Well, hello, my name is Matt Edmundson and you are listening
Speaker:to the eCommerce Podcast.
Speaker:Now I've been an eCommerce, uh, since 2002, and these days I get
Speaker:to partner with eCommerce brands to help them grow, scale and exit.
Speaker:And if you'd like to know more about how that works and if we could work together.
Speaker:Head over to our website at eCommerce Podcast dot net.
Speaker:You know the domain, buy now eCommerce Podcast dot net.
Speaker:I go over there, click the links and find out more.
Speaker:But today, ladies and gentlemen, I am, uh, I can't begin to tell you how much I've
Speaker:been looking forward to this conversation with a man who is fast becoming a very
Speaker:good friend, George Bryant, uh, all the way from the other side of the pond.
Speaker:George was on the podcast just a few weeks ago, and George,
Speaker:it has to be, it's fair to say.
Speaker:We've never had anybody make a second appearance on EP in such a rapid time.
Speaker:We've had people come on, you know, a, a few times, but normally there's
Speaker:like six months or 12 months between, but you my friend, are back on now.
Speaker:The first time we talked, we talked, uh, it was, it was like
Speaker:a philosophical talking mean.
Speaker:We talked about purpose, we talked about authenticity and mindsets in
Speaker:business, and I love the conversation.
Speaker:I'm excited because today we are talking about strategy and tactics and frameworks
Speaker:and all of those awesome things that you learned doing all those incredible things
Speaker:you have done in business over the years.
Speaker:So, George, welcome back brother.
Speaker:It's great to have you.
Speaker:Bro, I'm, I'm stoked to be back and, and for everybody listening for the second
Speaker:time, you've earned the strategies and tactics, but it's important to know
Speaker:the what and the why underneath them.
Speaker:I do this, I do this in my events too, and they're like,
Speaker:when are we getting to the how?
Speaker:I'm like, you have to earn the how, because you have to know the what and
Speaker:the why first or the how never sticks.
Speaker:And so I'm, I'm stoked and, and I'm honored to be back my friend.
Speaker:Oh no, let's get into it.
Speaker:Let's get, should we just jump straight in?
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:time is is is against us already.
Speaker:It's not really, but Do you know what I mean?
Speaker:I feel like if we don't start straight away, we'll just, we'll do,
Speaker:we'll need a third episode, George.
Speaker:Uh, so let's just jump straight in.
Speaker:Where do you want hit first?
Speaker:Yeah, I think, you know, for me, and I was actually really excited to
Speaker:share all this, I think first I wanna start with customer journey, right?
Speaker:Because everyone listen to this e-comm focus in e-comm, an understanding that.
Speaker:Customer journeys are the kind of bread and butter of what we
Speaker:do, but I think there's also a lot of misnomers around the word.
Speaker:And so I wanna start by kind of like defining customer journey for everybody.
Speaker:And then I have a model that I love teaching.
Speaker:It's called The Triangle of Poop.
Speaker:You can thank my 8-year-old, he named it, um.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It used to be called the Triangle of Death, but I've taught it so
Speaker:many times and he's like, no, dad.
Speaker:It's like, if anybody makes these mistakes, they end up
Speaker:with a stinky pile of poo.
Speaker:And I'm like, I'm keeping it.
Speaker:I, so I promised him I'd keep it, and it's like the three critical mistakes
Speaker:that I see in, in the thousands of e-commerce businesses that I've helped
Speaker:grow and scale just similar to you.
Speaker:Then my bread and butter, which I very rarely share publicly, but
Speaker:I'm, I'm excited too, is I have a, a communication framework.
Speaker:It's like one of the most ubiquitous tools I have.
Speaker:Um, and all you gotta do is remember the word apple, but it will
Speaker:absolutely change the way that you build and design customer journeys.
Speaker:It helps with retention, it helps with relationships.
Speaker:It helps move the needle in the direction that we're all designing and
Speaker:desiring for the needle to be moved.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so before I. Define customer journey because you and I
Speaker:operate in similar worlds.
Speaker:I'm gonna say this so everybody understands this.
Speaker:I might have said this on the first podcast as well, but scaling a business
Speaker:comes from retention, not acquisition.
Speaker:It comes from retention and not acquisition.
Speaker:And we all know it costs way more to acquire a new customer than it does
Speaker:to keep one and increase that LTV.
Speaker:And the reason I say that is because retention comes from
Speaker:relationships, not transactions.
Speaker:And so even in understanding customer journey, it doesn't
Speaker:matter what product you sell.
Speaker:You could sell a supplement, you could sell a belt, you could
Speaker:sell batteries for all iCare, but no one's buying the product.
