Have you ever wondered how brands get products to celebs like Justin Bieber, and then get Justin to post about it? If the answer is yes then tune into this episode with Sarah Grosz, an influencer marketer at Allbirds.
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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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Hey, it's me, Jess.
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Welcome back to another episode of The Juice.
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I am super excited to bring you this week's episode
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because we are with my friend, Sarah Gross.
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- Gross.
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- You got it.
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- Oh man, I butchered that.
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I'm so...
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- No, you're good.
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You actually, that was perfect.
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Exactly how it's supposed to be pronounced.
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- Oh, gross.
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Nobody pronounced my last name.
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It's Servion, but everybody's like curvil on.
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- Same thing.
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- Yeah.
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I love it.
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Anyway, Sarah leads influencer marketing at all birds,
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but she has a really dope story that I can't wait to dive into
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because there are some really fun stuff.
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I'm gonna hand it over to Sarah
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so she can tell you a little bit more about her,
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and then we're gonna dive in.
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- Sure, thanks for having me, by the way.
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This is so fun.
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I love this.
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Yeah, so I am the influencer marketing manager at Allbirds.
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Before that, I was consulting for a few years,
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but what really got me into influencer marketing
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was working at a performance marketing agency called Mute6.
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I started and scaled the influencer department.
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So what's cool is we had a bunch of different
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performance departments.
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So Facebook ads, paid search, email, all the things.
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And influencer was one of the pieces that was missing.
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So I was able to plug into the other channels
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and help them grow while also creating my own service.
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And then, yeah, we ended up working with over 200
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of some of my favorite D2C brands.
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There was, I think, a team of maybe 12, 13 campaign managers
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to video editors, it was this whole thing.
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And I just dropped out of college a few years before,
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and I was the youngest on the team,
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and it was just absolute madness, but it was so much fun.
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And that's where my passion came from.
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- I love that.
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I absolutely love that.
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I love the fact that you also just said
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that you dropped out of college.
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But wait, I wanna touch on this.
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You dropped out of college and then moved to LA.
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- Immediately moved to LA.
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- But you had no job, right?
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- So actually, I did have a job.
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I was going to school at Syracuse University.
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I was a junior, and to be honest,
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I was failing most of my classes.
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(laughs)
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Actually, I don't think my mom still knows
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that that was a big factor.
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I was working at a tech startup,
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and I was really passionate about building and growing there.
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And I just didn't think school was right for me.
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I remember I took running for fitness
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as a class for credits.
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I'm like, this is great, I love it.
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But also, where am I learning?
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How can I leverage my passion to move me forward in life?
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And at the time, it just,
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I felt like all my friends were still figuring it out.
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And I'm like, okay, I wanna do this, not only that,
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but I wanna put gas to the pedal.
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How do I do that?
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How do I just start my career?
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So I actually applied at an internship
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and I ended up getting connected with the CEO
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of a marketing agency, and the agency was out in LA.
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And we connected and he was like,
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"Oh yeah, what's this internship job you keep on mentioning?"
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And I'm like, "What do you mean?"
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I applied to it online.
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It's your company. - Stop.
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- And it was a fake posting, or maybe it was an old posting,
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but they had no intention of hiring an intern.
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And to be honest, it was like a startup,
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and it was the cool, LinkedIn had a moment,
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and they were the cool marketing Venice Beach, LA agency,
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the disruptors that every single marketing bro
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wanted to be a part of.
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And so I was a part of the marketing bro fan girl team.
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And so a lot of shit happened on campus,
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and I ended up getting into some trouble.
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Blacklisted from the business school,
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took all of the conversation to LinkedIn,
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to kind of string everyone along,
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and kind of exposing what it's like
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to be a student entrepreneur with not so much support
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from campus. - Yeah.
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- And yeah, this marketing agency ate it up,
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and they were really prominent on LinkedIn,
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so they also loved that I was posting on LinkedIn too.
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And they offered me a full-time job
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with the contingency of dropping out of school
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and moving to LA. - No way.
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- They were like, "Yeah, we'll give you a full-time job
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if you leave school."
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- I mean, I'm like, perfect, either I was gonna take myself out
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or find someone who was gonna do it for me.
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So I had no hesitation.
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What was cool is that I remember kind of like calling my mom
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and talking about this.
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And the way the conversation happened was,
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it's like, "Hey, I am doing this.
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I hope you can support me."
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And it was the best conversation ever.
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I had full support from my mom,
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which definitely was helpful,
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but yeah, moving to LA,
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knew a handful of people on the team that I was working with
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and didn't have any friends.
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I had actually met up with like one distant,
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like second cousin once removed.
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I don't know, like for a quick holiday,
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but other than that, I've just been--
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- Viben. - Viben.
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- Yeah, I love that.
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I think this is completely off topic
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of customer experience, brand experience,
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or influencer marketing right now.
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But I also, I think what's really interesting
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is that LA is a very lonely place,
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but once you find your people here, it's a vibe.
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- Oh, hell yeah.
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And then also, a lot of people just don't grow up in LA
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that are here now.
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And so I think the neutralizer is,
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so many people start at the same place when they move.
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And so once you kind of like realize,
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"Hey, we're, we started the same place
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and we're all trying to get to our next moment,
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it's so much easier to connect with people."
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- Yeah, no, absolutely, absolutely.
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And I think that there's also like so much,
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there's a lot of like events and fun stuff always happening,
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you know?
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Like, you're like, "We'll get there, we'll get there."
