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Yaw Aning 43 min

From Shipping to CX


In this session, Yaw Aning, co-founder of Malomo, discusses transforming the e-commerce customer experience through AI and personalized shipping, highlighting how Malomo turns the post-purchase journey into a unique brand storytelling and engagement opportunity. Yaw also explores the broader impact of AI in e-commerce, emphasizing the creation of deeper, more meaningful brand-customer relationships.



0:00

(upbeat music)

0:02

- And welcome to our next session

0:07

with Yau and Ing with Malomo.

0:08

Yau, how are you doing today, man?

0:10

- Hey, I'm Greg, Brian.

0:11

Thanks for having me.

0:12

How are you?

0:13

- I'm good.

0:14

I am super happy to have you here to have this discussion.

0:18

I know you got thoughts and opinions, so let's just go

0:21

right into it.

0:22

First of all, for those that don't know Malomo,

0:26

which I don't know how, like, that's insane.

0:29

- I'm a little bit of a "Malomo"

0:31

just because of the name at the very least.

0:34

And I know the name comes from a very special experience

0:36

that you have.

0:37

So can you tell us a little bit about your company?

0:39

- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

0:40

For sure.

0:41

Yeah, Malomo, we are an order tracking platform

0:44

that we focused on, you know,

0:46

high growth merchants on the Shopify ecosystem.

0:49

Our goal is to really bring transparency

0:51

to the delivery experience,

0:53

help our merchants kind of control the customer experience

0:56

after someone buys,

0:58

and really be proactive with them about letting them know

1:01

where their package is in the delivery process.

1:04

And then, like, our big sort of, like,

1:08

I would say, maybe differentiator or our thesis

1:11

that I think is different from most of the market is that

1:14

shipment tracking has historically sort of been

1:16

this very stale, engineering experience.

1:19

We wanted to help merchants make it very enjoyable,

1:22

help them stand out from the crowd

1:24

and use tracking as a way to connect in unique ways

1:28

with their consumers,

1:29

and ultimately make it a more profitable experience

1:34

for the merchant and more delightful for the consumer.

1:36

So we helped build a lot of tools

1:40

in order to make that a reality.

1:42

- There's been, there's several sessions today

1:45

where the topics of customer education

1:49

and product education,

1:51

celebrating your customers comes up

1:52

and I think that this blends itself so well.

1:54

- So we'll get into that,

1:55

but actually just out of curiosity,

1:58

I know you've been in the DDC space for a while now

2:01

and you're at an agency prior to Milomo.

2:04

When you bet on Shopify,

2:06

was it seriously just a bet and it actually kind of paid off

2:11

or while Shopify was one of the e-commerce platforms

2:14

that it kind of took off?

2:17

Or did you have this sneaky suspicion?

2:19

You knew some data points and you knew

2:21

Shopify would be in this position at the right.

2:25

- Yeah, it's such a good question to think back

2:28

to that time when you were first,

2:31

with our agency,

2:34

we would work with direct to consumer brands.

2:37

And a lot of times they would come to us asking for like,

2:39

"Hey, I'm launching a brand new storefront

2:43

or I've got sort of like a brick and mortar business

2:47

and I'm trying to bring it online."

2:49

And we ended up in the very early days,

2:52

sort of canvassing the market around solutions.

2:54

And we would, our agency would build

2:57

kind of custom technology that would plug into Shopify

3:01

and help them do some different things.

3:03

And so we would canvass the market

3:05

and look at a lot of different solutions.

3:07

And one of the things that stuck out about Shopify

3:10

was from a developer perspective, I'm not a developer,

3:15

but I didn't see obviously we did talk about development.

3:19

They're APIs and how extensible they were,

3:22

how they let developers build like,

3:26

what felt like any type of experience

3:28

that you wanted to enable.

3:30

It just was unparalleled.

3:33

And so we did not know,

3:35

like we felt like Shopify was small.

