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A lot of the younger generation now, they're using TikTok as a search engine.

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They're not using Google.

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Which is, which is kind of mind blowing but it allows you, if you're, if you're

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coming up with proper descriptions for your videos on TikTok and proper

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hashtags, you're, you're setting yourself up for search organic.

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And then of course YouTube is obviously populating all of that into Google.

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So if someone's searching, um, the traditional way of Google,

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your videos are gonna come up too.

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Welcome to the e-Commerce podcast with me your host Matt Edmundson.

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

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Wow.

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And to help us do just that, I am chatting with today's special guest,

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John Roman from the BattlBox Group about how to use content to connect with your

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community, which, let's face it, we all wanna know how to do that better.

Speaker:

So I'm looking forward to this conversation, but before John

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and I get into the nitty gritty, Let me give you my podcast pick.

Speaker:

Some previous episodes that I think you're gonna enjoy.

Speaker:

Check out how to tell stories that convert.

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This was a fantastic conversation I had with a chap called Marcus uh, Cauchi

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and let me tell you, Marcus is just an absolute legend, just full of stories.

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And, uh, one of my favorite episodes.

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So do check it out.

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Also, check out content strategy is my new BFF!

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Why it's essential for success, for successful e-commerce with Katie Wight.

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Uh, she's also a beautiful lady with a lot of good things to say.

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So do check that out.

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You can access my podcast picks and also my entire archive of

Speaker:

episodes for free, uh, on our website at ecommercepodcast.net.

Speaker:

Plus, if you're there sign up for the newsletter and we'll send you the links

Speaker:

to our podcast picks along with the notes from today's show that's today's

Speaker:

conversation with John, they get all delivered straight to your inbox,

Speaker:

totally for free at no cost to you.

Speaker:

Dear listener, which I think is pretty amazing.

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Now, are you struggling to grow your e-commerce business?

Speaker:

Do you feel like you're constantly spinning plates trying to figure

Speaker:

out what to focus on next?

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Well, let me tell you, I have been there and I've coached many people who have

Speaker:

been there, and I know how frustrating it can be, which is why it's exciting for us

Speaker:

that e-commerce cohort sponsors this show.

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Now E-commerce cohort helps e-commerce businesses like yours

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deliver an exceptional customer experience that drives results.

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And to help you get started, we're excited to announce a brand new free resource for

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you, and it's called E-Commerce Cycles.

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It's a mini course where I walk you through our proven framework for building

Speaker:

a successful e-commerce business.

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You know what?

Speaker:

I have coached a whole bunch of people.

Speaker:

And knowing what to do and actually do it are always two different things.

Speaker:

So we'll show you the specific steps that we take in our own eCommerce

Speaker:

business to implement the stuff that we need to do so you can see exactly

Speaker:

how this works and how you can put it in practice for your own business.

Speaker:

And the good news is, as I said, all of this is completely free and you can

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sign up now at ecommercecycles.com.

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In fact, I say sign up.

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You don't even need an email address.

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You just open the webpage and click the play button.

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So head over to ecommercecycles.com to get this free training and get started

Speaker:

today, it's time to start delivering e-commerce Wow to your customers

Speaker:

with the help of e-commerce cohort.

Speaker:

Now, all of that said, let's get into our conversation with

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John, uh, John Roman.

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I almost said Roman John.

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John, sorry about that.

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Almost got your name the wrong way around.

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John Roman is the CEO and co-founder of the Electrifying BattlBox Group, home to

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three explosive brands, BattlBox, Carnival Club, and Wanlow with a whopping $30

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million e-commerce subscription portfolio.

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This group is all about building strong content and community.

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So much so that they've even landed.

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Check it out, drum roll please.

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Their own show on Netflix.

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Now the excitement doesn't end there as the BattlBox group was recently

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acquired uh, in October, 2021 as well.

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So a whole lot of stuff to get into.

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Uh, John, thanks for joining me.

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It's great to have you here.

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Super excited, man.

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Got so many questions.

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How are we doing?

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Great.

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Thanks for having me.

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I'm excited to be here too.

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Oh, it's great.

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It's great.

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Now, John, listen, I mean, we were talking before we hit the record button,

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um, about various different things.

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Uh, and I, I wanted.

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Wanted to start out our conversation.

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Sadaf has given me the opening question, and so I'm, I'm gonna

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ask Sadaf's opening question.

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If you don't know dear Listener, Sadaf is the producer of the show

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and she's wonderful and she does a lot of research, and she's like, she

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gives you the opening question to ask, which is, what is a non-negotiable

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that you do every day, rain or shine?

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Uh, 200 pushups every day,

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200.

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Why 200?

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Um, I, I honestly, the, it's not a good reason why I build up to that

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with a group of, um, guys I do it with.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, uh, I'm trying to get it raised higher and we, everybody has to agree

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and not everyone's agreeing right now.

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Okay.

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I wanna, I wanna take, I wanna take it up, um, further.

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Wow.

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To what number?

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I think ideally 500, but that's a long, long way to go.

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Yeah.

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Wow.

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That's a lot of, not, not all one time.

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That's, that's not possible.

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So we've been doing this almost a year now.

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Okay.

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Um, so when we started we were doing a hundred a day.

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Wow.

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And it's just slowly over time build up.

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I think when I started doing it, the most I could do at one time was 25, 30.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, My first set this morning I did 80.

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Um, wow.

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So it's, it's, it's crazy.

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It's this little thing, but holding yourself accountable to it.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, um, and doing it, it just kind of sets.

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Sets the pace.

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Yeah, I imagine it does.

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And I, I mean, I, it is interesting you say you do this with a group of guys,

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because I think if you were just doing it on your own, it becomes quite hard.

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But because there's a group of you doing it and there is that accountability

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there, um, it's quite fascinating.

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So you're doing 80 pushups at a time then that's, that's some good going

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have to finish today.

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Mm-hmm.

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So I did a, I did a set of 80 and a set of 70.

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I'm at 150 for the day and finish the other 50, probably after this podcast, but

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I'll probably do like 70 or 80, whatever I'm, whatever I can really tap out at.

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Oh wow.

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You just keep going until you can't go any further.

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Yep.

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Until, until my arms.

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Arms collapse.

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And do you just eat lots and lots of protein?

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Is that how it works?

