The Juice is visiting the doc! Today we’re chatting with , the voice behind , a natural body care brand sold in major retailers including Walmart, Target, and Ace Hardware.
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(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, making that purchase,
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retaining that customer, bringing them back around,
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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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the marketing space and everything in between.
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(upbeat music)
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Welcome back to another episode of The Juice
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with me, Jess, your host.
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I am super stoked, as I am every fucking week,
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to bring on my homie, Scott Wicken,
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who leads copywriting at Dr. Squatch.
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Scott, tell the crowd who you are.
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- When I'm Scott Wicken,
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I lead copy at Dr. Squatch, just like you said.
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- This is the best copy that we've ever said.
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- Yeah, it's the way we're done.
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That's it, it's a wrap.
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- We're over.
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- Yeah, pleasure to be here
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in the presence of such a legend.
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But yeah, I've been in creative for digital creative
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for going on 13 plus years.
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- Shit, yeah.
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- In a range of different capacities.
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The majority of which is direct consumer brands,
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high growth lifestyle brands.
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In another lifetime, before that, I was in finance,
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and that's a fun career transition story.
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But copy is kind of the core of what I do.
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I've also worked in various capacities
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for men's clothing brands,
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a range of different CPG brands, fitness, technology.
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I was a creative director for a men's clothing brand
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for about four years.
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I was in the freelance space for three plus years,
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and then I've been with Dr. Squatch for about three years.
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And yeah, personal care space is really exciting
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and interesting right now.
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So yeah, it's a pleasure to be here.
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- Thanks.
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Well, let's start there, man.
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'Cause now I'm really interested
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how you ended it from finance
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into like this creative e-commerce.
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- Yeah, yeah, it's a good story.
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You know, I think coming out of college,
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I like many folks got a straight up business degree.
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And kinda didn't really know what I wanted to do.
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And I think the bigger point was more
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I didn't really know myself.
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So I worked in commercial estate finance
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in various capacities for almost eight years.
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And kind of every year that I went along,
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I got a little more unsatisfied,
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a little more unhappy,
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and a little felt a little more out of place.
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And once I started kind of working on myself
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and learning a bit more about myself,
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and what I was good at,
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what my strengths and weaknesses were,
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and ultimately what I wanted to do for the rest of my life,
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it just kind of became clear
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that this really was not it for me.
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And my time in finance was a really great experience.
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I learned a lot of very basic skills,
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how to show up to work on time,
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how to lead a meeting, how to write a new email.
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- To details. - Basic stuff, no sales.
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So certainly it was very formative for me.
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It ultimately was kind of a round peg
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in a square hole sort of situation.
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And I hit a certain point where I was like,
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I need to make a change.
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And quit my job, started over,
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spent a little bit of time soul searching,
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and really just kind of wanted to focus on,
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figuring out like what I love to do,
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and how that would ultimately translate into a career.
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And as cliche as it sounds,
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I read a great career book.
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I still think about it all the time.
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It's called Life's a Bitch, and then you change your career.
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And-- - I'd love to read that.
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- Nice little book, nothing super crazy about it,
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but it just had some really thoughtful exercises
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that guide me down a path of kind of figuring out
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what I was into.
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And that's really what stuck with me was this one question
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that still is like seared in my brain.
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It was don't think about what your next career is.
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It was what do you love
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and what do you wanna be around all the time,
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and make a list.
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So I made a list, and it was not finance and spreadsheets,
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although those things are great.
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And I certainly still use a lot of the business skills
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I learned as a young buck in finance to this day.
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I really value the importance of data
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and can crush a few numbers when I need to.
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But that was really where it started.
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And I made a list, and it was creative things,
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art, food, fashion, creative things.
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And I was like, okay, this is it.
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So again, a lot of cliches here,
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I really just started doing some creative things
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to kind of get my brain moving, get my body moving,
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get thinking about where I was at.
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And I started a blog as one does.
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And--
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I started a podcast.
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Yeah, right.
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This was like, you know, about a little bit back in the day.
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So starting a blog in this time was like starting a podcast now.
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So that's like definitely the corollary, to a great point.
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And yeah, just started writing.
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I think as I wrote, I realized that I was an English minor
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in college, kind of more just like because I liked it.
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And I kind of, and I was like, oh, I really like this.
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I enjoy this.
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I feel like I'm good at it.
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And then I was like, okay, how do I turn this into a career?
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So I started thinking about creative industries.
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Econ was really kind of taking off at that point.
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And I just started hustling.
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Did a lot of free work.
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Tried to build my portfolio with random stuff.
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Social media posts, blog posts, kind of some like--
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At that point, I really learned what copywriting was.
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That it is business-oriented, marketing-oriented words.
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So emails, all that sort of stuff.
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So I started doing kind of some a little bit of like,
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just practice work.
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And yeah, did a couple quick freelance jobs.
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And then got my first job working for women's shoe and accessory
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band called Soul Society back in 2012.
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Yeah.
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And a woman who is still a great friend of mine
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and a mentor or source of advice.
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She was my first boss there.
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She took a chance on me.
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And I'm forever grateful for her for giving me the opportunity
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to like this, you know, dude comes in.
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He just never-- he clearly has maybe some talent,
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but doesn't really have like a resume.
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And she took a chance on me.
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And I'm forever grateful for that.
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And was kind of off and running from there.
