Melanie shares her exciting career journey at Fabletics, her shift from B2B to e-commerce, and why omnichannel strategies are a game-changer in today's market. Get the scoop on using AI for customer interactions, crafting seamless user journeys, and boosting customer loyalty with smart return policies and personalized experiences.
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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,
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making that purchase, retaining that customer,
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bringing them back around, and everything in between.
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This is gonna be all about delivering dope brand experiences
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and talking to some really amazing people
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who are in the customer experience space,
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marketing space, and everything in between.
0:30
(upbeat music)
0:32
Welcome back to another episode
0:39
of The Juice With Me, your host, Jess.
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I don't know why I just repeated my name,
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but that's what I did.
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(laughing)
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This week, I am in my hometown, Chicago,
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and I am joined by my new homegirl, Mel Cummings,
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who is VP of product and digital at Fabletics.
1:01
Welcome.
1:02
- Thank you.
1:03
Appreciate you having me on.
1:03
- Tell the homies about your journey.
1:06
- Yeah, I've been at Fabletics about eight and a half years.
1:09
VP of product and UX.
1:11
Oh, next.
1:11
Yeah, it's similar, but different design.
1:13
It's fine.
1:14
(laughing)
1:16
I actually started in our retail business,
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opening up our retail stores,
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so kind of like our manager of retail ops,
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really enjoyed that.
1:23
And then about six years ago,
1:24
had an opportunity to jump over to the website,
1:26
I've been managing that in addition to our mobile app,
1:28
and our retail store technology as well.
1:30
- Cool.
1:31
So I'm super excited to bring you on,
1:33
because my journey in CX really started
1:38
from like more of a product side, like in B2B.
1:41
And how Mel and I became friends
1:44
is we actually met at E-tail West at a customer event,
1:48
and she was waiting in line to get a tattoo.
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And a tarot card reading.
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- Sorry.
1:54
- Beautiful tattoo.
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- Shout out to our events person,
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Alexandra, customer.
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- She did great.
2:00
- She did great.
2:01
So anyway, so we met in line,
2:04
and we were just vibing,
2:05
and then we started talking about your path, right?
2:09
Like what you do,
2:10
and then we just started nerding out about user journey stuff.
2:13
And I think that it's really important as we talk about
2:16
e-commerce, and we talk about digital experiences,
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even product, product design,
2:22
whatever portions of the actual product
2:25
and like the selling of your product,
2:28
there is a whole user journey behind that.
2:30
Customer experience.
2:31
- Isn't Jeff, oh, hold on.
2:34
One second.
2:35
- Oh.
2:36
Can you still hear me?
2:38
- Yeah, good.
2:38
(laughs)
2:39
- Okay, well, I got that out.
2:41
So I think that customer experience
2:43
isn't just about support, right?
2:45
There's so many other areas that are covered in that.
2:50
This is specifically why I will like,
2:51
really want to turn out about this to you.
2:54
Before we deep dive into user journey stuff though,
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like I'd love for you to tell the audience
2:59
kind of your background,
3:00
and how you worked at Oracle,
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and you were in customer success, cool.
3:04
(laughs)
3:05
Tell those peeps.
3:05
- Yeah, I've had a pretty eclectic journey,
3:07
which I think a lot of people in product have,
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'cause at least at the time,
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it wasn't something you went to school for,
3:11
you just kind of fell into,
3:12
but I started marketing, realized marketing
3:14
was not like my personal journey,
3:16
but I'd always been in digital and technology.
3:19
So I had the opportunity to jump over to a startup,
3:21
which I love, just based on Indianapolis called Compendium.
3:24
They're actually a content marketing startup,
3:25
so it was really in the content marketing space
3:27
as that was like emerging.
3:29
We had a tool for people to create content and manage it,
3:32
and put it out on their sites,
3:33
and then that actually got acquired by Oracle.
3:35
So I was working there for a couple of years
3:37
in customer success,
3:38
just helping people understand our technology,
3:41
how to leverage it, how to maximize it,
3:43
and really, really enjoyed that.
3:44
And then kind of coincidentally,
3:46
had a very random experience with an old boss
3:48
who didn't know I was looking for a job
3:50
when I was kind of apothetically looking for a job,
3:53
and they were opening up the retail stores at Fabladex,
3:55
and he was like, "You should come join us," and I did,
3:57
and it's been great.
3:58
- Yeah, that's so crazy.
4:00
Wait, I wanna double click into your content marketing term.
4:03
- Yeah, yeah.
4:04
- Because, okay, so I'm a CX-er,
4:07
but I really am a marketer, right?
4:09
And this is why I love it,
4:10
and I do, content marketing is just,
4:13
so this is content marketing.
4:14
This moment right here is content marketing, right?
4:17
News letters are all our content marketing,
4:19
and I think that it's like,
4:21
even when you think about e-commerce brands,
4:23
or you think about B2B brands, or companies,
4:27
content marketing is like,
4:28
such another user journey pathway,
4:30
and I think it's so interesting.
4:33
It's like a different way to kind of like,
4:36
sling your product, you know?
4:37
- Oh, for sure, yeah.
4:38
- I'd love to talk to you,
4:40
or I'd love for you to kind of double click into that though,
4:42
like, tell me about, okay,
4:44
so you were a customer success manager in this role,
4:47
but tell me about that user journey within that tool.
4:50
How did you map that out?
4:52
From a B2B perspective, right?
4:55
- It was a very different experience,
4:57
'cause it was also as content marketing
4:58
was still kind of emerging.
5:00
Social was a thing, but it was just not nearly as engaging
5:04
as what we're used to today.
5:05
So a lot of people were like,
5:06
okay, I wanna get more people to my side.
5:08
I think there's this SEO play ear here.
5:10
What do I do with it?
5:12
So a lot of what I would do is talk with people about,
5:14
what are you doing natively, organically,
5:17
within your business, and just talk about that, right?
5:19
And we had a pretty basic tool
5:21
where they were essentially writing blog posts at the time,
5:23
but it supported video, it supported images,
5:25
but just really telling other people
5:27
what was going on with their business,
5:29
and it proved pretty successful.
5:31
- Wow, that's awesome.
5:33
I think that's cool.
5:34
Did you, okay, one question, this is kind of random,
5:38
but a lot of people are combating today AI, right?
5:43
And I don't know much about this tool,
5:45
or the Oracle path, right?
5:47
But I'm curious, in that timeframe,
5:51
is there any sort of AI,
5:53
not necessarily the generative type,
5:54
but intent-based in that tool setting?
5:57
- There was some suggested content,
5:59
it would help you a little bit,
6:01
but a lot of people were trying to outsource the content
6:04
at the time, as opposed to being better
6:05
about creating content internally,
6:07
which I think was actually a big problem.
6:09
The outsource content never had the right voice
6:12
and brand distinction that people really needed
6:14
to feel connected.
6:15
And I think if we'd had AI more at the time,
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as we do today, and you could train it in brand voice
6:21
and being more connected, it would have been more impactful.
6:24
- Yeah, totally.
6:25
I think it's really interesting, the AI question,
6:28
the reason I asked you that is because a lot of people
6:30
are like, oh my God, AI today, but I'm trying to prove
6:34
a point that we've been utilizing some form of AI
6:38
for a long time.
6:39
- I mean machine learning, I mean, so many,
6:41
so much content recommendations and product recommendations
6:43
come from that.
6:44
- Totally personalizations.
6:46
- Exactly.
6:47
Okay, let's go down this journey.
6:49
We're on a roller coaster right now.
6:51
So continuing down your journey, so then you left Oracle
6:55
and then you went to FabLetics,
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and I know that it was an exciting opportunity
6:59
at that moment, right?
7:00
But tell me about your B2B switch to e-commerce
7:04
in user experience specifically.
7:07
- It was very interesting, 'cause I think going
7:10
into FabLetics at the time,
7:11
the brand was still pretty new.
