In today's digital landscape, email marketing stands as a potent tool for not only driving business growth but also for cultivating stronger and more meaningful customer relationships. Join us in this enlightening session, "Turning Emails into Relationships: Mastering the CX Game," where we delve deep into the art and science of email marketing as a vehicle for elevating the customer experience. Discover strategies, insights, and secrets to crafting email campaigns that go beyond transactions and transform into genuine connections.
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(upbeat music)
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- All right, welcome back to our next session
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with Mark Lewis of Nataleco.
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Mark, thank you so much for joining us today.
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- Thank you for having me.
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- Ah, of course.
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So this session is all about turning emails
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into relationships.
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I think Mark and I were talking a little bit more
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and this might kind of evolve into more on the AI side,
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which obviously we're really excited about.
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But before we get anywhere, Mark,
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can you tell us a little bit about your adventure
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and a little bit about Nataleco?
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- Sure.
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So I started in Nataleco about 10 years ago.
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I started as just a solo developer,
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mostly originally on Magento.
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And then over the years, transition more into Shopify.
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And then transition more into hiring a team.
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I basically, as a solo developer, I got too busy
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and I realized the only way to scale myself
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besides staying up to 2 a.m. every day was hiring a team.
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And so that's why I grew the company.
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And then I realized I really wanted to empower the merchants,
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not just from a development perspective,
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which is obviously very important for any calmer store.
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But looking at the design, the strategy, email marketing,
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really look at the top down approach of what are your needs
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and then how can we help you fulfill those needs.
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- Yeah.
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And I love the broadness because just for the audience listening,
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it's not just a Shopify agency.
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You're helping out Magento stores well too, big comersors.
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I assume though, with the rise of Shopify,
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is there a lot more Shopify?
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- Yeah, it's definitely a transition to majority Shopify
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because of really the market.
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And I think also the platform itself,
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I think Shopify has really grown in its capabilities
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and become more versatile.
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I would say five years ago,
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when we first started working on it,
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it wasn't a good fit for most of our merchants
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because it didn't have the features that they needed
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and we could build or find those features
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on a platform like Magento.
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But over the years, they really expanded
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the Shopify's capabilities and because it's so easy to use,
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it's fairly stable.
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It's really a great option for merchants
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to kind of simplify their operations
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as opposed to going with a more custom platform
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like Magento.
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- And, yeah, and actually one more question is,
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I hope the audience finds this interesting as well too.
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Like because you deal with the migrations
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from one platform to another, correct?
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So are there any patterns that you see
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when merchants are coming to you on, okay,
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I think we have to move to another platform,
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whether that goes from something to Shopify
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or Shopify to something else.
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Are there patterns of the timing of that?
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And what is that like for even the merchants
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that are listening to understand
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who maybe this is something I should consider?
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- Yeah, I think the timing is usually every two
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to three years a merchant looks at either a replatform
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or a redesign.
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And if you're currently happy on your platform
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via Shopify, Magento or BigCommerce,
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then you look at, okay, let's do a little rebranding,
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a little like cleaning up our look.
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If we're not happy with our platform at that point,
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it's a great time to consider a new platform
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with the redesign because essentially going
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from one platform to the other,
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you have to start from scratch.
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You have to do all the coding again.
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Everything anyway, so it's a great time
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to leverage that to go ahead
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and just refresh your brand as well.
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- Okay, that's great.
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And let's get into the weeks now.
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And so first we'll just talk about kind of the high level,
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your thoughts on the email marketing space,
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email marketing as a channel first.
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And then I think you and I have talked before about AI
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and I love that your thoughts on this.
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So we'll kind of venture into that as well.
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So from email marketing,
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I guess the first question I want to ask you is that
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when I talk to merchants,
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there's always this first feeling of like,
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well email marketing is transactional,
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but I also see that there's a lot of push for it's like,
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no, it's actually relational.
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And what are your thoughts on that?