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No, I haven't changed my diet at all.

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I probably don't, I don't eat that healthy.

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Um, I go through kind of, you know, the ebbs and flows of life um,

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where sometimes I'm eating healthy.

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But 2023, there hasn't been a lot of healthiness in my diet, unfortunately.

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No, no.

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Fair enough.

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Fair enough.

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Indeed.

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So, Well, I, I guess a question for, you know, you were, we're

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talking about content, um, and, and creating content around community.

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Is that why you started this challenge was to give you some form of content or was

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there, was there some just, you just did it because you just felt like doing it?

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Um, no, I wish there was a better story.

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Um, I, uh, a, a little over a year ago I had a, a, um, protruding disc, my L4-5.

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And, um, I went to the doctor, um, specialist, put me through

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the gambit of we're gonna do some, um, some physical therapy.

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And then they gave me, uh, that didn't work.

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So they did a sh um, uh, they gave me a shot, like it was a, went to the

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hospital and they gave me this mm-hmm.

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Um, steroid injection into the spine and that didn't work.

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And his final thing was you could have back surgery or focus on your core, and

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you can't do sit ups because of your back, but pushups are really good for your core.

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Mm-hmm.

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And, um, that, that was the reason I started it and I turned it into,

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uh, activity and got people involved for the accountability piece.

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Um, and it's not a good story on how to how I hurt my back either.

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I asked my doctor, why did this happen?

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And his response is, welcome to your forties.

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Thanks, doc.

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Really appreciate that.

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Yeah, that's super helpful.

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Appreciate that.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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What's it gonna be like when I'm in my fifties?

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I, I don't know.

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I don't know.

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So here you are in your forties and, um, you know, John, you've

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got, uh, I'm intrigued by, uh, something I see behind you.

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I see this actually when I watch a, cause I, I, I'm an avid YouTube consumer.

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I probably watch YouTube more than any other channel.

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And you have a YouTube plaque behind you, right?

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We do, yeah.

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The, uh, the silver one.

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We we're on the way to getting the gold one.

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We'll, we'll, we'll hit it this year pending something bad happening.

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Okay.

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So what does the silver plaque mean?

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So it's 100,000 subscribers.

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Um, so we hit that in, the middle part of last year.

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Well done.

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And so what does, what does, what does gold mean?

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Gold's a million.

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Wow.

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So you are gonna have a channel with a million subscribers on soon.

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That's the, that's the plan.

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We're at 570,000 right now.

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So we have a little bit of work to do.

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But it's honestly, all the videos have done somewhat well, but there are

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three, four videos that went crazy and boosted us, with the subscriber count.

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And is the, is the YouTube channel connected with your, um, your business

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or is the YouTube channel does something separate that, that you do?

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No, it's the business channel.

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So it's the B it's the BattlBox.

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BattlBox channel.

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So, uh, well let's get into this then.

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So for those who may, who may not know, what is the BattlBox channel?

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So, so BattlBox is, at its core, a monthly subscription box, um,

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mystery box of outdoor gear, adventure gear, um, survival gear.

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So, you know, whether you're prepping for an apocalypse or you wanna go hiking

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with your buddies, or you wanna go camping with your family, really anything

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adventure, centric in, the great outdoors.

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That's what, that's what we send each month.

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Which is, uh, I, I mean, I know what the BattlBox is.

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You don't do it to the UK.

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I, I noticed, uh, I think last time I checked, which was I was like, oh,

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that my son would really enjoy this.

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Um, so how did you get involved in the BattlBox?

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I mean, uh, how did, what was the story behind that getting started?

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Sure.

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So a buddy of mine, um, was every month his fiance was getting a subscription box.

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It was a Birch box.

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Yeah, yeah.

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Yeah.

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Was getting that in the mail.

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And he'd watch her with this excitement and joy as she opened up this mystery box

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of, of, um, you know, uh, makeup samples if for, for a lack of better description.

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Mm-hmm.

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And every month she got it.

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And she was just, it was this joyous moment.

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And he, um, was like, man, I wanna feel that.

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So he went online, tried to find, he was a out outdoors, outdoors man.

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And he wanted to find something that was like that for him.

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And there wasn't one.

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So when there wasn't one, he, he, um, as an entrepreneur as well, he, um, the

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business he had had a very slow season in December and in beginning of January.

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So he worked on coming up with a concept at that point and, um, launched it in

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February, uh, around Valentine's Day.

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I came in as an investor mm-hmm.

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Um, with a game plan to accomplish a couple things where we just, um, board

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seats and business acumen advice.

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Um, very minimal time, um, you know, maybe five hours a month.

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Mm-hmm.

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And then my other, um, objective was I really wanted to break down

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and document the, the product roadmap, the go-to market strategy.

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Mm-hmm.

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Because my background was, um, software, B2B software sales, and

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reoccurring revenue, um, models.

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And I love that this was a consumer version of it.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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So the concept was document as much as possible and we wanna

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launch some additional brands.

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Um, and then once I came on board, it.

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The time, um, that I was putting in quickly, uh, was

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not with the expectations.

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So it went from five hours a month to five hours a week to 10

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hours a week to 40 hours a week.

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And, um, I have a full-time job at the time, um, that I'm already

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putting in more than 40 hours anyway.

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Mm-hmm.

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So we hit this weird moment where, you know, I'm probably

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putting 50 plus hours in a two different companies, one of which.

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I'm, I'm not a principal.

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Right.

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Um, I have some options in case, in case something great happens

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like an acquisition, but if, if I leave, I don't have anything.

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Mm-hmm.

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And then on the other side, we have, um, BattlBox that I have significant

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equity in and I'm enjoying it a lot more.

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Mm-hmm.

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So, uh, in April, so we launched February 15 and April, 2016, I came on full-time.

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So when you came on, was your, was your strategy then to go,

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I'm gonna do a YouTube channel?

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Um, or was, is this something you sort of stumbled into?

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Was this that, I guess the question I'm asking here, um,

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John, is, was, was YouTube a very deliberate strategy for you?

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So it was part, it was a deliberate initial strategy.

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Mm-hmm.

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We pivoted, uh, to what it is today.

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So initially part of our go-to market strategy was even the first

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month we were sending out dozens of BattlBoxes out to YouTube reviewers.

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Right.

