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Explore every episode of the podcast The AgencyHabits Podcast

Dive into the complete episode list for The AgencyHabits Podcast. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
Are You Calculating Your Agency's Profits Correctly?15 Jul 202500:14:16

In this episode, Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim tackle one of the most confusing aspects of agency financials: how to properly calculate profitability. They break down the critical difference between SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings) and EBITDA, explaining why these metrics can paint vastly different pictures of the same business.

Using concrete examples and spreadsheet walkthroughs, they demonstrate how owner salary calculations can dramatically impact reported profitability margins…sometimes swinging from 15% to 40% depending on how compensation is structured. This episode is essential for any agency owner who wants to understand their true financial performance and how acquirers evaluate businesses.

You'll learn why a "normalized" view of profitability matters, how replacement cost thinking changes valuation conversations, and why scale affects the relationship between owner compensation and overall margins.

Key Moments
1. Defining SDE vs. EBITDA and why the distinction matters for agency owners
2. Breaking down a sample P&L to show real-world profitability calculations
3. How owner salary manipulation can inflate or deflate EBITDA percentages
4. The "replacement cost" framework for normalizing owner compensation
5. Why these calculations become less volatile as agencies scale to $10M+ revenue
6. How Barrel Holdings adjusts for owner salary when evaluating acquisitions
7. The importance of understanding your true role and replacement value

Real Talk Takeaways
1. SDE includes owner compensation; EBITDA doesn't - know which metric you're using
2. Owner salary swings can create 10-20% margin differences in smaller agencies
3. Replacement cost thinking is key…what would you pay someone to do your job?
4. Scale reduces volatility - larger agencies see smaller percentage swings from owner comp
5. Normalize before you negotiate. Buyers will adjust your numbers anyway
6. 40% "profit" might actually be 25% EBITDA when properly calculated
7. Context matters. Highly involved owners need higher replacement cost estimates

Timestamps
00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits
00:18 – Why profitability discussions often aren't apples-to-apples comparisons
00:44 – Defining SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings) vs. EBITDA
01:12 – The importance of understanding these different calculation methods
01:59 – Walking through concrete spreadsheet examples
02:11 – Sample P&L breakdown: $1M revenue agency with $500K COGS
02:35 – What constitutes COGS in an agency business
03:10 – SG&A expenses and how owner salary factors into calculations
03:56 – SDE calculation: adding back owner salary for 40% margin
04:26 – Why owners might take distributions instead of fixed salaries
05:18 – EBITDA scenarios: how different owner salaries create different margins
06:11 – The "too low" scenario: $65K salary inflating EBITDA to 33.5%
06:40 – The "too high" scenario: $250K salary depressing EBITDA to 15%
07:48 – How Barrel Holdings normalizes owner salary for fair comparisons
08:23 – The replacement cost framework for owner compensation
09:27 – Adjusting EBITDA calculations based on realistic replacement costs
10:38 – Why Barrel Holdings requires 15% EBITDA using their calculation method
11:22 – How these calculations change dramatically at scale
11:56 – $10M revenue example: why percentages converge at larger scale
12:57 – When owner salary becomes negligible in large, structured agencies
13:26 – The importance of understanding owner role and replacement cost
13:43 – Practical advice for agency owners on calculating true profitability

Notable Quotes
"It's not always clear what they mean. Are they talking about their profit after paying them a market salary? Are they excluding their comp? Is that inflating their numbers?"
"We're really thinking about what is the replacement cost of that person and making sure that's accurately reflected in the EBITDA."
"Just because your SDE is 400K doesn't mean you're pocketing 400K because there is something to be paid to Uncle Sam."

Links & Resources
Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/
Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/
AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/
AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/
Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/
Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

Our Approach to Agency Acquisitions: Valuation Drivers and Deal Breakers15 Jul 202500:20:27

In this episode of Agency Habits, Peter Kang interviews Sei-Wook Kim on the inner workings of agency acquisitions and valuations at Barrel Holdings. They break down the exact criteria they use when evaluating whether to acquire an agency and explain the logic behind their valuation framework: what increases the price, what brings it down, and how seller goals shape the final deal.

If you're building an agency with the intention to sell (now or years from now), this episode will help you understand how experienced buyers actually think: what they're measuring, what red flags they catch fast, and what signals a business is built to last.

They also discuss the emotional side of selling, legacy, and the difference between cashing out and compounding long-term value.

Key Moments
1. Why Barrel Holdings pivots between building and buying agencies
2. The evolution of their acquisition criteria and "buy box" parameters
3. How specialization drives both defensibility and higher valuations
4. The critical importance of recurring revenue and client diversification
5. Why proprietary technology can actually hurt agency valuations
6. How seller motivations dramatically impact deal structure and pricing
7. The emotional side of agency sales and preserving legacy

Real Talk Takeaways
1. Recurring revenue and retention unlock higher multiples.
2. Agencies with clear positioning and playbooks stand out fast.
3. Client and lead source concentration are silent risks buyers notice immediately.
4. Founders who've stepped back (and trained successors) are more valuable.
5. Legacy matters. Some sellers will trade upside for story.

Timestamps
00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits
00:33 – Why buy versus build? The acceleration advantage of acquisitions
02:08 – Inside Barrel Holdings' "buy box" criteria: $2-10M revenue, 15%+ EBITDA
03:23 – How deal size and structure constraints shape acquisition strategy
03:41 – The power of specialization: why niche agencies win
05:14 – Platform plays: riding the growth wave of Shopify and Webflow
05:31 – Top value drivers: what makes agencies worth more
06:44 – The importance of predictable, recurring revenue streams
07:10 – Revenue consistency vs. growth: why stable beats volatile
08:20 – Client concentration red flags: the 15-20% danger zone
09:30 – How agency reputation manifests in organic deal flow
10:08 – Business development diversification: avoiding single-source risk
10:49 – Team retention, margin efficiency, and operational excellence
12:17 – The nuance of employee retention: performance vs. loyalty
12:55 – What's less important: proprietary tech and unsustainable growth
15:44 – How seller goals affect valuation and deal structure
17:14 – Risk pricing: why seller involvement impacts multiples
18:05 – The emotional side: legacy, brand preservation, and life circumstances
20:03 – Wrapping up: the complexity beyond pure numbers

Notable Quotes
"Consistency helps give us the confidence that future years will look like the past years."
"Specialization isn't just for SEO, it's your valuation strategy."
"High revenue with low margin? That's not scale, it's a red flag."
"Legacy isn't soft. It shapes how sellers price the future."
"The emotional story behind the numbers tells us more than the deck ever will." 

Links & Resources
Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/
Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/
AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/
AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/
Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/
Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

The Barrel Holdings Origin Story: Building a Portfolio of Agencies15 Jul 202500:37:32

In this inaugural episode, Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim share the unfiltered origin story behind Barrel Holdings. From their humble beginnings building table-based websites in college to growing a multi-agency portfolio serving CPG brands, startups, and enterprise clients, this conversation charts nearly two decades of lessons in agency building, client service, and entrepreneurial evolution.