7:12
It wasn't a huge team.
7:14
It was based in LA, which was very different
7:15
from where I was in the Midwest, but what was nice
7:17
is a lot of really scrappy people trying to figure stuff out.
7:21
We don't always have huge teams of people.
7:24
It's a small group of people trying to do
7:25
a lot of really exciting things.
7:27
And I think for me, I was really used to building
7:30
one-on-one connections with customers
7:32
and understanding what they needed
7:34
and really trying to put a path together
7:36
for how do we help grow your business, right?
7:38
- Yeah.
7:39
- And with FabLetics, the transition was nice
7:41
because I was still building those connections,
7:43
and I actually had a really exciting kind of ease
7:45
into the brand because I started with retail.
7:47
So I was in the stores talking to customers,
7:49
learning about the product,
7:50
learning what they loved about our product,
7:52
and that reinforcement and that one-to-one connection,
7:55
when you then go to Econ, you actually sit there
7:58
and you're thinking, okay, what is this human
8:00
at the other end of this machine gonna do?
8:02
It feels so much more personal
8:04
because you've had that connection in person.
8:06
- Totally, totally.
8:07
I mean, we talk about a lot of like NCX teams.
8:10
You get a lot of analytics
8:12
and you get a lot of feedback loops
8:13
and all these pieces of it,
8:14
but I think a very underrated is when we talk
8:18
about omni-channel brands specifically, right?
8:20
So like FabLetics would be an omni-channel brand
8:22
'cause they're available in store,
8:24
then you're available online.
8:25
And what's interesting is that you have insights
8:28
and touch point from the brick and mortar piece of it, right?
8:31
Like the retail piece of it.
8:33
And then I love your journey
8:35
because you basically apply that to the econ.
8:37
- 100%, yeah, like you build that,
8:39
you take all of those learnings
8:40
and then you basically scale it, right?
8:42
How do you do this for more people?
8:44
And we actually still try to keep that connection
8:46
with our associates and digital teams.
8:48
We have in a program called retail experience
8:50
where like everyone goes into a store for a day,
8:53
does comp shopping, talks to the associates,
8:54
talks to customers.
8:56
Like you can't fabricate that,
8:58
like just having that one-on-one moment.
9:00
But I think it's really interesting
9:02
when you try to like, like when people try to go the other way,
9:06
it's harder muscles to build, right?
9:08
Like it's so, it's actually easier kind of going B2B
9:11
to retail to web because like you're just scaling
9:14
your connections essentially,
9:15
whereas people trying to go the other way.
9:17
Like you're so used to thinking at like at a huge scale
9:20
when you try to get down to the one-to-one,
9:21
it's a whole different mindset.
9:23
- It's so, such a different mindset.
9:25
I mean, you know, my past, right,
9:28
and econ like started from like more D2C
9:30
and then went into retail.
9:31
- Yeah.
9:32
- And I think like you lose that first party data.
9:35
Like so, wait, all right, I'm an econ, great.
9:37
I have like first party data 'cause it's like,
9:39
I know the touch points of my customer.
9:41
I can like do all these things.
9:42
I can survey them.
9:43
And the analytics for my customer experience team,
9:45
like all these pieces of the pie,
9:46
but then when you go into retail, you lose that, right?
9:49
- Yeah.
9:50
- And so how do you get them to work together
9:52
and like really complement each other?
9:53
- Yeah.
9:54
- I think a great example too for us
9:55
is we have a lot of situations where you're like the data
9:58
will kind of like suggest something,
9:59
like maybe a trend with like a product's not fitting
10:01
or something like that.
10:02
We actually just talk to the retail associates
10:04
and ask what they think.
10:05
And nine times out of 10, they know the answer.
10:07
- Dude, it's fantastic.
10:09
- If you are a brick and mortar store,
10:10
I just wanna say this, if you're a brick and mortar store
10:12
or you're in retail, you're considering retail,
10:15
do not underate your retail employees because they know
10:19
your customer better than you do in econ.
10:22
Like straight up.
10:22
- They do, they really do.
10:24
And they know that people come to the stores all the time.
10:26
Like they understand the trends that are coming in.
10:28
I think it's such an underutilized like component
10:30
of the business 'cause you think,
10:32
oh, well they're just selling,
10:33
but they're doing so much more.
10:34
And I think if you have the right retail leadership,
10:36
they can embody the brand in a way that's so authentic
10:39
and so real and really amplify the brand for you.
10:42
- Yeah, because like it's that human connection.
10:43
Like you're literally there.
10:45
And I think that retail experience pathway too,
10:48
of like if you are an omni-channel brand,
10:49
like having that like retail experience is so important.
10:52
So not just like, like y'all do that,
10:54
but Glossier also does that.
10:55
- That's great.
10:56
- Glossier like also has like a retail experience
10:58
where you go in like you work at the store
11:00
for like some time because it's like,
11:01
there's such valuable touch points.
11:03
Granted, you're both companies that own brick and mortar though.
11:07
You own that like retail experience.
11:09
So it's like, it is a little bit harder
11:12
for like an e-commerce brand that's maybe like going
11:15
into Walmart.
11:16
- 100%.
11:17
- Right.
11:18
- It would definitely be more challenging.
11:19
- But from your like product and like UX,
11:22
like just knowledge, right?
11:23
Like what's a hot tip that you would give to a brand
11:26
that's like entering retail, right?
11:30
And maybe like is it completely different?
11:32
Like in a scrappier way, like what,
11:34
what would you suggest to a brand to like capture
11:37
some sort of like data or survey touch points?
11:39
- Yeah, I mean, I think, you know,
11:41
we talk about omni-channel a lot
11:43
and we always talk about like you have to meet
11:44
the customer where they are.
11:46
And it's like, it's easy to say,
11:47
but it actually really is true.
11:49
And we found it's really impactful to like acknowledge
11:52
where the customer prefers to shop and meet them there.
11:55
And also like make sure the journeys
11:57
are gonna talk to each other.
11:58
So like we have some technology that we built
12:00
in our retail stores where like if you go
12:01
into the fitting room, we actually like add your account
12:04
and we scan you into the fitting room
12:05
and we know what you're trying on.
12:07
And like that just then, it's like a huge feedback loop, right?
12:10
- Yeah.
12:10
- And I think there's these little moments
12:12
that are like natural within a store
12:13
that people kind of forget about when you're thinking big
12:16
econ, but like you have to kind of break those moments down
12:18
in a retail store and think about those interactions
12:20
and how you can like really create
12:22
like a nice tight feedback loop for the customer
12:24
and for the brand.
12:25
- Yeah.
12:26
- Man retail experiences are like when you own
12:28
the retail experience and you can like do some crazy stuff.
12:31
I recently went into, I think it was Abercrombie
12:35
'cause Abercrombie's making a comeback.
12:37
- Oh yeah, they are.
12:38
- They are making a comeback, my friends, okay?
12:42
But I recently went into Abercrombie
12:43
and this is like nothing to do with data.
12:45
But I went to go try on clothing and in the dressing room,
12:50
they had like a hole where you could set the mood,
12:52
the lighting, you could charge your phone.
12:54
- I mean, if I'm in the dressing room that long,
12:57
I'm a little wickin' stern, I'm not gonna lie, right?
13:00
- But I think just like that retail experience
13:04
is just such a different type of customer experience.
13:07
- It is, it is.
13:08
And I think we often think about it.
13:09
Like obviously your associates have to be fantastic
13:11
and like the store has to feel fantastic.
13:12
Like those are givens, but I think how you can leverage
13:15
technology to amplify the experience is like people
13:18
are starting to do it more, but I think it's just such
13:20
an untapped opportunity.
13:22
- RFID opens up so much, I think that's been a huge unlock.
13:25
- Yeah, for the people out there who don't know what RFT is,
13:28
can you break that and I really don't know.
