on average the brand, the typical brand should have 30
Speaker:to 50 distinctive brand assets.
Speaker:The average folks that I talk to have five.
Speaker:So it doesn't matter if Michelangelo painted your brand Mark, or you know
Speaker:someone, someone very, very famous, created your brand mark for you.
Speaker:That's only one thing you know.
Speaker:That's only one memory.
Speaker:Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:The E-Commerce podcast is all about helping you deliver e-commerce.
Speaker:Wow.
Speaker:And to help us do just that today I am chatting with today's guest, Stæven
Speaker:Frey, from Quantum Branding Agency.
Speaker:To you about why is branding so important for your e-commerce business.
Speaker:I just love talking about branding, so I'm looking forward to this conversation.
Speaker:But before Stæven and I dive into our conversation, let me give you
Speaker:a, a podcast pick some previous episodes that I think you'll enjoy.
Speaker:Oh, yes.
Speaker:Check out five steps for successful e-commerce branding.
Speaker:No, no, actually that's wrong.
Speaker:Five steps for successful Amazon branding, uh, with Drew Morgans,
Speaker:who's actually a really cool guy.
Speaker:I met him in Kansas.
Speaker:What a legend He is, uh, Branding basics to consider when branding your
Speaker:business with a very own Josh Catchpole.
Speaker:Also talking about branding.
Speaker:Uh, you can access our podcast pick and our entire podcast archive for free
Speaker:on our website, ecommercepodcast.net.
Speaker:Plus, if you are there, sign up to the newsletter and we will send
Speaker:you the links to our podcast picks, along with the notes and the links
Speaker:from today's show with Stæven.
Speaker:They all get delivered straight to your inbox totally for free.
Speaker:So if you're not signed up for the newsletter yet, why not get on it?
Speaker:Get over to the website just do it now.
Speaker:Now, are you struggling to struggling?
Speaker:Are you struggling to talk a bit like me?
Speaker:Are you struggling to grow your e-commerce business?
Speaker:Do you feel you are constantly spinning the wheels trying to
Speaker:figure out what to focus on next?
Speaker:Well, let me tell you, I have been there and I know how frustrating it can be.
Speaker:That's why we have the e-commerce cohort, and that's why the e-commerce cohort
Speaker:sponsors the show, uh, e-commerce cohort helps, helps e-commerce businesses
Speaker:like yours deliver an exceptional customer experience that drives results.
Speaker:Uh, and to help you get started, they have a free resource for
Speaker:you called E-Commerce Cycles.
Speaker:It's a mini course.
Speaker:Which walks you through the proven framework for building a
Speaker:successful e-commerce business.
Speaker:In that mini course, you will see the specific steps that we take in our own
Speaker:e-commerce company, uh uh, so that you can see exactly how to put those concepts
Speaker:into practice in your own business.
Speaker:Oh, yes, and the good news.
Speaker:It's completely free.
Speaker:Uh, and you can sign up, uh, at ecommercecycles.com.
Speaker:Go check it out.
Speaker:Go head over to ecommercecycles.com, access our free training.
Speaker:Get started today.
Speaker:Uh, and just, you know, it's time to start delivering e-commerce
Speaker:wow to your customers with the help of e-commerce cohort.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Now that is the show sponsor.
Speaker:Let's talk about the show guest.
Speaker:Stæven is the founder and chief brand scientist, which I think is probably
Speaker:one of the best job titles ever.
Speaker:At Quantum branding, he helps brands become more authentic and memorable.
Speaker:Uh, he's a category leader through the power of brand science, the core
Speaker:of what fuels successful brands, growth, sales, and marketing.
Speaker:Brand science has got a trademark next to it, by the way.
Speaker:Uh, he's passionate about helping purpose-driven brands to go to the
Speaker:next level, disrupt their market, and leverage the power of brand science
Speaker:to become an industry authority.
Speaker:Stæven, great to have you on the show, man.
Speaker:How are we doing?
Speaker:We are good.
Speaker:And, uh, thanks listeners for uh, tuning in today's episode as well.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:Oh, no, it's, it's great to have you.
Speaker:It's great.
Speaker:I'm curious, Stæven, before we, before we jump in, um, I mean, you're drinking
Speaker:your, your English breakfast tea from, from from Tennessee, you know.
Speaker:No, it's Twinings.
Speaker:No worries.
Speaker:It even sounds quintessentially English, doesn't it?
Speaker:Twinings.
Speaker:Um, what's the, I'm curious, what's the painting behind you?
Speaker:Because I, I appreciate people listening to the show.
Speaker:Can't see it.
Speaker:Uh, but I'm, I'm really captivated by this painting that you have behind you.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Uh, so, uh, one of the things that, uh, is important for me is, uh, color
Speaker:and color is one of the, the secondary lenses that we interpret things.
Speaker:So, first is shape, then is color.
Speaker:And so these are just some great colors.
Speaker:And I live in a 1928 bungalow, and so these are a little
Speaker:bit more mid-century modern.
Speaker:But, uh, I just, uh, loved this, uh, loved this, uh, this painting.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Uh, behind me and, uh, there's actually another one.
Speaker:I can't gotta show it.
Speaker:We're gonna pull it off the wall.
Speaker:That's Cat.
Speaker:It's a cat painting.
Speaker:It's a cat.
Speaker:Now what the reason we're laughing dear listener, is because, um, before we
Speaker:hit the record button, Stæven, you were telling me that, um, as well as being a
Speaker:brand scientist, uh, you, you, you rescue cats, and there, there may be the odd
Speaker:cat sort of appearing on the video or, or, or maybe making a vocal appearance.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:So if we hear, so if we hear there's a variety of cats, cat noises, we
Speaker:hear, uh, usually, uh, it's Mr.
Speaker:Peanut butter wanting to go outside or teddy pumpkin pancakes saying hi.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:We won't go into all their names, but Mr.
Speaker:Peanut, I was teasing out.
Speaker:I was like, yeah, little did you know you signed up for a podcast
Speaker:with me and my cat entourage.
Speaker:My cat-tourage.
Speaker:The cat-tourage.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:That's awesome.
Speaker:That's awesome.
Speaker:Uh, we should maybe do a whole episode on how to name your cat,
Speaker:because obviously you've got some great names going on there.