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Okay.

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So people with, with any sort of following.

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At the time, I think our, our, our kind of, our, our mark in the sand

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was 10,000 subscribers or greater.

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We're having conversations with them, sending them out, um, YouTube boxes

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and just getting the, you know, free product in turn for free content.

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Um, and we were building that channel, not our channel per se,

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but our, our, our brand on YouTube via via reviewers influencers.

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And, um, it took an interesting, um, slight pivot where just to date this, um,

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it's crazy that we had this because it's not great for a conversion rate, but we

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had a pre-purchase survey, um, in 2015.

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Hmm.

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Um, on our site.

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And it was, how did you hear about us?

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And it was the usual suspects, right?

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So, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, etc.

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Um, but we also had the option for another.

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Mm-hmm.

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Where they could click that, click that little radio circle and type something in.

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And we had about 20, 30% the first month we put this on there, say that

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they came from us, um, from Currin1776.

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So we're like, okay, we found the channel, but they weren't on our comped box.

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Okay.

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Um, spreadsheet.

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Yeah, that's right.

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This is strange.

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Um, so we then did some more research and, um, Currin1776 channel was

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being ran by a guy named Brandon Currin, and he was a paying customer.

Speaker:

Wow.

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He was, he was buying our box doing these reviews.

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This was his passion.

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He was a career HVAC guy during the day and at nighttime he was

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working on a YouTube channel.

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We had a couple months in a row where it was like 20%, 30% of the people doing

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the pre-purchase survey were saying they were coming from his channel.

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Um, so we quickly reached out to him and said, Hey, uh, you don't

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have to pay for the box anymore.

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We're gonna keep sending it to you.

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Um, just keep doing these reviews and then a few months go by, five, six months.

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And we said, Hey, we need you to keep doing these, boxes still free.

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We're also gonna give you $500 a month.

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Please don't stop.

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And, um, uh, short a little bit after I came on, we reached out to

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him with a different proposition.

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Quit your day job.

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Move, move to Georgia.

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Um, be a full, be full-time, the face of BattlBox.

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And we're gonna pop out a lot more content.

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It's not just gonna be the monthly review.

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Yeah, we're gonna product test, we're going to start really building this

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community of, of like-minded individuals.

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Um, through content.

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Wow.

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And so he moved his, moved his wife and three kids, um, and moved them down

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to Georgia and we began just really focusing on content at that point.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

So what, so the content you guys focused on, you bought this guy down.

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I mean, obviously you were, you were starting to do well with YouTube.

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I mean, he was obviously doing well with YouTube.

Speaker:

Was that the main channel that you focused on?

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Were you like, we're just gonna own the YouTube space, or was

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it a bit more broad than that?

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So, so starting off it was, it was a little, it was a little bit more

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broad, but not what it is today.

Speaker:

So initially it was Facebook, um, Instagram and YouTube,

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and it was long form content.

Speaker:

So it was, it was, here's a product and we're gonna do a product review

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um, in addition to the, the monthly mission box, as we were trying to do

Speaker:

three to four product reviews, um, and, and in the, in, in the way that

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we were testing products to determine if, if they were gonna get our stamp

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of approval to go into a BattlBox.

Speaker:

Hmm.

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Um, so we're kind of really showing, showing how the sausage was made

Speaker:

and, um, it was just those channels and it wasn't honestly until.

Speaker:

And we were putting out quality content, but it was all long form the, it really

Speaker:

wasn't until, um, 2021 where we really started focusing on short form content.

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Okay.

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And when we started with the short form content, that's when we saw, saw the crazy

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growth in, in followers and audience.

Speaker:

We were adding on YouTube, maybe 500 to 600 subscribers a month, which

Speaker:

is no small number, but mm-hmm.

Speaker:

You know, it's a very slow, slow growth.

Speaker:

We were at 55,000 subscribers on YouTube.

Speaker:

Um, and then in early 2021 we started, uh, we finally started

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putting out content on TikTok.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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And we were having relative success early on, but in a small nominal number.

Speaker:

We were, you know, we had 5,000 subscribers and then 6,000, but we

Speaker:

were being, we were able to add them a lot quicker than we were on YouTube.

Speaker:

Sure.

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And the other channels.

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And then we saw, you know, we'd occasionally get a win and I

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document, I documented all this cuz it was a lot of losing.

Speaker:

But we were, we knew.

Speaker:

TikTok and short form content, there was something there.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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So we kept doubling down, kept increasing frequency of our content,

Speaker:

and eventually we saw, um, as everybody did this, this rise of TikTok.

Speaker:

And um, you know, at that same time of our rise, our follower counts growing.

Speaker:

And then we said, okay, well, we're producing this short form content.

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We're really taking long form content.

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We're already shooting and we're just cutting it down.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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Into short form, digestible content.

Speaker:

And YouTube has shorts, Instagram has reels, and we should, we're

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already producing this content, let's just put it on all three.

Speaker:

And around that same.

Speaker:

TIME You saw both meta and, and Google and Facebook, really start being a

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little bit concerned about TikTok.

Speaker:

So they made, they made those algorithm changes where they were treating

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short form content, like it was gold.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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Um, so we doubled down even further.

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And we're putting a short form of content across all three channels.

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And when we did that, we just saw YouTube start growing.

Speaker:

We weren't adding 500, we were adding 5,000 and then 50,000 of them.

Speaker:

And, um, you know, we quickly, what's crazy is, um, we're up to 570,000

Speaker:

on, on YouTube, but on TikTok, we're, we're closing in on 800,000, I believe.

Speaker:

Um, wow.

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Yeah, 842,000, I looked it up.

Speaker:

Um, so we're really just, we're painting it across all channels now, and we're,

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we're testing it on Twitter now because Twitter made the change last month where

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they're allowing short form video content.

Speaker:

Hmm.

Speaker:

So we're trying to stay ahead of the curve, um, and, and right now

Speaker:

everything is leading with short form.

Speaker:

So here I am.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

John listening to you talk and I'm thinking, holy moly, you've

Speaker:

got a YouTube channel with closing up to a million subscribers,

Speaker:

hopefully by the end of the year.

Speaker:

You're doing short form content and you are basically selling a box, which is a

Speaker:

subscription box, which does outdoor gear.

