We are well into the
In todayâs episode, we talk to a fascinating şÚÁĎĂĹ merchant, doing wonderful things in troubled times. We are proud to discover he listens to this show and our tips actually helped him out!
Our guest is RJ Rise — creator of the Ultimate 5 Squad. RJ shares with us the inspiration for this graphic novel, and the impact he hopes it has.
RJ talks about the business he created to promote and sell the comic, and how he had to build his own team, to bring it to life.
Show Notes:
- Free
Mind-Growth Worksheet - Free Empowerment Worksheet
Transcript:
Jesse: Richard, how are you?
Richard: Whatâs going on, Jesse?
Jesse: Weâre four months into the lockdown situation here, settling into my home office here. Iâm now on the opposite side of the wall. You know, big changes, a lot of things, a lot of stuff going on. How about you?
Richard: Itâs good, itâs really good; actually, itâs been interesting with the kiddos as far as just keeping her occupied. By the way, I donât use that term lockdown anymore. I use shelter in place or something. I just feel like that word is just got polarizing too much right now. I think thatâs part of why some people are like, screw it, Iâm going out anyway. They feel locked down. As opposed to just making a positive choice for something that you should be doing to help the collective whole. Theyâre not trying to get all political here or anything. Iâm just not using that term anymore.
Jesse: All right. All right. Well, I mean, Iâm at home, and I am starting to get a little stir crazy, but, hey, life is good, weâre happy and healthy here. And then workwise, hey, weâre still communicating with our people out here. Our listeners like, hey, I know weâve slowed down a little bit on the podcast. Thatâs because it has been so crazy busy. But weâre still out there. We actually have a couple in the backlog here. So thereâs a bunch of cool stuff coming out there. Some new features actually. Today is awesome because we get to talk to a listener as well and a merchant, which is always one of our favorite episodes to do. So Iâm very excited about that. And then, weâre talking about the situation here, a lot of stuff going on in the world right now. Thereâs a bunch of people out of work. Thereâs a bunch of people working from home, you know, whatâs your word again? The shelter in place?
Richard: Shelter in place. The political winds are blowing here. The Black Lives Matter movement is massive right now. Thereâs just a lot of stuff going on in the world here. Weâre in the safety of our little computer screens here. And I think itâs good to open our eyes every now and then and see whatâs going on in the world here. With that, letâs talk to our guest. We have RJ Rise, the founder of the Ultimate 5 Squad. How is it going on, RJ?
RJ: Iâm doing pretty well, yourself?
Jesse: Like I say, life is good. A little stir crazy. But, hey, try to stay positive on it. So itâs good.
RJ: Itâs so real being on this show and listening to you guys for a while now. So for me to be on here, itâs an honor.
Jesse: Perfect. We love to hear that, and weâre going to put a little hashtag on that. Send it to all the bosses that pay the bills and let them know we have fans out there, and they want to be on the show. So, so awesome now. All right. Give us a little background on what you do. Youâre the founder of Ultimate Five Squad. When you get their start there, we can start with your origin story. Prior to where you got started with that, where would you like to start?
RJ: Sure. So Iâm RJ, the author of The Ultimate Five Squad. We have the action book and then the coloring book it. The idea came to me back in 2018. There were two movies that I watched Black Panther and Crazy Rich Asians. And what those two movies had in common was that it showcased protagonists, characters of color, or of Asian descent. And what happened? I think Hollywood probably thought they were taking a gamble with showcasing a black cast or an Asian cast. But actually, the numbers were through the roof. It was a box office record. So when you showcase people in a prominent light, the way that theyâd like to be seen in a positive light, weâre going to go out and support it. And so the black community, the Asian community, everybody, whites, blacks, all went out and supported those movies. And so it showed me something to showcase folks in a positive light, no matter who they are, no matter what their disabilities may be, no matter their hair color, skin color, eye color, it doesnât matter if you showcase them in a positive light, in a respectful way. If you uplift their spirits and their psyche, theyâre going to go out and support it. And so as a school teacher, I absolutely love working with kids. I love what I do. It brings me so much joy. But I see a lack of confidence in them when they get bullied or where theyâre not represented. And so I said, let me do something about it. I could sit back and do nothing, or I feel like Iâm in a position where I could do something. So I put this brand together, the Ultimate Five Squad and the whole brand. What we stand for is empowerment; it is empowering kids, letting them believe that they can be whatever they set their minds to. And so thatâs how the Ultimate Five Squad was born.