3:37

Like it definitely didn't feel like this large ecosystem,

3:41

but the rate at which they were moving their technology

3:45

forward felt very like new and unique.

3:48

And that's what we made a bet on,

3:50

was like a modern technology stack would ultimately win

3:55

in most of our merchants.

3:58

They not only loved,

4:01

well, I mean, they loved the aspect of,

4:03

it's really easy for them to manage the storefront

4:06

and their product inventory and all that stuff.

4:09

And then for us as developers,

4:10

we can do all these crazy things.

4:11

And so it felt like such like a symbiotic relationship

4:15

that we felt like we couldn't ignore.

4:18

So I wouldn't say like we knew that Shopify

4:20

was gonna be as successful as it's become.

4:23

It was more of like, we just love this ecosystem

4:25

and what they've built and like,

4:26

we wanna continue to build on it

4:28

'cause it just felt so like they were ahead of the game.

4:32

- Yeah.

4:33

Well, good bet.

4:36

And I guess two, it's like,

4:40

they're very, and I've heard it from the outside.

4:42

They're very customer focused.

4:44

And in your example,

4:46

it's clear that like customer focus

4:48

to them also means giving you the tools as a developer

4:51

to utilize their platform as best as you can.

4:54

And that's like what they did.

4:54

That's awesome to hear.

4:56

Okay, so let me take it to like this next topic,

4:58

which is, and I brought it up briefly,

5:01

I was, there's a session today with Shrei

5:06

from Good Peeps, a D2C brand.

5:10

And he started bringing up the reasons behind

5:14

why it's so important to educate your customers,

5:18

to inspire your customers

5:20

and to inform your customers

5:23

and pretty much celebrate at the end of the day.

5:27

I think that both really well with shipping honestly.

5:31

- Yeah, yeah.

5:32

- And how do you see that?

5:33

And if you can like share a couple examples,

5:37

use cases or just in your opinion,

5:39

where you can do all this through the shipping experience.

5:43

- Yeah, so actually the genesis of Milomo

5:47

in the early days actually came from this exact problem

5:52

or opportunity, depending on how you look at it.

5:55

Yeah, so I was,

5:58

I was just enamored by these direct to consumer brands.

6:00

It all felt like they were like launching

6:02

these really incredible, highly crafted products.

6:06

And so any opportunity that I found to buy

6:08

from a direct to consumer brand I take.

6:10

So I was in the market for a backpack.

6:15

As a busy entrepreneur, you often have to travel

6:18

and take like these two or three day trips.

6:20

And I just hated, I hated traveling with a big suitcase

6:23

'cause it just felt like overkill.

6:24

So I was looking for sort of like this backpack

6:26

where I could, I could do these trips.

6:28

And so I found this brand,

6:30

people probably know it by now.

6:33

This is probably back in 2016 or 2017 called Nomadic.

6:38

And I think I found their Kickstarter

6:41

and it was just like, oh, this is really cool.

6:44

Like I like the feel of the bag, et cetera.

6:47

So I place an order and then I just weirdly got into

6:51

like this like mental state of like how to like efficiently

6:56

pack for trips.

6:58

I don't know why.

7:00

And so like I just go like YouTube like different ways

7:04

like pack for trips or like different like places

7:07

that you could go and like that.

7:11

That like just really got me excited about getting the bag

7:14

'cause there was, you just envision like all the things

7:17

that you're gonna do once you get that product.

7:20

And I was like no offense to Nomadic

7:24

but back in the back in the day like,

7:26

I don't think any brand is doing this.

7:27

Like once I got the package,

7:29

I was like expecting for them to educate me

7:31

on all these things that I like innately felt

7:34

like I wanted to do.

7:35

It's also like what we should be,

7:38

we should sort of like get our like the brands

7:40

that we work with to do this.

7:42

Like shipping, it's sort of this boring thing

7:46

that people do.

7:47

But once you buy something, you have this moment

7:51

where you have like literally a captive audience

7:54

of that single consumer, they're highly engaged

7:58

with paying attention to your brand.