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Where should the mindset be of a merchant
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when they start thinking about email marketing?
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Is it transactional?
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Is it really how like they should think about that?
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Or is it more building relationships with customers?
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I think it's both.
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I think a lot of merchants start
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from a transactional perspective.
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And even that word transactional email,
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it's been the order confirmation emails,
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shipping confirmation emails,
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all of those emails, they're important,
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like people need to get them.
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So you start at the transactional level,
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but then you can look at those emails
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and see what relational,
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what customizable aspects can I put in those?
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Even creating a little more like character around your brand,
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one of the brands we work with is Oakley,
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like the Oakmo company,
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and they have a very strong personality around the brand.
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And really look at how can you tell your brand story
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in even the transactional emails?
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It makes it a lot more real to the customer.
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And less of like, okay,
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I'm just getting this boilerplate email
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that's automatically fired off by Shopify or Clavia.
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- On that note, so Oakley, and correct me if I'm wrong,
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I feel like Oakley had this brand
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in this brand experience first and foremost,
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that was really important to them.
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And then they kind of figured out how to add that
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to their communication channels regardless.
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If that's correct, walk me through the reverse.
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Let's say merchants that are listening
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and agencies are listening,
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like there isn't that brand presence yet.
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Is that something you can start on email
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and then kind of utilize throughout the rest of the company?
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Or do you kind of push brands to say,
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"No, you have to understand who you are first
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before you start communicating utilizing channels like email
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and putting brand into that?
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- Yeah, I think it can be kind of a collaborative process
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where I do think you need to start
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with an initial brand voice
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and understand what you want your brand to be perceived as.
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But then through emails and open rates
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and click through rates, you can test those messages
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and really kind of refine that message
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and see what resonates and see what actually converts.
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The great thing about email marketing
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is that it's very numbers based.
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And so you can do a lot of testing
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to see what moves the needle on the actual sales of the brand.
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- Now, when I have had conversations
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with certain merchants about email marketing,
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I think there's two sort of mindsets.
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One is that yes, we're doing email marketing.
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It's just like we're sending out emails.
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So then two, it's really a large component of their business.
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How do you get, how do you tell your merchants
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of people you work with,
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obviously to get to that next level?
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Like what do you have to start thinking about?
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Like how it, or actually is email really important
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where they do have to think about more strategically
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how it fits in with the business?
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Like what, cheer me a little about your thoughts on that?
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- Yeah, I think there was like an old school
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thinking of email marketing years and years ago,
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which is like newsletters.
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And you just pump out a newsletter every week, every month,
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whatever.
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But I think what we're seeing now is a little more
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customization and less is more.
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Basically, if you don't have anything truly new to say,
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don't say anything at all,
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because it destroys kind of your brand's attention
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with a customer.
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If you're spamming customers with sales every week,
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they're not gonna start ignoring that,
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or they're just gonna completely unsubscribe.
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- Yeah.
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- So when we start working with a merchant, a lot of times,
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we look at how many emails they're sending,
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and we try to cut back.
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Sometimes merchants are sending multiple emails a week,
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or even one email a week might be too much,
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depending on their brand, depending on what they're selling.
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If they're selling the same products week after week,
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why are you continually telling your customers
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about the same product in the same way?
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Unless you have something new to say,
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probably better to say nothing at all,
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otherwise you're just gonna dilute their attention.
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- Is there a template that you use?
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And I'm not thinking of like a spreadsheet,
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but to start that brainstorming with the merchant of like,
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"Oh, I don't have anything to say outside of,
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I wanna sell this next product of mine."
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How do you craft like,
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okay, well, hold on, let's take a step back.
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Like, what should we be saying?
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And maybe even, this kind of bridges us to data,
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I assume as well too, of like what information you have
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in order to share with them.
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So talk to us a little bit about that.
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- Yeah, and you can get data
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from a lot of different sources.
