Matt:

Hello and welcome to the e commerce podcast.

Matt:

My name is Matt Edmundson and I'm your host for this conversation.

Matt:

This is a show all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.

Matt:

And to help us do just that.

Matt:

I'm chatting with Eagan Heath from Caravan Digital, which I think is

Matt:

probably one of the coolest names for a company I've heard for a long time.

Matt:

We are going to be talking about eCommerce, marketing, funnel marketing.

Matt:

We're going to get into the whole thing, basically.

Matt:

It's good.

Matt:

It's going to be good.

Matt:

Now, before we get into it though, let me just remind you, if you

Matt:

haven't done so already to sign up to the newsletter just head over

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all comes to your inbox automagically.

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It's a beautiful thing.

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Let me tell you.

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And of course, if you're new to the show, a very warm welcome to you.

Matt:

Now, let's talk about Mr.

Matt:

Eagan Heath.

Matt:

The mastermind behind Get Found Madison and Caravan Digital, who's been turning

Matt:

online traffic into treasure since 2016.

Matt:

Oh yes, he's not just a digital marketing guru.

Matt:

Oh no, he's also the brain behind the innovative My Digital

Matt:

Marketing Mastery Course.

Matt:

And the former captain of the quirky pet portrait ship Splendid Beast.

Matt:

I've no idea either, but we'll find out.

Matt:

I catch him sharing his eCommerce expertise on the What's Working in

Matt:

eCommerce show, where he leads the digital waves with tips and tales.

Matt:

Oh yes.

Matt:

It's good to be talking to a fellow podcaster.

Matt:

Eagan, welcome to the show, man.

Matt:

Been looking forward to this.

Matt:

How are you doing today, sir?

Eagan:

Great.

Eagan:

Even better after that intro.

Eagan:

Thank you, Matt.

Matt:

Dude, you've got to explain the quirky pet portrait ship Splendid Beast.

Eagan:

That's right.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

So I also had an e commerce business.

Eagan:

It's called Splendid Beast.

Eagan:

You can check it out at splendidbeast.

Eagan:

com.

Eagan:

I purchased it from a friend.

Eagan:

I grew it a bit and I sold it actually during the pandemic to focus on my agency.

Eagan:

But basically Splendid Beast does a custom oil pet portraits of your dog, cat,

Eagan:

whatever you have and any way you want.

Eagan:

And you want your dog as Winston Churchill.

Eagan:

You want your, cat as As Emily Dickinson whatever you want, you can do it.

Eagan:

And they're actual handmade oil portraits and they take a, it, they take a little

Eagan:

while to paint and then they actually have to dry and we ship them to you

Eagan:

and you can see a couple behind me, you can see the, this cat is the Maharashi

Eagan:

behind me and we also have Gizmo, the.

Eagan:

The owners the founder's pet dog is a professor and he is got a little

Eagan:

neck tie and things like that.

Eagan:

So it was a very fun business.

Eagan:

I had a lot of fun with it.

Eagan:

I learned a lot.

Eagan:

And oftentimes client clients are glad to know I've run an

Eagan:

e-commerce business myself too.

Matt:

That's a we'll stick on that point for a little bit, but then I've got

Matt:

some more questions about the pet thing.

Matt:

I'm not going to lie, we're going to get onto that.

Matt:

One of the things that I've always found quite fascinating about eCommerce is

Matt:

the amount of gurus in the world who claim to know stuff, but don't actually

Matt:

run their own eCommerce business.

Matt:

And I've always found that quite fascinating.

Matt:

And like you, I thought I actually was an eCommerce entrepreneur

Matt:

before I did the agency thing.

Matt:

And before I did the whole coaching thing and in fact, all the coaching

Matt:

came out of what we learned.

Matt:

in eCommerce and that always was one of those things that you

Matt:

clients really warm to really.

Matt:

And I always I, in fact, I always used to say, I still say, because a lot of,

Matt:

I don't know if you found this, Eagan, but a lot of people will go to Say their

Matt:

web designer for help with e-commerce.

Matt:

It's something's not working.

Matt:

I'll go talk to my website guy.

Matt:

But that's a bit like going to a midwife and asking them for parenting advice.

Matt:

The midwife is very good at one particular part of the journey, doesn't mean

Matt:

that they're good at everything else.

Matt:

And yeah.

Matt:

I'm intrigued by this.

Matt:

So you I totally get it.

Matt:

Actually.

Matt:

The fact that you do e-commerce, I imagine is a big plus for your clients.

Eagan:

Yep.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

And I think that's right.

Eagan:

I think I always like the comparison also to, I don't know what you guys.

Eagan:

Say in the UK, but here in the US, it's like when you physically build

Eagan:

a house or a building or, anything, it's like you've got the general

Eagan:

contractor who's overseeing all the subcontractors or contractors underneath.

Eagan:

And somebody has got to do the electrical.

Eagan:

Somebody has got to do the plumbing.

Eagan:

Somebody has got to do all of these pieces.

Eagan:

And so it makes sense from the client's perspective that they don't know about

Eagan:

all the stuff that happens behind the scenes that they maybe had one place built

Eagan:

their Shopify site or something like that.

Eagan:

But now we need to get people to that site.

Eagan:

We need to get people buying.

Eagan:

Those are separate skills and that makes sense to us.

Eagan:

We know that from being in the game for a number of years, but if you're brand

Eagan:

new and you're just trying to get some products online or just starting to sell

Eagan:

that, that can be news to you sometimes.

Eagan:

And so there are separate sub skills within this world, right?

Matt:

yeah, absolutely.

Matt:

That's intriguing.

Matt:

Fascinating.

Matt:

And I'm curious, though, what made you buy a pet portrait business from your friend?

Matt:

Because I don't know, just in all the times I've sat here and thought, what

Matt:

eCommerce business shall I do next?

Matt:

It never came up to paint pets with oil paintings.

Matt:

So I'm curious, what was it that drew you in?

Eagan:

Yeah, great question.

Eagan:

So I had started life, you mentioned Get Found Madison.

Eagan:

We're based out of Madison, Wisconsin.

Eagan:

It really started as a local SEO and Google Ads agency.

Eagan:

So a lot of our clients are still based out of here in the upper

Eagan:

Midwest in the United States.

Eagan:

And so I really knew that piece about keyword research, on site

Eagan:

optimization, running pay per click ads.

Eagan:

And I had talked with my friend Ben who started Splendid Beast.

Eagan:

And he was looking to get out of it.

Eagan:

And he was even just going to shut it down.

Eagan:

And I said, there's really more opportunity here.

Eagan:

And in particular, I'd done the keyword research.

Eagan:

And at the time, this was a number of years ago.

Eagan:

It was in the U S alone.

Eagan:

It was like dog paintings was searched 4, 400 times a month.

Eagan:

Cat paintings, thousands of times.

Eagan:

And then variations on each of those thousands and thousands of times.

Eagan:

And at the time it was a site, I believe on.

Eagan:

Weebly, do you remember that one?

Eagan:

This was pre, pre, so it wasn't on WordPress, wasn't on

Eagan:

Shopify or anything like that.