8:00

Like merchants should leverage that to engage them

8:03

and keep them entertained or educated

8:06

about the product, the brand, new products that are coming out.

8:11

And so that was the use case for no one.

8:13

It's like, oh, we could turn shipping

8:14

into this like really interesting marketing

8:16

or attention channel.

8:18

So I like I sort of pitched that to my co-founder Anthony.

8:22

Like the original for his point of view

8:23

like when you were thinking about this,

8:24

it was more of just like,

8:25

let's just create this dashboard

8:27

where we can tell merchants where their orders were.

8:29

I was like, but once we do that,

8:32

there's this other kind of like really cool thing

8:33

that we can do which is like,

8:35

makes us a really unique marketing channel.

8:37

So we use the two together

8:38

that sort of like making it all know.

8:40

- That's fascinating.

8:42

And again, I'm creating an assumption,

8:47

but it's more about timing, right?

8:51

Because at that point, there's brands,

8:55

they've always have the ability to email their customers

8:58

after someone purchases.

9:00

But there's this time of like,

9:02

hey, they get really excited about where is my item at, right?

9:06

And again, like it goes back to the customer support.

9:08

Number one question, everyone gets is where is my order?

9:11

But is that what it is?

9:13

Like at the at the helm of it, it's just the timing.

9:16

It's that excitement, it's like an inflection point.

9:18

And it's like, well, if we got them up here,

9:20

like it's the best time to educate,

9:22

is that really where it comes down to?

9:24

- Yeah, I mean, there's like rarely a place

9:27

that you can make a more strong impression than shipping.

9:32

Like you said, the timing is so crucial

9:35

because the emotional state of the consumer

9:37

is in such a unique place.

9:39

They're both like excited, but anxious, right?

9:43

They're anxious that their product's not going to arrive.

9:45

So they go to their order to track it

9:48

and they track it a bunch, like a lot.

9:51

We sort of seen that, you know, upwards of a fifth

9:54

of all website traffic hits one page

9:57

and that's your status page.

9:59

So like it's just customers really care.

10:01

And so their emotional state is pretty heightened

10:04

from that anxiousness, but they're also super excited,

10:07

right? They're super excited to get this thing

10:08

that they probably searched forever for on the internet,

10:12

right? They looked at alternatives,

10:13

they read the product reviews,

10:15

they decided to buy from your brand.

10:18

So they want to also hear from you,

10:20

like about who your brand is,

10:22

what you stand for, what your products can do in their life

10:24

that makes their life better.

10:27

So that timing is really, I mean, it's like,

10:30

that the timing creates this emotional pressure

10:34

and that emotional pressure can like help you form

10:38

a brand impression either positively or negatively.

10:41

- Is it also like confirmation as well too?

10:44

Because at least in my opinion,

10:47

sometimes there's this guilt almost after a purchase

10:51

of like, "Oh, did I make the right purchase right now?"

10:54

And do some of your brands or your customers

10:57

kind of take that opportunity too to almost confirm

11:00

that it's like, "Hey, let's know you made the right purchase.

11:02

"Let me tell you about the brand.

11:03

"I'm gonna tell you about the story again and again

11:05

"to make you feel, do you, other merchants

11:07

"that utilize that moment and stuff like that?"

11:11

- Yeah, I mean, yeah, I think you nailed it too.

11:14

Like, for some consumers, they might discover your brand

11:19

through a random ad.

11:21

Like, I've got a hat from Melon on my desk.

11:25

Like literally just saw this Facebook ad.

11:27

That is such a dope hat.

11:30

- And your purchase right there.

11:32

- And your purchase, yeah.

11:34

- Oh, they are the,

11:35

the look and like audience for all these brands, that's you.

11:38

- They want you.

11:39

- Oh, I'm targeted.

11:41

- I'm targeted, right?

11:42

It works.

11:44

But like, in that moment, like,

11:47

"Oh, is that a bad idea?"

11:48

Like, and it's not even like,

11:52

I was at it like, will I not love the product?