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And built up my career from there,
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expanded kind of in more of the creative direction,
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creative strategy, worked in production,
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photoshoots, campaign development,
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more of the kind of brand marketing stuff.
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And then, yeah, I've been kind of back to copy the last few years.
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And it's been a great experience.
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I think that's really fun.
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Like your path, right?
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Like we actually have a really similar path of like,
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well, I went to art school and then I ended up in finance.
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And then I ended up in like all these like very like stuffy things.
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And I'm just like, not good at stuffy.
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Yeah.
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I like was saying this on another episode.
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I got fired from like an office manager job.
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The lady was like, listen, you kind of suck at this.
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And I'm like, damn.
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Hard advice at the time.
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Yeah, it was like, okay.
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Honestly, the best advice because then I became very detail-oriented because of
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it, right?
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But I think that's really rad.
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I think like creative people don't get a lot of credit.
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Like creative minded people, right?
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Yeah. Like I think when it comes to the world of business,
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we like, we don't think like so in a box.
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We think very outside of the box.
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And we think about like solving problems in very different ways.
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Absolutely.
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I think it's a great point.
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And it is a mindset shift.
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I think the challenge and one of the things I personally pride myself on,
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as I'm sure you do as well, is how do I harness my creative capabilities,
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skill set experience, but also given that I do what I do,
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how do I approach the creative with the business mindset?
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Because that is certainly important.
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We can't just out here, those of us in pure creative that are working in econ,
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sales, marketing, whatever it is, we have to be able to come up with good
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creative
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that inspires, resonates, but also it's got to convert, right?
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And whatever that metric is, whatever situation it is,
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the creative has to do that as well.
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So creating good, creating, good creative.
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The copyright, it really has a way with words.
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Creating good creative just in and of itself is not enough to really be good at
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your job,
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whether it's copy or whatever, graphic design, customer, you know,
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there's creativity and everything, engineering,
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but it's really got to be able to meet those business goals.
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Yeah.
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And I think, and that is a big part of how I think about my creative work
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personally,
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not just at the execution level, but certainly at the strategic level as well.
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And being that I'm a little bit further on in my career,
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I obviously have had the chance to work on all of our strategic elements and
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different things.
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And I think that's a really important part too, is like, great,
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we need to come up with some creative for this, but we need to think
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strategically.
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We need to get conversion, revenue, whatever those metrics are.
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And that's a big part of it.
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I think what's really important too, like when you're thinking of creative,
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right, like you're thinking of creative and it's not just words of creative,
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it's not just designs, like these are all pieces of it, right?
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But really in the world of like E-com or even in the world B2B,
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you are creating these things, but really what you're creating is for the
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customer's journey,
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right?
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Absolutely. Right? Like there's different pieces of it.
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So it's like, so think about it, like performance creative, right?
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The ads you see on Instagram, Facebook, whatever, channels, right?
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There is a piece of creative work that goes into it,
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whether it's a static image with some beautiful copy or it's like a motion of a
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video, right?
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That is a piece of creative that you're speaking to that customer in that
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journey, right?
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So that's acquisition.
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Then there's like the CRM pieces that email SMS, like, and we're going to get
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into that
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because this is the SMS king.
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So, but...
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Lord, not a king.
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Okay, Lord, Lord.
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Or low level government function.
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Okay, the drama.
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Drama.
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We're not self-deprecating around here, okay?
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Anyway, but my point is I think you hit a really good point about the fact that
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creative
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creative does have a business function, obviously, right?
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And I think like, and as marketers, like I'm a marketer before I'm actually a
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customer
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experience person.
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I love customer experience because I'm dealing with a consumer journey, right?
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We all have a little CX in us.
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We just don't...
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Absolutely.
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We just like think it's just support all the time, you know?
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Absolutely.
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I think it's a really great point.
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And I think that's a perfect sort of reframing of kind of my point there was
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like,
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I think of myself, I'm certainly a marketer.
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Yeah.
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My output is creative driven, but you know,
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there's all kinds of other output.
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But certainly like, I'm a marketer at heart.
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I have my...
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The usage of my output is for marketing.
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And that's really important to think of yourself as a marketer,
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think of yourself in the business mindset.
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Because, you know, ultimately that's what it's about.
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And I think that's a really great way to think about it.
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We're all marketers.
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I think every opportunity from, especially CX, every first interaction on the
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growth side,
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the acquisition side, that is, like you said, using your word to start a
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journey.
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And that's a sales opportunity.
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Yeah.
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If you want to put like a more direct term on it.
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But yeah, that's what marketing is all about is like that first step or down
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the line or
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solving problems, it's all kind of marketing.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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So switching gears a little bit because I do want to talk about Squatch just
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briefly.
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And given you leave the copy, my guy,
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I want to talk about Squatch's tone of voice.
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I think it's really sick.
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Yeah.
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I love it.
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We appreciate it.
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Certainly team effort.
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The brand voice was established very early on our founder,
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by our founder.
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So I was fortunate to come into a situation where you had a lot of really smart
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really talented people developed it.
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And I think, yeah, for me, I looked at it like this is an opportunity to sort
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of like
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continue on, you know, help execute on it at different levels and, you know,
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sort of grow it in places that makes sense, be a steward of it, where it makes
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sense,
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define it, where it makes sense.
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I worked on our sort of internal brand book, and that was a really fun project
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that I was,
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you know, again, a big team effort there, but that was a great project that I
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was fortunate
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enough to be a part of.