Eagan:

And I said, boy, there's a lot of opportunity here.

Eagan:

So first thing I did was, we really got, we updated it in terms of on

Eagan:

WooCommerce and then we built out pages for dog painting, cat painting,

Eagan:

pet portrait, everything like that.

Eagan:

And for a little while there, we were number one in the U.

Eagan:

S for dog paintings.

Eagan:

We got a lot of traffic that way.

Eagan:

So I saw the demand that we could tap into where my friend who'd started

Eagan:

it, was really on the design side.

Eagan:

He did the pho, the Photoshopping and things like that, and had the

Eagan:

relationships with the painters.

Eagan:

But I had that marketing mind and it's like anyone who buys a business, it's

Eagan:

like you see something that maybe the current owner doesn't see and you think

Eagan:

you can take it to the next level.

Eagan:

Did for a while, had a lot of fun with it and realized that my, my agency

Eagan:

was requiring so much time that I had to choose one or the other during

Eagan:

COVID and it was sad to let it go.

Eagan:

I'm bittersweet about it, but basically the guy who was operating it for me, took

Eagan:

it over, had him trained on everything and we're, we're still great friends.

Matt:

Wow.

Matt:

What a great story.

Matt:

And it's interesting that you talk about doing keyword research

Matt:

before buying the business.

Matt:

Because one of the questions I get asked a lot is if I'm going to set up an eCommerce

Matt:

business, what product should I sell?

Matt:

How do I know what's a good product to sell?

Matt:

Would you still advocate for that today as in?

Matt:

If I'm thinking of setting up an eCommerce business, I have a product idea.

Matt:

Would you then go and do the keyword research to find the demand of that?

Matt:

And how would you, how would you correlate that to the

Matt:

competition behind that keyword?

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

Great questions.

Eagan:

I think that's part of what I think we're talking about today too

Eagan:

with the full funnel marketing and strategy and everything like that.

Eagan:

I think it depends on what you're selling, depends on kind of which

Eagan:

way you want to take things.

Eagan:

But to me, I always want to know that piece.

Eagan:

And it's the, it's this world of, Everything's amazing and nobody cares.

Eagan:

Like we forgot how special it is to be able to do that keyword research.

Eagan:

We take it for granted, but you and I have lived long enough, like we

Eagan:

remember the days of, the phone book and things like that, of, you knew

Eagan:

there was a phone book, you knew you could put your business in it.

Eagan:

You didn't know how many times a month people opened it up and

Eagan:

looked for businesses like yours.

Eagan:

Now we have at least some idea about that directionally.

Eagan:

And so if we're tapping into any sort of demand if we're selling a product that's.

Eagan:

Something people already look for, I think it behooves you to know that,

Eagan:

and I think if I did it now, I would, I would want to know the Amazon traffic

Eagan:

as well, so I think it's just getting a sense of understanding that's even the,

Eagan:

those are the head terms, dog painting, cat painting, pet portrait, those are

Eagan:

the tip of the iceberg, and then there's going to be all these others, and I went

Eagan:

down the list, and it got so specific, it was like French Bulldog painting,

Eagan:

that's got a couple hundred searches per month and then one of our first sales

Eagan:

I got when I took it over was a Bichon Frise painting and I had to look that up.

Eagan:

I didn't my, my wife loves dogs.

Eagan:

We don't have a dog.

Eagan:

So I was like, what is that?

Eagan:

People are looking for their breed of a painting and I saw it in the, the

Eagan:

PPC Google Ads reporting basically that someone searched that phrase

Eagan:

And you could click, clicked and bought, like that was one of our

Eagan:

first conversions on Google ads.

Eagan:

And I said, wow, there's really something here.

Eagan:

And the old, again, the old owner, my good friend, Ben, he didn't think like that.

Eagan:

He didn't have that training, those skills.

Eagan:

And so to even go down that route.

Eagan:

And so we started to create, we had a rat painting page.

Eagan:

We had a, we had Boston Terrier page.

Eagan:

We, it's like all those top breeds, like we went down the list and it's like as

Eagan:

crazy as it seems, as niche as it seems.

Eagan:

Someone is searching for, a page, paintings of bulldogs

Eagan:

and of their bulldogs.

Eagan:

Sometimes it's paint my dog and things like that.

Eagan:

And so I think any time you're tapping into existing demand, you want to

Eagan:

know what that search volume is.

Eagan:

Now, you also mentioned the competition.

Eagan:

That's a good point.

Eagan:

SEO tools like Ahrefs or SEMrush or others, can help you estimate

Eagan:

how competitive that's going to be.

Eagan:

I know there's Helium 10 and others on Amazon where you can do similar work.

Eagan:

I think it's good to know that, too.

Eagan:

Of how competitive is it, but even just a rough and ready sort of way

Eagan:

to check for a competition is you search those phrases, you do it

Eagan:

incognito or in private browsing mode.

Eagan:

How many ads do you see, right?

Eagan:

Are you, do you see the Google shopping ads appearing?

Eagan:

Do you see search ads at the top?

Eagan:

You can get a sense right there, if people are advertising on this, either

Eagan:

everybody in the industry is incompetent and they're advertising on a keyword

Eagan:

that doesn't convert, or there's information here in the market, right?

Eagan:

So right on that search page, I think there's information we can be learning

Eagan:

from about how competitive is this, and we know it's an auction, we're gonna,

Eagan:

we're gonna be paying more per click if I see a lot of other ads there.

Eagan:

And if there's no ads at all on a phrase, Maybe there's not a

Eagan:

lot of commercial intent here.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

It's, I mean it's one of those, isn't it?

Matt:

I think there are very few phrases that.

Matt:

That are undiscovered for want of a better expression, and we always

Matt:

every now and again, you come across them, they think, Oh, this

Matt:

is going to rock everybody's world.

Matt:

And it's, there's a reason why it is what it is.

Matt:

But if you are starting again today, or I came to you to your agency to Caravan

Matt:

Digital, and I said, you can listen, but my wife enjoys painting pets.

Matt:

So I'm going to set up a pet painting business.

Matt:

Is that, how would you, with the full funnel marketing sort of

Matt:

thing that we're going to get into how would I approach this?

Matt:

Because I imagine it's a lot more competitive now than when

Matt:

you took over from your friend.

Matt:

So getting ranked SEO wise is going to be complex.

Matt:

Google ads is going to be a little bit more expensive, I'm thinking.

Matt:

Yeah where would you go with that?

Eagan:

Yeah, that's great.

Eagan:

And maybe it's a good time to get into that.

Eagan:

If I think there is an element of the customer persona, probably the

Eagan:

listeners or viewers have heard that.

Eagan:

Is that something you guys do at your agency?

Matt:

Yeah, oh yeah, I'm a big fan of understanding the customer.

Matt:

Yeah, oh jeez, yeah.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

So we actually.

Eagan:

Put a Facebook name.

Eagan:

We create a composite person.

Eagan:

I can share and pull some up if we want to see some and look through some, but

Eagan:

it's literally, who are we talking about?

Eagan:

Who are we selling to?

Eagan:

It's who are we serving?

Eagan:

I think it really starts there.

Eagan:

And from there it's, what do they want?