Speaker:You know, the universe does it.
Speaker:You gotta listen to the universe.
Speaker:You give it two weeks and it just shows up.
Speaker:That's the whole episode actually.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well thanks for listening.
Speaker:Thanks for tuning in.
Speaker:Thanks
Speaker:to check the mail.
Speaker:We love it.
Speaker:We love it.
Speaker:So Stæven we read in your, um, bio.
Speaker:I'm just, You are the chief brand scientist.
Speaker:What does that mean?
Speaker:What's the chief brand scientist?
Speaker:So, a chief brand scientist is, uh, a term that, that I've kind of, uh,
Speaker:developed to represent several things.
Speaker:One, there's kind of a chief marketing officer and a chief marketing officer
Speaker:is their role is to, you know, and it may differ from agency or
Speaker:company or organization or nonprofit.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But, uh, chief marketing officer is predominantly, uh, Uh, given
Speaker:the responsibility to focus on the marketing of the organization
Speaker:and set out the message.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:But then there's also a strategist component.
Speaker:So then for a while I was, you know, I was like, well, chief strategy officer,
Speaker:so cso, that's kind of a new term.
Speaker:But what's interesting is within my organization, there's a
Speaker:couple things that I'm doing.
Speaker:You know, yes, I am advancing the marketing for my organization.
Speaker:Yes, I'm advancing strategy for organizations.
Speaker:But the main thing that I'm doing is that I'm, I'm researching first and
Speaker:foremost using evidence-based metrics, diving into, uh, what are, what are the
Speaker:metrics and things that organizations need to be looking at, and then I do
Speaker:that for their organization as well.
Speaker:So, so I'm not just the, the chief brand scientist for my own organization.
Speaker:That's kind of my title when I come to you.
Speaker:So I'm bringing that skillset of knowing how to integrate.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:The marketing, yes, the sales, but also the research, the strategy,
Speaker:and the synthesis so that we come in and, and together can diagnose
Speaker:and assess and create plans that are based on what's gonna move the needle
Speaker:forward for your organization based on where you are, kind of in the
Speaker:age and stage of your organization.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, as, as well.
Speaker:So, uh, chief Brand Scientist simply stated is, is my title.
Speaker:I made it cuz I do what I want.
Speaker:No, I'm just kidding.
Speaker:My brother used to say, do what you want, you'll do it anyways.
Speaker:So I was like, fine.
Speaker:No big chiefs chief brand scientist.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Uh, but was it a case of, um, it's the best term that, that
Speaker:embraces all the things that I do.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know, first and foremost, advancing brain science is kind of my
Speaker:main karmic purpose on this planet.
Speaker:Uh, and teaching, teaching everyone about it as well.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:Okay, well, we'll get into that.
Speaker:I mean, I, I was just saying then I, part of me is curious, did you come up
Speaker:with the name Chief Brand Scientist?
Speaker:Just, was it going back to the start of the podcast, the Universe, after two
Speaker:weeks, it just, that's what happened.
Speaker:It, it, it's a little bit longer than that, but doesn't work on yourself.
Speaker:It only works for cats, man.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Just takes a lot longer on, on humans apparently.
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:Um, So you've used this phrase, brand science.
Speaker:Let's dig.
Speaker:So you're a brand scientist, um, which is separate and distinct from,
Speaker:uh, the, the, the chief marketing officer that you, that you mentioned.
Speaker:So brand science, what do you, I mean, you've, you, you
Speaker:use the word like metrics.
Speaker:Um, so I, I figure that's involved in it somehow.
Speaker:But let's dig into this concept of brand science.
Speaker:What do we mean by brand science?
Speaker:Yeah, so, so I, I first like to start off with a baseline of where does this fit?
Speaker:So marketing is, hey, anything that says, Hey, do business with me.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You don't, you don't make,
Speaker:it's the best, best definition I've heard for marketing for a long time.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:so, It's, it's really functional.
Speaker:You know, you, back in the day, I would've traded some wheat, uh, with you for
Speaker:some cheese or something, or a goat.
Speaker:Um, and there would've been a sign outside your door that said, ah, you're the
Speaker:blacksmith, or, oh, this is the bakery.
Speaker:And we, we would've done trade on a local level.
Speaker:Yeah, and traded.
Speaker:So marketing.
Speaker:Now, nowadays we live in a digital economy, a digital global economy
Speaker:where I don't trade with people items, but I trade money and I
Speaker:trade possibly all over the world.
Speaker:So marketing is just the functional advancement of trade
Speaker:saying, Hey, do business with me.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Then within that, there's another component.
Speaker:There's branding, and branding is the unique and distinctive assets
Speaker:within your marketing, whether it's your sandwich board sign, or
Speaker:your, your various ways that you share who you are and what you do.
Speaker:Print, web, digital, social media, so there's marketing, and
Speaker:then within that is branding.
Speaker:And branding is the distinct stuff that helps you remember
Speaker:whom to do business with.
Speaker:So if the blacksmith had a bright Barbie pink sign, you'd probably be like,
Speaker:whoa, I remember that guy when I was traipsing through town on my Clydesdale.
Speaker:Let's go get a sword there.
Speaker:Uh, likewise, that's how things work in our minds when there are.
Speaker:Um, memories that we've built based on our senses.
Speaker:So this is the, the, the crux of everything is we make
Speaker:memories using our senses.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so sensory assets are the things within brands that we remember.
Speaker:So color, shape, word, story, sound, music, character, you
Speaker:know, photography, illustration.
Speaker:So any time that those are distinct, we remember 'em.
Speaker:So that's branding.
Speaker:So we went from marketing mm-hmm.
Speaker:To branding.
Speaker:And then there's brand science, which is this geeky little, you know, corner
Speaker:of my world, which is the study of how do we make branding more effective.
Speaker:How do we make it more distinct and more famous?
Speaker:How do we drive people to think of us first?
Speaker:And so there's a slew of sciences, um, and, and metrics that I look
Speaker:at, um, and variables that, that we work through to ensure that
Speaker:we're understanding your category.
Speaker:We're understanding the customer cues, we're understanding where everyone else
Speaker:is kind of in the bald diamond, you know?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So if you've got customer cues as first base, you can't alienate the customer.