Speaker:

So what sort of things do you do in your videos that sort of keeps people

Speaker:

engaged and keeps people coming back?

Speaker:

Sure.

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So we're really not selling, um, there's, there's not a lot

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of selling going on at all.

Speaker:

I would say maybe one out of 20 videos is really selling in any, any capacity.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Um, and, and when it is, it's not a, it's not a hard sell.

Speaker:

Um, so we're, we're, we're doing this content, it's educational,

Speaker:

it's product reviews, there's some comical elements as well.

Speaker:

Um, really what, what, why this works is, you know, consumer behavior.

Speaker:

It's a constantly moving, moving little point, right.

Speaker:

But what we're seeing.

Speaker:

I think most people would agree with this is, and it's, it's not like

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it started this year or last year.

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It's been a slow move.

Speaker:

Mm.

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Um, but consumers for it depends on where the product is on the need wants scale.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Um, toilet paper content and community probably doesn't matter too much.

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Right.

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Because you need toilet paper.

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Yeah.

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Um, but you start going something that's more on the want scale, like

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a mystery box of outdoor adventure.

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Consumers wanna purchase from a brand they connect with, they

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feel some kind of connection with.

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Um, and, and that's what we're building, right?

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So we have, um, uh, there's, there's other additional elements.

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So when you're a active subscriber with us, we're, you're put in a Facebook

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members only group where you have to be an active subscriber to be in the group,

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and not everyone takes advantage of it.

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Um, but you know, we have maybe 8,000 active members in there, and they, it,

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they're, they're fostering friendships.

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These people are posting and they're doing hiking meet meetups

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and camping meetups and Oh wow.

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Just.

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Grab a beer meetups.

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Um, and it's really creating this community, which, which

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is the real value add, right?

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People wanna feel connection To others.

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And I think the consumer behavior suggests they also wanna feel connection

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to the brands that they're spending their hard-earned dollars with.

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Yeah.

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Um, I, it was a long answer, but the content is not selling the product per se.

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It's just showing off this lifestyle and educating.

Speaker:

We did a educational piece, long form, and the short form will be dropping this

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week, um, on electric magnetic pulses.

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So EMPs, which are typically, they're gonna be caused by like a, a solar flare.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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Um, but now there's concern that countries might have.

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A weaponized version of this.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, so it's like a actual thing that people are searching for on Google.

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You're seeing it up on the trends.

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So we did a discussion about it and it's just trying to cater this

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content towards what people, people wanna know, people wanna see.

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So I'm genuinely really curious now and in the sense that, um, I.

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I've never really been able to crack YouTube.

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Um, and I, you know, we've dabbled in a few things, which is probably

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why we've never really cracked it.

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Do you know what i mean we've just dabbled.

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So I'm kind of curious if you're, if you know the guys listening to the show, the

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guys and the girls are sort of, they've got their e-commerce business and they're

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thinking, well, this all sounds great, but I don't, I don't already have a hundred

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thousand followers or 50,000 followers.

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I've got 50.

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Do you know what I mean?

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It, it's like, or 60 subscribers to my YouTube channel.

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Where is a, I guess where do, where do, where do we stop when we're

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actually right at the beginning?

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Um, because it feels like you look at it and you hear stories like from you, and

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you look at the, but you look at that mountain and you go, oh my goodness.

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That's a huge thing to climb.

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Like, so I'm kind of curious where, where do you begin when you don't

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really have the, the, the sort of the channel to begin with?

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Sure.

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So, you know now, now on TikTok or, or YouTube, if, if we're getting under 10,000

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views, we view it as a failure, right?

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But, but I say that to say, yeah, but that Right, that's not realistic for everyone.

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It doesn't, doesn't address your question.

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Um, starting off over a hundred views or over 200 views on TikTok,

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um, that's considered okay.

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Probably.

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The bar, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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If you're putting out, um, any sort of decent content, um, in short form, YouTube

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still treats short form like gold, right?

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Right.

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All the platforms do at the, um, if you put out a short form piece of short form

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content, you're going to get a hundred random strangers looking at it on YouTube.

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Yeah.

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And you're gonna only do it on TikTok.

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You're gonna get 200 random strangers.

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So that's the bar.

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So start putting out, um, the number one rule is consistent content, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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Like you have to truly commit to this and you have to commit to it knowing

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you're not gonna see success right away, and you just can't give up.

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You just have to believe that and, and honestly believe this.

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If you don't believe this, then you shouldn't be doing it.

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But believe that you're putting out good content, um, and consistently do it.

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I would say at bare minimum, Five outta seven days a week.

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But you should try to post daily content, right?

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Um, and what you should do is test different types, right?

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Whether it's product review, whether it's, you know, making the, making

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the, the, the salami of your business.

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Try.

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Come up with five, seven different angles mm-hmm.

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Of what you think content could be like and test them all.

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Mm-hmm.

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And don't just test them all one time.

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Test them all multiple times and find that one video or that one type of video

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that is netting you 300, 400 or 500 views.

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Yeah.

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And when you find that one, double down on that, still be testing the

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other ones, but now increase frequency of that type of content 2X it.

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And, and you always wanna lean in on test everything, but when you find a

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certain type of content is resonating with more audience, you just want to

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instantly lean on, lean in on, on that.

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Yeah.

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And that's what we've done.

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When we find something that works, we slight pivot additional resources.

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We're leaning in on that type of content.

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Mm-hmm.

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And we're gonna keep pushing it.

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Um, and even so, um, There's, there's billions of people in the world, right?

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So 500 people see something, make a variation of that video

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and put that variation on there.

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Slightly change it.

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You wanna remove the, um, the, the meta tags from it, right?

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So you don't want any of the platforms so I'll be able to

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identify, so rip the audio from it.

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Mm-hmm.

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Uh, in any metadata you don't want.

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YouTube or TikTok to identify it as the same video as before.

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Mm-hmm.

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But make a variation of the one video that did really well, make a variation of it

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and post it again, um, with, with slightly different audio and slightly different

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video makeup and, and you're testing then is it, is it that type of content?

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Um, and they make it so easy these days with video editing.

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You can, um, If you're familiar with the, uh, app, mobile app called Cap Cut,

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they have a web version too, but you can do insane video editing with cap cut.

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Um, I, I am not a video editor.