Speaker:The product is a bridge to a solution that they want in their life.
Speaker:The product when most businesses made, just about the product creates a revolving
Speaker:door where there's no community, there's no movement, and there's no endowment.
Speaker:And so for me, what a customer journey really, really is in simple
Speaker:terms, is we think about a customer journey in the lens of a marathon.
Speaker:And you can't jump from the starting line to the finish line without
Speaker:going through 26 mile markers, right?
Speaker:Or 40 something kilometers for all my European people, right?
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:I think about customer journey and mile markers, right?
Speaker:So that's the first frame that I want everybody to understand.
Speaker:The second most important part is a customer journey doesn't begin
Speaker:When somebody gives you their credit card, it begins the moment you
Speaker:enter their awareness to a desire or a pain point in their life.
Speaker:Maya Angelou said it best.
Speaker:Nobody remembers what you said, but they remember how you made them feel, right?
Speaker:And so.
Speaker:A lot of the times, even us, right?
Speaker:I don't know if you guys have billboards in the u, in the, in the uk like we
Speaker:have in the us, but you drive down the highway, billboard, billboard,
Speaker:billboard, billboard, billboard.
Speaker:And it was like, oh my God, I can't believe people pay for those.
Speaker:They're so dumb.
Speaker:They're so whatever.
Speaker:And then I'm like, all right, cool.
Speaker:I'm like, you gonna a flat tire recently?
Speaker:They're like, yeah.
Speaker:I'm like, who'd you call?
Speaker:I'm like, oh, that place I saw on a billboard.
Speaker:I'm like, I guess it worked,
Speaker:Yeah, yeah,
Speaker:Right, right.
Speaker:And so there's a lot that goes into it.
Speaker:So for me, a customer journey.
Speaker:The way that I define it, it's a series of steps designed to get
Speaker:somebody from where they are to where they want to be, be with agency and
Speaker:autonomy without creating codependency.
Speaker:So when scaling a business, I can tell you this firsthand experience.
Speaker:One of the number one biggest pain points that I bump into
Speaker:is increase customer service.
Speaker:Our customer service is through the roof.
Speaker:There's refunds, there's returns, there's emails.
Speaker:That's not a product problem.
Speaker:That's a customer journey problem.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:That's a lack of communication and relationship building,
Speaker:and it happens by accident.
Speaker:And so for me, that's what a customer journey is.
Speaker:And so if you think about it and you sell a a product, I've helped
Speaker:scale a ton of supplement companies.
Speaker:Those are like, for whatever reason, my bread and butter, those are the
Speaker:ones that cut to the billion dollar valuations, is that if Susan buys a
Speaker:collagen and the collagen shows up at her house and she puts it in her pantry,
Speaker:that doesn't help her or the company because now it's just shelf help.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:How many companies stop at, oh, Susan bought, because they spend
Speaker:90% of their time in acquisition and 10% in fulfillment, and then they
Speaker:wonder why their average returning customer rate is three months.
Speaker:I'm like, well, it's really, really easy 'cause Susan got hurt your product.
Speaker:She used it for three days and forgot about it.
Speaker:Put in the pantry the second month.
Speaker:The subscription showed up and she's like, crap, I haven't been taking that product.
Speaker:Takes it for a couple of more days, puts it away.
Speaker:The third one shows up and it's too much for her to take.
Speaker:And so then she cancels her subscription.
Speaker:And what's her complaint?
Speaker:Her complaint is never, I didn't take the product.
Speaker:The complaint is the product didn't work.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And then Susan goes out to dinner with all of her girlfriends and
Speaker:Jane's like, Susan, I found this new product that I want to get.
Speaker:It's this collagen.
Speaker:And she's like, you can't buy it.
Speaker:It doesn't work.
Speaker:Susan's not gonna be like, oh, I bought it and there's three hiding in my pantry
Speaker:that I didn't take consistently, because that's not how humans own things.
Speaker:And so a customer journey is understanding that no matter what your product
Speaker:or service is, the moment somebody says yes is where the game begins.
Speaker:It's not where the game ends.
Speaker:And so in that vein.
Speaker:There's three critical mistakes that people make when it
Speaker:comes to customer journey.
Speaker:IE, what my son has now aptly, nicknamed the Triangle of Poop.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:So these three mistakes, they're applicable anywhere where we're
Speaker:communicating with a customer.
Speaker:So this might be somebody sends you a DM on your Instagram.
Speaker:This might be somebody sends you an email.
Speaker:This might be somebody puts their email in for a lead magnet.
Speaker:And in exchange for something, this might be somebody bought your product, right?
Speaker:So the first mistake we call, we call the zone of doubt.
