Tune in to the latest episode of "The Juice with Jess Cervellon" as she sits down with Jade Cameron, the Head of Community Experience at LSKD, a renowned sportswear company. Get ready for an amazing discussion on cultivating customer loyalty, building brand communities, and the power of personalized experiences in the world of e-commerce.
0:00
(upbeat music)
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- My name is Jess Servion,
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and I'm super excited to bring you my new podcast,
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The Juice With Jess.
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This podcast is gonna be about everything
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in your customer's journey.
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We're talking acquisition, awareness,
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making that purchase, retaining that customer,
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bringing them back around, and everything in between.
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This is gonna be all about delivering dope brand experiences
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and talking to some really amazing people
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who are in the customer experience space,
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marketing space, and everything in between.
0:30
(upbeat music)
0:32
Welcome back to another episode of The Juice With Me, Jess.
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I'm still in Vegas, y'all.
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I've gotten an IV, I'm feeling alive,
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and I am at Shop Talk this week.
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I am super excited because I have my friend Jade,
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Cameron from Australia.
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She is head of Community Experience at LSKD,
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which is a high quality functional sportswear company
1:01
with a street aesthetic.
1:02
She will say that a lot better than I will.
1:06
Jade, why don't you tell the audience who you be?
1:09
- Hi.
1:10
Yeah, LSKD.
1:11
So functional sportswear with a street aesthetic.
1:15
We're all about creating amazing quality gear
1:18
that you can wear in the gym, go for a run,
1:21
but also feel comfortable enough to wear it to,
1:24
you know, a branch or a cafe
1:25
or just on your hot girl walk, if you will.
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I started with the brand about three years ago.
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My background is old community experience/customer service,
1:36
but I spent 10 years in the travel industry
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before coming to LSKD, to the e-commerce world,
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and I've never looked back.
1:44
I'm super excited to have you on because a fun fact,
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I also come from the travel industry prior to any of my B2B
1:52
experience or my e-commerce experience,
1:53
and as we were doing some research about Jade,
1:56
we figured out that we worked at the same
1:59
big corporate company, FlightCenter.
2:01
For anybody who's listening out there,
2:03
FlightCenter is a massive travel company in Australia,
2:06
the UK, predominantly everywhere else, but not the US.
2:11
- Yeah.
2:12
I worked for Corporate Traveler Division,
2:15
Jade, you were head of CS at Topdeck.
2:17
- Yes, correct.
2:18
- Yeah.
2:19
Topdeck is a youth touring company.
2:24
Yeah, for 18 to 39 year olds around the world.
2:28
- Crazy.
2:28
- Just so crazy.
2:29
- It is.
2:30
- Because that culture at FlightCenter is,
2:34
I think it's both set us both up for like community,
2:38
CX, like all of this, you know?
2:40
- One hundred per cent.
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- Yeah, you just deal with so many different types of people,
2:44
you know?
2:45
- Absolutely.
2:46
I attribute a lot of my growth and success to FlightCenter.
2:49
And the opportunities that I was given there,
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like not only the difficuteness of dealing with travel,
2:56
a non-tangible product to A, sell and B troubleshoot
2:59
when things go wrong, but FlightCenter in general,
3:02
like really invest in their people.
3:04
And I got given so many opportunities for like development
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and training courses in a really safe environment.
3:10
They're all about like failing forward,
3:12
learning from your mistakes, as long as you don't do it again.
3:15
- Yeah.
3:16
- Yeah, but yeah, so yeah.
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I attribute a lot of that to FlightCenter.
3:20
- Did you ever go to Global?
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- I did.
3:22
- How many Global's?
3:23
- I only won.
3:24
- Ooh, I went to Q, I think.
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- So Global for anybody listening out there or viewing N,
3:32
Global is basically like the equivalent of President's Club.
3:35
Right?
3:36
- I don't know what that is, but it sounds cool.
3:38
- Oh, okay, that's an American thing.
3:39
(laughing)
3:40
Okay, a President's Club is like,
3:43
if you're really good at sales,
3:44
you get invited to go to the President's Club.
3:46
It's kind of like silly and like very like President's Club.
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- Very American.
3:51
- Very American.
3:51
That's why we call it Global.
3:53
- Yeah.
3:54
- A FlightCenter because it's more inclusive,
3:56
granted you have to like earn your way into it.
3:58
- Yes.
3:59
- But, and you earn your way into it
4:02
by delivering a really dope customer experience, right?
4:06
So depending on like what positions you're in,
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but also, I'm not gonna give away all the tactics here.
4:13
(laughing)
4:15
- Spoiler alert.
4:16
But airlines will pay travel industries commission.
4:21
So it's a bit of a sales job,
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as well as like a service job.
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So anyway, but if you get to Global by
4:29
being like the best of the best.
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- Yes.
4:31
- So, yeah, absolutely.
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- Yeah, I went to...
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- We call Singapore?
4:36
- Singapore.
4:38
- My call, yeah, okay, yeah.
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I remember my first year starting at FlightCenter.
4:43
Global was in Cancun.
4:45
And I think like that just like had me like hooked
4:48
on the FlightCenter dream.
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I did not make it to Cancun.
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- Yeah.
4:52
- And then I moved from, so I was in store
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as a travel agent for one year.
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And then I moved to Topdeck Travel.
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- Got it.
5:00
- Yeah.
5:01
And finally enough, like I moved to Topdeck
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before FlightCenter actually purchased them.
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So, quick little history.
5:08
- Yeah.
5:09
- The founder of FlightCenter founded Topdeck first.