Speaker:You gotta give 'em what they want.
Speaker:And then you've got, third base is, is the industry.
Speaker:You know, you can't alienate your industry or else you don't fit.
Speaker:And then there's kind of the outfield.
Speaker:And the outfield is where everyone else has hit the ball with their own
Speaker:distinctive ip, with their own color, shape, word, distinctive brand assets.
Speaker:So every category has its own set, set of kind of.
Speaker:Data that, that we look at and create just for you, so that we look at and we
Speaker:can measure the effectiveness of your branding thus far, and, and this is
Speaker:really kind of a controversial thing.
Speaker:It's, it's shouldn't be, you'd think science.
Speaker:Everyone would love science.
Speaker:It gives us answers and helps explain things.
Speaker:Uh, but anytime you are talking about, you know, someone's brand mark, you're
Speaker:talking about things that they've invested in that they're heavily tied to.
Speaker:Um, and then we put that up against testing and saying like, wow, this
Speaker:is not distinct, it's not memorable.
Speaker:And be like, well, this has been our brand Mark for 200 years.
Speaker:And I'm like, well, that's great.
Speaker:Um, how's business?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Are you selling?
Speaker:And so typically there's an emotional side of.
Speaker:Of the branding that they think they are connected to and actually they're
Speaker:connected to their customers aren't.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And so that's another, that's another kind of fallacy in this world, but
Speaker:brands, uh, of brand science, that it's about emotional connection and
Speaker:it's actually about making memories.
Speaker:And, and we'll, we'll get into that a little bit later.
Speaker:So, brand sciences is this little subset within branding in the study of how
Speaker:to make your branding more effective.
Speaker:And it helps drive profits.
Speaker:It helps companies grow and sell.
Speaker:It helps make people think of you first.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:And that's ultimately what we want them to do.
Speaker:And that's the most important thing, especially if you're passionate about
Speaker:your brand and you're passionate about making a living and you're
Speaker:passionate about, you know, um, being able to afford the top shelf cat food,
Speaker:you know, or dog food for, uh, for.
Speaker:For, for equal amongst the pet or, or humans.
Speaker:If you have humans in the home and you want them to, but, but you know,
Speaker:if this is what you do for a living, this is probably one of the number
Speaker:one things you need to invest in.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:The challenge is most, most agencies, marketing personnel, and folks don't.
Speaker:They know why.
Speaker:They don't know how to articulate why.
Speaker:So that's why I really love brand science because it gives us a foundational
Speaker:explanation of what branding is meant to do, whether or not it's working.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:What we should do and how we can change it as soon as possible so that we
Speaker:can grow, we can sell, we can drive revenue, and we can get that cat food.
Speaker:So I, I mean there's a lot there, Stæven.
Speaker:I'm not gonna lie, I've got a little of notes already.
Speaker:Um, and so you've got this concept.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, okay.
Speaker:It's not, not your concept, but you, there's this, there's this, I think
Speaker:sometimes people think of it as a bit ethereal or don't they, branding.
Speaker:It's just something out.
Speaker:It's very unquantifiable.
Speaker:It's a bit like social media.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:It's just over there.
Speaker:It's, it is a bit ethereal and every now and again people think, well,
Speaker:should I change my logo and my colors?
Speaker:Um, which is actually, I think it's very.
Speaker:It's, it's doing a disservice to the, to the idea of
Speaker:branding, uh, in a massive way.
Speaker:But you are taking then this sort of ethereal thing and you're trying to
Speaker:put numbers or some kind of science behind it to help people understand
Speaker:whether or not it's, it's working.
Speaker:How, if I'm an e-commerce owner, um, let's say I've already got
Speaker:an e-commerce business, right?
Speaker:It's already established.
Speaker:How do I know?
Speaker:If it's working, what are some of the things that I need to be thinking about?
Speaker:How do I know?
Speaker:I love this phrase, do people come to you first, um, that you used?
Speaker:How do I, how do I know if that's happening?
Speaker:What are some of the things that you look for?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:So there's obviously leading and lagging indicators.
Speaker:You know, you can look at clicks and websites and things.
Speaker:You can see search terms and how you're ranking, you know, how you're
Speaker:ranking in Google search terms.
Speaker:Those are gonna kind of give you some lagging indicators.
Speaker:Uh, and I always, if I mess this up, forgive me.
Speaker:But you know, some of them are gonna tell you, um, are people looking for you?
Speaker:Are they not looking for you?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And so for you to change and move the needle, that's
Speaker:not gonna happen right away.
Speaker:So you may think that, uh, web.
Speaker:Website search and SEO or Amazon search is gonna be a leading indicator.
Speaker:Um, when it may not be, it may actually just be, you know, somebody just paid
Speaker:a hundred people to do, you know, testimonials and reviews or mm-hmm.
Speaker:It's paid sponsored ad.
Speaker:So then is that really, are you really leading in that category?
Speaker:So, so the really two metrics that I like to focus on is, uh, fame.
Speaker:How famous is it and how distinct is it?
Speaker:So when it comes to your, your, your brand asset, your brand assets, I
Speaker:said earlier, it's not just about your, your brand Mark or your logo.
Speaker:I say brand Mark.
Speaker:And I'd love if everyone else started saying this instead of logo, uh, because
Speaker:when we say brand Mark, it's, it helps us transition into this idea that your
Speaker:brand is more than just your logo.
Speaker:Your brand is all the assets, visual, verbal, word, shaped
Speaker:color, uh, story sound, music.
Speaker:And so then we see our brand assets as these really distinctive, that
Speaker:are unique to us investments assets.
Speaker:That anytime we need to do an ad or, or whatnot, we have a menu of
Speaker:assets that we can choose to help use to drive that top of mindness.
Speaker:Um, so you, you're to your question, how do you know if you are, you
Speaker:know, if they're coming to you first.
Speaker:There's obviously, you know, you've got leads, you've got
Speaker:your, your buyer's journey.
Speaker:Uh, but really the two that we, we have to look at first is how
Speaker:famous is it in your category?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And how distinctiveness is it?
Speaker:And so if you imagine a, a window, an old window with two boxes, you know,
Speaker:that's, that's our, our little rubric.
