In this session we will delve into the dynamic intersection of AI (Artificial Intelligence) and CX (Customer Experience) to understand how AI is reshaping the way businesses interact with their customers. We will explore the latest trends, practical applications, and the impact of AI on improving customer satisfaction and loyalty. Join us as we navigate the future of CX through the lens of AI
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(upbeat music)
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- Hey, welcome everybody.
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We got a great session today.
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I'm excited to be talking about this.
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We're gonna be diving a little bit into this idea
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of humanization of the digital experience,
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data AI technology.
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To do that I brought on a newer friend of mine,
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Shashank Singh.
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He's currently the CEO and co-founder
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of a cool company called Backstage.ai.
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We'll be hearing a little bit more about that
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as we dive in today.
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But Shashank, thanks so much for joining
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and how the heck are you?
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- I'm good.
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I'm glad you're doing this on a great day.
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- Yeah, yeah.
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You know, never bad to get this kind of start the weekend
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with something like this.
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So excited to get into it.
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We'd love to hear just a little more about your background
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and kind of what you guys are doing over there
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at Backstage.ai.
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- Definitely.
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I'll just briefly give my background.
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I've been in the super more than 20 years.
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I was born and bought up in India.
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I did my undergrad in the
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Science and Engineering India.
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Worked there for a couple of years
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and then I moved to US, the land of opportunity.
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And was in the course of working mostly in the banks
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initially, like banks like Bank of New York Mellon, UBS,
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from the Xhamanan majority of the time in Goldman Sachs.
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Also did my MBA for NYU Stern in the entrepreneurship
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and finance that made me move away from finance
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and actually go go to for the tech companies.
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So I joined the startup called Flurry.
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Just pretty exciting.
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We were doing one of the,
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we had the biggest largest mobile analytics company out there
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and we got bought by Yahoo.
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So I worked with all the ad exchanges across the world.
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So got a deep insight into like how brands are leveraging
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data to target and read out customer
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and showing the relevant ads at the right moment of the time.
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From there, I moved on to another startup I run at,
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got bought by Publicis.
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That was another great run.
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It was VP of Indian there to build a lot of data
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engineering pipelines and let their data science team
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to build some really amazing products out there.
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And then I saw the world moving towards privacy
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and my bet was that privacy is gonna play a bigger role.
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So I moved away from Publicis and joined the startup
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for data maths where we are building some really cool
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private data bank where consumer can deposit their data
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and earn some cool rewards and money.
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And from there, COVID happened and we were like,
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had some great ideas.
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So I thought like why not start something called Backstage.
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What we are doing there is like we,
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from all my experience, I saw that the customer experience
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field right now is very, very kind of very static.
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And if you look at all the websites across the world,
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it's giving one size fit all experience for everyone.
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Like a 16 year old person going over there
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versus a 30 year old versus a 60 year old.
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Everyone gets the same experience on the website.
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While if you see the world has evolved so much
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that you need to personalize it
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and you need to give what much better experience
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to everyone on the website.
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So on that fundamental and along with the technology changes
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with AI coming into the picture,
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which privacy playing a much bigger role,
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people are getting aware about their data.
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We thought why not focus on something,
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create a cool product out of all these video AI
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and human touch and change the whole digital experience
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on websites today.
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>> I love it. Yeah, I love it.
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And I want to hear a little bit more about this,
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some of the problems you found in the solutions you guys
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are now kind of recommending to customers.
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So let's dive in just a big picture
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around this humanization of the digital customer experience.
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Like why is that a problem?
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What was broken?
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What made you guys start to think about like,
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wow, we got to do something here.
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This isn't working.
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>> So it was not one single moment
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that when we realized that,
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hey, there's something like this,
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there's a period of time when you see,
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so let's roll back.
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Like let's talk when there was no internet,
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like how the customer experience was.
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Like when you go to a walk into a store,
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there would people know you.
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How do you buy your first name?
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Like, hey, Shashank, how are you?