Eagan:

What are their aspirations?

Eagan:

What are their goals?

Eagan:

What are their pain points?

Eagan:

Who are we talking about?

Eagan:

Let's put a, let's put a picture.

Eagan:

Let's put a name on it.

Eagan:

Let's make this a real person with a, a real age, a real city, a real income.

Eagan:

Let's let's flesh it out and then think about where are they?

Eagan:

Where do they spend time?

Eagan:

Where can we catch their attention?

Eagan:

is part of it, but it's also what sort of messaging and creative do

Eagan:

they need to see, what's going to speak to them at each of those levels.

Eagan:

And so somebody who is maybe they're on TikTok, maybe they're on Instagram,

Eagan:

and they've never even thought I could get a funny painting of my dog

Eagan:

or I could create, it's like they they would need to see examples.

Eagan:

And that was this was an interesting example for me, Matt.

Eagan:

When I first bought the business, I was obviously showing people,

Eagan:

Hey, check out this site, splendidbeast.Com, check it out.

Eagan:

And it was the old site before we redid it.

Eagan:

And a good friend of mine who's a marketer browsed through it and

Eagan:

she goes, What am I looking at?

Eagan:

And it was, it was pictures of paintings, but it was on a computer and

Eagan:

it was zoomed in just to the painting.

Eagan:

And so she thought, are these photoshopped images themselves?

Eagan:

Is this art?

Eagan:

What do I do?

Eagan:

And so immediately I got the idea, okay, we need to have people standing

Eagan:

next to their pets so we can see it.

Eagan:

Or we need the pet right next to the painting so that people can understand

Eagan:

immediately, this is this pet, right?

Eagan:

And this is a painting you get of the pet.

Eagan:

Is it okay if I share a screen

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Let me bring that on.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

So if you're watching the video we're looking at a screen.

Matt:

So maybe just talk us through what we're seeing as well.

Matt:

You can, for those that are just listening,

Eagan:

Yeah, can you hear this on splendidbeast.Com?

Eagan:

Again, this is my former business and it's based on that learning from my

Eagan:

friend Helen It was like, okay We used to have it was just this painting Zoomed

Eagan:

in and you couldn't even tell it was a painting because people see all kinds

Eagan:

of images online They don't know this is a handmade oil painting, right?

Eagan:

And then we also need to understand it's this dog and so online

Eagan:

on splendidbeast.Com now we've got Pictures of pets, right?

Eagan:

So we've got this cat and then we've got the cat is the famous

Eagan:

Van Gogh self portrait, right?

Eagan:

With his ear cut off.

Eagan:

And so we can at least understand a little better.

Eagan:

This is my specific cat.

Eagan:

And then this is a painting like this, right?

Eagan:

And so same story.

Eagan:

There's all kinds of different types.

Eagan:

I can have my dog in Star Trek.

Eagan:

And if I can see, at least get a sense of here's a pet.

Eagan:

Here's a specific pet, here's a portrait, here's, and I can see,

Eagan:

this is actually on the wall, some of these have frames and things

Eagan:

like that, and then people actually, this is great if you can get, user

Eagan:

generated content of people posting it.

Eagan:

Here's my cat, here's my cat painted as an astronaut, here's a smiling face.

Eagan:

It's just much more immediate like that.

Eagan:

Going back to your question was, where do we start?

Eagan:

There might be quirky people who have certain interests, like obviously they

Eagan:

love their pets, that's going to be a huge part of their persona and then there's

Eagan:

some sort of quirky sense of humor where they wouldn't be embarrassed having

Eagan:

this up in their house, they would be proud, they would show their friends and

Eagan:

family, they would even post on Instagram to say this is something they would do

Eagan:

so it's like we're getting a sense of what type of quirky person would pay for

Eagan:

a painting like this, whatever, yeah.

Eagan:

Where can we reach them?

Eagan:

And immediately, we understand a little better.

Eagan:

If we just had, here's a cat in a, in an astronaut costume.

Eagan:

It's we may not understand, you can actually do this for your cat.

Eagan:

And hang it on the wall, right?

Eagan:

And so it's that sort of thought, now we can pop a funnel.

Eagan:

Someone who's never even thought to search cat astronaut painting can get the

Eagan:

idea planted in their head and they can be looking at their cat thinking, huh,

Eagan:

what does my cat's personality match or my dog, how would I have them painted?

Eagan:

So it's, I think it's that sort of idea of where can we find them?

Eagan:

Where are they hanging out if they're.

Eagan:

Totally top of funnel.

Eagan:

Didn't even know this was something they could ever purchase in the

Eagan:

world or a commission, as we say.

Eagan:

And so where are they hanging out?

Eagan:

Where can we even get them aware of it?

Eagan:

And then how do we make it like very immediate?

Eagan:

So it speaks to them.

Eagan:

And so we went through anywhere on Instagram where people had tagged

Eagan:

us that user generated content that UGC was extremely valuable and

Eagan:

much better than any pictures that my old friend Ben had zoomed in.

Eagan:

Nice quality of a painting, but.

Eagan:

We couldn't tell at a distance that it was a painting.

Eagan:

Sorry if I went on too long about that, Matt, but that's how I think about it.

Matt:

No, it's really good.

Matt:

And I, as I was looking at the images there on the website the one thing that

Matt:

I was, That I noticed about the images, as soon as you add the pet and you give

Matt:

it context, you're actually showing that in some respects the transformation,

Matt:

it felt a bit like a before and after photo, do you know what I mean, of

Matt:

this is what I was and then I lost 75 pounds in two weeks and this is what I

Matt:

am now, those kind of shots which show transformation and they're really powerful

Matt:

because it actually tells the story, doesn't it, of where you are and where

Matt:

it could be, and I can imagine actually, if you just zoomed in on the painting

Matt:

if the paintings are any good, you might, you could easily go, what is it?

Matt:

It's just an image of a dog.

Matt:

I don't quite, I don't quite understand.

Matt:

So I see, and I'm imagining actually the conversion went

Matt:

up as soon as you did that.

Eagan:

Yeah, certainly we were tracking conversion rate, everything like that, but

Eagan:

even just the understanding if someone's scrolling through Facebook wherever

Eagan:

on social media, they might see this.

Eagan:

I need it to we got to stop the thumb, right?

Eagan:

And in general, if they're social media, I'm thinking in many

Eagan:

cases, that's top of funnel.

Eagan:

Back in the day, we could remarket a little better, but

Eagan:

as it stands, it's like with.

Eagan:

I was 14 in the pixel and everything like that.

Eagan:

We really almost need to think of meta as a top of funnel or many of these

Eagan:

paid social platforms as top of funnel.

Eagan:

People have never heard of us.

Eagan:

They don't know us from Adam and we need to grab them quickly and they

Eagan:

need to understand quickly what this is and even there's an implied

Eagan:

sense of why would I want this?

Eagan:

And so for people who there's probably most people on the planet

Eagan:

would never buy one of these, right?

Eagan:

I've got a dog, or my wife's got a dog, and I would certainly never

Eagan:

commission it to have it painted, right?