Jesse: Awesome. So itâs a comic book. These are superheroes, people of color, black characters. So that way, kids growing up can have their own heroes. I think thatâs a very, very cool concept. And yet you saw it with Black Panther, right? My kids, their favorite superhero, is Black Panther. They got me a
RJ: Exactly. For many, many black kids, many Asian kids, mixed kids, there isnât that superhero that they can relate to. Sure. Weâll go out and support Superman and Batman and Iron Man and The Avengers. We, Will, go out and support that. But at the end of the day, you donât see that hero that looks like you. And I canât tell you how many reviews, how much feedback Iâve been getting from parents that say As soon as my child saw the cover, they said: Wow, this looks like me. There are five characters in the book. And instantly, they gravitate toward the one that either they want to be like or resembles them the most. And thatâs something that they donât feel when they go and watch The Avengers or Ironman or whatever. Nothing against these heroes, they are great guys. But relating to someone is huge. And a lot of times the message is if the kids see a hero that looks like them, well, what does that say about them? I mean, that means that they, too, can be heroes. And so thatâs the message that it sends.
Richard: Yeah, itâs thatâs really cool. I like the way you learned that one of the things we talked about a little bit prior. And we talked about different superheroes that are out there that are hard to relate to because Superman came from another planet, Bruce Wayne, Iron Man, theyâre like super multimillionaire guys that kind of did whatever they want. But in that mix of past superheroes, Batman was always my favorite because of all the superheroes. He was the one who did it out of choice. And it kind of sounded like a little bit of our conversation prior that this was a group of friends that came together that by choice decided to do this. Is that kind of the background of what you got working with that book?
RJ: Yeah, well said. Well said. This is five ordinary friends, just five ordinary friends who come together. So thereâs no superpowers. Theyâre not born on another planet. Thereâs no getting bit by a spider. Theyâre just ordinary people who come together and use their skill sets. So oneâs an astronomer, oneâs an athlete, oneâs an inventor, oneâs a doctor. But together, they bring their skill sets and solve this issue thatâs happening. And the issue is Earth is being invaded by these robot aliens. So, yeah, as you said, theyâre relatable. Theyâre not multimillionaires, theyâre just regular folks like you and I. Weâre coming together to solve this problem.
Jesse: And thereâs still robot aliens.
Richard: Both worlds. Yeah, yeah.
Jesse: I mean, you know, we still have to have robot aliens. It still got to be exciting for the kids to want to get into the story like itâs for kids. Right. So, yeah, thatâs awesome. I think I think my boys would be interested in it. Iâm going to get them into the story. So, yeah, I would. Now, Iâd love to talk about the story more, but itâs an
RJ: I was a teacher, a PE teacher. And so I, of course, love comics. I love superhero movies. And so thatâs something thatâs dear to me. And so I felt like there was something that I could do, the love that I have for the superhero movies, but also as a teacher, someone that parents trust to instill goodness in your kids, to be role models for their kids. And so I felt like I have a platform, I have the smarts enough to put this together. So why not at least give it a shot, see if I could help impact some lives. But yeah, Iâm not a writer by trade, but as a school teacher, Iâm around kids all day.
Richard: You have this idea in 2018. When did you actually start building your şÚÁĎĂĹ store, or did you even build the şÚÁĎĂĹ store? What got you to choose şÚÁĎĂĹ? Iâm curious about that.