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We love heat maps, even, you know,
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classes at Google Analytics to see where people
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are going on the site,
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where they're clicking on the site with the heat maps.
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And then with email marketing as well,
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you can, you know, do tagging,
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you can do some automation around the interest
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and trying to figure out what individual customers
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are interested in, and then craft your emails
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in a more customizable way,
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even like using variables in the email templates of like,
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oh, if this customer has a particular attribute,
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if they're male or female, you know,
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depending on the brand, like a clothing brand,
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that matters.
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You don't want us to be sending men, you know,
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women's clothing and vice versa.
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So whatever you can do to find those data points
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and collect those data points,
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and then use them to make your emails feel more real,
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makes the customer feel like this is more relational
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versus just an automated transactional email
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that they blasted to a million people.
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- And in your case with the merchants
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that you're dealing with, is the data going
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into the e-commerce platform?
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But also I assume I'll talk about Clavio
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because they're clearly the number one email marketing tool
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for e-commerce brands right now.
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Is it getting the data into Clavio as well too?
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And I know you're a developer, Mark.
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So tell us like, go ahead, get into the weeds of like,
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well, you know, how do you capture this data
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and where are you sending it to
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so you can make those decisions
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in your email marketing campaigns?
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- Yeah, I mean, as you alluded to,
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Clavio is definitely the market leader
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in this SMB mid-market segment in e-commerce.
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Probably 90% of our clients are using Clavio.
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And we really look to Clavio as the kind of single source
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for customer preferences because the email marketing
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is so important in terms of the customization and preferences.
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So it's more important for us to get the data
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directly in Clavio than it is to have that data in ChuffFi.
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It might be different if you're using a different email tool
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or even ChuffFi does have their own email tool,
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but our approach is going ahead
12:07
and trying to get it straight into Clavio
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and then we can leverage it quicker and better.
12:14
We have less data issues if it's bouncing
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from platform to platform.
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- So as an agency, do you find yourself helping out
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the merchants like capturing and then getting that data
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in Clavio?
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Was that an easy thing to solve?
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And again, I apologize for the ignorance here,
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but I'm just curious if that's something
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that you work on at your agency a lot.
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- Yeah, it is a lot of installing pickles
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and there's code snippets that you put on different
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new product pages, collection pages
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to give those extra signals to Clavio.
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And by default, those aren't set up.
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So that is kind of a behind the scenes thing
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that if you just install the Clavio app out of the box,
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it's not necessarily going to give you that data.
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It's not super complicated, but it's enough
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that most merchants wouldn't be able to do it themselves
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without a developer helping them.
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- Love it.
13:12
All right, so let's take the next step,
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which is we're at the AICX Summit.
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So let's talk a little bit about AI and email marketing
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and we'll kind of then jump into AI and everything else
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that we talked about earlier.
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But how have you utilized up to this point AI
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for email marketing needs and then as well,
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like what would you recommend for certain merchants listening
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of like how they can get their hands dirty specifically
13:35
within the email marketing element utilizing
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any sort of AI capabilities?
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- Yeah, I mean, I think that the tools themselves
13:43
are going to keep releasing more AI specific features,
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even Shopify is just trying to release that sidekick,
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that kind of thing.
13:52
But outside of that, I think that you can use chat GPT,
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the kind of king of AI right now as an editor,
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as a brainstormer, as a copywriter.
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We see a lot of clients now,
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putting their brand boys, putting the assets
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of their brand in chat GPT and asking it,
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hey, I'm thinking about doing this and this,
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give me five different email titles.
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And there's still obviously a human element,
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you're in control of what you pick, but it's a great,
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it's a great like writing partner to bounce things off of them.
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And that's been huge from the titles to the copy
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and just really like leveraging the tool
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to almost 10x yourself as opposed to having
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to hire a team of copywriters.
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- Now, as a reminder, and I assume most people know this,
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but what you put in, right, is what you get out
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of something like chat GPT.