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Welcome to my store.
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And what are you looking for?
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I will help you out there.
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And we used to have great shopping experience.
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People would love to go to shops
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and have that experience,
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not just because of the product,
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but also the experience they were getting.
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Then came internet and everything became online.
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Everyone started investing in having a website,
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doing e-commerce and stuff.
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And at the end of the day, what happened was,
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it became so generalized,
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every experience became so generalized
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that there's no personalization and such.
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When you go to an online store,
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nobody's there to welcome you.
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Nobody's there to say, hey, Shashank,
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what can I do for you?
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And while in the store,
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you're getting much different experience.
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So why there's so much difference
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between a digital, a physical experience
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in a physical world versus a digital experience?
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So that's where we thought,
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like why not change something about it?
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Why not make it a little more humanized?
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When you go to a website,
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imagine somebody, a real human being there
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and saying, hey, welcome to buy a site
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and let me know how can I help you.
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That's one of the things,
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all different kinds of community experiences
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where every online store almost becomes
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like a community experience where you're going,
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walking in, looking at the product.
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There are people who are demoing the products out there.
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They're talking about it, like when you go to Costco,
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you see people actually brand showing their products,
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demoing without doing unboxing event,
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all those kinds of stuff that can happen on a brand website.
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And that was the mission we went after.
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Yeah, I mean, the fundamental thesis, again,
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when I spoke to you the first time I just loved it,
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'cause it is just true.
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I mean, there's something about walking
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into the neighborhood Starbucks.
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Or, and that's now.
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I mean, when I grew up in this small town
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and there was this grocery store called the Alpine Market,
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I won't say the gentleman's name, but to your point,
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I mean, you just walk in there and you'd say,
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you know, hey, Gabe, and how's the family?
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And, you know, and we, he knew the community, right?
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And we knew him.
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And yeah, now when I'm on the internet, it sucks.
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(laughs)
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And we are there to change that.
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Like I also want to highlight the fact,
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I highlighted the fact that the technology has moved on,
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privacy and stuff is linked to the,
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but another bigger factor is like,
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the consumer behavior has also changed a lot.
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If you look at digital natives, the Gen Z millennials,
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they, there are a lot of data around that.
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They want more and more interactions with the brand.
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And if you look at most of the newer brands
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are actually coming out of these social media,
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where they are, like these influencers are creating,
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they're becoming a brand because they are so much,
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they are so much closer to their customers,
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they know their needs, they understand who their fans
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are and what kind of product they can launch
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and they launch a product and then they take on the market
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and they look, I mean, Sabis has done that.
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Like Kim Kardashian has done that.
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You look at these new age brands,
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their traditional natives love that kind of thing,
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experiences they're getting from them.
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- Yeah, yeah.
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I mean, again, the concepts, right?
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Let's dive a little more into the details.
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Do you feel that there is for this,
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like you were kind of just going through,
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but this lends itself to more of a,
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maybe a B2C type audience,
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maybe not as much B2B.
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Is that something you'd say is true
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and you're like, honestly,
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I think this could be applicable for kind of anybody doing any,
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you know, anybody with the website
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should be thinking about how to do it differently.
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- No, it applies to, I mean, obviously B2C,
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it's a little more wider application
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and you're talking to billions of people out there.
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But B2C is actually, I think it's much more important there.
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Now you, because all those B2B says,
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you can look at their work,
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sometimes six figures to seven figures of contract,
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they come discover your product on the website
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and now you leave them on the mercy
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of your website experience that they are,
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obviously they are smart people
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and they will read all the videos,
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all the text, description and everything
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and they will decide based on that,
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whether they want to subscribe to your service.
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- Ah, what do you feel like is the,
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and again, this is just an interesting topic,
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so I'm gonna keep rapid fire in that you hear us hushing,
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but what do you feel like is,
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or maybe you're finding this,
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what are people liking the most about this?
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I'm gonna call it modern experience, you know,
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is it seeing the unboxing?
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Is it joining live webinars?