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We got a surprise at the end.
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How?
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Anyway, okay, let's talk about,
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I mean, you have a wealth of knowledge
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about influencer marketing.
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And I really wanna talk about like some really fun things
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because this podcast is really about customer experience,
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but not just the support piece of it,
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like the entirety of a customer's journey, right?
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And I think what's really interesting about like
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what you specialize in influencer marketing is like,
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literal influencers influencing people
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to purchase your product, right?
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And that's a, it's such a big acquisition channel.
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But I think people look at it as just like,
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oh, you just do influencer and that's it.
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They don't think about like the hopeful depths
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that go behind all of it, right?
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So I'd love to like just start at this part.
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Like, I wanna discuss taking risks
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with different influencers in your career.
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I wanna talk about, has there ever been a time
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where you believe like a certain influencer
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was like gonna be so good and it wasn't good?
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- Slops, yeah.
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Yeah, so often.
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- I know.
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- I mean, so with like influencer marketing,
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there's no, you can test as much as you can,
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but when you have a partnership,
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there's always gonna be the first post.
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And what's interesting about influencer marketing
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is that it's an ad, but it's also supposed to be
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an organic placement.
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And so it's finding the mix where the influencer,
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you can leverage the influencer for their knowledge
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on how their audience reacts,
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so that it's not just an obvious ad,
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but it's the dance by giving them the right,
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unique selling points,
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so that they can sell the product
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while connecting to their audience.
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And then there's also this another layer of,
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it's marketing.
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And most of the time, people aren't convinced
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seeing a product for the first time.
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And so how many times do you need to engage
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with an influencer to have that breakthrough?
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But also, if you push it too far,
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like sometimes like influencers are just flops
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and they'll never work.
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It doesn't matter how many times you partner with them.
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And so it's really, it's a lot of trial and error.
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It's a lot of it is setting internal expectations.
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- Yeah.
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- But then, yeah, there's a whole lot of factors.
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- There's like that internal expectations piece
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'cause then they're like,
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okay, great, make this campaign go viral,
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but it doesn't work that way.
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- I mean, we can all hope.
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(laughing)
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- I know, you can all hope, right?
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But it's like you gotta have thoughts and prayers first,
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you know?
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- Right, and then there's also a huge guardrail,
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especially working with an established brand.
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- Yeah.
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- And this is like, I've worked with hundreds
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and hundreds of brands and it's always been a challenge
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is how do you go viral
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and align with the influencer
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and align with your brands,
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especially if it's like more Lex or more elevated,
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doing like a quick viral TikTok post with a voiceover.
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That's just not pushing your brand in the right direction
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in terms of aspirational,
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but maybe it will get your brand really top of mind
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and just 'cause it goes viral that you get this awareness.
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But it doesn't speak to any of the selling points
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of your products,
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so you're not actually acquiring new customers
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or customers in general.
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- Right, right, right, right.
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- Right, right.
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- It's such a balance.
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It's such a balance.
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Like it's like, okay, it's an awareness play.
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You could definitely be an awareness play,
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but like it doesn't always leave to acquisition, right?
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When metrics are you looking at to like see
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if like you're performing correctly
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or not like you,
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but like your campaigns are performing correctly?
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- Sure, so I mean, just in general,
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like influencer marketing,
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there's so many different KPIs,
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key performance indicators.
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Usually where I bucket it is acquiring content,
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acquiring some sort of awareness
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and then also acquiring customers.
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And so content usually feeds into other channels.
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- Right.
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- So Facebook ads or meta ads in general,
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TikTok ads, even like onsite conversion rate,
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emails are so many places
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where you can leverage influencer content.
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But then in terms of metrics looking at feed,
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like the influencer's feed and social feeds,
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I usually go by CPM,
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so cost per thousand impressions.
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And then you can kind of cross check and see, okay,
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are we seeing the same efficiency for Facebook ads
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or are we just super expensive?
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How can we create efficiency there?
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And then just depending on your business model,
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you can do customer acquisition costs,
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you can--
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- CAC.
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- CAC.
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- CAC.
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- CAC.
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- That's usually what I've seen pretty universal
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in terms of like using influencer for a customer acquisition.
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- Yeah, yeah, interesting.
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Well, working at Mutix or just like honestly,
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not even just Mutix, like hundreds of brands, right?
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Like, tell me, tell me what is your best influencer
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campaign you've ever done?
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- Ooh, best.
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Actually, I think my favorite campaign to this date
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was my first campaign ever.
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And this was actually before Mutix for this agency
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that I dropped out of school for.
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I actually had this one client that knew the agency
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for what we call growth hacking.
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- Yeah.
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- And what is growth hacking?
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- I mean, at the time it was a pseudonym for
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make me a lot of money with $0 budget, right?
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And I'm like, and I'm just straight out of college.
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So I'm like, okay, put me in coach, I can do all this.
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- Yeah.
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- And they're like, great, she can do all this.
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So we had a makeup brand and they were pretty well known
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in Italy, a small indie brand.
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And they wanted to launch in the States.
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And I did a lot of PR hacking at the time
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where I was just scraping targeted leads.
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And it was a weird mix of like scraping
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and business development where I would reach out.
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And I don't know, basically the process that was outlined,
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it was so transferable into influencer marketing
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where instead of looking at the database we looked at
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was BuzzSumo for to find authors and journalists.
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Instead of that, we used Instagram.
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And we used the same tools to reach out via email
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'cause there's the contact button in Instagram
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or there's the email and bios.