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But, you know, I think ultimately getting to work for a brand, and there's many
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you know, unique, fun brand voices out there, but getting to work for a company
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that
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has that type of brand voice is really fun.
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And, you know, it really has been a great educational process for me, and, you
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know,
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really informed a lot about how I think about, you know, brand voice and tone
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in general,
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from a creativity standpoint, how can we use it effectively, how it can, you
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know,
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how it can, you know, it can be ineffective.
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But, yeah, ultimately it's really fun.
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So getting to a really fun challenge too.
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And I think, you know, ultimately, I think we're in a time now where, you know,
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brand has never been more important in many ways.
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And I think it's obviously how it works in different spaces, industries,
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product classes
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is a distinction, but ultimately there's so much noise out there, and customer
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acquisition is so
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tough, especially in direct consumer now, that certainly brand voice is a
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really key area where
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companies can differentiate themselves, put their product in the hands of
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people
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via clever and unique ways.
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So I think it's a really interesting time to be on the brand side of work in
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general.
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And I think brands now are really taking that more seriously and kind of making
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sure that
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it's consistent throughout their entire customer experience, whether it's
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acquisition, retention,
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customer service, social certainly.
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Every aspect has got to be consistent and interesting and innovative.
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And I think it's a really fun time out there.
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It's a really tough time, but I think you have a lot of really smart,
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innovative people doing really, you know, cool and clever things with their
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marketing.
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So it's very fun. And also, I think it's a big, you know, I think it's also a
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time where a lot
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of people are trying to do it. And I think the key thing that I think about a
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lot is I think
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certainly it can involve humor, cleverness, jokes, off the wall creative,
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whatever. But I think
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it really starts for me, at least when I think about it, really starting kind
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of back a step
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and thinking about who is your brand? What does your brand stand for? And then
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from there kind of
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developing what your brand voice is. And that's, you know, if I'm working on,
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you know, brand
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voice projects, that's really something I think about a lot. And I think it's,
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you know, I don't
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think there's one size fits all for brands. I think a lot of brands see the
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success of
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companies that use humor in their marketing. And they want to add that into
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their marketing
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naturally, because it's a great way to stand out and it can be effective. But I
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think that's,
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it really starts more before that in developing an idea of who the brand is,
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what it stands for.
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And then figuring out if humor makes sense or, you know, or memes makes sense
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or whatever it is.
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I think that's a big thing that I think is important to consider as you're
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thinking about
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your brand voice. Because, you know, for us, I think, you know, I think a lot
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about not just
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kind of how we do it, but why we do it. And that was kind of part of a lot of
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the work I did
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originally was really thinking about establishing sort of that why behind the
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how. Obviously,
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the how is important. Like what that looks like practically in your SMS in your
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email.
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All that kind of copy. But ultimately, like, what is it for? So I think taking
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some time to really
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go through that process and developing the brand voice is not just looking at
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the output. It's
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really looking internally, doing all those things in, you know, internally as a
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first step to really
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develop. This is who we are. This is what we stand for. And then, yes, like how
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you how your tone
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and voice and your output of all from there is sort of the next step. But you
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got to figure out,
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like, who you are. And maybe you decide like, Hey, we don't dreamers not for us
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. We need to
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focus on what makes us special who we are. And then we kind of develop from
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that.
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Yeah. And I actually think a lot of brands like don't get that right, like in
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the steps
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perspective of it. Because I think, you know, you come out the gate and you
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want to be like that
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funny brand and you want to like, hatlet it have a personality. And I think
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like, by all means,
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every brand, every company should have a personality. It's fun and punchy and
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like,
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get people across the line. But like, not everybody is fun and punchy.
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Yes. You know, I think ultimately, it's like another way to look at it. And
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this is like,
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such an overused term. But like, it's like authenticity really is still a thing
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. Like,
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I know that that is like, truly a word that just gets thrown around for
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everything. But
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that's really what it is. And it is really is the best way to describe what you
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can do from a
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positioning standpoint is like, be authentic, right? We're figuring out how to
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be more authentic
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or, and that starts with kind of internal understanding of your brand, what you
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do.
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Yeah. I think, I think you're absolutely right. I think it's a bit of
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authenticity. But I also
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think it's, and I don't see a lot of brands doing this in the beginning stages,
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developing your
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customer personas. Totally. Like, I think it happens after the fact. Totally.
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And I, and I think
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what also happens, because I see a lot of founders doing this of a brand, right
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? They're like,
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I have this product and I'm going to put this product out. And I've done all
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the research about
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the product. But then I've skipped the step of consumer research. Like, not in
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the consumer
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research in the sense of like, taste and like, or feel, or is this going well
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in the consumer
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research of actually like, who is my customer? Right. So then you find yourself
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marketing or
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creating a voice that has nothing to do with your product. And it's not all the
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time,
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but I've seen it enough where I'm like, don't skip that step. Like skip, find
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the step of who
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your audience is to then develop that brand voice. Absolutely. And I think that
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can really,
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you're totally right. And I think it's definitely a step that I think more
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brands need to think
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seriously about and really do the work on. And it's hard because exercises like
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that,
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you know, in the initial branding process. And it doesn't, you know, obviously
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it's good if it
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starts in the beginning, but you know, many brands go through a rebrand or a
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retooling and like,
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that can be an important part of that too. So it doesn't always have to be in
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the beginning,
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but it is an important step because you know, you want to think about those
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things like,
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who we marketing to, like you said, how, what needs is our product serving,
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what problems are
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we solving with our product? But also it's great if our product is solving a
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problem,
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you know, serving a need to, to a community that wants it. But if you're not
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conveying a way that
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connects with them ultimately, then that's really where you can kind of fall
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short. I think figuring
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out how to connect with your customer base, your audience is really the core
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about. And it's going
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to be tough to connect unless you're authentically know who your brand is, what
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your brand is about.