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I have the Adobe Suite on, on my, um, my computer, but it's not good, right?

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It's not a good use of my time.

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I am not gonna put out a quality product.

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I don't know what I'm doing, but man, I'm like a, a video expert.

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With cap cut, it's very, it's very, um, user-friendly and allows a novice

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like myself to, to edit videos.

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Um, and I think that's it, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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So yeah, 200 views.

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Find the thing that gives you 400 views or 500 views, double down on that.

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The cool thing about all the platforms is, um, eventually you're going to,

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you're gonna hit a win with a video.

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Um, of some sort.

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Now it's a relative win, right?

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Yeah.

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So starting off, it might be that video that gets you over a thousand views.

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Um, but all the, the reality of, of the matter is all platforms,

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um, have some gamification built into their algorithm, um, from to,

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to make, um, creators continue.

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Um, so you're going to see they're eventually gonna find something that

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checks boxes for them, that they're gonna disperse to more audience

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member and get you more views.

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Um, so if you, if you continue down the grind, it's just, it's doing it over

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and over again, not seeing the results, but knowing that you have to continue.

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That's the challenge.

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Most people, you know, they try for two weeks and they have

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no success, so they give up.

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Yeah.

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In reality, in reality, TikTok, we took TikTok from zero to, uh, 400,000

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in about nine months, and it was all, there weren't any wins in the beginning.

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It was trying to get that thousand view Hmm.

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Video and then trying to consistently get thousand view videos, but it

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was, it was building from zero.

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And just finding the content that that was, people were wanting to share.

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Mm-hmm.

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People were wanting to click the like button, leave a comment.

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Um, and, and you see tricks on it, right?

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You see, um, there's one, uh, person I follow that he'll mispronounce or

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misspell a word on purpose because in today's day and age, you know, there's

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thousand guys are gonna be like.

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Yeah, I'm gonna tell you that you're not spelling it right.

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Yeah, yeah.

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It's forcing engagement.

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Um, yeah.

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So there's like little tricks like that, just sticking, sticking with

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it and, and posting consistently.

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This is really interesting John right?

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So let's say I, I'm, I'm, uh, I'm starting my e-commerce business, or I'm, you

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know, I've been around for a while, but I don't, I've not really done the content.

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And I'm going, you know what?

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I'm listening to you talking.

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I'm going, I, I, I dunno how long it's gonna take to do those videos,

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but I'm totally gonna do it and I'm gonna stick it out and I'm gonna

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see what's, what's gonna happen.

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I have two questions for you, right?

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One is, how do I know what to do in those videos?

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So I think that freaks people out.

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Maybe we'll come back to that.

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And my second question, and maybe we'll start here, is, is it worth it?

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Right?

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So you've got 500 and some subscribers to YouTube, 800 and some survivor.

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800 or thousand subscribers to your TikTok.

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How many of those in effect become subscribers to the BattlBox?

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Do you know what I mean?

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Because part of me is like, well, I could have half a million people over

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here subscribe to the YouTube channel, but if no one's buying over here, what's

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the, why am I doing this over here?

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Right?

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Yeah.

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So the first, the first part, first question on what do you do?

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What, what should the content be?

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I don't think you have to reinvent the wheel here, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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You can look at similar brands or brands that might be in the, a

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higher, you know, general space.

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Start looking the ones you know up and you're likely gonna find one of them

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that is having success with this and look at the content they're doing.

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Right.

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Yeah.

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And, and honestly it's a cheat sheet because you can probably come up why I

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said, you know, come up with your five to seven different things, different kind of

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types of content you want to test, you're probably looking at a playbook on, on

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that brand, on what's working for them.

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Yeah.

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Um, so I.

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I think finding, finding the ideas.

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You don't have to reinvent the wheel, the answers.

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Mm-hmm.

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The answer is already there.

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Um, and I think from that, if, if, if you have any creative juices, you're,

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you're going to have some ideas, okay, well this is working for them.

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We can do that, but we can also do this.

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Mm-hmm.

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You're gonna, it's really starts the idea flow.

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Um, and the, okay, the second.

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My mind went blank.

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What was the second question?

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Does it work?

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You know, out of your half million subscribers, do, how

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many of 'em become customers?

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So, so it's a great question.

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So the reality is these customers are not converting at the same rate

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as paid targeted traffic, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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Just not the case.

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Um, what we're doing is it's a very top of funnel, um, and we're a hundred percent

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gonna re prospect remarket to them, right?

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We're putting up some exclusive offers to try to capture their

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email when they go to our page.

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Um, and then depending on, on their behavior with the, uh, first few ads or

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emails, we're then doing, you know, pretty detailed segmenting and identifying.

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The best fits that are highly engaged.

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And then we are, we are getting aggressive with email campaigns and

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re prospecting and offers and sms.

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And if they downloaded our, our mobile app, we're sending

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'em an Android or iOS push.

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Um, we are, we are trying to convert 'em in traditional e-commerce ways once

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we capture them into our ecosystem, whether it's yeah, through, through,

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you know, a traditional pixel.

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Or getting their email address.

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Um, so they don't, they don't convert the same way.

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Um, you're, you're typically seeing 10% of, of a, a standard conversion rate.

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Um, but that's still a lot.

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Yeah.

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So, you know, if, if your, if your site normally converts at a, you know, for

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using round easy numbers, so I don't mess up the math at a 2% conversion rate.

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Right.

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These guys are probably gonna convert at a 0.2.

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And that's probably like on the good side.

Speaker:

Hmm.

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Um, we'll have some things where a video goes really does really well,

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and we look at the traffic and it's performing at a fraction of that, right?

Speaker:

It's only these people are only converting at 0.08.

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Um, but the, the reality is it's still.

Speaker:

There's value on time and there's value on spending the editing time,

Speaker:

whether it's you or someone else, but the content lives forever.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Um, and it's still the, the cost is still less than, than traditional paid.

Speaker:

Um, and, you know, we're seeing, you know, TikTok as, as an example, we

Speaker:

already know YouTube is doing it, but you're starting to get some search engine

Speaker:

optimization into the mix for your brand.

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Um, it's, it's, it's kind of insane that, um, I don't do this, but I know that a

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lot of the younger generation now, they're using TikTok to search for stuff, right?

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Mm-hmm.