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Is it chatting with people?
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Is there certain things or behaviors that you feel like
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is being now kind of validated?
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Or is it so different in a, in a, in a game?
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I, a lot of people are like, oh, I,
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they got so used to not interacting
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with anybody on websites, they're like,
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they don't wanna, they don't wanna have a part of this.
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- I think like what's standing out
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and what people like, especially the newer generation
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is appreciating is about the authentic view of the brand,
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when they see these kind of experiences
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and special inferential doing unboxing
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and looking at the review and everything.
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It doesn't have to be, I mean,
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if you look at a lot of content has moved towards
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from a production Hollywood style videos
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to very authentic video, very authentic experiences.
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And people can resonate with it.
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It brings up loyalty, it brings up a lot of like retention.
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Like this is the way you retain your customer's teeth.
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And very interestingly, like I was reading one article
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like two days back, my co-founder shared it with me
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and it's pretty amazing where it's completely changes
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the whole funnel, the way you think about the funnel
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that the top down funnel.
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Lot of new age customers are buying the product first
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and then they're experiencing the product, the brand
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and then they are building the loyalty.
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So you may be able to sell one product,
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but you may not be able to sell them back again
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if you're not having.
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- Yeah, like that, the concept of building a brand
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with now doing like it's just becoming part and parcel.
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The interesting thing I think is for, you know,
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we work with a lot at customer,
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we work with a lot of B2C brands.
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So it feels so relevant to them as they do that.
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I think it's interesting to B2B, you know,
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I think you're gonna see more of that type of concept
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which it meaning like the brand is mattering more
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than just your direct marketing activity capability.
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But the one follow up I had is, you know,
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as I think about this concept of personalization,
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you know, do you feel like based on some of the things
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you guys offer, is it, are you seeing some more things
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that are working better?
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And again, this might be by industry or by type,
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but is it the live streaming of this or that
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that is kind of capturing people the most
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or is it recommending certain things
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when people jump onto the website?
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Is it, you know, is it personalizing the landing page
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when they're coming on and again,
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I don't know all the things you guys have tested
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and played out, but what types of things
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are driving that increased engagement in your mind
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from a tactical activity standpoint?
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Personalized web pages, videos, live streaming, demos,
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unboxing, what is it?
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Interactive content, what's kind of working?
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- I think like the biggest factor right now is like
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when we are doing some kind of influencer marketing,
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you have already an influencer who's using your product
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and you get them live on your website.
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And that drives a lot of traffic also engagement
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and people start seeing your product in a way
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associated with those subject-to-text experts.
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So we have worked with some of the like health
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and wellness companies where they get doctors,
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they get site characters, they get other influencers
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live on the website and you host that AMS sessions.
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And what we have built is like two way license,
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not just one way of licensing,
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where people are just watching things,
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they can raise their hand and become a speaker,
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that kind of stuff.
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Chats are going on interactivity.
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So it's like you connect to the level
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where you start assuiting that brand
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with that particular subject.
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So customer education plays a huge role
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in what we are talking about.
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It's like you're educating the customers.
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In return, data and insights play a big role
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that you know your audiences
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because you did like 50 different kind of live streams, let's say,
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and you with each live stream,
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you can associate, create an audience segment
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and you understand, hey, Sushank is into sports,
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this guy is into something else
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and that person is into something else
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and then you can tag along, you get first quality data
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because now you're doing those kinds of engagement
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which you were doing anyways on YouTube's
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or the world Instagram's or the world TikTok's or the world
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and you're not getting any kind of data from the consumer.
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What you were getting was vanity metrics saying,
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hey, 5,000 people join my live stream
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and what do you do after that?
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Like you can pat your back,
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hey, I was able to grab a tension of 5,000 people
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but then you cross your fingers
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and hopefully some of them will come to my website.
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And I'm saying like, let's say not 5,000,
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like if you're getting 500 people on your website,
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that's much important, much bigger.
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And I'm not saying you're banned in Shoshan, we have to do that.
