Tune in to the latest episode of "The Juice with Jess Cervellon" as she welcomes Alexandra Vailas, the Senior Vice President of Brand Marketing at Dyper, a brand with a mission of sustainability and transparency. Get ready for an insightful conversation on maintaining consistent branding across diverse retail outlets, balancing a mission with consumer needs, and the journey from influencer to brand marketer.
0:00
(upbeat music)
0:01
- My name is Jess Servion,
0:03
and I'm super excited to bring you my new podcast,
0:05
The Juice With Jess.
0:07
This podcast is gonna be about everything
0:09
in your customer's journey.
0:10
We're talking acquisition, awareness,
0:13
making that purchase, retaining that customer,
0:16
bringing them back around, and everything in between.
0:19
This is gonna be all about delivering dope brand experiences
0:23
and talking to some really amazing people
0:26
who are in the customer experience space,
0:27
marketing space, and everything in between.
0:30
(upbeat music)
0:32
- Welcome back to another episode of The Juice With Me, Jess.
0:41
This week, I am still in Scottsdale, Arizona,
0:45
and I am interviewing Alex Vales,
0:48
SVP of brand marketing at Diaper.
0:51
Alex, I could sit here and I can talk about your brand,
0:56
but I actually really would love for you
0:58
to talk about your brand story.
0:59
- Yeah, so I work for Diaper,
1:01
and guess what, we sell Diaper.
1:03
- Diaper!
1:04
- But with a Y.
1:05
- What with a Y.
1:06
- So Diaper is all about the diapering journey
1:10
that is the closest to zero.
1:12
We really care about protecting baby and the planet.
1:15
And the unique thing about Diaper,
1:18
other than that it's a really great diaper
1:21
and great product, is that we prioritize
1:24
independent testing, transparency, and environmental standards
1:28
the best that we possibly can so much so that
1:31
we can keep diapers out of landfills
1:33
and turn them into dirt.
1:34
We're really, from start to finish,
1:37
a better diapering option.
1:39
- Yeah, that's amazing.
1:40
'Cause I do feel like in the generations
1:43
that we've grown up in, right?
1:44
Like there's so many bad products out there,
1:47
especially like in the diaper area for babies,
1:52
like we just grow up with like all these like
1:54
really crappy products.
1:55
So it's a really amazing mission,
1:57
like to start out with like sustainability
1:59
at such a young age.
2:01
- Yeah, I mean we want to create environmental advocates
2:05
with this generation, the alpha generation.
2:08
It's crazy to think about that.
2:10
- Yeah, I know.
2:12
But you know, I think that a lot of times
2:16
people think that just pose ability
2:18
and sustainability can't go hand in hand.
2:21
We like to think of ourselves
2:23
not just as a challenger brand in the diapering category
2:26
that's been dominated by, you know, big CPG for decades,
2:31
but that we are a challenger brand
2:33
really challenging the status quo of saying,
2:35
why can't it be sustainable?
2:37
How do we find a way?
2:39
Cloth diapering isn't really, I mean, it's amazing,
2:43
but very few people can actually do that.
2:45
- Yeah, I think a lot of new parents have,
2:47
and listen, I'm not a parent so I don't,
2:49
like I can't have a very valid opinion about this,
2:52
but what I have seen with a lot of my friends
2:55
who care about sustainability and disposability
2:58
and all of these things, you start off
3:00
with that full intention of wanting
3:02
to be able to do cloth diapers,
3:04
but then it becomes really hard because when you're
3:05
a new parent, like you have a new warm baby.
3:08
- You're exhausted.
3:09
- You're tired.
3:10
- Yeah.
3:10
- You, like, everybody has full intentions,
3:14
but like nobody really thinks about the consumer
3:16
and what stage they're actually in.
3:19
- In that journey, you know?
3:21
- We convenience is paramount,
3:23
convenience has to be there for the parent,
3:26
they're so tired, and so how do you offer a diaper
3:30
that you don't even really want to pay for?
3:31
Let's be honest, like we don't want to pay for diapers
3:34
and toilet paper and they're expensive,
3:36
and it smells bad and you don't even like diapering,
3:40
so how can we as a brand make this as easy as possible,
3:44
as accessible as possible, all without the guilt
3:48
that comes with disposable diapers?
3:51
- Right, right.
3:52
Yeah, again, I think it's really amazing.
3:54
I think there's gonna be a lot of evolution
3:58
in these products, like we already see it so much, right?
4:01
I think it's because our generation is having babies,
4:03
you know, and we think about these things
4:05
and then just imagine even when Gen Z has babies,
4:09
you know, like, my hope is that it continues down a path
4:14
of just like better for you products,
4:17
like that you're, you know, putting it in your home, right?
4:22
Like there's so many plastics and like bad things out there,
4:25
it's like we don't need to start out a baby's life
4:29
with something really crappy.
4:30
- No, it's all-- - No pun intended.
4:32
- There's so many puns in the diaper.
4:35
- No. - It's really fun.
4:37
Yeah, no, I think that that's where already,
4:40
Gen Z is already in our audience demo,
4:43
and we are seeing that environmental standards are,
4:46
that's table stakes, it's not even like a category
4:51
defining challenge or brand thing.
4:52
Now, most of the diaper brands have some type
4:55
of environmental message to them,
4:57
but we are the only ones addressing the end of life,
5:01
and that's the issue that yeah,
5:03
there are a lot of great products out there with better,
5:06
you know, ingredients and responsible sourcing,
5:09
which is fantastic, but what happens after it goes to the landfill?
5:15
- Well, it stays there for 500 years.
5:17
- Yeah.
5:18
- If it has too much plastic,
5:19
it stays there for 500 years, it's insane.
5:21
So it's now become the third largest contributor
5:23
to waste in the world.
5:24
- Yeah. - In the world.
5:26
- That's insane. - Right?
5:28
- That's insane because like as we,
5:29
yeah, it makes sense though,
5:31
because as we increase in population,
5:33
and you know, the other aspect of it,
5:36
and these aren't even all my notes,
5:38
like I'm literally just vibing right now,
5:40
I'm thinking about this, but like think about it,
5:41
like even as you know, more people have babies,
5:45
not everybody has the same amount of income
5:48
and the accessibility, right?
5:50
So it's like, you know, as the population increases
5:54
and accessibility kind of like decreases,
5:56
like those statistics do make sense to me.
5:59
Which actually, that is a question that's like popped up,
6:02
is like how is diaper thinking about accessibility
6:05
for their consumer?
6:07
- Yes, it's very top of mind,
6:08
because I mean, I think it's over half the population
6:11
struggles to afford diapers.
6:13
- Yeah. - It's a lot.
6:14
In the US. - Yeah.