Speaker:The zone of doubt.
Speaker:And so what we have to remember about humans, especially in buying
Speaker:processes, is everything's an emotional based decision, right?
Speaker:It's not logic.
Speaker:And if everyone's like, oh, it 100% is, I'm like, when you walked into the
Speaker:store to pick up a phone and then you're like, oh, I want it, you logically
Speaker:convinced yourself, but then your wife got mad at you, or your husband's
Speaker:like, I don't think you should do it.
Speaker:Or you thought about bringing it home and had buyers or more so something happened
Speaker:that made you feel unsafe or unwelcome.
Speaker:You're like, oh.
Speaker:Not getting it.
Speaker:Just like there's people listening to this that have called people
Speaker:like you and I, not us, and they're like, oh, I wanna work with you.
Speaker:And they get sold snake oil, and then they get in the process and they're
Speaker:like, uh, something doesn't feel right.
Speaker:I'm out.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So every decision a human makes is an emotional based decision.
Speaker:So what the zone of doubt is, it's really simple to understand and we're
Speaker:all guilty of this, myself included.
Speaker:The zone of doubt is when anybody's in a heightened emotional state down that
Speaker:marathon where we've promised them a next step or given them a next step,
Speaker:and when they get there, they fall into what I call the black hole, right?
Speaker:So if you've ever put your email address in for a lead magnet on the internet,
Speaker:you're like, oh, I'm so excited to go get those three secrets to scale my
Speaker:business in three minutes or less, right?
Speaker:And you're like, go to your inbox, you're excited.
Speaker:Then you get to your inbox and it's not there.
Speaker:And I always ask everybody what feeling pops up when you
Speaker:get there and it's not there?
Speaker:And they're like, oh, like I get upset.
Speaker:I'm like, or I can't find it, or it means I have to go look for it.
Speaker:Or I have to email the company.
Speaker:And I'm like, so now do you think you're gonna have a seamless experience or be
Speaker:as excited to consume that lead magnet?
Speaker:And they're like, no.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Or, we see this on Instagram marketing all the time.
Speaker:People are like, shoot us a DM and we'll send you the link in the next hour.
Speaker:24 hours passes, 48 hours passes.
Speaker:They're like, oh, I forgot to send it.
Speaker:Those are all the black holes, or even in your mind world.
Speaker:We'll go to conferences and people do this with business cards.
Speaker:Oh my God, Matt, it was so nice to meet you.
Speaker:Give me your card.
Speaker:I'll shoot you an email tonight.
Speaker:And then 14 days later, I'm like, Matt George over here.
Speaker:Do you remember me?
Speaker:And you're like, I have no idea who you were because I lost in that heightened
Speaker:emotional state and E-commerce, how it typically shows up is a little bit.
Speaker:It's a little bit more nuanced because I see this all the time,
Speaker:specifically supplement skincare to where Susan comes and buys a product.
Speaker:So she's like, oh, I just bought this product, and the first email
Speaker:she gets is a discount off another product or an email not even
Speaker:associated with what she just bought.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:So it doesn't always have to just be no communication.
Speaker:It can also be inconsistent and incongruent communication.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:The wrong communication.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:the wrong communication.
Speaker:And the reason this matters so much is because it instantly erodes trust.
Speaker:It genuinely breaks it because human beings create unspoken
Speaker:contracts with each other.
Speaker:And I have an expectation that like if I go to a restaurant and I order a rib eye.
Speaker:That the rib eye's gonna come out to the table, not chicken.
Speaker:And if chicken comes out, I'm like, Hey, did you not hear me?
Speaker:Can I please have the rib eye?
Speaker:And they're like, no, no, no, you ordered the chicken.
Speaker:I'm like, are you gaslighting me right now?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I also have an expectation, like if I buy a product, that you're gonna
Speaker:tell me that I bought the product and you're gonna tell me what I'm gonna
Speaker:do with it and how I'm gonna use it.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And people forget about that because they're so focused on acquisition.
Speaker:So that's mistake number one.
Speaker:Mistake number two is what I call the ego journey.
Speaker:And this one is accidental for a lot, but it causes a lot of pain.
Speaker:And so the ego journey is when we're communicating with customers,
Speaker:somebody comes and buys our product where our messaging is focused on us.
Speaker:Instead of them.
Speaker:So it's I versus you language and, and I always give this example,
Speaker:and people laugh so loud, but any woman listening to this who has
Speaker:ever bought skincare on the internet knows exactly what I'm about to say.
Speaker:She goes and buys this hyaluronic acid to tighten up her skin, right?
Speaker:She gets an email that goes something like this.
