mathematically unsustainable.   3. The Only Equation That Matters To simplify your business, Frank recommends focusing on these core metrics:   Cost Per Lead: What does it cost to get someone into your ecosystem?   Cost Per Customer: How many leads does it take to get a sale?   The Profit Gap: If your cost to acquire a customer is higher than your profit per customer, the business is broken—no matter how good the marketing is.   4. Beware of Small Sample Sizes Frank tells a story of a &amp;quot;scary month&amp;quot; for a radio advertiser:   The Panic: The client thought the ads stopped working because sales dipped.   The Reality: All top-of-funnel metrics (calls, appointments, show-up rates) remained consistent.   The Lesson: With only 20 appointments a month, a small dip is statistically insignificant. Don't blow up a working system because of a &amp;quot;bad&amp;quot; month based on small numbers.    Memorable Quotes  &amp;quot;The money’s not in the list. The money is in the math.&amp;quot;   &amp;quot;We are really in the multiplication of capital business... it’s so unsexy it’s hard to even say.&amp;quot;  </description>
  <author_name>Your Next Million</author_name>
  <author_url>http://frankkernpodcast.com</author_url>
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