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So, and I don't want this to be the chat GPT series,
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but I think you're a perfect fit for this,
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just talk to us a little bit about custom instructions,
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'cause I'm assuming you know about that.
15:04
And how important that is,
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because you just talked about brand voice, right?
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And so, again, it goes to the input
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and making sure that chat GPT is ready
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to clearly understand your business.
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So then when it comes out of it, it's what you can utilize.
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So, just walk us through like when I say custom instructions
15:20
that I'm making input versus output,
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like can you clear that up for us?
15:24
- Yeah, so in the latest version of chat GPT,
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there's basically even another layer
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of custom instructions where you can create
15:34
your own custom bot.
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And so, I've seen one brand do it so far,
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and I think everyone should do it,
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is you can create your own custom bot,
15:44
and go ahead and give it all the material possible,
15:48
and save it, and it's going to always
15:50
have that material to reference.
15:52
And then you ask the questions
15:54
that you would ask the normal chat GPT.
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So it has access to the internet,
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it has access to its brain,
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but it also has access to all the materials
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that you've given it forever, basically.
16:07
And so it can almost be like your history
16:11
in the voice of the brand
16:13
because you've fed it so much of your brand.
16:15
- All right, when you say,
16:18
and I just want to go deeper into this,
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so people listening understand,
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when you say, well, give it assets,
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what do you mean by that?
16:26
Like what is an asset that you can upload into chat GPT?
16:31
- Yeah, so now you can upload almost anything,
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you can upload images,
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you can upload just a screenshot of emails of your website,
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you can tell it, this is our website,
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look at our website.
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Really, it's up to your mind,
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your creativity to decide what you want to feed
16:54
into this bot, because now it can essentially
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process anything.
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So I wouldn't limit what you put in it,
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I would just put everything you can relevant,
17:07
obviously to your brand,
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and then see where it goes.
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- So as an example, right, it's like,
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hey, here are our last five blog posts
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that are under standard style,
17:18
and here's a logo of our brand asset, right?
17:23
And here is obviously our website and so forth,
17:26
and maybe if you have PDF files of,
17:29
I don't know, your brand for you, right?
17:30
Like get them all of that,
17:32
and that's something that you can do, correct?
17:34
- Yeah, totally.
17:35
- And again, I know this is so simple,
17:37
but it's not, just remind us, like an engineer can do this,
17:41
or you need an engineer to do this?
17:43
- You don't need to be an engineer at all,
17:45
like in the background,
17:47
obviously it's using code and everything,
17:50
but now they've made the processing of documents
17:54
and PDFs and images, very seamless,
17:58
and so anyone can just upload those materials,
18:02
and it'll save it in perpetuity.
18:05
You don't have to always keep giving it,
18:07
okay, this is my brand voice,
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'cause I'm asking you a question about my business today.
18:12
Once you create that custom bot,
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you can be like the Natalecobot,
18:16
it's going to retain all that information forever,
18:20
and then every time you ask it a question,
18:22
it's going to be pulling from there.
18:24
- I love it.
18:25
- So let's kind of venture to the,
18:29
after you send out some email campaigns,
18:31
have you,
18:32
you can either use examples of your merchants or yourself,
18:38
have you utilized AI tools to analyze the data,
18:41
or make tweaks to email campaigns?
18:44
So not just the input now,
18:46
and then creating the email campaigns,
18:48
what comes after,
18:49
have you utilized AI to help you with this as well?
18:53
- Yeah, so what we've done or related to that
18:55
is a lot of times we've AB tested a couple different AI prompts,
19:00
or basically we asked at a question,
19:03
it gave us two examples,
19:04
or we asked at two different questions,
19:07
and then we did an AB test of that.
19:09
Usually the subject line is a good place to start,
19:12
because you can test the open rate,
19:15
it's a very simple metric.