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Yeah, absolutely. And you know, to your point about the customer journey, that
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connection in the,
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in the beginning, whatever that, whatever that is, whether it's an ad, whether
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it's a SMS,
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whether it's a promo email, developing that connection right from the jump is
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really the core to,
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you know, getting people in and getting them to, to create that limerance with
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your brand for sure.
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Yeah, absolutely. I think we can go so many different places in this subject.
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But I actually
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really want to get into the subject of the SMS Lord subject.
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So self-appointed. Hey, let's talk a little bit about CRM.
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Well, first we're going to start an email though, because I actually have a
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question for you.
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So how do you in copy, because I struggle with this, how do you make an email,
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not so like transactional
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promo like, and like transition that copy into like, no, you like, I'm talking
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to you like,
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you're my home, man, you need this soap. Yeah, it's sick. You know, yeah, it's
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a, it's a great
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question. I think two things. One, I think having talented people that know
19:44
your brand can execute,
19:45
like, I'm sorry, that's not a flashy answer, but that's truly what it is. Yeah,
19:49
I think that's a big
19:49
part of it. It's brand obsession. Brand obsession. You have people that that
19:53
live and breathe their
19:54
brand also have talent and experience. I think that's important. But I think
20:00
too, I think it really
20:01
starts maybe a little bit earlier on. I think it starts, you know, from a
20:05
strategy perspective,
20:06
really thinking about, especially with email and certainly with SMS and other
20:10
avenues,
20:10
you know, thinking about it's never just about one email, right? Yeah, it's
20:15
about a campaign,
20:16
a collection of emails, a collection of SMSs, your marketing effort for a
20:20
particular product,
20:21
a promo, whatever it might be, really is the sum of many parts. And I think it
20:26
's really important
20:27
to consider that as you're thinking about, like, for a retention scenario, for
20:30
example.
20:31
Yeah. And I think that's really important because, you know, having good
20:35
segmenting and good strategy
20:36
around a campaign, looking at all the parts, looking at your different audience
20:39
segments,
20:40
who you're marketing to and how, I think that sort of like foundational, unsexy
20:44
stuff is really
20:45
where success starts. Yeah. And understanding that and knowing that you're
20:50
solid there,
20:51
then puts your creative in a position to be its most successful. So, but going
20:56
then to your
20:57
question about copy, I think it's really about thinking about a couple of
21:01
different things. One,
21:03
you know, you haven't established brand, you have your authenticity, you have
21:06
people that
21:08
understand how to market your products, you know, find that balance of humor
21:12
and education,
21:14
product information. And I think ultimately thinking about it really
21:18
conversationally,
21:19
again, that's a, you know, like authenticity, you know, the conversational
21:23
nature of copy
21:24
specifically is kind of a thing that's talked about a lot. But it's truly the
21:28
key,
21:28
and especially as we get into more one-to-one sort of marketing like SMS and
21:34
then what's
21:34
up and even forms of social media, you know, that conversational aspect is
21:39
really, really core
21:40
and really able to translate your marketing into conversational copy is really,
21:45
really important.
21:45
So I think thinking about it from that standpoint, and then also, you know,
21:49
like you said, really
21:50
knowing your audience, knowing what they respond to, like, are they audience
21:53
that really responds to
21:55
bare bones, informational, just get me to the page again. Yes, if that's so
22:01
great, if they,
22:02
if you have established a relationship with them where they appreciate your
22:05
humor,
22:06
they appreciate your content, it's not every email is transactional, you got to
22:11
focus on that too.
22:11
And I think that kind of goes into the point when I was thinking about looking
22:14
at things holistic
22:15
as a campaign, your set of emails can be a range of different, you know,
22:20
constructions. You have
22:22
some content, you have blog posts, you have humor, you have product information
22:26
. Ultimately,
22:28
if they're receiving your email or your SMS, like they know who you are for the
22:31
most part,
22:32
they know how to get to your website, right? So you don't need to, like, you're
22:36
not solving a
22:37
mystery with them, you're really convincing them to get there, right? How are
22:41
you doing that? Yeah.
22:42
And I don't think, and I think certainly there are, there are a lot of
22:45
opportunities that you do need
22:47
to sell. Sense of urgency is obviously like a critical component if you're
22:51
looking at a promo
22:52
specifically or a limited edition product. But people know how to get to your
22:56
website, right? So
22:57
you've got to get them to want to go there. And that's sort of where a little
23:02
bit of the magic
23:03
lies, right? And whether you're intriguing them with beautifully designed
23:06
graphics, whether you're
23:08
intriguing them with clever copy, you're reinforcing their love of your brand,
23:13
what they love about
23:14
your brand in the context of an email, that's really, really where it's at.
23:18
Yeah. Okay, let me ask you this question. This actually has nothing to do with
23:21
copy at all.
