Jason Swenk’s No-BS Agency Playbook: Stop Chasing Revenue, Fix the Foundation
Interview: How to Build a Profitable Agency You Actually Like Running (and Escape the Referral Trap)
Behind the Agency Podcast with Jason Swenk, Founder of Agency Mastery 360
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Prefer the highlights? Key takeaways and summary below.
TL;DR – Key Takeaways
Jason started an agency “by accident” in 1999, grew it for 12 years, then sold it after hitting 8 figures.
Worst advice: “Make a sub-brand for smaller clients.” Translation: do the same work for less money and get beat up more.
If you’re stuck under $1M–$2M, the problem usually isn’t tactics… it’s foundation + the owner being the bottleneck.
Two clarity exercises that actually work:
Fist-circle exercise: write what you hate outside the circle + what you love inside it.
Calendar highlight exercise: mark meetings red (draining) and green (energizing).
Qualification framework: NBAT = Need, Budget, Authority, Timing. Find it in the first 20–30 minutes or you’ll waste months.
Pricing mistake to avoid: don’t start low when asking budget. Jason uses a “reverse auctioneer” approach to force a real range.
Marketing mistake to avoid: leading with “about us” fluff (awards, process, office dogs). Lead with the prospect’s pain first.
Hiring lesson: don’t hire your twin. Hire for core values and fill your weak spots. Then coach with 1-3-1 so people stop depending on you.
Meet the Guest
Jason Swenk is the founder of Agency Mastery 360 and host of The Smart Agency Masterclass podcast (10+ years, never missed a week). He built and sold his own agency after growing it over 12 years, working with big names like LegalZoom, Lotus Cars, and Porsche. After selling, he tried the “I’ll go build an app” path and hated it—then found his real lane: helping agency owners build agencies that are profitable, scalable, and not miserable to run.
Episode Summary
1. Accidentally starting an agency (and learning the hard way)
Jason’s story is peak agency-world chaos in the best way.
He graduated college, took a corporate job at Arthur Andersen, hated it, and made a fake band + website as a joke. That site got attention, then people started asking him to design websites… and suddenly he had an agency.
He didn’t even know what an invoice was at first. He just kept learning by getting punched in the face repeatedly (like most founders do).
2. The main tension: referral growth feels good… until it turns on you
Jason nailed the trap a ton of agencies fall into:
Referrals bring you work. Then you hire to handle work. But the work is the same price (or worse), so you add stress without adding profit. And eventually you start making less money while working more.
Jason hit this around $2M and flat-out hated his agency. His wife basically called it out: “You’re miserable—why don’t you shut it down and get a job?”
That moment forced clarity.
“Our business was really kind of based on referrals, which aren’t scalable… and I just hated the agency.”
3. Their unique way of solving it: get clarity, then rebuild your role
Jason’s core point: most agencies don’t have a growth problem. They have a founder-role problem.
You can’t scale past the owner’s capacity, skill set, and tolerance for chaos.
So he did the uncomfortable work: figuring out what he hated, what he loved, and what he needed to stop doing.
4. Framework, method, or mental model
Here are the key models Jason laid out:
A) The “Circle” clarity exercise (simple, brutal, effective)
Grab paper. Put your fist on it. Draw a circle around your fist.
Spend 30–40 minutes writing everything you hate outside the circle.
Then write what you love inside the circle.
This is how he realized he liked:
coaching/mentoring the leadership team (not everyone)
setting direction
building key relationships
…and disliked the stuff that was draining him (project management, HR, account management, etc.)
B) The calendar red/green audit
Print your last 2 weeks of calendar
Highlight meetings:
Red = sucked the life out of you
Green = gave you energy
Then use that to decide what to delegate/hire for.
C) “The 3 Whos” (hard decisions agencies avoid)
Who do you need to hire?
Who do you need to get rid of? (painful, but real)
Who do you need to become to level up?
Jason’s opinion (that I agree with): the owner is usually the bottleneck, but it’s easier to blame the market than fix your own role.
D) Sales qualification: NBAT
Need: do they need what you do?
Budget: do they have the money?
Authority: can they decide?
Timing: is this real now?
He says you should find this out in 20–30 minutes, otherwise you’ll waste months.
E) The “reverse auctioneer” budget move
Instead of anchoring low (“Is your budget $1k or $500k?”), he lists ranges from high to low to avoid dragging the prospect toward the smallest number.
F) Foot-in-the-door offer
Stop giving away strategy for free. Sell a paid “first step” (blueprint/roadmap/mind map). It qualifies the client and increases odds they buy bigger work later.
G) 1-3-1 leadership coaching
When someone brings a problem:
1 problem
3 options they see
1 recommendation they choose
Then they run with it.
That’s how you stop being the “decision vending machine.”
5. Common mistake or ‘cringe’ moment
Jason called out two common agency cringes:
Marketing that leads with the agency: awards, process, team photos, office culture, “how many coffees we drink,” etc.
His take: nobody cares (except you and maybe the dog). Lead with the prospect’s problem.
Hiring your twin: founders hire someone who thinks like them, then wonder why operations still suck.
You don’t need a clone. You need coverage.
Also: he had a painful example of losing a deal because he didn’t ask budget and pitched $20–30k to a giant that expected ~$300k. That’s a brutal but common lesson.
6. Where the founder/leader still belongs
Jason’s “graduation path” is basically:
Founder → accidental do-everything operator → intentional CEO who:
defines direction
builds leaders
creates the right acquisition + qualification system
owns key relationships
stops doing work that drains them
And he made a spicy point I liked:
If your revenue drops but your profit and happiness jump, you might be winning.
“It’s not always about top line revenue… I want everyone to be profitable and do the things they love doing.”
7. Hiring, scaling, or process lessons
Jason’s hiring POV is very “grown-up agency”:
Start with self-awareness: what are you terrible at?
Don’t “fix” your weakness by forcing yourself to become good at it. Hire for it.
Hire by core values, not just skills.
He gave a clean example: he hired a salesperson from a bigger agency, but that person wasn’t resourceful (they were used to lots of support). In a leaner environment, they failed.
Then: set goals, communicate constantly, get out of the way, and coach leaders (don’t solve every problem for them).
Notable Quotes
“It’s not always about top line revenue.”
“There’s no such thing as a bad agency client. There’s only a bad prospect or a bad process.”
“Most agencies are trying to go after anybody and everybody.”
“You do not need to hire your twin.”
Learn More / Get in Touch
Visit → agencymastery.io
Podcast → The Smart Agency Masterclass (2x/week)
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