19:17
And then basically iterate on that, okay,
19:20
like then tell the AI, tell chat TPT,
19:24
this won the test,
19:26
and then basically he she it knows,
19:31
okay, we should go more in that direction,
19:35
and you can just keep kind of iterating on that AB testing,
19:39
and continue like basically to improve the open rate,
19:43
until at some point we've seen it kind of slope off,
19:47
you kind of hit a ceiling,
19:49
but it's a cool way to really like see a difference,
19:53
and a lot faster than the past,
19:56
where you probably be racking your brain,
19:59
of like, okay, look, you kind of come up with another campaign,
20:03
another campaign, like to test, yeah, it's a lot of work.
20:05
- I mean, that's why I think there's so much potential here,
20:09
because just the amount of brainstorming
20:12
that you can do with it is endless, right?
20:14
Like to your just very point,
20:15
oh, I gotta think of another campaign,
20:18
like within a few prompts, like here you are,
20:20
here are your next ideas,
20:22
not that you have to go in that direction,
20:23
but ideas and to start brainstorming yourself off of, right?
20:27
And again, just one other point of clarity for the audience,
20:29
right, it's really important to continue these conversations
20:32
on that same thread,
20:34
because the model understands like obviously everything
20:39
that comes beforehand,
20:40
and then you don't wanna start a brand new thread,
20:42
because then you're starting from scratch really.
20:44
But Mark, maybe kind of last subject,
20:49
let's kind of broaden this out a little bit,
20:50
I know we talked about this before we started,
20:52
or on our previous conversation,
20:55
but just utilizing AI across your entire business.
21:00
We were just talking about email marketing,
21:04
but outside of email marketing,
21:07
where have you suggested to start utilizing AI
21:12
across customer experience, wherever that might be,
21:14
and tell us a little bit about those conversations,
21:16
and your recommendations for people listening?
21:19
- For sure, for sure.
21:20
You know, we at Nataleco really promote everyone to use AI
21:25
as much as possible,
21:26
and look at it as like a 10x tool for you.
21:30
It's not so much about like,
21:33
oh, people are gonna lose their jobs,
21:36
it's more about like you can become 10 times
21:39
more powerful internally.
21:42
And so, you know, think the simple things
21:45
of like just responding to a customer email,
21:49
running through chat DPT,
21:50
that can provide very valuable feedback of basically like,
21:55
oh, maybe you could tweak this, maybe you could tweak that.
21:59
And you know, not super relevant to CX,
22:01
but like even development, coding,
22:04
I think that like kind of the possibilities
22:07
for a team to use AI to really 10x themselves,
22:12
are basically limitless.
22:15
And you know, I know that there's a lot of fear
22:17
about losing jobs,
22:19
but I think that if you give your team the message of like,
22:24
no one's gonna lose their jobs,
22:26
you're just going to be that much better.
22:29
I think that's really empowering for them
22:31
to basically try to increase their productivity
22:34
versus thinking like, okay,
22:36
if I start using AI,
22:38
then you know, five people on my team are gonna get laid off.
22:42
And that is a fear at some companies,
22:46
you know, they're gonna use that as a call savings tool.
22:49
But I think that's going to be like a losing game,
22:54
to always look at it as like, okay,
22:59
we can cut these costs, we can lay off these people
23:02
as opposed to really like doubling down on your existing team
23:05
and trying to empower them to be better than they are.
23:09
- What would you tell someone that wants to learn
23:16
but doesn't know where to start, right?
23:18
It's like, where do you go to better understand
23:23
how to utilize for this business?
23:24
Like maybe would you go to an agency?
23:27
Would you go, like I don't know,
23:29
like where would you suggest?
23:32
- Yeah, I mean, if you don't have an existing agency,
23:36
I think the value of working with an agency
23:40
is that you get what I call cross pollination.
23:43
Like we are exposed to so many different brands
23:46
because we work with them and we're using,
23:49
we're working with them in a fast pace
23:51
versus, you know, a brand that only has an internal team,
23:54
they only know what they know
23:56
and technology and e-commerce is changing so fast.
