Matt Edmundson:

Well, hello and welcome to the e-Commerce podcast

Matt Edmundson:

with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt Edmundson:

The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce.

Matt Edmundson:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

And to help us do just that today, I'm gonna be chatting with Colby

Matt Edmundson:

Flood from Brighter click about how to develop a creative strategy

Matt Edmundson:

for your brand's advertising.

Matt Edmundson:

But before the magnificent Colby and I jump into that, let me suggest a

Matt Edmundson:

few other podcast episodes that at some point I think you should check

Matt Edmundson:

out, uh, try the ultimate Facebook ad strategy for your e-commerce

Matt Edmundson:

business with Meredith Kallaher.

Matt Edmundson:

She was an absolute legend, uh, and How to 10x your investment with an

Matt Edmundson:

agency partner with Chase Clymer.

Matt Edmundson:

Great conversation with Chase about that.

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You can find both of those and our entire archive of episodes on our website for

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free at ecommercepodcast.net, which coincidentally also has the ability

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for you to sign up to our newsletter.

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And each week we will email you all of these links, plus the links

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and notes and transcript from today's conversation with Colby.

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totally free, totally automatic.

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Sign up now.

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Have a go.

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Uh, this episode is brought to you by the e-commerce cohort, which

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helps you deliver e-commerce Wow.

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To your customers.

Matt Edmundson:

Colby, I am sure just like me, you have come across a whole bunch of

Matt Edmundson:

folks stuck with that e-commerce website, or they've just got siloed

Matt Edmundson:

into working on just one or two areas.

Matt Edmundson:

And miss the big picture, something I know we're gonna get into today's conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Funnily enough.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, well enter the e-commerce cohort to solve this particular problem.

Matt Edmundson:

Cohort is a lightweight membership group with guided monthly sprints that cycle

Matt Edmundson:

through all the key areas of e-commerce, the sole purpose of which to provide you

Matt Edmundson:

with clear actionable jobs to be done so you will know what to work on and

Matt Edmundson:

get the support you need to get it done.

Matt Edmundson:

So whether you're just starting out in eCommerce or if, like me, you're

Matt Edmundson:

a well established eCommercer, you've been around a wee while as they say.

Matt Edmundson:

Then can I encourage you to definitely check out ecommercecohort.com,

Matt Edmundson:

uh, or email me directly at matt@ecommercepodcast.net with

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any questions that you may have.

Matt Edmundson:

ecommercecohort.com is today's sponsor.

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So do check them out.

Matt Edmundson:

And actually, what I should have done and didn't do, Colby, is I should

Matt Edmundson:

have put the thing on the screen.

Matt Edmundson:

There you go with the WebLink.

Matt Edmundson:

If you're watching the YouTube video, uh, that's, that's my bad.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, anyway, let's get into this.

Matt Edmundson:

So Colby founded Brighter click in 2019 to create an education first

Matt Edmundson:

agency that focuses on performance and proactive communication led by education.

Matt Edmundson:

He hired his first team member in 2020 and saw 300% growth in the next 12 months.

Matt Edmundson:

By 2022, they had managed over $20 million in ad spend for their clients, and the

Matt Edmundson:

agency has seven full-time employees.

Matt Edmundson:

Brighter Click helps e-commerce companies just like yours, just

Matt Edmundson:

like mine, 2 to 3x their current Facebook marketing performance.

Matt Edmundson:

They are the only agency that leads all communication through education.

Matt Edmundson:

That is all a big, uh, interesting statement Colby, and I'm

Matt Edmundson:

super keen to get into this.

Matt Edmundson:

So welcome to the show.

Matt Edmundson:

Thank you for joining us all the way from Raleigh, North Carolina.

Matt Edmundson:

Great to have you here.

Matt Edmundson:

How, how are we doing today?

Colby Flood:

I'm doing well.

Colby Flood:

Thanks for having me.

Colby Flood:

I'm excited to, uh, see what we can unpack today.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh yeah, absolutely, Absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

So tell me about Brighter Click and, and what, what's, what is Brighter

Matt Edmundson:

Click, what does it do and why?

Colby Flood:

What is brighter click?

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

So we are a team of high achievers.

Colby Flood:

Does that sound motivational there?

Matt Edmundson:

We need some, we need some funky music, don't we?

Matt Edmundson:

To go, We are high achievers.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Sorry.

Matt Edmundson:

Carry on.

Colby Flood:

Okay.

Colby Flood:

Eighties corporate video . Um,

Colby Flood:

Onboarding new team members?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, so we're an agency.

Colby Flood:

We started out focused on uh, Facebook, Instagram management.

Colby Flood:

We really niched down to e-commerce in that area.

Colby Flood:

One thing we've been moving towards as of late is also focusing on creative

Colby Flood:

strategy, cuz we see kind of the writing on the walls, that, that's where the

Colby Flood:

industry is going with things is the focus on creative for paid media and specific.

Colby Flood:

So we work with clients, um, to provide paid media strategy and production.

Colby Flood:

And I'll emphasize strategy and we can talk about that later.

Colby Flood:

And also paid ad management as well.

Matt Edmundson:

So how did you, how did, because this has been around

Matt Edmundson:

since what, 2019 did I say in the bio?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

So what were you doing before you started Brighter clicks?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, good question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, I had worked in house with, uh, companies doing marketing and

Colby Flood:

always saw that divide, um, between communication with the company and the

Colby Flood:

agencies that we were working with.

Colby Flood:

And I started going freelancing before I started Brighter Click.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And if you want me to be frank with you, in the intro you said started.

Colby Flood:

2019 hired first team member, 2020 felt like I needed to be official

Colby Flood:

and have a company name and not just be Colby Flood as I was freelancing.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, started it January, 2019 and then, um, just continued to scale up.

Colby Flood:

The client base continued to scale up the work until I mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

needed to bring on people, uh, to keep growing that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, it's interesting the amount of people that I speak to, Colby

Matt Edmundson:

that started off, they were in a company.

Matt Edmundson:

They learned some stuff.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Thought they could do it better or different or for whatever reason, um,

Matt Edmundson:

Providence, whatever you want to call it.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, they then set up their own little sort of freelance agency, do quite well,

Matt Edmundson:

and they, they quite quickly grow their freelance business into a full on agency,

Matt Edmundson:

especially around sort of marketing type stuff, which is, which is quite interest.

Matt Edmundson:

It's quite an interesting journey for me to see people go through that.

Matt Edmundson:

And you're, so, you're not the exception.

Matt Edmundson:

That's, that's for sure.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but here you are, the founder, CEO of Brighter Click . And you,

Matt Edmundson:

you started out with this statement, the writing is on the wall for paid

Matt Edmundson:

media, but you're a paid media, or you started out as a paid media agency.

Matt Edmundson:

So what do you mean when you say that Paid media?

Matt Edmundson:

The, the, the writings on the wall.

Matt Edmundson:

What does that mean?

Matt Edmundson:

Because it sounds, if I'm honest with you, it sounds a bit kind like, whoa.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, that's a bit high and intense.