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That's a great way to discover, get your brand discovered
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but then draw those niche customer
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who are really interested in your product
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to your website and engage with, understand them.
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All they are interacting with more kind of content.
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- Yeah, look, I mean, ultimately,
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your point you want to buy.
13:47
To one more click on that,
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I mean, how do you find,
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'cause I think some people,
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when they hear something like this might just say,
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"Gabe, look, we already are live streaming on TikTok."
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You know, we're already doing this social media platform.
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Like, now you want me to live stream on my website.
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What's the connection?
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Like, do you, it sounds like you're not saying abandoned social
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like you're saying.
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- Yeah, we are.
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- Like, but how do you bring the two together?
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Do you live stream on all of them or do you?
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- So we can connect.
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We can connect all the platforms
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and it can just go live from your website.
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I believe your website is your primary field.
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That's your pitch.
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Put the best effort out there.
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Do not abandon social media.
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Get the engagement there.
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Draw people to your website.
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So when they say, "I'm live,"
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I got the best influencer live on my website.
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And if they say, "Hey, I'm also live on the website."
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If you want to talk to me,
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you want to ask a question,
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you want to raise your hand and become a speaker,
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come on my website and you get that experience.
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So you can do that.
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You can drive a lot of traffic from different social media
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to your website.
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So that's one of the way.
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So do not abandon your social media
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because that plays a big role in our strategy
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because that's a ocean.
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But then you get those really niche customer
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to your website based on those engagements there.
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And you can ask them to come over on my website.
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It can incentivize,
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if you join my website in this conversation,
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ask a question, get 10% off,
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special codes or something like that.
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You can reward your customers.
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And in turn, you're getting the first body data also.
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- Yeah, yeah.
15:24
I like it.
15:26
I like it.
15:27
It's such a fun talk track and a great idea.
15:28
Again, just in principle,
15:29
I think it's as you originally started.
15:32
Like we've got to humanize this digital experience more
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and more, we're all looking for it.
15:37
Maybe we don't need to have the John at the coffee shop
15:41
or whatever saying hi,
15:42
where's you planned on a website?
15:43
But I don't know, there seems like
15:45
we've lost some of that balance.
15:47
Is you kind of think,
15:48
we need a wrap here, Loba.
15:50
Although I love to just hear about some of the fun things
15:52
you've discovered and experienced.
15:53
So thanks, Sushank for taking the time.
15:55
But for companies trying to get down this journey
15:58
and find this idea of humanizing the digital experience,
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what would your advice for people trying to kind of
16:05
start down this path?
16:08
What would you leave us with?
16:10
I think it's a long journey.
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It's not going to be like,
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whether you use backshade or something else for that,
16:16
immunizing your customer experience is going to be,
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you have to take the step first step.
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And that first step is actually making your website
16:23
much more interactive and much more fun place to be.
16:26
It should not be just like an online catalog of products.
16:30
Because today all the websites are online catalog of products.
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I can see, I can, it's a directory.
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I can go through products and delete the digital experience
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description that's about it.
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Make it more, more engaging and fun place to be.
16:39
And build a community.
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Community is the key where your customer can relate to you
16:43
and they will walk.
16:44
They are looking for a certain kind of information.
16:46
You've become that leader in that space.
16:48
They look at you not just for product,
16:50
but also for learning and educating themselves.
16:52
Yeah.
16:53
Love it.
16:54
I think that's a great talk track.
16:55
Appreciate you taking the time.
16:57
If someone wants to learn a little more about BackStager,
16:59
you know, connect with you.
17:00
What's the best way to do that, Sushank?
17:02
I'm on LinkedIn, backshade.ai is our website.
17:05
So Sushank, saying, "Backstage on LinkedIn."
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You can find me over there.
17:10
Sushank, add.
17:11
Go ahead.
17:12
All right.
17:13
We appreciate you jumping on it for the audience.
17:15
Have a fantastic day.
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[MUSIC]