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And then FlightCenter and then sold Topdeck,
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but then bought it back, I think in 2014, 2015.
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And then we became part of the family again.
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But I was lucky enough to go to Berlin,
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I think in 2018.
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- Oh, it went to Berlin.
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- I was at Berlin in 2018?
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- Yeah, I was at Berlin too.
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- We went there together.
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- That's so weird.
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- And now we're besties.
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- Yes.
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- We just met in this moment.
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- Yeah.
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- I love it.
5:35
- Yes.
5:36
- Yeah, I was at Berlin too.
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That's so crazy.
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But so Global also used to always follow my birthday.
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So it would be like a birthday trip.
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- I loved that.
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- The time that I would bake in, you know?
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- Oh my God.
5:45
- Happy birthday to you.
5:47
- Good birthday in the middle of the year, July 14th.
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If for anybody listening out there, July 14th,
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subliminal messages.
5:53
(laughing)
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Let me write that down.
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- Any way, great.
5:57
Anyway, okay, so I'd love to get into your story
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'cause I think your story is really amazing.
6:05
The fact that you worked in travel
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and then you ended up in e-commerce.
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Tell me about that switch.
6:10
- My goodness.
6:11
- Okay, yes, travel.
6:13
Love, my heart will always be in travel.
6:15
I don't know if I could ever go back
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because there was a little thing like called the pandemic.
6:20
- Ooh, I don't know if you remember.
6:21
- Yeah.
6:22
So after Top Deck, I moved to a online travel agency
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called Tour radar who specialized in gruturing.
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And six months after I started there is when COVID hit.
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So for 12 months of my role there,
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we went from being in the office to working remotely,
6:44
travel, shutdown overnight, which was crazy.
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So working through two operators
6:52
not wanting to give refunds
6:53
and us communicating that to our customer
6:55
and then making sure my team were okay
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and taking pay cuts and convincing my team to take pay cuts.
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And it was a time and it was probably one
7:04
of the most stressful times of my life.
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But what I learned and how much I grew in that time
7:10
around, even in my leadership,
7:13
I think I've always been an empathetic leader,
7:17
but that had to be next level during that time
7:21
to just be that support for my team.
7:23
And I really changed my style through that time
7:26
as well you had to, right?
7:28
Like all of a sudden you can only communicate over a screen.
7:31
And then so fast forward to,
7:35
I think it was around November, December, 2020.
7:39
And my boss now, the CEO of LSKD reached out to me
7:44
on LinkedIn and he was like,
7:46
"Hey, we have this job that looks like something
7:49
that you'd kind of like, do you want to have a chat?"
7:52
And I was like, "No, I have a job."
7:54
Was my initial reaction and my best friend was like,
7:56
"No, call him please."
7:58
And I was like, "Okay."
7:59
And then the more I spoke to Keith
8:01
and then I met the CEO, founded Jason
8:03
and then our CEO from Matt,
8:05
every conversation I had along that journey
8:07
through the interviews, I was like, "I have to work here.
8:10
I have to work here."
8:12
And the main thing that drew me in was like Jason's passion
8:15
and the fact that I could just tell that they were
8:17
on the edge of something amazing
8:19
because Jason had been on a journey,
8:21
he had discovered his why he was like reading books
8:25
and like developing himself
8:27
and just wanting to create something bigger than himself.
8:31
And I was hooked.
8:32
Yeah, I fucking love that.
8:35
I fucking love that.
8:36
I love that because like,
8:38
and also why we're becoming besties in this moment
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because we actually have a really similar background.
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Like granted, like I left travel or I left Flight Center,
8:50
I went to my first startup,
8:52
it was to travel companies, pandemic happened.
8:54
And then I tried to like float around
8:56
to like cybersecurity, health tech,
8:57
like all these places and I was just like,
8:58
"Ah, I don't know what I'm doing in life," right?
9:01
And randomly moved to Chicago like on a whim
9:04
because I wasn't ready to go back to California.
9:06
I'm not gonna bore anybody with all those details.
9:09
But had I never moved to Chicago,
9:13
I never would have gotten the job at festivals
9:16
as head of CX, right?
9:18
And that was also my first time of working in e-commerce, right?
9:22
But I joined the company because like our old CEO, COO,
9:26
they were all come from like RX bar,
9:28
like founding employees of that.
9:30
And like, and they're just mission and values
9:33
which is like, damn, like I really wanna be a part of this.
9:36
I really wanna be like in this and like,
9:40
and it's so crazy and I don't know if this is free,
9:42
like you as well, but like then coming into e-commerce,
9:45
I've actually found like my kind of like way in a way.
9:49
Like I care, I've always cared about customer experience
9:53
and I've always cared about like the brand experience
9:56
and like what we're delivering from a service perspective.
9:58
But then moving into e-commerce,
10:00
I've like really put into practice like the marketing pieces of it,
10:04
the community building pieces of it.
10:06
And it's like, it's just something I'm so obsessed with now.
10:10
Yeah, you know, what about you?
10:12
Yeah, I'm like shaking my head so dramatically.
10:14
Like, yes, me too.
10:17
It's so funny that you mentioned what drew you in about
10:19
festivals was like the mission and the values.
10:22
Yeah.
10:22
Because when I met Keith, Chase and Matt,
10:25
we had the mission which we have since changed.
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So back then it was inspiring our community to chase the vibe.
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And we've since updated it to inspiring you to be 1% better every day.
10:39
But when I started, we didn't have company values,
10:44
but they were on the journey in creating them.