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It can very easily, you can get tunnel vision
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of just knowing what you know
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and having an agency, even if they're not, you know,
24:11
full time, even if they're not replacing your team
24:14
as like a sounding board can be basically a breath of fresh air.
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Like we were on a conversation
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with a potential client the other day
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and it was just a sales call, we were like,
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oh, maybe you think of this, maybe you can do this
24:29
and they're like, oh, like you've already helped me
24:32
in 30 minutes more than my existing single developer,
24:36
you know, has helped me in two years.
24:39
So I think that that kind of external perspective
24:43
is really helpful for a lot of brands that, you know,
24:46
just really get in the weeds
24:48
because they're just kind of on the day to day.
24:51
- Yeah.
24:53
I wanna just call that out
24:54
'cause it's something that actually,
24:55
I didn't realize until this point, Mark, which is,
24:59
you know, if you think about yourself,
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compared to an agency, like you have so many partners
25:06
that you work with, you have to always be on,
25:10
at least I know in our sense, like here at Customer,
25:13
when new features are coming out,
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especially right now with all these new AI features,
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we release a lot of information to partners first
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and foremost before anything else.
25:22
And so here's like a very value added,
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or I should just say it's a value add
25:27
for talking to an agency because they are probably the ones
25:31
that are responsible for really understanding
25:34
what's happening right now.
25:36
I'm sure it could be exhausting,
25:37
but is that ring true for you and your team, Mark?
25:41
- Definitely.
25:42
- You look at one of the biggest things
25:44
working with our partners as education
25:46
and education for our team so that we can educate the clients.
25:51
I know on your side as a partner,
25:55
it's very hard to speak individually to every client,
25:59
and so a lot of times if you broadcast it out
26:02
to the agencies, they're able to also disseminate it.
26:06
And we have weekly monthly meetings with our clients
26:11
and our goal is to try to understand the ecosystem
26:14
as much as possible and the new features in the ecosystem.
26:18
And then suggest based on the clients' goals at that point,
26:22
I'm like, oh, by the way, did you know that customer
26:25
has this new feature?
26:27
Sounds very applicable to your current goals
26:31
have you considered it.
26:32
And that kind of conversation is sometimes just a game changer
26:36
because like I said, they're so in the weeds
26:38
of just like they know what they know,
26:41
it's amazing for them to be able to get
26:44
that kind of external spark.
26:46
- I love it.
26:48
Maybe last thing again, just to wrap everything up
26:51
in a box here.
26:52
If you're starting with AI, let's say more,
26:57
I think it leads to email honestly,
26:59
just because of our conversation, I agree,
27:00
where there's so many easy things to do.
27:02
Tell us one more time how you would start
27:07
if you want to utilize AI, specifically in the email channel.
27:10
Go ahead, just give us a few quick examples.
27:13
- I would say, honestly, just go to chat PPT.
27:16
I would sign up for the $20 a month plan
27:21
and I think it's worth it and ask it,
27:23
hey, what do you think of my latest email?
27:26
And just start from there of just kind of getting inspiration.
27:31
I think it kind of leads itself to the next thing,
27:36
and as you start experimenting with using AI
27:39
in an external tool, then you're gonna appreciate it
27:43
more in the internal tool as well.
27:45
Whenever customer releases a new AI feature,
27:48
you're gonna look at it more positively and say,
27:52
oh, this is something that really can make me so much better
27:56
versus, oh, this is something that I don't understand,
27:59
I don't control, maybe I'm just gonna skip it
28:02
because I know what I know.
28:04
- Right, right.
28:06
- Great.
28:07
Well, Mark, thanks again for all the time
28:09
that you're giving us, the expertise around email,
28:11
marketing and AI, and look forward to talking to you again.
28:16
- Yeah, thank you, Ryan.
28:17
- All right, thanks everyone.
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