13:31
- Yeah, I don't know the acronym actually,
13:32
which is really embarrassing.
13:34
- Man, do I Google it?
13:35
- Yeah, you can Google it.
13:36
(laughing)
13:37
- Don't worry, for the people listening,
13:39
we will definitely put this in the show notes
13:42
or at the Acronem.
13:45
Essentially, RFID technology, it's like allows you
13:49
to have an individual digital code on every product
13:53
or skew in your store, so you know where the product,
13:56
like if you have the right beacons in your store,
13:57
you know where the product is, you know
13:59
if they've tried it on.
14:00
- Yeah.
14:00
- You can track product around the store.
14:02
- Talk about a user journey though.
14:04
- You can get so much interesting data.
14:05
- So much interesting data.
14:07
- Okay, okay, wait, can we break this down a little bit more?
14:10
Okay, 'cause I'm more of like an e-comp girl, right?
14:14
Like you have way more retail experience.
14:16
I mean, trust me, I worked at Best Buy,
14:17
the returns calendar when I was like 19.
14:20
I like dealt with some angry customers my day.
14:23
- Okay, I'm sure.
14:25
- But not like on these like levels, right?
14:27
- Yeah, yeah.
14:28
- But I think that's really interesting,
14:29
like that user journey of like all the, like the tracking,
14:32
it's like, it's so different.
14:34
You go to a website and it's like,
14:35
there's a pixel to tell you the journey, right?
14:37
- Right.
14:38
- But in store, it's like you gotta like physically figure
14:40
that out, right?
14:41
- Well, like think about it, right?
14:42
You have a product on your front table, like super cute,
14:45
customer picks it up, they walk around the store with it,
14:47
they go into the fitting room with it,
14:48
they come out of the fitting room with it,
14:50
but then they don't buy it, right?
14:51
Like what happened?
14:52
- Why did they not buy it?
14:53
- How do you find that out, right?
14:55
So like those are things that we're asking and answering
14:57
because we wanna understand what's going on with our product
14:59
and like what the gap is.
15:01
So we actually, a couple of years ago now,
15:03
we actually found a really bad fit issue
15:04
with one of our products based on fitting room conversion data.
15:08
So essentially people in like a certain size range,
15:11
we're converting at a really high rate,
15:12
but our smaller sizes weren't.
15:13
And we found it was just a great issue
15:14
on the bottom of the legging
15:16
where just didn't quite fit, right?
15:17
- So interesting.
15:19
- Yeah.
15:19
- So interesting.
15:20
Okay, well let's, like, I wanna keep talking about retail,
15:24
but I also wanna like kind of like talk about the user journey
15:27
into like e-commerce, right?
15:29
So like what do you guys do at FabLetics
15:31
to kind of like gather like from a feedback loop perspective,
15:35
gather information from your like customer experience teams?
15:37
Like when analytics are you like utilizing?
15:40
- We have a very robust partnership with our analytics team.
15:43
We quarterly get like quarterly trackers.
15:46
We ask customers how their, you know, brand sentiment is.
15:48
It really helps us identify like spikes or trends.
15:51
So if like something really jumps out at us
15:52
like a quality issue,
15:53
we can investigate that really quickly.
15:55
We also have a really good connection with our,
15:57
what we call global member services, our GMS team.
16:00
We meet with them every other week
16:02
and they really do a great job of surfacing up trends
16:05
of like complaints or concerns or feedback from customers.
16:08
And what's been great is obviously it alerts us
16:09
like if there's a bug or something, you know,
16:11
on the site that we have to look at,
16:13
but they've also alerted us to like this flow is just off.
16:16
Like this is kind of like a dead end.
16:17
How do we improve this experience?
16:19
And I feel like it makes all of us better
16:22
because a like we're listening to the customers,
16:23
we're taking their feedback,
16:24
we're making their experience better.
16:26
But like then we are informing our partners on,
16:29
okay, we're going to make this update.
16:30
You can let the customers know.
16:31
Like it's a really nice like holistic partnership
16:34
that I hope every brand has
16:36
because I don't know how we, what we would do without it.
16:38
- I know.
16:39
I think, and I know we're talking about like enterprise brand
16:42
right now, but I think that like there's a lot of lessons
16:47
to be learned from even like a smaller brand too.
16:50
Like that feedback loop is so important
16:52
because it informs your user journey on website,
16:55
in your product, like everything.
16:57
Like especially if your subscription program too,
17:00
like why are your customers turning out?
17:02
Why are they repeating like and doubling down
17:05
on those areas, you know?
17:07
- It's very real.
17:08
- Is your CX team, so like tell me the flow
17:11
into like conversations like, I'm just curious.
17:14
- It's like, so you like retail, right?
17:16
But then you also have like subscriptions
17:18
and like all these other like e-commerce pathways.
17:21
But like do you have, how is your team structured
17:25
in the sense of like, is there some sort
17:27
of like omni-channel team subscription?
17:29
Like tell me about that breakdown.
17:31
- Yeah, so we're a little bit functionally oriented internally.
17:34
So we have our global member services team
17:35
that takes all of our customer feedback
17:37
and it every it's that, we have our member insights team
17:39
that's doing more like proactive research.
17:42
We also do events at our corporate office,
17:44
office called Meet the Member,
17:46
where we actually like bring customers in
17:47
and we like interview them, talk to them,
17:49
get their brand sentiment.
17:50
Which is hugely helpful when you're doing
17:52
an English show. - Experience for marketing baby.
17:54
- It's stellar.
17:55
And like usually like I think it, to tangent a second,
17:57
the Meet the Members are fantastic
17:59
because the customers are so excited about the brand.
18:01
Like they love the brand as much as we do.
18:03
And it's like just such like a buzz, like a good vibe
18:06
when they're like juiced on the brand,
18:08
just as much as you are.
18:09
Which is really just empowering to see that.
18:11
- Yeah.
18:12
- So yeah, we have our member insights team,
18:14
our global member services team.
18:16
And then we have like essentially a retail ops team
18:18
that'll help facilitate and field stuff.
18:21
And then obviously our technology team.
18:22
And we're just kind of like all circularly connecting
18:25
as much as we can on the right topics.
18:27
- Yeah, God.
18:29
I mean, I love that breakdown.
18:31
I mean, granted, I know,
18:32
this we're talking about enterprise here, right?
18:34
But I think there's so many lessons to be learned.
18:37
Another brand that kind of breaks down like functionally.
18:40
- Yeah.
18:41
- Like smaller is called Sundays for dogs.
18:44
It's a dog food company, my home girl Madison,
18:47
she's her episode's coming out this week.
18:50
She runs the member services or member experience team, right?
18:55
So it's similar to like the global and like your global team.
18:59
But she's very specific to the subscriptions, right?
19:03
Whereas like the additional support team is very specific
19:08
to like general support or like other avenues.
19:11
And I think doubling down from like a function level like that,
19:15
especially if your subscription service is so important
19:18
because those are your VIP customers
19:20
and like those VIP customers and like treating them very well,
19:24
giving them that kind of like VIP experience
19:26
is going to play into retention.
19:28
- Right, it does.
19:29
And I think we talk about that internally because like for us,
19:32
the membership is almost part of the product, right?
19:35
Like the membership is such a value that you get,
19:37
you know, when you shop with Fabladex.
19:39
It's hard to disassociate it and like it's weird.
19:42
You need to have like a focus on it as a company.
19:45
So like maybe you need to have a human,
19:46
but you really need everybody internally to understand it,
19:49
adopt it and be thinking about it
19:51
because if you don't make, that's the biggest thing I've learned.
19:53
If you don't make the decisions that make the sense,
19:55
most sense for the membership and for the customer,
19:58
they might be great e-comm decisions,
20:00
but membership has its own mechanics.
20:02
- Totally.