They walk us through key inflection points: like quitting Wall Street, bootstrapping through Craigslist hires, launching Barrel, and ultimately spinning off multiple high-performing specialized agencies. 

You'll also get a behind-the-scenes look at their first acquisition and why they've committed to a long-term, compounding approach to holding company success.

Key Moments
1. How a student club and side hustle led to a full-time agency career
2. What triggered the shift from full-service to eComm & Shopify specialization
3. Why spinning off legacy clients into Vaulted Oak became a lightbulb moment
4. The strategic difference between launching vs. acquiring agencies
5. How handing off CEO roles created operational leverage and personal peace
6. Their investment thesis: small, durable, cash-flowing specialist agencies
7. Why "focus" is the most underrated agency growth strategy

Real Talk Takeaways
1. Cash flow is the new growth. The best agency is a durable one.
2. Don't cling to legacy clients, spin them off and build anew.
3. Leadership handoff works...if you prepare for it years in advance.
4. Platform plays (Shopify, Webflow) can be major growth engines.
5. A great operator is your biggest unlock post-acquisition.

Timestamps
00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits
00:35 – How Peter & Wook started freelancing in college
02:40 – Quitting Lehman to go full-time with Barrel
05:00 – The iPad-era boom and scaling through partnerships
07:09 – Betting early on Shopify & selling themes
09:30 – Launching Vaulted Oak to support legacy clients
12:00 – Webflow's rise & the BX Studio playbook
16:41 – Spinning up Bolster and appointing Barrel's new CEO
21:00 – Their first acquisition: the story of Catalog
26:00 – Inside the Barrel Holdings portfolio strategy
35:00 – Why long-term cashflow matters more than quick exits
37:56 – Building community and future plans for Agency Habits

Notable Quotes
"The power of focus became crystal clear the moment we handed off CEO to someone who could give 100%."
"We weren't tired or burnt out after 18 years. We wanted to go deeper."
"If the structure is right, the business runs better. Period."

Links & Resources
Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/
Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/
AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/
AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/
Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/
Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How We'd Generate Leads If We Started Our Agency Today12 Aug 202500:24:21

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim take listeners on a journey back to their agency's origins, sharing hard-won insights about building a business from scratch with limited connections and resources. They explore the strategies that helped them jumpstart Barrel 19 years ago, from leveraging personal networks to building lasting client relationships that compound over time.

The conversation covers everything from their early days doing pro bono work for nonprofits to developing systematic approaches for staying top-of-mind with past clients and building referral networks. They also discuss the importance of treating every client engagement, regardless of budget, as a premium experience that can lead to future opportunities.

Whether you're starting an agency from zero or looking to revitalize your lead generation, this episode offers actionable strategies for building sustainable business growth through relationships and consistent execution.

Key Moments

1. How accepting any paying work helped build their initial portfolio

2. Why treating free work like premium engagements pays dividends

3. Leveraging Korean-American nonprofits and Columbia connections for early opportunities

4. How Silicon Alley networking opened doors to new partnerships

5. Creating mutually beneficial relationships with complementary agencies

6. How one satisfied client can multiply into multiple referrals over time

7. The weekly habit that saved their business during a revenue shortfall

8. Why aligning with growing tech platforms like Shopify creates tailwinds

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Every client is a marketing investment. Deliver premium experiences regardless of budget size.

2. Relationships compound over decades...people you meet today may become major clients years later.

3. In-person connections still matter. Virtual networking can't fully replace face-to-face relationship building.

4. Consistency beats intensity. Regular weekly outreach trumps sporadic burst efforts.

5. Diversify your lead sources…don't put all eggs in one referral basket.

6. Documentation drives visibility. Invest time in case studies and sharing your work.

7. Platform timing matters! Getting in early with growing tech platforms can provide significant advantages.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:26 – The origin story: starting Barrel 19 years ago fresh out of college with no connections

02:18 – Strategic pro bono work: using nonprofit projects to access seasoned professionals

04:24 – Treating low-budget and pro bono clients with premium service as marketing investment

07:46 – The reality check: building networks takes years, not months

09:22 – The irreplaceable value of in-person relationship building

10:46 – Building referral networks with complementary agencies

15:05 – Systematic relationship maintenance: weekly outreach to past connections

19:40 – Platform partnerships: the Shopify success story and partnership team relationships

23:31 – The foundation principle: none of this works without excellent client delivery

Notable Quotes

"Just because somebody is paying you nothing or little doesn't mean you should give them a less than premium experience."

"The best form of marketing is a happy customer."

"If you start doing it when you need it, then it's probably too late at that point."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How Specialization Impacts Your Agency's Growth, Margins, and Valuation05 Aug 202500:16:08

In this episode, Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive deep into agency specialization and how narrowing focus has become a key driver of growth across their Barrel Holdings portfolio. From the evolution of Barrel's journey from generalist to CPG eCommerce specialists, to the strategic positioning of BX Studio as Webflow experts, they share practical insights on when and how to specialize.

They explore the trade-offs between being a full-service generalist versus developing deep expertise in specific verticals or capabilities. The conversation covers real-world examples of how specialization leads to stronger client relationships, higher margins, and better valuations - while addressing the practical realities of when to take work outside your niche.

You'll get actionable frameworks for identifying specialization opportunities, plus book recommendations from industry thought leaders who've shaped their approach to positioning and expertise development.

Key Moments

1. Defining specialization vs. positioning: internal expertise vs. external messaging

2. The generalist trap: why being everything to everyone limits impact

3. Barrel's evolution from investment bank + nail salon clients to CPG eCommerce focus

4. How platform specialization (Shopify) created competitive advantage

5. Adding vertical focus (CPG food & beverage) for deeper differentiation

6. BX Studio's Webflow expertise and potential hospitality vertical expansion

7. The business case for specialization: retention, pricing power, and margins

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Specialization builds trust. Clients choose agencies that have solved their exact problems before.

2. Pattern matching accelerates results. Deep expertise means faster problem-solving and better outcomes.

3. You can still take other work. Specialization is about positioning, not absolute exclusion.

4. Look for clusters in your client base. Your next specialization might already be hiding in your portfolio.

5. Small agencies need focus more than large ones. Scale can compensate for generalization, but boutique agencies need differentiation.

6. Specialized agencies command higher multiples. Better margins and client retention directly impact valuations.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:18 – Defining specialization: internal expertise vs. external positioning

01:47 – Why specialization matters: the generalist agency trade-offs

04:50 – Barrel's specialization journey: from generalist to CPG eCommerce experts

07:26 – Can you take work outside your specialization?

09:35 – Moving toward specialization: practical tips for generalist agencies

12:14 – Why Barrel Holdings focuses on specialized agencies

14:40 – Book recommendations for agency positioning and specialization

Notable Quotes

"Specialization is really about defining what you're gonna master as a business."

