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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this high-energy episode of The Level Up Podcast, host Paul Alex sits down with 25-year-old entrepreneur Seve Ortale, who transformed from receiving 600 consecutive rejections to building a multi-six-figure passive income stream in credit card processing. (02:12) Ortale shares his journey from a failed e-commerce venture to becoming an ISO owner in just two years, demonstrating the power of persistence and strategic pivoting in entrepreneurship. (23:05) The conversation explores the massive opportunity in payment processing as one of 2025's biggest blue-ocean markets, with practical insights on building $20K-$50K monthly in truly passive income. (01:00)
Host of The Level Up Podcast, which recently achieved #1 ranking in business on Apple Podcasts with over 4 million downloads. Paul is a serial entrepreneur who transitioned from corporate sales to building multiple successful ventures including ATM businesses and digital marketing companies.
A 25-year-old entrepreneur from Nashville, Tennessee who went from 600 consecutive business rejections to building a multi-six-figure residual income stream in payment processing. He transitioned from failed e-commerce ventures to owning his own ISO (Independent Sales Organization) in under two years, now generating $25-30K monthly in passive income while mentoring others through his coaching program.
Seve Ortale experienced 600 consecutive rejections when starting in payment processing, but this rejection became his foundation for success. (16:50) His wrestling background taught him mental toughness, and he realized that if a peer could make $25-30K monthly, so could he. The key insight is that rejection isn't personal failure—it's market education. Each "no" taught him what didn't work until he discovered that providing value beyond just cost savings was the breakthrough. Practical Application: Track your rejections as data points rather than failures, and use each one to refine your approach until you find what resonates with your target market.
Ortale's initial approach of simply offering to "save money" failed repeatedly because every competitor used the same pitch. (17:53) His breakthrough came when he shifted to identifying specific operational improvements, like replacing handwritten tickets with handheld devices and kitchen printers. This approach demonstrated tangible value before discussing pricing. The lesson is that businesses care more about efficiency and improvement than just cost reduction. Practical Application: Before pitching any service, spend time understanding the prospect's specific operational challenges and lead with solutions that improve their daily processes.
Building passive income isn't about massive wins—it's about consistent, small victories that compound. (25:01) Ortale emphasized that even securing three deals per month creates a $10K annual raise in perpetuity. His first residual check of $355 became the foundation for eventually reaching $25-30K monthly. (18:31) The power lies in understanding that each client adds lifetime value, not just one-time revenue. Practical Application: Focus on securing 2-3 new recurring revenue clients monthly rather than chasing large one-time deals, as the compounding effect creates true wealth over time.
Ortale's biggest deals, including a $500 million processing opportunity, came through strategic networking rather than cold outreach. (02:30) A former D1 basketball player in their program connected them with a massive enterprise client. This demonstrates that building relationships within your industry creates exponential opportunities that individual effort alone cannot achieve. Practical Application: Invest 20% of your business development time in nurturing relationships with existing clients and industry connections, as they often become your best source of high-value referrals.
Ortale's payment processing logo is still a modified Canva template, proving that execution matters more than perfect branding. (34:48) He advocates for "shut up and work" mentality over spending months perfecting logos, LLCs, and other administrative tasks. His success came from immediately hitting the streets after minimal training rather than over-preparing. Practical Application: Launch your business idea with 80% readiness rather than waiting for 100% perfection—use basic tools like Canva templates and focus your energy on customer acquisition and value delivery.