Join us for an enlightening conversation with Chelsea Jones, Founder and CEO of Shopify agency Chelsea & Rachel Co. In this session, we'll explore the dynamic world of fast-growing ecommerce brands and the evolving landscape of Customer Experience (CX) strategies. Chelsea brings a wealth of experience in helping brands scale their operations while maintaining a customer-centric approach. Discover the secrets to success in delivering exceptional CX as your brand experiences rapid growth.
You Might Also Like
0:00
(upbeat music)
0:02
- And welcome back to our next session
0:07
with Chelsea Jones from Chelsea and Rachel.
0:08
Chelsea, how are you doing today?
0:10
- I am doing good.
0:11
It's so good to be here, Brian.
0:13
- Aw, thanks for joining us.
0:14
I really, I really appreciate it with your time.
0:17
Well, let's just dive right into things.
0:19
First of all, co-founding with Rachel, Chelsea and Jones,
0:24
Shopify Plus Agency, can you give us kind of just the deal
0:28
of like what type of work do you do at your agency?
0:31
- Yeah, I love this.
0:32
So we're actually OG in the agency space.
0:35
In January, it's going on 10 years
0:37
that we have had this agency and our specialty
0:41
in this timeframe has really grown just as Shopify
0:44
has grown with kind of going up market
0:46
and focusing on strategy, design, UX design and development.
0:51
I have a philosophy that we take brands from OJV
0:54
to Varsity level online.
0:55
So I'm all about best of class work
0:57
and putting out creative that really makes commerce better
1:01
and makes brands just excited about the work
1:03
that they're showcasing as their website
1:05
and their digital presence.
1:07
- I love that JV to Varsity.
1:08
That's cool.
1:09
Makes it really simple, honestly.
1:12
Actually, one other question on that.
1:16
You work on customer experience, also marketing development.
1:20
Is it pretty much broad strokes?
1:22
You kind of dabble in all of those for your clients?
1:25
- So great question.
1:26
We are professional problem solvers in this ecosystem.
1:29
So we have two paths as an agency.
1:31
We do both projects and retainers.
1:33
When we're doing retainer model,
1:34
it's more of like ongoing strategy
1:36
and development work and organic growth.
1:38
When we do projects, it's more like,
1:39
we're building your house
1:40
and we're doing everything from content creation
1:43
to overhaul of your Figma files
1:45
to then the rebuild of the custom theme development
1:48
that we do a lot of that in Shopify Plus.
1:50
But migrations and subscription have been our main focus
1:54
for a lot of brands and their growth strategies.
1:57
And we don't do any paid media.
1:59
We don't do anything regarding the driving of the traffic.
2:01
We do all organic growth and then specialize
2:03
in the tech stack to help from a flywheel standpoint
2:07
to help them actually improve the sales.
2:09
- So I guess the first question I have for you is,
2:13
it sounds like you deal with a lot of fast growing
2:16
D2C Shopify brands.
2:19
So, and you mentioned that it's more about problems,
2:22
like solving problems.
2:23
So can you actually talk about what are the patterns
2:25
that you see when you're diving into these clients
2:29
that are fast growing specifically about customer experience?
2:32
Is there a pattern that typically kind of,
2:35
you see often in your space?
2:37
- Yeah, that's a great question.
2:39
Before I answer that question, I'll tag it with this.
2:41
So Chelsea and Ray's company is also known as CNRCo,
2:44
like C+ Sign RCo.
2:46
Like a little bit of an Ode of like CRO.
2:49
So conversion rate optimization
2:51
and then the plus sign, Popify Plus.
2:53
- But I shared that.
2:54
- I love that, I didn't know that, that's great.
2:55
- So it's kind of fun.
2:56
I share that from a branding standpoint
2:58
that it's so important that like we as experts
3:02
in this space help brands understand that clarity
3:05
of what is that they're actually doing.
3:07
Because I believe that the future is really the output
3:10
of information has to be clear, concise,
3:13
and also worthwhile because we're inundated with so much stuff.
3:17
So when you come full circle to your question
3:19
about customer service and experience,
3:22
my passion is saying in this AI and bot generated world,
3:25
we're still humans talking to humans.
3:27
And as brands, we need to elevate our experience level
3:31
because it's not just given, it's expected.