Matt Edmundson:

So I wanna pay attention to this.

Colby Flood:

That's a good Gary v eye catcher statement there for you,

Colby Flood:

Um, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, the way we've seen it is, so over the past year, year and a half, all you've

Colby Flood:

heard about is all these updates, right?

Colby Flood:

iOS 14.5, Facebook's losing targetability with audiences.

Colby Flood:

We're losing match rate with our pixel to retarget people.

Colby Flood:

The platforms are seeing damage from that because they're losing

Colby Flood:

trust with the channel to market on.

Colby Flood:

And then we're seeing for marketer perspective, we're losing data, right?

Colby Flood:

We can't do as much.

Colby Flood:

About two months ago, two and a half months ago, um, from the time of this

Colby Flood:

recording, Google put out Performance Max.

Colby Flood:

Facebook put out Advantage Plus.

Colby Flood:

Now, some people may see positive, some people may see negative, but

Colby Flood:

these are like the V1 of the platform doing the media buying for you.

Colby Flood:

Even TikTok just came out with in the past week.

Colby Flood:

New targeting abilities to where if you really look at it, it's

Colby Flood:

just a simplified targeting.

Colby Flood:

You can choose people who may be interested in buying makeup or

Colby Flood:

people who may be interested in buying bikes, which is just taking

Colby Flood:

three or four targeting tactics and making it a click button, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, the platforms are starting to automate the media buying, and there's gonna

Colby Flood:

be one thing left for marketers to pool lever wise, and that's

Colby Flood:

gonna be creative in messaging.

Colby Flood:

So if you think about it, 2015, Prime time for Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

It was all about audience and, uh, bid cap and campaign structures,

Colby Flood:

CBO abo and what are you doing?

Colby Flood:

And there wasn't as much focus on the messaging.

Colby Flood:

You could throw up an ad, you could get 10 x return.

Colby Flood:

That's not the case anymore.

Colby Flood:

And we're having to go back to being marketers.

Colby Flood:

It's not as much about growth hacking tactics now it's

Colby Flood:

about marketing and messaging.

Colby Flood:

So I believe in the next two years.

Colby Flood:

Um, we're gonna see the platforms really automating all the media buying and the

Colby Flood:

purpose of a media buyer is going to either transform or diminish because

Colby Flood:

it's gonna be about creative strategy.

Colby Flood:

That's my personal opinion with it.

Matt Edmundson:

That's really interesting cuz I, I, we've had people

Matt Edmundson:

on the show talking about, you know, the effects on like Facebook Ads.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, I'm just gonna pick on Facebook ads, um, because they were the ones in the

Matt Edmundson:

headlines over the changes with iOS.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And a few of the bits and bobs.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, um, we've had people on there say, No, it's not as bad.

Matt Edmundson:

Everything's okay.

Matt Edmundson:

Life's still good.

Matt Edmundson:

And we've had people coming on going, Oh man, the, the world is fallen

Matt Edmundson:

out of our, you know, the bottom's fallen out of the world right now..

Matt Edmundson:

And so what you are saying is, is it seems to be fairly consistent with

Matt Edmundson:

what I'm hearing across the, And to be fair, what I'm experiencing my own

Matt Edmundson:

e-commerce businesses, that actually the, the, with Facebook ads, um, it

Matt Edmundson:

has become a lot harder to get some kind of value out of, uh, Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

And one of the things that you said that I just wanted just to touch on

Matt Edmundson:

a little bit is the other comment you said is the channels are losing

Matt Edmundson:

or the channel is losing trust.

Matt Edmundson:

And what do you mean by that?

Colby Flood:

I've heard.

Colby Flood:

So you keep seeing in reports.

Colby Flood:

Um, where is marketing budget gonna go in 2023?

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

And as I get on sales calls with potential clients, I hear time and

Colby Flood:

time again, we're not sure Facebook is still the place to be marketing.

Colby Flood:

Maybe we need to be doing a different channel cuz people

Colby Flood:

aren't seen as good results.

Colby Flood:

So I think there's a general buzz about Facebook that people just

Colby Flood:

aren't as confident in it in 2022 as they were in 20 16, 17, 18, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

And people were believing because of the shifts that we've had that

Colby Flood:

maybe it's gonna have some troubles.

Colby Flood:

And of course, Zuckerberg's been working on Metaverse and all these news things

Colby Flood:

and all this stuff is happening, so I think its just kind of shifting

Colby Flood:

people's perspective a little bit.

Colby Flood:

We're still seeing great performance, um, on Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

It's just not as easy for smaller brands as it used to be Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

So, and that's an important point because I'm like

Matt Edmundson:

the guys that have been calling you on the phone, I'm set, I'm sat, I'm

Matt Edmundson:

literally sat here talking to the guys in our marketing team , Uh, we had

Matt Edmundson:

a brainstorming session last week.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, we went out and we, uh, for one of our econ businesses, and,mand

Matt Edmundson:

one of the questions I asked the team is, Listen, do we, do we even spend

Matt Edmundson:

money on Facebook ads next year in terms of, you know, budget and performance?

Matt Edmundson:

Given what we are seeing at the, the moment, the way it's going, and

Matt Edmundson:

actually just the sheer avalanche of people as in the end user who are not

Matt Edmundson:

using Facebook or Instagram anymore, you know, just so it seems to me to be

Matt Edmundson:

both sides that ads, the ads people are leaving, but also the users, they're

Matt Edmundson:

not using it as much as they should.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm sat here as an ecom business thinking about that.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, but I, I then I, I've just heard you say, actually you can still

Matt Edmundson:

get great performance with the ads.

Matt Edmundson:

So should I bail or should I stay?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, is the, is the question.

Colby Flood:

Can I ask you a few targeted questions?

Colby Flood:

Do you mind?

Matt Edmundson:

You go for it.

Matt Edmundson:

No, no, absolutely.

Colby Flood:

What's your, what's your AOV for your store?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, about in Sterling it's about 50 Sterling.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, so it's whatever, about $60.

Colby Flood:

And refresh me on your product type or your,

Matt Edmundson:

So the site that I was talking about is the

Matt Edmundson:

site which sells these, It's the supplements, the vegan supplements.

Colby Flood:

Okay, so here's what I would tell you, and kind of going

Colby Flood:

towards creative, uh, Facebook ads is getting more difficult for non-well

Colby Flood:

known branded companies or products.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, right?

Colby Flood:

Um, and specifically with supplements, because that can be a more difficult niche

Colby Flood:

to be in in terms of marketing that way.

Colby Flood:

So the key thing that I would really focus on, regardless of, or regardless,

Colby Flood:

whatever the right word is there of which platform you're gonna go to, is

Colby Flood:

making sure to not skip the branding and the messaging part of the business

Colby Flood:

and not saying that you have, just kind of speaking in generalities now.

Colby Flood:

Sure.

Colby Flood:

Um.

Colby Flood:

And focus on making sure you have your USP marked down.

Colby Flood:

And then really go into what is your messaging gonna be on the platform.

Colby Flood:

And there's some great things you can do specifically for your product.

Colby Flood:

Things like pr, which people often forget about.