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Whether they're looking for a certain product or they're looking, they're

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in, in going into the city and they wanna go to a restaurant, they're

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using TikTok as a search engine.

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They're not using Google.

Speaker:

Which is, which is kind of mind blowing.

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Um, but it really is, yeah.

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It, it allows you, if you're, if you're coming up with proper descriptions mm-hmm.

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For your videos on TikTok and proper hashtags, you're, you're setting yourself

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up for, you know, search organic.

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And then of course YouTube is obviously populating all of that into Google.

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So if someone's searching, um, the traditional way of Google,

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your videos are gonna come up too.

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Yeah.

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Ah, it's, it's mesmerizing stuff, John.

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I'm not gonna lie.

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It's just you kind of thinking, you, oh, goodness me, there's

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a world out there, you know?

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Um, and that somehow, if I can tap into that, um, it'd be great.

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And I can see how, um, a bit like what we do with the podcast, right?

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You, we do the podcast and people think, well, if you get a podcast and you get a

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thousand people listening to your podcast, you know, a hundred of 'em are gonna

Speaker:

become clients, which is not true at.

Speaker:

Um, but you, there are all these other benefits that I

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experience to doing podcasts.

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So you do get people who convert and they'll join a course or whatever.

Speaker:

Um, but you, you build credibility.

Speaker:

You, there's, there's, you know, there's, there's sort of the engagement,

Speaker:

there's, there's a whole bunch of other things that you sort of build.

Speaker:

Um, around doing the podcast, so I'm assuming and listening to you talk

Speaker:

because the conversion numbers are so low that there are a lot of added extra

Speaker:

benefits for you to carry on doing.

Speaker:

The, the YouTube channel.

Speaker:

One of the things that you said, which I thought was really interesting was

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actually, even though the conversion rates are much lower, they're still

Speaker:

more cost effective than paid social.

Speaker:

So then it does become a numbers game.

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So then I go, well actually now I understand why you want a million people,

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because if you've got a million people converting a 0.02 or whatever it is,

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um, then obviously the, the cost of

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creating the content for that million people to consume is an

Speaker:

awful lot lower, I'm guessing, per conversion than your paid media.

Speaker:

Right.

Speaker:

Um, so I, I like that.

Speaker:

But what, what are some of the other benefits that you guys experience

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for going through all this pain and aggravation of creating

Speaker:

this constant content machine?

Speaker:

You know?

Speaker:

Sure.

Speaker:

So I'm glad you, you mentioned the podcast piece because it's the same model.

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Right.

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The same, the same benefits.

Speaker:

It, they're eerily similar.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

We're subject, we we're becoming subject matter experts in the outdoors.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

It, it's, it's a softer sell.

Speaker:

Um, you're, you know, on the, on the business side and the podcast

Speaker:

side, you're building a network and it's, it's the same thing.

Speaker:

You're building an audience.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

They really are very, very, very similar.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

It's, it's, it's just, it's, it's the way people ingest content now

Speaker:

and they ingest it in ways they didn't before and embarrassing

Speaker:

amounts that they didn't before.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Um, and I think that it's as, it's as simple as that

Speaker:

to, to answer your question.

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Um, in addition to that, you know, there's, there's the home runs, right?

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Um, a home run that is not easy to replicate is the Netflix TV show.

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Mm-hmm.

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So what the Netflix TV show did for us, which, you know, I think that's,

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that's hitting the grand slam.

Speaker:

That's, that's, yeah.

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You know, best case scenario, will we get another show we're trying.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Um, we're continuing to try to replicate and get an additional show.

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Um, but what that show did for us was, um, leading up to it, we were

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getting about 125-30,000 unique visitors a month on our site.

Speaker:

Mm.

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The month, uh, July, 2020 that that show dropped.

Speaker:

We had, uh, 1.2 million unique visitors.

Speaker:

Wow.

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And Netflix didn't give us like a, a call to action at the end.

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Go to BattlBox.com.

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It was just people, um, searching on Google.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

For us.

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So we saw obviously a, a, a increase in direct traffic.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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An increase in Google organic, Google paid, um, those were the,

Speaker:

the three, you know, buckets in, in analytics, if you will mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Of, of that traffic.

Speaker:

But that we, we did a 10 x, uh, already relatively, um,

Speaker:

acceptable number of traffic, got 10 Xed because of a, a TV show.

Speaker:

Um, and it's just, it's just interesting.

Speaker:

It's.

Speaker:

You're, you're looking for the home runs like that.

Speaker:

We've had, um, you know, a couple videos.

Speaker:

We had one video, uh, testing a water filtration, um, that

Speaker:

got 35 million views and

Speaker:

that's as it would and why would it not, right?

Speaker:

I don't know.

Speaker:

Um, it's a lot of views and, um, it really is.

Speaker:

Geez.

Speaker:

It, and it, it, that was on TikTok.

Speaker:

We, it's, um, it has more than that on YouTube.

Speaker:

But, but from that came, um, just obviously there, there

Speaker:

was an uptick in traffic.

Speaker:

There was an uptick in, um, in email submissions and emails

Speaker:

that we're capturing collecting.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Um, from that video though, came some other cool things.

Speaker:

Um, a bunch of, um, I guess you would consider them media

Speaker:

companies, but a lot of the.

Speaker:

Those, those sites and pages that just post content, other

Speaker:

people's content all the time.

Speaker:

We had a few of them reach out to us and say, Hey, can we repost your content?

Speaker:

We're gonna tag you.

Speaker:

Well ab absolutely.

Speaker:

Um, so we have all these other companies now posting, reposting

Speaker:

that video and tagging us, which means they then come to our page,

Speaker:

they like our page, or they follow up, follow us, depending on channel.

Speaker:

So it's like a just.

Speaker:

Constant snowball that's just getting larger and larger and larger.

Speaker:

That's just, it's funny, isn't it?

Speaker:

And so how do you, how do you keep it engaging?

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

I mean, cuz.

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I am imagining John, and correct me if I'm wrong here, but I'm

Speaker:

imagining that the bigger it gets, the more successful it gets, the

Speaker:

more pressure you put upon yourselves to deliver great content, right?

Speaker:

So I'm imagining, uh, as a channel gets better, the, the cameras get bigger.

Speaker:

That Do you know what I mean?