3:34
Right, it's just like when Target went more into Tarje
3:37
and started bringing in designers
3:38
and their stuff got a little bit better
3:40
and the quality is there and people started spending more.
3:42
You have the same concept for brands right now
3:44
is you have to elevate your presence,
3:47
your branding, your content,
3:48
because it's expected for you to actually survive
3:51
and grow into this next phase of information
3:55
that we're leaning into as like an industry.
3:58
- So then I hope I'm not getting too deep here.
4:02
And if you could share some of things,
4:04
like do you have an approach that you take with your clients?
4:08
Like is there other questions that you ask
4:10
that kind of get to that brainstorm thinking
4:13
with a client that you could better understand
4:15
what they're looking for when it comes to
4:17
a next kind of level of customer experience for them?
4:20
- Yes.
4:21
- So we do, we have kind of a whole process
4:22
that we do in strategy.
4:24
But the big thing I always say is we are doctors and specialists
4:27
as well as the visionaries and reverse engineering
4:30
where you're going from.
4:31
So when I say doctors and specialists,
4:34
like there's always problems that are in everybody
4:36
is e-commerce and site and stuff
4:38
because most companies have grown pretty quickly
4:40
or had a lot of technical debt from just trying things
4:43
and it comes to technology.
4:45
So there needs to be an understanding of like,
4:47
okay, just like our bodies, we go to doctors
4:49
and specialists as something's hurting, of like understanding
4:51
what is it on your site that is a problem,
4:53
is not and that you need to address now.
4:55
And then the opposite is true of like the creative
4:58
and the content creation.
5:00
So we use a program called Figma,
5:02
which is the UX UI design creative program.
5:05
And what I love about Figma and the way we've been able
5:08
to innovate is we really are leaning into
5:10
what is the future of design?
5:13
What is the future of storytelling?
5:15
And how does storytelling equate with technology?
5:18
And how does that ultimately impact brands?
5:20
So in full circle to your question of how we take people
5:23
in a strategy process, that's my passion is to be like,
5:26
all right, Ryan, if you had a brand right now,
5:29
where is it you want this brand to go?
5:30
What is it you're trying to accomplish?
5:32
Is it just more sales?
5:34
Is it that you have an impact in mind?
5:35
Are you B-Corp certified?
5:37
Are you interested in, you know, let's say like Tom's shoes
5:40
for example, they were wanting to give away
5:42
a pair of shoes for every shoe they sold?
5:44
Like that was their ethos.
5:45
And I think it's more and more important
5:47
that the companies that are gonna survive
5:49
and thrive in the future have a real foundation
5:52
of their why and their storytelling about that
5:54
and the way that they're communicating
5:56
across all digital channels.
5:58
And their website is hub for that.
5:59
Like their website and the way that they engage
6:02
with commerce on mobile and on desktop
6:05
needs to be addressed all the way through.
6:08
- You're inspiring me.
6:10
How important is consistency then?
6:16
- It sounds like you can help uncover the why
6:19
and the why is the first and now that you have the why
6:21
and what the brand should be.
6:24
I assume that then it's the consistency
6:27
of that across all touch points is rather important.
6:30
Is that true or is that not important?
6:33
- It's very important and consistency matters
6:36
because it's just like how people present
6:38
and different things matter.
6:39
So I'm a big component of coaching and therapy
6:42
and life like, you know, we always need to be learning
6:45
and growing.
6:46
I think it's the same thing for brands
6:48
in a consistent pattern of what does your brand mean?
6:51
What are you doing?
6:52
And then how are you making steps to do that?
6:54
But you have to do it in a way that doesn't get
6:56
into the perfectionism.
6:57
We're not gonna put anything out there mode.
6:59
I say imperfect action is better than no action every day,
7:02
but it needs to be in direction
7:05
to elevating where you're going to go.
7:08
So for example, my own practice,
7:09
I do visualizations on like my team, myself,
7:13
where we're kind of going into the future.
7:15
Regarding the work that we're doing now.
7:17
And I think it's important for brands to do the same thing.
7:20
And then the work that they craft now
7:23
can be elevated to that space.
7:25
Does that make sense?
7:26
Like on a little bit more clarity,
7:28
like without a North Star, people don't know
7:30
where they're going.