11:56

Some of it's like, is this a real brand?

11:59

Like, did I just buy from some sort of like

12:01

vaporware company and get my money stolen?

12:04

'Cause that happens, right?

12:06

- How's that gonna happen to you?

12:08

(laughing)

12:11

- So there's definitely some of that

12:13

of just reinforcing.

12:14

Like, this is a great idea.

12:15

I'm gonna show you all the reviews from others

12:17

who've made a similar decision as you.

12:20

I'm gonna tell you how they use the product,

12:22

how they get the value of the product.

12:24

And so you just peek in all of that emotional connection.

12:28

- Yeah. - Awesome.

12:29

So let me just ask you another question about post-per...

12:34

Or not even post-perches,

12:36

let's just say customer experience in general.

12:38

Is there anything like that I'm missing,

12:42

if I were to say, yeah,

12:43

I think customer experiences around celebrating

12:46

your customers, customer education,

12:48

you know, bleeding the brand into the experiences well too?

12:53

Is there anything else that like you'd say is

12:55

also as important as those three?

12:58

And again, this is off the cuff.

13:00

So I'm just curious if you can say something else

13:03

when it comes to customer experience about these brands.

13:06

- Yeah, I mean, like the basics of like,

13:11

you know, I think a lot of brands also don't want to do this,

13:16

but getting out ahead of problems too,

13:19

you know, they're in the delivery experience.

13:23

Like, I think about, you know, carriers get a lot of flack.

13:28

They get a lot of anger thrown at them for, you know,

13:33

losing packages, getting them, not delivering them on time,

13:38

them being damaged.

13:41

And you think about like literally billions of packages

13:45

are moving across the world in just a few days.

13:49

The coordination that is required to do that

13:53

on the scale that these carriers do it,

13:56

it's sort of like the eighth one of the world in my mind,

13:59

that anything even arrives, like I could,

14:02

Brian, I could literally go outside my door,

14:04

put something in the mailbox,

14:05

and then like three days it would arrive

14:07

on your doorstep in Chicago from Indianapolis.

14:10

Like that is sort of like amazing to me.

14:12

But like that scale means that like things

14:15

are going to go wrong.

14:17

Like there's like, there's two things that are sure in life,

14:20

like, or three things, death taxes and like a package will go.

14:24

(laughs)

14:25

- What was that?

14:26

- That's like the first time you said that, huh?

14:29

That's the one I wrote first.

14:32

(laughs)

14:33

I just put those in my backpack and just wait, wait.

14:36

- I love it.

14:37

- But like just trying to predict, right?

14:40

When an experience is going to go bad,

14:43

and then telling the customer what's happening,

14:46

tell them what you're gonna do about it, right?

14:48

Setting a new expectation.

14:49

If that expectation changes,

14:51

start getting ahead of those things.

14:53

There's been a lot of research that says like,

14:56

if somebody like has an experience with your brand

14:58

and it's bad, and you work really hard

15:02

to rectify that experience proactively,

15:05

the loyalty from that consumer to your brand

15:08

is actually higher than if something wrong

15:12

never occurred with that consumer in the first place.

15:15

And so being able to like just get ahead of those problems,

15:19

knowing that they're gonna happen

15:20

is also kind of a key part of that.

15:21

That overall customer experience and brand loyalty.

15:24

- Yeah, I think I could see some similarities

15:27

between again, the post-purchase experience with shipping.

15:32

Like you mentioned, just to clarify,

15:34

hey, a package is getting lost.

15:36

It's better to text them, email them upfront

15:40

as soon as you have that understanding and notification.

15:43

And then it goes to just customer support,

15:45

I assume in general, I honestly agree with what you just said.

15:50

Like pro being proactive is probably that fourth

15:54

kind of topic pillar that I forgot to mention

15:58

because I do think now more than ever, life is busy

16:02

and a brand is important, it's important to be proactive

16:07

with that ever message or whatever they want to talk to.