Colby Flood:

Um, but just to kind of.

Colby Flood:

Loop all that.

Colby Flood:

Before I go on a long tangent on creative strategy, cause I'm sure

Colby Flood:

we'll loop into that is focus on your, your ads or your creative budget.

Colby Flood:

And I always tell people, 10% of your marketing budget,

Colby Flood:

put that towards creative.

Colby Flood:

And as you scale your marketing spin, your creative spin should scale as well, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, there's someone, um, there's a marketer on LinkedIn I saw put out a good statement

Colby Flood:

saying like, if you purchase a Super Bowl ad, you're not just gonna throw up

Colby Flood:

some creative, you're gonna be spending tons and tons of money on that ad, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, your focus is gonna be on the quality of that ad.

Colby Flood:

Social media should be no different.

Colby Flood:

You should focus on the quality of the creative you're putting out as well.

Colby Flood:

So with a, with a AOV of 50, um, I mean, it's definitely possible.

Colby Flood:

Getting a sub 20 CPA can be difficult, especially in your niche.

Colby Flood:

And I imagine without seeing your account right now, you're

Colby Flood:

probably seeing higher CPMs.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, um, and higher CPCs in your account.

Colby Flood:

Uh, do you get, do you get rejected ads at all for your product?

Matt Edmundson:

Occasionally, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, we have to reword things.

Matt Edmundson:

Um,

Colby Flood:

and that's one thing to watch if you, if your ratio to rejected

Colby Flood:

ads to approved ads gets offset.

Colby Flood:

Facebook will naturally raise your cpm.

Colby Flood:

So what you need to do is you need to get those ads approved, Don't run 'em,

Colby Flood:

don't feel the need to, and then launch a Facebook like campaign with just.

Colby Flood:

Dozens of ads to reset that ratio, that'll help out with your CPMs.

Colby Flood:

But yeah, sorry, I get on tangents here.

Colby Flood:

I love, uh, kind of going through those, but I would say don't

Colby Flood:

top tip, don't abandon ship.

Colby Flood:

Just don't maybe put all eggs in one basket if possible.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

No, fair enough.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, you've talked about this, um, the, the idea of putting 10% of my

Matt Edmundson:

marketing budget towards creative.

Matt Edmundson:

Let me be, um, let's be super clear at the start.

Matt Edmundson:

When you say creative, what do you mean?

Colby Flood:

That's a good question.

Colby Flood:

So, uh, the way I would define it is what people are seeing for the ads.

Colby Flood:

So that could be influence or content, that could be graphics, that could

Colby Flood:

be video production, that could be pr to put into your actual ads.

Colby Flood:

Whatever is going in that 1080 by 1080 or 9 by 16 square for people to look at.

Colby Flood:

I would say put 10% of your budget focused on that.

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

And there may be spin that goes into the ideation of it or the, the, uh, tracking

Colby Flood:

of it, those types of things as well.

Matt Edmundson:

I like it.

Matt Edmundson:

I like it because what you're saying is, uh, uh, Colby is, and, and if I can

Matt Edmundson:

paraphrase, and maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong, um, actually Facebook

Matt Edmundson:

ads, it's not dead is just different.

Matt Edmundson:

And for the longest time, people like me have just thrown quick, cheap, and

Matt Edmundson:

easy content or creative onto Facebook because we could and we didn't have to.

Matt Edmundson:

And it worked.

Matt Edmundson:

You're right.

Matt Edmundson:

And we didn't have to think about it.

Matt Edmundson:

But in the world in which we now live, actually, I really

Matt Edmundson:

have to think about that.

Matt Edmundson:

If I want to come out on top, right, I have to think about this creative.

Matt Edmundson:

I have to think about the, the quality of the creative.

Matt Edmundson:

Am I, am I understanding that right?

Colby Flood:

Yes, and I'll give you, uh, some validation to that, which is,

Colby Flood:

uh, I've, we have a couple of kind of enterprise clients and I was on a call

Colby Flood:

with them, one of them before this call here, and they just let me know that

Colby Flood:

Facebook just announced, cuz they were in the initial run of it, like three

Colby Flood:

or four days ago, that it's launching an accelerator program very similar to

Colby Flood:

TikTok, where it will match companies.

Colby Flood:

That get approved to be in the program with a content creation agency

Colby Flood:

to create free content for them.

Colby Flood:

Facebook's paying for it a hundred percent.

Colby Flood:

Wow.

Colby Flood:

Cause it's starting to see that creative is, so they said the categories are

Colby Flood:

video production, edits on existing creative or influencer content.

Colby Flood:

Wow.

Matt Edmundson:

So the Facebook's paying for it.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I mean that in itself is a headline right there, right?

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, I've never known Facebook pay for anything.

Matt Edmundson:

So, um, it's quite an interesting, So I get what creative is, and I

Matt Edmundson:

understand that I need, I now need to start thinking about creative.

Matt Edmundson:

So what are some of the building blocks that you would have me

Matt Edmundson:

think about in terms of strategy?

Matt Edmundson:

What is creative strategy?

Matt Edmundson:

What should I be thinking about?

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

Um, and I'll answer that and let me give you one little tiff here,

Colby Flood:

one little, uh, pet peeve of mine as you're looking at creative.

Colby Flood:

Um, one of the biggest problems you'll see oftentimes with the quality of

Colby Flood:

creative is the setup of communication and responsibilities, which is if

Colby Flood:

you work with a creative agency and they are not ideating the strategy.

Colby Flood:

or they are not hands on with media buying.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, It oftentimes leaves the business owner as the creative strategist who

Colby Flood:

may not be running Facebook ads and may not have experience on creative

Colby Flood:

for Facebook ads, communicating with a graphic designer who's learning the

Colby Flood:

business and doesn't know Facebook ads to create the creative mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

So one little thing I would say is make sure there's someone

Colby Flood:

in that chain of communication.

Colby Flood:

Ideally, the person responsible for the strategy that knows Facebook ads very

Colby Flood:

well and knows creative strategy for them.

Colby Flood:

But as we're looking at creative strategy, The key to start is going

Colby Flood:

to be the research phase, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, I'm coming from an agency perspective.

Colby Flood:

Some of these things will just kind of mold and adapt if you are

Colby Flood:

the business doing that, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, we always start top down.

Colby Flood:

So I say there's three levels to creative.

Colby Flood:

There's gonna be the CMO level, and that's the person that is setting the

Colby Flood:

USP, the buyer personas, the messaging that goes across all channels, right?

Colby Flood:

You take that information and you move it to the ad strategy level,

Colby Flood:

which is what we're talking.

Colby Flood:

Which is going to be determining what part of the USP and the

Colby Flood:

messaging and the personas you're gonna try to hit with your channel.

Colby Flood:

And then the, the next level is going to be the actual graphic

Colby Flood:

design work, the creation of it.

Colby Flood:

So I would start by looking at the brand Bible and the brand guidelines,

Colby Flood:

making sure we fully understand the usp.

Colby Flood:

And ideally if you have like brand voice or brand identity.