Speaker:And, and the top corner is where we wanna get super famous and super distinct.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And based on how those assets test, um, you know, so, uh, a great
Speaker:example is if you think of Coca-Cola.
Speaker:Coca-Cola has over 150 and plus assets.
Speaker:You know, Santa Claus, polar bears, you know, the shape of the bottle.
Speaker:Open happiness, always coca-cola.
Speaker:You know, they've got all these assets and then they refresh them every season.
Speaker:You know, you get the new Coke Zero can and now it's red with the black.
Speaker:And that was a 20 year kind of push to, to shift.
Speaker:Now they're saving money cuz they, they can do one can and then just do a two
Speaker:color process on the same can, you know?
Speaker:Um, but before it was black and they established that black was
Speaker:zero sugar and they created what we call a distinctive memory structure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, So they've got all these assets, right?
Speaker:And you may have Matt's Cola company and we would say, yeah, cola is red.
Speaker:Like when you go to the store and there's off-brands, they're red.
Speaker:And so just cuz you're red, that may be an industry signifier
Speaker:that Oh yeah, it's cola.
Speaker:Yeah, but it's all the combination of all the assets mm-hmm.
Speaker:That make it Matt's cola.
Speaker:It's your tagline, it's your brand Mark.
Speaker:And so, so to be highly famous in your category, people need, need to
Speaker:be able to look at assets and know that's Matt, that's Matt's cola.
Speaker:Or that's, you know, you know Matt's brand.
Speaker:And so the goal is for people to think of you first, and.
Speaker:We have to back up and say, well, why does, why is this work?
Speaker:And so, uh, in our brain, there's actually two systems.
Speaker:It's not left brain, right brain.
Speaker:There's a book called, uh, thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman.
Speaker:And he basically says, uh, the majority of our lives are lived with
Speaker:system one, which is kind of fast.
Speaker:Autonomous works on its own autopilot.
Speaker:It's why you can talk and drive on the, you know, and listen to the
Speaker:radio while you're driving down.
Speaker:You know, the, the highway.
Speaker:System two is like 15 times 37, or should I invest $29,000 in this 2.9 APR thing?
Speaker:Like, you're like, what?
Speaker:No, I need a minute to think about that.
Speaker:So, System one is always using our mem our our senses and creating memories.
Speaker:So the, the question is not to ask, how do I know if I'm, you
Speaker:know, they're choosing me first.
Speaker:Well, the first question is, do you have highly famous and distinct assets first?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Because that's, then we can figure out why, when and where.
Speaker:So if we know that you have.
Speaker:You know, and on average the brand, the typical brand should have 30
Speaker:to 50 distinctive brand assets.
Speaker:The average folks that I talk to have five.
Speaker:So it doesn't matter if Michelangelo painted your brand Mark, or you know
Speaker:someone, someone very, very famous, created your brand mark for you.
Speaker:That's only one thing you know.
Speaker:That's only one memory.
Speaker:The brand with the most memories, you know.
Speaker:Um, if, if I said to you, you know, man, I'm really hungry, and
Speaker:you go, dude, you're not you when you're hungry and then you're like,
Speaker:ah, you should eat a Snickers.
Speaker:And then you're thinking commercials with Betty White and celebrities and
Speaker:the package and the colors and the type.
Speaker:So you're like, yeah, I should probably get a Snickers.
Speaker:They've got a story, they've got the packaging, they've got this idea.
Speaker:That you connect hunger with Snickers.
Speaker:I think it's brilliant.
Speaker:It's a candy bar.
Speaker:Y'all like, every time you're hunger, you should not eat a candy bar.
Speaker:Like, no, this is like, I'm definitely
Speaker:not a Snickers, but I mean, you know,
Speaker:maybe a Walker's shortbread.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Um, I'm just listeners.
Speaker:I'm just pulling out all this British stuff.
Speaker:Um, so, but the, I think that's Scottish.
Speaker:Forgive me, but, um, The first question we have to ask is, do we have assets?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:How many do we have?
Speaker:And are they highly distinct and famous?
Speaker:And if you're looking at your brand and you say like, well,
Speaker:I don't know how many I have.
Speaker:Do you have a color?
Speaker:Do you have a color palette?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Do you have a shape in your brand mark?
Speaker:Do you have your brand mark?
Speaker:Do you have a tagline?
Speaker:Do you have a process or a name for your product?
Speaker:And when we start to gather all these things up that your senses can identify.
Speaker:If you have three to five, it's time to invest in some more.
Speaker:If you have five to 10, okay, maybe we should go test them and add some more.
Speaker:If you've got, you know, 15 to 30, then.
Speaker:We need to test those too, but you're on the right path.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, because at the end of the day, people need those distinctive brand
Speaker:assets, those brand assets that are unique to just you to drive those
Speaker:memories because we actually keep those memories in little boxes.
Speaker:And that's actually the science of semiotics, so Right.
Speaker:Um, it's like a March madness bracket in our head.
Speaker:So when you think of cookies, you think of cookies.
Speaker:When you think of, you know, things in the fridge that are white, that
Speaker:are in the door that are a condiment, that is a vegetable, you know, your
Speaker:brain has to go through, oh, milk, eggs, uh, mayo, oh, uh, horseradish.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It takes a minute for your brain to get there.
Speaker:So since we have all these boxes, that's how we make memories.
Speaker:So there, there's not really a long, uh, a short answer to your question.
Speaker:The first one is, you know, how do we gauge if people are coming to us first?
Speaker:The real question we need to be asking is, are we investing in our brand?
Speaker:Are we willing to invest in our brand?
Speaker:And what assets do we have to start with?
Speaker:Because then we can, then, once we identify those, then we can look and see
Speaker:if, um, if we need to test those assets to make them more distinct, if we need
Speaker:to use or lose some of those assets.
Speaker:So you may have a really great asset you're not using.
Speaker:Um, you may be sitting on a really great illustration or, or a story
Speaker:or, um, a jingle, uh, that people don't know about yet, and it's
Speaker:could be really, really distinct.
Speaker:So a lot of your intellectual property isn't just about your brand
Speaker:mark, isn't just about your name.
Speaker:It's actually about all the sensory things that you connect
Speaker:because we think in ideas.
Speaker:Um, which is really about, uh, if you're familiar with Simon Sinek,
Speaker:I really love his golden circle.
