In a digital landscape where every click counts, how do you transform casual browsers into loyal customers? Join us in this insightful session with Nikki, a seasoned marketing expert, as we dive into the intricacies of a customer experience and retention-focused technology stack. Learn how to leverage technology not just for short-term gains, but to cultivate lasting customer relationships.
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(upbeat music)
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- And welcome to our next session
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with Nicki Tubman of Sticky Digital.
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Nicki, how are you doing today?
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- Good, Brian, how are you?
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- I'm doing just fine.
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So let's just get right into it.
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Nicki, tell us a little bit about how you came to find,
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find, to found Sticky Digital,
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the retention marketing agency.
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- Yes, so as you said, I'm Nicki Tubman,
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one of the co-founders of Sticky Tubman.
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Sticky Tubman.
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- It's a new name.
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- It's digital.
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And I actually came to found Sticky Digital
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when I met my co-founders,
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Mariel and a full app for this agency,
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we were all at.
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It was one of the larger shop by agencies,
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and still is one of the largest shop by agencies.
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And we started as, one of my co-founders
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and I were employee number nine and 10,
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and we got to know each other and really just started like,
0:59
we worked really well together.
1:02
And as we sort of like worked together
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and we were at that agency,
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we were both at that agency for quite a few years,
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we were recruited to go brand side
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and start working and building Shopify brands.
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It was myself, her, our other co-founder
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and there was like six other people
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if they recruited from the same agency.
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And so we went and brand side to start building
1:21
actual Shopify brands.
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And we were in charge of doing everything
1:24
from sort of like the like finding of the products,
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naming of the products,
1:29
like putting it all to market, building the Shopify store,
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like doing the whole thing, branding exercises, everything.
1:34
And as we were going through it,
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we realized that our previous CEO,
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his background was in direct response.
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So he was really great at like sort of like
1:43
throwing money at the funnel
1:44
and like these people converting.
1:46
Well, what we were realizing is that
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on the other side of it, the retention keys,
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we weren't spending a ton of time focused on retaining
1:54
his customers as we were pulling money into it.
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There's still at this time where like
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Facebook was still pretty good and you throw an onion
2:02
and really get a good return.
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But we were like, hey, we need to work on actually
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like bringing these people back
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because this isn't gonna be a forever game.
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And that sort of is really how sticky digital started
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is that we realized that like so many brands
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were doing that exact same thing, like just throwing money
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and weren't really focused on sort of like,
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then what, what happens next?
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Just relying on people just coming back
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because they know your products,
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they like your products,
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but not really like marketing to them.
2:31
And when getting into this, like we realized
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sort of like retention by a lot of brands,
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people think about it as like email, right?
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Like email and SMS or as SMS was starting.
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So like really email, it's about more than that.
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It's more than just email and SMS
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and brands weren't actually thinking of it that way.
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They were thinking of like, oh retention,
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I'm sending emails, I'm doing what I need to do,
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but it really is like, are you actually taking all
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of these tools and text facts that you have
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and really tying them together to like speak
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to the customers appropriately at the right time
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when they need to be spoken to
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and sort of like bringing them back
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on their own personal journey.
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So I'm gonna just go really deep into it.
3:16
It sounds to me that the the clonkance of the beginning
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clients of yours and when you first started Sticky Digital,
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they weren't even asking about retention.
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It was more of you seeing that as an opportunity
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and bringing it to them.
3:33
Do I have that right?
3:35
- Yeah, so we never started doing acquisition,
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but the first couple of calls that we took ironically,
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like people were speaking to us thinking
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that like, that is what we were doing
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and they were like, no, no, no.
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- Acquisition.
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- That yeah, like we are not doing that piece,
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like we're doing the piece that nobody is thinking about,
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which is that like retention piece.
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So like you're very correct in stating that like,
3:55
people were really not understanding
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like what we were trying to build, like retention wise,
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'cause it was still this very foreign thing.