Speaker:It's like.
Speaker:Hey Jane, thank you so much for buying our product.
Speaker:My name's George.
Speaker:I've spent the last 14 years of my life scouring the jungles of Costa Rica to
Speaker:find this one last hidden ingredient.
Speaker:And I have four board certified surgeons that are in my office.
Speaker:And I just wanted to say, we're so happy that you're gonna have healthy skin, so
Speaker:here's a discount off your next product.
Speaker:And that happens all the time.
Speaker:Instead of being like, Hey Jane, how does it feel to have healthier skin?
Speaker:And we haven't even shipped your product yet.
Speaker:Truthfully, our commitment to you is to help you glow from the inside out,
Speaker:even if you don't use our product through being a part of our community.
Speaker:And so we just wanna say welcome to the family.
Speaker:And over the next couple of days, we're gonna be shooting you some emails on
Speaker:like how to get the most out of the product, what mistakes to avoid and how
Speaker:to even amplify your results starting today with your nighttime routine.
Speaker:And so I just wanna say hello and if at any moment you wanna hit reply to this
Speaker:email, it comes directly to my inbox and I can't wait to connect with you.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Super powerful.
Speaker:I pose that to audiences and everyone's like, I'm in.
Speaker:I'm in, I'm in.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And so we accidentally fall into this ego trap because our default is, I, well, I
Speaker:did this, or I created this product, but really what we should be speaking to is
Speaker:them and what they're going to achieve.
Speaker:It's pacing, it's seeding.
Speaker:So that's the second mistake, which we call the the ego journey.
Speaker:I've seen this a lot before you, sorry, before you jump in, let me, I, I, I've,
Speaker:I've talked about the same thing, George, and this is why, why I'm, I'm smiling
Speaker:and I remember I was, um, one of the conferences I was speaking at, I was, uh,
Speaker:in front of a group full of, um, CEOs.
Speaker:At a very famous hotel in, in, in, in the land down under.
Speaker:And I was speaking to these chaps and I'm like, the way I phrase
Speaker:it, I think it's is same thing, I phrase it slightly different.
Speaker:The customer doesn't care about your story.
Speaker:They care about their story.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And you have to, you have to connect him with their story and, um.
Speaker:And I said, let's take a case in point.
Speaker:I said, I, I ran this experiment.
Speaker:I don't even know if it's still gonna work.
Speaker:Uh, but I ran this experiment, which said, right, I want you to go to Google.
Speaker:I want you to type in the word accountant and I want you to pull up the first
Speaker:accountant's website that you can see.
Speaker:And I pick on accountants because I trained as an accountant at uni, right?
Speaker:So, um, I feel like I have, I have some license there to make
Speaker:fun of the accounting fraternity.
Speaker:And so they all pulled up a website.
Speaker:And, um, it was brilliant because what you had in the, in the top left corner
Speaker:was their logo, which was massive.
Speaker:And then the hero image was a picture of the outside of their building.
Speaker:And guess what?
Speaker:They shot the picture, their logo on the side of the building, and they had
Speaker:this carousel image, and the next image was a picture of their business card.
Speaker:Which had their logo just a massive on one side.
Speaker:And it was, it was, it was absolutely hysterical.
Speaker:And, and the headline established 35 years ago or whatever.
Speaker:And I'm like, no one cares, dude.
Speaker:'cause that's your story.
Speaker:Um, you, you're not telling this in the, in the light of the.
Speaker:Of the customer and their story.
Speaker:And so I think it's such an important point, right?
Speaker:We love our logos.
Speaker:We do, we're proud of our logos.
Speaker:I love the eCommerce Podcast logo.
Speaker:No one else gives a flying flip,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:And it's just, it is what it is.
Speaker:And it is true of everything about the story that I have.
Speaker:Some people might be interested, but honestly they care more about their story
Speaker:and we have to talk in that frame line.
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:And to your point though, to give people some, some credence and
Speaker:runway here, people do care about our story after they've rewritten theirs
Speaker:and become a part of our movement.
Speaker:That's the difference, and that's the biggest part.
Speaker:Well, that's community then, isn't it?
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:Which is really the core of customer journey because to my previous point about
Speaker:customer journey, when people focus on the product itself and then they make these
Speaker:mistakes, they erode community because they relegate themselves to a transaction.
Speaker:Because what that happens is somebody comes in to get a product and they
Speaker:achieve the goal of the product.
Speaker:Well, if it's transaction and they're done with the product,
Speaker:guess who they don't need anymore?
Speaker:You.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:If they come in and there's a relationship and they're done with
Speaker:the product, they stick around.