Speaker:

The, the production value gets higher.

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Um, Which is a pressure I don't think you have when it's just you sat around

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a kitchen table cuz you're starting, you know, your first online store,

Speaker:

you've got a mobile phone and that's it.

Speaker:

Right?

Speaker:

How, what do you guys do to sort of keep that content fresh?

Speaker:

How do you, how do you work that?

Speaker:

So, yeah.

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So yeah, now we've gotten to a point where expectations are rising and

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it, it's a new challenge, right?

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Before was the challenge of let's just get some content,

Speaker:

but now expectations are there.

Speaker:

So we're we're just constantly having meetings, trying to figure out how

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can we make some additional content.

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Um, surprisingly, uh, chat GPT has been a, a friend of ours.

Speaker:

Wow.

Speaker:

So, um, giving us ideas.

Speaker:

We, we were in Las Vegas for a conference and we had the idea we had seen on TikTok.

Speaker:

In other channels where people were just asking random people questions.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

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And we said, okay, there's something there.

Speaker:

People watch these videos cuz they have millions of views and

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millions of likes and shares.

Speaker:

Um, how do we, how do we kind of do this but make it our own?

Speaker:

So we ask chat GPT and chat GPT told us and we then came up with a bunch

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of questions we could ask and we

Speaker:

then also ask chat GPT, what questions should we ask?

Speaker:

And we, it's not just, that's not what we all we typed, right?

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

We gave it context and direction Yeah.

Speaker:

And sure what we're trying to accomplish from it and what

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is it's gonna be used for.

Speaker:

And it popped out 20 questions to us, and most of 'em are better

Speaker:

than the questions we came up with.

Speaker:

Wow.

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Um, and then so we said, okay, well let's do a true test.

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In some of the content, we ask our questions, and in some of the content, we,

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uh, we ask the chat GPT questions and the dang chat GPT questions perform better.

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Um, that's fascinating.

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So that, that's, you know, I know.

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Maybe not as much as it was, but for the last couple months, chat GPT has been

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the buzz that everyone's talking to.

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Mm-hmm.

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That's how we're using it.

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We're using it as leverage.

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How do we go faster and stronger?

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Um, in ways.

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And they're mostly content driven.

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We're asking them for, um, okay, we wanna film this, write us a script.

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And it's giving us, now, it's not ever getting into a hundred percent right?

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It's getting us, it's getting it from, we're getting it taken from zero to five.

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It's taking it from five to 85.

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Mm-hmm.

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And then at that point, we're then just editing, honing it, making it our own.

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But it's shaving probably 8, 9, 10 hours out of, out of a process for us.

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Um, which is, which is pretty cool.

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Yeah, it's, it's, I, I like that and I like the fact you've mentioned that

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it's, it's not, it's not necessarily perfect, but it, it, I think it's a great

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place to give you ideas, doesn't it?

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And it sort of jumpstarts that process.

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I was on Mid Journey the other day, um, as playing around with that.

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Which is like, I dunno if you come across Mid Journey, but it's

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just sort of like a, a AI imagery.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah.

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And it's just incredible.

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So we were like telling it, right?

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I want you to create website, UX, UI with this idea and that idea.

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I'm just coming up with some thoughts.

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Now.

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What it comes back with, you can't use, but it can send you down a.

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It gives you ideas.

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I tell you, uh, John, I'm a bit of a regulars to the show, will know.

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I, I sort of dabble in carpentry and joinery.

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I like to make stuff outta wood.

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It's like my little hobby, if you like.

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And my daughter, who's 16 years old, she wants me to make her

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a new bed, which I designed.

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We'd gone on Pinterest, we'd looked at images together and we design, we drew

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it up and designed it and I was, I'm just about to start cutting all the wood.

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And then I was on mid journey and I thought.

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I wonder what would happen if, and so I just put in some prompts into

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Mid Journey, come back with some bed designs and my daughter see them, and

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she went, dad, that design you did.

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I don't want that.

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I want that one.

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That that thing is done there.

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And we're like, oh my goodness.

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It's, uh, it's really interesting how it sets you off in the, in the right path.

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But, uh, I think you, I, I think you nailed it though, right?

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It, it helps with the, with the ideas.

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Mm-hmm.

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It's not gonna be a replacement, but it, it, it helps guide you towards creation.

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Yeah.

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And it's interesting that you are doing it, um, using it on a

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channel as, as big as you guys are.

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What does, um, what does the future look like, John, for you guys?

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Where do you want, I mean, you obviously, your, your aim this year

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is to get the, the gold plaque, which is a million YouTube subscribers.

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Um, but beyond that, what sort of are the things are you, are you guys aiming for?

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So, so far this year we, we brought on our second full-time video editor.

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Um, our, our short-term goal, which we'd like to figure out in q2, I don't

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know if we will, but that's a, at least what we're hoping for is we wanna

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bring on another full-time creator.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, and that'll allow us to just output a way more additional content.

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Um, we're gonna change our thinking this year.

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Previously, you know, we have BattlBox, we have Carnivore Club, we have Wanlow

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we have these additional brands.

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But we've always built the brand and then tried to build the content and community.

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Mm-hmm.

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On top of it, I think this next brand we launch, we're gonna build the content

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and community first, and then listen to that audience and really just inspect

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and understand the demographics and the makeup and what that audience is.

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Yeah.

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And then cater a brand.

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That's made specifically for that audience.

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Mm-hmm.

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Uh, which is a, for us it's the reverse order.

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Yeah.

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You look at, um, we're talking about YouTube content.

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Um, so many, obviously, Mr.

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Beast is the one that everyone knows.

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Yeah.

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Um, that's what he did.

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Right.

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He built this content and community and then he dumps a burger brand.

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Mm-hmm.

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And a, and a cookie or chocolate brand on top, and they're instant

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success in his Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Right now, you know, is it easy to build a community and follower account like him?

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Probably not.

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Mm-hmm.

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But if you, if you can build at a smaller scale, a community and an audience, I

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think understanding that community and then building the brand on top of it,

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I think it's, it's, it's reversed for us, but you're seeing people do it in

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that order and doing it really well.

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Um, I think that's helped.

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It is reverse for you, but the, the, the, the in effect, the principle

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is still the same, isn't it?

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It's, it's, you, you guys are focusing very heavily on content and community.