"There's bound to be clusters where you've done something more than once, and then from there, understanding how you can go deeper."

"Specialization offers a degree of durability and profitability that drives value."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

"The Business of Expertise" by David C. Baker

"Anyone, Not Everyone" by Corey Quinn

"Positioning for Professionals" by Tim Williams

 

Why & How to Prune Your Client Roster for Agency Growth02 Sep 202500:30:52

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive into one of the most challenging but necessary decisions agency leaders face: when and how to let go of clients. As agencies grow, not every client remains a good fit. Peter and Sei-Wook break down the key factors to consider when evaluating your client roster, from strategic alignment and profitability to relationship quality and payment behavior.

They share real-world examples from their own experiences at Barrel, including how shifting their focus to Shopify-led projects meant parting ways with clients on other platforms. They also tackle tough topics like dealing with unprofitable accounts, managing difficult client relationships, and knowing when to walk away from a high-risk engagement.

Whether you're struggling with client concentration, operational overload, or simply want to build a more intentional client portfolio, this episode offers a practical framework for making proactive, strategic decisions that support long-term agency health.

Key Moments

1. Why "pruning" your client list is essential for sustainable growth.

2. How to assess strategic fit using your Ideal Client Profile (ICP).

3. When to prioritize profitability over revenue.

4. Evaluating account expansion potential vs. dead-end relationships.

5. The role of relationship quality and access to decision-makers.

6. Red flags in client payment behavior and how to respond.

7. Managing operational load and protecting team morale.

8. Weighing the marketing value of a client (case studies, brand credibility).

9. Understanding risk factors like client concentration and legal exposure.

10. Knowing when to bow out of a project, even after it's started.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Not all revenue is good revenue. Unprofitable clients can drain resources and morale.

2. Strategic fit matters. Align your client roster with where you're going, not where you've been.

3. Payment behavior is a leading indicator of respect, and risk.

4. Protect your team. Difficult clients can cause burnout and turnover.

5. Sometimes the best business decision is to fire a client.

6. Leaders must own the tough calls. Don't push them down to the team.

7. Risk isn't always financial, reputational and legal risks can be just as damaging.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:19 – Why agencies need to regularly assess client fit

01:35 – The tree-pruning analogy for agency growth

01:56 – Factor #1: Strategic fit & Ideal Client Profile (ICP)

03:46 – Barrel's experience with platform fragmentation

04:45 – Factor #2: Gross margin & profitability

06:15 – The trap of "ossified" unprofitable relationships

07:31 – Factor #3: Account expansion potential

08:55 – How to allocate resources based on growth potential

10:18 – Factor #4: Relationship quality & access to decision-makers

12:19 – When bad behavior justifies ending a relationship

13:21 – Factor #5: Payment behavior & red flags

15:06 – Why agencies aren't banks—setting payment boundaries

17:32 – Factor #6: Operational load & team impact

20:43 – How to give feedback to high-maintenance clients

22:33 – The leadership decision to protect the team

23:41 – Factor #7: Case study & marketing value

25:28 – When you can't talk about the work (e.g., Apple)

26:38 – Factor #8: Risk (concentration, reputation, legal)

28:14 – Reputational risks and company values

29:26 – When to walk away from an oversold project

30:41 – Wrap-up: Making proactive decisions for growth

Notable Quotes

"They are the people that are paying you now and are supporting your business, but that doesn't mean they're the right fit for the next phase of your growth."

"Agencies are not banks. We're not here to lend unlimited credit to our clients."

"If you don't make the decision, it could cause burnout turnover. If you do make a quick decision, you can build a lot of trust."

"Not every client needs to be a case study, but every client should align with your values and operational sanity."

"Sometimes it's better to bow out and take the hit immediately versus a much bigger problem down the road."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

10 Essential Habits for Running a Successful Agency26 Aug 202500:30:57

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive into the core habits that have driven their agencies' success over the years. From structured team reviews and client communications to proactive outreach and financial discipline, they break down 10 essential routines (plus a few bonus ones) that help agencies improve continuously, stay aligned, and grow sustainably.

Peter and Sei-Wook share personal stories and practical advice on implementing habits like After Action Reviews, weekly biz dev meetings, monthly newsletters, and quarterly business reviews. They also explore how these habits compound over time, strengthen culture, prevent problems, and unlock new opportunities.

Whether you're a solo operator or leading a team, this episode offers an actionable framework to build consistency, accountability, and resilience into your agency's DNA.

Key Moments

1. How After Action Reviews turn project learnings into process improvements.

2. Why weekly business development meetings keep the pipeline full and the team aligned.

3. The role of monthly all-hands meetings in celebrating wins and maintaining morale.

4. How consistent weekly outreach emails can lead to multi-million dollar opportunities.

5. Using monthly newsletters to stay top-of-mind with clients and partners.

6. The importance of weekly client account check-ins to anticipate issues and opportunities.

7. How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) deepen client relationships and unlock growth.

8. Why "mining the bottom"—addressing underperformers—is crucial for culture.

9. The value of client feedback surveys in improving service and offering.

10. Setting and reviewing annual and quarterly goals to drive focused growth.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Habits compound. Small, consistent actions lead to big results over time.

2. Debrief everything. Learning from wins and losses prevents repeat mistakes.

3. Outreach is everything. Relationships built today can save your business tomorrow.

4. Culture is performance. Tolerating underperformers drags everyone down.

5. Goals need rhythm. Annual vision without quarterly check-ins is just a wishlist.

6. Cashflow isn't optional. Weekly finance reviews prevent surprises.

7. Always be recruiting. Even if you're not hiring, stay connected to talent.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:52 – Habit #1: After Action Reviews

02:32 – Habit #2: Weekly Business Development Meetings

04:39 – Habit #3: Monthly Team Meetings

06:46 – Habit #4: Weekly Outreach Emails

09:19 – Habit #5: Monthly Newsletter Emails

11:16 – Habit #6: Weekly Client Account Check-Ins

13:37 – Habit #7: Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)

16:58 – Habit #8: Mining the Bottom (Performance Management)

19:21 – Habit #9: Client Feedback Surveys

21:02 – Habit #10: Annual & Quarterly Goal Setting

23:55 – Bonus Habits: Weekly Finance Reviews, Org Chart Reviews, Always Be Recruiting, Utilization & Forecasting

31:07 – Wrap-up and where to learn more

Notable Quotes

"A lot of what makes agencies successful are not just one-off big actions, but consistent activities that compound over time."

"The weekly outreach email is a multi-million dollar habit."

"If you're allowing underperformers to continue, you're dragging the entire culture down."

"Reserves aren't for funding losses, they're for timing mismatches."

"Goals without a plan are just a wishlist. You have to work backwards from the number."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How Much Cash Should Your Agency Keep on Hand?19 Aug 202500:24:17

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim talk about the critical yet often overlooked topic of cashflow management for agencies. They share lessons on balancing profitability with liquidity, designing client contracts to align cash inflows with outflows, and determining the right amount of cash reserves to weather uncertainties.