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And I think now like not a lot of brands
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really understand it.
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And there's very few of us in this space
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that solely do just retention marketing.
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And so we still do today have some of those conversations
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or people don't really know what that is.
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- Like can I ask you about like,
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what that discussion is like almost?
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Because as you said, just even a couple of years ago
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and yes in the present moment, but a couple of years ago,
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it was so much on acquisition acquisition.
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Like when you brought up retention
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and you had to educate them on this,
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was there a point where like you and your co-founders
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were almost like, what are we doing?
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Like let's make it easy on us and just talk about acquisition
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and why did you not decide to do that and just say like,
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no, like retention is key, we're gonna educate them,
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they're gonna get it.
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And what was that like?
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- Yeah, well first of all, we're not masochists.
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So we did not wanna do acquisition.
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We never did.
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It was never something that like we had a want or a drive
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or a passion to do.
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And I think some more people that didn't really understand
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what retention was or how could be utilized profitably
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or even well made us feel like we were doing the right thing
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and like we were actually going down the right path.
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The conversations for us were like educating people
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on like full funnel retention marketing.
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We're like, we're talking to them,
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not just about email and SMS,
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how you can pull in your subscription program
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and how you can form loyalty, how you can form rewards,
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how you can pull in like your customer service tools
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to like really speak to your customers genuinely.
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Those are the conversations that are the most fun for us
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because it's just your uncovering sort of like
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this whole new world to your merchants.
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But that's like what makes it the most fun.
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Like we've had so many calls like we're like,
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oh, you do more than just send emails.
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And it's like, yeah, like it's looking at the whole picture
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and making sure that like when they get that email,
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that email should be given to them
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and that they don't have any customer service tickets opened,
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that they don't have any sort of like,
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they didn't just place an order and now you're right,
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ask them into place in order for something else.
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Like it is really like a full funnel picture
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that people don't think about
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when it comes to retention marketing.
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- Yeah.
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So correct me if I'm wrong,
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but it sounds to me that you work with clients
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and that and Shopify brands that are really starting
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to figure things out and starting to scale
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and wanting to scale, is that right?
6:34
- Yeah.
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So we like our sweet spot is really anybody
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that's doing over $5 million today on Shopify.
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- No bad.
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- But we work with brands that are doing over $55 million
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a year on Shopify and there's sort of like
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that whole space in between.
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Cause even those guys that are doing a lot,
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a good example of like we just did an audit for a brand
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and they're driving a ton of revenue
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through their retention, right?
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Just through email and SMS.
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They're driving a ton of revenue,
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big influencer backed brand.
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And like we did an audit for them and we're like,
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hey, you guys should actually be collecting
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first party data on entrance and you should be doing
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and we listed out a whole bunch of things
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that are like missed opportunities.
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And they were like, oh,
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we didn't even think about any of that stuff
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because all we're doing is driving revenue today
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through email.
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We didn't actually think about like the longterm game.
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So it's sort of like helping all of those brands
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that even have a sophisticated systems that up
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really understand that like there's probably significantly
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more that you can be doing to help the future you.
7:39
- Now, I guess the way that I look at it,
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two different buckets.
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One is the different channels that you have
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to optimize and to reach out and the customer touch points.
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And then the other bucket is what you just mentioned
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with like the actual customer data.
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Do you, I guess my first question is,
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do you think about it?
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Is there another bucket that I'm missing?
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And do you think about it like that?
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And then the follow up question of that is,
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is there one that comes first that you have
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the discussions with?
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Like is it more about the customer data first
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and understanding how to capture that and where to store it?
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Or is it about the channels first or maybe I'm wrong?
8:16
- No, I think like the thing that we try educating
8:20
most brains on first is like it really is about
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the customer data and like you might know
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what a customer wants by being able to run a segment
8:30
or like through some of these other like data tools, right?
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That people are using.
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But like you have all of the power through like
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these retention tools to sort of like collect data
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upon entry.