20:03
- And it's really hard and especially when new people come in
20:06
and they've never done membership before,
20:07
they could be the best e-commerce marketer, whoever.
20:10
But if you don't understand their mechanics and membership,
20:12
it's really, really hard to make the right calls.
20:14
- I mean, absolutely, it's a completely different user journey.
20:17
- It's such a different user journey.
20:18
- And like I see this very often in a lot of like e-commerce brands
20:21
of like understanding from like a retention marketing perspective,
20:24
like, okay, like I want to understand like my,
20:27
like how I can upsell like in subscriptions,
20:31
but like I also want to understand like why people are turning out
20:34
and what I, and a trend that I always see
20:37
across like multiple different types of brands, right?
20:39
Like it doesn't matter if you're athletic leisure
20:42
or you're, you know, a chocolate brand, right?
20:45
- Yeah.
20:46
- What I see often is they always fall out around the month three.
20:49
- Oh my God, yeah.
20:50
- Right?
20:51
- Yeah.
20:52
- Why is that?
20:53
Why is that?
20:53
- I mean, we actually, we've recently updated our loyalty program
20:56
to actually get more benefits for staying three months or more
21:00
because that is such a 10-day-night.
21:01
- Yeah, yeah, that's funny.
21:03
- That makes sense.
21:03
It's always that 90-day mark.
21:05
I mean, granted every brand is very different,
21:08
but there's something that happens
21:09
in the consumer psychology at 90 days.
21:13
- I mean, I sometimes wonder, is it like you lose kind of
21:16
the excitement and the hype and there's so much else out there
21:19
that you just kind of like you're onto the next?
21:21
Like I feel like there's a piece of it that's like our culture
21:23
is like there's so much like next, next, next, next.
21:26
Is it just people are ready to move on?
21:28
I don't know.
21:29
I think it's a little bit of that,
21:30
but then I think also you,
21:33
you know when you're like on a subscription,
21:36
you just kind of like forget about it
21:37
and then you remember when it charges you?
21:40
- Yeah.
21:41
- I think it's that, it's like 90-day mark
21:42
when I'm actually looking at it.
21:43
I'm making saving and I'm like, oh, that's Stitch Fix, huh?
21:47
- There it is.
21:48
- Yeah, I remember, dude, I actually remember one time,
21:50
I was like a part of Stitch Fix.
21:52
- Yeah, yeah.
21:53
- Sorry Stitch Fix.
21:54
- Hell geez.
21:55
But I was a part of Stitch Fix and I was so busy in my life,
21:59
I kept forgetting to cancel it.
22:01
And it was probably like a good six to nine months actually.
22:05
I was their best customer because I just forgot to cancel.
22:08
- You're obviously great.
22:08
- I know, and then like I would like get to,
22:11
I would get the box and then I'd be like,
22:13
I would never really look at the clothes
22:15
and I just keep sending it back.
22:17
And I don't know why I just didn't get online and cancel it.
22:20
- Oh yeah.
22:21
- Talk about a user journey.
22:22
- Yeah, that's, but why didn't they catch you?
22:24
Like I feel like they should have caught that you were doing that.
22:26
And like they could have proactively paused you
22:28
and it would have been such a better experience for you.
22:30
- I know, but do you think that they didn't catch me
22:32
because they're so large in the sense
22:34
that they are like probably not doing that pro activity?
22:37
- I mean, potentially, but like those are things you can query
22:39
and they have to have a bucket that they're looking at.
22:42
Okay, here they're people who are like passively engaged,
22:44
they're getting a shift but they're not buying
22:45
and we're getting their $20 whatever every month.
22:48
- Right.
22:49
I don't think it was $20.
22:50
I think it was more than that.
22:51
(laughing)
22:52
- I think it was even sometimes where I forgot
22:54
to send things back and then I would get charged.
22:56
- All the glowers.
22:57
- You just have piles of ditch bags.
22:59
You know what I'm trying to do?
23:00
- Dude, dude.
23:01
Oh my God.
23:02
Talk about like membership services though.
23:04
Like on like completely outside of subscriptions,
23:08
ESOs has like a whole membership service
23:11
where you can sign up and you get free,
23:13
like you get quicker shipping, like two day shipping or whatever.
23:17
So that's another one that I would be like,
23:19
I order all the things that I knew I'd get them in time
23:21
for that event, right?
23:22
And then I'd forget to like return them
23:24
and I'd end up with like a closet full of ESOs
23:26
and I'm never worn.
23:28
(laughing)
23:29
Just like as a consumer behavior,
23:31
I'm like the worst one for subscriptions.
23:33
So now that I'm grown and I've worked in e-commerce,
23:37
I definitely have grown up a little bit.
23:39
- Yeah.
23:40
- I cancel the services.
23:41
- Good job.
23:42
Good job.
23:42
- I will say that like for our customers,
23:44
we wouldn't go in the retail store.
23:45
Like I've had a social tool just like remind the customer
23:48
like put it on your calendar right now.
23:49
- Yeah.
23:50
- Like just do it.
23:51
Like remember to the shopper skip, it's nobody deal.
23:52
I know.
23:53
And make those journeys easy.
23:54
Like that going back to what I was saying too
23:56
is like I probably didn't cancel it
23:58
because I was probably like,
23:59
didn't want to go through the daunting step
24:01
of like remembering my password to go into these things.
24:04
And like, and I get that you don't want people
24:06
to turn out, right?
24:08
But still make it easy.
24:09
Like if you make that user journey easy to skip,
24:12
cancel or whatever,
24:14
you're more likely to be able to keep those customers.
24:17
- Right.
24:17
Right.
24:18
Or they're going to be happier with the experience
24:19
and they're going to be want, they're going to come back.
24:20
Like that's what we find.
24:21
Like we have a pretty healthy reactivation program
24:24
of people who like bought a bunch of stuff,
24:26
canceled and then they come back because like,
24:29
I can understand it, right?
24:30
You only maybe need workout clothes,
24:31
like so many workout clothes for a period of time, right?
24:33
And then, okay, you're good.
24:34
And then you come back and we're,
24:36
welcome them with open arms.
24:37
They're welcome.
24:38
- Yeah, like come back.
24:39
- Yeah.
24:40
Well, that's actually a good segue
24:41
into cause we didn't even talk about it.
24:42
Like tell me about phabletics.
24:43
Like it's not just phabletics,
24:45
it's not just the brick and mortar.
24:46
Like tell me the different brands
24:48
that actually sit under you.
24:49
- Yeah.
24:50
- So, phabletics, women's,
24:51
which is our first big brand that we launched.
24:53
We also sell men's wear now.
24:55
So that's a really big component of business.
24:57
We also have scrubs.
24:58
And then we have kind of a sister brand Yiddy,
25:02
which is included in the membership,
25:04
but that's shapewear, which is a huge success
25:06
in the sense that that was the number one product
25:08
our customers wanted from us.
25:09
So we offered a new membership with a shapewear.
25:12
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26:15
How did you guys do the research and insights
26:19
into understanding that?
26:20
I know, was it like surveying touch points
26:22
and then doubling down more?
26:24
Yeah, we did a lot of investigation on it.
26:26
So, I mean, I've been on the leadership team
26:29
for a couple of years and shape where it consistently popped
26:31
in our normal surveys of what else
26:33
would you wanna see from public edicts consistently shape where,
26:36
which there's an associated product garment fit
26:38
that makes sense.
26:39
I can see why that would pop.
26:41
But then once we started talking about it,
26:42
we did more surveys to understand
26:44
what they actually want from us.
26:45
So one of the things about Fabletics is like,
26:47
we're cute, fun, activewear.
26:49
We're not like, you know, just the blacks and grays and beige.
26:52
Like we have a lot of fun prints and fun colors
26:55
and we realized that that's what she wanted applied
26:57
to her shaper as well.
26:58
So we're like, yes, of course we have your basics,
27:00
but then we also have really fun, vibrant things
27:03
that customers are really excited about.