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And so I would commission these virtual assistants
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to find all of these emails.
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And I would just plug them into these sales outreach programs
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so that I could reach out at skill to influencers.
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And this was back in 2018 where influencer marketing
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was just starting.
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And I remember reaching out to hundreds and hundreds
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of influencers and within two months,
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we saw over 200 influencers post.
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And these were kind of like macro influencers,
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especially at the time where they had 100K+ followers.
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And it was just kind of like my aha moment
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where you could just like,
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once you like reach out to people be like,
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"Hey, try this."
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And people like, "Okay, yeah, sure, like let's do it."
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But it was cool, especially at the time starting when I did
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because I had to do everything manually,
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like tracking content and communicating both with my team
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and then also with the client.
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And it's like, this is what success looks like.
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And I remember I had this massive deck
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with each slide representing an influencer
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that I reached out to.
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And there was, it was like a red light green light system
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where at the bottom, I like had a block of red,
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meaning like they're not interested or a yellow,
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which means that the client had to talk with a client
15:28
and answer a question or green, meaning like,
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we have their address product descent.
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And I'm like, "Oh my God."
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Like if this was the scenario today,
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like more than half of the brands that do influencer marketing,
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I bet you wouldn't still do it
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'cause it was such a manual process.
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But it was so good to know how everything works
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from the ground up and then now supplementing it
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with so many more efficient tools.
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- Yeah, well it's funny because I've actually worked
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with brands like in the freelancing stuff,
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but they're not as, they don't got these tools still.
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Like I've seen, I'm not gonna name any names, okay?
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But I have seen a program where it was thousands upon thousands
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of like creators, right?
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Across so many different industries.
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And they were doing all of this through Google Sheets
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and tracking it very manually.
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And it's a big company.
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- Yeah.
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- It's not a tiny company.
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- You know?
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- Yeah, it's probably, yeah, spreadsheets are big.
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It kills me when brands DM at scale.
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I'm like even going back to customer success.
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Like DMs are such a hub for problem solving
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that you're adding a layer of communication.
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- Dudes.
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- And I'm like, and there's no tagging, there's no,
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I mean there's all these additional tools
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that can connect to Instagram Messenger,
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but I'm like, why would you start there?
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- Yeah, I still see, I'm telling you,
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I still see brands doing this.
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I actually just ran into something
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because the customer support team and the affiliate team
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like needed to work in the inbox.
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But then what happened was I put the customer support person
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in the inbox so she can like deal with like
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actual comments and stuff like that, right?
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And then she like poked around and like looked in the DMs
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just to be like, oh, do you need support
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or this or that, right?
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And then it ruined this manual system.
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- Yeah, it's, like people still do this.
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But it's also like an unavoidable evil
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where influencers don't have their contact information out
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which I'm like, why would you, why?
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- PR@influencer.com, you know?
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- Even just do that, but there's so many accounts
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where they just keep their information,
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especially on, I see this most often with TikTokers
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who don't have a ton of following on Instagram
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and there's no contact information on TikTok.
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Or there's no DM.
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You have to be mutually following each other,
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which is like the chance of that happening as like slim to none.
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(laughs)
18:13
I'm like, why isn't all of the influencers
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following me on TikTok post?
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I never post.
18:16
So the natural progression,
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if you can't find their contact info is DM on Instagram.
18:23
But again, it's also just like the notifications
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and the unreads on DM is crazy.
18:30
- Yeah.
18:31
- Yeah, I try to avoid it as much as possible.
18:33
- I know, it gets lost in the sauce, man.
18:35
So I'm gonna go ahead and chalk that up to the nightmare question
18:38
that I was gonna ask you about influencer marketing.
18:41
(laughs)
18:42
That seems like a nightmare, right?
18:44
- Yeah, this is, yeah, definitely something
18:48
that I constantly scratched my head at.
18:49
I think, like right now I have a good system going
18:52
where I'm like, the system is don't engage
18:54
until someone tells me there's an influencer.
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I'm like, okay, great, my time to shine.
18:59
Yeah, that's definitely a nightmare constantly.
19:05
- Yeah, no, I bet, I bet.
19:07
So, okay, in the realm of like a customer's journey,
19:11
and I know we like kind of like talked about this a little bit,
19:13
but you know, if influencer marketing is at acquisition
19:17
and awareness, where do you think,
19:21
not necessarily for the customer in particular,
19:23
but like even at the influencer,
19:25
like how do you retain them, right?
19:28
Like how do you keep them coming back?
19:30
Like and wanting to constantly like promote your brand,
19:34
like put, you know, and be just a part of the funnel.
19:38
- Yeah, actually, I forget which brand this was,
19:41
but I had this aha moment.
19:44
There is one brand that I was working with,
19:47
and they only wanted to work with these like massive celebrities
19:53
and this is a few years ago,
19:55
and I'm like, guys, you're still working on credibility.
20:00
There's no, it was such a small brand,
20:04
and I believe, I remember I'm like,
20:06
oh, but this is such a good product,
20:07
and we just need to get like these people to say yes to trying.
20:11
And so what we did was try to integrate
20:16
within their close circles.
20:20
So let's say Justin Bieber is a celebrity
20:24
that we wanna get in touch with.
20:26
The strategy there was let's see who Justin's following,
20:30
assuming that it's close personal connections,
20:33
and it's definitely not gonna even be close
20:35
to the amount of people that follow him.
20:38
- Right.