7:31
And when it comes to elevation,
7:33
and because I'm a woman, I'm gonna go in this,
7:35
I wear lipstick and dresses and I love the concept
7:38
of an outfit can change your mindset sometimes.
7:40
If you feel really good in your space
7:42
and with different things,
7:43
it's the same for brands.
7:45
Putting out content that you're really proud of
7:47
that you feel like is an ethos and an up level
7:50
in the way that you look and feel, it matters.
7:52
And so the full circle of that
7:55
is really comes back to like kind of a challenge
7:58
to two brands and companies that are looking
8:00
at elevating their directed and humor channel.
8:02
Stop looking at it, it's just one channel,
8:04
and look at it as a whole arch of this elevates
8:07
your entire company because we're commerce first
8:10
and how you engage with somebody all the way to check out.
8:13
It matters for the rest of your company growth goals.
8:16
- So I guess what I wanna ask on this subject
8:23
is more on like the customer support side.
8:26
And this is more out of curiosity
8:28
because when I've talked to founders, it's almost like,
8:32
or I should say there's some founders that are like,
8:34
okay, let's just kind of solve this issue
8:37
and move on from it, which is where like
8:39
the outsourcing comes in with the,
8:40
okay, just hire this BPL with them, solve it,
8:43
not worry about it, but it sounds like to me Chelsea,
8:45
like you would take the point of view of like, again,
8:50
every single touch point is an opportunity
8:54
to tell that why.
8:56
And so you shouldn't think or you would tell
8:58
a founder or CEO that like, there's no reason to say,
9:03
like, okay, just solve this and move on rather than like,
9:07
no, like let's really go deep into every single channel,
9:11
whether that's the first touch in marketing
9:13
for the last touch in customer support.
9:14
Is that true or can you push me off of that?
9:17
- Yeah, so I think there's definitely true to that.
9:20
I always advocate that brands and companies and founders
9:23
need to look at what is it they're really trying to accomplish
9:26
and then put into places experts or teams
9:29
to execute in that vision.
9:31
So what I say is different about our agency
9:34
when we get to be involved with a brand
9:36
and build their house, let's say it was a project,
9:38
you came to us and you had a new brand refresh
9:41
that you're doing, you want us to build your whole new website
9:43
in a custom theme.
9:44
Well, the reason people choose to work with us
9:47
or the reason that we're elevating in this JV diversity
9:50
is because we're collaborative by nature.
9:52
It is a process and it's a journey.
9:54
It's not just a output destination.
9:57
And so that's part of what I'm trying to change
9:59
in this landscape of having more conversations
10:02
with founders and CEOs that commerce matters
10:06
and commerce is more than just a transaction.
10:08
You need to be looking at it from an overarching brand,
10:11
storytelling and pulling your wife forward
10:14
because this is the time that you will engage with people
10:17
more often than not.
10:19
And it's becoming more difficult in the marketplace, right?
10:22
We're seeing cost of acquisition is higher.
10:25
We're seeing longer engagement
10:26
before people make a purchase,
10:28
you know, the different factors in economy.
10:30
So those things all aside, it matters the output
10:35
that you're putting and that you're being consistent
10:37
in that messaging, in that creative
10:39
and in that way that really draws people in based on
10:43
an ethos of not only what you're selling, but who you are.
10:46
- Can the wide change in a point of time
10:53
during the brand's existence or would you ever say,
10:56
or would you say that should be the most consistent thing
11:00
about your brand from the day that you start to the end?
11:03
Or have you dealt with clients that do change their why
11:06
in the middle of the process?
11:08
- I have dealt with both.
11:09
I think it's depends on the brand.
11:11
And it depends on their leadership, to be honest.
11:13
I am a firm believer without quality leadership.
11:16
You don't have the way and path forward.
11:19
And in this space, people change at a sea level quite often.
11:22
So I think that's a good question,
11:26
but I don't think it fully matters if it changes or not.
11:28
Life is about change.
11:30
It matters still about that consistency
11:32
and being very clear on the why.
11:34
And if it is to change, you have to be very tactful
11:37
and strategic on how you do that change across all touch points.
11:41
So it's very unified in nature.