27:04
And we found out that nugget from a lot of the research
27:07
we did before we launched the brand.
27:09
Cool, I love that.
27:10
I love that.
27:11
I think it's really important again,
27:13
surveying your customers, doubling down on insights,
27:15
feedback looping, like I don't know how many,
27:17
this is the feedback loop episode,
27:19
like seriously, like use the analytics from your team.
27:23
Okay, your CX team, I guarantee has a lot of info for you.
27:27
Right.
27:28
Yeah, I think that's really interesting.
27:30
I think it, how long has Fabletics been around actually?
27:33
About 10 years.
27:34
Wow.
27:35
Yeah.
27:36
It's been 10 years.
27:37
Yeah, I know.
27:37
What?
27:38
(laughs)
27:39
That's so wild.
27:41
And you've worked there for eight of those.
27:42
Yeah, like eight, yeah, like eight and a half.
27:44
It's wild.
27:45
That's so...
27:46
We were babies and now we're grown up.
27:48
Don't you love that, like watching your little baby company
27:51
grow up?
27:52
It's lovely.
27:52
It's really beautiful.
27:53
Mat toddler than a teenager.
27:54
And then they're like just the pain points.
27:56
Well then it's like you have new humans to do new things
27:58
and you're like, oh my gosh, we have people to do that now?
28:00
Yes, and you're so excited.
28:02
What number employee were you?
28:04
I actually don't know.
28:05
It wasn't that early on for me to count.
28:08
Yeah, but how many employees are, is Fabletics now?
28:11
Roughly, it doesn't have to be.
28:12
It's probably like 500-ish.
28:14
That's like corporate.
28:15
That's not including the field and our fulfillment center.
28:19
So yeah, it's pretty decent size.
28:21
And you guys are on your own fulfillment?
28:23
Yes.
28:24
Oh yeah.
28:25
Yeah.
28:26
I think you have to at some point, right?
28:27
Like when you become like enterprise, like...
28:29
Well, we actually have a whole, we have a very interesting
28:32
approach to that.
28:32
So we've built a ton of our own technology internally,
28:36
including our fulfillment center technology,
28:38
our retail technology, and obviously our website.
28:40
And then they all kind of talk to each other.
28:41
Like the way I used to describe the retail tech is it was
28:44
essentially the baby of our warehouse and our website.
28:46
They came together to handle the, you know,
28:47
in store fulfillment pieces,
28:49
plus obviously selling the product.
28:50
And I think that's really helped us in a lot of ways
28:53
because we can be so much more nimble and flexible to the needs
28:57
of our customers and our membership and adapt and change
29:00
in a way that I think if you had kind of off the shelf stuff,
29:03
it's sometimes hard to do.
29:04
Yeah, I agree with you.
29:06
I think I totally agree with you.
29:08
I think that at some point, like, at least your users,
29:13
your customers journey, like some things,
29:15
like it can't be a Shopify app.
29:17
No, it's just, it's not flexible enough, right?
29:19
Yeah.
29:20
So like if you, like for example,
29:21
we recently made some updates to our loyalty program,
29:23
did a lot of enhancements there.
29:24
And there's pieces of that that flow through the system.
29:27
And I think if we had tried to do that, you know,
29:28
with a bunch of partners, it would have taken so much more,
29:31
so much longer, been so much more complex
29:32
and probably wouldn't have like hit,
29:34
like it needed to hit for the customer.
29:36
Yeah.
29:37
You know, tell me about the breakdown.
29:39
I actually have quite a few questions, right?
29:41
But I want to go back to that loyalty comment.
29:43
Yeah.
29:43
Tell me about the breakdown from like,
29:45
okay, so you have your membership,
29:46
you have your subscription,
29:47
then you have your loyalty, right?
29:48
Yeah.
29:50
And a lot of people like talk about customer loyalty,
29:52
not just from like a feedback loop perspective,
29:55
like, or doing things for like personalization,
29:58
for your customer, but like loyalty program, right?
30:01
Yeah.
30:01
How did you guys approach going from subscriptions to loyalty?
30:05
It was challenging.
30:06
So we had a version of the loyalty program
30:09
that was like, it was kind of independent
30:12
of the concept of membership,
30:13
which the perks were great.
30:15
It was a good program,
30:16
but it didn't, it was too much for the normal consumer
30:19
to understand about the brand.
30:20
Like, I had to understand the mechanics of membership
30:22
and then wait, I have to understand how loyalty works.
30:24
Like, we needed to figure out how to make them talk together
30:26
and that's what we've done recently.
30:28
So for example, in the way we've updated the program,
30:30
we actually have tied the perks to your tenure
30:33
as opposed to like some sort of spend threshold, right?
30:35
Which makes a lot more sense
30:36
because we want to encourage longevity,
30:38
we want to encourage people to stay longer,
30:39
so let's give them more benefit
30:41
for staying that extra period of time.
30:43
Yeah.
30:43
And then we still offer additional like benefits, right?
30:45
So as you purchase, you do get points,
30:47
but then you can redeem them for free product.
30:49
So it's like, we're kind of continuing
30:51
to keep that cycle of like, try new things,
30:53
buy with us, but like the core of it
30:55
is more about longevity now,
30:57
which I think makes more sense
30:58
in the concept of membership.
30:59
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.
31:02
And I think I really like that approach.
31:04
I think like when a lot of people think about like loyalty
31:07
versus subscription and like putting that all together,
31:09
like how do you think, so when you think about like
31:13
giving the free product, is there a certain,
31:16
and I don't mean like, and I mean your opinion,
31:18
it doesn't have to be like fat bloodaches,
31:19
but like, is there a certain threshold of cost?
31:23
Like it needs to be good product.
31:25
Right, it needs to be good product.
31:26
Cause it's like, listen, we can break that down
31:28
to like what the margin is and all these other things, right?
31:31
But it's like, I've seen, you know,
31:32
companies out there give a free product
31:34
for like a water bottle and it's like a really crappy
31:36
plastic water bottle.
31:37
So underwhelming, yeah.
31:38
It's so underwhelming, exactly.
31:40
And then people get complaints about the free water bottle,
31:42
right?
31:43
Yeah.
31:43
So it's like, how do you approach like saying like,
31:46
okay, I wanna give this like, I wanna give you like loyalty
31:50
and you earn your rewards and all these things
31:52
and I give you free products or I give you discounts,
31:53
but like, how do you approach which product
31:55
to even give them?
31:56
Yeah, it's, I mean our merch team does a really good job
31:58
trying to think proactively about it
32:00
because there's a lot of different lenses
32:01
with which we're allocating like kind of special product.
32:03
So we have, if you remember with us a certain amount
32:06
of time or longer, you get exclusive product,
32:08
then you have the product in your loyalty shop,
32:10
then you have the product that we're just launching
32:11
on a regular basis.
32:12
But in the loyalty shop specifically,
32:14
we try to do stuff that's like,
32:16
that's gonna be beneficial and like valuable
32:18
to the customer, but maybe it's something
32:21
they haven't explored before.
32:22
So one of my favorites that we had in the reward shop recently
32:25
was this dash bra.
32:27
It's like a really cute kind of low impact bra
32:28
with like really strappy back.
32:30
It actually was a top seller when I first joined.
32:33
So like in our first like couple years of business,
32:34
it was a huge hit, we kind of discontinued it.
32:37
And then we brought it back as part of like an exclusive
32:39
10 year anniversary.
32:40
And then for the, like we added to the reward shop as well.
32:43
So it's like we're really trying to like build
32:45
that brand story, like we talked about it kind of from a
32:48
loyalty, I mean from a anniversary perspective,
32:51
but then putting it in the reward shop,
32:53
like it adds more value to the shop
32:55
by having products like that
32:56
that people like genuinely really want.