RJ: Good old Google. I googled, I knew that there were X amount of companies who host websites, who have plugins. And so I did some research, and after doing my homework, I found that şÚÁĎĂĹ had a podcast featuring YouTube. And I said, OK, so Iâm not a true techie to the point where I could build a website from scratch and coding. So I said, well, thereâs a podcast, and I hear them, and every so often they mention which apps to use, they mention new features that are going to be on the website. Thatâs like my inside guy. So I use you guys as my inside guy, my source. Whatever you say, I give it a shot. If you say MailChimp is doing this, Iâll give it a shot. If you say thereâs a Facebook integration, I gave it a shot. I truly trust and value whatever you guys say. And what helped me make that decision was that I could hear from not only you, too, but also your guests. If your guests say, hey, you know, we love this, and these are the apps that we use, then Iâm down. The site was probably put up in February. I was tinkering around with it. I paid for the whole year, and I kept listening to you guys, and I kept building it and adding the background and different little features here and there. But I donât think we fully launched it until about early March.
Jesse: Ok, wow, thatâs awesome. So several things I could go into there, but one, you launched a site in about a month, really without having a technical background. Thatâs great. You could have probably done it faster if you wanted to. You could have done a fancier. You could have done a million different things, but the key is that you got it launched, right? So I always love it when people just, you know, thereâs always a hurdle or two. Just get this thing launched, get it out there, see whatâs going on. Kudos to you on that, obviously. Thanks for listening to the podcast!
Richard: Now the pressureâs gone.
Jesse: Yeah, I mean, thatâs the biggest thing. Besides that, you launched right at the beginning of the COVID situation. Boy, itâs actually a very good time to be launching a product. I mean, I have kids, Iâm working from home, my wife working from home. The kids need to be occupied, the bottom line, they need something to do. And people are looking for resources. Theyâre looking for anything to not just; you can always keep the kids occupied with the iPad and YouTube. Thatâs not the goal. The key is, how can you teach them when you donât really have the ability or the skills? Iâm not teaching; my wifeâs not a teacher. So it turns out that you launched this at the perfect time where there are resources here for kids to learn, like you mentioned, about empowerment. Thereâs some downloadable content. Itâs awesome that you launched it. Your timing was actually just a good time to launch, really. You didnât plan for that. So anyway, I donât know if that was a question. Sometimes I do ramble on the podcast a little bit, but like, Iâm so happy for you that you have a launch at this time.
RJ: So, yeah, Iâll take what you said and go with it. Yeah. It wasnât planned at all. A lot of families and folks that are finding me on Facebook or social media, word of mouth, theyâll say to me, oh wow, because of the Black Lives movement and whatâs happening in America, you came out with this book. Thereâs no way that I could have come out with a book that quickly, especially two books on top of that. This was a year and a half in the making, finding the illustrator, working on every single page, every single detail from what the characters are wearing to the earrings, to the lipstick, to the shoes, to the trees, to the dogs. I mean, details after details. So it took a good year and a half. I knew the conviction I had was that this book was needed, needed. I would go to; I donât know if I could say their names, the big box store with a bunch of books. I went to the local bookstore. I didnât see it. I didnât see what I was looking for, for my nephews, at least for their birthdays. I went on the big website. I searched. I donât want to say there has been a search on the website, and I was looking for a cast of protagonist superheroes of color, and I could not find it. And so I said, well if itâs not out there, I quit, and I could wait, or I could do something about it. And so thatâs what I did. And so the timing was unreal. It was just so real that at this moment, parents, black and white, are looking for books that are going to boost their kidâs confidence in the midst of all of whatâs going on, but also showcased and brought to the forefront to their kidâs characters that donât look like them. You know, itâs OK to have characters with books, with black characters, Asian characters, Indian characters. And so a lot of white families were scrambling, looking online, trying to find books to educate their kids because they donât want to repeat that cycle. And so Iâm just fortunate that my book is among one of the many that parents are seeking out.