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So I came in at this amazing time where I got to be a part
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of creating the values that we have today.
10:53
And we are such a values led company.
10:55
And as like being passionate about CX,
10:59
the second value is create a community.
11:01
Yeah.
11:02
And like that is what I am able to bring to life every day.
11:05
So I was hired to basically build the CX team from the ground up.
11:08
Yes.
11:09
When I started, there was like two full-timers and two casuals.
11:12
And I think we're a team of like around 20 now
11:15
within that three year period.
11:17
Nothing existed.
11:18
I got handed this like red folder of like passwords.
11:23
And that was the CX manuals.
11:25
And I was like, what is this?
11:26
Yeah.
11:26
Like they were still answering friends like with desk phones.
11:29
I was like, whoa, I'm so excited.
11:32
Mm-hmm.
11:32
But the coolest thing was like even back then, like three years ago,
11:36
they were hiring based on that connection and values alignment.
11:43
Right.
11:43
So I was entrusted and empowered to just like go do.
11:48
Right.
11:48
So I would have check-ins along the way.
11:51
I'd be like, this is what we're doing.
11:53
But it all came back to community and creating a community,
11:56
even from that first day that I stepped into the office.
11:59
Yeah.
11:59
So we really lean into that.
12:01
And we're all about that.
12:02
You said art first science so many times in your intro
12:05
when I listened to your first.
12:06
Yeah.
12:07
And like that is like, yeah, Jason, our senior year is
12:10
voice ringing in my head.
12:11
It's like that art first science where it's like, I'm the art.
12:14
Yeah.
12:14
I'm the wanderer, the creator.
12:16
And then I've like built my team around me to like help bring
12:19
that science to life as well.
12:20
Yeah. The data pieces, the feedback loops.
12:22
Like all of that.
12:23
I know.
12:24
I think like just as creative people, right?
12:27
Like it's like, and maybe this is why we ended up
12:29
in the travel industry.
12:31
Just like floating through space.
12:32
Like I don't know what to do, right?
12:34
Yeah.
12:34
But like it's so, but being in CX and like building community
12:39
and building from the ground up is just such a part of like
12:43
that artist creation piece of it.
12:46
Yeah.
12:46
And then you got to put it in the structure.
12:48
Yes.
12:49
Which is boring to some.
12:51
Look.
12:51
Yeah.
12:52
There needs to be structured.
12:53
But I mean, I think the biggest thing for me, like as I said,
12:57
during COVID, I really changed my leadership style.
13:00
I became a lot more relaxed as a leader and just had to put
13:04
the trust into my team.
13:06
And that just like changed how I did things for the better, right?
13:10
So, you know, I think the biggest mistake that a lot of CX leaders
13:16
make is not empowering the frontline team.
13:19
Absolutely.
13:20
And not giving them the autonomy to actually bring to life the
13:23
moments that they want to bring to life and how they want to bring
13:26
them to life.
13:28
Just like a quick pause on that.
13:29
Like part of our whole onboarding experience at LSKD is all around
13:33
books.
13:34
And one of the books that Jason read that he realized that he
13:39
then didn't know anything about CX.
13:41
And that's where I come in.
13:42
But delivering happiness by the late Tony Shay, the exe of Zappos.
13:48
And their model around like wowing the customer.
13:52
And I basically built the LSKD philosophy around Tony Shay's
13:56
concepts because customer community wow moments, like it's all about
14:02
that genuine connection that you're building.
14:04
Yeah.
14:05
That's what people are hungry for.
14:06
And that's actually how people buy now.
14:08
They want to buy with brands that they connect to.
14:11
Yeah, absolutely.
14:13
You buy because you have a dope brand experience.
14:15
You buy because you're loyal to that brand, right?
14:17
And I don't care what brand it is.
14:21
I literally do not care if you're selling in chocolate bars
14:24
or you're selling in a t-shirt, right?
14:26
I am going to buy from that brand because of the experience
14:28
that I'm having from that brand and the ability to deliver something
14:33
really sick and dope.
14:35
And I want to keep coming back because of that.
14:38
Yes.
14:39
Absolutely.
14:40
I love-- I think that it's just so crazy because it's
14:44
like literally kinder CX experience here.
14:46
I'm feeling that.
14:47
Because-- and the reason is, is because I also built my CX team.
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I made the entire company not the Zappos book,
14:57
but I did an effortless experience.
15:00
OK.
15:01
And I built-- I made the Feastables Company, read this book.
15:05
Every single person.
15:06
Our old CEO-- I love it.
15:07
--read this book.
15:09
This is why we're building the most frictionless experience
15:11
as possible so we can then deliver a really dope community
15:15
experience.
15:16
I love that.
15:17
I haven't read that.
15:18
I have to write that down.
15:19
You'll have to send that to me.
15:20
Oh, done.
15:20
Because I'm like, books.
15:21
Like, I can stream so many books.
15:23
I love it.
15:24
Yeah.
15:24
No, effortless experiences are a really good book by Matt Dixon.
15:29
Yeah.
15:29
Highly recommend.
15:30
Man, we haven't even gotten into my questions.
15:32
OK.
15:33
Literally.
15:34
Whoops.
15:36
But I'm really curious, though, like, you know,
15:39
one of the biggest questions that I want to ask you
15:41
is that we talk about-- we talk about, you know,
15:44
customer experience.
15:45
Sometimes people call it customer service.
15:47
Sometimes people have this, then the other thing.
15:49
I want to know specifically why you call it community experience.
15:53
A few reasons.
15:55
So we at LSKD refer to our customer as our community.