From the pitfalls of 50/50 payment structures to the advantages of retainer-based models, Peter and Sei-Wook explore practical strategies to avoid cash crunches. They also discuss the emotional and financial challenges of using reserves to sustain operations during downturns, the role of insurance and credit lines as safety nets, and how centralized cashflow management works in a multi-agency portfolio.

Whether you're a solo founder or managing multiple agencies, this episode offers actionable insights to build a financially resilient business.

Key Moments

1. Why a profitable P&L doesn't always mean money in the bank.

2. How lumpy payment structures can create cashflow nightmares.

3. Shifting to frequent, project-aligned invoicing to smooth cashflow.

4. Why retainers create positive cash conversion cycles.

5. How much cash to hold (1–6 months of expenses) and when to distribute profits.

6. The risks of over-relying on cash buffers to delay tough decisions.

7. Building granular cashflow projections to avoid insolvency.

8. Centralized finance strategies for portfolio businesses.

9. Insurance, credit lines, and owner investments as backup plans.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Profit isn't equal to Cash. Accrual accounting masks timing mismatches between revenue and actual payments.

2. Design payments like payroll…invoice frequently to mirror when work is done, not when projects end.

3. Retainers are KING. They provide float by collecting cash before incurring expenses.

4. Hoarding cash can mask operational inefficiencies.

5. Cut costs early. Delaying tough decisions burns reserves faster than expected.

6. Insure against disasters…legal liabilities can dwarf cash reserves overnight.

7. Credit Lines = Emergency use only. It is cheaper to use your own cash than pay high interest.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:52 – The disconnect between P&L profitability and bank balances

02:40 – How 50/50 payment structures create cash gaps

04:27 – Best practices: Frequent invoicing and expense matching

06:33 – Retainer models and the power of positive float

08:07 – Handling prepayments (don't treat them as instant profit!)

09:15 – How much cash to hold (1–6 months of expenses)

12:04 – The emotional dilemma: Using reserves to save jobs vs. facing reality

15:12 – The lifesaving role of granular cashflow forecasting

18:07 – Multi-agency cashflow: Centralized reserves and holding company strategies

20:06 – Insurance and credit lines as last-resort safeguards

23:41 – Final advice: Keep 1–6 months of cash, separate reserves from growth investments

Notable Quotes

"Cash is the lifeline of whether you can run your business day to day."

"On paper, you might have amazing profits, but the bank account tells a different story."

"If you're paying team members before clients pay you, you're playing with fire."

"Reserves aren't for funding losses, they're for timing mismatches."

"A lawsuit could tank not just your cash, but your entire business."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

A Lightweight Agency Partnerships Program That Actually Works01 Oct 202500:20:30

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive into the practicalities of building a partnerships program for resource-constrained agencies. They argue that you don't need a dedicated partnerships team to start seeing significant benefits from strategic alliances.

Peter and Sei-Wook outline a step-by-step, lightweight approach to identifying the right partners, from complementary agencies and tech platforms to fractional consultants. They explain how to build genuine relationships, properly vet potential partners to protect your reputation, and set up simple systems for tracking and incentives. The conversation also covers the critical mindset shift required, which is focusing on giving value first to build "relationship capital" rather than just chasing referral commissions.

If you've considered partnerships but feel overwhelmed by the complexity, this episode provides a clear, actionable framework to start small, stay consistent, and build a powerful network that drives high-quality leads and strengthens your agency's ecosystem.

Key Moments

1. Defining agency partnerships: The different types of partners and why they matter.

2. The case for a lightweight approach: How to start a partnerships motion without a dedicated lead.

3. Step one: How to strategically select your first 5-10 target partners.

4. Building real relationships: The importance of consistent touchpoints and going deep with a few.

5. Protecting your reputation: How to properly vet agency partners before making referrals.

6. Incentives simplified: A standard model for referral commissions and why trust matters more than money.

7. The "give first" principle: Why sending leads to others is the surest way to become top-of-mind.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Start small. Focus on building deep relationships with 5-10 key partners rather than managing a huge, shallow list.

2. Your reputation is on the line with every referral. Vet partners through small projects or client feedback before going all-in.

3. A standard, simple commission structure (like 10% of collected revenue for 12 months) keeps administration lightweight.

4. Track partnerships with simple tools like spreadsheets; you don't need complex software to get started.

5. The goal is a two-way street. You can't just ask for leads; you must actively send opportunities to your partners.

6. Keep your team in the loop. Visibility into partnerships ensures everyone can leverage these relationships in client work.

7. Success isn't just leads received; track the leads you send out, as this builds relationship capital for the future.

Timestamps

00:00 – Intro: The value of a lightweight partnerships program

01:05 – What types of partners should an agency consider?

02:00 – The first step: Defining and prioritizing a shortlist of partners

03:26 – Going deep: Building real relationships with key people

04:35 – Maintaining visibility: Cadence, events, and keeping your team informed

07:05 – The critical importance of vetting agency partners

08:21 – When partnerships go wrong: Protecting your reputation

09:42 – Incentives and commissions: Keeping the structure simple

12:32 – Tracking partnerships and measuring success

14:47 – The "give first" principle: Why sending leads is crucial

15:46 – How to manage partner capacity and have backups

16:36 – Key metrics to track for a partnerships program

18:19 – Unlocking the next level: What a mature program looks like

19:52 – Actionable first steps: Your targeted partner list and one-pager

Notable Quotes

"Start out defining who the partners could be... it doesn't need to be a huge list. Just thinking about the few, maybe five to 10 partners that are in your ecosystem." — Sei Wook Kim on starting with focus.

"You are putting your reputation on the line by recommending somebody, so it's not something to take lightly... no amount of money makes it worthwhile to jeopardize your reputation in this way." — Peter Kang on the stakes of vetting partners.

" Go deep, really understand the people at these partners. Spend time too, so that they understand what you do and how you can help them, and how they can help you." — Sei Wook Kim on building relationships one at a time.

" You can't just go around and be like, 'Hey, I'll pay you 10%, 15% if you give us a lead and then sign a bunch of those and then expect the leads to flow in.' It never quite works that way." — Peter Kang on mistakes of tracking leads.

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

Key Metrics for Agencies: What to Track for Better Decisions26 Sep 202500:20:20

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim cut through the noise of data overload to share the essential metrics every agency should track. Moving beyond fancy dashboards, they break down the handful of key performance indicators (KPIs) that truly drive informed decision-making at their portfolio agencies under Barrel Holdings.

Peter and Sei-Wook explain the critical difference between lag measures (reporting on the past) and lead measures (predicting the future), providing a clear framework for both. They dive deep into core financial metrics like revenue mix, gross margin, and EBITDA, and operational essentials like utilization and pipeline health. They also share practical advice on avoiding common pitfalls, like making hasty decisions based on unverified forecast data or tracking too many meaningless numbers.