Jesse: I can see it, like white parents trying to teach their kids about like, hey, youâre seeing some stuff on the news here. How do you distill that into your children with some of these are pretty heavy topics? Are you going to show the kids the George Floyd video? Probably not at six years old. But you want to instill this sense in them of what is injustice and whatâs going on in the world without maybe knowing yourself all that well. I think itâs happened to be a great time to have resources for that. Like I say, you didnât plan for this. You had a plan, but itâs just the timing that it came out was kind of worked out in your favor. And you happen to be a great resource for people out there that are looking for ways to talk to the kids about whatâs going on in the world.
Richard: Some people, when they talk about taking advantage, some people think, taking advantage means taking advantage of somebody. Sometimes itâs just taking advantage of a situation. But this is a perfect example of it. Itâs just sometimes great timing, and itâs not necessarily. You can
RJ: America is a cultural pot because there are black doctors, thereâs white doctors, white, black, you just see it. You donât have to be taught that itâs an OK thing, it just is a cultural pot.
Richard: So you built the site yourself. You got it a month, or so you mentioned a little bit about what customers are saying. Do you have any other books coming out, or what are the plans you have for the Ultimate Five Squad?
RJ: The first part was I did start to mess with the website and make it myself, the background, adding products. And then, I know my strengths and weaknesses. And I hired out my weaknesses. And so I hired a marketing person to help me with Facebook, Instagram, and so forth. But as well as doing that, sheâs just very skilled and took over the website. So any new products, any new things that we need to do with şÚÁĎĂĹ, sheâs all hands on. I do have another product. So parents are already asking me. Theyâre already ahead of the ball. In 2018, I knew the vision right was to be the next more impactful version of a Power Ranger or an Avenger. I want it to be that brand. Itâs not just a book, but itâs a movement. And so I knew back then that I wanted to have a movie. I just knew that. And whatâs just surreal is these parents, theyâre already asking for the kids or asking their parents, is there a movie? Is there another book? Kids, literally, I think it was yesterday, a mom said she was so excited that not only that her
Richard: I donât particularly know them, but I worked in a television film for thirteen years, and I know a lot.
RJ: All right. Thanks for that card.
Jesse: Well thatâs great. I canât help you with the movie, but what I can help you with is the website and kind of generating that next tier of revenue to start making those dreams a reality. You mentioned the posters and things like that. You know, if you probably go back a little bit, but we had a Printful on quite a while ago. But there is a print on demand shop particularly busy right now in this kind of world. But like, you could very easily take some of your characters and turn them into
Richard: Oh, yeah. Thatâs the beauty of having the digital downloads, too, because as long as youâre collecting those emails, even if they donât buy from you now, if you keep letting them know what youâre up to and what youâre doing, they could be a customer in the future.
RJ: Yeah, youâre right.
Jesse: Yeah. So keep working. Love the free downloadable, there were a couple of things you mentioned, already doing Facebook and Instagram. If youâve listened to podcasts long enough, are you doing the Shoppable posts where you can have a box around the product where people can purchase right from your Instagram and Facebook feed if theyâre doing that?
RJ: Yeah, I listen to that. And literally, as soon as I heard that, I went ahead and implemented that. Iâve gotten a few purchases from the Facebook side, but for some reason, it hasnât allowed me to do it on the Instagram side. But yes, on the Facebook side, itâs on the Facebook page of Ultimate Five Squad. And if you scroll down, youâll see the products. You can tap on it. You can buy it. Oddly enough, though, I donât know why, but on the Instagram side, itâs not giving me that opportunity.
Jesse: Fair enough. Instagramâs a little tricky. And itâs not like you can call somebody on Instagram and have them fix it. It might just be like, I donât know, Iâm not Instagram, but like I think it might be with the digital downloads. Sometimes they donât want people abusing their platform for digital downloads. So like, if you had merch, for instance, if you had where itâs clearly a book and not a digital download, that I think thatâs whatâs tripping it up. I canât say for sure, but just to hint there, that might be a place to look at. Talk to our support, too; they can probably walk you through it. But digital downloads are awesome. But theyâre not awesome when youâre trying to get approved for Instagram shopping. I have a hunch.