Eagan:

And even if I did, I wouldn't make some goofy thing and

Eagan:

have him Winston Churchill.

Eagan:

But, there is some subset that would, and it's that's who we want to

Eagan:

grab, and we want them to understand immediately, and start checking out,

Eagan:

and start thinking through that process.

Eagan:

And you can imagine some people have multiple pets and they would get one

Eagan:

for each pet and they would, if we've got whole galleries of I've got three

Eagan:

to five dogs and all of them have their own Splendid Beast on the wall and they

Eagan:

send us pictures of all of them sitting on the couch below their paintings.

Eagan:

So it's that, that immediacy of why on earth would I want this?

Eagan:

What is it?

Eagan:

And how can I get one?

Eagan:

And it's for the right people that's going to land.

Matt:

yeah, Matt, very good very good.

Matt:

And I love how you used the imagery to tell that story and

Matt:

to grab people's attention.

Matt:

I assume you did it with video as well, on the, on Metta.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

That's good.

Eagan:

And I should say on YouTube as well.

Eagan:

And we had a great, so what we would do is another thing, talking

Eagan:

through what, how do we get started?

Eagan:

When I took over this business, I went through and said, again, Ben, previous

Eagan:

owner, what do we got for an email list?

Eagan:

He goes, email.

Eagan:

What's that?

Eagan:

I said, all right, we're going to grab all the, we're going to, we're going

Eagan:

to grab all the previous customers.

Eagan:

I'm going to put them into at the time, MailChimp, cause we were just getting

Eagan:

started right late, later on Klaviyo.

Eagan:

And first thing we did was.

Eagan:

You get a free painting if you send us pictures of your not everybody,

Eagan:

but we're going to do a contest and you're going to win a free Splendid

Eagan:

Beast's gift card or what have you.

Eagan:

Send us a picture of you with the pet, with the painting, if possible,

Eagan:

if they're still alive, right?

Eagan:

And that was the whole thing of people memorializing their

Eagan:

pets and things like that.

Eagan:

Very first thing we did was, new email list, here's a giveaway, right?

Eagan:

Enter to win a giveaway.

Eagan:

If you like this quirky thing already, chances are you like it again.

Eagan:

You can give it as a gift or you can get your other pet painted this way.

Eagan:

And as soon as we did that, we solicited a bunch of user generated

Eagan:

content that we could then use in the marketing, put on the site,

Eagan:

put in the ads, put in the emails.

Eagan:

So that's that piece, getting to that bottom of the funnel.

Eagan:

They already bought from us, they already have one, why did we disappear?

Eagan:

If, it's like the hardest thing you know, Matt, is to get a new customer,

Eagan:

it's time to sell them another thing.

Eagan:

It's a gift card for another one, it's a gift card for someone else,

Eagan:

it's that, credit toward their next pet painting, or whatever it

Eagan:

is we, we gotta keep them engaged.

Eagan:

And that was a huge win right out of the gates of, New channel, yes,

Eagan:

but also, we didn't hit them, here's a sale, come buy things right now.

Eagan:

It was, let's get you guys re engaged.

Eagan:

You bought this weird thing from this weird company.

Eagan:

Who are you people?

Eagan:

What's your story?

Eagan:

And let's get you something free, or let's get you entered.

Eagan:

And, what I liked about the giveaway, too, is, it's at cost for us, it's

Eagan:

whatever it was for one painting, but that got us, it got people opening our

Eagan:

emails, which they'd never seen before.

Eagan:

Some people hadn't bought a painting in years, so got our emails opened,

Eagan:

but then also started a conversation with something free rather than,

Eagan:

Hey, here's a hard sell right away.

Eagan:

So I think that helped us too.

Matt:

That's a really powerful tool, isn't it, in, in terms of how to

Matt:

Instantly get a whole bunch of user generated content is just to give

Matt:

people something for free, or the possibility of getting something for free.

Matt:

And something valuable to what you've done there with another

Matt:

painting and people will love it.

Matt:

It's actually I'm the cleverness in it is The people that you want

Matt:

to produce the user generated content are the passionate people.

Matt:

The passionate people are probably going to want another painting off you.

Matt:

And so they're going to, oh, I get a chance to win, and oh, I didn't

Matt:

win, I'll blow, I'll buy one anyway.

Matt:

Because, why not?

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

And again, it's obvious to everybody watching this or listening to this is,

Eagan:

you get your products at cost, right?

Eagan:

But other people receive the value over the top of that.

Eagan:

That's why they're giving you their money in exchange.

Eagan:

What you're selling them is more valuable than that.

Eagan:

So anytime you can do a giveaway like that, it's like you're

Eagan:

putting value out into the world over and above what it costs you.

Eagan:

And then if you can multiply it one to many with marketing with, you're

Eagan:

getting testimonials, you're getting case studies, you're getting happy customers,

Eagan:

pictures of their faces with the product.

Eagan:

That's invaluable because you're going to then multiply that in all your marketing.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

And actually that, that, and there's something quite clever about that as well.

Matt:

I always, we've always talked about this on the show that actually

Matt:

a gift with purchases offer the often better than discount.

Matt:

So I can discount by 10 percent and if your average order value is a

Matt:

hundred bucks that's a 10 discount.

Matt:

Whereas if I can find a gift with purchase, maybe it costs me

Matt:

three bucks, but the perceived value of that is say 27 bucks.

Matt:

Then.

Matt:

I'm making more money by doing the Gift With Purchase because I'm

Matt:

losing three bucks rather than ten.

Matt:

But the customer's getting something of a much higher value.

Matt:

So instead of getting ten bucks, they're getting twenty seven, right?

Eagan:

Yeah that's spot on.

Eagan:

I'm gonna, if it's okay, man, I'm going to pull up the presentation a little bit

Matt:

Yeah, go for it

Eagan:

I did a recent, so I did a recent workshop basically about

Eagan:

how to create a marketing strategy that actually drives results.

Eagan:

And you're reminding me of this slide here I created.

Eagan:

It's just, what does strategy entail?

Eagan:

This is me and feel free.

Eagan:

This is not the final word.

Eagan:

I don't claim to be a guru, Matt.

Eagan:

I'm just, I'm here along with people trying to learn it.

Eagan:

So we talked about.

Eagan:

Our customer persona, who are we marketing to?

Eagan:

Who are we serving?

Eagan:

What's the problem or aspiration addressed?

Eagan:

How are we going to help them, right?

Eagan:

And by the way, with the pet paintings, just as an example, I know we can talk

Eagan:

about other examples too, but it's what is what is the problem addressed here?

Eagan:

What is the aspiration?

Eagan:

It's worth thinking through.

Eagan:

And one thing we found was, oftentimes, a major use of these paintings was

Eagan:

people wanted to memorialize their pet.

Eagan:

In many cases, we had to work from old photos because the pet's gone

Eagan:

and they want to remember them.

Eagan:

And that's a use case into itself.

Eagan:

Another one is just, we want to celebrate this weird animal, and

Eagan:

when people come over to a party we want to see it on the wall, right?

Eagan:

That's a separate use

Matt:

Yeah.

Eagan:

You're talking about the offer.

Eagan:

What are you selling?