16:10

Right? - Yep.

16:11

- Super interesting. - Yep.

16:12

- Let me kind of pivot this to,

16:14

if you have any thoughts, I know you have thoughts

16:18

and opinions, but does, and specifically about AI.

16:23

So let me kind of set the stage really quick.

16:26

There's a ton of technology companies today

16:28

that are, the next announcement is around new AI functionality

16:33

with their platform and their platform.

16:37

And I wanna say like, take yourself outside of Malomo

16:42

and put yourself in the merchant's shoes for right now.

16:45

Like if you're a merchant, would you like try to utilize

16:49

as much of this AI technology use cases as possible?

16:54

Would you kind of put yourself on hold?

16:56

Where would you start if you were a merchant?

16:59

- Yeah, that's a wonderful question.

17:01

Like it is, even as a founder,

17:03

like I'm thinking about the same things in my business, right?

17:06

Like, AI is gonna change my business for the better,

17:11

maybe even for the worse.

17:12

And so like, you can't ignore it.

17:17

But like, there's just so much happening and so much change

17:20

that's also sort of like hard to wrap your head around it.

17:23

I think for a lot of people, AI right now is sort of like a hammer

17:27

and like to a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

17:30

So like, people are just trying to apply AI to everything.

17:34

When in reality, I think like that the mindset should be,

17:38

what customer problems do I have?

17:40

And how might AI help me solve those customer challenges

17:45

to create a better experience?

17:47

Not all of those things require AI.

17:50

But there could be some like really, really, really interesting

17:53

use cases around that.

17:55

I sort of like bucket, I'd bucket like AI into,

18:00

around like specifically like customer experience things

18:02

into four buckets.

18:03

One would be more of like utility, right?

18:07

How does AI do things for me or my customer?

18:12

One is customer delight.

18:15

Like how does AI make my customers experience more enjoyable?

18:18

There's the thing I would kind of categorize as efficiency.

18:24

So how does AI make, you know, my life serving my customers

18:28

easier or my customers life easier?

18:32

And then the fourth is more on like insights.

18:36

Like how does AI spark new ways of thinking or new ways to do things?

18:41

From like consumer, like if I'm a DDC brand perspective,

18:44

of those four buckets, there's like,

18:46

there's clear ways in which my brand could be impacted

18:50

by those four things.

18:51

Like from a, from an efficiency perspective, right?

18:54

AI could make my employees lives easier.

18:58

I could do more things with less.

18:59

Those are more the obvious things and a lot.

19:03

Like there's a lot of like really great platforms

19:05

like customer doing like really impressive things around that,

19:08

right? That makes support agents lives easier

19:10

to help them answer customer questions faster,

19:14

you get to the right answers quicker

19:16

and do it in a really delightful way.

19:18

I think people sort of like ignore it.

19:22

But the thing that I care a lot about is like,

19:24

how do I make my customers life more enjoyable

19:26

and create like newer delightful experiences?

19:29

So much of the conversation around AI today

19:32

has been around Japots and LLMs and all that stuff.

19:36

And we can go into that.

19:38

I think there's some interesting things to be said around

19:40

like some of this like image or video manipulation

19:45

that's happening, which like, it's weird for me to say,

19:48

'cause I'm scared of some of it, like legitimately scared.

19:51

But there's some really like cool use cases

19:53

that you could also kind of like create.

19:57

So I think of like, oh, like,

19:59

we're just talking about this all the time,

20:00

but they've struggled to figure out how to do this at scale,

20:02

which is like,

20:05

do a personalized thank you message from the founder, right?

20:10

Like people have thought, I get right hand right,

20:13

written letters to that customer,

20:14

thanking them for the order for first time customer

20:17

and write something different

20:18

than if they bought from us a bunch.

20:20

But like, there's some cool things

20:23

that you might be able to do around that.

20:24

But I even take that one to further,

20:25

it would be great to have like a thank you video

20:29

that I see on my order confirmation

20:30

of my tracking experience that is literally the founder

20:33

saying, hey, Brian,

20:36

thanks so much for buying this melon hat.