32:58
Yeah, and it's understanding like the product
33:00
that the people genuinely really want, right?
33:02
And it's not, you don't got to go out
33:04
and like reinvent the wheel, right?
33:05
But it's like taking those analytics and like that data
33:08
of like what your customers really like.
33:10
Exactly.
33:10
Yeah.
33:11
And I mean listening to the reviews.
33:13
Oh, for sure.
33:13
Oh yeah.
33:14
We're huge on reviews.
33:15
Yeah.
33:16
You're huge on reviews.
33:17
Cause people will review their free product.
33:18
Oh yeah.
33:19
They will share an opinion.
33:20
Oh, they give you all, all the tea.
33:21
Like excuse me, this was free for you.
33:24
Oh yeah.
33:25
I like, I've seen brands like the free water bottle thing.
33:29
I've like seen the brand in particular,
33:32
I'm not going to name names,
33:33
but like I've seen this brand get really negative reviews
33:36
on water bottle that was free.
33:38
And I'm like, excuse me.
33:40
Can you like review maybe the product
33:43
that you got in your box?
33:45
Not the water bottle.
33:46
But I think that's the thing is like
33:48
for the normal average customer, they don't care.
33:50
They don't care who bought it.
33:52
They don't care that it was like a vendor supplied thing.
33:54
Yeah.
33:55
It stands for your brand.
33:56
It has your logo on it.
33:57
It needs to be a good product.
33:58
Right.
33:59
I'm just going to stand behind it.
33:59
Well, that talks into like the entirety
34:01
of like brand experience, right?
34:03
It's like every piece that you're doing
34:06
isn't just about you just putting out like,
34:10
okay, I'm going to put out like a great user journey
34:12
and a customer experience or a great product, right?
34:14
Every piece, even the free stuff, even the technology,
34:17
like this, that and the other thing
34:18
have to be an exemplification of your brand
34:21
and the brand experience.
34:23
And again, this is why customer experience
34:25
isn't just customer support, right?
34:28
Right.
34:29
You really have to like be very holistic
34:31
and how you approach it.
34:32
I mean, we think about that from, you know,
34:33
for our new customers, they go through like a quiz
34:35
when they first get started.
34:37
And we get a lot of information about that customer.
34:39
And like, it's the first touch point.
34:40
It has to be great.
34:41
Like if you, it has to communicate, deliver value,
34:45
and that's something we're really sensitive to.
34:47
And I think it's often forgotten
34:48
how much all of those things will connect over time, right?
34:52
Like that customer took that quiz at the very beginning.
34:54
They've been with us for a while, but they're like,
34:56
oh wait, will you guys already have my sizes?
34:58
Because I took the quiz.
34:59
Like you reinforce the behaviors that you wanna see.
35:01
Right.
35:02
Because you're asking me the right info
35:04
and you're thinking about what they need.
35:05
Right, absolutely.
35:07
Going back to quizzes now.
35:08
'Cause listen, everybody out there,
35:10
we got a user experience designer up in this podcast.
35:13
So I'm gonna break down the consumer psychology
35:16
and like just use our journeys and everything you're saying.
35:18
But like, walk me through the quiz, right?
35:22
'Cause I also find a lot of brands like,
35:24
like, oh, I'm gonna do this quiz, right?
35:27
And they pop it on because yes,
35:28
the information that you get about your customer.
35:30
But how do you approach the questions actually being asked?
35:34
Yeah, it's a good question.
35:36
It's a combination of what's valuable for us as a brand
35:40
and then what makes sense for a customer
35:42
to wanna engage with, right?
35:44
So we're actually kind of in the midst
35:45
of doing some testing on different types of questions
35:48
and we're gonna kind of explore it in more depth.
35:50
But when you really break it down,
35:52
there's so many variables that can drive
35:54
how a customer perceives a quiz
35:56
or even just a question within a quiz, right?
35:57
Like, does the image resonate?
35:59
If the images aren't great,
36:00
that they might not be tuned in, right?
36:03
Is the copy correct or confusing, right?
36:06
How do they navigate through it?
36:08
We found there's so much variation
36:09
in each of those elements
36:10
that you kind of have to be intentional about how you test.
36:13
But for us, it's like, we wanna get the information
36:16
that's gonna help us provide a better experience back.
36:18
Right.
36:19
So it's like that, it's that balance, right?
36:21
You don't wanna go too much and like ask them the farm,
36:23
but you wanna get enough
36:24
that you can inform their experience.
36:26
Yeah, absolutely.
36:28
I think that's a really great approach 'cause like I said,
36:31
like I see a lot of brands doing these quizzes, right?
36:34
And I think that's really great
36:35
and like you're gathering data,
36:37
like it's a good way to like,
36:38
but it's not just like slap it on the website
36:41
and like, okay, great, like, now I've quizzed my customer
36:44
and I'm gonna like personalize some recommendations, right?
36:47
I mean, and then actually that's a whole other piece.
36:49
Like how, like you guys probably have,
36:51
how many skews do you have?
36:52
Do you know, roughly?
36:53
A couple thousand.
36:54
Yeah, yeah, right.
36:55
It's not a huge catalog.
36:56
Right, but you have more variety
36:58
than like a company who might have like 10,
37:01
you know what I mean?
37:02
Right, right.
37:03
So like, if I'm a company who is like 10,
37:05
like think about it in a scrappy way,
37:06
like how would you approach the like personalize
37:08
recommendations, like would you like catalog them,
37:11
like or create them into collections?
37:14
Like what would your approach be?
37:15
I think I'd probably wanna explore like,
37:18
like the education of the product and then matching that.
37:21
So like, if you were to do a quizzed example,
37:22
probably more about like product attribute,
37:25
like data to inform a recommendation
37:28
as opposed to like more generic to narrow down,
37:31
like it's supposed to like a filtering down a set.
37:33
It's about choosing within the set that makes sense.
37:36
Yeah, yeah.
37:36
Yeah, that makes, that makes sense.
37:38
I like that approach.
37:39
I wanted to talk also about journey mapping
37:44
because I think that's a hot topic
37:45
in customer experience, right?
37:47
And I think like you would have so many tips on that.
37:50
Like actually, just in my like CX group chat the other day
37:55
with like one of my home girls, she was like,
37:56
who has a template for a customer journey map?
37:58
And I was like, I just Googled this
38:00
and this is what I use.
38:01
You're right, you're right.
38:02
But what would like, so if somebody came to you
38:05
and was like, what's your approach
38:07
for customer journey mapping?
38:08
Like, is there a template?
38:11
Like what would the suggestion be?
38:13
It's a hot tip.
38:14
Like we are huge white borders and we use Miro
38:17
very often for like digital whiteboarding
38:20
and that's hugely impactful for us.
38:22
Just like, it's important to think about
38:26
the whole soup to nuts experience.
38:28
I think it's really easy and I even find this sometimes
38:30
with you know, folks on my team like,
38:31
okay, it starts here on the website
38:33
and then it's gonna end here.
38:34
And it's like, but what happened around it?
38:36
I think that's sometimes what we often forget.
38:39
Yes.
38:40
There's more going on than just like your little sliver
38:43
of focus.
38:44
And I'm a big like collaborator.
38:45
So like we were very cross-functionally collaborative.
38:48
So like we'll pull in people from different pieces
38:50
like parts of the business to like validate and fact check
38:53
pieces that we might have forgotten.
38:54
Like, oh wait, you're gonna forget,
38:55
GMS is gonna get that contact.
38:57
So like this how it could circle back.
38:59
I think that's super, super helpful.
39:00
It's very hard to do it effectively in a silo.
39:04
I think it's much better done when you collaborate with group.
39:07
That's more of a hot take, okay?
39:10
Like absolutely because like I often see this, right?
39:14
Like I often see this where it's like,
39:16
okay, I'm in the CX side and I'm gonna go and like build
39:20
a customer journey map, but nobody else does it, right?