23:22
But I remember, I have an opinion about this and maybe it's because I'm a
23:27
creative, I don't know.
23:29
And I do think that text-based only emails can sell, but I also, but like
23:36
straight up,
23:36
I'm such a slob for good creative. I love a good design, I love a good color
23:45
scheme. I'm like,
23:46
oh, it's just like, I love it. But I realized that like, that doesn't always
23:50
sell, right?
23:51
And people really combat me on this one a lot. But like, how do you find a good
23:57
balance between
23:58
text only? So every day dose, for instance, every day dose is only text, they
24:03
're text-only emails,
24:04
right? In Jack's voice. And I've actually asked Jack this question, I was like,
24:09
why do you do that?
24:09
And he's like, they crush. He's like, people want my voice. And I'm like, okay,
24:14
but you also have this beautiful creative, like, why don't you add? Then he's
24:17
like, I know it works.
24:19
Yeah, I think that's a great point. And again, he knows his brand, he knows his
24:23
audience. And that's
24:23
not to say there are spaces to try new things. But you got to put yourself in a
24:29
position to,
24:30
as you look at your creative and your marketing, you got to double down on what
24:34
works, find some
24:35
avenues to try new things and experiment and try and gain customers, new
24:39
audience, followers,
24:40
whatever that case may be. But yeah, like, I think you have to approach, you
24:44
know, you always
24:45
want to be innovating on that. But if you have something that works, double
24:48
down on that,
24:50
iterate off that, find new ways to do that similar thing that's working until
24:53
it doesn't.
24:53
And then you got to chuck it and try something new. Yeah, I think plain text is
24:57
really interesting.
24:58
I think we're really, especially with email, we're really in a like, noise
25:03
driven environment,
25:04
like inboxes have never been more crowded. Deliverability has never been harder
25:08
. And how you stand out
25:11
amongst like the promotions folder, where you land. I mean, even a lot of
25:15
people have purely like me,
25:17
I have all of my brands that I follow, I have them filtered in different
25:21
folders. So really
25:23
standing out, really standing out is very hard. And obviously you've got to
25:28
have an email in the
25:29
email perspective, you got to have your subject lines. Yeah, on point. Yeah, I
25:32
think that's where
25:33
like, that should be like, yes. But I think internally from a tech standpoint,
25:38
it is,
25:40
it is a new experience. And I think given just the visual nature of text, it
25:45
really,
25:45
if they open it, their engagement with it is going to be a little bit deeper
25:50
because they're not just
25:52
scrolling a visuals and then they're off, right? Because it's text, they have
25:56
to actually read it.
25:57
Right. And I think that sort of just like by that nature creates a level of
26:01
engagement,
26:02
especially if they've already gotten two, three, four emails from you in the
26:05
course of a campaign,
26:07
and depending on the segment, and they open it up and like, whoa, this is not a
26:11
nicely designed
26:12
beautiful email, which certainly that's super important. But it's just
26:16
something different. I
26:17
think breaking up that noise, that is a very, very good tool to break up the
26:20
noise. Yeah, I agree with
26:22
you. And I think that's really important. Like I said, in the context of today
26:25
's email marketing
26:26
world. Totally, absolutely. I totally agree with you. But like, and maybe this
26:30
is just because like,
26:31
I'm such a psychopath about customer journeys, right? But when I think of a
26:36
really good creative
26:38
email with like images on it, I think of it as like a funnel. That's like, you
26:43
have your subject
26:43
line, you have your header, then you have like your contacts, and then you have
26:46
your ender, right?
26:48
And it's like beautiful for anybody viewing. I'm making a hourglass shape right
26:53
now, you know,
26:53
funnel motion with hands. But I totally get that. Like I get that some
26:59
marketers don't agree with
27:01
that. But like, I think it just varies. I think it varies by your audience and
27:07
your brand. And
27:08
for somebody who really loves creative, think about your creative as a funnel.
27:12
Don't just like,
27:13
throw things on a screen and be like, cool. And especially, you know, with, you
27:17
know,
27:18
we're driven by such a mobile environment now, if you're not designing your
27:23
emails specifically,
27:24
and your communications and your websites, mobile first, you know, you're
27:28
already behind the game.
27:29
And I think that's really critical. And that certainly changes the way you
27:32
approach your
27:32
design, of course, but certainly your copy as well, and how they work together
27:36
and are integrated
27:37
in not just the email environment, but in the mobile email environment. And I
27:41
think that's a
27:41
really critical thing to think about too. But yeah, and again, I think it's all
27:45
about standing out.
27:46
I think it's all about testing and segmentation to your old thing. Oh,
27:49
absolutely. You know,
27:50
as you get into it, you're really finding different segments in your audience.
27:53
Some may
27:54
respond well to beautiful design. Some may respond to like, just the facts, you
27:58
know,
27:59
give me that promo, whatever it is, get me to the site and you're done.
28:01
Some, you know, I think the text gives you a little bit more personal
28:06
interaction.
28:07
You get an opportunity to like speak as a person, a founder, a persona, a CX
28:12
rep, whatever the
28:13
personas that are using your email. And I think a lot of audiences really
28:17
respond to that vibe,
28:19
especially if you know, it's more of like a high LTV segment, where you're
28:23
really trying to create a
28:23
little more personal touch with that experience for them. And you know, I think
28:27
, you know, approaching
28:29
it like a conversation and approaching it like someone you're sending an email
28:33
to someone you know,
28:35
for the right audience can can do really, really well, especially if they don't
28:38
need convincing about
28:41
who your brand is to them. Yeah, they are in the high LTV audience, a very
28:46
engaged segment.