Whether you're drowning in spreadsheets or flying blind, this episode offers a pragmatic, battle-tested approach to measuring what matters, so you can focus on growing a healthier, more profitable agency.

Key Moments

1. Why less is more: The danger of tracking everything and the power of a simplified dashboard.

2. Lag vs. Lead: Understanding the difference between historical reports and future forecasts.

3. Revenue 101: Why breaking down revenue into recurring vs. project and new vs. existing clients is crucial.

4. Gross Margin as a health check: What it says about your pricing and operational efficiency.

5. The story behind EBITDA: How to interpret SG&A costs and strategic investments.

6. Utilization deep dive: Why targets vary by role and how to forecast future capacity.

7. The art of the pipeline: Tracking leads, proposals, win rates, and converting it into a weighted revenue forecast.

8. Secondary metrics worth a glance: Accounts receivable aging, client concentration, and net revenue retention.

9. The human side: Why employee satisfaction and retention are leading indicators of business health.

10. The litmus test: How to know if a metric is worth tracking or just becoming "wallpaper."

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Data is a signal, not gospel. Never make a major decision based on a number without understanding the story behind it.

2. A signed contract doesn't equal instant revenue. A weighted pipeline that maps revenue to future months is essential for cash flow planning.

3. Utilization targets are not one-size-fits-all. They depend on role, seniority, and your agency's billing rates.

4. Profitability is a multi-layered game. You need to understand it at the project, client, and overall agency level.

5. The most important metric is the one you act on. If you're not having conversations or making decisions based on a KPI, stop tracking it.

6. Don't let perfect data paralyze you. A directional understanding of your forecast is better than no forecast at all.

7. Metrics should inform judgment, not replace it. Leadership is about interpreting the data and making the call.

Timestamps

00:00 – Intro: Cutting through the noise of agency metrics

00:15 – The "less is more" philosophy for agency dashboards

01:05 – Lag vs. Lead Measures: Defining historical and predictive metrics

01:20 – Lag Measure #1: Revenue (Recurring vs. Project, New vs. Existing)

02:07 – Why the recurring revenue mix is a key stability indicator

02:20 – Lag Measure #2: Gross Margin (Pricing & Operational Efficiency)

03:24 – Lag Measure #3: EBITDA (Understanding SG&A and strategic investments)

04:17 – Lag Measure #4: Utilization (Targets by role and discipline)

05:24 – What is a "good" utilization rate? (Spoiler: It depends)

05:40 – Shifting to Lead Measures: Forecasting the future

05:48 – Lead Measure #1: Forecasted Utilization (Avoiding capacity cliffs)

06:48 – The critical step: Verifying forecast data with your team before acting

07:23 – Why you must look beyond the next two weeks in your forecast

08:27 – Lead Measure #2: Pipeline (Leads, proposals, win rates, and value)

09:33 – The importance of tracking new work from existing clients

10:12 – How to build a "Weighted Pipeline" to forecast committed revenue

11:33 – The critical difference between bookings and recognized revenue

12:46 – How a signed mega-deal can still leave you in a cash flow drought

13:00 – How pipeline forecasts impact hiring decisions and gross margins

13:47 – Secondary Metrics: The supporting cast of data

14:04 – Accounts Receivable Aging: The cash flow reality check

14:28 – Client Concentration: Measuring your biggest risk

14:50 – Net Revenue Retention: The ultimate test of client growth

15:56 – Why employee satisfaction and retention are business health metrics

17:12 – Project & Client Profitability: Learning from past engagements

18:13 – The final word: If you don't act on it, don't track it

18:39 – The "wallpaper" test for metrics

19:33 – Finding the right cadence for each metric (weekly, monthly, quarterly)

19:52 – Wrap-up: Metrics inform judgment, they don't replace it

Notable Quotes

"It's very easy to go overboard, just start tracking everything you can... there's actually benefit to having less." – Peter Kang on simplifying your dashboard.

"Metrics can be lag measures... reporting on what happened in the past versus lead measures, which you're trying to project the future." – Sei Wook Kim on the two types of data.

"Gross margin... reflects how profitable are the projects that we're running. It speaks to operational efficiency." – Peter Kang on the story behind the number.

"Any of these things... it's making sure the data is correct before making any decisions on it." – Sei Wook Kim on the danger of unverified forecasts.

"A signed contract for a $500k project sounds great, but if it doesn't start for months, you still might be in a drought and be in trouble." – Peter Kang on the difference between bookings and cash flow.

"Metrics are... it shouldn't replace judgment. You have to look at this and decide is it telling you the right thing." – Sei Wook Kim on the role of leadership in interpreting data.

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

Why Agencies Lose Clients (and How to Stop It)24 Sep 202500:33:18

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive deep into one of the most painful but inevitable aspects of running an agency: client churn. Drawing from decades of experience building and scaling agencies, they break down the most common reasons clients leave—from poor onboarding and missed deadlines to unresponsive communication and misaligned expectations.

Peter and Sei-Wook share candid stories from their own agency, Barrel, including how they've lost clients due to everything from quality control issues and ego-driven interactions to market downturns and internal stakeholder changes. They also offer practical advice on how to strengthen client relationships, improve retention, and build an agency that's resilient to turnover.

Whether you're struggling with client satisfaction, fearing an upcoming renewal, or just want to build stickier relationships, this episode is packed with actionable insights to help you diagnose and fix the leaks in your client bucket.

Key Moments

1. Why client retention is the hidden engine of agency growth (and profitability).

2. How poor onboarding can kill a relationship before the work even begins.

3. The real cost of missed deadlines and unpolished deliverables.

4. Why unresponsive communication is often the first sign of trouble.

5. How to handle new stakeholders (and why it's like re-pitching your agency).

6. The danger of ego and defensiveness in client feedback conversations.

7. Why scope creep and surprise invoices erode trust, and how to prevent them.

8. How to demonstrate value so clients see you as an investment, not an expense.

9. What to do when market conditions shift or clients bring work in-house.

10. Why flexibility in pricing and process can save (or sink) a relationship.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Client acquisition is expensive. Retention is how you grow.

2. Communication isn't optional; it's the foundation of trust.

3. Speed matters. Slow responses signal you don't care.

4. Your ego is not worth losing a client over. Stay humble.

5. Value isn't what you deliver, it's what the client perceives.

6. Market conditions change. Your flexibility can be a differentiator.

7.Always assume other agencies are pitching your client. Prove your value daily.