16:00
Yeah.
16:00
Because that's what we're trying to do.
16:01
We're trying to build a community.
16:03
We're trying to build something bigger than us
16:05
for people to be a part of.
16:06
Yeah.
16:06
So when I started, the team was actually
16:09
customer support, which, you know, that's fine.
16:12
And when I look at customer support or customer service,
16:15
they're just fulfilling a function, right?
16:18
Like, that's just my mentality around those words.
16:21
I read a book last year, which I'll go into a little bit more
16:25
if we have time, but it's called unreasonable hospitality.
16:28
I'm not going to say Will's last name,
16:29
because I'll butcher it every time.
16:31
But he basically was the reason 11 Madison Park
16:37
won Best Restaurant in the World.
16:41
And he talks about customer service is black and white,
16:44
but hospitality is color.
16:46
And like that, I think for me, community experience
16:49
is that color.
16:51
So what we're trying to achieve at LSKD is that every touchpoint
16:56
is like, how are we creating a community with this person?
16:59
What are we doing?
17:00
How are we creating a one size fits one interaction
17:04
with the tech that we have with the personalities
17:06
that we have with the autonomy that the team has
17:10
to create a fan, an advocate, like a returning customer,
17:15
because that connection is just so much more important
17:17
at the end of the day.
17:19
And I think sales are important, obviously,
17:21
but if you're building connection genuinely
17:25
and creating those experiences,
17:26
the sales are just a byproduct of everything that you're doing.
17:29
Absolutely agree with you.
17:30
And I think that philosophy,
17:32
I share that same philosophy with you
17:33
because I don't think we should look at it so siloed.
17:38
And I think a lot of times and a lot of new brands
17:41
that come out, a lot of people who are even revamping things
17:46
to think about things from a very customer service point of view,
17:50
like, oh, I'm servicing the customer.
17:52
But honestly, if you answer questions
17:54
before they become questions, your service team
17:57
wouldn't be inundated as much with tickets, right?
18:01
100%.
18:01
So think about it in that philosophy, too, is like, all right,
18:04
you think about it like, I'm answering questions
18:06
before they become questions,
18:07
but then you even take it a step further, right?
18:10
If you're thinking about it from the philosophy
18:11
that you have, like, my customer is my community, right?
18:15
Yeah.
18:15
I'm building loyalty from the get-go of it.
18:17
I'm also building advocates, right?
18:22
But additionally, though, like,
18:25
you're also treating those customers,
18:28
like, as much as they're loyal to you,
18:32
you're loyal to them.
18:33
Yes, 100%.
18:34
And I think it does come from the hospitality perspective.
18:37
Yeah.
18:38
I really do.
18:39
Like, for you and I, at least,
18:42
like, why we view this point is because it's like,
18:44
we're not, I don't know, like, in hospitality,
18:48
like, I go and, like, I check into my hotel in Vegas, right?
18:51
And I'm loyal to Marriott, specifically,
18:55
because I know I'm going to get, like,
18:57
the points and the upgrades, right?
18:59
And I walk in, and it's not about being, like, boujee,
19:02
but, like, I walk in and I get upgraded,
19:04
and my room is overlooking the boulevard.
19:06
Yeah. But it's an experience that I constantly get.
19:09
Yeah, I'm a part of that community continuously.
19:11
I love that example, and just, like,
19:13
leaning into hospitality, I think,
19:15
there's so much opportunity,
19:17
like, in the traditional hospitality world
19:20
of, like, restaurants, hotels,
19:22
there is so much opportunity to be able to create
19:25
one size fits one experience.
19:27
So, like, you know, if you are a loyal customer,
19:29
you might, you know, from time to time,
19:31
get, like, a bottle of champagne,
19:32
or your favorite flowers, or your favorite chocolates,
19:34
or whatever that might look like.
19:36
And I think that a lot of the times,
19:38
from an e-commerce perspective,
19:40
some people think that their pigeon-hold
19:42
that they can't bring to life those experiences,
19:44
because you're having an online experience.
19:46
Your CX is great.
19:48
That phrase is so last season.
19:51
We want to hear your CX is incredible,
19:53
because a customer, we believe,
19:55
in delivering incredible customer experiences.
19:57
Introducing KIQ Agent Assist,
19:59
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20:02
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20:04
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20:06
When building KIQ Agent Assist,
20:08
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20:10
One, get rid of long customer wait times
20:12
and increase the speed of customer resolution.
20:14
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20:18
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20:19
Three, delegate those mundane tasks to AI,
20:22
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20:23
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20:25
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Customer, delivering incredible CX every single time.
20:47
I actually just built an online training course
20:51
for the whole business on becoming unreasonable,
20:54
based off this book.
20:56
But what can I share a story?
20:57
- Yeah, cool.
20:58
- Cool.
20:59
- All the time in the world, my friends.
21:01
- So I just want to put that into context.
21:03
So we had this really cool experience recently
21:08
where two community members getting married,
21:12
they sent us their wedding invitation
21:14
and wrote a note on the back of it,
21:16
and they were like, "Thank you guys so much
21:19
"for being a part of our Get Wedding Ready journey."
21:23
So obviously, Get Wedding Ready,
21:25
they're like they're leaning into fitness,
21:28
got a little good for the big day,
21:29
and they went out of their way to send us a note
21:32
to say, "Thank you," which is wild.
21:35
And so what we did was we got two of our shirts,
21:38
white shirts that had 1% better every day on them.