Colby Flood:

So let's say friendly, approachable, um mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, funny, those types of things.

Colby Flood:

Looking at how you can match those to different levels of the funnel if you're

Colby Flood:

wanting to kind of be targeted that way.

Colby Flood:

Okay.

Colby Flood:

And then we want to start doing research on the brand and also your competitors.

Colby Flood:

So I would look at doing competitor research, going through the competitors

Colby Flood:

Facebook ad libraries, and looking for, And when I say messaging and

Colby Flood:

themes, The goal is to be as broad with it as possible to start.

Colby Flood:

And here's what I mean.

Colby Flood:

So go through your competitor's ads and we wanna see from their messaging, if they're

Colby Flood:

talking about things like founder story or benefits of use, or ingredients and

Colby Flood:

supplements, like what are the super high level things that they're talking about.

Colby Flood:

And with the creative, we wanna look for creative structures.

Colby Flood:

And my best way to explain that is if you go to three or four of your

Colby Flood:

competitors, , and you especially see this in the clothing companies a

Colby Flood:

lot, and you look at their creatives.

Colby Flood:

If you're looking at it from a.

Colby Flood:

Forget about the pictures and just focus on the structure

Colby Flood:

of how the creative is placed.

Colby Flood:

You will see trends, so let's say there's one where it's three images,

Colby Flood:

50% of the screen on the left side is just one image, and on the

Colby Flood:

right side it's two images stacked.

Colby Flood:

So that would be a three panel image right there.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm..

Colby Flood:

So that's a structure, or it may be the product.

Colby Flood:

Keyed out where it's just a product laid over top of a lifestyle

Colby Flood:

photo of somebody with a quote that's a flat lay lifestyle combo.

Colby Flood:

You wanna be looking for those trends within their creatives as well.

Colby Flood:

So do the competitor research that way.

Colby Flood:

And then you really want to get a voice for your business or for your customer.

Colby Flood:

So we look at, of course, your Google Analytics data, right?

Colby Flood:

To understand who Google is saying is your best customer.

Colby Flood:

But Reddit comments, Um, reviews, right?

Colby Flood:

Comments on your Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

We wanna look for the pros and cons, right?

Colby Flood:

Because with the pros, we can double down on those in our messaging, but

Colby Flood:

with the cons, we understand what may be holding somebody back as they're

Colby Flood:

transferring from top of funnel to middle of funnel or from middle to bottom

Colby Flood:

of funnel of not making a purchase.

Colby Flood:

And if we don't spearhead that and give them some messaging to address those

Colby Flood:

cons with either counters or validation, uh, they're gonna go do their own

Colby Flood:

research and then they're gonna end up going with a competitor of yours.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So we wanna find the pros and cons in the messaging and then look through

Colby Flood:

your own Facebook ads and have that same structure mindset and see, okay.

Colby Flood:

When we talked about founder story, they performed very well.

Colby Flood:

When we talked about, um, discounts, it performed very well.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So you've done research on your brand, you've done research on your

Colby Flood:

competitors, and now take a step back and really understand what's

Colby Flood:

going on in the world, right?

Colby Flood:

We have a lot of things going on in the world right now.

Colby Flood:

Is there any of world event financial, um, country to country that may be changing

Colby Flood:

the buying habit of your customer?

Colby Flood:

The answer right now especially is going to be yes.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And because of that, maybe it's recession, maybe it's um, a global conflict.

Colby Flood:

How can you empathize with your customer and resonate your

Colby Flood:

messaging towards that, right?

Colby Flood:

To, to understand that something's going on.

Colby Flood:

That's the research phase.

Colby Flood:

Now, I could keep going on cuz there's a couple other phases, but I'll, I'll

Colby Flood:

give a, I'll give a rest there and, Say, uh, any, any thoughts or anything

Colby Flood:

as we're kind of looking at that?

Matt Edmundson:

Well, one, you started with research, uh, which

Matt Edmundson:

is, uh, uh, which is interesting.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, everything that I had to be fair, any framework that I

Matt Edmundson:

teach always starts with research.

Matt Edmundson:

You've gotta know what's going on.

Matt Edmundson:

And so, uh, instantly, I'm, I'm with you, Colby.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm not gonna lie.

Matt Edmundson:

You, you've won me over already.

Matt Edmundson:

because you talk about the input.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, yeah, absolutely.

Matt Edmundson:

I, I, I understand the importance of research.

Matt Edmundson:

What's interesting is, um, you are, you are researching both your stuff

Matt Edmundson:

as in, you know, your ads, your, the reviews on your ads as well as

Matt Edmundson:

your competitors, and you're trying to draw this sort of information

Matt Edmundson:

out, which shapes the creative.

Matt Edmundson:

have you done, let's, have you done any, any projects or any case studies

Matt Edmundson:

recently where actually you were surprised by stuff that came out in

Matt Edmundson:

the research where you had one idea, you did the research and it changed

Matt Edmundson:

what you did, It changed the outcome, uh, of, of what ended up happening?

Colby Flood:

Yes.

Colby Flood:

We're actually, so we're working on a project right now for a, um, home

Colby Flood:

security company, and they're more.

Colby Flood:

Location based.

Colby Flood:

They're in a couple of states in America, whereas you have like ADT

Colby Flood:

and Ring who are nationwide, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. So we were looking at, um, in the research phase, really understanding

Colby Flood:

what we wanted to do and.

Colby Flood:

One thing we were going into, it was really focused on price comparison as

Colby Flood:

the idea, because Ring you can very easily, um, purchase that off Amazon.

Colby Flood:

You can set it up yourself, right?

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

You can go.

Colby Flood:

But the biggest thing that we were seeing from researching that specific company

Colby Flood:

and then also the ads of competitors as well, was really focusing on the community

Colby Flood:

aspect and, and showing the idea of how.

Colby Flood:

They're to help build a community, a safe community.

Colby Flood:

And also they are a community focused provider as well.

Colby Flood:

Like being very niche targeted with your location, which is

Colby Flood:

counterintuitive to Facebook ads if you know about kind of audiences on

Colby Flood:

Facebook ads, because it's hard to do small location based ads that way.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. Um, but that's one thing, and we're actually in the

Colby Flood:

process of building that out.

Colby Flood:

I don't have any data on.

Colby Flood:

Finished test results.

Colby Flood:

I can maybe check back in on podcast two there.

Colby Flood:

But, um, that is one thing that we've, we've currently seen the, the

Colby Flood:

research phase is super important because your customer's voice is

Colby Flood:

the most impactful kind of needle of where you should be moving that way.

Colby Flood:

We're North Star.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And that would've imagined impacted not just their Facebook ads, but their,

Matt Edmundson:

their website messaging, everything.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

It's like, it, it's where you are sort of going down one route.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done this research and actually, no, this is not, that's

Matt Edmundson:

important, but it's, this is way more important over here.

Matt Edmundson:

So we need to, we need to show pictures of this and communities

Matt Edmundson:

and, and used language of community and so on and so forth.

Matt Edmundson:

Just being heavy on the pricing, I would've thought.