6:16
- So we entered the market at a premium price point,
6:21
because we of course, you know,
6:23
when you think about enough plant-based content
6:27
to be able to compost the diapers commercially,
6:30
and a lot of things that we optimized for
6:32
to solve that first problem,
6:34
we knew that we were entering the market
6:37
for the eco-warrior for a small group of people.
6:40
But as we have realized,
6:43
especially in partnering with Walmart and entering retail,
6:47
you know, that's the Valley Shopper,
6:48
and we've had to really look at our supply chain
6:52
and our sourcing and work very hard
6:57
to bring that price down and make it more accessible.
7:00
And I think we have some other things coming out.
7:02
I think that that will help solve that problem.
7:04
But last year, we launched a diaper card
7:08
because before we knew we could offer maybe
7:11
a new product line that was more economical.
7:14
You know, of course, I think a lot of people
7:16
think about maybe different product strategies.
7:20
And so that is top of mind,
7:22
but it takes a while to do that.
7:23
So in the interim, how can we solve this problem
7:28
with the product line that we have?
7:30
Well, we offered a diaper card
7:32
where when you go to Walmart,
7:36
once you got approved for the card,
7:38
you get, you go to Walmart and you can redeem
7:41
three boxes of diapers at Walmart,
7:44
which is around three months of diapers for free.
7:47
Just upon approval, you don't need to spend any money.
7:50
Just upon approval, you can go get free diapers.
7:52
That's a lot of diapers for free.
7:55
And then as you use the card, the points earn you diapers.
7:59
So potentially you don't even need to pay for diapers,
8:02
which is awesome.
8:03
And then once you're done using diapers
8:05
because there's a graduation day,
8:07
you can then use those points to divert
8:12
to a savings account for the future of your kiddo.
8:15
So it's really in line with our mission
8:18
to protect baby and their future.
8:21
And future is a word that encompasses the planet,
8:24
but also just their wellbeing
8:26
as far as setting them up for success in life.
8:29
So we're super excited about that.
8:32
We're glad that Walmart was stoked about it.
8:34
And obviously it also sends a lot of foot traffic to retail,
8:39
which is great.
8:40
- Yeah.
8:41
(laughs)
8:41
The good journey, right?
8:44
- Yeah.
8:44
- You wanna keep your retailers happy, right?
8:47
- Yeah, right, right.
8:48
And that's something where yes,
8:50
you can only redeem it there.
8:52
- Yeah.
8:53
Well, I think that this is an amazing way
8:54
to close the loop though, right?
8:56
Like, I mean, granted, I know we're talking about sustainability
9:00
and like loyalty building here,
9:01
but like, I think it's really amazing
9:04
that you're not just thinking about it
9:06
from like one channel of like, okay, you're in D2C,
9:09
like loyalty programs like that,
9:11
mostly sit just on like your online channel.
9:14
And then you can't really close the loop into like retail.
9:16
Like you kind of lose that customer's like data
9:19
and that experience.
9:21
And I think that that's really,
9:23
that's a really amazing but differentiator
9:27
of bridging that gap, right?
9:30
- You get the data on the consumer.
9:33
- You get the data.
9:34
- And now we also launched an app.
9:37
- Oh, wow, tell me more about the app.
9:39
- Yeah, so we launched a diaper app
9:41
because we realized we,
9:44
most of our users are,
9:46
for D2C are using their phone.
9:48
- Mm-hmm.
9:50
- You know, it's a better, faster experience for your mobile device.
9:54
And we are able to obviously utilize push notifications,
9:59
get a better understanding of, you know,
10:01
what's resonating content-wise with our consumer too,
10:05
because we have a thousand days of content
10:09
to support parents in their parenting journey,
10:12
'cause let's be real, like for some parents,
10:15
it's just like, this is like a steep learning curve.
10:17
- Yeah.
10:18
- So we wanna support our parents and it's free.
10:20
Once you become a subscriber,
10:21
you get access to a thousand days of content for free
10:23
and it's daily advice on your wellness and nutrition
10:28
and sleep and potty training and diapering,
10:31
all of that to support your parenting journey.
10:33
And so, yeah, using this app,
10:36
you can also manage your diaper card.
10:38
So it's like kinda all in one.
10:39
- Yeah.
10:40
- We launched that in January of this year.
10:42
- That's an amazing customer journey.
10:44
I would like wanna dive even further into it.
10:47
I would actually like to come back to the beginning,
10:49
like of when you're thinking of like the brand strategy
10:52
and you're thinking about like your customer data
10:54
and the feedback loop that you're getting,
10:56
like what were kind of like,
10:59
just walk me through the first steps of even thinking,
11:01
like I wanna build an app for a diaper company.
11:04
Like how did that journey internally happen?
11:08
- So we actually had an app on old app.
11:10
I think it might even still be an app store, maybe not.
11:13
But the, our founder Sergio,
11:17
he had a company prior to diaper
11:19
that was all around prenatal care and it was through an app.
11:24
And so the foundation of it was before diaper existed.
11:30
And so when he realized he wanted to get in the business
11:33
of diapers as he was wheeling dirty diapers
11:35
out to the curb, he thought,
11:37
wait a second, there's something more here.
11:39
So he adapted the previous company's app to diaper
11:44
and started making an easy subscription service
11:47
'cause that was still pretty new.
11:48
We're six and a half years old.
11:51
So the app was mainly around making subscription convenient
11:56
and just tracking your delivery and...
12:02
- Yeah, like the basis of like subscriptions.
12:05
- But now that's kind of like, that's pretty normal.
12:07
There's nothing earth shattering about the app.
12:10
It doesn't make you wanna download that.
12:12
In fact, we're at a place where people don't wanna download
12:14
more apps.
12:16
- I absolutely agree.
12:18
I literally when I was sitting on the plane the other day,
12:20
I was like, I have time, I'm gonna delete my app.
12:23
- Yeah, it takes a space on your phone.
12:26
Like what am I, I use this one time.
12:27
- Yeah. - Yeah.
12:29
But this is one where you would want to just because
12:32
you are, your baby is changing sizes every month.
12:36
You're needing to update your subscription
12:38
and possibly manage your card,
12:41
possibly also be digesting content every day.
12:45
And you can put your baby's age in the app.
12:48
So it's really tailoring your user experience.
12:51
- Wow. - Yes.
12:53
- It's truly with the cookies going away.
12:56
- Oh, and yes, of course.
12:59
- And marketers, yes, of course.
13:00
I mean, we don't talk about that too much
13:03
but considering we're on a marketing podcast.
13:05
- I know.
13:06
I mean, it's no, I literally that thought
13:09
just even came to my mind.
13:10
'Cause like the talk about cookies going away
13:13
only just came up like recently, right?