11:44
- Now, as you called out your company and yourself, OGs,
11:49
now knowing that have you seen change
11:56
in the last 10 years of just how people are thinking
12:00
about customer experience and prioritizing customer experience?
12:04
Has it always been that way or has it been a shift in your mind?
12:07
- Oh, I think it's absolutely been a shift
12:10
because I think originally when Shopify started
12:13
and people were just excited to put something out there
12:15
and sell some products,
12:16
they weren't actually thinking of engaging with customers
12:19
or the data about their customers
12:20
in the same way that we are now.
12:22
Customer experience has grown extensively,
12:27
just like the demand for quality design has, right?
12:32
And quality in general, when it comes to your messaging,
12:35
your transparency, we're in an age now
12:38
where transparent leadership, it like trumps over anything, right?
12:42
Like we are, anything can be found out, you know,
12:45
via Google searches or videos or different stuff.
12:47
So those that do rise to the top, I'm a big reader
12:51
and I like Brené Brown.
12:53
So she speaks about like vulnerability and this concept
12:56
is I think really imperative as we go forward
12:59
because we're in a world where everything's tracked,
13:02
everything's recorded, we have, you know, you could say,
13:05
I like pizza and then all of a sudden your phone
13:07
is showing you ads based on pizza in the area.
13:09
You know, like it's very much this is our reality,
13:13
not a fiction.
13:14
And so to lean into that, we have to be more engaged
13:19
with customer service because without asking the marketplace,
13:22
without asking your customers, you don't always know,
13:25
you can have theories or ideas
13:26
and so back to your question of does the Y change?
13:28
I think it can based on the market and the customers themselves
13:32
if you have the right leaderships that's listening
13:34
and adapting to that and making that more of the priority.
13:38
- Yeah, I think just to clarify,
13:42
like continuous listening to your customers, right?
13:45
Throughout the entire existence is super important
13:47
because if customers change, right?
13:50
And then you're gonna have to listen
13:51
and you might be changing as well.
13:54
- So right before we were talking,
13:58
we talked about AI really quick.
14:00
And you recently, it sounded like you're at an AI conference
14:05
yourself, how often are you talking about AI
14:09
to your clients now?
14:11
- Okay, so honestly, quite a bit.
14:14
And here's why.
14:16
AI is the fastest growing eclipse
14:19
that we've ever seen in something, right?
14:20
Like you look at chat GTP and how many people
14:23
like engaged with it almost overnight.
14:26
And then the growth hockey puck of it,
14:28
like it's not a matter of this,
14:31
but when this changes people's behavior in consumer buying,
14:35
right?
14:35
So what do we do with that?
14:37
Without going down a rabbit hole
14:38
or getting scared about the robots taking over the world,
14:41
there is, it's more of a question of,
14:43
okay, this is happening.
14:45
How do we assess this and still get back to our purpose
14:48
of we're humans talking to humans.
14:49
How do we use this to as a tool
14:52
to be able to better serve them?
14:54
So my philosophy and AI and customer service in particular
14:58
is, and you guys, any of you have played with chat GTP,
15:02
nothing can be like completely verified, right?
15:04
You have to like get it for research,
15:06
you can get it for ideas,
15:07
but you need to absolutely edit things
15:10
and make it more specific because it's not accurate.
15:13
And it's just not built that way yet.
15:14
Just the latest launch just started researching the internet
15:18
whereas before it wasn't.
15:19
And this is just a few weeks ago.
15:20
So I say that to say it's innovating,
15:22
it's growing, there's some powerful tools there,
15:25
but how it equates back to customer service
15:27
is that we understand what is happening,
15:30
but also that it makes it easier for us
15:33
to have a day-to-day engagement.
15:35
Let me give you an example.
15:37
I see this AI as a shift in tools,
15:40
just like we saw iPhones when they came out
15:42
and now everybody can even run a business
15:44
on their phone versus just having computers and big rooms,
15:47
right?
15:48
So if you know that,
15:49
you put that perspective of this is a tool,
15:52
how do we use this tool?
15:53
I think you're gonna start seeing incredible innovation
15:56
happening in entrepreneurs that lean into it,
15:59
that want to do it better.
16:00
And you're gonna see some companies go out of business
16:03
because they can't adapt and adjust to the changing times.