Eagan:

What's the price what's entailed, right?

Eagan:

And I think what you're saying, what we're agreeing about, Matt, is how

Eagan:

do we make that offer more valuable, throw in something else, right?

Eagan:

Of here's a way to maintain this.

Eagan:

Here's what else you can do with this.

Eagan:

Here's a free guide.

Eagan:

Here's a free PDF.

Eagan:

Here's a checklist.

Eagan:

Here's a, inexpensive gift on our end.

Eagan:

That's going to add value for you.

Eagan:

Those are all ways to increase that average order value and increase the

Eagan:

value that your customers receive, right?

Matt:

Yeah, absolutely.

Eagan:

And then obviously that's going to affect our messaging.

Eagan:

One of the things I changed on the website right away was custom

Eagan:

oil paintings of your pet, right?

Eagan:

Before it was just sort of Splendid Beast, figure this out, right?

Eagan:

Here's an image, good luck, right?

Eagan:

And now it's get really clear.

Eagan:

There's this whole element of competition.

Eagan:

We can or cannot go into that today, right?

Eagan:

Channels, where are we going to reach our prospect?

Eagan:

We've talked a little bit about that.

Eagan:

Are they already searching Google?

Eagan:

If so, I would call that middle of funnel.

Eagan:

If they don't even know this exists and we're running ads top of funnel on

Eagan:

YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, wherever.

Eagan:

That's, I'm calling that top of funnel.

Eagan:

They've never heard of us.

Eagan:

And then bottom of funnel is they've heard of us.

Eagan:

They've gotten on the email list and now we're moving them along.

Eagan:

So each one has its place.

Eagan:

I think there's time and or money to invest.

Eagan:

You mentioned the SEO piece of the complexity around that.

Eagan:

It's complex.

Eagan:

It's difficult.

Eagan:

It takes time, but if people are low on budget.

Eagan:

It's like there's always organic strategies to work on,

Eagan:

but they cost you time, right?

Eagan:

Are you putting in the elbow grease, are you putting in the sweat equity into your

Eagan:

company with organic, or are you trying to go faster by running ads, right?

Eagan:

So that's the budget.

Eagan:

There's obviously a measurement piece of this, but we want to do direct response

Eagan:

marketing and that's the idea there.

Eagan:

I think there's more to this, too.

Eagan:

We could certainly add to this list, but Matt, I think, who's our customer persona?

Eagan:

What's the problem or aspiration?

Eagan:

What's our offer?

Eagan:

I always, I throw in what's the copywriting.

Eagan:

We could also say, what's the creative, we could say what's

Eagan:

going to be in the images.

Eagan:

We could say, how are we different than the competition?

Eagan:

What are the channels we're going to reach them at?

Eagan:

We could talk more about the, channels at different points, top of funnel,

Eagan:

middle of the funnel, bottom of funnel, and then budget and measurement,

Eagan:

I think we're starting to get.

Eagan:

A strategy once we have these pieces, what do you think?

Matt:

I think it's a very comprehensive list, Eagan and I think it's

Matt:

it's, I love where you start and I love where you end with that.

Matt:

And yeah.

Matt:

I was very good.

Matt:

Very where did you do that presentation?

Eagan:

So I do workshops here in Madison as well, and I'm often teaching other

Eagan:

marketers or, small business owners.

Eagan:

There's a mix of eCommerce and other, local businesses and things like that.

Eagan:

And I absolutely love doing it.

Eagan:

I think it's engaging.

Eagan:

We can just be on our computers all day, crossing our eyes, looking at

Eagan:

Google ads and looking at spreadsheets.

Eagan:

So it's nice to get out and talk with other marketers and bounce things off

Eagan:

each other and I always learn from them and I, I, I think they get enough value

Eagan:

out of it where they keep coming back.

Eagan:

So I'm a huge fan of, if you like teaching, if you like this stuff,

Eagan:

and you're an agency or you're a consultant I think it's worth checking

Eagan:

out because it's a, it's reinvigorates you if you like that sort of thing.

Eagan:

So I do the, I do the in person workshop and then I'll basically, I

Eagan:

turn those into the online courses that people can buy as well.

Matt:

brilliant.

Matt:

Do you just switch and tack very slightly at this point.

Matt:

You do your own podcast.

Matt:

We mentioned that at the start of the show.

Matt:

And that's how we met.

Matt:

I ended up on your podcast and I'm very sorry about that.

Matt:

But we chatted about eCommerce and I've I obviously connected to your show.

Matt:

A number of the guests that have been on your show have been on this

Matt:

show and a whole bunch of people whose faces I don't recognize.

Matt:

One of the reasons I love doing this podcast, Eagan, and I'm curious if you

Matt:

can talk to this because Every week we have an incredible guest come on the

Matt:

show, and they share their stories, they share their insights, and I take copious

Matt:

amounts of notes and go back to the team, and we have a conversation about how we

Matt:

can run our eCom businesses better, and here I am, a bit like you, I run my own

Matt:

eCommerce business, I have my own agency, I'm an eCommerce coach, we have eCommerce

Matt:

cohort, the group I have clients all over the world, And I still struggle with this

Matt:

concept of being an expert because an expert feels like I've achieved something,

Matt:

whereas actually I, I think I'm more of a learner, that actually there's still

Matt:

so much to learn because tech, everything moves so quickly in this industry.

Matt:

And part of the way I do my learning is to do these shows is talk to people like you.

Matt:

Yeah.

Eagan:

Yeah, I think that's right.

Eagan:

I'm a book nerd.

Eagan:

I like books.

Eagan:

I like audio books in particular.

Eagan:

So I go on long walks and listen to audio books.

Eagan:

And at one point I'd heard on a podcast or somewhere else.

Eagan:

It's like by the time something makes it in a book, it's almost

Eagan:

stale this day and age, right?

Eagan:

If it's a, if it's an evergreen thing, if it's a timeless principle, If it's, the

Eagan:

Stoics and things like that's one thing.

Eagan:

Like to your point of these platforms are changing all the time.

Eagan:

The economy's changing all the time.

Eagan:

This is a big macro picture.

Eagan:

That's quite complex.

Eagan:

I think talking to people in the trenches is really how you keep

Eagan:

up to date on what's going on.

Eagan:

And so I had a I had another agency owner.

Eagan:

People always jock me too on my my podcast are you getting business from that?

Eagan:

What's the deal on this?

Eagan:

Or kind of bottom line on it.

Eagan:

And I'm like, Hey, this is, we're just over a year into it.

Eagan:

I'm meeting all kinds of great people.

Eagan:

I'm learning a lot or, building relationships and things like that.

Eagan:

To me, I'm not, I'm like, that's almost not the point.

Eagan:

Even if we never did, if we weren't.

Eagan:

I think I would keep doing it because I'm it's engaging in this way that the

Eagan:

other parts of our work are not, and like you said, we're always picking up

Eagan:

new pieces, new thoughts, new ideas that are hot off the press, totally fresh

Eagan:

things that people are trying right now and that are working in the wild.

Eagan:

I don't see what, to me, it's I'm never not going to have a podcast.

Eagan:

How about you?