20:39
- And there might be an account with,
20:40
you know, a few thousand followers,
20:42
and like, and you can go in and see if they liked each other's
20:45
post and I'm like, okay, let's start seeing product
20:49
to their network, and then once we reach out to Justin,
20:53
I can, maybe he's already heard of us.
20:55
- Yeah.
20:56
- Or maybe it's just like a talking point where we,
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I can call names that he for sure knows
21:04
and would care about that might be more interesting
21:07
than like just a random someone else to get in touch.
21:11
But also kind of with that concept is that
21:16
the retention part is that you can work with an influencer
21:20
so many times, and at some point it gets boring.
21:23
- Yes.
21:24
- This is also something that I'm actually testing right now
21:28
is like, how many times can we have an influencer
21:31
talk about us without being, without plateauing?
21:35
- Right.
21:36
- 'Cause there's only so many things about either a brand
21:39
or a product that keeps people interesting,
21:41
and then there's also so many creative ideas on top of that.
21:45
So there's definitely a finite amount.
21:48
But if you can work with their circle of influencers
21:53
or within their close or not work,
21:55
you can assume that they have some follower crossover.
21:59
And so maybe I'm seeing content from Justin Bieber
22:02
or maybe I'm seeing content from Haley Bieber
22:04
just knowing they have such similar crossover
22:08
that the customer is constantly engaged and interested.
22:12
- Right.
22:13
- Right, yeah, because it can get stale.
22:15
Like, absolutely.
22:16
I mean, there's a lot of just micro influencers
22:19
that I follow, right?
22:20
Like, I don't know, get ready with me videos.
22:23
I don't know why I like those so much.
22:25
Or the ones where they're like,
22:27
- The Amazon?
22:28
- Yes, MR.
22:29
- Yeah.
22:30
- Oh, interesting.
22:31
- But it's not like anything like, okay.
22:34
You know, about the mic, right?
22:36
It's like something really fucking weird.
22:38
Like, I don't know, makeup or whatever.
22:40
And like, they're like-- - They're like cleaning supplies.
22:43
That's weird. - Ew, that's weird.
22:45
- Okay, I'm weird.
22:46
I am weird.
22:47
- That's so clean.
22:48
- Okay, but that's on my feet.
22:49
- So like, cleaning.
22:50
- Yeah, all right, Sarah.
22:52
Anyway, the point is that was like,
22:54
I have so get ready with me video, right?
22:57
There's this one micro influencer that I follow.
23:01
And like, she's like always kind of repping
23:04
like these brands, these clothing brands or whatever.
23:07
But I actually started getting really annoyed with her videos.
23:12
- Did she selling out?
23:14
- I don't think it's like selling out.
23:16
It's not even to do with the product.
23:17
It was just like consistently the same type of motions
23:22
or the same type of comments.
23:25
You know what I mean?
23:25
So it's like, it's gotta get stale
23:27
for the on the brand side too,
23:29
if you're still constantly doing the same influencer.
23:32
- Yeah.
23:33
- Does that make sense?
23:33
- Oh, 100% and I think that's where a lot of brands
23:36
create like briefs.
23:37
- Yeah.
23:38
- And you can do like briefs on like a brand moment.
23:42
Maybe you're doing a product, new product launch,
23:44
a new variation of what you already have.
23:48
And you create a campaign for newness.
23:51
Other opportunities for newness is like cultural moments
23:54
or holidays too.
23:55
- Yeah.
23:56
- But yeah, it's, I, there's so much repetition
24:00
and also on social when there's a good idea.
24:03
So many people copy it.
24:04
- Yeah.
24:05
- And so all of a sudden you're seeing like,
24:07
you're hearing the same sounds,
24:08
you're seeing the same motions.
24:11
And what I see as a trend is like brands try to hop on it too,
24:14
which super smart, but again, like,
24:16
is that the best newness that you can offer?
24:19
- Right. Right.
24:21
I know.
24:21
It's like you gotta constantly be innovative
24:24
and constantly like,
24:26
it kind of goes back to actually one of the things
24:29
I was talking about in another podcast episode
24:31
but about like spectacle marketing in a way.
24:34
You know, it's like there's gotta be some sort of like spectacle
24:36
in it because at some point your audience like,
24:40
just gotta stop fucking believing you
24:41
that you want the soda in your guy's hand.
24:44
Like I've tried that soda and that soda is shitty.
24:47
- You know, actually, this reminds me of a campaign
24:50
that I was a part of and oh my God,
24:54
it was, it's a very popular cereal brand
24:57
that we were working with to launch them on TikTok.
25:03
And I remember on TikTok,
25:06
we really leaned into cringe culture.
25:10
And I remember like sparked a memory,
25:13
like it sparked like a moment.
25:16
I remember watching a video and this person was just like
25:20
doing super normal things, talking to camera.
25:22
This is all on TikTok.
25:23
- Yeah.
25:24
- And there was like a cat in the background on like,
25:26
either a shelf or a pedestal and all of the comments
25:29
were saying like, the cat though.
25:31
And I'm like, okay, like this is cool.
25:33
This is so unexpected.
25:36
And everyone in the comments jumped on the cat bandwagon.
25:39
- Yeah.
25:40
- Even though the content was totally not about that.
25:41
- Yeah.
25:42
- And so for this cereal brand, what we did was
25:46
we had them doing like very normal things,
25:49
you know, like maybe it was a get ready with me.
25:51
Maybe it was like a taste test, like,
25:53
I don't know, very normal things.