16:06
So the fact of those that wanna lean in
16:09
and adapt and adjust,
16:10
just understand what tools are best for you.
16:12
One of my favorite applications is rebuy.
16:14
It sits on the power of AI and e-commerce
16:17
for upsells and cross-sells and insights.
16:20
And that's like a good example of an assas company
16:24
that's doing it well.
16:26
But because AI is such a trend in a buzzword right now,
16:28
I think it's more important than ever
16:30
that you get experts involved
16:32
and you don't just start going off
16:33
on all this shiny object syndromes
16:35
because people are claiming AI that's not real AI.
16:38
There are companies out there though,
16:39
like Clickly is another one.
16:41
It's an AI performance marketing company
16:44
that is really good and gives people results.
16:48
So I think it's just doing your homework,
16:50
doing your due diligence of how this is being used
16:53
and making sure that there's an edit process
16:55
of humans reviewing what is output of AI
16:58
so that you're not just publishing stuff as a brand
17:03
that doesn't have at least a check-in balance right now.
17:06
- Yeah.
17:07
I love that you're starting to rattle off
17:11
all these technologies.
17:13
Now, what I find really interesting, Chelsea,
17:15
is that there's so much innovation going on
17:20
across the entire ecosystem
17:23
that it probably puts the pressure on you and the team
17:26
to have more understanding in the spaces,
17:29
well, too, if I'm correct on that.
17:32
And again, I also think it puts a lot of,
17:35
it's not pressure, but another reason to look at an agency
17:40
like yourself because again, there's so much going on.
17:44
Let me go to an expert in the space like yourself
17:48
and like tell me, like what are the things
17:50
that actually I need to know right now
17:52
and to the value add from an agency?
17:54
Are you experiencing that yourself right now with clients?
17:57
- Yeah, I completely agree it's a value add as an agency
18:00
and I think that's what I want to put out in the world more
18:03
is like I have blocked out my time.
18:05
Like I said, I just went to a conference.
18:06
I had AI specialized this last weekend.
18:08
I'm actively learning and curious
18:10
because that's who I am by nature,
18:12
but I can't lead or have the right strategies
18:14
for my clients and customers
18:16
if I don't know myself as well.
18:18
So I think because it's a changing landscape,
18:20
it's important that we have these conversations,
18:22
but I'm excited.
18:23
I feel like this is an innovation time.
18:25
And to me, that's the fun part of how can we be more creative
18:29
to solve problems that we know are in the marketplace,
18:31
but on the flip side, while being more creative,
18:35
how do we make sure it has checks
18:36
to be be back to that why?
18:39
That's why I kind of like do those as a balance
18:41
because where I think people and even brands
18:44
or companies can get off track
18:45
is they can go down a rabbit hole in some of the AI world
18:48
stuff and then they're off track to actually what they're wise.
18:51
Like, is this tool gonna help with this?
18:53
So it's kind of going back to that clarity piece
18:55
and that's what I love helping companies understand.
18:58
And then we can bring those tools to the forefront
19:01
so that they can run at a faster clip
19:03
and have those results that they want to see,
19:04
but also be more innovative.
19:07
Like part of my vision for my team
19:09
is that we put best in class work out there.
19:11
And the only way that's gonna happen in this AI world
19:15
is that we also are testing and trying
19:17
and being a leader in this space.
19:19
So I want to lead like this innovation
19:23
because to me it impacts anybody
19:25
that's in this commerce world as they are.
19:27
And quite frankly, the way that Shopify is rejected
19:32
to kind of go more up market
19:33
in some of these big traditional large enterprise companies,
19:38
there's a lot of confusion around AI
19:41
and how it's going to affect them.
19:42
And I think the important thing is you get smart people
19:45
in the room together and then you innovate
19:47
on those problem solvings.
19:48
And that's what I love to do is collaborate in strategy
19:51
of like, how can we make this a strategic move for AI
19:54
for this company's growth goals
19:56
or this company's why that we're executing on?
19:58
- Is it from your conversations with your clients now,
20:02
are they more centered around the efficiency?
20:05
And how do you utilize AI to be more efficient?
20:08
Is it centered around growth right now
20:10
and how do you use AI to grow even faster?