20:39

Like here all the ways that I think you would get value out

20:42

of this and like leveraging AI to do that at scale,

20:47

I think it's like, oh man,

20:48

I think that's where you unlock some really unique

20:50

customer interactions that I don't think people

20:53

are thinking about.

20:54

- I like that.

20:55

I think what you bring up,

20:57

what you bring about in this conversation and topic

21:00

is that there is going to be this like new bar

21:05

for customers, this is just my hypothesis.

21:08

There's gonna be this new bar for customer support, right?

21:10

Because of AI models

21:12

and because now we can provide a certain standard experience.

21:16

When everyone's right here,

21:18

and then when, how do you differentiate, right?

21:20

Like how do you then you could celebrate your customers

21:24

but how and why and at what point?

21:26

And I love that, I haven't heard of that before

21:30

but that's a unique experience

21:32

and I do think that merchants have to think through that

21:34

a little bit more,

21:35

- Yeah.

21:35

- And provide now proactive, unique experiences

21:39

to differentiations of yourself and the brand.

21:42

How important is a,

21:44

well now how important is a brand?

21:48

And when I say that, meaning the story,

21:51

the elements, the emotions that a brand kind of pushes,

21:55

it maybe it's not more important than before.

21:59

Just what's your opinion on that?

22:02

- Oh man, that's like,

22:04

that's such, I like, I love that question so much

22:07

and yet there's so much impact there.

22:09

I think like, if you could almost think about

22:15

like remove brand from the equation

22:17

and think about relationships

22:19

and think about the people in your life,

22:21

like where do you find yourself spending time?

22:26

Who do you find yourself spending time with?

22:29

And that's how you should think about

22:30

what your brand is with your consumers.

22:34

It's like, how do I,

22:35

I'm trying to build a relationship with you,

22:36

I'm not trying to get you to like,

22:39

you know, know my tagline, like,

22:42

I mean that's important

22:43

but like, I think it goes way deeper than that.

22:45

It's where it's just like the little things

22:48

that you do to plant deposits

22:52

that can be harvested later in the form

22:55

of just repeat purchases from your brand.

22:59

It's, I think that's like the drive.

23:02

But I almost like, it's almost like,

23:04

like when you're dating somebody, right?

23:06

Like, you're courting them,

23:07

you're doing some things to build trust,

23:10

to drive affinity with them,

23:12

to get them to like you,

23:13

to give them to love you,

23:15

to get them to marry you.

23:16

I think people should think about brand in the same way.

23:19

It's like, I'm trying to do over time,

23:21

build this multi-dimensional relationship with this consumer.

23:24

And it's not one way,

23:25

it's not brand me kind of portray who I am to you.

23:28

It's like, I want you to know me and I wanna know you

23:32

and we should be in relation with each other.

23:34

And that will be beneficial to both of us.

23:36

- In your opinion,

23:40

- Yeah.

23:41

- This is a hard hidden question.

23:42

Do you think of brands can develop relationships

23:46

when they use AI,

23:50

or even AI responses via an email,

23:55

is that developing relationships between a brand

23:58

and a consumer,

24:00

or does there be that human element in it?

24:03

- Yeah.

24:04

I don't know.

24:05

- I feel like I'm on this.

24:07

- Oh, right.

24:10

- Yeah.

24:11

- I mean, like,

24:14

- There's no perfect answer here.

24:16

Let me just,

24:17

- You need to make it.

24:18

- People are trying to figure this out, so.

24:20

- Yeah.

24:21

- I like, what's that movie?

24:24

I forget that movie.

24:25

There's a couple.

24:26

- Yeah.

24:27

- Give me a better clue than that.

24:28

- I don't know.

24:29

(both laughing)

24:31

- You don't have to give up your eyes.

24:32

That movie, right?

24:33

- I'll try to think of it.

24:37

I can't think of it right now.