25:55
But we really emphasized milk before cereal or cereal.
26:00
What is it?
26:01
You pour the milk in first and then the cereal.
26:05
- Oh, cause it's cringe.
26:06
- It's so cringe.
26:08
And we had all of a sudden so many people paying it,
26:11
even if they're just like talking to camera,
26:12
having a family moment, like eating, just having breakfast,
26:16
people would run straight to the comments.
26:18
No!
26:19
Like that's the wrong way.
26:21
Like I can't believe this, like I hate this so much.
26:23
I'm like, great.
26:24
Not only are people engaging and we're optimizing for that,
26:28
but there's that like recall where they're for sure
26:31
seeing the brand name on the box
26:34
because they're paying attention to the action
26:37
of like pouring the cereal in the bowl.
26:39
- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
26:41
Okay, I love this.
26:43
So it's like a little spectacle, virality moment, right?
26:47
Of pissing the audience off.
26:48
- Oh.
26:49
Yeah, I mean, I like to piss them off.
26:52
I don't know, it just has to be brand friendliness.
26:55
But also I'm like, what's the actual cost?
26:59
If people are vocal, you're sparking conversation
27:04
and hopefully it's like not too risky.
27:07
But that's something else that I'm like,
27:09
brands should like really understand the scope.
27:12
And if you wanna do influencer marketing,
27:14
how much risk are you willing to take?
27:16
- Yeah.
27:17
- Especially when you don't have control of like
27:19
what the history of the influencer is
27:22
and all of the maybe risky activities they did
27:27
and their past life.
27:28
And that's kind of like one of my favorite things
27:30
on especially on TikTok when someone's like exposed
27:33
for something that they did in like high school.
27:35
I'm like, oof, yeah.
27:37
Yeah, yeah, I know.
27:39
- Your CX is great.
27:40
That phrase is so last season.
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27:45
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28:39
- You know, kind of like switching gears,
28:44
but still in like the same vein
28:45
because this is a question that popped up for me.
28:48
Have you or your team ever caused a viral moment
28:53
that's affected the customer experience team?
28:55
- That has affected a customer.
28:58
- Like, oh, like, you know what I mean?
29:01
'Cause I know that this is happening at Feastables.
29:02
Like, listen, what you guys said on this thing
29:06
was just not right.
29:08
I mean, coupon codes happen all the time.
29:10
- Oh, all the time.
29:12
- That's, and especially we,
29:16
I'm a fan of keeping coupon codes always on.
29:19
Just 'cause especially if content's in feed,
29:23
you have the chance of maybe 10 years from now
29:26
getting a customer 'cause they're scrolling all the way through.
29:29
I don't know.
29:29
But I remember also on TikTok,
29:33
this is kind of funny.
29:35
So I was working with this brand
29:38
and they were kind of on the edge of a gambling brand
29:41
where it was more of like a mystery box.
29:45
- Okay.
29:45
- And it paid for some sort of tokens
29:48
and the tokens would get you different levels of mystery box.
29:52
And these, it was kind of like a streetwear brand
29:55
or like a streetwear lifestyle brand.
30:00
And so you would unbox maybe,
30:02
it was like a key chain with the smallest tier,
30:04
like sneakers which would be the next tier up
30:07
or you could do like a whole luva ton bag.
30:10
And it's kind of gambling 'cause you would always win
30:14
but you wouldn't always win great.
30:16
- Yeah.
30:18
- And or you can kind of like recycle your winning
30:21
and be like actually wanna trade it in for, I don't know.
30:23
- There's a whole interesting, very complex.
30:26
- Yeah.
30:26
And so I remember it was so disruptive.
30:29
We worked with an influencer on TikTok doing something
30:33
and it went viral,
30:35
but what happened was it spun off so many fan accounts
30:39
of this brand where they would just show
30:42
their like there was a really insane unboxing,
30:44
digital unboxing experience where the entire fan accounts
30:48
would just buy more tokens
30:51
and just show their screen takes free and recordings
30:53
of like their unboxing experience.
30:55
And then we'd do a voiceover being like,
30:57
"Yeah, let's go next one baby."
31:00
And it was just like a whole, like,
31:02
and I'm talking like at least a few hundred accounts
31:06
were made and we're like scratching our heads being like,
31:09
where did this come from?
31:10
- Dude, trends are so weird.
31:14
Like trends are absolutely so weird, you know?
31:16
Like it's so like it's like,
31:19
where did that come from?
31:20
Like some one person said this was cool
31:24
and then a hundred other people were like,
31:26
"Yeah, let's do it."
31:27
- But also I'm like, why is this?
31:28
Why is this the one that you choose?
31:30
- Yeah.
31:31
- There's so many like other things, I don't know.
31:33
- Yeah.
31:34
Okay, well in that same vein, what trends do you think
31:39
are gonna be like a game changer
31:41
in the influencer marketing world?
31:43
- Well, right now there's this one account
31:47
that I think is just so, like,
31:51
Serendipitous and where they are,
31:53
the account is on TikTok,
31:55
I like TikTok a little bit.
31:57
It's on TikTok, her name's Risa Tisa.
32:01
- Oh my God, I was hoping, no,
32:03
I was hoping you would bring this up.
32:05
'Cause that's when my mind literally just went.
32:08
Okay, keep going in the-
32:09
- I have thoughts.
32:10
- So Risa Tisa, all of a sudden,
32:12
she's just this like very charming woman
32:14
and she speaks directly to camera.
32:17
And there's no frills, there's literally no editing.