Speaker:Um, when we tap into the big why, We tap into motivations.
Speaker:And so that's a huge, that's a huge must that your brand must connect to a big idea
Speaker:or motivation, not just selling a product.
Speaker:And so, and, and I know we all go on Amazon and you see some of these brands,
Speaker:it's like they're, they're like a Chinese or an off-brand or, and it's like J D R K
Speaker:R M, and you're like, what is that brand?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:But it's only $20.
Speaker:And so they're the number one in their thing because of price.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then you get it, it's not very good.
Speaker:It doesn't work.
Speaker:And then at the end of the day day you're, you've realized, wow, I just
Speaker:bought something based on value alone.
Speaker:It really wasn't solving the problem I needed.
Speaker:And it definitely didn't leave me with a great experience because it didn't show
Speaker:me that they understood my motivation or why I was looking for that product.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's really fascinating.
Speaker:Uh, Stæven, I, and again, Lots to sort of dig into there and I'm, I'm just
Speaker:trying to think if I was, If I, as I'm listening to you talk and I'm thinking
Speaker:I'm, I'm running my e-commerce business.
Speaker:How many assets have I got?
Speaker:How many brand assets have I got?
Speaker:I'm just sort of taking a mental sort of checklist and I've got this,
Speaker:this sort of many, um, well, I'll,
Speaker:um, I know you told me to wait till the end.
Speaker:I've got a resource that, that, that I can share with the list listeners.
Speaker:Um, but it's, uh, Bitly, b i t l y slash brand science checklist.
Speaker:Um, and that's just something that's.
Speaker:Not the, the main thing I was gonna talk about today, but I've got a checklist that
Speaker:people can go through as a starting point.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:It helps you.
Speaker:Um, so happy to share you and give you that link.
Speaker:You can put it on the, the, the, the podcast link.
Speaker:But, uh, I've got a checklist to help prime you, uh, through that process.
Speaker:Uh, but so, so don't worry about, uh, trying to in go through that
Speaker:process alone, um, if that's something that's important to you, but.
Speaker:No, that's great.
Speaker:So, uh, brand science checklist, Bitly forward slash brand
Speaker:science checklist is great.
Speaker:Um, so you've got a checklist.
Speaker:So I'm gonna start to figure out how many assets I've got.
Speaker:The thing, the word that I'm lock locking on, um, here, Stæven is the word famous.
Speaker:Um, how do I know if.
Speaker:My brand assets are famous.
Speaker:How do I even start to think about that?
Speaker:Because my initial response will be, well, as the brand owner I, I, I think
Speaker:everything I do is famous because, you know, it's just, it's just me.
Speaker:It's just the way I work.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:But the, the, but, but how do I know really, uh, if things are famous?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:So, uh, a great test.
Speaker:Um, and there's a lot of tests out there that you can, you can do group
Speaker:studies, you can do, you know, one of the prime examples is, is simply if you
Speaker:took your product and you offered your product and you removed the product
Speaker:itself and simply try to sell it with just the distinctive brand asset.
Speaker:Um, so if you have, you know, if you're selling something online, And
Speaker:you have a set of colors that you use.
Speaker:You know, do those colors outperform?
Speaker:Are there colors that outperform because they're, they're kind of, you
Speaker:have a color palette that you use.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, can, would people buy, do people buy your product based on the assets?
Speaker:Because the assets create those memories.
Speaker:So, so the, the first question is, you know, how do I know if they're famous?
Speaker:A better question is, where am I implementing all my distinctive brand
Speaker:assets across the buyer's journey?
Speaker:Because the first step is to build awareness and trust and, and have that
Speaker:strong brand identity so that when they do or they are ready to buy, when
Speaker:they are ready to buy, they buy you.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:So, um, worked with Mars Petcare a while back and we did this journey
Speaker:document to help their marketing, sales, uh, packaging and design team.
Speaker:And we talked about the buyer's journey and where to put, you know, the
Speaker:distinctive brand assets on the pack and the best practices as a document
Speaker:to help retain knowledge over time.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And it's interesting is we've got like the buyer's journey.
Speaker:Which is, you know, from the second they pick it up on the shelf and
Speaker:they, and this is a little different from e-commerce in this sense,
Speaker:but here's the interesting thing.
Speaker:There was an awareness chunk and they're like, yeah, we're not
Speaker:gonna cover that in this document.
Speaker:That's a whole nother document.
Speaker:And so they identified that, yes, there's the buyer's journey.
Speaker:Mm, but then there's the awareness component.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That your messaging should be out there priming the pump.
Speaker:And so the.
Speaker:Priming of the pump, using your brand assets to create those
Speaker:associations, and for them to think of you first when they go to buy you.
Speaker:That should be the indicator.
Speaker:But if you don't have that awareness ecosystem built in, if you don't
Speaker:have ads that are driving, you know, if you don't have ads that are just
Speaker:introducing yourself to people, um, there's actually four types of ads.
Speaker:There's only four.
Speaker:Uh, introduce the brand.
Speaker:Um, call to action, feature and benefit, and then endorsement or social proof.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So say I have a new, a new car and I advertise at the Superbowl
Speaker:like Audi did a few years ago, and then, okay, that's great.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:Well, nobody bought that car cuz they never followed it up with a sign and
Speaker:drive event or, you know, 0% apr.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:There was no call to action.
Speaker:Do people need that call to action?
Speaker:Not really, but yes they do.
Speaker:They need a prompt to say, go buy it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They're not going to, so, so the awareness was, introduce 'em to the
Speaker:brand, then give them a reason to buy the brand and then like, oh, well,
Speaker:JD Power and Associates, five stars.
Speaker:Oh, and five outta five people love this car.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:The same thing with your products.
Speaker:You know, if, if I'm scrolling down on Facebook or social media, that tends
Speaker:to be where I see the majority of e-commerce products advertised to me.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Based on my likes, my wants, my needs.
Speaker:Then when I'm ready and however, the magical ecosystem of them
Speaker:stalking me with my voice works.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:Uh, I have an awareness of that brand.
Speaker:So when I see that, you know, I see that brand online.
Speaker:I see that e-commerce brand online, or I search for it even.
Speaker:But typically if it's a sponsored ad or it follows me around, it'll drive
Speaker:me to go click on it when I'm ready.