Timestamps

00:00 – Intro: Why client retention matters

01:29 – The "leaky bucket" analogy for agency growth

02:20 – Reason #1: Poor onboarding & mismanaged expectations

04:17 – A real-life example of how fumbled onboarding cost a client

04:36 – Reason #2: Missed deadlines

05:29 – Reason #3: Poor quality control

07:16 – Reason #4: Unresponsive account management

09:33 – How silence can sabotage even "good" relationships

10:41 – Reason #5: New stakeholder changes

11:49 – How to treat new stakeholders like a new pitch

12:41 – Reason #6: Misaligned communication style & tone

14:03 – Why response speed can make or break trust

15:16 – Reason #7: Ego & defensiveness

16:21 – Reason #8: Cost creep without justification

18:30 – How to train your team on scope management

19:43 – Reason #9: Perceived lack of value

21:38 – Reason #10: Rigid pricing models

22:24 – A story about how rigidity cost a 7-figure opportunity

23:19 – Reason #11: M&A events (client or agency side)

25:43 – How an acquisition announcement led to immediate churn

26:46 – Reason #12: Market conditions & how to adapt

28:05 – Why you should never let receivables slide—even in a downturn

28:54 – Reason #13: Another agency offers a better value prop

30:25 – How a CEO's retreat led to a competitor sneaking in

31:02 – Reason #14: In-house resourcing

32:06 – How to stay valuable even when clients build internal teams

33:08 – Wrap-up: Retention is everything

Notable Quotes

"Client acquisition can get pretty expensive if you have to do it over and over again."

"The moment there's a mismatch in communication speed, you get instant erosion of trust."

"Your ego is not worth losing a client over. Stay humble."

"If you're fixated on a specific pricing model, clients will say, 'That doesn't work for us.'"

"Always assume other agencies are pitching your client. You have to prove your value every day."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How to Design Your Agency Org Chart for Sustainable Growth10 Sep 202500:23:45

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim pull back the curtain on one of the most critical yet often overlooked aspects of scaling an agency: organizational design. Starting from their own early days as a flat, "all-hands-on-deck" team, they trace the evolution of their org chart at Barrel as they grew, specialized roles, and built departments.

Peter and Sei-Wook discuss the telltale signs that it's time to add structure, from the need for career paths and mentorship to managing increasing project complexity. They share practical advice on how founders can be more deliberate about org design, including the powerful exercise of visualizing your current and future org chart.

They also get real about the challenges of scaling up and down, the pitfalls of over-specializing too early, and how to define leadership roles that match your agency's current stage of growth. Whether you're a solo founder feeling the strain or a growing team struggling with blurred lines, this episode offers a clear framework for building an intentional and effective organizational structure.

Key Moments

1. The early days: Why flat orgs work (until they don't).

2. The catalyst for change: Needing career paths, mentorship, and clear leadership.

3. How project complexity forces specialization and new roles (PMs, QA, Strategists).

4. The pitfall of over-specializing and bloating project teams without budget support.

5. The danger of "orphaned" roles that report directly to founders.

6. Step 1: Understanding your own strengths and weaknesses as a founder.

7. Step 2: The power of visualizing your org chart to identify gaps and stragglers.

8. Step 3: Using the org chart as a strategic tool for future hiring and growth.

9. The hard reality: Scaling your org down in times of revenue decline.

10. Defining leadership roles: "Player-Coach" vs. "General Manager" at different stages.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Your org chart is a strategic tool, not an HR formality. Visualizing it is the first step to intentional growth.

2. Not all specialization is good. Adding roles increases overhead; it must be supported by project budgets and volume.

3. Founders must learn to let go. The goal is to move from being a "player" to a "GM" who focuses on org design and hiring.

4. Business isn't always up and to the right. You must be willing to dismantle roles you worked hard to build when revenue contracts.

5. Hire leaders for the stage you're in. A "Director" at a 20-person agency needs to be hands-on, not just managerial.

6. Clarity is kindness. Clear role definitions, career progressions, and reporting lines build trust and accountability.

7. The ultimate leverage for a founder is designing an org where the right people are in the right seats.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:06 – Why org design is a recurring pain point for scaling agencies

00:39 – The early days: Fluid roles, flat structures, and everyone wearing multiple hats

01:33 – The turning point: Needing structure for career growth and mentorship

02:10 – How project complexity (bigger teams, more disciplines) forces org evolution

03:43 – The transition: Creating departments, defining roles, and establishing leadership

05:48 – The double-edged sword of specialization: Efficiency vs. overhead & silos

07:24 – The critical link between project budgets, team size, and agency margins

08:11 – The problem of "orphaned" roles that lack a clear reporting line

09:00 – Advice for founders: How to start being deliberate about org design

10:00 – Step 1: Map your current org chart to visualize reporting lines and gaps

11:00 – Step 2: Create a future org chart to plan hires and growth deliberately

12:22 – Integrating org design with performance management and career progression

13:29 – How org design gave the founders the confidence to exit day-to-day operations

14:17 – The hardest part: Letting go, trusting your team, and allowing them to learn

14:46 – The founder's evolution: From "player" to "General Manager"

16:05 – The reality check: Scaling your org down during stagnant or declining revenue

17:04 – The sunken cost fallacy: Why you can't cling to overhead roles in a downturn

19:22 – Strategies for contracting: Transparency, fractional roles, and re-consolidating hats

20:13 – Defining leadership: "Player-Coach" vs. "General Manager" at different scales

22:47 – How to think about a leader's utilization and their impact on the entire team

23:19 – Wrap-up: The importance of intentional org design

Notable Quotes

"The org chart was very flat... it became unclear who reports to whom, what everyone's responsibility is."

"Effective org design needs to also reflect the type of work that you do and the way that your project or engagement teams are constructed."

"Once we started using the org chart as a tool, it was really helpful... we started having discussions around job descriptions, who reports to who, and how we measure success."

"The first thing for a founder is understanding your own strengths and weaknesses."

"As the founder, the leader, you're really trying to get to a point where your main lever of impact is the org design and then recruiting the right people and holding them accountable to results."

"Business isn't always up and to the right... you may need to make changes in the business that are kinda the opposite of what you put in place."

"You almost have to kind of see the warning signs, make the decisive move to slim it down... you can't cling to the facade of the infrastructure you built."

"It's always a balance, but just understanding... how are they using their time and what's the best use of their energy."

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How We Exited Our Agency Without Selling It08 Oct 202500:16:09

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim pull back the curtain on one of their most significant career transitions: stepping away from the day-to-day leadership of their first agency, Barrel, without selling the business. They define this strategic move as a "role exit" which is a path less discussed but highly relevant for founder-led businesses.

Peter and Sei-Wook share the multi-year journey of identifying and grooming their successor, Lucas Ballasy, from designer to CEO. They detail the practical steps of mapping out their own responsibilities, filling skill gaps, and navigating the emotional challenges of letting go, even amid a major client crisis. The conversation also explores the profound shift in their daily lives post-transition and how this move unlocked their ability to fully focus on building Barrel Holdings.

For any agency founder wondering how to eventually step back without a full sale, this episode offers a candid, real-world blueprint built on trust, deliberate planning, and deep relationships.

Key Moments

1. Defining a "role exit" and how it differs from a traditional ownership sale.

2. Identifying the right successor: The qualities that made an internal candidate the perfect fit.

3. The multi-year grooming process: From a team member to CEO.

4. The essential first step: Mapping out all founder responsibilities to define the new role.

5. Navigating a major business crisis just before the leadership handoff.

6. The toughest part of letting go: Trust, patience, and resisting the urge to micromanage.

7. Life after the exit: The shift to a strategic focus and building Barrel Holdings.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. A "role exit" is a powerful alternative to selling your business, allowing you to retain ownership while freeing up your time.