13:16
But in like so many brands have to think through
13:18
at the stage like, okay, well, if cookies go away,
13:21
like how do I capture that first party data?
13:23
Like what are the innovative ways
13:25
of capturing that data?
13:26
And like, and I mean, granted like, yes,
13:28
diaper is, you know, a children's company, right?
13:33
That's for parents.
13:34
It's very like specific demographic
13:35
but I think it's very innovative
13:37
rather than just being like, okay,
13:39
here's your formula or here's your diaper.
13:41
And like you scan a QR code.
13:43
It's like you're continuing down that user journey
13:46
and literally touching them at every single one
13:48
of their touch points and you're owning those channels
13:51
even with you being in retail and on D2C.
13:54
- I think that that, all the credit goes to our CEO.
13:58
I mean, that's his background is more in technology.
14:00
- Okay.
14:01
- So he actually coded the app like he does it.
14:03
- I love that.
14:04
I love a digitally native e-commerce brand.
14:06
- Oh yeah.
14:07
He's brilliant, he's a brilliant marketer himself.
14:09
So it's to be in marketing with your CEO
14:12
who can code things and gets excited about that.
14:15
It is pretty awesome.
14:17
But I think one of the things we learned a really hard lesson
14:22
and I think a lot of brands learned this lesson
14:24
when Facebook, when that whole,
14:27
what was that a couple years ago now,
14:29
almost three years ago now.
14:30
- Yeah, almost three years ago.
14:31
- We had put a lot of our eggs in the paid social basket
14:34
and the meta basket and man that hurt us
14:37
when all of a sudden we couldn't, you know,
14:39
really understand our audience and their behavior.
14:42
- Yeah.
14:42
- Yeah, yeah, you're absolutely right.
14:45
I mean, you're absolutely, like,
14:48
I mean, forget even like you just having an app, right?
14:50
Like now, 'cause obviously that kind of solves for that,
14:54
like of understanding your audience.
14:56
But like you as like a brand marketer,
14:59
what advice would you like walking into it?
15:02
Like forget diaper, just walking into that situation.
15:05
Like what, if you don't have a digitally native CEO,
15:09
you know, like, how do you
15:11
solve for those things?
15:13
- Man, I think that--
15:16
- A lot of us, yeah, I think that's what I know.
15:19
I sometimes realize that I have it really good.
15:22
(laughs)
15:23
- I mean, I'm amazed by, I'm like, dang, that's awesome.
15:26
- You know, especially, and especially as the consumer
15:30
is demanding a very customized experience, right?
15:33
- Yes.
15:34
- That's the expectation of our consumer now.
15:36
It was a very custom tailored experience.
15:39
- Yeah.
15:40
- It's the rise of AI at that too, you know?
15:42
It's like the rise of AI now is like forcing us,
15:47
even if you weren't thinking about personalization,
15:49
you better be thinking about personalization
15:50
because AI can like help you with it,
15:52
but then it's still, even when if you involve AI,
15:55
it's not always personalized.
15:56
- So I'm going to say something that might make
15:58
all of your listeners roll their eyes.
16:01
- No, you're good.
16:02
Is this safe space?
16:03
- It is safe.
16:04
- It's a safe space because sometimes I actually think
16:07
people will wanna come from you
16:08
about the way I talk about marketing.
16:09
So we all have our opinions.
16:11
I'm gonna be honest with you.
16:12
- I think that more than ever having consumer insights
16:17
and doing regular surveying of your consumers
16:20
is the way to do it.
16:21
And I think it's both quality and quant.
16:24
I think you need to utilize big platforms
16:26
and there's a lot of different tools out there,
16:27
but that is something where all of a sudden,
16:31
we're switching some of those marketing dollars
16:33
to survey more often.
16:36
And not just asking, have you purchased diapers
16:40
within the past six months, but where did you do it?
16:42
- Where did you do it?
16:43
Who are you?
16:44
- Who are you?
16:45
- What are you doing?
16:46
What's your lifestyle like, like all of that?
16:48
- Asking questions at checkout.
16:49
- Yep.
16:50
- Asking questions within the app.
16:51
Asking as many questions as possible
16:53
where you're not annoying your consumer
16:56
and they're not opting out.
16:57
- Yeah.
16:58
- Yeah, that's the only way to do it.
16:59
And then you need a really strong analyst on your team
17:02
or you need, and you need to take a minute
17:06
to pause and digest the data.
17:07
And that's what I think the hardest part about being
17:11
a challenger brand in a category where you,
17:15
you know, really are fighting for share constantly.
17:20
And I mean, I guess that's everybody, but, you know,
17:22
CBG is no joke.
17:24
And is slowing down to speed up,
17:29
but we are used to just going, going, going, going, going,
17:33
but we've realized we haven't really paused
17:37
to understand our consumer
17:38
and what their needs are today.
17:41
- Right.
17:41
- It has, it's changing rapidly.
17:44
- Right.
17:44
All the time, I think one, it's changing rapidly.
17:47
Two, we're also getting a bit lazier
17:50
with the evolution of AI.
17:52
- That's right.
17:52
- I'll be real with you, right?
17:54
Hot take central up in here.
17:55
(laughing)
17:56
- No, I think everyone would agree.
17:59
- Yeah.
18:00
But I mean, like, we're, you know,
18:01
we're in that like that discussion point right now
18:05
of like, you're absolutely right.
18:07
Like, it is serving your audience.
18:09
It is understanding your audience in any touch point.
18:11
Like, I don't care if you're, you know,
18:13
you have five people on your team
18:15
or if you have 70 people on your team,
18:18
you have data that's coming into you from your customer.
18:21
They are emailing you in.
18:22
They are in your marketing funnels.
18:24
Like, take the time to like, simply go,
18:27
even make a Google form if you need to.
18:31
You know, it doesn't have to be the most robust
18:34
consumer research strategy.
18:36
You can start small and build upon it
18:38
and like truly understanding your product market fit,
18:43
but also your consumer as you evolve as a company
18:47
is so important because your company,
18:49
or your company, sorry,
18:50
your consumer that you have from day one
18:53
with your products on the market to day five
18:56
or like year five is going to be different.
18:59
Like because of the, like how much
19:01
we're our consumers are evolving
19:03
and that so many things are at our fingertips, you know?
19:07
Like the rise of personalization is like really amazing.
19:11
And I think that's like,
19:12
that gives you a very great brand experience
19:15
and we should be all striving to that personalization.
19:19
But the expectations of that personalization
19:21
are also rising.
19:23
Meaning like, people don't just want to know
19:25
your name anymore, like, or you're calling me Alex or Jess, right?
19:29
I want you to be personalizing offers to me.
19:33
I want to like to keep me being loyal to your company.