Colby Flood:

And that's the goal with Facebook ads, and not even just

Colby Flood:

Facebook, but any, any marketing channel you're on, is it, It can be a,

Colby Flood:

a mass market pretester for what you should focus on in your website, right?

Colby Flood:

If you're noticing that messaging is performing very well and then.

Colby Flood:

Over time, you don't build out landing pages for that.

Colby Flood:

There's gonna be a, what you call like a loss of cent or a, a disconnect

Colby Flood:

between the messaging on your landing page and the messaging on your ad.

Colby Flood:

And you can see conversion drops from that or increases if you match it.

Colby Flood:

So even if you don't, um, have the bandwidth or the team to rebuild

Colby Flood:

the whole website, building out specific landing pages on your

Colby Flood:

e-com store that match what you're seeing, perform well on the Facebook

Colby Flood:

ads can be very beneficial for you.

Matt Edmundson:

Super top tip there.

Matt Edmundson:

That's an extra bonus, isn't it?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, what, how would you monitor the performance and understand

Matt Edmundson:

what's performing well, if you outsource, say your ad buying to

Matt Edmundson:

another company so you know your pet peeve going back to the start.

Matt Edmundson:

You've got, you've got multiple people involved in the whole thing.

Matt Edmundson:

So I, I, I know plenty of people, for example, that might go well, Facebook

Matt Edmundson:

ads, we just kind of give that to that agency over there and, and we spend

Matt Edmundson:

this much and we kind of think it generates this much of behavior that's

Matt Edmundson:

probably about as much as they know.

Matt Edmundson:

Is there an easy way to get started with that?

Matt Edmundson:

If I want to go find out or is it quite involved?

Colby Flood:

For tracking?

Colby Flood:

So, um, we'll, I'll go with two things.

Colby Flood:

One is gonna be naming conventions and one is gonna be tools that I would suggest.

Colby Flood:

So naming conventions.

Colby Flood:

What we do, uh, at Brighter Click is we'll focus on assigning specific naming

Colby Flood:

tags in your ads to specific creatives.

Colby Flood:

So, We'll create a spreadsheet and one tab, or one spreadsheet is gonna

Colby Flood:

be for your copy, one's for your headlines, one for your landing

Colby Flood:

pages, and one for your creative.

Colby Flood:

And every row is a different creative or a different copy, right?

Colby Flood:

So what we'll do is we'll say, Copy is CO creative is CR.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

headline is HE and landing pages LP.

Colby Flood:

And every row gets a new number.

Colby Flood:

So you'll have an ad that we'll take from those.

Colby Flood:

And let's say you create one ad and it's gonna be, um, CR 10, CO2, HE3,

Colby Flood:

LP1, so you know which assets that are.

Colby Flood:

And then when you track that with your tools, we use.

Colby Flood:

Uh, if you wanna stay platform specific, you can use Supermetrics, but that

Colby Flood:

helps you kind of segment it out.

Colby Flood:

Now, looking at specific tools, I would suggest one, we are

Colby Flood:

affiliated with, one, we are not.

Colby Flood:

Just kind of full transparency there.

Colby Flood:

Um, Triple well is super important for overall data tracking, not just creative.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. Overall, because first party data is super important.

Colby Flood:

Now that's the one that we have affiliation with, The one we do not

Colby Flood:

have affiliation with, that is for creative tracking is motionapp.com.

Colby Flood:

Motionapp.com is a very, very important tool for creative tracking.

Colby Flood:

Great thing is, is um, they set it up for you as well.

Colby Flood:

So they walk through your business and they set up what you wanna be tracking.

Colby Flood:

They build out those dashboards.

Colby Flood:

I would highly suggest if you're wanting to put your focus towards creative to

Colby Flood:

look at or look at motion or something similar for your creative tracking.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

We will of course link to those in the show notes.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so Colby, you, you talked about the research phase.

Matt Edmundson:

You said there's a couple more.

Matt Edmundson:

What are those?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, so once you go through research, really start looking

Colby Flood:

at your strategy planning, right?

Colby Flood:

So, , we've gone through, we've looked at the ads your competitors are running.

Colby Flood:

We understand what type of creative, what type of messaging they have.

Colby Flood:

We've gone through your audience.

Colby Flood:

Uh, reviews comments, and we've gone through the past performance

Colby Flood:

of your account as well.

Colby Flood:

Now you wanna really start mapping out what creative and messaging

Colby Flood:

structures you're gonna use for each level of the funnel.

Colby Flood:

And ideally when we do this, we look at, um, always starting

Colby Flood:

messaging first because messaging has to come before creative.

Colby Flood:

The messaging is the purpose, the creative, uh, is

Colby Flood:

designed based off of that.

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

And we'll try to pick three to four messaging themes at

Colby Flood:

each level of the funnel that you're gonna be running ads for.

Colby Flood:

And then from there, try to find at least three to four creative structures that

Colby Flood:

are going to match those messaging themes.

Colby Flood:

So let me give you an example.

Colby Flood:

Um, We work with a company called Great Wrap.

Colby Flood:

They're a sustainability business out of Australia.

Colby Flood:

They take when you make french fries and potato chips.

Colby Flood:

Little fun fact here, there's a byproduct waste from it.

Colby Flood:

They take that, which gets turned into little pellets and

Colby Flood:

they make cling wrap out of it.

Colby Flood:

So like GLAD Wrap.

Colby Flood:

They make cling wrap and their goal, their brand mission is to eliminate

Colby Flood:

plastic waste from the world, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

one roll at a time.

Colby Flood:

So when we started working with them, They were a fresh startup.

Colby Flood:

We understood there was a lot of things we were gonna need to uncover, right?

Colby Flood:

So, We're gonna need to educate people on this.

Colby Flood:

We're gonna need to normalize the product.

Colby Flood:

We're gonna need to familiarize people of the product, right?

Colby Flood:

So we needed to understand what type of messaging themes, and what

Colby Flood:

type of creative themes we're gonna put at each level of the funnel.

Colby Flood:

Well, since we wanted to educate and kind of normalize, we looked at top

Colby Flood:

of funnel of what can we do there?

Colby Flood:

And we went with PR content.

Colby Flood:

They were very active with.

Colby Flood:

Uh, PR campaigns and we would just take Channel 10 News.

Colby Flood:

Started out in the anchor room, went to their facility on interview, and then

Colby Flood:

went back to the anchor room, A normal two minute segment, completely unedited.

Colby Flood:

Channel 10 News is the headline.

Colby Flood:

What Channel 10 News put as the copy.

Colby Flood:

Why?

Colby Flood:

Cuz we wanted it to look as native as possible to Facebook.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. And then bottom of funnel.

Colby Flood:

We wanted to familiarize, we just ran Founder story.

Colby Flood:

Organic photos of the founders holding the product, talking about two local

Colby Flood:

native Australians, married, couple, wanting to eliminate plastic waste

Colby Flood:

in the landfills and in the ocean.

Colby Flood:

And we saw massive results with them.

Colby Flood:

We tripled their revenue whole store two months in a row.

Colby Flood:

Um, just based off of that now.