Speaker:Um, so the first question is, do you have an awareness that you're creating?
Speaker:Because if you go to test it, And how do you test it?
Speaker:You test it on distinctiveness?
Speaker:Memorability.
Speaker:Um, one of the ways you also, uh, look at it is as far as market share.
Speaker:Um, mark, uh, the term is market penetration.
Speaker:I don't really like that term.
Speaker:It's a little creepy.
Speaker:Uh, but the percentage of people in the market that buy your product, mm.
Speaker:And so that's another way is, uh, you compete against
Speaker:everybody in your category.
Speaker:So whether you're luxury or economy, you compete in everybody in your
Speaker:economy, in, in your industry, in your category, and you all are
Speaker:sharing all the same customers.
Speaker:So luxury, handbag, buyers, you know, so Louis Vuitton also by coach, right?
Speaker:Uh, so.
Speaker:So there's, there's a lot of things like people like to think
Speaker:that their customers are theirs.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:People who buy Coke also buy Pepsi too.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Um, and then there's, you know, how, how often people purchase and how
Speaker:many times a year people purchase.
Speaker:And then there's light, medium, and heavy buyers.
Speaker:So there's this whole awareness ecosystem that you need to create first and
Speaker:foremost, that you can't look at sales if you don't have the data to drive, um, to.
Speaker:To, to drive some of those findings of your market, of your market share.
Speaker:The easiest way is to start, well, is it distinct?
Speaker:That's the easiest and fastest thing to test with.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And even brands that are just getting started or wanna, you know, kind of up
Speaker:their game or revitalize their brand, that's where you can start and you can,
Speaker:you know, create new brand assets and test them based on how distinct they are.
Speaker:You know, and, and think of it this way, if everybody in your category
Speaker:is red, okay, well why is that?
Speaker:Is there an inference?
Speaker:Yes, because cola is red.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:So if cola is red, what other assets that can we create
Speaker:that are really unique to us?
Speaker:You know, so you've got your brand mark color combination.
Speaker:So maybe it's a combination of red, yellow, and black or red, green and white.
Speaker:You know, specific combinations, um, adding those assets and we can test
Speaker:them and know that those are really distinct, so that as you do launch your
Speaker:awareness ecosystem, as you do launch your brand, they will become more memorable.
Speaker:Um, cuz that's really the, the most important fart.
Speaker:Um, most important.
Speaker:The most important part.
Speaker:Most important fart,
Speaker:most important fart.
Speaker:I called my cat Sweet fart the other day.
Speaker:Sweetheart.
Speaker:So the, the, the, the most important place to start then is being distinctive.
Speaker:Um, yes.
Speaker:Which I, I, when
Speaker:we say distinctive, we just say distinctive.
Speaker:Don't say different.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, people think they need to be different.
Speaker:If you're in the cookie aisle and you wanna be a cookie, You've
Speaker:people are looking for cookies.
Speaker:They're not looking for crackers, chips, cake, or pie.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And if, if you're too different and you're like, well, I'm homemade,
Speaker:Stæven, well then you're in the bakery.
Speaker:So, so you really gotta keep to your industry and follow the norms.
Speaker:And interestingly enough, most brands are near knockoffs of each other.
Speaker:I mean, you look at toilet paper, it's a great example.
Speaker:They're either really, really wide, really, really tall.
Speaker:They're clear with some, you know, soft, fuzzy baby or animal on the front.
Speaker:It's either red, yellow, uh, red, yellow or blue based on its softness or hardness.
Speaker:And strength and there's some bad math in the corner that I still don't understand,
Speaker:even though, um, I, I, I try to learn.
Speaker:So brands are near knockoffs of each other.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Because we're sharing those shared memory structures and then we
Speaker:have those distinctive memory structures that are unique to us.
Speaker:So if you go back to your Coke example, which I think is a good example, so
Speaker:if I want to set up a Matt's Coke brand, I have to understand that,
Speaker:um, The color red is important.
Speaker:And so being distinctive doesn't mean going luminous
Speaker:green, uh, in the Coke sector.
Speaker:Um, being distinctive is actually being distinctive in other ways.
Speaker:So you've gotta recognize the important things for your industry or business.
Speaker:Sure, yes.
Speaker:Um, and.
Speaker:Because they're connected to memories like you talked about.
Speaker:They're connected to specific boxes.
Speaker:And I'm not trying to interrupt that because I need that easy connection.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So how do I, how do I, it's like someone else has built, it's like someone else
Speaker:has built a connection for you on like the information superhighway of your memories,
Speaker:and you're like, oh, no, no, no, no, no.
Speaker:We need to use that.
Speaker:We need to use red as cola.
Speaker:You know, why don't we use, you know, People think yellow is happy.
Speaker:Like no yellow means stained teeth in the dental industry, so
Speaker:don't use, so it's like there's, there's differal different cultural
Speaker:contextualization of what things mean.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So what works in our market may not work in Asia.
Speaker:You know, may not work in Europe.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's really important to understand what are those pre-existent stories,
Speaker:associations, memories, and share those, but then build on top of those
Speaker:so you can get to those clusters.
Speaker:And that's why endorsements and celebrities are so important for, for
Speaker:some brands, because they're like, Ooh, somebody has a whole bunch of
Speaker:really great memories about kiss.
Speaker:Let's use them in a commercial with, uh, this career builder
Speaker:brand that we've never heard of.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Or, oh, Betty White, Danny DeVito, Roseanne, they're, they're well known.
Speaker:Let's put them in a Snickers commercial about how you're not you when you're
Speaker:hungry, so then all of a sudden you're hijacking other memories.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And creating more clusters.
Speaker:The scientific term is nodes, so you're creating an clusters and
Speaker:associations of nodes, and so literally the, the brand with the most nodes
Speaker:is the one you think of first.
Speaker:That's interesting.
Speaker:Okay, so the brand with the most nodes is the one that you think of first and
Speaker:the, the nodes, uh, or the associations.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:So we've got these, we you've got this going on, then this
Speaker:distinctive versus different.
Speaker:Um, and if I can take it back one step, Stæven, one of the things I'm
Speaker:please, I'm kind of curious about is how do you know what is preexisting?