19:37
- Yeah, I think everything from now
19:40
you're starting to see founder stories,
19:42
consumers need to know who the founder is,
19:44
what they believe, your values need to be communicated
19:49
very consistently and frequently.
19:51
And yeah, they're comparing constantly
19:56
between different retailers, but also different brands
20:01
and asking a lot about ingredients.
20:04
Our consumers are so smart.
20:06
And I think that that's the thing as a marketer.
20:09
Sure, we could talk about a lot of different content
20:11
marketing strategies and ideas and storytelling
20:15
and all that, but it doesn't mean anything
20:16
until you really just spend time with your consumer.
20:20
And remember that you only exist because they are there.
20:25
And I've never been more thankful and appreciative
20:30
of people in CX.
20:32
I think CX is where it's at.
20:36
I mean, as a marketer, it's, yeah, BFF.
20:39
- Well, I think, absolutely.
20:42
I think the CX team always,
20:44
'cause I mean, that's where I've started my career
20:46
and then like became predominantly a marketer, right?
20:49
And so I always will have a soft spot
20:52
for like the service team, the success teams, CX, whichever,
20:55
whichever name you wanna call it today, right?
20:58
But I think what's really interesting is that
21:00
what's shifting is people not just thinking of CX
21:03
as just CX and actually thinking about it as a channel
21:06
that feedback loops and information,
21:08
as well as giving like a brand experience to it.
21:11
But I think that that is like a big takeaway, right?
21:17
Like I see this time and time again,
21:19
I still continuously see brands hiring like,
21:22
oh, I need customer service,
21:23
but then like they never set up analytics.
21:25
They never set up like the feedback loop
21:28
of what's actually coming to those channels.
21:30
You're only thinking about it from a reactive standpoint,
21:33
but you're not thinking about it
21:34
about the proactive standpoint.
21:35
If I have a customer who's being reactive right now,
21:38
let's gather information so that I can be proactive
21:40
for the other customer before them.
21:42
- Right.
21:43
And I think as a marketer, you know,
21:45
we're more focused on, you know, what's your,
21:49
what's your CAC and what, like thinking through
21:51
acquiring the customer and that all of those,
21:54
and just getting the customer in the door.
21:57
And then feeling, I guess you use the word lazy,
22:00
just so confident we have the best product
22:02
and like of course they're gonna stay,
22:04
you know, they're not gonna switch.
22:05
Well, I think now because again,
22:08
'cause of accessibility, looking,
22:11
our consumers, rising up to things.
22:13
I mean, especially in the parenting space,
22:16
oh, you use that, it's like a word of mouth
22:18
and you know, friends referring you to different products.
22:21
It's huge.
22:23
- Yeah.
22:23
- Retention's everything.
22:26
- Everything.
22:27
- Everything.
22:28
- Yeah.
22:29
And that's a lot of marketing right there.
22:30
(upbeat music)
22:31
- Your CX is so great.
22:33
That phrase is so less seasoned at this point
22:36
because at customer, we believe
22:38
in delivering incredible customer experiences.
22:41
Introducing KIQ Agent Assist,
22:44
the ultimate CX team AI sidekick built on our CRM
22:48
to give agents superhero capabilities and efficiency.
22:51
When building KIQ Agent Assist, we had goals.
22:55
Get rid of long customer wait times
22:57
and increase the speed of customer resolution.
22:59
Provide the CX team with real time data for personalized prompts,
23:03
delegate mundane tasks for AI and free up your agents.
23:07
But we didn't stop there.
23:08
We wanted to deliver more.
23:09
Check out KIQ Agent Assist, amazing features,
23:13
the suggested responses, the automatic two way translation
23:16
and 53 languages and conversation summaries.
23:20
Upgrade your customer experience with KIQ Agent Assist,
23:23
try it today and see the difference.
23:25
Customer, delivering incredible CX every time.
23:29
- I think what's really interesting is that
23:33
a lot of times people think of retention as just like,
23:36
oh, my upsells or my win backs
23:38
or a lot of these other things,
23:39
but you don't think about retention as an all encompassing
23:42
of your brand experience, your customer experience,
23:45
the analytics that go into it,
23:47
the segmenting that goes on.
23:48
Okay, maybe there's actually, I take it back.
23:50
There is definitely segmentation,
23:51
but it's not just retention, isn't just about,
23:55
okay, how do I close the loop and get them to come back
23:58
from a winback email?
24:00
It's literally being innovative and thinking about it
24:02
from building an app, building a dope subscription program
24:06
and really just constantly evolving
24:09
what your customer's journey is to loop them back.
24:12
- And it's unique to your product or your service
24:17
because one of the things that I learned,
24:20
I think a lot of people have come into
24:23
specifically the diapering space thinking,
24:25
oh yeah, I know this, we're just gonna take everything
24:29
I know about cool brand marketing
24:31
and we're gonna apply it to diapers.
24:32
Well, the thing is, is that still 60% of,
24:35
over 60% of all diapers are still sold brick and mortar
24:37
between Target and Walmart alone.
24:40
There's something about the customer behavior
24:43
where it is not changing as far as they like
24:48
to pick up the box of diapers at the store.
24:51
- Yeah, yeah.
24:53
So then there's a lot of brand storytelling
24:55
and things that you have to do on pack,
24:57
like on the actual box itself.
25:00
- Absolutely, absolutely.
25:03
- I mean, granted, again, you're the expert in the space
25:06
but like, and I'm really just giving a viewpoint
25:08
from the outside looking into it.
25:10
But yes, I do believe that because think about it,
25:12
think about that consumer, right?
25:13
I'm a dad, I'm a new mom, whatever.
25:15
Oh, shoot, I just ran out of diapers.
25:17
Like, I gotta go just run to the store
25:19
and go get them, right?
25:21
But then like the same way you think about yourself
25:23
on the shelf, right?
25:24
Like in any product, it's not even just diapers.
25:27
Like think about deodorant, right?
25:29
Deodorant, many choices on the shelf.
25:32
So many choices, so many different color schemes.
25:35
There's like native that comes,
25:37
that's white, then there's degree, that's like green as blue.
25:40
- Yeah, minty green.
25:41
- Yeah, minty green.
25:43
Like, I don't know.
25:44
There's Dr. Squaj, like there's this, there's that, you know?
25:47
There's so many, you walk into that aisle
25:49
and there's so many different choices.
25:51
How do you stand out as just a deodorant company, right?
25:54
Like, so it's the same type of concept of like,
25:56
how do you stand out when you're walking down the diaper aisle
26:00
and there's so many different choices
26:02
at that point, it does come down to packaging.
26:05
It comes down to like, how do you stand out on the shelf?
26:08
What I'm interested to know,
26:10
because we did a large series of this with festivals
26:15
when festivals went through a rebrand.