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So we all know like you go to a website
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and a pop up shows up and you're gonna put in your email
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'cause you're gonna get 15% off or free shipping
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or whatever that looks like.
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Like why aren't you using this opportunity
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to gather more information on your customer, right?
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Like we work with a brand that's a maternity brand
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but they also do postpartum stuff.
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Why aren't you using that opportunity to find out
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where are they in that journey, right?
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Like when is their baby due?
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Like literally any sort of information
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that can add the personal touch on the line.
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I think a lot of brands are really missing today
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because as like it gets more competitive
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you need to be more compelling and speak to them
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as to who they are, where they are in their journey
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and what they're looking for.
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I mean, I'm a mom so I think like this speaks to me too
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but like when I'm shopping for my kids stuff
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I have both a girl and a boy
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and so sending content to me
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that has both like girl and boy imagery
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or talking to the both of them speaks to me
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'cause I have both but a mom that has maybe two girls
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and you're sending her content
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that's like really boy related stuff
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or toys that like feature little boys playing with the toys.
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Like it's just as easy as sort of like knowing
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that she's a mom of girls
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and switching the content that you're delivering to her
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to feature all girl content.
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Girl imagery, girl toys, like even if that's not
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the sole focus of what you want to deliver to them
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it's first impression, right?
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So like knowing that like you're like mom I know you,
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I see you like this is the stuff that you're gonna like
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like all of that first party data
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and really understanding who your customer is from the jump
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is gonna be the most impactful for a brand.
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- Yeah.
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I wanna ask you about first party data
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compared to like the third party data
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and I guess my hypothesis is that
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you're really pushing on your clients
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to capture that first party data information
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because of the transformation that has happened
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in the last few years where you cannot rely on
10:45
any more third party data.
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Is that a viewpoint that you would agree with?
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And is there anything else that I'm missing
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of why that first party data is now so much more important
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than ever?
11:00
- Yeah, I think, I mean, I think you've hit it on the head,
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right?
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Like we don't know what to trust now, right?
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Like you're hearing like, okay,
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we can't even trust open rates.
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We can't like we can't trust any of this data.
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Like you can't trust any information that you're getting.
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All of these like tools that are like,
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oh, this is your geo, this is your demo.
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Like you're having to take it for word,
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but like you don't actually know, right?
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So to me it just makes the most sense,
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like ask for it in the beginning
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when your customer is the most engaged
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because even on this point,
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even collecting first party data,
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30 days down the line,
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it's gonna be so much harder for you to collect it
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from a customer than collecting it
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from a customer with the intent on day one.
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So like if you know Brian is shopping here
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and he's willingly gonna give you his email,
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collect another piece of information
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that you can use further down the line.
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And I think a lot of brands don't do that
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because it's almost like analysis paralysis.
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It's like, well, I wanna know all of these things
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about this person.
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So how do I choose what one thing I'm going to ask?
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But you should really think about it strategically
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and say like what one piece of information
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can help me further down the line market to this person.
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And you can use all of that information
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in your Facebook ads, right?
12:19
Like you can push all of the data information
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from Clavio into like a meta.
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You can do a lot more with it
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and just knowing that people are giving you the information.
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Like I would trust that over a third party tool any day.
12:34
- Yeah.
12:35
You know, during this summit,
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there's also a session with O'Kendo.
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And during this discussion,
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I tell all the audience like to also tune in there
12:46
because it's very relevant where O'Kendo talks about
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obviously the first party data
12:50
and the ability they're pushing to do as many surveys
12:54
and questionnaires as possible on D2C websites.
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And so that kind of leads me to again,
12:59
the tech stack and the retention marketing tech stack
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in general, you know, I don't care if it's agnostic
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or not, like in your opinion,
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how do you, like where do you start?
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And maybe as an agency too,
13:14
giving recommendations and suggestions to those brands,
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the amount of tools now I feel like are analysts.