RJ: Because on the site, not only do we sell the two physical books, but we have a freebie. So, anyone that visits the site thatâs not too familiar with us, theyâre taking a chance with us. We offer downloadables. We call it an empowerment worksheets pack. And so they get to download almost 40 worksheets for free just so they get familiar with the brand and then have to get familiar with us. They donât take a chance and buy the book, and they could do that. But yeah, you might be right on that one.
Richard: As you mentioned, Jess, this is one thatâs worth talking, especially since you prepaid for the year. You definitely have a chat and all that you can talk to support because it could be that. And did you remember actually uploading your product feed and trying to get approved with Instagram, or was there just something not working because you might not have just done that.
Jesse: So if itâs done with Facebook, it should be, the infrastructure is in place for Instagram. So I know itâs there. I get it sometimes itâs a little wonky, and yeah, you got to kind of just push through on that one. I wish we had Instagram on the line right now. Another idea I wanted to throw this out to you. You mentioned you might not be aware of this, but the concept of free plus shipping, if you ever heard this concept. So you have a product, it is priced in sort of the zone where that can work. It sometimes sounds a little; I donât know, shady because youâre using the word free plus shipping. But I know this works, it works particularly well for books because itâs fairly inexpensive to mail books and coloring books. But you can offer up. This might be later when you have a few more products, by the way, like maybe you have more products and then you have a
Richard: Yeah, I would say Iâm going to take a look, and Iâll reach out to you a little bit more like diving a little deeper. But I think this is a great one. I notice you have a couple of bundles on there, but especially with whatâs going on right now. I think if you made it a little bit more prominent or maybe had a dropdown for more quantity. Buy some for your friends, too, the timing of all this, instead of only relying upon somebody saying, oh, I got a copy and paste this and create an email; they might just buy five more copies. They might buy ten copies and share them with people. Thatâs just I just think with the space weâre in right now in America, that that would be worth trying to figure something out. Iâll think about a little bit more on the specifics on how you probably do that to not take away from just getting one. But I think definitely adding some form of dropdown or verbiage that says Buy some for friends and family. Then go towards helping a cause or something with these two.
RJ: Yeah. So I think it was either early this week or sometime last week we had a customer and then weâre using this app. I canât think of the moment, but you can have your customers leave a little note for you as they purchase. And so in the notes section, it said, We love what you stand for. Thank you for having these superheroes and also thank you for the causes you support. So inside the book, literally as you open it, page one, we let our audience know our customers know that when they purchase a book, part of what theyâre paying, part of that money goes towards a cost. And so every quarter we try to choose a new cause. This past summer, and weâre still rolling into it. Itâs No Kid Hungry. So theyâre an organization that because school was shut down, was closed so abruptly. A lot of kids depend on these meals. They depend on schools for their breakfast and lunch. And so now you have millions of kids that went without their breakfast for lunch. And so No Kid Hungry has been doing this obviously before the coronavirus. But even now, more so, itâs more important. And so they feed these families, these kids. And so we want to help out. So when someone buys the book, youâre actually feeding a child. So thereâs a good that comes with that. Youâre not just impacting your child and not just impacting your community, but youâre helping other kids around the country. And so thereâs a social good. Itâs kind of like that Warby Parker in the Times model where you buy wine, and youâre giving something away. So when you buy this for helping feed some kids here in America.
Richard: I would say that a little bit more on the website. You know, just let people know ahead of time, not just after they buy the book. I wouldnât be afraid. Thatâs a beautiful thing. Not that youâre afraid, but you know what Iâm saying. Like, just make it prominent.
RJ: Perfect, I will.
Jesse: And I think also you always need new social content as well. So like when you make the donation quarterly. Hey, guys, thank you to all the customers that have purchased from us. But here is our donation, as we had mentioned to this organization. And by the way, next quarter weâre going to choose this organization. Just to kind of give people a reason that youâre not just selling a book at a big box store here. Thereâs more behind this book, the message, and the donation as well. So, just to tip as I know sometimes coming up with social content is tough, but thereâs you have this thing.