Speaker:And by the way, 90 plus percent of marketing is word of mouth marketing.
Speaker:And I will tell you right now for anybody scaling your company, you don't
Speaker:recognize that the majority of your new customers do not come from you.
Speaker:They come from other people talking about you in either a positive
Speaker:experience or something they've gained.
Speaker:And if you're not aware of this.
Speaker:You won't like how they talk about you, and so it is such a valid point
Speaker:and I love the way that you said it.
Speaker:And so then.
Speaker:The third mistake, and the reason I'm rushing through these mistakes is because
Speaker:the framework I'm gonna share with you, I'm gonna actually share exactly
Speaker:how I took a company from a million a month to 2 million a day with five
Speaker:emails, and I'm just gonna give them to everybody with the Apple framework.
Speaker:And so the third mistake is what we call the fire hose.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:And this one we're all guilty of.
Speaker:The fire hose happens accidentally, but it overwhelms customers
Speaker:immediately after saying yes.
Speaker:And what I mean by customers, I mean anybody who's paying attention to you.
Speaker:So this could be somebody giving you their email.
Speaker:This could be somebody DMing you on Instagram and asking a question,
Speaker:and primarily it's somebody who buys a product or a service where we
Speaker:accidentally create this overwhelm.
Speaker:And so if you've ever bought a course on the internet, you've experienced this.
Speaker:And I'll just explain what fire hose is through.
Speaker:An email that you got.
Speaker:Hey Matt, thank you so much for signing up for my customer journey scaling session.
Speaker:It's so exciting to have you.
Speaker:I need you to watch this 15 minute video, fill out this application, and then go
Speaker:through these four onboarding videos in the next 48 hours before we get onto our
Speaker:next call, and all of a sudden, nothing but reactance shows up in your body
Speaker:because it's so overwhelming, right?
Speaker:Or you buy a physical product from a company.
Speaker:They've spent 30 to 60 days courting you to get you to say yes to this
Speaker:supplement, and then they send you one email with 10 days worth of information.
Speaker:Wonder why you don't read it, don't open it, and then immediately
Speaker:drop you out of their newsletter.
Speaker:That's called the fire hose.
Speaker:Jonah Berger talks about this.
Speaker:I have his book memorized at this point, but his book is called The Catalyst,
Speaker:and it's what gets in the way of us becoming a catalyst for somebody's change.
Speaker:That topic is reactance, and what happens is if we overwhelm people.
Speaker:They actually start to become a bigger no than they were in the first place.
Speaker:And every touch point that follows gives them more and more evidence
Speaker:that they made a bad decision.
Speaker:So the reason I think about customer journeys and mile markers is
Speaker:because they're micro commitments that build confidence over time.
Speaker:So the fire hose.
Speaker:I do it on calls.
Speaker:I do it on podcasts all the time, but I'm not selling you a product.
Speaker:I'm not delivering you into a journey.
Speaker:But I say this to people listening on, the easiest way to solve this when it
Speaker:comes to building customer journeys, and I'll tie all this together for
Speaker:everybody, is if you've ever raised a child between the ages of four and eight.
Speaker:You are better at building customer journeys than you realize.
Speaker:Or if you've ever worked with a personal trainer and you don't have children, you
Speaker:have been an experience or a byproduct of an incredible customer journey.
Speaker:And so I'll give the kid example first and I'm gonna, I'm gonna
Speaker:tie all three of these mistakes into a solution given my son.
Speaker:And I'm gonna use my beautiful son Branson 'cause I love him to pieces, but he.
Speaker:No matter what likes waking up at 5:00 AM primarily on the weekends
Speaker:when daddy's like, I'm not getting up at four today, I wanna sleep in.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But Monday through Friday, he's like 5:00 AM ready to go, and every
Speaker:day we have to leave the house at seven 30 to get to school on time.
Speaker:As a parent, there's a lot of things we have to get done in the morning.
Speaker:Breakfast, brush hair, brush teeth, put clothes away, make the bed, get our
Speaker:lunch packed, check our homework, right?
Speaker:All of it.
Speaker:And so I say this to parents and I'm like, all right, cool.
Speaker:If my son wakes up tomorrow morning at 5:00 AM and I say, Hey bro,
Speaker:we have to leave at seven 30.
Speaker:I need you to brush your hair, brush your teeth, pack your backpack,
Speaker:eat your breakfast, make your bed, check your homework, and
Speaker:meet me at the car at seven 30.
Speaker:What are my chances of success?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Tiny non nil.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But if I wake up with him and I say, Hey bud, good morning.
Speaker:It's so good to see you.
Speaker:And I acknowledge him and I'm like, Hey, today's just like every other day
Speaker:we got all these things to get done.