28:48
They're like, yeah, dude, we know what's up. Just just tell me what's good. You
28:51
know, tell me like
28:52
what you got, your product promo, you know, give me a little bit of like give
28:56
me a heads up,
28:57
make me feel a little special. So I think yeah, that personalization aspect,
29:01
again, it really
29:02
comes down from thinking about your segments and thinking about your audience
29:05
and thinking about
29:06
your campaign, holistically. Yeah, absolutely. Let's switch gears to SMS real
29:11
quick, because I
29:11
keep saying like, we're gonna get there. We're gonna get there. This is also my
29:15
favorite. I think I
29:17
recently posted on LinkedIn, I recently posted on LinkedIn, like a poll about
29:23
like email and SMS.
29:24
And I just remember somebody being in my threads being like, no way. I hate SMS
29:29
. And I'm like, all
29:30
right, dog, like that's cool. I know I'm like, why? I was like, you're most of
29:34
these people,
29:35
most of your consumers in anything, right? Like whether you're a sass company,
29:40
whether you're a
29:41
brand, most of your fucking consumers are mobile first. Absolutely. And so it's
29:46
like, I love SMS
29:48
because you can get like quick punchy, right? And you can get quick and punchy.
29:54
And like, what's
29:55
really tight about it is you can be in somebody's hand. And I love like, I mean
30:00
, we can nerd out,
30:00
like I love building flow paths. I love building like two, like one on one
30:05
conversations, but
30:06
from a copywriter's perspective, how do you make that copy hella punchy? It's,
30:12
yeah, it's a great
30:13
challenge. It's a really fun challenge. As we've talked about, I love SMS. I
30:18
think it is. We're
30:19
just scratching the surface in terms of opportunity for it to continue to
30:23
become a tool. If your
30:27
SMS program is not near or already outpacing your email revenue, I think, you
30:33
know, it's,
30:35
you know, you should take a hard look at that ultimately. I think it's very,
30:38
you know, obviously
30:39
varies depending on your product, your market, your audience. So there's a lot
30:42
of room to wiggle
30:43
there. But I think the power of SMS is huge and only getting bigger. Yeah,
30:49
especially as we come
30:51
to deliverability challenges with email. Absolutely. Like I said, touch on
30:55
earlier, we talked about
30:56
the noise in the inbox. I think it's just a great way to differentiate. And
31:00
like I said earlier,
31:01
I think it's a really key opportunity to have a one-on-one conversation with
31:05
your customer.
31:06
Absolutely. And that is really interesting because it is a totally different
31:12
way to interact.
31:13
And it gives you a lot of opportunities to converse with them. Obviously, you
31:18
use it as a promo tool,
31:19
just like you would email certainly. New product releases, promos, all that
31:25
kind of stuff. But from
31:26
there, how you then continue to develop your audience directly and then make it
31:31
more specific to SMS,
31:32
I think is really the fun challenge, right? And I think the, however you go
31:39
about it,
31:39
I think there's different ways to tackle that challenge, whether you're
31:42
creating an SMS-only
31:43
persona, you're using it as a CX tool. I think, you know, you're the, you know,
31:48
the chat bot queen.
31:49
And I think we're only scratching the surface of ways to create automations for
31:56
not just,
31:56
you know, not just, you know, customer service-oriented interactions, but
32:03
personalization
32:04
and recommendation opportunities, which I think is another core thing that
32:07
really, certainly,
32:09
you can do a lot of that with email. And your email program should be doing
32:13
that already.
32:14
But I think you've got even more opportunity to do that because of the one-to-
32:17
one nature of
32:18
SMS. Absolutely. Absolutely. I think the other thing to hit on too, and you
32:23
briefly touch on this,
32:24
but like, and there's tools out there that like have teams behind, I like to be
32:30
a little tool
32:31
on X-ray right here. So like, there's tools out there that have people behind
32:37
the scenes that are
32:38
responding, right? Like to those avant-garde emails, like all that stuff. And
32:42
that, and it
32:42
crushes because I have it, I have it across like some of my clients, right? But
32:47
outside of just
32:48
like the SMS marketing tool piece, I also want to see more customer experience
32:54
teams across brands
32:55
involved in SMS. And I think we are. I think we definitely are. I think there
33:00
needs to be
33:00
tighter integrations between the SMS tools and the help desk tools, right? So,
33:06
you know, customer,
33:07
I mean, this at the end of the day, this is a customer podcast, right? Customer
33:12
actually has a
33:12
really tight integration with Twilio and WhatsApp. And I think that crushes,
33:16
dude.
33:17
Yeah, absolutely. And I think from, again, to kind of circle back to your
33:20
original point about
33:21
copy and brand, you really want all of that experience to feel consistent and
33:27
cohesive. So,
33:29
every interaction your customer has with your brand should feel obviously
33:35
nuanced depending on
33:36
the situation, but certainly consistent and cohesive relative to tone. And I
33:40
think that is,
33:41
especially in the context of SMS where you have very tight character limits for
33:46
the most part,
33:46
that's a big challenge. And I think that's really where kind of the magic comes
33:51
in is,
33:52
you know, you've got 90 to 117 characters depending on what platform you're
33:57
using.