RJ: Genius. Yeah. Great point.
Richard: Yeah. I would even stick with Jessieâs
Jesse: And I will tell you, Iâm scrolling on the Facebook thing on the other screen over here and you have a lot of social content. So, you know, but this is just something different, to mix it up a little bit. I know you got to like I think something every couple of days and. You always need new content, so there might be an idea, and yeah, like I actually really think the merch could work for you because the brand is great. The problem is your average size is probably a little small like people are 50 bucks, 30 bucks. Itâs great, but itâs sort of hard to support. It is just the reality is itâs hard to advertise for something thatâs going to be a thirty dollars sale. So anyway, just a couple of ideas there. We want to keep moving on the ideas here. I want to have a couple more, so Iâm going to bear with me here.
RJ: All the ideas you have, Iâll take them.
Jesse: All right. All right. Well, the other one, this is also a preview of a future podcast here. Actually, we did talk a little bit about the free Google listings. Iâm not sure if youâre aware of free Google listings. Googleâs making a really big push. Theyâre going after Amazon here. In the Google search area, thereâs the shopping section that has been sort of ignored over time. But theyâre making a really big push that most of the products shown in there are now from free listings. So thereâs a paid component, but it used to be one hundred percent paid. The only way to get in Google shopping before was you had to pay for Google shopping ads, and they would place you there. Now theyâve opened it up. Itâs called Google Free Listings. Thereâs a couple of options for you there. The hard version and the free version is you can go inside of şÚÁĎĂĹ. Thereâs a Google product feed, which isnât that hard to do by itself. But youâve got to go to Google, and you go to a place called the Google Merchant Center, and you upload, and you connect. You can do it if you can stick to it. But you will definitely have an error. There will be some sort of error. Youâre going to have to figure it out. I just want to warn people that itâs not magic. If you do want the magic area, check out our partner Kliken. Theyâre the ones that run the Google shopping, the Google Smart Shopping ads. Itâs in beta right now. By the time this podcast goes live, itâs ten dollars a month. But they manage the whole process of getting you approved and all the little errors. Google is going to want a lot of things from you. They want a lot of information. They help guide that. And itâs ten bucks a month to keep this feed active. Theyâre doing this, itâs going to be twenty bucks in the future. So once youâre out of the situation, weâre in. But anyway, itâs more of an easy button, but it is ten bucks. So I recommend that because I was just on a call with them a little bit, so Iâm not sure how much Iâm supposed to share, sorry Google. But like right now, thereâs great visibility in this section because not all stores have done this yet. So, people, itâs when things are new, theyâre really good for like six months or a year. And then everybody gets in and figures it out. Itâs OK. This is one of those times where there are a lot of free clicks in this section. I would strongly recommend getting that. The product names are more important here, though, and the descriptions, because people are necessarily searching for the Ultimate Five might be searching for comic books with people of color as the main characters. I donât know the search terms like itâs going to be not a brand name. Itâs going to be broader. Just kind of keep that in mind.
RJ: Yeah, Iâm going to get on that ASAP.
Jesse: Now is the time. Like in a year or two everybody will have done this already and there wonât be as much kind of free traffic on that.
Richard: Itâs a great point in two different ways. When you get an early and a lot of these new functionalities that Facebook or Google or any of these people do, itâs kind of a double when you get the win in that youâre one of the first people to do it. And so thereâs not as many other people that youâre competing with it, but also youâre getting the win because not that I claim to know all the algorithms by any mean means, but itâs very obvious by anyone who just pays attention when a new feature rolls out. If youâre participating in a new feature, they want as much data as they can get on it. So theyâre pushing it even more. So, again, I donât know the particulars. Not like youâre going to maybe be an Internet millionaire overnight or anything. Iâm not trying to claim anything for you, but itâs two reasons to kind of move early and some of these type situations like this.