2. The ideal successor is often already in your building. Look for proactive, low-ego team members hungry for more responsibility.

3. You can't hand off a messy role. You must first map out and systematize all your responsibilities to set the new leader up for success.

4. Transition timing is never perfect. You must trust your chosen leader to navigate challenges, even difficult ones you're handing over.

5. The emotional tie to your first business is immense. Letting go requires immense trust, which is built on a foundation of shared history and values.

6. Post-exit, your focus shifts from daily firefighting to quarterly and yearly strategic planning.

7. The magic formula for a successful transition combines strong personal relationships with deliberate, intentional planning for the future.

Timestamps

00:00 – Intro: What is a "Role Exit"?

01:08 – Why we decided to step back after 18 years

02:17 – Identifying and grooming our successor: The Lucas Story

03:58 – The practical steps: Mapping out our roles and responsibilities

06:24 – Navigating a crisis: Losing major clients right before the handoff

08:25 – Making the final call to transition amid uncertainty

09:31 – The toughest part: Letting go of control and trusting the new leader

10:10 – Life after the exit: The immediate shift in our daily reality

11:54 – How the transition unlocked our focus on Barrel Holdings

13:16 – The #1 lesson: Why deep relationships make a succession possible

15:02 – The final takeaway: Combine strong relationships with deliberate planning

Notable Quotes

"When people hear the term exit, they usually think about selling a business.  Our definition of exit was slightly different from that." — Sei Wook Kim on the definition of a founder's exit.

"The ideal successor is often already in your building. Look for proactive, low-ego team members hungry for more responsibility." — Peter Kang on identifying internal talent.

"Transition timing is never perfect. You must trust your chosen leader to navigate challenges, even difficult ones you're handing over." — Sei Wook Kim on navigating the handoff during a crisis.

"As founders in a business for more than a decade and a half, there's a lot of little things that we take for granted. Little activities that we were just doing on autopilot. We spent a lot of time kind of mapping out all these things." — Peter Kang on delegation of marketing, HR, and finance.

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

How Specialization Impacts Your Agency's Growth, Margins, and Valuation29 Oct 202500:16:08

Is your agency a "jack-of-all-trades, master of none"? In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim dive deep into the transformative power of agency specialization. They break down the critical difference between internal specialization and external positioning, and reveal why narrowing your focus is the ultimate growth accelerator for agencies under $10M in revenue.

Peter and Sei-Wook share Barrel Holdings' own journey from a generalist agency serving investment banks and nail salons to a specialized leader in the Shopify CPG space. They provide a clear-eyed view of the trade-offs between generalist and specialist models, and offer practical steps for any agency owner looking to transition. Learn how specialization leads to stronger client relationships, higher fees, better profitability, and ultimately, a significantly higher valuation.

For any agency owner tired of competing on price and hungry for durable, scalable growth, this episode is your roadmap.

Key Moments

1. Defining specialization vs. positioning: What you master vs. how you tell the world.

2. The generalist trade-off: Why variety can come at the cost of depth and client trust.

3. How specialization builds confidence and allows you to deliver more impactful results.

4. The Barrel story: From a broad generalist to a focused Shopify + CPG expert.

5. The reality check: How to balance your specialization goals with the financial needs of your business.

6. Identifying your "clusters": A practical method for finding your natural specialization.

7. Why Barrel Holdings' entire investment thesis is built on specialized agencies.

8. How specialization drives durability, profitability, and higher valuations.

9. Must-read books and follows to deepen your positioning expertise.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Specialization isn't just a marketing tactic. It's about building deep, internal expertise in a specific area.

2. Generalist agencies can succeed, but often only after reaching a significant scale that smaller shops can't match.

3. Clients pay a premium for confidence; a specialized agency inspires more trust than a generalist.

4. You can still take on work outside your specialization, but your external messaging must remain focused to attract your ideal clients.

5. To identify your natural path to specialization, identify the types of clients you've served repeatedly. Look at them as "clusters" in your existing client base.

6. For acquirers, a specialized agency signals higher retention, longevity, and profitability, which directly translates to a higher valuation.

7. The path to specialization is a journey, not a flip you switch. Start by leaning into what you're already good at.

Timestamps

00:00 – Intro: The power of agency specialization

00:16 – Defining specialization and positioning

01:43 – Why specialization is a game-changer for growth

01:56 – The pros and cons of generalist vs. specialist agencies

04:51 – Case study: Barrel's specialization journey

07:27 – How to balance focus with financial reality

09:21 – Tips for transitioning from a generalist to a specialist

11:54 – How specialization impacts agency valuation

14:31 – Top books and resources to master positioning

15:53 – Conclusion and final thoughts

Notable Quotes

"Specialization is really about defining what you're gonna master as a business... Positioning is really about how that mastery is expressed to the public."Peter Kang

"If you do specialize, does that mean you can't take on other work outside of that specialization?"Sei-Wook Kim on balancing focus with business reality.

"Our thesis for Barrel Holdings is that... we think specialization offers a degree of durability and profitability that drives value."Peter Kang

"Why would you say it's important for us to go down this path of specialized agencies versus just agencies in general?" — Sei-Wook Kim on Barrel Holdings' investment philosophy.

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

 

Recommended Reading & Follows

The Business of Expertise by David C. Baker

Anyone, Not Everyone by Corey Quinn

Positioning for Professionals by Tim Williams

Are You Calculating Your Agency's Profits Correctly?22 Oct 202500:14:16

Agency profitability isn't always what it seems. In this episode, Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim break down how to really evaluate your agency's profit. The hosts also talks about why two agencies reporting the same margins can mean totally different things.

They unpack the difference between EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) and SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings), showing how owner salaries, distributions, and "normalization" adjustments can completely change the story. Whether you're thinking about selling your agency or just want a clearer view of your true financial performance, this episode will help you see beyond surface-level numbers and benchmark your agency's health the way experienced acquirers do.

Key Moments

1. SDE vs. EBITDA — and why the difference matters when valuing your agency.

2. How owner salaries can inflate or deflate your real profit margins.

3. A walkthrough of sample P&L scenarios to illustrate EBITDA normalization.

4. What Barrel Holdings looks for when assessing profitability across agencies.

5. The "replacement cost" principle: paying yourself like someone you'd hire.

6. How agency size changes the EBITDA-to-SDE gap.

7. Why scaling up makes your profit story more consistent and credible.

8. The final takeaway: Normalize your numbers before you talk about valuation.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Many agency owners misread their profit margins. Clarity starts with defining how you calculate them.