21:41
So leaning into their personal story,
21:43
and we actually took them to our local screen printer
21:46
and got just married, and the year,
21:49
screen printed on the back,
21:50
and then we sent them this care package
21:51
with something new, something blue,
21:55
and water bottles for the day,
21:57
and all that, and wrote this really cool note,
21:59
took a team photo, sent it back to them,
22:01
and they were absolutely shocked
22:04
and just over the moon that we did anything really.
22:07
- Yeah.
22:08
- But it's just like a little bit of an extravagant example,
22:12
but we're just looking for those moments every single day
22:15
where we can tailor and experience for our community
22:17
and just give them something unforgettable.
22:19
- Well, absolutely, and basically, surprise and delight.
22:23
- Yeah, all of our customers want to surprise and delight.
22:25
Like, shout out to episode prior,
22:29
but Roma from Dr. Squatch,
22:32
like she's the CX manager in what she talks a lot about,
22:35
about like Dr. Squatch, the soap brand,
22:37
is that like the personalization
22:40
and like building that brand voice in that brand community,
22:42
right?
22:43
But like their customers are so loyal
22:45
because in every interaction,
22:47
they're having a surprise and delight moment, you know?
22:50
And it's like, and you and I might think about it
22:53
like a PR package or this or that or like a note,
22:55
'cause like I used to do those things of like
22:57
at festivals too, but like it's going above and beyond
23:01
for the people who are like,
23:03
and you can't necessarily do it all the time, right?
23:05
But you can like, you can personalize the experience a lot.
23:09
- Absolutely.
23:10
And then people make that viral.
23:11
- Yeah, absolutely.
23:13
Like recently, so we have like a theme every month,
23:16
like an internal theme that like basically tells us
23:20
what our marketing plan is going to be linked back to product
23:23
and back to like our values.
23:24
So for February, Valentine's Day,
23:27
the theme was for the love of training.
23:29
- Yeah, so what we did was we went through,
23:33
found our top 100 customers who had spent the most
23:36
in the last 12 months.
23:37
And my team actually went through each of their profiles
23:40
and created a gift for them based on their past purchases
23:44
and wrote them like a love note.
23:45
We even got little Valentine's Day cards made up.
23:48
Got them a little love note just to say like,
23:50
thank you so much for like being such a big part of our brand.
23:53
And the feedback that we got like from those loyal customers,
23:57
like it could have been anyone,
23:58
but like I think just that something extra,
24:01
like we could have just gifted them all a new product
24:04
or sent them all, you know, flowers or our favorite tights
24:07
that we like wearing or leggings because I'm a US podcast.
24:10
But you know, I think like the thing is like you really
24:14
have to tailor those experience to each community member.
24:17
- Right.
24:18
Absolutely.
24:19
Absolutely.
24:20
I think it's like to each community member,
24:22
but like if you want to put this into practice,
24:23
like as Jayden and I are talking about these things,
24:26
like maybe you're thinking about like for your brand,
24:28
like, oh, well, I can't really do this.
24:29
My audience is this segment your audience then,
24:32
like segment your audience based off of like the grandparent,
24:35
the mother, the child, whatever demographics.
24:38
And then try to like break that down and do something special
24:40
even by like segmenting, you know?
24:43
- Yeah, definitely.
24:44
Like we have what we call our muse.
24:47
And so we have a male muse, female muse,
24:49
and we design product for these muses, air quotes.
24:53
Like people listening can't see me do that.
24:54
I don't know why I did that.
24:55
- That's fine.
24:56
It's videos.
24:57
- But we know that like our community is so much broader
25:01
than that, but yeah, we just have to find ways
25:04
to tailor the experience to each individual.
25:06
And that only happens by hiring the right people,
25:09
getting the right people on the bus,
25:10
your balance, big fan.
25:12
But also like empowering them to make those decisions
25:16
and bring their personality to life
25:18
and listen with empathy and create a genuine connection.
25:21
- Yeah, but genuine connection, man.
25:24
Like I think it's, yeah, again, community,
25:28
creating the genuine connection.
25:29
You can't, well, actually let me ask you this.
25:32
I don't even want to see this.
25:33
What is your opinion?
25:34
Do you think that like, okay, I'm starting over brand,
25:37
like I'm thinking about my service.
25:39
I'm thinking about all these things.
25:40
I know we think about things in a community perspective,
25:43
but do you think that every brand can immediately
25:47
start a community or do you have to like,
25:50
do you have to understand it first
25:52
and then build out like additional channels for it?
25:55
- I honestly, let me sit with that for one second.
26:00
I honestly don't think it's one or the other.
26:02
- Yeah.
26:03
- I think that you can take a brand,
26:08
like create a brand and create a community
26:11
that you want to create,
26:12
and then you're going to attract those people.
26:15
So there's a really cool brand in Australia.
26:17
I think they're even in the US now called Frankbody.
26:20
And I look up to them so much just from a tone of voice,
26:24
community marketing, CX, like whole thing
26:29
that just is one tone and one personality.
26:32
And they started with one product.
26:35
And they really went into Frank as this guy
26:39
and how he talks and all of that.
26:42
But they basically started their brand with that
26:46
and they attracted this community.
26:48
They didn't like, yeah, start and then create a community.
26:52
I don't know if that makes sense.
26:54
- Yeah, it's so for LSKD, for example,
26:57
like when I started three years ago,
26:59
we already had a highly engaged community.
27:02
They were, they're fanatics.
27:03
We even now have, because our brand changed.
27:06
So we were originally LKI,
27:08
which stands for loose kid industries,
27:11
which is the original brand that our founders started.
27:13
And that's what LSKD stands for.