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It's what you guys do well, and out of that, um, you, you,

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you've managed to monetize.

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Now before you had a product, you went and found the community.

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Uh, now you're on about getting the community and, and doing it, the product.

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But it's this, there's still this principle of produce content that your

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community wants to consume, right?

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And.

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I'm kind of curious as we, as we close the show here, you've been

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doing this a couple years, right?

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And you've, you, you guys have got a lot going on.

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What's, what's something maybe two or three points that you wish you knew at

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the start that, um, that you sort of figured out along the way that would've

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really, really helped you and sort of got you on your journey a lot quicker?

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So the, the number one thing is diversification of lead source.

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Um, so right now we're super diversified, um, typically,

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and, and there's ebbs and flows.

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And when a campaign, um, advertising campaign is doing well and really

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well, it might, it's gonna temporarily bridge this role and break it.

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But we wanna have no single lead source currently.

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Giving us more than a sixth or 16% of, of our customers.

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Right.

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Um, cause we never wanna be dependent on, on a specific platform or, or area.

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Now I wish we knew that before, um, you know, go 2015, we were

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advertising only on Facebook.

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Now we were sending those YouTube boxes, but we were only advertising on Facebook.

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We were getting customer, acquiring customers for $5.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, and you know, knowing,

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bring back those days, right?

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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I would've, I would've gotten as many credit cards as, as banks have given

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me and Yeah maxed every single one out.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Um, I think a mistake.

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Well people see, and I think it's, it's very much true now

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in a post iOS world where, where wins are, are a little farther and

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few between than they used to be.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, when you get a win go mm-hmm.

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Like figure out, figure out what overselling the problems that causes.

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Right.

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Yeah.

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And like it's a good problem to have and you can figure it out.

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Um, just, you ha, I think when you see something that works, you

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have to double down, triple down in as fast as you possibly can.

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Capitalize on on that, that winning and make it as big of a victory as possible.

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Um, go, I don't think you can go on the assumption that, oh, we can just pause

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this campaign and next month we'll, we'll start back up and it's gonna work.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, I think that's the, the biggest piece of advice is just so.

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Just oversell and, and figure out how to solve for that later.

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Um, get the customers while you can because it's, it's

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such a different landscape now.

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Yeah.

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No.

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Really powerful stuff.

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Really powerful stuff.

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John, listen, it's been great chatting to you on the show, man.

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And, um, uh, thank you for answering my, my questions and, and, uh, helping me feel

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a bit more inspired about this whole area.

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How do people reach you?

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How do they connect with you if they want to do that?

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Sure.

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Um, probably best is LinkedIn.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, LinkedIn, uh, I'm self admittedly I'm on Twitter, but I'm horrible at it.

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But, but I'm pretty, I'm pretty good at LinkedIn.

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Uh, and, uh, I also have a, a blog onlinequeso.com, uh, where I just

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kind of write what we're working on.

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Um, it's, it's not your typical stuff that's only filled with wins.

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Mm-hmm.

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It's, it's filled with losses too, because, you know, I feel.

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There's such learning experiences from the losses.

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Mm-hmm.

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And people don't really document that.

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Mm-hmm.

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Um, and I like it because two, it helps me process it in how we can learn from

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it and be better, stronger, faster.

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Mm-hmm.

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But also, if I can put it out there and someone can read it and

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it can, it can save them a step.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Not make the same mistake I made, then it's a win.

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Fantastic.

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And what's your blog?

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Uh, onlinequeso.com

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Onlinequeso.com.

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We will of course link to that and to your LinkedIn profile, uh, in the

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show notes as well on the website.

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If you are on regular to the email, they'll also be in the email.

Speaker:

Um, but John, genuine, uh, real appreciation man for you

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coming on the show and sharing your insights and thoughts.

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And, um, I'm gonna be going and checking out your YouTube channel.

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Uh, we'll connect on uh, LinkedIn just because we can, and I'm gonna

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connect with you on Twitter just because I'm also rubbish at it as well.

Speaker:

So we'll just be rubbish together and um, I'll see how we get on.

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Uh, but it's been awesome.

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Thanks, man.

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Genuinely, really, really appreciate it.

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Thanks for coming on the show.

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Thanks for having me, Matt.

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Really appreciate it.

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Oh no no worries.

Speaker:

So there you have it.

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Another fantastic conversation with John.

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As I said, uh, all of the links to John, his LinkedIn and Twitter that

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he never uses as well as to his blog will be, uh, on the website, in the

Speaker:

show notes at ecommercepodcast.net.

Speaker:

It'll also be in the newsletter, which is emailed out.

Speaker:

If you're not on the list, get on the list.

Speaker:

And they just come straight to you?

Speaker:

Uh, now let me just say, be sure to follow the e-Commerce podcast wherever you get

Speaker:

your podcast from because we've got yet more great conversations lined up, and

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

Speaker:

Also, let me give a big shout out to today's show

Speaker:

sponsor the e-commerce cohort.

Speaker:

Remember to check out their free online training at ecommercecycles.com.

Speaker:

Uh, just have a go.

Speaker:

Uh, see how you get on.

Speaker:

And before I wrap up today's episode, lemme just take a moment

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to invite you, dear listener, to become a part of the show.

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If you're an e-commerce entrepreneur or an expert in the area of e-commerce

Speaker:

and would like to share your insights with, uh, amazing audience,

Speaker:

we would love to hear from you.

Speaker:

Or maybe, you know somebody.

Speaker:

Just head over to the website, ecommercepodcast.net, follow

Speaker:

the links, get in touch.

Speaker:

We would love to hear from you.

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Yes, we would.

Speaker:

And in case no one has told you yet today.

Speaker:

You dear listener, are awesome.

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Yes, you are.

Speaker:

Created awesome.

Speaker:

It's just a burden you have to bear.

Speaker:

I have to bear it.

Speaker:

John definitely has to bear it, and you've gotta bear it as well.

Speaker:

So it just is what it is.

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Now.

Speaker:

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 team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Estella

Speaker:

Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.

Speaker:

Our theme song was written by Josh Edmundson, and as I mentioned, if

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

Speaker:

website, ecommercepodcast.net.

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That's it from me.

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That's it from John.

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Thank you so much for joining us.

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Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.

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I'll see you next time.