32:19
She's just one shot and she all of a sudden
32:24
wanted to talk about her experience through COVID,
32:28
meeting a man, ending up living with him,
32:32
marrying him and then divorcing him,
32:34
all like marrying and divorcing within like six months.
32:37
And then it was all like through the first year of COVID.
32:40
So he came into her life really kind of messed it up
32:44
and then left and he was lying about everything.
32:47
- It's so crazy.
32:48
- On the phone in front of her talking to family
32:51
or talking to business people,
32:52
but at the end you learned that he wasn't actually
32:56
talking to someone, he was just faking
33:00
and having a one-way conversation just to lie
33:03
and there was no point, it was just ridiculousness.
33:06
But the trend here that I think is going to really
33:10
have a bigger moment is one direct to camera
33:15
and specifically conversations.
33:18
And then also she added on this long format where,
33:23
oh my gosh guys, it was a playlist of 50 videos,
33:28
five zero videos and each of them were about 10 minutes long.
33:32
So that's 500 minutes of video.
33:35
And I think, and this is like a new creator too,
33:39
she had only-- - Unintentional creator.
33:41
- So unintentional.
33:42
And it's kind of like cringy where she's a little bit older,
33:46
she's not like the typical TikTok influencer
33:49
or TikTok or-- - She's not dancing.
33:50
- Yeah, she's not the archetype.
33:52
But she, I think every single one of her videos,
33:56
one of her 50 videos has over a million impressions
33:59
and this is within a week, one week.
34:02
And the last time I checked, she had two million followers.
34:05
- Yeah.
34:06
- So there's a few takeaways there, like one direct to camera.
34:09
- Yeah.
34:10
- Long form format, like, and then also,
34:13
I think it's just like how the industry is shifting.
34:18
Music is going to be less prominent
34:21
for a piece of content to go viral.
34:25
And it just has a lot to do with what's changing
34:27
in the industry.
34:29
A lot of music has been taken down just from new deals
34:33
and new partnerships and changes within partnerships
34:36
with TikTok.
34:38
And so I think the biggest trend is the individuality
34:43
and uniqueness that a creator makes
34:50
that isn't as like easily replicated
34:53
and that's the conversation to camera.
34:55
- Yeah, absolutely.
34:57
Conversation to camera right now.
34:59
I'm trying to make my content.
35:03
- No, I think you're absolutely right though,
35:04
'cause I think that is the trend.
35:05
I think that's a storytelling trend,
35:08
even of course, e-commerce brands, right?
35:10
Like even if you see like,
35:12
so actually completely stepping out of social, right?
35:16
Like you're seeing more of a trend
35:18
on like social commerce, like videos too.
35:21
And you're seeing more of like that founder story
35:23
being sitting on like websites, right?
35:26
And I think that that's really,
35:30
I think it's, people wanna feel connected.
35:33
People wanna feel connected in the content
35:34
that they're consuming.
35:36
They wanna feel connected to a brand, right?
35:38
And so it's like a different level of creating content.
35:41
It's not just like, oh, here's my spectacle
35:43
and like I'm gonna do all the things.
35:44
No, it's like one on one moment of like,
35:47
no, you need this.
35:48
- 100%.
35:49
And also just with like how popular e-commerce
35:53
just brands are these days.
35:54
- Yeah.
35:55
- It's so, so easy to literally create a copy
35:58
and paste of a brand.
35:59
And just change the name.
36:01
And I saw an Instagram post the other day
36:04
and it was just like copycats are out.
36:06
And it was like so, like Graza has a copycat
36:11
and Can has a copycat.
36:13
And Can you for X has a copycat?
36:15
And it's literally same color, same font, same everything,
36:19
except just the words are a little bit different.
36:22
And what's so important is to create these brand modes.
36:26
And the storytelling is a moat,
36:29
especially when it comes to building the brand
36:32
and the founder's story that cannot be replicated.
36:36
And another really customer success is another element
36:41
that just cannot be replicated.
36:43
And then also like social is another thing
36:45
that just cannot be replicated.
36:47
You can copy my content,
36:48
but the way that I engage with my audience
36:52
cannot, you just can't copy and paste it.
36:56
And also like the amount of followers
36:59
and the community that you're building,
37:00
it's the moat that brands need to build
37:03
in order to actually create success.
37:06
- Right, absolutely.
37:08
I think, man, end it there.
37:11
I feel like that was the moment,
37:13
like because you're absolutely right.
37:14
Like you're absolutely right.
37:15
Like, no, people don't wanna buy from you
37:18
because if you're like just like everybody else, right?
37:22
Like they wanna have a connection to you.
37:23
They want to feel like whether it's, you know,
37:26
a connection of an influencer liking your brand
37:30
or your own content and like the storytelling piece of it,
37:34
or it's the customer experience team
37:37
and like that human experience,
37:39
like in your email marketing, all of these channels, right?
37:42
Like people want to feel connected
37:45
in order to actually continue purchasing from you, you know?
37:50
- Yeah.
37:51
And I mean, there's no reason why
37:53
if you're not upset, if the product is not life-changing,
37:57
there's no other reason why people need to stay with you.
38:01
- Absolutely.
38:02
- Or like try something else.
38:03
And there's especially in like consumable products
38:05
where there's all these like different ingredients popping up
38:08
and you're like, oh, but this like combo of this,
38:11
I'm like, you just need to create a connection moment.
38:14
- Yeah, yeah, absolutely connection moment.