26:17
What, like did you go through any sort of like
26:21
consumer research stages with that packaging?
26:23
And like, could you talk to us about like,
26:25
just the tactics and like what you did there?
26:28
- Definitely a lot of research there.
26:31
Years of research.
26:33
- Yeah, yeah.
26:34
Years of research is not just overnight.
26:36
- Yes, you know, I think we started,
26:39
for background for the listeners,
26:41
we started D2C like a lot of brands do
26:43
before we entered retail and we were D2C
26:45
for three years before we entered retail.
26:50
So we thought we knew everything.
26:54
We were really proud of ourselves
26:55
for the rapid growth that we had
26:56
and the fact that we were talking
26:58
to the nation's largest retailer.
27:00
They were interested us, Walmart, oh my gosh,
27:02
we know what's up.
27:03
And then we entered Walmart and we realized
27:07
we need to rebrand because we had made bamboo diapers
27:12
really large and our name small.
27:18
And so people thought our name was bamboo diapers.
27:21
- Yeah.
27:22
- And so there were a lot of mistakes
27:24
that we made with our packaging
27:26
because it didn't really matter when it's D2C,
27:28
they were receiving marketing materials,
27:29
they knew our name that way.
27:31
But then, yeah.
27:32
So we spent a lot of time working with an agency
27:37
but also just, you know, internally looking at other people
27:41
within the space, our competitors
27:44
and trying to figure out what is really
27:47
going to make us stand out on shelf.
27:50
Everything from the color yellow,
27:51
which was already a brand color for us
27:53
because it's gender neutral.
27:56
We just, it's very bright and happy.
27:58
There are a lot of reasons why we chose yellow
28:00
but it was great because there wasn't another yellow brand
28:05
available in the aisle.
28:06
So that was first like a good like lucky win.
28:10
But we purposely did not put people on our packaging.
28:14
A lot of the other brands have parents and babies
28:19
and it's very soft and cushy.
28:20
And we decided, you know, that's not our brand voice.
28:24
That's our brand voice is very much about science
28:28
and research and independent testing
28:30
and just being straightforward and transparent.
28:32
So we went with more of our story
28:37
around responsible diapering and a giraffe.
28:41
We have a giraffe named Frankie
28:43
but it's just yellow and craft, like a craft round
28:48
and black text and we put B Corp front and center
28:52
because we feel that that's what our ideal customer care is about.
28:57
They know what B Corp is and focus more on ingredients
29:02
and putting what was in our diapers
29:03
right on the front of the box.
29:05
- Yeah.
29:06
- That was very different too.
29:08
So we did a lot of research of what other brands were doing
29:12
and then we took that back and we digested it
29:13
as in what are our brand values.
29:16
And this is what we're gonna put out there.
29:18
Did we know if it was going to truly resonate
29:20
and make boxes fly off shelves?
29:22
No.
29:23
- Yeah.
29:24
- But we did and we did do research of like, okay,
29:28
where do environmental,
29:31
where does the environmental claims sit
29:34
among the drivers of purchase?
29:37
It is still lower at the, I mean,
29:39
price is still number one.
29:40
- Right.
29:41
- And then efficacy, it has to work.
29:43
If it doesn't work, you're not gonna buy it.
29:45
- Right.
29:46
- Right.
29:46
- So in softness matters a lot.
29:48
So those are things we realized, oh, okay.
29:51
Okay.
29:52
So I guess even though we care a lot about the environment,
29:55
we still have to address like their main pain points.
29:57
- Yes.
29:59
- But we're going to talk about the environment
30:02
as much as we can.
30:03
- Right.
30:04
- So that's kind of how we ended up with simply kind diapers
30:08
because it communicated, it's simple,
30:12
it's kind to the planet and then these are kindness pillars.
30:15
And now people know us as the yellow box,
30:18
which is great.
30:19
- So we're talking a lot about the packaging
30:21
and the positioning of particular like words and call outs.
30:26
- Yes.
30:27
- Which are also really like hammering home
30:28
the brand messaging too.
30:29
- Right.
30:30
- Yeah, so like what you're talking about is also like
30:32
the positioning of your brand messaging, right?
30:35
And so I know we're talking a lot about retail too,
30:38
but like did, we're talking about retail
30:40
and we're talking about D2C,
30:42
well, we were talking about D2C before,
30:44
but what I'm curious is it's like,
30:46
did you change any of the sort of like brand positioning
30:48
and messaging on D2C as well during this phase?
30:52
- Yes.
30:53
So when we knew that we were headed towards this direction
30:57
to address our packaging failures with the retail,
31:02
we realized, no, this is something that we need to make sure
31:06
transcends all of our outlets and communication outlets from
31:11
and so that because if you're, say that you are someone
31:16
that's a subscriber with us, but you put a month on pause
31:19
'cause you're traveling and then you go pick up our brand
31:22
over at Wom.
31:23
I mean, we know that the consumer sometimes picks us up
31:26
at different spots or we're on Amazon too.
31:29
- Everywhere.
31:30
- Yeah, we're omni-channel.
31:30
- Yeah, we're omni-channel.
31:31
So we needed to make sure that we were driving the,
31:35
being as cohesive as possible,
31:37
but I will tell you it's incredibly hard.
31:42
It's incredibly hard to keep your brand consistent
31:45
once you start getting into so many different retailers.
31:49
- Absolutely.
31:50
- I had no idea.
31:51
- Yeah.
31:52
- This is my first time on Brandside.
31:54
- Yeah, I think, no, and I agree with you.
31:56
I think it's like, it's very common for so many different
31:59
brands to feel that way too, right?
32:01
Because it's exactly what we're talking about.
32:03
What resonates in one place might not resonate
32:06
in another place.
32:07
- Right.
32:08
- And you have so many channels, right?
32:10
But we sit here and we preach about like,
32:12
okay, your consumers journey needs to be consistent.
32:15
But then once you get into retail, you can't control it.
32:19
I mean, not even just retail, like Amazon too, right?
32:22
Like Amazon has its own rules, its own expectations.
32:25
And so it's like, you can't control it
32:27
in the one funnel that you do have, which is your website.
32:31
You can change the messaging all day long
32:32
if you wanted to on a PDP.
32:34
- That's right, yep.
32:35
- But yeah, I agree with you.
32:37
I absolutely agree with you.
32:38
I think it's really hard to stay consistent
32:41
across your entire brand experience.
32:44
But when you do, you can continue hammering home,
32:48
your values and your mission of your brand.
32:51
But I think you have to think about each channel
32:54
so differently.
32:55
- You do.
32:56
And then think about how long it takes
32:58
for you to update packaging.
33:00
- Oh.
33:01
- Yeah.