Speaker:How do you know what, what we, how do I know that I should
Speaker:keep the color red versus.
Speaker:Change it.
Speaker:How, how, how?
Speaker:Do you see what I mean?
Speaker:Because I think, I think people can get a little bit insecure about this.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:So, um, for each of the different assets, there are criterion or
Speaker:factors that I grade them by.
Speaker:So, uh, for each, each asset we go through and, and test.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Some of those tests, uh, are easy and some of them are a little bit more subjective.
Speaker:The first one is, does anyone use this already right now?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Does anyone else using this color?
Speaker:Yes or no?
Speaker:Does it prompt my category or does it prompt my competition?
Speaker:Those are kind of the two distinguishers, so most people would say, does green,
Speaker:you know, is that prompt your category when you're talking about landscaping?
Speaker:Yeah, that's pretty, you know, you don't, nobody owns green, but does
Speaker:green prompt the com competitor when you're talking about coffee?
Speaker:So what's interesting is if you do the research on the, the coffee category,
Speaker:like 90% of all coffee brands, it's more than that, but I just make it
Speaker:low so people don't get mad at me.
Speaker:But 90 some percent of of coffee brands are red in the world.
Speaker:Espresso, Italy.
Speaker:Um, many of the brands, they're red.
Speaker:And coffee, Brett is, is red and it's usually a bright red,
Speaker:you know, we think of energy and that's what it's communicated.
Speaker:So when you look at Starbucks, Starbucks is green.
Speaker:It's complimentary color.
Speaker:Um, in that palette, it, it fits it, you know, uh, if you understand
Speaker:color wheel and things like that.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:It fits in, in there, but so, It makes sense with the other colors and it stands
Speaker:out, but it still fits alongside of them.
Speaker:So the first question is, does anybody in my category use this?
Speaker:You know, does this color exist already?
Speaker:Does it prompt my category or does it prompt my competitor?
Speaker:And then there's some other things that you can go do.
Speaker:A simple research of.
Speaker:The top 100, um, your top 100 is a, is a combination of
Speaker:who are your local 25 to 40.
Speaker:Your regional 25 to 40, your national 25 to 40, and then
Speaker:your international 25 to 40.
Speaker:And the reason we do 25 of each and saying what are the
Speaker:top competitors in that space?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Um, that helps us identify just from a quick snapshot look.
Speaker:We're not getting in the nitty gritty, but we're able to see
Speaker:what are the baseline trends.
Speaker:And so you're like, oh, here's how most local brands start.
Speaker:But here's where brands on the international scope end up.
Speaker:We need to avoid purple because the number one international
Speaker:brand in the world is purple.
Speaker:And if we ever get big enough to go nationally, we're gonna
Speaker:go head to head with somebody.
Speaker:We don't wanna use their color.
Speaker:So some things we can just look and identify.
Speaker:Are there distinctive identifiers in their brand mark, in their word, their
Speaker:shape, you know, their packaging.
Speaker:In all the assets that they use.
Speaker:That's a starting point.
Speaker:Then there's other things like the trademark electronic search system.
Speaker:Um, I call it my girlfriend, Tess.
Speaker:Don't tell, don't tell my partner.
Speaker:I have a girlfriend, but, uh, no, no, no.
Speaker:I do.
Speaker:Uh, her name is Tess.
Speaker:Uh, we hang out all day long.
Speaker:But no, Tess is the trademark electronic search system in America.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And usually every country has their own version of Tess.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:Um, and that's where it's by the US Patent and Trademark Office in America.
Speaker:You know, over, over in the UK and Australia and the other Big Five,
Speaker:they have their own offices as well.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And literally you can go in and you can search for word, color, some
Speaker:of these distinctive elements that you wanna make sure that, wait.
Speaker:We've got a really, really great name for your Cola company, Matt.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:And then you go, like, you get the packaging done, it's all done, and then
Speaker:you roll it out and two to five years later down the road, you get a cease
Speaker:and desist letter from like a global company that's like, Hey, uh, you're
Speaker:using our trademarked tagline and name.
Speaker:You need to stop that.
Speaker:And you're like, how did I, I didn't know.
Speaker:And they don't care.
Speaker:They don't care.
Speaker:So this is where doing your legal research on the front end is so important.
Speaker:And someone like myself, um, there's also trademark lawyers.
Speaker:They can help you.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I kind of bridge the gap between those two, uh, between the trademark
Speaker:lawyers and the clients because I know what the end goal is in mind
Speaker:and what we need to be looking for.
Speaker:So, uh, just doing a basic search.
Speaker:How do you know, you said, you know, how do I know what I can use?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and what's distinct?
Speaker:So the first one is doing a basic search.
Speaker:Your top 100 - 25 locally, regionally, nationally, internationally.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:That'll give you baseline trends.
Speaker:The second thing you can totally do is hop online and learn, you know, uh,
Speaker:look, uh, use, um, I'm trying to think.
Speaker:I think it's Boolean searches is the term.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But basically, but whatever you're looking for in quotation marks mm-hmm.
Speaker:The exact phrase or, or items you're looking for, um, that
Speaker:you're looking to, to use.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You know, and then you can also use Google.
Speaker:Um, one of the things that's interesting though, is trademark
Speaker:doesn't depend on the internet.
Speaker:So if I was using my phrase 40 years ago, and I don't have a
Speaker:website on the internet, I still am the first use in commerce.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's why it's really important to hire somebody.
Speaker:But those first two things, doing a baseline search, seeing what the,
Speaker:the trends are in your category will help you identify, ooh, what's the
Speaker:direction that as companies grow, Wow.
Speaker:Where do they simplify or how do they really pare down their messaging that's
Speaker:gonna give you a, a great approach to investigate, like, oh, is this a
Speaker:direction we should or shouldn't go?
Speaker:Um, and, and, and, you know, back to our fictitious, you know, if I
Speaker:had a dollar for every fictitious company I came up on, uh, podcast
Speaker:with, I think I'd have $20 now.
Speaker:Um, but, but you know, with our fictitious capitalized spending company,
Speaker:Uh, I think the last podcast it was a, a pancake or, um, a cupcake company.