Matt:

Oh, I'm exactly the same.

Matt:

I started this we started the eCommerce podcast in the early days,

Matt:

it was called the Kuriosity Podcast.

Matt:

I don't know why we called it actually I couldn't, it was our agency at the

Matt:

time was called Curious, spelled with a K cause we wanted to be quirky.

Matt:

And so we called it the Kuriosity Podcast.

Matt:

We ended up changing it to the eCommerce Podcast cause it just

Matt:

made an awful lot more sense.

Matt:

But I remember that, and I tell the story often, we had an occasional guest

Matt:

the first sort of 19, 20 episodes.

Matt:

But the majority of them was just me talking to a microphone about

Matt:

what I knew about eCommerce.

Matt:

And I remember saying to Sadaf who's the show's producer

Matt:

and been with me for a while.

Matt:

She's just an adorable person.

Matt:

And I remember saying to Sadaf, I'm just getting bored at the sound

Matt:

of my own voice, if I'm honest.

Matt:

I'm just like, I, and so we started interviewing people.

Matt:

And, at first, we were like, how in the world do we get

Matt:

people to come on the show?

Matt:

We were hustling, I was calling all the contacts do you want to come on the show?

Matt:

They're like, no, not really.

Matt:

No, come on, you really do.

Matt:

And we had to really work hard the first few seasons to get guests on the show.

Matt:

Whereas now, I think we're a hundred and, I don't even know, a hundred and

Matt:

40, 150 episodes, somewhere around there and we have a wait list as long

Matt:

as you're armed to come onto the show.

Matt:

'cause people now want to come on it.

Matt:

It's one of those things that it's, and I look at the downloads occasionally.

Matt:

I don't look at them every week maybe, if I'm honest with you, every six months.

Matt:

Unlike e-commerce stats, I don't ever really pay attention to my podcast stats.

Matt:

'cause it, it is what it is.

Matt:

I'm doing this mainly for conversation to meet interesting people, to learn stuff.

Matt:

The downloads are they're great, but they're secondary, if that makes sense.

Matt:

And I think back now, and I just think back to some of the people

Matt:

that we've had on the show, and I thought, what a learning experience.

Matt:

So I absolutely would keep doing it, even if there was no work that came out of

Matt:

it, and I think, I'm hoping listening, you'd be able to do it listening,

Matt:

you'd be able to tell me if I'm wrong.

Matt:

I'm hoping that comes across.

Matt:

That actually it's just, it's a passion project for, one for better

Matt:

expression rather than a profit project.

Matt:

But I make money out of it in so many ways, but it's the passion thing first.

Matt:

But yes, so like you, I would keep doing it and I would

Matt:

definitely enjoy every episode.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

I think people can tell if you love it, if you're doing it for the right reasons,

Eagan:

that, that comes through and that's part of why it's such an intimate medium too,

Eagan:

of just, people can hear your voice, they hear that authenticity, I think,

Eagan:

as, there's a lot of questions about AI and what's going to happen and what are

Eagan:

humans going to be doing, and I think we're on to something here, even though,

Eagan:

AI is going to be doing more and more, it's like, That, what's the human piece?

Eagan:

I think we've, I think we've got our thumb on it somewhere here.

Eagan:

So we gotta keep it rocking.

Matt:

yeah, absolutely.

Matt:

Cause for me, it's all about conversation, meaningful conversation.

Matt:

That's what I say to people all the time.

Matt:

It's all about meaningful conversation.

Matt:

And AI will never be able to have meaningful conversation.

Matt:

It may at some point be so clever that it can predict what you're going to say,

Matt:

what I'm going to say and write the whole thing and even create its own podcast.

Matt:

But it's not a meaningful conversation as it's not got that humanity behind it.

Matt:

But yeah, fascinating.

Matt:

Absolutely.

Matt:

Wow.

Matt:

It's interesting.

Matt:

You've been going a year already.

Matt:

Happy birthday.

Eagan:

Thank you.

Eagan:

Yeah.

Eagan:

It's, I don't know about you, to me, the logistics of it and stuff

Eagan:

really took a while to get lined up.

Eagan:

And like you said, you've got to have a helper cause

Eagan:

you're busy running an agency.

Eagan:

So once I got a good production assistant, I think that's, things moved a lot faster.

Matt:

Yeah, and I think there's a confidence as well, isn't there, and

Matt:

I've been in podcasts since 2012.

Matt:

In 2012, we did our first ever podcast.

Matt:

The eCommerce podcast was not our first podcast.

Matt:

In fact, our first podcast was called Jersey FM because our company

Matt:

was called Jersey Beauty Company.

Matt:

In fact, I think I still own the domain name jersey.

Matt:

fm.

Matt:

We obviously don't do the podcast anymore, that business I sold.

Matt:

And it was absolutely fascinating.

Matt:

It was one of those things where there was just three of us stood

Matt:

in a room with microphones and an old fashioned sound desk.

Matt:

And we just started talking about things to do with the beauty industry.

Matt:

And so it actually did wonders for our business.

Matt:

And I think if you're listening to this and you're an eCommerce business

Matt:

wondering, should I do a podcast?

Matt:

Honestly, I, you probably should.

Matt:

I think there's some strategy to think through.

Matt:

But I think as a form of marketing, we totally didn't

Matt:

plan to talk about this, Eagan.

Matt:

I appreciate this, but as a form of marketing, I think it's quite fascinating.

Matt:

Like you say, deeply intimate, deeply personal medium of communication.

Eagan:

Yeah, I'm very I'm so curious to know more about that, but it sounds like

Eagan:

every time you've done it, it's worth it.

Eagan:

Is there a, year one, two or three, is there like a time that people need

Eagan:

to hang on to make sure you make it this far to really see the results?

Eagan:

How do you think about the results?

Matt:

I think you have to defi let's go into this a little bit.

Matt:

I wear two hats.

Matt:

I have a full disclosure to everybody listening.

Matt:

I do have two hats.

Matt:

One hat is eCommerce and the other hat is podcasting.

Matt:

So we have a podcast agency.

Matt:

90 percent of people that do podcasts stop before the 10th episode.

Matt:

So if you get past 10 episodes, you're ahead of 90 percent of podcasts already.

Matt:

If you get through, I think episode 20, you're ahead of most people.

Matt:

And with podcasting, the thing is about consistency and do it as a passion

Matt:

project rather than focusing on the download numbers would be my advice.

Matt:

Because then it's authentic and people would, will listen into it.

Matt:

But yeah, I think if you're going to do it, you've been doing it a year, you've

Matt:

got in the rhythm, you've got a system.

Matt:

There's no reason not to keep doing it.

Matt:

There genuinely isn't.

Eagan:

Thank you.

Eagan:

Yeah, we'll be crossing the hundred episode mark here.

Eagan:

And I know, like you're saying, I'm just, you hear those things,

Eagan:

you're like, just keep going.

Eagan:

That's the piece.

Eagan:

And it seems like you have to be, who's ever doing it.

Eagan:

You gotta be genuine.

Eagan:

You have to be genuinely interested in what you're talking about or

Eagan:

you're not going to stick with it or that's going to come through.