39:24
Like marketing doesn't get involved,
39:26
fulfillment doesn't get involved, all these other avenues.
39:28
But like these are all touch points that we're talking about.
39:30
Like start thinking about it from like a collaboration.
39:33
A hundred percent.
39:34
Yeah.
39:35
Like I think, you know, it's very easy to get like focused
39:37
in your day to day focused on what you're doing.
39:40
But I feel like it's, you're gonna be like 99% better
39:44
if you ask a few people and you include more folks.
39:46
It's like people aren't comfortable doing it sometimes.
39:48
I'm a huge believer in like you should be vulnerable,
39:52
be comfortable saying what you don't know,
39:53
be comfortable asking for help
39:55
because you're only gonna do better work
39:57
if you can approach kind of your work with that mindset.
39:59
Yeah, absolutely.
40:00
I'd love to like kind of switch gears
40:04
and talk about AI again, right?
40:06
Like so I know we talked about it in the beginning
40:08
of like AI usage and like your previous past
40:11
and like content marketing, right?
40:12
And like, you know, proving the fact that we all
40:15
before using AI.
40:16
(laughs)
40:17
But what's your approach to AI today though, right?
40:20
Like how are you thinking about AI and like
40:24
just anything that you're like,
40:26
that you're doing in your field?
40:28
Yeah, so I think there's two angles.
40:30
And I think you've talked about this previously.
40:31
There's like the internal experience
40:33
and kind of the external experience for the customer.
40:35
Internally, my biggest hot take,
40:37
if you're not using an AI note taking tool,
40:39
you are doing the wrong work.
40:40
100%.
40:42
Like, oh, that's a hot take that I might need to do.
40:44
You have to do it.
40:45
It is life changing.
40:46
Like once here.
40:47
Once it's, no, it's like,
40:49
I find that you're so much more engaged
40:51
once you have those on, like you're not trying to like
40:53
furiously take notes and like keep up with action items.
40:55
Once you trust the tool that you use,
40:58
it just you show up so much better.
40:59
So like that's my biggest AI win,
41:01
I think in recent memory is the meeting tools are great.
41:05
We're also big proponents of finding ways
41:07
to do more more quickly internally.
41:09
So like there's obviously like, you know,
41:11
chatbots with GMS, you know, we are big on how do we write
41:14
our requirements and do some of our discovery work
41:16
in partnership with like a chat GPT.
41:18
Yeah.
41:19
Because there's no like, I don't need you as my product manager
41:21
to write every line of the requirements.
41:23
You just need to understand
41:24
what the requirements supposed to do,
41:26
leverage a tool to help you get there.
41:28
Right.
41:29
From a customer perspective,
41:30
I think there's a lot kind of coming in the market
41:32
that's pretty exciting.
41:33
One thing I'm looking at right now
41:35
is potentially integrating kind of like an AI chat bot
41:37
potentially on our PDP.
41:39
Yeah.
41:40
So the customer can like ask questions about the product
41:42
and like get more information.
41:43
It's still really early,
41:45
but I think that could be super, super helpful.
41:47
It's just like help us understand the details on a product.
41:50
Dude, I did this with Feastwills.
41:53
I think this might be a workshop session right now.
41:56
(laughing)
41:58
No, I did that with Feastwills.
41:59
I took, so you know, I was trying to solve a problem.
42:03
So not that you're interviewing me,
42:06
but like just how I like approach this, right?
42:09
When we started with Feastwills,
42:12
we didn't know anything about our customer, right?
42:14
So like I had to approach CX,
42:17
like the support function and the community function,
42:19
like the digital experience function,
42:21
from like a perspective of like,
42:22
I think I know what I know about my customer,
42:24
but I'm gonna like put this on to like launch it.
42:28
So that's how I approach the chat bot of like,
42:29
I think I know what they want in the sense of like,
42:32
okay, they wanna like know about Mr. Beast,
42:33
I gave them product information and all these pieces, right?
42:36
And then my finding was that people started really interacting
42:39
with the chat bot a lot more, right?
42:41
And so I was like, oh, this is really sick.
42:42
So then how do I approach the same thing you're talking about,
42:45
putting it on PDPs?
42:47
And then so like, how do we actually make this
42:49
into like a sales bot?
42:51
- Yeah. - Essentially, right?
42:53
Like into like an always on experience
42:56
that you don't necessarily have to like reach out
42:58
through email if you like have questions about the product.
43:01
And so then like I changed that chat bot
43:04
for the external customer to like only on PDPs
43:07
would be like, okay, if they were sitting there
43:09
for like a minute or whatever, I'd be like,
43:11
hey, looks like you're looking at, thinking about it
43:16
and looking at this chocolate bar, I don't know, right?
43:18
And so then like it would prompt them to have a conversation
43:22
and then they would have the conversation
43:23
and then they would lead them down
43:25
like the little salesy like bot path.
43:27
So, and this is really cool.
43:29
I can't give the exact number,
43:30
but I can tell you this piece, right?
43:33
This bot contributed to about four to 6%
43:38
of our launch revenue.
43:40
- Oh. - Which is massive.
43:41
- That's amazing.
43:42
- And this is what I was saying,
43:43
it could be like a workshop moment, right?
43:45
So if I'm looking at it from like a athletic leisure,
43:47
right perspective, right?
43:49
Like or just phabletics, right?
43:50
Like taking that concept of like being a little salesperson
43:54
and you don't necessarily even have to use the generative AI,
43:57
you can make it intent-based to like understand pathways
44:01
a little bit and then build the generative.
44:03
- Right, right.
44:04
- You know?
44:05
- I think that's a super interesting application.
44:06
And I think for us, what we've still been trying
44:09
to kind of crack the nut on is like,
44:10
how do you have a great chat experience
44:12
that blends membership education,
44:14
general support kind of questions and like product selling?
44:17
Like I think that's a nugget.
44:19
I actually don't know if I've seen anybody do it super well,
44:21
combining all three of those.
44:23
- Yeah.
44:24
Yeah, well, I mean, this is a plug to customer,
44:27
I'm gonna be honest with you,
44:29
because like the way customer approaches this
44:32
is service doesn't start at, I need help,
44:36
it starts at like hello, right?
44:38
And so it's like taking that concept,
44:40
but I love saying that quote because that's my CX philosophy
44:43
as well, like answer the questions before
44:45
they become questions, right?
44:47
And so it's like taking that tool, right?
44:51
And you know, for anybody listening out there,
44:53
it doesn't necessarily have to be customer specifically,
44:56
but if you're thinking about chatbots,
44:58
think about it from that perspective of like,
45:01
your service starts at like,
45:03
I'm browsing the website,
45:05
let me build a conversation and engagement pathway
45:09
for my customer to always be and always on thing, right?
45:13
Let me be informative, but also you can take it
45:16
a different way, like how I would approach it.
45:18
Again, this is Yeti, or not Yeti, I'm sorry,
45:20
this is a workshop moment.
45:22
So Yeti, for anybody who doesn't know,
45:24
is a brand by Lizzo, right?
45:27
And Lizzo is an experience, Lizzo is like a whole moment, right?
45:32
I would even approach that, like your different brands,
45:35
like your core FabLetics brand, your Scrub brand,
45:38
and like Yeti and anything else.
45:41
And I would approach them as all different
45:42
like engagement experiences.
45:44
So like, specifically Lizzo is like the most,
45:46
like stands out, right?
45:47
So it's like people who probably are coming to this site
45:49
because one, you're interested in the product,
45:51
but two, you probably are a fan of Lizzo, right?
45:53
So offer some sort of like, product information,
45:56
but also maybe fun facts about Lizzo.
45:58
- 100%.
45:58
- How she came up with the name.
45:59
- 100%.
46:00
- Yeah, yeah.
46:01
- Like, the name is great, it's her childhood name,
46:03
which is so adorable, her childhood nickname was Yeti.