Speaker:I think it was a cup.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But, um, but, you know, doing, doing your baseline research and
Speaker:just seeing who is using, what are they using in the questions are,
Speaker:does this prompt my category or does this prompt my competitor?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And if you, if you go out and you see and you're looking at your research, those are
Speaker:the first most two, and that's per asset.
Speaker:So like your brand Mark like is if, are you using a typeface?
Speaker:Is anyone use this typeface?
Speaker:Does this typeface prompt my category?
Speaker:Does this typeface prompt a competitor?
Speaker:If you can get through those two questions.
Speaker:No, let's keep going.
Speaker:Yeah, that's worth maybe looking into.
Speaker:Um, so that, that's kind of a, the, the easiest starting point answer.
Speaker:Um, and then once you make it through that, there's still some
Speaker:other rigorous testing and making sure, you know, in, in research.
Speaker:But the goal is to, to see.
Speaker:Is this something that I can own, that people can associate with me?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so distinctiveness really is the number one factor, you
Speaker:know, and I, and I say, you know, fame, we can always increase.
Speaker:Distinctiveness, you gotta do it right the first time and it's hard.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's such top advice.
Speaker:And I like the, I like the use of the word distinctiveness.
Speaker:I think it's, it's, it's what's a distinctive phrase isn't.
Speaker:It is a distinctive word and it, and it in its own right.
Speaker:So, um, I, I, I like that.
Speaker:How distinctive are we?
Speaker:Listen Stæven, I'm, I'm aware of time.
Speaker:Um, and I'm aware that I still have a whole bunch of questions to
Speaker:ask about branding, and I imagine actually the listeners have as well.
Speaker:So if they wanna reach out to you, if they want to connect with you and,
Speaker:and dig into this a little bit more.
Speaker:Um, you've mentioned, uh, Bitly b i t l y slash brand science checklist,
Speaker:but what other ways can people reach out and connect with you?
Speaker:Sure, sure.
Speaker:So, uh, the, the easiest way is at my website, which is quantumbranding.agency.
Speaker:Uh, and there's a spot on there if you wanna go to the contact form and
Speaker:be like, Hey Stæven, we gotta talk.
Speaker:I've got a question for you.
Speaker:Um, one of the other things we've got got going on, if you want to learn
Speaker:about how to implement brand science in your organization, uh, learn
Speaker:the basic tenets of brand science.
Speaker:Uh, create and assess a plan for your brand.
Speaker:And then, uh, learn how to integrate and execute that plan so that you
Speaker:make sure that you and your team and everybody is on the same page.
Speaker:We have a program called BrandPreneur.
Speaker:Um, so, oh, that's, there's a button, right?
Speaker:Uh, there's a button right on the top right?
Speaker:Uh, just says brand preneur.
Speaker:You can check it out.
Speaker:It's a, in, it's a 10 week program.
Speaker:Includes a workshop, a four day in-person workshop.
Speaker:But, uh, the goal of that is for you to learn the tenets of brand science, create
Speaker:um, a metric based assessment of your plan, of your brand,
Speaker:and then walk away with a plan.
Speaker:So, um, those are kind of the two, the two main ways that
Speaker:you can kind of prime the pump.
Speaker:Um, but either way, uh, if you're interested in talking, um, check out
Speaker:quantumbranding.agency and, uh, we can schedule a call and talk, talk
Speaker:to you about what's on your mind.
Speaker:So fantastic.
Speaker:Just got a little Calendly link at the bottom.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:Gotta love Calendly.
Speaker:Gotta love Calendly.
Speaker:If, if I have too many people, we'll, we'll, we'll put a form there to
Speaker:slow 'em down, but as of right now, we've got the Calendly that says, no.
Speaker:I, I have nothing on my schedule.
Speaker:Please, please
Speaker:come and fill it up.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Please fill my schedule.
Speaker:Make me feel wanted.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Yeah, I'm kidding.
Speaker:You know what?
Speaker:I moved from Calendly to Zow.
Speaker:Cause I got, I got tired of paying for Calendly for, for that reason.
Speaker:You're like, no, no.
Speaker:I, I need to,
Speaker:I, I, I, he's, I think it's, um, it's, uh, z Did you say Zcal?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah, that's what I'm switching to too.
Speaker:Don't tell anybody cuz I'm just, I just, I don't want to pay.
Speaker:Uh, listen, we would of course link to, uh, Stæven's info, uh,
Speaker:in the show notes, which you can get along for free, along with the
Speaker:transcripts, ecommercepodcast.net, or direct to your inbox.
Speaker:If you've signed up to your newsletter, listen Stæven.
Speaker:Thoroughly engaging conversation.
Speaker:Love your passion about cats, love your passion about branding,
Speaker:man, and the branding science.
Speaker:And you've, I've got a lot of things to think about and I'm definitely checking
Speaker:out, uh, your brand science checklist.
Speaker:So thanks for coming on the show.
Speaker:Really, really appreciate it.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:Thanks listeners, for listening and, uh, uh, Stay nerdy, my friends.
Speaker:Love that.
Speaker:The new tagline for the e-commerce podcast, stay nerdy.
Speaker:What a great conversation.
Speaker:Huge thanks again to Stæven for joining me today.
Speaker:Also, a big shout out to today's show sponsor the e-commerce cohort.
Speaker:Remember to check out their free online training at ecommercecycles.com . Also
Speaker:be sure to follow the e-commerce podcast wherever you get your podcast
Speaker:from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up and I
Speaker:don't want you to miss any of them.
Speaker:No, I don't.
Speaker:So make sure you subscribe to what's going on.
Speaker:Uh, it'd be great.
Speaker:And in case no one has told you yet today, you are awesome.
Speaker:Yes, you are created awesome.
Speaker:It's just a burdening, you've gotta bear.
Speaker:Stæven has to bear it.
Speaker:I have to bear it.
Speaker:You've got a bear it as well.
Speaker:Now the E-Commerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Speaker:The amazing team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon,
Speaker:Estella Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if
Speaker:you'd like to read the show notes or transcript, head over to the
Speaker:website, ecommercepodcast.net, uh, where it's all there.
Speaker:It's all there waiting for you all free to access.
Speaker:Easy as pie.
Speaker:Yes it is.
Speaker:So, uh, go ahead and check that out now.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Stæven.
Speaker:Thank you so much for joining us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I will see you next time.