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I think one more thing to mention is that
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even if you look at the Shopify app store,
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I think every month there's another 100,
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I think I saw like another 100 or so apps
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that have been approved in our own Shopify.
13:31
So I guess like tell us what's the suggestion?
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Where do you start with the retention marketing stack
13:39
and help us or guide us through that process?
13:44
- Yeah, I think the biggest thing
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that a merchant needs to remember is like
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when you're looking at evaluating a new app,
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like does it work with your current tech stack?
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Does it work with your current other tools?
13:56
Like a lot of merchants get into marketing waters
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when they're like, oh, this seems really cool.
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And they'll like install an app
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and they'll start running towards the finish line
14:07
with that app, but they don't realize
14:09
that it doesn't integrate or it can't like,
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you can't push profile properties into Clavio
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to like help you further segment.
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Like you can't take the data that you're getting
14:19
from that tool and do anything else with it.
14:22
So I think like that's number one, right?
14:24
Like whenever we're like recommendations,
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and I agree with you, I think there's plenty
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of agencies that are like, they will shout
14:31
specific technologies from the rooftops.
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Like for us, like we will always give our merchant options
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and say like, hey, these are the best guys in this space.
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And like these are the reasons why we think you would benefit.
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These are the differences, right?
14:45
Like maybe it's a plus thing, maybe it's an ability thing.
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Who knows?
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But like these are the differences.
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But what you need to make sure you're doing
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is like look at how you can use the data from that one app
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and how can you use it across multiple other channels?
15:00
A back-end stock tool, you don't wanna use a back-end stock app
15:03
that can't connect to your email
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'cause then what's the point of it, right?
15:06
Just because it's cheaper doesn't necessarily mean anything.
15:10
Or you're gonna have to do a manual upload
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into Clavio for all of the emails
15:14
that you've collected for a back-end stock.
15:16
Is the manpower actually that you're gonna have
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to put in on the tail end actually worth the cost savings
15:21
when you could just have something that's like
15:23
collecting and building segments for you out of the gate, right?
15:26
So it's like you need to sort of like figure out
15:29
what's more important to you
15:31
when I think probably like time is money.
15:34
And so really thinking about how these all work together
15:38
is like primary and number one.
15:40
Like you need to find something that works
15:43
within your current wheelhouse.
15:45
And with that being said too,
15:46
like if you're looking at overhauling your tech stack,
15:48
I think that that's totally fine.
15:50
And great too, just make sure that as you start overhauling it,
15:54
you're probably overhauling it
15:55
because you found one technology that you really love
15:58
and you wanna move forward with.
15:59
So then use that as like your North Star
16:01
and what does that one technology connect you
16:04
and sort of like start filtering from there.
16:07
- Yeah, I think that's actually really good advice.
16:10
I haven't thought about it like that
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because it's, I've heard the case of like,
16:14
well, you don't wanna go towards the new apps
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because they're brand new
16:18
and maybe the ones that have been out there for a while
16:20
don't have the latest and greatest features.
16:22
But, and again, I'm just clarifying for the audience
16:24
what you've said, Nicky is like,
16:27
think about it where, hey,
16:29
what kind of data isn't capturing?
16:31
Where is it hosting that data?
16:32
Is it able to then transfer that data
16:35
to other tools that you're currently using?
16:37
And probably what's probably most important
16:38
on all this is centralizing that in some place
16:41
so then you can have retention marketing strategy
16:43
on top of it, do I either right?
16:44
- Yeah, 'cause like what's the point in collecting it
16:46
if you can't use it?
16:47
Like, yeah, so what you know that all of these people
16:50
are returning this specific item,
16:52
but like if you can't do anything with that information,
16:55
like what really does it do for your brand
16:57
at the end of the day?
16:59
- And maybe that's a good point for even the technology
17:01
companies that are listening here.