33:02
- So once you go to market with it and it's in stores,
33:05
and then you start talking differently on a different channel,
33:08
you're risking fragmenting your brand.
33:11
- Right.
33:12
- But then at the same time you need to maybe
33:14
make some changes because you maybe glean
33:16
some consumer insights where you know something's gonna work.
33:19
It's really hard.
33:19
It's like, do we stay beholden to these things
33:23
because our packaging says that and we're, you know,
33:26
in nationwide and Walmart, or do we start iterating now
33:29
over here?
33:30
Do we do a clean cut and take all that packaging off
33:33
and put new on or do we wait to, do we sell off that?
33:36
Like there's so many different ways to go about it.
33:40
And there's not necessarily a right and wrong way.
33:43
It just is kind of doing like that cost benefit analysis
33:46
and just making the choice.
33:48
And so a lot of, for most of us at diaper,
33:51
this is our first time in the diaper game.
33:54
I think there's one person, two people that have worked
33:58
with another diaper brand before.
34:00
- That's it.
34:01
- That's crazy.
34:02
- So we're not only figuring it out.
34:04
- We're just figuring it out.
34:06
- We are figuring it out.
34:07
But in some ways it's good to look at things with fresh eyes.
34:10
Right?
34:11
And to not think, to be successful is to not think
34:16
that there's a silver bullet to accept that there is not.
34:24
And then to say, well, how are we,
34:27
the innovation is really where we've leaned in.
34:30
Like we're just gonna be the most innovative diaper company
34:34
there is.
34:35
That's really like again, coming to our values
34:37
and what we're good at and what we wanna do in this space
34:40
is we, of course the environment is part of that value
34:43
but we launched a charcoal diaper.
34:47
- Interesting.
34:47
- It's a black, it looks black.
34:50
It's the coolest diaper.
34:51
It's not colored with any dyes or chemicals.
34:54
It's colored with charcoal, which is a natural ingredient.
34:58
And you can still compost it into dirt,
35:01
which is amazing.
35:02
And it looks like a Calvin Klein diaper.
35:04
It's so cool.
35:05
- I love that.
35:06
- Why not?
35:07
How can we come up?
35:08
- How chic.
35:09
- Yeah.
35:10
And how can we address this whole demand that consumers have
35:13
for something that's cool and fashionable
35:17
and has cute prints?
35:17
Well, how do we do it in a way that aligns with our values
35:20
but offers something new?
35:21
Okay, this is what we did.
35:23
We did, and we sold it on target.com.
35:26
- Yeah.
35:27
So just.com?
35:28
- Target.com, yep.
35:29
I mean, see how we do there, you know?
35:32
That's always.
35:33
- Yeah, but I think the start.
35:34
- But again, yeah.
35:35
- It's starting-- - It's rushing into this.
35:37
- Absolutely.
35:38
- Yeah.
35:39
- Absolutely.
35:40
Like instead of rushing in and saying, okay,
35:42
this is all of my inventory and all of these places, right?
35:46
Instead, you're testing out specific channels
35:51
to see how it performs.
35:53
- Right.
35:55
And Amazon, we just actually brought that product line
35:59
over to Amazon too.
36:00
- Interesting.
36:01
- Recently.
36:02
- So, and I'm curious if you even know this yet,
36:05
between target.com and Amazon.com,
36:07
are you seeing any different types of consumer behaviors?
36:10
- Not necessarily different consumer behaviors
36:14
but it's doing well on Amazon.
36:15
- Yeah, so that's a good testing point though.
36:18
- Yes.
36:19
- Yeah.
36:20
- Yeah.
36:21
- Yeah.
36:22
- I wanna circle back to something
36:24
that we haven't mentioned,
36:25
but we've been talking about off-camera.
36:27
- Okay.
36:28
- And we're gonna switch complete gears.
36:29
It's not just about diaper.
36:31
- Down shifting.
36:32
- Down shifting.
36:34
Because on this podcast, we also gas people up individually
36:38
and I wanna talk about the fact, fun fact about Alex,
36:43
she has over a million followers on social
36:46
and I think that that's like really awesome
36:48
from like a personal brand perspective
36:50
and I'd love for you to tell a little bit of that,
36:52
that story about you were telling me
36:54
about Pinterest and stuff.
36:55
- Yes.
36:56
Yes, that's a fun fact.
36:58
It's a good party story.
36:59
- It's a good party story.
37:00
(laughs)
37:01
- So I have a really unique journey
37:04
to getting to the brand side of things.
37:06
I started as a creator back in 2010.
37:10
So right at the beginning of,
37:12
the influencer wasn't even a word like that.
37:14
You never heard that.
37:15
Definitely never heard creator economy.
37:17
None of this jargon.
37:20
It was the Wild West and I was blogging.
37:24
So I had a WordPress blog
37:26
and that was what people did back then.
37:29
And Twitter was there and Facebook was there
37:32
and Instagram was around.
37:36
But Twitter definitely was like the hot one.
37:38
- Now X. - Now X.
37:40
(laughs)
37:41
- Oh, I think that's 14 years later.
37:46
So I've always been someone that's quick
37:50
to adopt new technologies
37:52
and I like beta testing and I just can, a nerd.
37:57
And I have styling business, a fashion styling business
38:00
here in Arizona and a fashion blog on the side.
38:04
So I went to this conference called Altitude Summit
38:08
and it was for bloggers.
38:10
And I was there just trying to learn
38:12
about how to be better at blogging.
38:14
And there was a man walking around named Ben Silverman
38:18
who's founder of Pinterest.
38:19
And this is like everyone's a woman
38:21
except for this one person.
38:23
So he just took out and he's very shy
38:25
and very humble and kind by the way.
38:28
And he was trying to get people interested in this app
38:32
but there didn't seem to be a lot of appetite.
38:34
So he finally is his friend and convinced him
38:37
to come to this conference and tell people about it.
38:39
And I get this invite to beta test Pinterest.
38:43
And as I'm using it, I think, oh my gosh, this is amazing.
38:47
I no longer have to carry stacks of magazines
38:49
like a virtual bookmarking tool.
38:51
And so for me, I saw the application
38:54
as a way to streamline my business
38:59
and I started making boards for my clients.
39:01
And I got an email from Enid
39:04
who was the third hire at Pinterest and just said,
39:06
"We love what you're doing, Ben likes what you're doing.
39:09
On Pinterest, would you be interested
39:10
in curating a fall trends board?"
39:13
I said, "I was like one of those, like she's all that.
39:16
Like, are you talking to me?"
39:20
'Cause I am not, I mean, compared to the fashion elite
39:23
in New York or LA, Arizona, isn't it?
39:26
You're like, I'm just hanging out.
39:28
Yeah, I was over here.
39:29
Do you think I'm good?