27:16
But we even have people who are fans from like back then
27:19
that are like, oh, we've been fans since the LKI days.
27:22
But then when I came in and I was able to build this team
27:25
from the ground up and just,
27:27
I want to say, harness the energy
27:30
of the existing community and like just like take that
27:34
and run with it and just grow that.
27:36
- Yeah, so I think it's one or the other.
27:38
- Yeah, I agree with you.
27:39
- Yeah, I do agree with you.
27:40
It wasn't a trick question.
27:41
- Okay, good.
27:42
- I was just like, I just wanted to share
27:43
like somebody else's opinion because I agree with that too.
27:46
Like, you know, I know I'm like using the feast.
27:49
I don't actually, I don't even want to use
27:50
a Feast of Wholes example.
27:51
Like I, I sit across like quite a few other brands
27:55
and like their wellness brands, right?
27:57
And I, and I won't name like any names,
28:01
but like, you know, with wellness comes a community, right?
28:05
There's like a whole, and there was all,
28:08
there's also like another creator brand
28:10
that has like a peril, right?
28:11
- Yeah.
28:12
- And so like I kind of help them out sometimes
28:15
and they had a community started
28:19
before they became out with the apparel brand.
28:21
So it's like really doubling down
28:23
in the community previously
28:25
and like developing out that voice
28:27
for your marketing pieces of it.
28:28
Like I, my point is I agree with you,
28:31
but like if you are like a just starting out,
28:34
you're going to attract the community that you want.
28:37
- Yes.
28:38
- You know?
28:38
- Yeah, absolutely.
28:39
- I don't know, just lots of opinions,
28:43
just lots of opinions about it,
28:45
but okay, I would do when I get into like a little nitty gritty.
28:48
- Okay.
28:49
- A little bit of a nitty gritty.
28:50
What channels are your community on?
28:53
- Like what, sorry.
28:54
- So like SMS, email, like how are the people
28:57
who are communicating to you?
28:59
- All of them.
29:00
(laughs)
29:01
- I think what's really cool about like our brand is,
29:05
as I said, we have our new years
29:06
but our community is so broad.
29:08
So like from a CX perspective,
29:10
we try and be where our community want us to be.
29:14
So, you know, I mean, phone calls aren't huge for us,
29:17
but we have that function where they can call in,
29:20
live chat is growing, which is awesome,
29:22
that like instant response type thing.
29:25
My team also look after everything reactive on social media.
29:28
So we're replying to comments and DMs.
29:30
Yeah, so basically all of those platforms.
29:35
And so I've actually started to like segment my team
29:38
a little bit and I've created specialists in those areas
29:41
to actually like lean into like,
29:43
creating that live chat space,
29:44
creating the social space, creating the email space.
29:47
So yeah, we just try to be where they want us to be.
29:50
So they dictate that, which is fine by me
29:53
because absolutely.
29:54
- Yeah.
29:55
Question about like live chat specifically,
29:59
actually I have just several questions hit me.
30:01
It's what topic in my brain at the moment.
30:03
So okay, okay, we'll come back to that.
30:06
Actually, we'll come back to that one.
30:08
Social because it's gonna lean into other questions.
30:10
Social, do you utilize any like sort of listening tools
30:14
or are you just like, stouring the internet?
30:16
- Do you know what?
30:17
No.
30:19
Oh girl, but you need to know what it is.
30:22
- Okay.
30:22
So like as like my socials are split.
30:25
So we have our social media coordinators.
30:28
We have our content team, which they sit under
30:31
and then we have CX.
30:32
So our social coordinators amazing,
30:36
shout out Gracie and Robin.
30:37
They're doing all the posting and creating
30:39
and then we're doing everything reactive.
30:42
And it's kind of been a bit of an afterthought
30:45
for our platforms, but we're on, I think, Sprout Social.
30:49
And we use that in CX,
30:50
but they're not even using that as their scheduling tool.
30:52
They're doing everything locally.
30:53
- Interesting.
30:54
- And we're whole with them literally last week.
30:56
And I've spoken to them previously about social listening
31:00
and so it's something that we're gonna do.
31:02
- Yeah, it's cool.
31:03
- So I know it and I'm like, why aren't we doing that?
31:05
- Dude, Game Changer.
31:06
- Yeah.
31:07
- Straight up, Game Changer.
31:08
And I'm actually telling a lot of my brands
31:10
that I advise to to start now because,
31:14
and I think there's a lot of social listening tools out there.
31:17
I'm not, this is not, this segment is not me selling
31:20
a social listening tool.
31:22
This is literally me selling like the why you need this, okay?
31:25
So here's the jam.
31:27
You cannot scour the fucking internet.
31:29
Enough, okay?
31:30
I'm sorry.
31:31
And so like the brands that I have worked for
31:35
and including Feastables, okay,
31:37
large community here,
31:39
we've had to look at negative and positive things
31:41
like constantly, right?
31:42
And we also would want to always like respond
31:45
to the comments, but you can't catch all of them.
31:48
And the listening tool will help you kind of just like
31:51
understand the overall sentiment.
31:54
And what's really cool is like a lot of these tools now
31:56
have like AI and like all these other pieces of it.
31:59
And then also adding it into your CS reports every week.
32:03
- Yeah.
32:04
- So adding it into your CS reports,
32:05
not just on the tickets that I get an email or this and that.
32:08
Like an overall sentiment analysis of what is fully happening
32:12
in the voice of the customer is really interesting.
32:14
- I can nerd out about this.
32:16
- I love that.