20:14
Or is it more centered around,
20:16
and I'm just gonna pick out another one, maybe like money,
20:18
and how do we save on certain tools
20:22
or customer support or whatever and utilize AI?
20:26
Is there any sort of focus there or has it been all three?
20:29
- Good question.
20:30
I think it's actually been all three
20:31
and it depends on the brand a little bit.
20:33
In the efficiency category,
20:35
I think where this is gonna be really helpful
20:37
is for us to diagnose things faster.
20:39
Every company and every brand has technical debt
20:42
in this space going into 2024,
20:44
because the internet and ways things were built
20:47
was moving at such a fast clip, right?
20:49
And so without the efficiency of like auditing that
20:52
or like you're tune up in a way,
20:54
I think AI is gonna help with that.
20:55
I think in terms of the growth and the money side,
20:58
it's gonna help in getting more creative ideas
21:01
around competition and around avatar research
21:04
and around market research in general.
21:06
It's not always as accurate, but the data that like,
21:09
for example, a prompt I put into chat GTP recently
21:13
for a client of mine and was able to do
21:15
in just a few minutes time that used to take hours
21:17
of research is like, give me a list of every company
21:21
that has this GMV level with this kind of wellness thing
21:24
with this and it'll spit out stuff.
21:26
Sometimes it's accurate, but sometimes you just have to check.
21:29
But the amount of information that we have access to right now
21:32
is just incredible and it's how we use it
21:35
that's going to matter.
21:37
So that's right, all three of those questions
21:39
are pretty important in my bank.
21:41
- I kinda knew it was gonna be all three,
21:42
but I wanted to see if you would shift one way or the other.
21:45
If you don't mind, are there any,
21:50
I know you talked about a couple examples with Rebye
21:52
and then it was click C, is that what it was?
21:55
- Clickly, yeah.
21:56
- Clickly, quickly.
21:58
Any other examples, use cases like that,
22:02
that you have implemented yourself earlier on
22:06
with now the innovations of AI that you can talk about?
22:10
- Sure, I'm an open book.
22:12
People know that when it comes to me.
22:13
So I actually just implemented daily.ai,
22:16
which is a newsletter concept about AI performance stuff.
22:21
One of my growth goals for this next year
22:24
is to be more of an influencer in this space with my team.
22:26
And the only way I'm gonna do that
22:28
is actually to put out information and get more content going.
22:30
I have been so busy just focusing on the client work
22:34
that I haven't had time to actually strategize
22:36
on our own marketing plans as an agency.
22:39
So that's one I'm using and gonna lean into
22:41
because I wanna put good work out there
22:43
and from a newsletter perspective.
22:45
But I also think it's going to be a game changer
22:47
for the way algorithms are addressing for brands.
22:51
So it's really important now that ever
22:54
that decision makers in marketing
22:56
and founder level look at commerce in a different way
22:59
because of AI.
23:01
Meaning are you knowing your numbers really well now
23:04
because they're going to shift probably
23:06
at a more rapid pace as we get into the future
23:08
than they did prior?
23:09
So we have to be able to adapt to that
23:11
based on the data that we're seeing.
23:14
- Oh, that's great.
23:15
I wanna end on one thing, Chelsea.
23:19
And that's kind of again, looking forward.
23:21
It's hard to say like looking forward to the future
23:23
'cause I feel like we're in the future right now.
23:26
So maybe it's just like current state.
23:28
Now, I know a lot of people listening are VP CEOs
23:33
or even just managers of a lot of DTC brands here.
23:39
Now, if they haven't even touched anything
23:42
around AI right now, specifically centered around CX,
23:46
like what would your advice be to them
23:49
to take those next steps?
23:50
Or maybe your advice is not to take the next steps,
23:53
but what would you tell them if it's like AI's
23:58
all around them and they're like,
24:00
"What do I do here?
24:01
"Like how should I move forward
24:03
"with everything and all the innovation going on?"
24:06
- I love it.
24:07
Well, the first thing I would do is lean
24:08
into your SaaS for customer service.
24:10
So we're gorgeous partners.
24:11
Pervert example would be ask gorgeous.
24:13
Like you pay for this software on the back
24:15
and then Shopify for a reason.
24:17
What innovations are they doing with AI?
24:19
Shopify is doing innovations with AI.
