Dive into a fascinating session with Michael Epstein, a seasoned D2C entrepreneur now at the helm of Postpilot, as he navigates the evolution of customer acquisition from early e-commerce days to the present. Learn about Postpilot's inception, a platform that seamlessly merges traditional direct mail with modern e-commerce tech stacks like Shopify and Klaviyo, making direct mail campaigns as intuitive as email or social media campaigns. Delve into how this transformation was driven to address the clunky experience of traditional direct mail campaigns and how Postpilot has grown to cater not only to retention but also customer acquisition, providing a full-funnel approach.
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(upbeat music)
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- Michael Epstein here from Postpilot.
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Michael, welcome to the AICX Virtual Summit.
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Glad to have you here.
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- It's like to be here, Brian, thanks.
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- Nice, well, we were talking a little bit beforehand,
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but we're just gonna dive right in.
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I guess first and foremost, Michael,
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can you give us a little background of yourself?
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I think what was interesting to me was the amount
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of years of experience you have in D2C.
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- Yeah, I am an old-timer.
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I started my first e-commerce brand in 2000.
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Like Shopify didn't exist.
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Google didn't.
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Google AdWords didn't exist.
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Like none of us existed.
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And yes, go to it in 2013 to private equity
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and gotten to private equity operating roles
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with the notable companies for a while after that
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and then Postpilot, here I am.
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- All right, sorry, one question.
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Customer acquisition at that time
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compared to our customer acquisition now,
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is it, was it easier, do you think,
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is it easier to acquire customers back then
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before Google Ads, or is it now so much easier
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with so many different channels?
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- It was different.
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It was different.
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It was just so many things that you see now
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or sort of have their genesis from things
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that you were doing before, but they weren't,
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you didn't know what they were called at the time.
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But just as a example, we blew up by partnering
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with bloggers in specific categories
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who talked, who reviewed our products
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and talked about our products on their blogs.
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These were like old school blogs
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where people have websites around specific topics,
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which would now be called like influencer marketing.
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And things like that.
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So it was different in that it was,
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you didn't have as many ways to get your name out,
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but there also wasn't nearly the same level of competition.
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So yeah, it was just very different.
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- What goes around comes around,
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just basically the same nature,
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they just renamed everything.
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And now here we are.
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- One way or another, they just evolve.
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They just keep evolving.
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- And now you are the co-founder of Postpilot.
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So, and you told me just four years ago,
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so tell us a little bit about Postpilot, Michael.
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- Sure, so Postpilot is a direct mail platform
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that natively integrates with Shopify, Clavio,
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your e-com tech stack and makes sending direct mail
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as easy as like email or Facebook campaigns.
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And really the genesis of Postpilot was
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we had used direct mail successfully as a channel
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in my career, throughout my career,
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working with different portfolio companies
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and different brands.
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But it was just the stereotypical clunky experience
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of a bunch of spreadsheets and finding a printer
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and then a bunch more spreadsheets
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to try and figure out if it are a wide for you.
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And it just sucked.
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So the thesis was like,
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somebody needs to build Clavio for direct mail.
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And so that's what we set out to do.
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And that's what we did.
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And then it really started out as more of a retention platform,
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like you're sending campaigns to existing customers,
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but over time we really evolved it
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to a full funnel platform that helps with acquisition as well.
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- When you say Clavio for direct mail,
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can you go deeper into like,
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what about Clavio outside of, yeah,
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they do email and SMS that you are bringing in to Postpilot?
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- Sure.
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So you think of your email program,
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you think of Clavio or Sennlainer,
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these other email service outliers
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and you're creating segments.
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You're defining a segment of customers,
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like somebody, I want everybody that has bought for me
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more than once and not in the last 90 days.
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And you're sending, you can send campaigns to those,
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one of all campaigns to those customers.
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By, in your ESP, you're sending these email blasts,
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think of like newsletter type announcements,
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like new product launch or sale announcement
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or things like that.
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And then you're also creating automated flows
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in your email service provider.
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So triggered automations, think of your winback campaigns,
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your abandoned cart campaigns, your cross-sell campaigns.
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When somebody makes their fifth purchase,
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you wanna send them a thank you message.
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You can do all of that with Postpilot
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the same way you would with an email,
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with email, we're literally triggering
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individually personalized cards to go out to people
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based on their behavior in real time.
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So Brian, you buy a 60 day supply of supplements.
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You go 65 days without placing another order.