Eagan:

Right.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

And I think actually that's true for any form of marketing, isn't it?

Matt:

Bring it back to your, your system your strategy.

Matt:

One of the things that you mentioned was copywriting, right?

Matt:

So And you go back to the pictures that you had originally, you

Matt:

could see the oil painting.

Matt:

But as soon as you switched it around, there's a bit of quirkiness, there's

Matt:

a bit of personality, there's a bit of passion you can feel in those images.

Matt:

You can feel that in the copywriting.

Matt:

And this is where I think and Eagan, maybe you can share your thoughts on this,

Matt:

but this for me is how, what I call the digital Davids, David and Goliath's story.

Matt:

It's like, how do I as a digital David, a small e-commerce

Matt:

entrepreneur, take on Goliath?

Matt:

How do I do that?

Matt:

And I think you do it with that type of thing.

Matt:

Amazon, you'll never be Amazon at the commodity selling.

Matt:

Because it's massive.

Matt:

It's had billions to invest in.

Matt:

It's got algorithms that have figured stuff out way more smarter than I have.

Matt:

And so I'm not going to beat it on that, but what Amazon

Matt:

can't do is it can't be me.

Matt:

It can't bring my voice.

Matt:

It can't bring my story.

Matt:

If I've got a podcast, it can't bring that.

Matt:

There's that whole personality side of things which you, which

Matt:

get lost very quickly on Amazon.

Matt:

And I think that passion, that personality has to come through

Matt:

in all forms, not just podcasting, but in all forms of communication.

Matt:

And that's how ultimately you'll beat Amazon at their own game, I think.

Eagan:

Pretty interesting.

Eagan:

We need that human side in all your marketing.

Eagan:

It sounds like each channel of.

Eagan:

Make sure a real human's touching that and thinking through, are

Eagan:

we connecting with the humans on the other side on their device?

Matt:

Yeah, I think you have to, don't you?

Matt:

And I think it's a super powerful thing because this is one of the,

Matt:

I know you can go to AI, you can go into ChatGPT and you can go write me

Matt:

an Instagram thing about this, right?

Matt:

Or I can give ChatGPT the transcript for my conversation and go write

Matt:

me a blog post, and it's good because it's quick, but if that's

Matt:

all I ever do, it's also lazy.

Matt:

And I think people spot lazy.

Matt:

Because every blog post will start sounding like the next one because ChatGPT

Matt:

is always sounding like the next one.

Matt:

So I think you have to look at it, you have to edit it, you have to go

Matt:

into it, you have to bring your voice, your personality and go, actually

Matt:

I wouldn't say that, I would say this, so I need to swap that out.

Matt:

Yeah I

Eagan:

and that was true before ChatGPT, right?

Eagan:

You could hire inexpensive VAs in the developing world, you could get cheap blog

Eagan:

posts it's not different in kind from that it's faster, it's cheaper, but it's the

Eagan:

same piece of, eh, you give it a B, right?

Eagan:

It's and, it's it's 80 out of a hundred.

Eagan:

It's okay.

Eagan:

And it's, I don't ever want to be on record saying AI is never going

Eagan:

to be able to do this or that.

Eagan:

Like I think it's only going to keep getting better and better.

Eagan:

So I'm not, I don't ever want to sound Pollyannish and say here's the

Eagan:

human piece, here's the machine piece.

Eagan:

And I know the difference.

Eagan:

I think it's important to, to use the new tools and take advantage

Eagan:

of them and see what they can do.

Eagan:

It's interesting with.

Eagan:

Respect to Splendid Beast because I knew, okay, I saw more and more competition

Eagan:

coming in one before I sold the business.

Eagan:

And some people, some of the competitors were just, they just printed on canvas.

Eagan:

It's not handmade oil.

Eagan:

So it's like that piece of it's cheaper, it's faster in that respect.

Eagan:

With this whole piece about GPTs of not just chat GPT, these custom

Eagan:

ones that can do different things.

Eagan:

There is specifically one now that's a GPT of make my pet a funny thing.

Eagan:

So it's it is.

Eagan:

It has already happened, it's touching us, but there's still this element of,

Eagan:

in the same sense that, hipsters use, typewriters and vinyls coming back, it's

Matt:

Yes, so

Eagan:

you what's the artisanal thing going to be?

Eagan:

Maybe it's going to be handmade oil paintings that AI didn't do.

Eagan:

So it's maybe the down market stuff is fully automated and humans don't

Eagan:

touch it, but maybe there's still this kind of like experience economy.

Eagan:

And even again, thinking of what are the reasons that I buy, maybe I'm

Eagan:

telling, I'm signaling to the other people in my life that I hire artisans,

Eagan:

that I actually, I'm in the same sense of, I listen to vinyl, I've got

Eagan:

a typewriter, I write old fashioned letters on just to, just for whatever

Eagan:

reason, it's like that same sort of.

Eagan:

That same sort of signal is maybe being sent of, I'm, I pay for

Eagan:

real things from real people.

Eagan:

I think it, it's, the market could go in that direction too.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

I think you're totally right.

Matt:

And for me, having this conversation around AI has been

Matt:

really fascinating recently.

Matt:

Because like you say, AI is just going to get better and better.

Matt:

And it doesn't seem to be going anywhere, as in we're not, it's

Matt:

not like we've all got together.

Matt:

The governments have gone shut down everything that is AI.

Matt:

To be fair, AI has been around since the eighties and in many ways, but.

Matt:

One of the things that is becoming more and more obvious to me in this

Matt:

whole field is the fact that if you are mediocre at something that AI

Matt:

can do, you have got a real problem.

Matt:

So if you're a mediocre graphic designer why would I go to you when I can just

Matt:

go to mid journey and get it to do what you would do, but it's probably going

Matt:

to be a little bit better, a little bit quirkier, and at least give me some ideas.

Matt:

The way you're going to stand out, I think is to be a craftsman, to

Matt:

be that sort of quality person.

Matt:

I think, and I, having sold very expensive saunas for a part of my life

Matt:

spas and steam rooms and things like that, I became very acutely aware that

Matt:

actually the mediocre companies were all competing with amongst themselves

Matt:

with people that had very little money.

Matt:

Whereas if you had something that was really high quality,

Matt:

something that was craftsmanship.

Matt:

And I'm thinking, the oil painting versus a screen printed painting.

Matt:

There's a reason why I don't, I could have a poster of the Mona Lisa on the wall, but

Matt:

actually it's not going to be as good as having the real thing on the wall, is it?

Matt:

And so yeah, I think you're right.

Matt:

And I think this is where, if you want to know how to succeed in the

Matt:

world of AI, I think you just get really good and stop being mediocre.

Matt:

And I think you'll be really fascinated by the results.

Eagan:

And I wonder if part, maybe part of your getting really good is

Eagan:

using AI where it's appropriate to.

Matt:

Oh, without a doubt.

Matt:

Knowing how to use

Eagan:

it's not.

Matt:

Yeah.

Eagan:

It's not about being a purist and saying, I do everything by hand.

Eagan:

It's know when to use the tool, know when to add the value on the human

Eagan:

side, and be multiplicative that way.

Matt:

Yeah, absolutely.