17:03
And again, like I work for a technology company
17:05
but it's super important to make sure yet
17:07
you can capture all the data,
17:08
but if you don't share that
17:11
and offer the ability to share that with other tools,
17:14
like you're just, you're losing clients
17:17
if that's the way that clients
17:18
are supposed to be thinking about it.
17:20
- Totally, and like just having the ability
17:24
to use the information
17:25
or push the information somewhere else,
17:27
like even if it takes you an extra step
17:29
to be able to do it, like as a technology
17:31
being able to provide your merchant
17:34
with the information that they can then use somewhere else
17:38
is so beneficial to them
17:41
because it's sort of one of those things,
17:43
like it's when you find a tool
17:46
that actually like you can push information
17:48
and pull information back and forth
17:50
between the two, like you have just
17:53
sort of like secured your livelihood
17:55
almost like with a merchant
17:56
because like you are now the most profitable piece
18:00
of technology that they have
18:01
because you are collecting data
18:03
and you're giving the data to somebody else.
18:05
Like it's so smart as a technology to be able to do that.
18:09
- Yeah, let me kind of follow up with one more topic
18:13
and it's around, obviously this is AI
18:16
and CX Virtual Summit.
18:18
I want this topic to be more around
18:20
customer experience right now.
18:22
How do you align again customer experience with retention?
18:28
Like are those almost the same words for you
18:31
at the end of the day?
18:31
Like, and then also the clients that are yours right now,
18:36
what does customer experience mean to them?
18:39
And how important is it in their
18:42
retention marketing philosophy?
18:44
- Yeah, I think it probably differs
18:47
based on size of brand and sort of like the ability
18:50
and the team structure that they have
18:53
and things like that.
18:54
Obviously when you're talking to a smaller team,
18:57
when you talk about doing a strategy
18:59
or implementing something that they think
19:01
is gonna create more customer service tickets
19:04
or create more feedback from a customer, right?
19:07
Because you're asking for information to them,
19:09
they immediately are like,
19:10
oh, well I don't wanna do that
19:13
because it's now gonna be more work for me
19:14
and I only have one person manning it.
19:17
So I think it's sort of like aligning your strategy
19:19
to your capabilities.
19:21
Obviously there are CX tools
19:23
that you can sort of like create macros for
19:26
and you can really like auto respond to a lot of people
19:30
based on like what you've asked them
19:32
to like send you an email for or whatever.
19:35
But I think it really does depend on the brand.
19:38
We have a lot of brands that they find it very important
19:42
to do like the one to one personal touch.
19:44
And I personally think that that is a wonderful strategy.
19:49
The one to one personal touch
19:51
and that one to one personal touch
19:53
can still be an automated message,
19:55
but it should be signed from a person.
19:57
And when they respond to that email,
20:00
should go to that person's inbox.
20:01
So for instance, like if your CX person's name is Anna,
20:06
like in a flow as they're not converting,
20:10
like Anna writes them this email, it's like,
20:12
hey, this is Anna, I lead our customer service team.
20:15
Like how can I help you?
20:16
I've noticed you still haven't purchased,
20:18
respond to this email and I can help you make that decision.
20:22
That should go to Anna's inbox
20:24
or Anna should be the one responding, right?
20:26
So I think it's like you can have sort of like a mixture
20:29
of both like automated messaging and a personalized touch
20:33
in order to sort of like convert your customer,
20:36
but it's all about implementing it properly
20:39
and making sure that like, I don't know,
20:43
Brian, I think we spoke about this before,
20:44
if you're an AI, and your celebrity
20:47
is like texting you or responding to you,
20:49
nobody's gonna buy it.
20:50
So like just make it personal and like make it
20:53
if you're putting in the effort,
20:54
like make it personal and make it more--
20:57
- We did talk about this.
20:59
- Yeah.
21:00
- But let me pretend I'm a client right now
21:02
and I ask you, okay, that's all great,
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but honestly, how do you scale that?
21:08
Like I only have two CX people on my team,
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I can't be actually emailing and able to respond
21:15
to every one of them.