Speaker:And I prepare him and I'm like, and by the way, if we're done on time, we'll
Speaker:have more time to play this morning.
Speaker:Painting the picture of where he wants to go and be like, I'm just
Speaker:gonna give you a couple tasks at a time, so I just need you to put your
Speaker:clothes on and brush your hair and when you're done, come down for breakfast.
Speaker:And then when he is done with breakfast, I'm like, Hey, now that
Speaker:you've finished your breakfast, I need you to put your lunch in your
Speaker:backpack and go brush your teeth.
Speaker:When you're done with that, come see me because all we have to do is make your
Speaker:bed and then we can play until we leave.
Speaker:Somehow I magically get out the door every day on time.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I. I'm not giving him the marathon at once.
Speaker:I'm giving him bite by bite by bite, and I'm increasing his buy-in
Speaker:and endowment to that process.
Speaker:That's what customer journey is, and for those that don't have a child, if you've
Speaker:ever hired or worked with a personal trainer or a running coach, I'm like, Hey
Speaker:Matt, I want you to be my running coach.
Speaker:I wanna run a marathon.
Speaker:I pay you and you're like, great, put your shoes on timer.
Speaker:Go.
Speaker:Let's see how you do.
Speaker:We would never do that.
Speaker:Or if you go into a gym to try to join a gym, the first thing
Speaker:they do is they welcome you in.
Speaker:They ask about what your goals are.
Speaker:They walk you around and show you the equipment, and then you sign
Speaker:up and they're like, Hey, I'll introduce you to this person.
Speaker:Here's where this is.
Speaker:Here's where this is.
Speaker:There's this handholding process.
Speaker:To build agency so that they can actually use the product or use the service while
Speaker:a customer journey is doing and building the same exact thing to guarantee, not
Speaker:that we sold a product, but that we help them get closer to their goal or
Speaker:what we promised through that product.
Speaker:By leading a child or a personal training client through the journey of our
Speaker:product, and I've been challenged on this.
Speaker:Someone's like, do it for batteries.
Speaker:I'm like, done.
Speaker:I can tell you how to store them, where to use them, how to set reminders in
Speaker:your calendar, how to change them.
Speaker:I've done this with physical therapists and optometrists, and the easiest ones
Speaker:are physical products because what most of the time happens is we assume
Speaker:that when somebody buys our physical product, they memorized the PDP.
Speaker:The product detail page, I'm like, oh, they memorized it.
Speaker:So because we have it on there, what ingredients are in there and how to use
Speaker:them and when to take it, when it shows up, they're just gonna magically do it
Speaker:every day and establish a habit that has never existed in their life before.
Speaker:And I'm like, I'm not betting my business on that.
Speaker:Never.
Speaker:And I tell people all the time, and when I keynote to audiences, I was like, I
Speaker:want everybody to be honest with me.
Speaker:Put your hand in the air.
Speaker:If your biggest fear in your company is that you're not
Speaker:gonna find your next customer.
Speaker:And 80% of the hands go up.
Speaker:And I'm like, you're all gonna go out of business.
Speaker:And they're like, why?
Speaker:And I'm like, because if your fear isn't that I got a customer, but they didn't
Speaker:use the product or get a result, you have no business being in business.
Speaker:And that's where customer journey comes in.
Speaker:So those three mistakes, when I teach them to people and everybody
Speaker:listening, I ask you to take those and go audit your business.
Speaker:Like where in, and I break it down in a couple buckets, but really
Speaker:it's marketing, sales, and delivery.
Speaker:Where in your delivery are people accidentally falling into a zone of doubt?
Speaker:I. Is it because you're wasting the second most piece of wasted real
Speaker:estate on the internet, which is the confirmation page, and the moment
Speaker:somebody invests, all you're doing is reminding them how much money they bought.
Speaker:How much money they spent instead of welcoming them to the family
Speaker:or sharing something of value.
Speaker:Is it, oh, we do send this lead magnet out, but all we're doing is emailing
Speaker:the PDF and we're not emailing them.
Speaker:We're not sending them any information.
Speaker:We're not following up.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:If it's in your sales, it's like, Hey, are we communicating effectively
Speaker:with people when they reach out or are we just sending them a link?
Speaker:And I ask everybody to go through and audit your business because these are the
Speaker:leaks in businesses that cost businesses.
Speaker:And most of the time when you and I are helping clients scale,
Speaker:they think the answer is more.
Speaker:And I'm like, yes.
Speaker:But if you put more water in a bucket before you plug the holes
Speaker:on the backside, you end up in this massive cycle of losing on both ends.