38:18
That's the hit connection moment.
38:22
- Okay, a couple more questions, but I mean,
38:25
that's actually a few, quite a few,
38:26
'cause I want to get your take on AI influencers,
38:31
influencer marketing and stuff.
38:33
'Cause you know, there's like,
38:35
obviously like more imagery or it,
38:38
actually I take it back, not even just more imagery,
38:41
but like AI utilization in developing scripts even.
38:46
- So actually, yeah, what I have been really excited about
38:50
and actually myself have used is using AI
38:54
to create timelines process.
38:58
I also like, I'll say like, hey, we're launching a product
39:04
this time, we're looking to work with this many influencers,
39:06
create a timeline for me with important dates
39:11
and execution dates.
39:14
So that I don't need to like backtrack myself and be like,
39:16
okay, this is when we start reaching out to influencers.
39:19
And this is the last day we can send out products.
39:21
And this is when we start seeing content come in.
39:24
AI is doing that for me.
39:26
- Yeah.
39:27
- Creating briefs is a really, really nice one.
39:30
- Yeah.
39:31
- You can give them AI a few prompts.
39:34
I'm talking more specifically chat GPT.
39:36
- Yeah, of course.
39:38
- Giving a few prompts and it'll spit back out,
39:40
like what are the unique selling points
39:43
that the influencers should highlight?
39:46
What are the concepts that they should lean into?
39:51
Briefs are really, really big.
39:53
Another thing that I use chat GPT for
39:55
is the outreach element.
39:57
When I reach out to influencers,
39:59
I try to stick with email,
40:02
but email school, 'cause you can also test your messaging
40:05
and see what really hits.
40:07
And I use tools that like give me feedback,
40:09
like open rates, response rates, like click through rates.
40:12
And so testing subject lines, testing,
40:15
you know, like I usually actually sometimes use
40:18
a press article in the outreach to add some credibility.
40:22
'Cause I mean, you're, you can be the biggest brand
40:25
in the world, but you can always be surprised
40:27
to how little people know about it.
40:30
So adding in that like little credibility moment
40:33
is really helpful.
40:34
So I use chat GPT to create different outreach templates,
40:39
different cadences for it, the whole thing.
40:42
And then there's also the content aspect where,
40:47
yeah, it's something that I'm excited to dabble in.
40:51
I don't have too much.
40:54
- Yeah, I think it's where I struggle from the content,
40:58
like the AI content piece is in this isn't just
41:01
for like my content, like this is actually like,
41:04
there's a brand that I do marketing for,
41:06
but like CMO, so it's like you do everything,
41:10
you know what I mean?
41:11
Great title, but my point is though is I was like
41:16
kind of using chat GPT to like help me
41:17
in like the same thing of like process
41:19
and that type of stuff, but then also helping me
41:22
with come up with like scripting for like content
41:24
because it's like hard sometimes you like
41:26
to completely like have writer's block, you know?
41:31
But I think it's hard unless you do the right prompts,
41:36
you know?
41:37
And getting to the right prompts is like takes time
41:40
is my point.
41:41
- 100%, but also when you get to the right prompts,
41:45
usually my little hack is I tell chat GPT give me
41:48
50 more examples.
41:49
- Yes.
41:50
- And then from those examples I usually ask,
41:54
give me the top five like recommendations from that list
41:59
'cause it doesn't list it in like best
42:03
and chat GPT like has its own way of defining best.
42:07
I mean, you can give it more and for like more insight
42:09
on what best should mean, but that's been super helpful
42:12
for me is like, okay, give me all the options
42:15
and then I can also present that to like my team
42:17
and say like here's everything that we thought about.
42:20
- Yeah.
42:20
- Here's our top selections and just makes me look
42:22
like a smarter, better, more aware.
42:24
- Like you're so good.
42:25
- Yeah, I came up with this on myself.
42:27
- Just me, just me.
42:30
Yeah, okay.
42:30
No, you're right.
42:31
It's like, it's constantly, it's like the initial prompt
42:33
but you still gotta do work with it, you know?
42:36
And like, and I think AI can like in many different areas
42:40
make us faster, better and I don't wanna say stronger,
42:44
but.
42:44
- Medially stronger.
42:45
- Medially stronger.
42:46
Cool.
42:49
So are there any influencer brands that you like?
42:52
- Oh, yes.
42:53
- You like really love.
42:54
No, give me your top three, chat GPT.
42:56
- There's so many.
42:57
Right now I have to lean back on the first brand
43:00
that comes from mine is Pop Daddy Snacks.
43:02
- Mm, I don't know that one.
43:03
- Oh my gosh.
43:04
- See exactly your point about it.
43:05
We need a phone, Pop Daddy Snacks, Pop Daddy Snacks.
43:07
It's like listening and you will get it
43:10
as soon as we leave this conversation,
43:13
go on TikTok and you'll get it.
43:15
They're leaning into a TikTok shop and.
43:18
- I love TikTok shop, dude.
43:20
I love TikTok shop.
43:21
- It's like the, it's, I love it.
43:25
It's like a love-hate relationship
43:26
'cause I'm like, you're taking a lot of my money.
43:29
- Yeah, yeah.
43:30
I mean, fair, yes, fair.
43:34
I have a brand that I work with that is on TikTok shop.
43:38
Like wasn't finding a lot of success in just the e-com store,
43:41
but then we had a lot of like success in like,
43:44
'cause it was a, it was a challenge brand,
43:48
meaning like you consume this,
43:49
you post your challenge.