46:05
- I love that.
46:06
- And that's the name of the brand, it's great.
46:07
- I love it, but that's a fun fact, right?
46:09
Like, so that's an engagement piece,
46:10
and like the same thing with FabLetics, right?
46:12
Like there's no reason why you couldn't like,
46:14
build like some history into it.
46:16
- 100%.
46:17
- It's like, build it to like have a conversation.
46:20
So it's like your service isn't starting at like,
46:22
I need help.
46:22
- Yeah, yeah.
46:23
- It's starting at like, hello, I'm a new customer.
46:25
- Right, right, right.
46:26
And I think that like, it really speaks to how much
46:28
education goes into selling product nowadays.
46:30
Like, I think people are so much more invested in brands,
46:33
they wanna understand the brand better,
46:34
they wanna know what they're buying,
46:36
they wanna understand the mechanics of a program
46:38
if it's a program of some sort.
46:39
And I think it takes a lot more to be intentional,
46:43
to communicate that information now,
46:44
than it used to be.
46:45
- Yeah.
46:46
- Like, it used to be so much more transactional,
46:47
I feel like we're kind of in a different era right now.
46:49
- Yeah, well, this kind of goes back
46:52
to the beginning of our convo, right?
46:53
We talked a lot about like retail experience, right?
46:56
And I don't know if you're noticing this
46:57
with like consumer behavior, but like I'm noticing,
47:00
I mentioned Abercrombie, Abercrombie's having a comeback,
47:02
right? - Right.
47:03
- I don't think like malls are necessarily gonna have a combo,
47:05
like overall comeback.
47:07
I would say like it's like, you know,
47:09
Abbot Kinney and Venice, you know, type of like comeback,
47:14
like brick and mortar stories on like a street,
47:16
an outdoor mall moment.
47:17
But my point of my point of coming circling back is that,
47:21
what I'm noticing is that consumer behavior and e-commerce
47:24
is like, like people aren't really buying online anymore,
47:28
they're wanting to go and store, you know?
47:30
- We see it too.
47:31
- Right?
47:32
- And we see that like our most valuable customers,
47:34
our customers who shop with us on all platforms,
47:37
like we're, they really are engaged with the brand everywhere.
47:40
But I mean, that's partially when we opened our retail stores,
47:43
like what was so exciting, we had a, you know,
47:45
members who shop with us online,
47:46
they had a bunch of member credits,
47:47
they had a bunch of money to spend with us.
47:49
They'd come in the store and like,
47:50
say before they'd only bought the leggings,
47:52
they see all the other product that we offer
47:54
and they just kind of go crazy.
47:55
Like they're so excited, they get to touch and feel it.
47:57
Like there's like a, like a tangibility piece
47:59
that I think kind of coming out of the COVID era,
48:01
like people want more experiences,
48:03
they wanna touch things, they wanna feel things.
48:05
- Right.
48:06
- And a retail store does that in a way
48:07
that you really can't do any content.
48:09
- I know, I know, I mean,
48:10
it's really interesting to watch that behavior,
48:13
like switch and I think, and I think you hit it.
48:17
I think we're all coming off of COVID
48:19
and wanting that like interaction in person
48:21
because like we missed it for two years.
48:23
- We did, yeah, and you only bought online,
48:25
it's like you were only like connected to your screen
48:27
and now it's like, how can I like really validate this
48:30
before I just click buy, right?
48:31
- Right, right, and it's like,
48:33
like going back to that ASO's example,
48:34
I bought all these clothes because like,
48:37
I wanted to try them, like I wanted to feel them,
48:40
but then I have the intentions of returning them.
48:42
- Yeah, yeah, you never were actually gonna keep those
48:44
like seven pairs of shoes.
48:45
- No, but I did.
48:47
(laughing)
48:47
- I just returned them, gotcha.
48:49
(laughing)
48:50
- Oh man.
48:51
- That's like a whole nother thing though,
48:52
and this is like just totally random, a little bit off topic.
48:55
I don't understand why like return policies
48:57
are so rigid at stores.
48:58
Having a generous policy builds so much more goodwill.
49:01
- Well, builds loyalty.
49:02
- It totally does.
49:03
Like why would you, like, like,
49:05
why die on that hill?
49:06
I don't understand it.
49:07
- Yeah, okay, going back to ASO's real quick.
49:10
I will tell you that like, they're,
49:12
I know this is like e-commerce more,
49:14
but like they have like a, I don't know,
49:17
15 day, 30 day, whatever it is, right?
49:20
Policy, but like sometimes I would forget
49:22
to return the things, right?
49:23
And then I would like remember when it was like too late
49:26
and a few times, sorry, so I've done this.
49:29
Like I returned something like three to six months later.
49:31
- Oh no way, did they take it back?
49:33
- They take it back?
49:33
- They take it back?
49:34
- That's stellar customer service.
49:36
That's such a good experience.
49:37
- I know.
49:38
- Yeah, I know.
49:39
And so it's like take that example of like,
49:41
it's kind of a Costco example.
49:43
- Yeah. (laughs)
49:44
No, it's true.
49:45
Honestly, that's how our retail store,
49:46
like our return policy is 90 days,
49:48
but like so it's already quite generous.
49:50
But like if you come in store with a product,
49:51
like our associates are never gonna turn you away,
49:53
they're fine.
49:54
It will take it back.
49:55
- Because you want to build the loyalty to your brand
49:58
and that affinity to it, you know?
49:59
And it's like, like if you're rude,
50:03
or I wouldn't say rude, I get it like,
50:05
like-- - You can call us the A, right?
50:06
- Yeah.
50:07
- But I think there's a piece of like,
50:08
it's like that empathy piece of like,
50:11
we understand you as a human, like,
50:12
you got busy, something happened, like we got you, right?
50:15
I think that's like what builds that connection.
50:17
- Yeah, absolutely.
50:18
Mel, I had to tell you this,
50:21
but we're at the end of the road.
50:23
- No way.
50:24
I know.
50:25
- This has been great.
50:26
- I'm gonna miss you now.
50:26
- I'm gonna miss you too.
50:27
- It's been so fun.
50:28
- Yeah.
50:29
- It's been so fun.
50:30
I feel like you and I could like talk for 20,000 hours.
50:33
- Yeah, we could keep it rolling.
50:34
- So maybe we'll do around two of this.
50:37
- I love that.
50:38
- Here for that.
50:39
Tell the homies where they can meet or see you, meet you.
50:43
- Find me?
50:43
- Find you.
50:45
I am a horrible, not frequent LinkedIn poster,
50:47
but I am on there, Melanie Cummings, you can find me.
50:50
But she is a responder to DMs.
50:52
- I will respond if you hit me up in the DMs for sure.
50:56
- Maybe, don't over inundate her on the DMs.
50:58
(laughing)
51:00
We'll see how much I can handle.
51:01
- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
51:02
- I was like, I really set that expectation real high.
51:05
- So I had to like, backtrack it for a second.
51:07
- I gotta level up the expectation.
51:09
- But we'll put your, you will put a link in the show notes
51:12
to your profile and I really appreciate you coming on.
51:16
- Absolutely my pleasure.
51:17
- I can't wait to do this again.
51:18
- Yeah, thank you.
51:19
- And to everyone out there, I really appreciate you tuning in
51:23
for another episode of the Juice.
51:25
Please tune in next week, as well as sign up for our Newsy.
51:30
We're dropping the hot takes on a weekly basis
51:33
that aren't just all our better interviews.
51:35
So you can sign up at juice.customer.com
51:39
and I will see you all next week.
51:41
(upbeat music)
51:44
- Hey, wow, you made it to the end of the episode.
51:47
That means that you like me and I like you,
51:49
which also means you should subscribe to this show.
51:53
(upbeat music)
51:55
(upbeat music)
51:58
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52:01
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(upbeat music)