33:58
Shout out all the SMS platform people. You know who you are. Yes, you know who
34:03
you are.
34:04
You all are probably listening to this.
34:05
But yeah, that is a challenge. And I think to me, when I think about it
34:14
personally,
34:15
the creative challenge, I love, like, I like the restriction to me, like, and
34:19
again,
34:20
this is like me really nerding out. Like when I can dial in something and I can
34:24
get a hopefully,
34:26
in my mind, a powerful, thoughtful, funny, goal achieving message in 100
34:35
characters,
34:36
that to me is like, hell yeah. And I think, and I think also, as you build that
34:42
out,
34:43
then you really set yourself up for success with flows. Because I think that's
34:46
one thing we,
34:47
you know, you didn't touch on is like, yeah, certainly with email, but the flow
34:51
opportunity is
34:52
afforded to you, you know, not just in SMS in general, but working in concert
34:58
with your email
34:59
is really interesting, whether it be win back, whether it be replenishment,
35:05
whether it be,
35:06
you know, and again, and how you're, you know, to sort of watch your customer
35:09
service.
35:09
Yeah, I see some brands, man, like on those flows, sorry, I really like cut you
35:14
off.
35:14
No, it's okay. I just want like, I see some brands in like that flow process,
35:18
like,
35:19
dog, I've saw, I've seen one flow with like 17 emails going through every
35:24
single flavor of a
35:26
product. And I'm like, yeah, why? Yeah, like, that's not going to sell you.
35:30
That's going to sell you
35:31
probably in the first five emails. Yes, I was just going to say, you got to get
35:34
it done in a couple.
35:35
Yeah, but after the 12 others is like, you're just annoying me in my inbox now.
35:39
Yeah. And I think, you know, I think a lot of it comes down to timing too, you
35:43
know, and, and who
35:44
your people are. And, but yeah, but I think now the opportunities to do some of
35:49
that, that like
35:50
regular interaction and create that relationship with your customer, the SMS is
35:54
really important.
35:56
Cause like we have relationships with our friends, our peers, our family, the
36:00
text.
36:01
If you can thoughtfully integrate that in a brand, in a brand way that, you
36:05
know, certainly,
36:06
you know, people are going to look at it differently. But if you can integrate
36:09
your,
36:10
you know, yourself into those sort of text based relationships and make it feel
36:13
authentic in a way
36:15
that, you know, really keeps your customers engaged with you regularly in
36:18
little bites. Yeah.
36:20
And it's not just that they're in front of their computer, they're on their
36:22
phone and traffic,
36:23
looking at email or whatever. That's a really compelling opportunity to, you
36:28
know, continue to
36:29
deepen your relationship with your customers. Yeah, absolutely. What's your
36:32
thoughts on like
36:33
the founder voice, like in text, though, not an email, just like in text? I
36:36
think it's, I think
36:37
it's a great question. I think it's highly brand dependent. Yeah, I agree with
36:42
you. I don't think
36:42
it crushes for everybody. I don't think it crushes for everybody. I think 10, 8
36:48
, 10 years ago,
36:49
I think we're the founders of XYZ. We're telling you about our products was
36:55
like a really common
36:56
tactic. And I think worked really well. I think that is what the audience
37:02
wanted in sort of like
37:04
somewhat of a nascent industry and a lot of new product categories were being
37:08
developed.
37:08
And I thought that was really important. I think now, I think you need more
37:12
than that.
37:12
But also, I think depending on your company, depending on your brand, depending
37:17
on who your
37:17
audience is, I think, again, it's all about figuring out what your audiences
37:21
are going to
37:21
respond to from an authenticity standpoint. Your audience really connects. You
37:25
mentioned every
37:25
day dose if they're really connecting with you as a founder and your founder
37:29
story and they're
37:29
responding to that, the numbers don't lie. You got to just be like, okay, the
37:33
numbers are telling us
37:34
where we're going, whether it's sales, whether it's engagement, they're going
37:37
to tell you where
37:38
to go. Ultimately, you certainly have to make space to try new things and fail.
37:41
But the numbers
37:43
will tell you where you need to go, what's working and what's not working. And
37:46
whether going up
37:48
down or stagnating, then you need to make your decisions in terms of where you
37:51
want to go.
37:51
Yeah, absolutely. And when you talked about engagement and engagement metrics,
37:56
and I want to just point this out that I think as marketers, we constantly look
37:59
at engagement
38:00
metrics or CTR rates, click-through rates, all these things and revenue from
38:06
the tools that
38:06
we're utilizing, the marketing tools that we're utilizing. But I think a very
38:10
untapped area is
38:12
actually looking at your CX. I mean, granted, I'm like, I am this person. So
38:16
these are the things
38:17
that I look at. When I look at feastables, how I knew that we needed to do this
38:22
chatbot and do
38:22
these pathways is because I could see what was happening in the customer
38:26
service channels.
38:27
And so I was also comparing not only everything that I was seeing in our SMS
38:34
tools and our email
38:35
tools, but I was also comparing everything that I was seeing in our customer
38:39
service tools as well
38:40
and creating a holistic engagement metric. Yeah, totally. I think it's such a
38:45
great point.