39:30
Yeah.
39:31
Yeah, so I just was really excited
39:34
and of course just jumped at the chance
39:36
of offering what I could to this tool I fell in love with.
39:39
And I started seeing the ticker go up.
39:42
Yeah.
39:43
And I remember one day I was looking at it,
39:47
I thought, man, it's a lot of people.
39:50
It's like 30,000 people.
39:52
And then it just kept climbing and climbing in my inbox,
39:54
kept getting stuffed with notifications
39:56
of people following me.
39:57
Wow.
39:58
And then eventually it hit a million.
40:00
And then I got emails from Revlon and Glamour.
40:04
I was hosting parties at the Beverly Hills Hotel
40:08
with strangers.
40:08
I didn't even know they were flying me out.
40:10
Refinery29 called me and said,
40:12
"Do you want to host a room with 29 rooms?"
40:14
And Coca-Cola was called.
40:16
And every brand that I was dreaming of working with
40:19
as a fashion stylist that was in Arizona,
40:23
all my dreams came true in a minute.
40:24
And never once though did I think,
40:27
"Oh, I should put my own content out there."
40:29
It was so funny.
40:30
Yeah.
40:31
I didn't think about pinning my own content.
40:33
I was just having fun sharing stuff
40:35
that I would find on Nordstrom
40:37
or, and then I was watching it sell out in a second.
40:40
That's so nice.
40:41
It was so painful.
40:42
It was chronological in turn.
40:43
Yeah, it was chronological feed.
40:45
No impression based or engagement based speed.
40:49
It was, you share something and immediately
40:51
it was sent to all those people
40:52
and then it would sell out in seconds.
40:54
That's crazy.
40:55
Yeah, affiliate marketing at that time.
40:57
I was making really good money.
40:59
Yeah.
41:00
(laughing)
41:01
Yeah, I mean, I bet.
41:03
Like, so new and uncapped probably.
41:08
Yeah, there weren't still uncapped.
41:11
But I wasn't negotiating deals.
41:12
I was just saying yes for free.
41:14
I thought it was cool.
41:15
I didn't know I could get paid for it.
41:17
Yeah.
41:18
You know, and then you realize it's then,
41:21
you know, an agency reached out,
41:22
wanted to represent me and then I started dealing
41:25
with contracts and started understanding,
41:28
you know, working with Coca-Cola's
41:30
maybe a 90 day pay cycle,
41:32
things like that on the business side.
41:34
You started relearning and then,
41:36
yeah, eventually pioneering the content creation side
41:38
'cause I didn't really wanna be the next Oprah.
41:40
I wanted to make cool content
41:43
and started white labeling content for Target
41:45
and Home Depot and really loving it
41:48
and honing my skills as a stylist
41:49
and art director and creative director,
41:51
which then when I went through kind of a
41:54
big life change personally,
41:57
I went through a divorce, became a single mom.
41:59
I realized I need more stability
42:02
than what freelancing can provide.
42:04
Even though this is great and fun,
42:06
I can't pay my bills with shampoo and, you know.
42:09
(laughing)
42:10
And so I thought, well, I'm gonna take these skills
42:12
and I'm gonna pivot quickly into agency life.
42:15
And so I started working on influencer marketing agency
42:17
on the agency side.
42:18
Yeah.
42:19
And it was super easy for me to just, you know,
42:21
I brought in Ralph's was a client,
42:24
Ralph's grocery store, or Smith's, you know, Kroger.
42:26
Yeah, and that's how you ended up.
42:28
And that's how I got in that.
42:29
And then I ended up being a creative director
42:31
for Road Trippers, which was a road trip application
42:35
that got acquired by Thorne in the series.
42:37
I knew Road Trippers.
42:38
Yeah, we're probably the same age range.
42:41
Yes.
42:42
Yeah, turning 40 is the same age.
42:44
Yeah, I'm turning 40, I'm turning 39.
42:48
But the Botex has done me well.
42:51
Okay.
42:52
(laughing)
42:53
Let's put it out there.
42:54
Keep it packed.
42:55
My head is to wear glasses now.
42:57
(laughing)
42:59
Yeah.
43:00
So, yeah, I made a whole career out of it,
43:02
but it's really helped me going from creator
43:04
to agency to brand.
43:05
Yeah.
43:06
Now I have this unique career experience
43:08
where I can empathize with each.
43:10
And I know how to be a good client.
43:12
I know what the expectations are of our creators.
43:15
I know also now I can empathize with the brand side
43:18
and how difficult it is.
43:20
Yeah.
43:21
But it's really rewarding being on the brand side
43:22
because for once I can really see the needle move.
43:27
Yeah.
43:27
I cannot see it when you are freelancing
43:29
and you're freelancing.
43:30
No.
43:31
You really can't.
43:32
And it's like you feel like,
43:33
'cause I also, one of the pillars of my life,
43:38
besides customer, is I also accidentally started an agency
43:43
and accidentally hired a bunch of people
43:45
to run that agency.
43:47
But you're absolutely right of like,
43:50
it's really fun creating and doing things for brands, right?
43:54
And being engulfed in it from the agency side.
43:57
But at the same time, it's so different
44:00
than actually being a brand, right?
44:02
Like it says so different than being a brand
44:05
where it's like you really can see that like change
44:07
as you go in the brand.
44:09
And then on the agency side, it's like,
44:10
you know you're helping, you know you're contributing,
44:13
you know you're doing the things,
44:14
but at the same time it's like, it's just different.
44:17
And I think there's no right or wrong with it.
44:21
I actually like love like all the sides, you know?
44:24
I mean B2B now.
44:25
Like I love that side of it.
44:27
I love this side, I love brand side, I love all of it.
44:30
I just think it's like you just different perspectives
44:33
that have created a full on career for myself.
44:37
- Yeah, I talk a lot about now on,
44:39
so you know I didn't get rid of my million followers,
44:42
it still happened.
44:43
But I spend most of my time doing brand work.
44:46
And so I thought, well what am I gonna do
44:49
with this community that I have
44:50
that has really been with me over, well over a decade?
44:54
And I started just sharing my life
44:57
as people have seen me pivot many times.
45:02
I realized, oh I'm creating a personal brand
45:05
around the idea of reinvention.
45:07
Because, and that's a whole new opportunity for us
45:11
in the age that we're in,
45:12
is that you can reinvent yourself
45:14
as many times as you want.
45:16
- Yeah.
45:17
- And that's a new thing.
45:19
- I know, I know you're absolutely right and I love it.
45:22
- I love it too.
45:24
- I feel like we have to have a whole other episode.
45:27
- That's true.
45:28
- But I will say that a lot of people know my past too,
45:31
like went to art school,
45:33
worked a lot on customer service, customer success,
45:36
products marketing, then E-com,
45:38
then doing this, doing that, back to B2B now.