Speaker:And you can't recover a broken relationship in the same way
Speaker:that you can start the right one and keep them around forever.
Speaker:And so this.
Speaker:Three mistakes are like a diagnostic tool to be able to go and apply them
Speaker:and look at where there are potential leaks that do have KPIs associated,
Speaker:but most people forget about them.
Speaker:They'll look at like, oh, what's my average retention?
Speaker:But they won't look at what's causing it from the emotional
Speaker:lens of the relationship.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we all know that if we open our inbox every day, there's emails that we just
Speaker:delete instantly, but then we know that there's emails we go open because we look
Speaker:forward to how we feel when we're in them.
Speaker:And so this is a lot of the soft skills that are required to actually
Speaker:scale a company because scaling a company is about community, it's about
Speaker:retention, and it's about relationships.
Speaker:So those are the three big mistakes.
Speaker:They're fantastic.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I just, I love that I've got those.
Speaker:Sorry, the sun is glaring in my eyes.
Speaker:It's just bouncing off the window.
Speaker:Um, but yeah, I, I I love those, George.
Speaker:That's great.
Speaker:I love the, the, uh, the Triangle of Poop.
Speaker:Um, I
Speaker:think that is the name that is gonna stick with me for a long time.
Speaker:The Triangle of Poop.
Speaker:No, I love that.
Speaker:And just to comment on, on something that you said, I, there's a great quote
Speaker:that I've been using a lot recently.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:Because as you know, we, we do, part of what we do is acquisition.
Speaker:So we acquire the, um, businesses or we partner with 'em and get involved.
Speaker:You can't, you can't fix a leaking bucket by adding more water.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You just can't.
Speaker:And so the amount of businesses which I, you come across and go,
Speaker:well, we just need more money.
Speaker:And you go, what?
Speaker:Really?
Speaker:You can't fix a leaking bucket by adding more water.
Speaker:And I think it's so true.
Speaker:Some of the stuff that you're talking about, it's like these are the leaks.
Speaker:Just throwing more people in the pipeline is not gonna fix my problem.
Speaker:Uh, 'cause I've got a leaking bucket.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:um, you can spend, you can waste a lot of money on ads that way, there's
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And it's, I, it's the number one thing, like when I scale businesses, they
Speaker:all think I make them money first.
Speaker:90% of the time I save them money before we ever make them money because of
Speaker:plugging those leaks in those buckets.
Speaker:And so your point is so, so valid, and this is where I've seen so many
Speaker:companies struggle because they fall into the more, more, more trap.
Speaker:If I just get more leads.
Speaker:If I get more attention, and what I say to people is, you can't
Speaker:adopt any more children till you can feed the ones that you have.
Speaker:That's a good, that's a good way to put it.
Speaker:I think people do this.
Speaker:My experience is people do this because it's easy,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:In the sense you to crank up ads is easy.
Speaker:I can just go, well, let's just throw another 10 grand in
Speaker:that I can measure that ROI.
Speaker:What Google doesn't measure is the fact that Jean talked to a friend
Speaker:Sarah down the road and what she said and what she didn't say.
Speaker:So I can't see that it's, it's much more touchy feely.
Speaker:Like, yeah, it's very soft skills, isn't it?
Speaker:Like you were talking about.
Speaker:And I think, um, we choose ads 'cause it's easy, it's a quick, dirty,
Speaker:easy thing to do when we're in a rush to try and grow our business.
Speaker:And I think
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:there's so much we're leaving on the table when we do that.
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:I, I, we could do a three hour series on just that alone and reputation
Speaker:and relationship management.
Speaker:But here's my litmus test and I ask every single client of mine, 'cause
Speaker:all I do just like you is I go behind the scenes and I'm like, call me.
Speaker:I got you.
Speaker:I'll help you scale over the next six to 12 months.
Speaker:But I always start with the same first question, and I would never do this to
Speaker:you because you'd be okay with this, but I'd be like, oh, you sell a product?
Speaker:They're like, yeah.
Speaker:I'm like, amazing.
Speaker:Would you click on your ads?
Speaker:Would you convert on your product?
Speaker:And even better if your wife or partner went through your funnel,
Speaker:would you be happy about it?
Speaker:Nine outta 10 times, I get a deer in headlight look, and I'm like,
Speaker:okay, then let me ask you a question.
Speaker:Why is it okay that my partner goes through it?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You want more of them and you want me to turn around and tell
Speaker:other people to come through it.
Speaker:That's not from pouring more gasoline on the fire.
Speaker:That's from solving the holes.
Speaker:And I find it's the one of the struggling, like hardest and most struggling litmus
Speaker:tests to give people is if you actually went through yours as a consumer, number
Speaker:one, would you feel good about it?