Matt:

Like I've got a friend who doesn't do something similar to

Matt:

the pets, but he paints houses.

Matt:

Using watercolor paints.

Matt:

And actually what's really fascinating is his technique for doing that, because he

Matt:

gets so many orders, he has to speed up the process so he has to hand paint them.

Matt:

So is he spent a lot of time thinking about how do I make this process faster?

Matt:

How do I use the tools that I have yet still create the end

Matt:

outcome with that craftsmanship?

Matt:

And it's exactly the same, isn't it?

Matt:

I have to know how to use ai.

Matt:

I use ai, we use it a lot to generate content.

Matt:

But the content that we put out there is, having experimented a little bit,

Matt:

it can't be the final content that the AI gives me, if that makes sense.

Matt:

There has to be that tweaking.

Matt:

So it's part of the process, but it's not the whole process.

Eagan:

It's the first draft, yeah.

Eagan:

And I'm excited for some of these things.

Eagan:

Spin me up a webpage, spin me up a logo.

Eagan:

I'm watching this stuff too, Matt.

Eagan:

I've, I'm yet to say this is it, this is ready for Showtime.

Eagan:

In many cases I say, that's interesting, not there yet.

Eagan:

And then I still hire a designer and pay them because, um, we,

Eagan:

we still need that quality hire.

Eagan:

And

Matt:

We do.

Matt:

We really do.

Eagan:

I'll be the first to switch to AI when it can do it.

Eagan:

But yeah, it's, if it's not there yet, that's that's part

Eagan:

of what we're bringing to it.

Eagan:

If you've been in the game a long time what's good, you can see

Eagan:

this as a good one and this isn't.

Eagan:

And some of it's interesting right now, but I haven't seen it.

Eagan:

Build me a website.

Eagan:

Build me an eCommerce website.

Eagan:

Here's the pictures.

Eagan:

Here's the persona.

Eagan:

Go nuts.

Eagan:

Like it's not there yet.

Eagan:

It will probably get there.

Eagan:

But part of our job is to watch and see when that is.

Matt:

Yeah, but by the time it gets there, here's my thing, by

Matt:

the time it gets there, when it can do that, somebody somewhere who's

Matt:

a clever chap, who's really good at what they can do, has moved on.

Matt:

And so when 100 percent of people can get something really good over

Matt:

here from AI for next to nothing.

Matt:

The guys that stand head and shoulders above that, who have moved on and

Matt:

innovated, that's where people like me are going to go to and go, dude,

Matt:

you need to do this for me, and I'm willing to pay you money to do it.

Matt:

It's that's where I think it'll be interesting.

Matt:

The whole AI conversation, totally unplanned, just like the podcast

Matt:

conversation, but it's fascinating the humanity of marketing in a lot of ways.

Matt:

Eagan, listen, I'm aware of time.

Matt:

And that we've been chatting for a wee while now and it's been a

Matt:

fascinating conversation, man.

Matt:

Listen, if people want to reach out to you, if they want to connect with

Matt:

you, what's the best way to do that?

Eagan:

Yeah, check us out on caravandigital.com you can also

Eagan:

connect with me on LinkedIn.

Eagan:

I'm Eagan Heath, E A G A N H E A T H.

Eagan:

And if anybody wants to listen to the What's Working in eCommerce

Eagan:

podcast, you can find that on YouTube or on your podcast player.

Eagan:

So thanks so much for having me on Matt.

Eagan:

It's been great.

Matt:

Nah, it's been fun.

Matt:

Fun.

Matt:

I'm curious, why Caravan Digital?

Eagan:

We were, it was really the rebrand of figuring out of, we're not

Eagan:

just based here in Madison anymore.

Eagan:

We're not just a local SEO agency.

Eagan:

We got to go.

Eagan:

And so it was really working with my team, they're young people in their twenties.

Eagan:

And so we looked at different options.

Eagan:

It was a whole thing of the first, the first time it was like, go fast,

Eagan:

but trying to go far, go together.

Eagan:

And we went through a whole process and that was, that's

Eagan:

what came out the other end of.

Eagan:

We're, we're globally distributed.

Eagan:

I've got somebody in India, somebody in France, and we're all about, digital

Eagan:

nomads, being digital nomads and traveling and, taking advantage of what we can now.

Eagan:

And so it all just fit of we're on the journey with our clients.

Eagan:

We're helping them bring their markets to the, bring their goods to the market, and

Eagan:

then we're also a global company as well.

Eagan:

So that's the idea.

Matt:

I love it.

Matt:

I love the name.

Matt:

I think it's just great.

Matt:

I think I'm, I like the name.

Matt:

I'm in the process of doing a van conversion myself.

Matt:

And I just, all that kind of stuff.

Matt:

I'm just now feel like I'm part of that community if I'm honest with you.

Matt:

But no, it's great.

Matt:

Listen, again, thank you so much for coming on the show, man.

Matt:

Super, super appreciate it.

Matt:

Love the conversation, love the spontaneity of it and

Matt:

love your insights, man.

Matt:

I love what you're doing and thanks for sharing some great value and

Matt:

appreciate you sharing the stories of the pet business as well.

Eagan:

Right on.

Eagan:

Thanks so much, Matt.

Matt:

We will link to Eagan's info in the show notes, which you

Matt:

can get along for free with the transcript at ecommercepodcast.

Matt:

net.

Matt:

Of course, if you sign up to the newsletter, it's going to be

Matt:

coming straight to your inbox.

Matt:

But yeah, all the stuff that links to Eagan, we'll put in there.

Matt:

And what a great conversation.

Matt:

Love to love that.

Matt:

Also a big shout out to eCommerce Cohort, which enables you to bring this show.

Matt:

Like I say, it's the membership group that we run.

Matt:

If you want to find out more, great.

Matt:

We would love to see you in there.

Matt:

eCommercecohort.

Matt:

com.

Matt:

Prices start at just 14.

Matt:

99 a month, but obviously no pressure.

Matt:

Just keep turning up to the eCommerce Podcast, listening

Matt:

to these great conversations.

Matt:

Follow the podcast wherever you get your podcast from.

Matt:

Because why would you not want to?

Matt:

It's just.

Matt:

It's a bit posh, isn't it, for me to say that maybe, but I don't

Matt:

know, I don't understand why people wouldn't want to hear it.

Matt:

Anyway, just in case no one has told you yet today, let me tell you, let me be

Matt:

the first to tell you, you are awesome, yes you are, credit awesome, it's just

Matt:

a burden you have to bear, Eagan's got to bear it, I've got to bear it.

Matt:

You've got to bear it as well.

Matt:

Now the eCommerce Podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt:

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

Matt:

The amazing team that makes this show possible is the fantastic

Matt:

Sadaf Beynon and Tanya Hutsuliak.

Matt:

Theme song was written by Josh Edmundson.

Matt:

And as I said, Everything is on the website, ecommercepodcast.

Matt:

net, if you want to know more.

Matt:

So that's it from me.

Matt:

That's it from me again.

Matt:

Thank you so much for joining us.

Matt:

Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.

Matt:

I'll see you next time.

Matt:

Bye for now.