38:46
And I think, to your point, figuring out how to deepen that relationship
38:50
between your CX and
38:52
your marketing arm is really important. That is your front lines. And not just
38:56
your front lines,
38:57
because you could argue that acquisition is certainly front lines. This is a
39:01
deeper level of
39:02
engagement because these are people who have either actively bought your
39:07
product or are
39:08
actively very hardcore thinking about buying your product or engage with you on
39:12
a deeper level
39:13
where they're asking questions. So I think that truly is the front lines of
39:17
figuring out really
39:18
what's going on with your audience. Obviously, Instagram comment section is one
39:22
thing.
39:22
Social is one thing. Other forms of communication is one thing, but truly your
39:29
CX and
39:29
is a way to get insights about what's going on with your customers, one,
39:36
whether relative to
39:37
problems and issues, or ultimately, hopefully you have a good relationship with
39:41
your customers
39:41
on there, shouting you out and letting you know that you're doing a great job,
39:44
or they're
39:45
giving you opportunities for new ideas by saying, "Hey, I would love it if you
39:48
guys came up with this,
39:49
made this product or whatever." And certainly that's not an easy thing, but at
39:53
least it's really
39:53
tapping into in real time what is going on with your customer base at a very
39:58
deep level. And thinking
40:00
about how to, thinking about CX as a crowdsourcing mechanism for your products
40:06
and your marketing
40:07
and how you're connecting is a great way to do it. Whether it's a product's
40:11
landing really well,
40:13
there's issues with delivery or whatever it is, you're really learning at a
40:16
deep level what's
40:17
going on with your customers and I think how you translate that interaction
40:20
into other opportunities
40:22
is huge. One question that I have for you because you are in copy, right? What
40:27
's your thoughts on AI?
40:28
Yeah, a great question, hot button issue, the amount of friends that have
40:33
texted me like,
40:34
"Hey, like, say goodbye to your job, AI is here." Yeah. No, I think it's a
40:40
great question. I think
40:41
it's a fascinating issue, true. I think to me, I look at it as this is a tool,
40:48
right? I think
40:50
certainly we're all going to be replaced by robots in one way or another in 50
40:54
years. We're not there
40:55
yet, but to me, I look at it as this is a tool to make me better at what I do.
40:59
How do I figure that
41:01
out? How do I welcome change and use it to my advantage to help me do a better
41:06
job? I personally
41:08
don't think that obviously I'm biased, but I think AI has a long way to go in
41:13
many respects
41:15
relative to copy. I think it is astounding in certain areas and I think it
41:22
should be used as a
41:23
tool in those areas. I think it's just like anything, like any piece of
41:28
technology, it's not to be
41:29
feared, it's to be embraced, it's to be mastered, it's to be used as a tool to
41:35
make you better. I think
41:38
I personally don't look at it as a replacement for my writing. I think about it
41:42
as a tool to create
41:44
things at scale or to create variants for testing for large volume of copy that
41:52
can be iterated on.
41:53
I am still admittedly a novice. I'm trying to learn more about it because I'm
41:58
looking at this as
41:59
a challenge. I personally don't think it's a replacement for tight, effective
42:05
brand marketing
42:07
copy, but it's a great tool for SEO driven content that doesn't need to get a
42:12
lot of eyes, but it's
42:13
going to juice your search or creating options at scale, things like that. That
42:18
's why I look at
42:19
it. Certainly it's a little crazy and to feel like there's robots that are
42:23
doing my job, but again,
42:24
I think about we can't sit around and say it's kind of a fact or whatever. It's
42:30
here. For me,
42:31
I'm approaching it like I want to learn as much as I can about it, figure out
42:35
how it can make me
42:35
better. I can use it as a tool in ways that makes sense. I don't think it's
42:41
that effective of a
42:42
tool at the moment for my day to day or for any good copywriters day to day. I
42:47
think does it give
42:51
certain people a cost-effective way to achieve things if copywriting is not
42:54
their strong suit?
42:56
Sure. I think as pure writing, I think it's more a tool for specific things.
43:04
I think it remains to be seen like where it goes. I think it's an interesting
43:11
tool to have at our
43:12
disposal. I think that's how everyone should look at it. Whether you're crunch
43:15
ing numbers,
43:15
writing, copy, design, photo retouching, everything helps us move faster. I
43:21
think we should look at
43:22
it as an assistant. I forget who coined that phrase, but that was really a ref
43:27
raming of AI as an
43:28
assistant and to help you do certain aspects of your job better and quicker. I
43:34
think that's really
43:35
where it's at. Again, I'm trying to learn more about it. What is the phrase? It
43:41
's like,
43:42
"Keep your friends close and your enemies closer." I guess. Something like that
43:45
. I see robots.
43:47
Well, man, I feel like we can be vibing all day long, but unfortunately, we are
43:55
at the end of the
43:56
road like a Boyz to Men song. I got to stop quoting that because that was in
43:59
another episode.
44:00
Anyway, Scott, tell the homies where they can find you. You can find me on
44:06
LinkedIn. We can
44:08
connect. We can do all that. Scott Wicken. You can see my work at Dr. Squatch
44:16
and other places.
44:17
But yeah, it's been such a pleasure to join you here and talk all things copy
44:22
and SMS.
44:23
And yeah, it's been a blast. Thanks for coming on, man. And I will see and talk
44:29
to you all next
44:30
Thursday, Toodles. Hey, wow. You made it to the end of the episode. That means
44:38
that you like me
44:39
and I like you, which also means you should subscribe to this show.
44:53
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