2. SDE includes owner comp; EBITDA assumes you've paid yourself a market-rate salary.

3. If your EBITDA looks high, check whether your salary is unrealistically low.

4. For acquirers, EBITDA reveals the agency's true operating performance, not the lifestyle of the owner.

5. Always factor in the cost to replace yourself when analyzing profitability.

6. At scale, the gap between SDE and EBITDA narrows, showing a healthier business model.

7. Transparency in financials builds credibility with potential buyers and investors.

Timestamps

00:00 – Welcome to Agency Habits

00:18 – Why profitability discussions often aren't apples-to-apples comparisons

00:44 – Defining SDE (Seller's Discretionary Earnings) vs. EBITDA

01:12 – The importance of understanding these different calculation methods

01:59 – Walking through concrete spreadsheet examples

02:11 – Sample P&L breakdown: $1M revenue agency with $500K COGS

02:35 – What constitutes COGS in an agency business

03:10 – SG&A expenses and how owner salary factors into calculations

03:56 – SDE calculation: adding back owner salary for 40% margin

04:26 – Why owners might take distributions instead of fixed salaries

05:18 – EBITDA scenarios: how different owner salaries create different margins

06:11 – The "too low" scenario: $65K salary inflating EBITDA to 33.5%

06:40 – The "too high" scenario: $250K salary depressing EBITDA to 15%

07:48 – How Barrel Holdings normalizes owner salary for fair comparisons

08:23 – The replacement cost framework for owner compensation

09:27 – Adjusting EBITDA calculations based on realistic replacement costs

10:38 – Why Barrel Holdings requires 15% EBITDA using their calculation method

11:22 – How these calculations change dramatically at scale

11:56 – $10M revenue example: why percentages converge at larger scale

12:57 – When owner salary becomes negligible in large, structured agencies

13:26 – The importance of understanding owner role and replacement cost

13:43 – Practical advice for agency owners on calculating true profitability

Notable Quotes

"Oftentimes when we look at agencies and people talk about their profitability, it's really unclear how they're calculating it — it's not always apples to apples." — Peter Kang

"Are you talking about profit after paying yourself a market salary, or before? That one choice can swing your margins by 10–20 points." — Sei-Wook Kim

"If your agency says it's doing 40% profit, the first question to ask is: 40% of what? EBITDA or SDE?" — Peter Kang

"For acquirers, we always normalize the numbers — it's the only way to compare agencies fairly." — Sei-Wook Kim

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

The 6 Types of Agency Buyers: Who They Are and What They Really Want13 Oct 202500:32:07

In this episode, hosts Peter Kang and Sei-Wook Kim break down the complex landscape of agency acquirers. They map out the six primary types of buyers, from individual entrepreneurs to massive strategic networks, explaining the distinct motivations, financial structures, and long-term goals for each.

Peter and Sei-Wook provide a clear-eyed view of what it's like to sell to each buyer type, covering everything from highly leveraged individual purchases to the synergy-driven deals of strategic acquirers and the financial engineering of private equity platforms. They also delve into the nuances of management buyouts, employee ownership plans (ESOPs), and the "permanent capital" model of independent holding companies like Barrel Holdings.

For any agency owner considering an exit or simply curious about the acquisition game, this episode offers an essential guide to understanding who might be on the other side of the table and how to align your own goals with the right buyer.

Key Moments

1. Mapping the acquirer landscape: Why not all agency buyers are the same.

2. The Individual Buyer: Buying a job, financing with SBA loans, and the risks/rewards of high leverage.

3. The Strategic Buyer: The pursuit of synergy, higher multiples, and the reality of brand integration.

4. Private Equity Platforms: The roll-up strategy, multiple expansion, and operating on a 3-7 year timeline.

5. The Independent HoldCo: The "permanent capital" model focused on long-term compounding and decentralized operations.

6. Management Buyouts: A gradual ownership transfer to the next generation of internal leaders.

7. Employee Ownership (ESOPs): Preserving legacy and culture through employee stock ownership plans.

8. Where Barrel Holdings fits: Our philosophy on long-term ownership, autonomy, and sustainable cash flow.

Real Talk Takeaways

1. Individual buyers are often "buying a job," using heavy debt to acquire a business they can operate and grow themselves.

2. Strategic buyers pay premiums for synergy, but be prepared for your brand and culture to be absorbed into the larger entity.

3. Private equity is in the business of buying, growing, and selling within a fixed timeline—their incentives are tied to a future exit.

4. Independent holding companies offer a long-term, "permanent capital" alternative without the pressure of a fund-based exit.

5. A management buyout is a stable, gradual way to transfer ownership and reward the team that helped build the business.

6. ESOPs are less about maximizing price and more about preserving a company's legacy and rewarding its employees.

7. The right buyer for you depends entirely on your personal goals for the business's future, your desired involvement, and what you value beyond the check.

Timestamps

00:00 - Intro: The different worlds of agency buyers

01:08 - The individual buyer: Motivations and financial structure

03:36 - The seller's experience with an individual buyer

04:13 - The strategic buyer: synergy and higher multiples

06:32 - Risks of strategic integration and cultural mismatch

08:23 - The seller's role and earnout in a strategic acquisition

10:08 - Private equity-backed platforms and the roll-up strategy

12:12 - The private equity playbook and value creation

13:00 - The seller's experience and "second bite" with private equity

15:07 - The independent HoldCo: long-term capital and decentralized ops

17:44 - Flexibility for the seller in a HoldCo deal

19:23 - Management buyouts: transferring ownership internally

21:02 - Employee ownership (ESOPs): preserving culture and legacy

23:34 - How an ESOP works from the seller's perspective

25:27 - Barrel holdings' philosophy and what we look for

29:00 - Closing thoughts: Choosing the right buyer for your future

Notable Quotes

"Individual buyers... are in many instances buying a job. I think it might be somebody who worked in the corporate environment for many, many years... they wanted something where they had more control, autonomy over their time." — Peter Kang on the motivation of individual acquirers.

"Strategic buyers... think it's a one plus one equals three situation... they're willing to pay higher multiples. And usually, this might be another agency that's bigger or maybe even a network." — Peter Kang on why strategics pay a premium.

"Private equity firms... their job is to acquire, grow, and sell within a three to seven year time horizon. So their intent is to grow value and sell. And I think that's an important distinction here." — Sei Wook Kim on the private equity model.

"In a HoldCo... there's no fund, there's no investors, there's nothing that forces actions in one way or another." — Sei Wook Kim on the flexibility of independent holding companies.

"When agency owners think about selling, usually the focus is on, what's the price, what's the timing... But really, as we've illustrated today, there's so many different types of buyers. So it's understanding, what kind of buyer do you want to build a future with?"Sei Wook Kim on the importance of choosing the right partner.

Links & Resources

Peter Kang on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterkang34/

Sei-Wook on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiwookkim/

AgencyHabits Website: https://www.agencyhabits.com/

AgencyHabits on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agencyhabits/

Barrel Holdings Website: https://www.barrel-holdings.com/

Barrel Holdings LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/barrel-holdings/

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