45:42
- Yeah.
45:42
- Doing content and evangelism work for customer
45:46
and also have this agency.
45:48
But my point is, you can have so many different pillars
45:51
in your life, on your own personal brand,
45:54
and it's absolutely okay.
45:55
Like you don't have to have one definitive career path
46:00
forever.
46:01
You can try on different stuff.
46:02
And I think it's really awesome,
46:04
even on your career path,
46:05
like doing the creator realm,
46:08
working in the agency, being the creative directory,
46:10
and now doing brand marketing, like girl,
46:12
like you know so much about that brand,
46:15
how to build a brand from a strategic
46:17
and experience point of view.
46:20
- I do, and I think that it's still hard.
46:23
Sometimes you know, as you're talking to people
46:25
and advocating, you have your own personal narratives, right?
46:29
And how you communicate,
46:31
I used to get down on myself thinking,
46:33
"Man, I have such a squiggly career path.
46:36
"Like I'm not gonna be good at just,
46:38
"you kinda wanna be good at one thing."
46:41
But you realize, "No, there is so much power
46:44
"in being a multifaceted creative."
46:48
And how much all of those different experiences
46:51
inform my role as a VP of brand for this company.
46:56
And sure, there might be a lot more to learn ahead of me,
47:03
given that this is the first time I've really been
47:06
on the brand side compared to maybe someone
47:08
who's the same age as me who's only done brand.
47:10
- Right.
47:11
- But how many people can say that they built a following
47:16
to a million followers on their own,
47:18
or to do these brand deals on their,
47:21
like I have to remember and not diminish the wins
47:24
that I've had, same with you,
47:26
that you've had along the way that make you worthy
47:29
of the position that you are today.
47:31
You know, imposter syndrome is a real thing.
47:33
- Yeah.
47:34
- But the number's shitting all over ourselves.
47:37
- Yeah.
47:38
- And it's what makes you stand out.
47:43
And so yeah, I have no idea if this is,
47:46
if I'll always stay brand side, I have no idea.
47:49
Today it works.
47:50
- Tomorrow you could be a CEO of your own brand.
47:53
- Let's do it, I don't know.
47:54
- Who knows?
47:54
- I mean, I don't want anyone to hear that
47:56
and think I'm moving.
47:57
I'm not, I'm staying.
47:58
- She's not ready for that.
47:59
The point is in 10 years, you don't know.
48:02
- No, I don't.
48:03
- Yeah.
48:04
- And I think working with a,
48:06
I worked with a career coach last fall
48:08
because I was starting to feel like these parts of me
48:11
were boring with each other.
48:13
Like I needed to choose, do I want to go back
48:16
to being a full time creator and creative
48:19
and working for myself or do I, you know,
48:21
I had like one of those moments of,
48:24
I don't know what I'm talking about.
48:25
- What am I doing?
48:26
- Yeah, what am I doing with?
48:27
I think we have those every now and then.
48:28
- All the time.
48:28
- And so I hired this career coach.
48:30
We did four sessions later and she said,
48:33
"Why can't they both coexist?
48:35
"Why do you, why are you so set on one or the other?"
48:39
And I thought,
48:41
"Wow, okay."
48:44
Yeah, what does it look like for them both to coexist
48:46
and to stay in my life and let them work together,
48:51
not fight each other?
48:52
- Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
48:54
And I think there's nothing wrong with that.
48:55
There's nothing wrong with that.
48:57
And you can have many different fucking hats.
49:01
- Yeah.
49:02
- You have all the fucking hats you want.
49:03
- Yeah.
49:03
- You know?
49:04
I think that I just don't want to bring that,
49:09
that energy that we're, you know,
49:10
'cause I think a lot of us are tired.
49:13
- Yeah.
49:13
- I don't know about you, I can use that.
49:15
- I'm tired too, I promise you.
49:18
- So I think it's also like, okay,
49:20
what does it look like to have a full
49:24
and also balanced life?
49:27
I don't believe balance is a unicorn.
49:29
I think balance is something that you choose
49:30
and create for yourself.
49:31
It just might look different on different days.
49:34
So what does that really look like for me?
49:36
Well, that still looks like maybe,
49:39
80 to 90% of my work hours are this.
49:43
And then I do some work on the side.
49:46
- Yeah.
49:47
- It's not, it is also just opening my mind
49:52
of how they can coexist
49:54
and like what the actual expectations are.
49:58
- Yeah.
49:59
- Of myself.
50:00
'Cause I don't want to bring that hustle.
50:02
I'm in the soft ambition era.
50:04
- Yeah, I'm not there yet.
50:06
I'm in the hard ambition era.
50:08
- I'm trying.
50:09
- I'm a girl.
50:11
Yeah.
50:12
I think that's a whole other podcast
50:14
about hustle culture and everything else.
50:16
- That's what it's saying.
50:17
- Yeah, hustle culture.
50:18
I'm tired.
50:19
- I am very tired, but I think I can't,
50:23
and maybe it's 'cause we're millennials,
50:24
we can't break it, you know?
50:27
I literally don't know how to break it.
50:28
- I have to, I don't think I can,
50:30
I must die in my life.
50:32
- I know.
50:33
I see, if you're viewing in,
50:37
it's right there.
50:38
This is from stress.
50:40
- We both are experiencing some stuff right now.
50:43
(laughing)
50:45
- Well, Alex, I really appreciate you coming on.
50:48
And before we depart,
50:49
please tell the audience where they can find you.
50:52
- Yeah, I'd love for you to find me over on LinkedIn.
50:56
It's just my name, Alexandra Vailas.
50:59
And I'd love to connect with you on Instagram.
51:02
It's A-V-E styles.
51:04
And no, I did not brand myself in the right way.
51:07
(laughing)
51:09
- It works.
51:10
- That's a word. - That's a word.
51:11
- Yeah, I can't, I mean, I guess I could,
51:13
but I have it, so it's A-V-E styles.
51:15
'Cause it's my, that's how I started.
51:17
That's how I started on Instagram.
51:18
- Got it.
51:19
Cool.
51:20
Well, I really appreciate you coming on.
51:23
And to everybody out there listening or viewing in,
51:27
I appreciate you tuning in,
51:29
and we'll see you next Thursday.
51:31
Thank you.
51:32
(upbeat music)
51:34
- Hey, wow.
51:35
You made it to the end of the episode.
51:37
That means that you like me and I like you,
51:40
which also means you should subscribe to this show.
51:43
(upbeat music)
51:46
(upbeat music)
51:49
(water splashing)
51:52
(water splashing)
51:55
(water splashing)
51:57
(water splashing)
52:00
[ Silence ]