Genius Network Magazine Genius Network Magazine | Page 7

IS GENIUS NETWORK A SCAM? T he first thing I noticed when I started delving into online marketing last year was that the leaders in the industry had three things in common: 1) They’re all health-conscious: either Cross Fit or supplement obsessed (often both). 2) They’re into efficiency: they Slack, Evernote and Asana themselves and their teams into princes of productivity. 3) They’re all in mastermind groups. I was cool with the first two; it was fact number three that had me the most suspect. Masterminds, for the uninitiated, are groups of people whose careers are in similar places but are all looking to 10X where they are (this is a crowd, by the way, that’s really into the term 10X). The meetings can consist of monthly calls, regular in-person gatherings or both and are usually led by a leading expert in the field. And they’re expensive as can be. The cost factor is what stopped me in my tracks. Sure, I was interested in networking with people who could give me ideas, introduce me to even bigger fish and help me promote whatever I had to sell but was I willing to part with large chunks of money for that privilege? I was not. And so, about a year ago, I started looking into MeetUp mastermind groups. Alas, without even having to attend, I could assess what those were: a collection of people too broke to go to a real mastermind. I gave up on masterminds, telling myself that I could get successful on my own. Then I was invited to attend one of the biggest masterminds out there—Joe Polish’s Genius Network $25K group. Joe Polish, for anyone not familiar with this world, is a once-broke, once-ponytailed 40-something dude from Arizona who’s widely considered one of the world’s greatest marketers and marketing coaches. His phone regularly buzzes with texts 7 from Tony Robbins and Arianna Huffington. He’s Richard Branson’s largest fundraiser. He runs multiple marketing companies, connects the biggest players in the field to one another and hosts several podcasts. His greatest achievement, however, is his Genius Network. The Genius Network $25K group, if you haven’t figured it out from its name, costs $25,000 to join. For that, you get to attend three meetings a year—an exorbitant- sounding amount until you compare it to Polish’s $100K group, which operates under the same principles but is for people who can spare, well, 100 grand for this privilege. In other words, bigger fish, smaller pond. I couldn’t understand why people intelligent enough to have a spare $25 or $100K would fall for what was clearly a scam. And yet the group of 50-odd men and women I met while stuffing some gluten-free muffins and Bulletproof coffee down my gullet in Polish’s Tempe, Arizona, office seemed like savvy folks. If this mastermind thing was a scam, it was a subtle scam indeed. As the group settled into their seats around a winding group of long tables, I took a look around. The set-up was simple enough: name cards at each place, a large countdown clock in the corner and a Truman Show-like attached room from which a team made sure the entire production was shot and disseminated perfectly—for Facebook Live streaming as well as for future marketing purposes. I essentially had the whole bottom floor of the office to myself, watching the video feed in a room filled with unique odds and ends (a squatting sumo wrestler, a book on farts, a plastic monkey hanging from a pillar), photos of Polish with people like Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Arianna Huffington, Rupert Murdoch, Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and signs that posed questions like “What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?” This, as far as I was concerned, was an oasis: I could see everything the group members could, had first access to the delicious, healthy GENIUSNETWORK.COM