Colby Flood:

Translating that into companies, right?

Colby Flood:

I would be looking at messaging themes.

Colby Flood:

What is gonna work at your top of funnel?

Colby Flood:

What do you think will resonate with the most?

Colby Flood:

And you can really pull that from your customer reviews.

Colby Flood:

Talking about what people like.

Colby Flood:

Is it the ingredients in your product?

Colby Flood:

Is it founder's story?

Colby Flood:

Is it, um, relatability to the viewer's problems, right?

Colby Flood:

With your creative themes.

Colby Flood:

Are you gonna want to be doing lifestyle photography?

Colby Flood:

A video about the founder's story?

Colby Flood:

Picking those messaging themes at each level, the funnel.

Colby Flood:

And it can be a little bit, try to stay general as I'm explaining

Colby Flood:

this here, cuz it can be, it's very different for each business.

Colby Flood:

But that's gonna be the next step for you, is really mapping out what you wanna do.

Colby Flood:

And the key thing that I'll kind of close on that thought with is, is don't

Colby Flood:

let perfection keep you from doing it.

Colby Flood:

Um, start testing right.

Colby Flood:

Start testing.

Colby Flood:

Have a good setup there.

Colby Flood:

Don't let fear of not doing it right, hold you back because if there's

Colby Flood:

no strategy, a movement towards strategy is hopefully gonna have

Colby Flood:

better results for you that way.

Matt Edmundson:

I like that.

Matt Edmundson:

Don't let perfection hold you back.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, you just gotta get going with something.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

So you have top of funnel, you have bottom of funnel.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, do you have, uh, do you have Mid Funnel content as well, or are you,

Matt Edmundson:

and are they the three stages of the, the funnel that you're looking at?

Matt Edmundson:

Or do you have more?

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, if we're going into setup wise for campaigns, so top of funnel

Colby Flood:

of course, just to define those, cuz people define them differently.

Colby Flood:

Cold audiences.

Colby Flood:

So interest based audiences and lookalikes.

Colby Flood:

People that have never come in contact with your ads.

Colby Flood:

Middle of funnel, we do run those.

Colby Flood:

That's gonna be people who have engaged with your brand but haven't added to cart.

Colby Flood:

So essentially Facebook page likes Facebook ad engager.

Colby Flood:

Same with Instagram, website visitor, no add to cart, bottom of funnel, add to

Colby Flood:

cart, checkout initiated with no purchase.

Colby Flood:

And then the key part of the whole account that so many accounts miss out on is

Colby Flood:

existing customers loyalty campaigns.

Colby Flood:

Those are super important for end of season sales.

Colby Flood:

New product releases, um, discounts, cross sales.

Colby Flood:

You see some of your highest returns with loyalty in Instagram reels and stories.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. But those are the main levels of funnel.

Colby Flood:

And then what I will suggest always is have a separate

Colby Flood:

campaign for creative testing.

Colby Flood:

That's super important.

Colby Flood:

You wanna have a creative testing campaign ongoing cuz when you need creative.

Colby Flood:

You don't wanna have to figure out what creative you can run, you

Colby Flood:

wanna already have it ready to go.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, okay.

Matt Edmundson:

So you're running these sort of creative campaigns just over here,

Matt Edmundson:

testing and figuring out what's working, so then you can assign that

Matt Edmundson:

correctly over here when you need it.

Matt Edmundson:

Yep.

Matt Edmundson:

Have I got that right?

Colby Flood:

Yep.

Colby Flood:

And run it to the respective audience, of course, or respective level of

Colby Flood:

the funnel that you're testing.

Colby Flood:

Yep.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Very clever.

Matt Edmundson:

Okay, so I've got, uh, research, I've got strategy planning, Uh, is there

Matt Edmundson:

anything else I need to think about?

Colby Flood:

Reporting and optimizing, right?

Colby Flood:

So you, you research, you plan out the strategy and then where we said,

Colby Flood:

don't let perfection hold you back.

Colby Flood:

You really start to learn as you go through the reporting that way.

Colby Flood:

So ideally, you have a setup like motion or you have a tool that you

Colby Flood:

can use because, um, sometimes you can test too much and when that

Colby Flood:

happens, you don't track it and then you don't learn from it, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, So making sure you're tracking it and then, uh, revise as you go.

Colby Flood:

The way that I would put it is have, uh, two week sprints.

Colby Flood:

So let's say you're doing 30 ad creatives per month.

Colby Flood:

Focus on building out a brief, getting 15 ad creatives put

Colby Flood:

out, launch them in the account.

Colby Flood:

Um, of course, don't launch 'em all at once and, uh, just sit there,

Colby Flood:

but launch them in the account.

Colby Flood:

And then a week, two week, start monitoring those.

Colby Flood:

Look for your themes and trends.

Colby Flood:

So, is founder story messaging doing well or bad?

Colby Flood:

Is this type of creative doing well or bad?

Colby Flood:

And then, Really start diving into how you can modify the next creative

Colby Flood:

brief for the next two weeks.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

And then when you get done with month one, take a step back and look

Colby Flood:

at, were there messaging themes we need to double down on or change?

Colby Flood:

Is there creative that we need to double down on or change?

Colby Flood:

That's a high level.

Colby Flood:

When you go into a tool like motion, you can even start looking at, did

Colby Flood:

the first three seconds of this video perform well versus this video?

Colby Flood:

And what was different there?

Colby Flood:

But, we'll, we'll kind of keep it broad for now, cuz that's

Colby Flood:

a whole nother conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Duh.

Matt Edmundson:

I'm, I'm, I'm utterly intrigued by the whole thing.

Matt Edmundson:

I mean, you, if I'm honest with you, Colby, as soon as you said, if you're

Matt Edmundson:

gonna, you know, launch 30 pieces of creative this month, I instantly

Matt Edmundson:

go 30 pieces of creative and I, I'm in a cold sweat straight away.

Matt Edmundson:

Right.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's not even, I mean, we have a marketing team, so, um, I,

Matt Edmundson:

Is that, is that what we should be thinking about realistically?

Matt Edmundson:

Or is that just a figure you, you pulled outta the air?

Colby Flood:

It all, it all depends on, uh, how much you're spending, right?

Colby Flood:

So, um, here's what I would say, cuz this can really be contingent on the account.

Colby Flood:

A key indicator of knowing you need more creative is your frequency in your first

Colby Flood:

time impression ratio in your account.

Colby Flood:

Right.

Colby Flood:

So if you notice that your account frequency or a campaign frequency is, is

Colby Flood:

above 1.5 is starting to get much higher than 1.5, that's gonna be an indicator.

Colby Flood:

You need creative refresh.

Colby Flood:

And if you want to get even more validated with that, look at your

Colby Flood:

first time impression ratio, which is found within your ad set analytics

Colby Flood:

when your first time impression ratio for an ad starts to get to 70%.

Colby Flood:

which means on a scale of zero to a hundred, what percent of people

Colby Flood:

are seeing this for the first time?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, when it starts to get to 70, that's when you know you're gonna need to

Colby Flood:

start looking at changing creative.