32:16
I feel like, yeah, so my team respond to like every single
32:19
comment usually.
32:21
- Yeah.
32:22
- We're still at our size now that we can do that,
32:25
but that is not sustainable like long to know.
32:27
- And we don't ever want to lose that one-to-one contact
32:30
with our community.
32:31
- Yeah.
32:32
- But obviously you need these types of tools
32:34
to scale and grow.
32:35
- Yeah, yeah.
32:36
- Absolutely.
32:37
- It's a balance, isn't it?
32:38
- Yeah.
32:39
- It's absolutely a balance.
32:40
So actually going back to live chat, okay,
32:43
so going back to live chat, like,
32:45
are you utilizing any sort of,
32:47
like you just started using live chat?
32:49
- No, we've had it the whole time.
32:51
- Okay.
32:51
- It's just been more of a focus.
32:52
- Got it.
32:53
And are you utilizing any sort of like AI into that?
32:56
- No.
32:57
- There is more to that.
33:00
- Yeah, yeah.
33:01
- No, but so yeah,
33:05
AI I am back and forth with, it has its place.
33:09
- Yeah.
33:09
- Absolutely.
33:10
- But as I said, like we're at that size
33:12
where we have like so much control over the conversations
33:16
that we're having with our community
33:17
that like I don't need to find efficiencies at the moment.
33:21
Like I want to invest in more people
33:23
to build more connections with our community,
33:26
but I think there is absolutely a place for it.
33:29
In our team, it's going to be a very small space really.
33:33
But how we're using chat at the moment is like more
33:37
proactively so trying to recreate an Insta experience online
33:42
by like engaging and reengaging community
33:44
moving through the website like,
33:45
oh, hey, you've added those leggings to your cart.
33:47
Like what about the matching sports bra?
33:49
Like that kind of thing to kind of generate revenue.
33:52
Yeah, but I mean, you're fulfilling
33:55
what the community actually needs as well.
33:57
- Yeah.
33:57
- Like it's not a sales tactic for me,
33:59
although I know it's going to generate-
34:00
- It can be.
34:01
- It can be.
34:02
- Absolutely.
34:03
But that's not my main focus.
34:04
What are our community missing out on?
34:07
And how can we fulfill that need for them?
34:09
Because if you think about,
34:10
if they were to walk into one of our retail stores,
34:12
that's exactly what's going to happen.
34:13
You're going to pick up the leggings, try them on.
34:16
And one of our educators is going to take
34:18
like the matching top or the sports bar or a T,
34:20
like to complete the whole fit.
34:21
So that's kind of what we're trying to do at the moment,
34:23
is how we like having that true omni-channel experience
34:27
from a community perspective.
34:29
- Yeah, absolutely.
34:30
Well, okay.
34:31
So I know this is like speedy, but like I,
34:35
and not really speedy, but like I want to know,
34:38
why did you guys open this brick and mortar store
34:40
in San Diego?
34:41
- Okay.
34:42
- Being an Australian company, and then in San Diego,
34:43
I'm curious.
34:44
- Yeah.
34:45
So we have a US store, like online store.
34:48
We have a shop of buy store at UNUS.
34:51
So we've been kind of nurturing a small portion
34:54
of the US community for quite a few years now.
34:57
And we've had team based in the US since I think like 20,
35:02
okay, don't quote me on this, but like 2021, I think.
35:06
Or maybe a little bit longer, actually.
35:09
So we invested in partnerships,
35:13
a partnerships team based in the US, and I was scattered around.
35:17
And we decided that we actually wanted to hone in on one community.
35:22
- Yeah.
35:23
- And try and recreate what our founder did.
35:25
Like when he started the brand in that one community
35:27
and grow from there.
35:29
So we decided on San Diego, Pacific Beach.
35:34
And I think the retail store, like while we love it,
35:36
and it's a great space for our community to come touch feel,
35:40
it kind of just happened because of the space that we went into.
35:43
- Oh.
35:44
- I think, I think that's what happened.
35:46
So we found this really cool office space that had a great kind of like
35:50
storage area, but also this cool little room,
35:52
which we've now created a community room.
35:54
So if you're in San Diego, you can actually go to the store,
35:56
but then go hang out in the community room.
35:58
There's like recovery gear in there.
36:00
There's ice baths, there's a lounge, there's a TV.
36:03
Just hang out and have a chat.
36:05
But yeah, it's got like a cool showroom at the front.
36:07
So we have a small retail store, which is awesome.
36:09
- Dude, I want to come to San Diego.
36:11
- I'm just in Diego.
36:12
- Do it.
36:13
- Like, absolutely.
36:14
- Do it.
36:15
- But only when you're here.
36:16
- Yeah, well, I'm here.
36:17
I'm there for a week from Wednesday.
36:18
So come on down.
36:19
- Yeah, well, let me Chicago.
36:20
So we're gonna have to, we're gonna redo this trip.
36:22
- Yeah, sorry.
36:24
I'm not sure if there's any other US stores on the horizon at the moment,
36:27
but like our community in San Diego is, yeah, it's pumping.
36:31
- It's awesome.
36:32
- Yeah.
36:33
So between like Australia and the US, right, and like being on the channel at
36:37
this point,
36:38
do you have, well, actually, actually, this kind of question just came to me.
36:43
What's like the difference between the different like, like localized
36:48
experience?
36:49
Is it a localized experience like different?
36:51
- I mean, it depends kind of like, what do you mean though?
36:55
Like localized in our stores or on the website or...
36:57
- Localized by like US and Australia.