21:17
Like what's your answer to that?
21:20
- Yeah, I think it's so you shouldn't have
21:22
to like do automated messaging
21:23
like in every single one of your flows, right?
21:25
But like let's pick the most impactful flows
21:27
that's gonna help you for your bottom line.
21:29
So Brian, like if you are doing browse abandonment,
21:33
if you have a browse abandonment flow set up
21:35
and you've noticed that somebody is browsing your website,
21:37
they have an intent to purchase
21:39
or even an abandoned cart, they have an intent to purchase.
21:42
If they still have not recovered their cart
21:44
from these email flows that you've set up,
21:46
it's probably gonna be more impactful for you
21:49
to email those people and find out like,
21:51
"Hey, how can I help you?"
21:53
The influx isn't gonna be large,
21:54
it's not gonna be like you're sending a welcome email
21:56
that's like, "Hey, let me help you choose your product."
21:58
These people have actually viewed something,
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they have the intent to purchase,
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they're really close to being a purchaser.
22:05
So those are the people that you should focus on,
22:07
not like the everybody.
22:09
So I think like it is scalable
22:11
as long as you choose to do it in the appropriate channels
22:14
and like in the appropriate flows as well.
22:17
- I love it.
22:18
And thanks for getting in the weeds with me there.
22:19
I think that's like something that the audience
22:22
just wants to know exactly.
22:23
'Cause I've proved that so many times where it's like,
22:25
okay, yep, you gotta personalize it.
22:27
And of course like you want to,
22:29
as you scale your company, right?
22:31
And maybe I'm wrong here, but as if you scale your company,
22:35
you still want to maintain what got you there
22:38
in the first place and you were probably super personal
22:41
in the first place, but it's really, really difficult to do that.
22:44
- Yeah, and I think the important thing to remember too
22:47
is like if you the sound or like if you're the face
22:49
of your brand and people know that you're the face of the brand,
22:51
I don't even necessarily think it has to come from you.
22:54
I think just knowing that somebody from your brand
22:58
is reaching out to the prospect of the customer
23:01
and like they're willing to help them make the purchase,
23:04
that also goes towards your brand and who you are
23:07
and the people that you're hiring
23:08
and that you care about them
23:09
because you're making sure that the people
23:11
that are working at your brand also care about them.
23:14
So it doesn't necessarily need to be
23:16
face of the brand, head of the brand.
23:18
As long as it's coming from somebody personal at the brand,
23:21
it's not gonna matter to that, the customer.
23:23
- Right.
23:24
- But maybe actually, last thing here and add to this,
23:29
because maybe I'm right or wrong,
23:30
but it's like whatever the founders' personality is,
23:34
like how they talk their voice, their tone,
23:37
what they represent, it's not, try to still take that
23:42
and blend that into those responses.
23:45
Maybe it's not coming from the founder,
23:46
but still that tone is the same
23:48
throughout that entire experience.
23:51
- Totally.
23:51
And I think like most of the time
23:53
when you're hiring a customer service team,
23:54
like the brand or the founder,
23:56
you probably are very specific
23:57
on how they're talking about the products
23:59
or how they're talking to the customers.
24:01
Use that and continue that through, right?
24:04
Whenever you're communicating with your client
24:06
or your customer, but I think it is really important
24:09
that like regardless of who it comes from,
24:11
like it sounds authentic
24:13
and it doesn't sound automated if that sounds weird
24:17
or is it automated, but it does sound authentic
24:21
and it sounds personal.
24:22
I think that's the biggest thing, sounding personal,
24:25
that is what's gonna convert somebody.
24:27
- Love it.
24:28
- And again, Nikki, thanks for kind of hitting on
24:30
a whole bunch of things during this session.
24:32
A lot of takeaways for the audience.
24:33
Thank you so much for your time.
24:35
- Thank you, have a great one.
24:37
Happy holidays.
24:38
- Thanks everyone.
24:39
Yes, happy holidays.
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