24:38

But like,

24:40

I think like chatbots are not there yet.

24:46

So I think more of the experiences degrade

24:48

the relationship than build them today.

24:50

'Cause like,

24:52

you can, if you as a consumer know,

24:54

you're talking to a chatbot

24:55

and the responses are very,

24:57

like even if they sound human-like,

25:00

but you know it's a chatbot,

25:01

it definitely feels impersonal.

25:03

So I don't,

25:05

I think the short-term answer is like,

25:07

AI should aid humans

25:09

in getting to like conversation or relationship,

25:15

like building elements faster.

25:18

Can AI reach a point where it replaces a human over time?

25:23

- Yeah.

25:24

- I feel like that's the goal, right?

25:26

Like people are trying to get there.

25:29

And if you do that in a way where the human doesn't know

25:33

that chatting look like a bot,

25:35

then it's possible, I would say.

25:38

- Yeah.

25:39

- But it's like if we're optimizing towards like,

25:41

hopefully they don't know that it's an AI bot.

25:45

We then, it's kind of confirmed that,

25:48

no, the best of the best is a human-to-human experience

25:53

because that's what we're trying to find.

25:54

- Yeah, yeah, yeah.

25:56

Yeah, yeah, that's what, I mean, honestly, yes, right?

25:58

Nothing will replace that.

26:00

- Yeah.

26:01

- 'Cause that's what we're trying to do really.

26:03

- Right, right.

26:04

But I will say on the other side of the thing though,

26:06

on the other side of this,

26:08

there are conversations of like,

26:11

well, the best sort of customer support

26:14

is a fast answer right away.

26:19

And it's like, dum, like, yep, I wanna return something.

26:21

Here you go, just do that.

26:22

Or if you have, again, a question about a certain service

26:27

of the description, what does this mean?

26:30

Oh, here it is.

26:31

And that's it.

26:32

And I find that fascinating because it is kind of two sides.

26:35

It's like, well, you do want some friction.

26:37

Like if it's just like one flick

26:38

and you get your answer and that's it.

26:40

And that's your experience.

26:43

- Yep.

26:44

- I don't know.

26:45

- Yep.

26:46

There's gotta be more, like if you're playing the long game,

26:49

right, like I have this personal saying, right?

26:54

Play long term games of long term people.

26:58

If you're playing the long game with your customers,

27:02

you're optimizing for several dimensions

27:05

to build that relationship.

27:06

Like speed could be one aspect of that relationship, right?

27:11

But like we're multi-dimensional beings

27:13

and sometimes speed is what we want.

27:15

And sometimes slowness is what we want.

27:18

Sometimes like care and empathy is like more important.

27:23

Sometimes delight or like giving like levity

27:29

to a situation is like what we want.

27:32

And so yeah, I definitely like most of the conversation,

27:37

I sort of like, highlighted those four things.

27:39

And I think like what you are alluding to is right,

27:42

that efficiency in the equation.

27:44

But does efficiency remove delight?

27:48

- Nope.

27:48

- It could, it could potentially.

27:51

I think people need to like think about this

27:54

and just multiple dimensions

27:56

'cause I don't think it's gonna be reduced effectively

27:59

down to just like AI makes us work faster.

28:03

And then (laughs)

28:04

- Right.

28:05

Right.

28:06

Well, I'm gonna wrap this up, but I kind of feel like

28:11

I may have even more questions now

28:14

than before I start writing a lesson.

28:17

Sometimes people who have helped life.

28:19

But no, yeah, I really appreciate the time.

28:23

Always enjoy talking to you.

28:25

And I can't agree more, long-term relationships

28:29

with, wait, hold on, I got it wrong.

28:31

What was the saying you say?

28:32

- Play long-term, games with long-term people.

28:37

- Games with long-term people, I love that.

28:39

I hope we can get into doing that, yeah.

28:41

Thank you guys. - Yes, yeah, thank you.

28:44

Thank you for having me.

28:45

- We'll talk soon.

28:46

Thanks all.

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