Colby Flood:

When it gets to 50 or lower you, unless metrics are good, right?

Colby Flood:

You really need to start changing creative, because if performance

Colby Flood:

is bad, And met that first time impression ratio is low.

Colby Flood:

It's probably cuz it's burnt out.

Colby Flood:

And sometimes you'll see as you start taking this into account, Oh this,

Colby Flood:

this adds at 2%, this adds at 4%.

Colby Flood:

Right?

Colby Flood:

So those can be clear indicators for you.

Colby Flood:

It can be different for every account.

Colby Flood:

Um, I like to say 30 cuz it, it gives you a good amount of creative to test through.

Colby Flood:

Cuz not all creative is gonna be good creative, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

. So it gives you, it gives you room to hopefully have some creatives you can

Colby Flood:

scale with and test with that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah, no, that's great.

Matt Edmundson:

And that's, it is probably worth, I'm assuming, actually it's probably worth

Matt Edmundson:

saying that 30 pieces of ad creative, some of those, are they, are they 30

Matt Edmundson:

individual different pieces or are they like five or six key ideas with

Matt Edmundson:

different variations of it attached?

Colby Flood:

That's a good question.

Colby Flood:

So, um, I wouldn't say it's 30 ad structures, right?

Colby Flood:

So like three panel versus flat lifestyle combo versus I would say

Colby Flood:

it's, uh, you pick your structures and you can definitely create some

Colby Flood:

variations of it that way so that you're.

Colby Flood:

Um, you have more to test with there?

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

So, Colby, I'm listening to you talk and I've, I've got again, uh, as avid

Matt Edmundson:

listeners of the show will know I, I'm an avid note taker and I've got plenty

Matt Edmundson:

of notes in my little journal here.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, where do I get started?

Matt Edmundson:

How, how do I, how do I get moving?

Colby Flood:

With a creative strategy that way?

Colby Flood:

Mm..

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I would say definitely get started with the creative research if I'm plugging

Colby Flood:

myself, one thing that we could provide, um, in the links here is we have a PDF

Colby Flood:

document that lays out this strategy.

Colby Flood:

It's a kind of a fill in the blank thing to make sure you

Colby Flood:

follow the right path that way.

Colby Flood:

Um, start with your research.

Colby Flood:

Really understand what your customers are saying and what

Colby Flood:

has worked in your account.

Colby Flood:

If it's not broke, as we say in North Carolina, if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

Colby Flood:

Uh, double down on it that way.

Colby Flood:

Um, and then start looking at making sure you have the resources

Colby Flood:

in house to create creative.

Colby Flood:

And if you don't find someone that does, and ideally, ideally, the same

Colby Flood:

person that is doing the production is also coming up with the strategy and

Colby Flood:

the ideation of what's gonna happen.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, Colby, I'm, I am aware of time, uh, and the hour is fast approaching.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, so let me ask you, uh, a, a slightly left field question, if I may.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Now you've, you've in effect spilled your beans on the

Matt Edmundson:

whole creative strategy thing.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, As you know, this uh, podcast is sponsored by the e-commerce cohort, right?

Matt Edmundson:

Which is this sort of monthly mastermind group.

Matt Edmundson:

And there's people in the cohort and imagine they're all together in a hotel

Matt Edmundson:

room and you've spent three hours with them or however long it is outlining

Matt Edmundson:

your strategy, given them point by point, you know, this is what you do.

Matt Edmundson:

This is everything that I know.

Matt Edmundson:

It's your best speech you've ever done.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, I know you did a conference, didn't you?

Matt Edmundson:

An online conference.

Matt Edmundson:

I saw it on LinkedIn.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done your, your first conference really recently.

Matt Edmundson:

So you got that under belt.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

At what conference was that?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, AD World.

Matt Edmundson:

Ad World.

Matt Edmundson:

So you've just done that, right?

Matt Edmundson:

And it could be Ad World, it could be the cohort.

Matt Edmundson:

You've done it, the crowds going wild.

Matt Edmundson:

Yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

Colby, you know, it's the best thing you've ever done.

Matt Edmundson:

You take a bow and you do that thing that they do at the Oscars, and you just

Matt Edmundson:

say, I would just like to thank, uh, who, who would you thank and why would

Matt Edmundson:

it be a person, a book, a, a mentor, a podcast, I don't know, whatever.

Matt Edmundson:

Who, are we grateful for?

Colby Flood:

For, for where I am right now.

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm..

Colby Flood:

Yeah.

Colby Flood:

That's a great question.

Colby Flood:

Um, can I thank multiple people or do I need to limit it to one?

Matt Edmundson:

No, you got, We can have more than one.

Matt Edmundson:

That's fine.

Colby Flood:

10 minutes on the mic here.

Colby Flood:

Perfect.

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I mean, definitely family, um, for helping me through harder times

Colby Flood:

when I was younger, uh, 20, 21 years old, um, the team at Brighter Click.

Colby Flood:

Because they are doing amazingwork that way.

Colby Flood:

But I would really focus on, and this one's kind of out of the box, um,

Colby Flood:

the environment that the internet has created for access to knowledge.

Colby Flood:

That's, we are education first because, uh, I started the company

Colby Flood:

with that cuz I had to teach myself everything, uh, with marketing.

Colby Flood:

And I did that through ordering books off Amazon.

Colby Flood:

Going to AD World conference, taking online courses, edx.org, everything that

Colby Flood:

I could for marketing, for Facebook ads.

Colby Flood:

And we're at a point now to where, I mean, 30, 40 years ago, you were

Colby Flood:

limited to what the encyclopedia had on one page for one topic, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, like if you wanted to know about, uh, what a plane was, you had

Colby Flood:

maybe a page of knowledge that way.

Colby Flood:

We have infinite knowledge now.

Colby Flood:

You can really access anything you want, um, through the internet

Colby Flood:

and through, uh, books that way.

Colby Flood:

So that's a whole different passion of mine is education first, but

Matt Edmundson:

yeah.

Matt Edmundson:

And when, when you say education first, is that, is that because it has come out

Matt Edmundson:

of this you've had to teach yourself?

Colby Flood:

Yeah, I think so.

Colby Flood:

And I mean, I think I see how important it is, right?

Colby Flood:

So, uh, our education first has three pillars to it.

Colby Flood:

The first is, Really what feeds the rest, which is educating our team.

Colby Flood:

So you work at Brighter Click, like we strongly recommend, suggest not

Colby Flood:

sure the legality of saying, uh, require , uh, you take, you take a

Colby Flood:

paid course conference, something that we cover for you every quarter.

Colby Flood:

And we have channels within Slack that are just focused on education

Colby Flood:

and like, we're always looking to see how we can help our team members

Colby Flood:

grow, whether it be in their field.

Colby Flood:

We have a media buyer right now.

Colby Flood:

We're putting on a training, uh, path to go towards like a CMO role, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

really trying to give people that opportunity.

Colby Flood:

And then the second pillar is educating our clients.

Colby Flood:

99% of agencies just suck at communication and it's not just the speed of response,

Colby Flood:

cuz I know that's one pain point, but it's the quality and the detail of

Colby Flood:

response as well we'd like to make.