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We tried emailing you to tell you it's time for refill.
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You haven't come back on day 65 trigger a card
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that says, "Hey Brian, it's time for refill.
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"Get back on track.
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"Here's 10% off your order if you come back now."
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And we send you that card in the mail.
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- So this is very aligned with the previous conversation
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that I've had about first party data,
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second party data, third party data.
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And tell me if I've run it wrong on this.
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But if you look at just direct mail,
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I feel like it started with a lot of third party data
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of like, okay, like, try to send to people that you think,
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like I've worked with yourself and saying,
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all right, try to find my target market
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and send this stuff out.
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And now I think the table is turn where it's all about
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zero party data, first party data,
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and utilizing as much of that in all of your direct mail
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is that, do I have that right?
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Would you kind of explain that the same way?
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- Sure, so it's actually both.
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So when you think about on the retention side
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and even on the retargeting side,
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it's using a lot of that zero party data.
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It's using your existing customers and transactional data
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to target people based on their purchase behavior.
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Or if you're thinking about retargeting type campaigns,
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we can actually take an email address
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from somebody that subscribed to your list
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but never bought anything from you
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so you don't have their postal address,
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match that to a postal address and retarget them
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with a card.
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We can match anonymous site visitors to a postal address
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and retarget those folks with a card.
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But what you're talking about is really on the acquisition side
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and knowing that this is more of like an AI
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sort of machine learning summit that we're in right now,
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it's, this is where you start to really be able to apply
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a lot of that.
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There's a couple of ways that you can apply it to the channel.
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But in prospecting, that's a key way
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'cause we're building lookalike audiences
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the same way that like Facebook is using AI machine learning
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to build lookalike audiences for Facebook called prospecting.
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Typically in the past,
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you've relied on kind of like superficial attributes
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to target people.
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I just want all females 25 to 49 in these zip codes
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to get a card.
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Like that's not a great idea.
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But what we're doing for brands is we have thousands
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of different attributes across hundreds of millions
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of US consumers.
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And we can take your first party or zero party data
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and use that to build lookalike models
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and then model it against these large consumer data sets
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that have thousands of different attributes.
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So we're looking at things like,
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okay, yes, you're, you might be a female 25 to 49,
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but you make this household income.
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And we know that you're, you have kids
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that are between ages two to five.
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And we know that you shop in Target twice a month.
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And we know that you buy meat jerky products from Target
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and you buy this type of beer and you drive this kind of car
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and you are an avid outdoors person
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and you are health enthusiast and you, you know,
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you have Disney Plus subscription.
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Like there's literally thousands of attributes.
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And this is where again, that sort of AI learning
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starts to really get interesting
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because we can model your first party data
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against all of these attributes and find people
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that look very much like your core customer.
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Super useful on the, the call of acquisition side.
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- So it sounds to me like where the AI is super impactful
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is just that you are thinking about so many different
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attributes and have the availability to look
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at so many different attributes
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that you kind of need an AI tool to better understand that.
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Do I have that right?
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- Exactly.
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There'd be no way to like model,
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create these models that factor in all these thousands
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of different attributes against huge data sets of customers
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without that type of technology.
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Be different if you were just saying,
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I just want to target all females in this.
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- Yeah.
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So then if I'm thinking about this right,
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like it's a formula of the TAM
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and making sure the TAM is right on
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and the message and the personalization of the message
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and making sure that is right on,
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is it like almost a 50/50 split of like,
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listen, you have to give as much attention to the target,
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the TAM as much as you is about the message
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or would you say one comes first to them in next?
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- Yeah, I think it's,
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what we really advise brands is
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you should really have a well-defined customer.
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So think similar to Facebook,
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there's a lot of correlation to like how Facebook
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shows acquisition and prospecting audiences.
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Like if your product is super generic
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and your TAM is everyone in the world,
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that's actually not a good fit for these types of technologies
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where they want to be able to identify
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what are the distinct attributes
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that makes your customer, your customer.
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There's an example, this isn't quite like AI-based,
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but as a good example of this,
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we work with a baby clothing brand
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and they want to target expectant moms
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in their third trimester.
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Like we actually know that information
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based on due dates that is available to us
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from tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands
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of expected mothers, we can back into like their due date
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and where they are in their pregnancy.
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But that is a very specific attribute
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that you want to ensure is present
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because you could look like an expected mom,
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but if you aren't an expected mom,
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that person is like not relevant to you in any way.