43:51
So like that pathway is very beyond line, right?
43:56
So then purchasing, so continuously purchasing
43:59
from the store is a little bit hard, right?
44:01
But like this is why I like TikTok shop for them specifically
44:04
because we're already on TikTok shop,
44:06
or I'm more sorry, we're already on TikTok.
44:08
So it's so easy to be like,
44:10
hey, go purchase it through here, you know?
44:13
- 100%.
44:13
What I also love about TikTok shop specifically
44:17
is the visual aspect where you can not only see the product
44:22
and that's how it's usually merchandise on social
44:25
or on site is you see the product,
44:28
but what I love especially on the content aspect
44:33
of TikTok shop is the reactions to the product
44:36
that really sell.
44:38
And this is like visual like,
44:40
"Hah, like ready?
44:40
Should we do a thumbnail for this little?"
44:42
- Yeah, yeah.
44:43
(laughing)
44:46
- There you go.
44:48
But yeah, it's pairing the visual of the product,
44:51
the all of the like interesting things that are going on
44:55
and screening the actual,
44:56
especially on like consumables or even with them,
44:58
apparel, just the reaction trying things on.
45:01
I'm like, "Oh my gosh, the perfect fit."
45:04
Whoa, like, and then even like seeing other people
45:06
like step into frame and give their reaction,
45:08
it's just not something that's normal.
45:11
In like the purchasing journey or the consumer journey
45:16
that that's where I think TikTok shop
45:18
is disrupting the most.
45:20
And that's the edge off of Amazon
45:23
where it's like you get the reactions
45:25
that's so much different than reviews.
45:27
- Absolutely, absolutely.
45:29
I mean, also when you talk about reviews, right?
45:32
You hit this part, like I see a lot of brands
45:35
like putting a lot of emphasis
45:36
and getting photos and videos back
45:38
and then incentivizing that
45:40
because that's good UGC for them, right?
45:42
But then on these channels on like TikTok shop
45:44
like you get those reactions like so quickly,
45:47
you know what I mean?
45:48
Like obviously UGC sells, oh sorry, apologies.
45:53
User generated content.
45:54
- Yes.
45:55
- It sells, right?
45:56
So it's like finding the easiest path to that
45:59
is like what is helpful, you know?
46:01
(water splashing)
46:03
So we only have a couple minutes left
46:04
and I just wanna point this out
46:05
'cause this will not air until after our party.
46:09
But the whole reason I'm in LA right now
46:13
and with my home girl Sarah is because we are hosting
46:17
a D2C ranch party.
46:19
Do you wanna tell them what a D2C ranch party is?
46:22
Oh my God, you're so excited about this.
46:23
- I do.
46:24
- Oh no, it's so funny.
46:27
Yeah, Jessa, Richeau, ran,
46:29
you actually a little, this is our first time
46:32
like actually having a conversation.
46:33
- Hang on.
46:34
- Oh, my friend.
46:35
- So funny, but yeah, internet friends love it.
46:40
- Yeah.
46:40
- Live, laugh, love.
46:42
And yeah, we wanted to throw an event
46:45
and I literally had, I told Jess, I'm like,
46:48
oh my gosh, we don't know each other
46:49
and I'm just gonna say this random idea.
46:51
What about a D2C ranch party?
46:53
I'm like, but not like ranch ranch.
46:55
I'm like ranch dressing where we have
46:59
unlimited fountains of ranch and anything
47:02
that you can dip into and people are just enjoying their ranch.
47:07
- The ranch.
47:08
- And you were like, hell yeah, let's go.
47:10
Let's like more and more and more.
47:12
And so we're throwing a D2C ranch party.
47:16
All of our CPG and D2C founder friends are coming
47:20
completely sold out.
47:22
- We were all covered.
47:23
- We were all covered.
47:24
- We were also powered by customer.
47:26
So we're legit, okay?
47:28
Like you don't even just follow the Jews
47:31
for the podcast piece of it.
47:33
You follow the Jews for the weird events.
47:35
- Yeah.
47:37
- And I can't wait to throw more weird ones with them.
47:39
- I'm ready.
47:40
Let's do it.
47:41
So on that note, more to come
47:45
because we're actually going to do some video content there.
47:48
So we'll post that online and in other places.
47:52
And link it in the show notes.
47:53
But before we end end, Sarah, can you just tell them,
47:58
where can I find you?
48:00
- Ooh, LinkedIn is always a good spot.
48:04
Starting to post more content there,
48:05
but more specifically, Instagram, I have like a fun little
48:10
CPG D2C spot, it's called good.cpg.
48:16
And I share mostly stories on different trends
48:20
that I'm seeing different pieces of content
48:23
that I think are really pushing the needle
48:25
and moving brands forward.
48:26
And that's the best place that I like to chit chat.
48:29
- Yeah, it's really good.
48:30
We'll link all of Sarah's contact information
48:33
in the show notes, but specifically follow
48:36
the Instagram account.
48:37
It's, if you're in just D2C and CPG
48:40
and just like fun stuff and good content, highly recommend.
48:45
And on that note, thank you for joining me
48:48
for another week of the juice.
48:51
I'm your host Jess and I'll see you next week on Thursday.
48:54
- Hey, wow, you made it to the end of the episode.
49:00
That means that you like me and I like you,
49:02
which also means you should subscribe to this show.
49:05
(upbeat music)
49:08
(upbeat music)
49:11
(water splashing)
49:14
[BLANK_AUDIO]