I’ve read hundreds of business books over the years. Some had big ideas but little execution. Others were full of tactics but no clear strategy. This one hits both.

Sell Like Crazy by Sabri Suby is a tactical field manual for anyone serious about building a predictable, scalable customer acquisition machine. This post summarizes the key takeaways and highlights the parts that stuck with me the most—things I’ve started applying or now see differently.

Here’s my belief:

If you get one or two actionable ideas from a good book, that’s rare.

Most of us can’t remember a book we read two years ago.

That’s why I started summarizing my favorites.

The Hard Truth About Business Success

Suby doesn’t sugarcoat it:

96% of businesses fail within 10 years.

And 95% never hit $1 million in sales.

The difference isn’t the product—it’s the selling of the product.

“The money in business isn’t in your product or service, it’s in the selling of your product or service.”

Ken’s Note:

This hit home. I’ve seen great businesses die because they couldn’t consistently bring in customers.

The 4% Rule: Focus on Revenue-Producing Activities

Suby uses the 80/20 principle to identify where your time should go. Delegate or eliminate the 80% of tasks that don’t move the needle, and focus on the top 4% that drive 64% of your revenue.

Key activities include:

  • Writing compelling offers and sales copy
  • Writing compelling offers and sales copy

  • Shooting videos, hosting webinars
  • Shooting videos, hosting webinars

  • Building sales funnels
  • Building sales funnels

  • Strategic planning and partnerships
  • Strategic planning and partnerships

    “ As the owner, your number one responsibility is to sell. ”

    Ken’s Note:

    This is where many small business owners get it wrong. They think their job is doing the work. It’s not. It’s creating systems to sell the work.

    Reminds me of the Ken Griffin quote “If we're all going to eat, someone's got to sell.”

    The Eight-Phase Selling System

    1. Understand and Identify Your Dream Buyer

    Before you sell, you need to know exactly who you’re selling to—and what keeps them up at night.

    Suby calls this your Power 4%, the segment of the market most likely to buy. Research tools like Facebook Groups, Reddit, and AnswerThePublic.com help uncover:

  • Where they spend time
  • Where they spend time

  • What they fear
  • What they fear

  • What they dream about
  • What they dream about

  • What language they use
  • What language they use

    “Enter the conversation already taking place in the customer’s mind.”

    Ken’s Note:

    The best marketing I’ve ever seen sounds like it was written by the customer themselves.

    2. Create the Perfect Bait (High-Value Content Offer)

    Don’t start with a sales pitch. Start with a solution to a pressing problem.

    HVCO examples:

  • Free reports or checklists
  • Free reports or checklists

  • Short, specific videos
  • Short, specific videos

  • Diagnostic quizzes or tools
  • Diagnostic quizzes or tools

    Headline examples:

  • “X Ways to Achieve [Desirable Thing] Without [Painful Thing]”
  • “X Ways to Achieve [Desirable Thing] Without [Painful Thing]”

  • “How to Eliminate [Frustration] Without [Common Mistake] in Just [Timeframe]”
  • “How to Eliminate [Frustration] Without [Common Mistake] in Just [Timeframe]”

    Ken’s Note:

    Most lead magnets fail because they’re either too generic or too obvious. This phase reminded me: solve something urgent, not just interesting.

    3. Capture Leads and Contact Details

    Your opt-in page should be laser-focused:

  • A bold, benefit-driven headline
  • A bold, benefit-driven headline

  • Curiosity bullets
  • Curiosity bullets

  • Simple form
  • Simple form

  • Strong visual
  • Strong visual

    Your customer list is the only audience you truly own.

    4. The Godfather Strategy

    Make an offer so good they’d feel stupid saying no.

    Checklist:

  • Clear reason for the offer
  • Clear reason for the offer

  • Strong value stack (benefits > features)
  • Strong value stack (benefits > features)

  • Bonuses and scarcity
  • Bonuses and scarcity

  • Iron-clad guarantee
  • Iron-clad guarantee

    “If the offer and the guarantee don’t keep the founder up at night, they’re not strong enough.”

    Ken’s Note:

    This forced me to ask: Is my offer 10X better than the price, or am I just hoping the customer “gets it” on their own?

    5. Drive Traffic

    Once your offer and funnel are in place, then you pay for traffic:

  • Google Ads
  • Google Ads

  • Facebook/Instagram
  • Facebook/Instagram

  • YouTube, TikTok, Reddit
  • YouTube, TikTok, Reddit

    “ Your ad has one job: sell the click .”

    Ken’s Note:

    I’ve wasted money in the past trying to sell the whole thing in the ad. Suby’s framework makes you rethink each step.

    6. Nurture with the Magic Lantern Technique

    This is about warming up leads with education and value before asking for the sale.

    Steps:

  • Map the journey from pain to result
  • Map the journey from pain to result

  • Deliver educational content along the path
  • Deliver educational content along the path

  • Build trust with each message
  • Build trust with each message

    Most businesses ask for marriage on the first date.

    7. Sales Conversion

    Suby’s “Sell Like a Doctor” framework:

  • Diagnose the problem (don’t pitch yet)
  • Diagnose the problem (don’t pitch yet)

  • Prescribe the solution
  • Prescribe the solution

  • Present the Godfather offer
  • Present the Godfather offer

    Also includes a 17-step sales message formula with:

  • Attention hooks
  • Attention hooks

  • Emotional pain points
  • Emotional pain points

  • Social proof
  • Social proof

  • Urgency and guarantees
  • Urgency and guarantees

    8. Automate and Multiply

    Once the system works, scale it:

  • Automate email follow-ups
  • Automate email follow-ups

  • Scale paid ads
  • Scale paid ads

  • Improve each step with data
  • Improve each step with data

    Ken’s Note:

    This is where you stop guessing and start compounding. Small improvements at each phase = big results over time.

    The Power of Email Marketing

    Don’t sleep on email.

  • $1 invested returns $44
  • $1 invested returns $44

  • You own the list
  • You own the list

  • Automations sell 24/7
  • Automations sell 24/7

    Ken’s Note:

    Social platforms change. Your email list is an asset. This reminded me to double down on it.

    Final Takeaways

  • You’re not a business owner. You’re a marketer.
  • You’re not a business owner. You’re a marketer.

  • Your success isn’t about traffic—it’s about your offer.
  • Your success isn’t about traffic—it’s about your offer.

  • The real money is in follow-up and automation.
  • The real money is in follow-up and automation.

  • Paid ads are not a gamble. They’re an investment with math behind them.
  • Paid ads are not a gamble. They’re an investment with math behind them.

  • Value first. Sales later. Trust leads to transactions.
  • Value first. Sales later. Trust leads to transactions.

    This book isn’t about chasing hacks. It’s about installing a system.

    Not for the lazy. Not for dabblers.

    But if you want predictable growth, this framework delivers.

    If you liked this summary, I’ll be doing more just like it—pulling key takeaways from books that have had a real impact on how I think and operate.

    Follow if you want more. Or better yet—go apply one thing from this post today.