Colby Flood:

We're educating our clients through communication so that they have all

Colby Flood:

the information they need that way.

Colby Flood:

And then the third is educating the public.

Colby Flood:

I know there's a lot of people out there, so I, um, had to educate myself.

Colby Flood:

Thankfully, with my circumstances, I was in America.

Colby Flood:

I had the means to have a job that could afford to purchase those things.

Colby Flood:

But there's people at second turning points in life, leaving the military,

Colby Flood:

going through divorce in a country where, uh, the economic state is not the best.

Colby Flood:

That can't pay for things, right.

Colby Flood:

That can't pay for courses.

Colby Flood:

So our goal is to put out free education, um, to get people

Colby Flood:

the education that they need.

Colby Flood:

But yeah, I think it, I think it came from that cuz I understand that.

Colby Flood:

Your learning is not limited to college or the school that you go to.

Colby Flood:

It's continued.

Colby Flood:

Facebook ads was different three years ago than it is today, right?

Colby Flood:

Mm-hmm.

Colby Flood:

, so a degree doesn't do much for you there.

Colby Flood:

It's all about continued education and the access to that.

Matt Edmundson:

I couldn't agree more.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, it, uh, and like you, I, I have devoured more books than

Matt Edmundson:

I care to remember, more online courses than I care to remember.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, and a desire and a pursuit to understand, uh, my, my craft.

Matt Edmundson:

And, um, I think it's one of the most remarkable things.

Matt Edmundson:

And it's, uh, I mean, I went to, I don't, Did you do college?

Matt Edmundson:

I went to university.

Matt Edmundson:

Did you go to college?

Colby Flood:

I am a, a happy college dropout after one year that was not

Colby Flood:

focused on college, but I, I fully respect, uh, getting a degree fully.

Matt Edmundson:

It just, it's interesting because my kids, uh,

Matt Edmundson:

my two boys, I have three kids.

Matt Edmundson:

My two boys are at uni.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, Zach started the, this year was his first year at university, and I,

Matt Edmundson:

and Josh has been at uni a couple.

Matt Edmundson:

And I remember having conversations with, uh, friends of mine that own agencies

Matt Edmundson:

cuz Josh was interested in computer programming and they were saying to me,

Matt Edmundson:

Listen, if you wanna get into programming, probably best you don't go to uni.

Matt Edmundson:

Well, this is not what they would've said years ago.

Matt Edmundson:

You know, when I was looking at it, it's, but it's this whole thing now, actually.

Matt Edmundson:

The world is a different place where education is concerned and it's

Matt Edmundson:

all getting turned on its head.

Matt Edmundson:

So I love your philosophy.

Matt Edmundson:

I think it's great and I think it's, um, I can see why it will resonate.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, Colby, listen.

Matt Edmundson:

How do people reach you?

Matt Edmundson:

How do they connect with you?

Matt Edmundson:

Um, how do they get that free pdf?

Matt Edmundson:

. Colby Flood: Yeah, so free pdf.

Matt Edmundson:

If there's links provided in this, uh, podcast, um, I can

Matt Edmundson:

definitely send that over to you.

Matt Edmundson:

So there'll be that and some additional free content they can get for education.

Matt Edmundson:

If you go to our homepage, brighterclick.com.

Matt Edmundson:

In the home hero section.

Matt Edmundson:

So the top of the page, there will be a button to download

Matt Edmundson:

the current creatives that we're seeing performing for Facebook ads.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, we're not gonna spam you promise, Uh, don't have the bandwidths to do that right

Matt Edmundson:

now, , but you'll get a, you'll get a pdf.

Matt Edmundson:

What you will get looped into is what we're looking at

Matt Edmundson:

starting, which is every month.

Matt Edmundson:

We're just gonna send out a, a slide deck with the top creatives

Matt Edmundson:

we we're seeing performing that way.

Matt Edmundson:

Um, reach out to me on LinkedIn, Colby Flood.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, be glad to connect with anybody and just kind of, uh, talk

Matt Edmundson:

shop or talk opportunity there.

Matt Edmundson:

Fantastic.

Matt Edmundson:

And we will of course put all of the links, uh, that Colby has mentioned

Matt Edmundson:

in the show notes, so to the pdf, the software that he's mentioned.

Matt Edmundson:

We'll get, we'll get those off you as well, Colby, and we'll, we'll put those

Matt Edmundson:

in, uh, and we'll listen, we'll even put your affiliate link in because why not?

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, it makes no difference to anybody else.

Matt Edmundson:

Right?

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, we'll add those to the show notes, uh, which you can get at

Matt Edmundson:

ecommercepodcast.net or you can get them direct to your inbox if you have

Matt Edmundson:

signed up for our non spam newsletter.

Matt Edmundson:

Cuz like Colby, we don't have the bandwidth either.

Matt Edmundson:

We only just remember to send the newsletter out more than anything else.

Matt Edmundson:

So, uh, it's, uh, it's a funny one.

Matt Edmundson:

Colby, thank you so much for joining me on the e-Commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Been an absolute treat, man.

Matt Edmundson:

Real pleasure to meet you and thank you for sharing your thoughts and insights.

Matt Edmundson:

Lots of stuff to think about, Lots of conversations to have.

Colby Flood:

Thank you so much for having me.

Colby Flood:

It was a great time.

Matt Edmundson:

Oh, it's been brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

Brilliant.

Matt Edmundson:

So there you have it.

Matt Edmundson:

What a great, great conversation.

Matt Edmundson:

Huge thanks again to Colby for joining me today and also a big shout out to

Matt Edmundson:

today's show sponsor ecommercecohort.com.

Matt Edmundson:

Do head over to the website, ecommercecohort.com for more

Matt Edmundson:

information about this new type of community that you can join.

Matt Edmundson:

Be sure of course to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get

Matt Edmundson:

your podcast from because we've got even more great conversations lined

Matt Edmundson:

up just like today's one with Colby.

Matt Edmundson:

And I don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt Edmundson:

And in case no one dear listener has told you yet today, let me

Matt Edmundson:

be the first person to do it.

Matt Edmundson:

You are awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Yes, you are.

Matt Edmundson:

It's just a burden we all have to bear.

Matt Edmundson:

Some of us more than others, but we're still all awesome.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, the e-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt Edmundson:

You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

Matt Edmundson:

The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,

Matt Edmundson:

Estella Robin and Tim Johnson.

Matt Edmundson:

Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson and My Good Self, and as I

Matt Edmundson:

mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, head over to the

Matt Edmundson:

website, ecommercepodcast.net where you can also sign up for our weekly newsletter

Matt Edmundson:

and get all of the good stuff direct your inbox totally free, which is amazing.

Matt Edmundson:

So Colby, that's it from me.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from you.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, thanks everyone for joining us.

Matt Edmundson:

This, uh, this well, this is the e-commerce podcast.

Matt Edmundson:

Uh, have a fantastic week wherever you are and I will see you next time.

Matt Edmundson:

That's it from me.