24:21
I think before they pivot into more tools
24:24
or more understanding,
24:26
ask with a certain SaaS technology
24:28
that you have now on what innovations are happening.
24:30
Clavio as well as a good one, or SMS,
24:33
what are ways that you can do that?
24:34
And then implement things that make sense for your brand.
24:37
So for example, like I just shared personally,
24:40
my implementation was daily.ai.
24:43
So I knew in my roadmap,
24:45
I wanted to start putting out a more consistent newsletter.
24:48
You said consistency was really important
24:49
and I want the open rate to be better.
24:51
Well, that's what this particular function
24:54
is supposed to do and help me with.
24:55
So if I can shortcut some of that,
24:57
that's an intent based on something I had as a goal.
25:00
So I think for these brands and CEOs that are looking at,
25:03
what do they want to do this next year?
25:05
If it's, like you said, money,
25:06
if it's the sales side of it
25:08
and they want to increase,
25:09
let's say their conversion rate from three to four.
25:12
Well, what are tools right now
25:14
that are focused on conversion rate optimizations
25:16
based on AI patterns that they can maybe think of?
25:19
Is it a traffic problem?
25:20
Is it a development problem because their site is too slow?
25:24
Is it a content problem because the creative?
25:27
There are certain tools in AI and all those categories.
25:30
You just have to be specific about the ask.
25:32
It's just like chat GTP.
25:33
It's only as good as the prompts that you put in there.
25:36
I would just encourage and challenge those CEOs
25:38
to do the same thing.
25:39
- No, that's great.
25:40
Well, Chelsea Jones, thank you so much for your time.
25:44
Really appreciate that.
25:45
Chelsea Jones, co-founder of Chelsea,
25:49
sorry, Chelsea Rachel, taking,
25:52
I'm gonna just say this for myself,
25:53
taking JV D to C Shopify brands to the varsity level.
25:57
Do I got that?
25:57
- You got that, love it.
25:59
- That's awesome.
26:00
Okay, again, thank you for your time
26:01
and we'll talk later.
26:03
- Thank you so much.
26:04
Bye, Brian.
26:05
(upbeat music)
26:08
(upbeat music)
26:10
(upbeat music)
26:13
(upbeat music)
26:16
(upbeat music)
26:38
(upbeat music)
26:43
(upbeat music)
26:50
(upbeat music)
26:58
(upbeat music)
27:05
(upbeat music)
27:10
(upbeat music)
27:20
(upbeat music)
27:25
(upbeat music)
27:30
(upbeat music)
27:37
(upbeat music)
27:47
(upbeat music)
27:52
(upbeat music)
27:57
(upbeat music)
28:04
(upbeat music)
28:14
(upbeat music)
28:19
(upbeat music)
28:24
(upbeat music)
28:31
(upbeat music)
28:41
(upbeat music)
28:46
(upbeat music)
28:51
(upbeat music)
28:58
(upbeat music)
29:08
(upbeat music)
29:13
(upbeat music)
29:18
(upbeat music)
29:25
(upbeat music)
29:40
(upbeat music)
29:45
(upbeat music)
29:52
(upbeat music)
30:07
(upbeat music)
30:12
(upbeat music)
30:19
(upbeat music)
30:34
(upbeat music)
30:39
(upbeat music)
30:46
(upbeat music)
31:05
(upbeat music)
31:12
(upbeat music)
31:31
(upbeat music)
31:38
(upbeat music)
31:58
(upbeat music)
32:18
(upbeat music)
32:38
(upbeat music)
32:58
(upbeat music)
33:18
(upbeat music)
33:38
(upbeat music)
33:58
(upbeat music)
34:18
(upbeat music)
34:38
(upbeat music)
34:58
(upbeat music)
35:18
(upbeat music)
35:38
(upbeat music)
35:58
(upbeat music)
36:18
(upbeat music)
36:38
(upbeat music)
36:58
(upbeat music)
37:18
(upbeat music)
37:38
(upbeat music)
37:58
(upbeat music)
38:18
(upbeat music)
38:38
(upbeat music)
38:58
(upbeat music)
39:18
(upbeat music)
39:38
(upbeat music)
39:58
(upbeat music)
40:18
(upbeat music)
40:38
(upbeat music)