

đ´228. How to ignore feedback feat. Alan Weiss (Weekend Rewind)
Today I poured a long black (Alan poured a martini) and we got spicy about feedback: smile sheets, unsolicited opinions, and why being liked is overrated compared to being respected. Alan shares why he was often hired to discomfort audiences, how to stay buyer-centred (not audience-centred), and when to refund, repeat, or remix. We also riff on The Mom Test, critical mass marketing, and the difference between repeating your âLiving on a Prayerâ hits and still innovating.
What we cover
- Respect > like: why pleasing the buyer beats chasing tepid standing ovations
- âFeedback is for the senderâ: spotting passive-aggressive advice and status plays
- Smile sheets: why two â9sâ out of 200 donât matterâand what to do if they do
- The buyer test: who actually pays and whose opinion counts (hint: not the event coordinator)
- Marketing before content: sell to critical mass, then build the thing
- When things go wrong: the one time Alan refundedâand how he turned a bad workshop into a huge Bank of America engagement
- Signature hits vs. novelty: give people the classics and add a fresh twist
- Being âuncoachableâ vs. trusting yourself: why greats still use coaches to avoid breathing their own exhaust
Quotables
- âItâs more important to be respected than to be liked.â âAlan
- âFeedback I didnât ask for is for the sender, not for me.â âAlan
- âIâm not here to convert; Iâm here to delight the people who like what I do.â âAlan
- âMinimal success: a sincere thanks. Maximum success: âDonât leave until we book you again.ââ âAlan
Mentioned
- The Advice Trap â Michael Bungay Stanier (on why we love giving advice)
- The Mom Test â Rob Fitzpatrick (donât validate ideas with compliments; validate with payment)
- Bon Jovi & Billy Joel (why fans want the classicsâplus a fresh surprise)
Try this
- Before your next talk, list your buyer, their success metric, and your own minâmax success range.
- After the talk, call the buyer for targeted feedback. Archive the smile sheets.
- Selling a new offer? Open a 12-hour window and ask for paid commitments first; build the content after you hit your number.
If you enjoyed this
Share this episode with a friend whoâs drowning in feedback, or tag me with your biggest âunsolicited adviceâ story. And if you want Alan in Australia for the 80/20 Tour, tell me where we should host it!
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