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So you want to make sure that certain attributes
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that are really important to you as a brand
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can be identified so that we can really zero in
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on those distinct things that make your customer
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really relevant to your business.
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- Is there a line?
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Is there a line between personalization
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and then intrusiveness?
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Like do you talk through that with certain clients?
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Does that come up at all or no?
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- Yeah, the interesting thing is people do ask that
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and direct mail tends to have,
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like it's, you don't get like the cringe factor
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that you do if you get like a retargeting ad
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or even an email from a brand,
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particularly that you don't know
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or haven't done business with.
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Because people have gotten cold catalogs
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and cold direct mail pieces from companies
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for like all of their existence.
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So it's actually, we actually don't hear that really ever
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in that people actually like receiving highly relevant
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direct mail, they perceive it more like a gift
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than an interruption, like a digital ad
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or an email.
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And so no, people actually respond to it really well
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and you don't get that sort of yeah, like stalker factor
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that sometimes people feel when they're getting
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like a super personalized retargeting ad
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after they visited a site
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and they like told Alexa they're interested in something
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or something.
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- Well, really quick story, like personalization
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is vastly improving and I know that for a fact
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just because I look at the holiday, like the Amazon
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and all these different toy stores, the magazines
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and all the stuff that I'm getting now.
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And it used to be my, I got two kids
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and it used to be like they'd circle a couple things
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that they want and now they're circling every single toy
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that's on the page because it's very highly relevant
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and it's clear that they've learned exactly what my kids
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actually would enjoy and stuff like that.
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And so like that personalization is getting to a point
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where it's right on.
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So let me kind of take the next step
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which is that I know you were talking about
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clavio integration, shopify integration.
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So someone that is new to this technology like myself
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that maybe some merchants that are listening,
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how do you integrate with something like Shopify
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as an example in the e-commerce platforms
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and how is that fruitful for the merchant at the end of the day?
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- Yeah, great question.
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So super simple, we have a Shopify app.
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You install it with one click the same way you install
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other Shopify apps.
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And once it's installed, like we can then create these segments,
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these audience segments, the same way you would create them
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like in an email platform or your SMS platform.
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- Yeah. - Or you would sort of segment
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your audience that way.
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And then also because of that integration,
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you can track performance of those campaigns
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in real time dashboard.
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This isn't like the old school way of direct mail of again,
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60 days after a campaign goes out,
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you're trying to put a bunch of spreadsheets together
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to figure out who of these people do I see
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in my customer database.
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We are, we have a real time dashboard
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because we're integrated with Shopify.
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We know when a customer receives a card,
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we know if they go on to make a subsequent purchase,
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we know if they use coupon code on the card
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and we attribute that back in real time with that.
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- Oh, interesting.
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Oh, I did not know that you were able to do that.
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Oh, wow, that's very tightly targeted.
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And I'm sure the merchants then,
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I mean, that's gotta be enlightening for the merchants
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they have an understanding of like,
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okay, here's actually the results coming from these campaigns.
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- This, it really is game changing.
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It really opened up this new growth channel
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to brands that historically would have never known
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where to begin and also just don't,
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it doesn't feel, it never felt familiar,
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you know, it was just so different from how you would execute
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the types of campaigns that brands were used to,
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like a Facebook campaign, like an email campaign.
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- Yeah.
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- We really made it feel very familiar and easy.
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- Now, do you have clients that,
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most of this conversation has been centered around acquisition,
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obviously retention and transactions, right?
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Getting something to like come to the website again
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and make that transaction.
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Have you dealt with clients or even refer,
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or recommended to clients that like,
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well, like there are other messages that you can utilize
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or these could just be another touch point
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in the customer journey.
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And what I'm thinking about is just like,
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the celebration of customers is common theme right here.
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Do you have those conversations or merchants
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that utilize this, not just for that transaction,
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but just to continue the relationship?
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- Yeah, great question.
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So yes, in a number of ways.
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Interestingly, I just heard from a customer this morning
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who was talking about how one of her best customers
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had just gotten her Black Friday card from us
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and called in to say, thank you so much
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for thinking of me and sending me this card,
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which we hear not immediately,
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people feel like it's this tangible thing
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coming from a brand.
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And that does create a different type of relationship
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and it's a different level of engagement with a brand
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and just sending them an email or sort of a digital touch point.
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But the other things that we can do to your point
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around celebrations,
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we can actually match your customers to their birthdays.