Jesse: There was a podcast on it where we gave kind of directions on the hard version. We are going to the easy version. Itâs in beta right now, and itâs coming very, very soon. So anyway, I just happen to have a little I get to peek behind the curtain, so I know whatâs coming. So we got that. You mentioned well, you didnât say it by name, but you hinted at Amazon and Amazon, Etsy. So you might be in Etsy because you are a creator. Right. So this is potentially something that you might consider Etsy or other marketplaces for. So I donât know if youâve looked into those. Have you checked out of the marketplaces?
RJ: Yeah, both, actually. Theyâre both OK. All right. Book itself is not on Etsy, but the worksheets are so heavily on both platforms.
Jesse: Yeah, OK. Youâre already ahead of my tips here. So thatâs a good sign. And OK, so youâre on Amazon. The problem with Amazon is that you canât get emails necessarily. So hopefully, thereâs something in the book that if they sign up for whatever your free offers are that you could you want to get that email from because you donât make as much money from Amazon even though the sales are easy. Maybe others I donât know if thereâs any other marketplaces that I can think of. Then you get Teachers Helping Teachers; I donât know if youâve checked them out, I might be messing up the name. But anyway, just some other resources for yourself. Richie, any tips, other tips. You were saying these were the kind of things we had noticed prior to the call.
Richard: Not really any tips in per se, because I can already tell Iâm going to stay in contact with the RJ and I want to want to help you in quite a few ways here. But more, I just am super excited to have met you for multiple reasons. We talked earlier — representation matters. And so you get to check a bunch of boxes for us. One, we want to do all we can to help merchants, and youâre a merchant representing as a merchant. We got BLM going on right now, and youâre coming on as a black man whoâs trying to empower not just black children, which is very important, but it sounds as if all children and youâre really looking out for everybody, but particularly putting a spotlight on that. So thatâs fantastic. Just in general, back to Jesseâs point, when weâre talking about kids at home right now like empowerment is such an encompassing topic, we keep thinking, well, how are we going to teach our kids? Sometimes just empowering our kids to go and try things on their own and learn things on their own could be more important than actually what theyâre learning, because over time, thatâs going to be exponential. If theyâre empowered and go out and try to do things and go with the Ultimate Five Squad, that is just a group of ordinary kids that got together and by choice decided to do this. I just look forward to seeing how we can help you in any way possible. And like I said, Iâll be keeping in touch with you.
RJ: Thank you so much. Thank you.
Jesse: Awesome. All around. I canât do better than what Ritchie just said, so Iâm going to leave him. Yeah, thatâs good stuff. So, you know, I think for people listening, though, if youâre interested in the Ultimate Five Squad, so itâs ultimatefivesquad.com.
RJ: Yeah. So ultimatefivesquad.com. And then on Instagram and on Facebook, itâs the ultimate5squad.
Jesse: Got it. Yeah. You have to do that. I totally understand because you know, people typing the wrong thing, theyâre going to the wrong place.
Richard: So weâll put that in the show notes to get a slight little dip in your audio there. So you want to make sure.
Jesse: There are some free downloadables there, too? So if youâre thinking, OK, this is great, you can check it out. There are those worksheets there for free. Check it out. Now, you know, youâre going to be on RJâs email list just FYI, because we were talking about MailChimp, but I think itâs a small price to pay.
RJ: We donât bombard people with gimmicky stuff. Itâs things that youâre going to want your kids to have. So itâs empowerment worksheets. Itâs a good thing. I think your kids are going to fall in love with the characters, with the story. But what the feedback is so far and so itâs down the line. We say, hey, weâve got
Jesse: Yeah, I hear you. Got to be very careful with your emails, but Iâm sure youâll do it in a very right way. Iâm not worried about it. Well, RJ, itâs been great talking with you. Richie, any last thoughts here before we go?
Richard: I know weâve got another podcast coming up here recording shortly, so I got to quickly get my downloadable worksheets and get on his list and then also get the book also.
RJ: Yeah. You guys have kids, so I would love for them to have a copy.
Jesse: Awesome.
Richard: Weâll be getting it.
Jesse: Hang on in the end, and weâll chat afterward.