36:59
- Yeah, so I mean, we do a couple of different things like just from an online
37:03
perspective.
37:04
Like the seasons are different to start this.
37:06
So we've got to make sure that we've got the right content on both stores.
37:10
So, you know, summer content in the A.U. and then winter in the US.
37:14
So it's a little bit of a juggling act.
37:17
And because like we love our US community, but it's still quite small for us.
37:22
So we just, we've invested in team that our US focus, which is really cool.
37:27
Like not just based in the US, but also based in our A.U. office in our digital
37:31
marketing team
37:32
who are just looking after the US so that they're able to nurture it a bit more
37:36
So like we create like specific ads for the US community.
37:39
We try and stay relevant for like US holidays.
37:43
And then locally, like if you go to San Diego, you can actually get a t-shirt
37:47
that you can only buy
37:48
from the San Diego store and a water bottle, which is pretty cool.
37:52
- Oh, yeah.
37:53
- And we've even like brought one out in like the Padres colors.
37:55
- Oh, cool.
37:56
- Yeah, localized experience again.
37:58
- Yeah, exactly.
37:59
- Yeah.
38:00
- So each retail location has a t-shirt that you can only get in that retail
38:03
location.
38:04
- Yeah.
38:05
- So that's kind of how we've started to personalize her retail store.
38:09
- Awesome.
38:10
- Yeah, that's cool.
38:11
- Yeah.
38:12
- Personalization.
38:13
- Yes.
38:14
- Of it.
38:15
- It's awesome.
38:16
And we need to do more of that.
38:17
And I think, yeah, I think there's some really exciting things coming.
38:20
- Yeah.
38:21
Okay.
38:22
- I'm excited to learn more.
38:24
- Well, my friend, we are reaching the end of the road.
38:27
- Oh, good.
38:28
- I know.
38:29
It goes really quickly.
38:30
- That was like five minutes.
38:31
- I know.
38:32
Well, technically it was because like we did get started a little later.
38:35
But I do have a, I just have a couple of questions though.
38:37
- Yeah.
38:38
- And just going back to travel.
38:39
- Okay.
38:40
- Or the coolest place you ever travel to.
38:42
Iceland.
38:43
- Yes.
38:44
- Yes.
38:45
- Me too.
38:46
- Okay, cool.
38:47
As like a country and like the overall experience, Iceland.
38:51
My favorite city though, can I do too?
38:53
Am I gonna do it?
38:54
- Yeah.
38:55
Fuck you.
38:56
- Oh, what's so random?
38:57
And it was just one of those stops on my itinerary where I didn't know anything
38:58
about and I didn't
38:59
care about it until I got there.
39:00
But it was L'Oupliana.
39:02
- L'Oupliana?
39:03
- L'Oupliana?
39:04
- Yeah.
39:05
- Where's that?
39:06
- Can you sing that right?
39:07
- I have no idea because I've never heard of it.
39:08
- L'Ouplania.
39:09
- Oh, interesting.
39:10
- Yeah.
39:11
- Cool.
39:12
- Yeah.
39:13
- Okay.
39:14
- Editor, it was just like the vibe, the food, the wine.
39:17
- Yeah.
39:18
- Yeah.
39:19
- I love that.
39:20
- But I'm sitting here going like so many different like Switzerland.
39:22
- I know, right?
39:23
- I know this happens when-
39:25
- Well, one, this happens when I think when you're Australian because
39:28
Australians do love
39:29
to travel.
39:30
- We do.
39:31
- But two, when you work to flight center.
39:33
- Yeah.
39:34
- There's so many things.
39:35
- I'm mad.
39:36
- All those deals, girl.
39:37
- And I don't talk about travel much anymore.
39:38
You know what I was talking about travel.
39:39
- I love that.
39:40
Like I still catch up with like the people that I used to work with.
39:43
But it's just like, you know when you catch up with people you say, "I can just
39:46
talk about
39:46
everything funny that happened when you worked together."
39:48
- Yeah.
39:49
- And that kind of thing.
39:50
But yeah, actually sitting down and talking about travel, I miss it.
39:53
I travel so much still.
39:55
- Yeah.
39:56
- Like it's so, it's so insane.
39:58
But I'm here Vegas and I actually live in Chicago.
40:01
So there's, here's an example of that, my friend.
40:03
- Yeah, very good example.
40:06
- Here can everybody find you?
40:07
'Cause it's been so lovely and I want them to continue talking to you.
40:10
- Oh my God, thank you.
40:11
You can find me on LinkedIn, Jade Camera.
40:13
And I think there's not that many, but L.S. Katie, if you go on to there,
40:16
LinkedIn.
40:17
- Yeah.
40:18
- Absolutely.
40:19
- Well, thanks Jade for coming on.
40:21
And I really agree.
40:22
- Thank you for having me.
40:23
I'm coming to Australia.
40:24
We're gonna do this again.
40:25
- Yes.
40:26
- Okay.
40:27
- Absolutely.
40:28
- Come visit us.
40:29
Out of us, we do tours.
40:30
Might put you through like a little yoga session of Pilates Festival.
40:32
- Yes.
40:33
- Let's try work out.
40:34
- Let's go.
40:35
- Yes.
40:36
- Cool, thank you.
40:38
And to everybody out there, thank you so much for tuning in to another week of
40:41
The Juice.
40:42
And we'll see you next Thursday.
40:43
Hey, wow, you made it to the end of the episode.
40:49
That means that you like me and I like you, which also means you should
40:53
subscribe to this
40:54
show.
40:55
Bye.
41:03
Bye.
41:04
[silence]