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We have the ability to take your customer list.
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And even if you've never collected their birthday,
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like through a form or something else,
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we can actually match that for you.
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And then we can send them birthday cards
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that are personalized.
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And it's just like a great touch point from a brand.
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And often brands will include something like,
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and here's a gift from us,
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take $20 off your next purchase.
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And they were super well from an ROI perspective,
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but they're also great from a general,
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just how many people are sending you
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like a birthday card in the mail?
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Very few.
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And so when it comes from a brand,
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you remember who sent that to you.
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You remember that brand.
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And then we also have a handwriting technology.
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And writes with like all the nuance of a human hand on paper
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and can write like a handwritten card to these folks,
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whether it's a birthday card or a VIP, thank you card.
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You just made your fifth purchase from us
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or you just spent over a thousand dollars
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all with us.
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So I want to trigger a card that goes out
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from my founder that's like,
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just want to say thank you so much
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for being such a loyal customer.
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We appreciate you.
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And just making them feel seen like that
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and getting a handwritten note,
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you know, to your point,
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it's a really memorable touch point with a brand.
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And that, you know,
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that's what we're all really competing for
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at the end of the day, right?
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It's like a tension and creating a memorable experience
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with our customers so that we're not having to constantly pay
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to get in front of them again and re-acquire them all the time.
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I think, I mean, you nailed it.
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Like I just want to stop right there
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because at this point,
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and I'm just sharing conversations that I've had
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with several different merchants,
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like looking outside right now,
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there's a difficult, you know,
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we still have a difficult economy
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and there's just a lot of hardships going on
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around the world at this point.
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And if you look back,
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just at the last 10 or 15 or 20 emails
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in your personal inbox, right?
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I guarantee you,
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there's not going to be many that are celebrating you
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or things that are like,
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hey, like nice work or whatever it is
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that you're celebrating.
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It's mostly about like,
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hey, getting someone to buy something.
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And so I do think that there is such an opportunity
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that's like, just stop and like,
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can you figure out ways to celebrate your customers
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through a channel like Direct Mal,
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which is highly unique?
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Because those are what you just said, Michael,
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memorable moments that make a difference
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in the customer journey.
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- I love you're absolutely right.
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- So, okay, let's really quickly,
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like we'll go into the next stage, which is,
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you know, I know we're talking about like current state
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and current state to me is also future state
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because these are things that are still brand new
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to the ecosystem.
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But are there things that you are working towards
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or you just see a lot of innovation outside of
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what you're working on that you get excited about,
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specifically around customer experience and AI?
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And is there anything even with post pilot
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that you're, post pilot that you're, you know,
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looking forward to when it comes to some next
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in the developments in this AI space?
19:06
- Yeah, I mean, the thing that I can say is that we are,
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we are very interested in AI and how that plays a role
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in what we're doing and makes things even more personalized
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and more timely.
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So the fact that we have all this transactional data,
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there's, we can use AI to be even more precise
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around the timing of how, when certain messages are triggered
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and what messages are most relevant to somebody
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at any given time.
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So I think there's a lot of opportunity there
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that we're excited to continue to tap in terms of,
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and just getting even more precise.
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And you're seeing it with various platforms
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in terms of their predictive analytics
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and predictive triggering around certain events.
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I think that that's a place where this gets really exciting.
20:02
- Well, I would also say, well, triggering
20:06
is probably one of them, right?
20:07
Like where, right now it's humans making that decision,
20:12
obviously of when to send something.
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But I could see in the future utilizing AI,
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having all these moments, the customer, all this data
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and say, when is the bright time
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to send this message out, right?
20:27
- As CDPs continue to become, you know,
20:29
more relevant and more prevalent.
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That's it.
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I think that's where a lot of this is going,
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is like being able to be more precise
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and more personalized with what message at what time
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and what channel to what person.
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And, you know, I think we're excited
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for what that opens up for us.
20:50
- That's awesome.
20:50
Well, right there, we'll end it, Michael.
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I appreciate all your time on this
20:54
and learning a lot more about post-pilot
20:56
and kind of the future of what's to come.
20:58
But again, thank you so much for your time.
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- Thanks for reminding me, Brian.
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I appreciate it.
21:03
- No problem. Thanks, all.
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25:41
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26:07
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26:26
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26:33
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26:53
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27:13
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27:33
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27:53
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28:33
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30:33
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31:53
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32:13
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34:53
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35:13
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35:33
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