Speaker:But number two, would you get the desired result that you're
Speaker:actually promising people?
Speaker:Because without that.
Speaker:Nothing can actually scale, so you will just do what you said and pour
Speaker:more money down the toilet, which is why it's called the triangle of poop.
Speaker:'cause that's where it belongs, is in that toilet.
Speaker:So good.
Speaker:George, let's move on to Apple because,
Speaker:uh, I'm keen, I'm keen, I always like talking about Apple, but I
Speaker:think yours is a very different form
Speaker:Yeah, mine's.
Speaker:Mine's very, very different to Apple.
Speaker:And so I'm gonna frame this really, really quickly because
Speaker:this is the most ubiquitous model.
Speaker:I've been teaching this model for over a decade.
Speaker:It has not changed once, and it is the number one reason
Speaker:I've scaled so many companies.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:So when I say ubiquitous, I mean it applies everywhere.
Speaker:It can be used as a communication framework and team meetings.
Speaker:It can be used when sending individual messages and customer service, and
Speaker:it can also be used as a series of.
Speaker:Steps in emails, and when I explain it to you, it will make sense and
Speaker:I'll give everybody an Instagram example, a lead magnet example,
Speaker:and a paid product example.
Speaker:And so let me tell everybody what Apple stands for, right?
Speaker:So Apple stands for the A stands for Acknowledge.
Speaker:The A stands for Acknowledge.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:The first P stands for Prepare, prepare.
Speaker:The second P stands for project.
Speaker:The L stands for, let them know, and the E stands for excite.
Speaker:So it's acknowledge, prepare, project, let them know and excite.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And what this framework is, it's a communication framework to get
Speaker:any customer at any mile marker from mile marker to mile marker,
Speaker:from mile marker to mile marker.
Speaker:So the easiest way for it to resonate with everybody before I even teach what
Speaker:each step is, is to give you an example.
Speaker:So I'm just gonna take a physical supplement product, and I gave you
Speaker:an example earlier of you buy a product, you get that email, but
Speaker:what typically happens now is someone will buy a physical product, like
Speaker:a supplement, they'll get an email.
Speaker:It's just like, welcome to the family, your product's on the way, and
Speaker:then they'll drop into a newsletter of just ongoing emails, right?
Speaker:Eh, don't do it.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So in this lens, what I do, especially for physical products, is because
Speaker:I've spent an amount of time courting people, and I also don't want a
Speaker:supplement customer to stay for a week.
Speaker:I want them to stay forever.
Speaker:I don't need to rush communication.
Speaker:And so in this example, I use Apple with a different letter each day
Speaker:before I drop them onto a newsletter.
Speaker:And so if I bought a physical product, how am I going to acknowledge them?
Speaker:Hey Matt, thank you so much for joining the family.
Speaker:I'm stoked to help you add more muscle to your body and sleep better in the process.
Speaker:Acknowledge, I write an email about acknowledging somebody, and what
Speaker:I'm basically doing is closing the loop and I'm like, Hey, that choice
Speaker:you made, it was the right choice.
Speaker:Welcome to this new race.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you're also talking in their story, aren't you?
Speaker:You're, you've,
Speaker:you've said, I'm helping you gain, you know, we are gonna get you
Speaker:on your journey to gain muscle.
Speaker:The reason I bought this product, you've tapped straight into that.
Speaker:You've tapped into my story and you've closed the loop.
Speaker:Thousand percent.
Speaker:That is exactly what I'm doing.
Speaker:I'm speaking into you and I'm also getting an emotional touchpoint and a connection
Speaker:with you that creates ownership of a product, but also makes you informed.
Speaker:Just like if you go to Apple and you buy a phone, they don't
Speaker:let you walk out the store.
Speaker:They'll say, Hey, do you want our help setting it up?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:They know if you go home and you get frustrated, it's going to destroy them.
Speaker:But if you feel set up and confident, so they acknowledge you, but they
Speaker:also guide you in the process.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So the acknowledgement step is what it's doing.
Speaker:It's closing in the human brain, what's called the Zy Garic effect,
Speaker:which is an emotional open loop.
Speaker:Because somebody committed to something, and so we need to acknowledge them that
Speaker:they made the right choice and close that loop so they can start the next race.
Speaker:So the acknowledged step is really just closing that loop for a human
Speaker:being to feel hli heard, understood, listened to, and acknowledged, right?
Speaker:That's what people crave is to feel seen.
Speaker:So what we're doing is meeting them where they're at, emotionally or situationally.
Speaker:That's the acknowledged step.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:The prepare step is setting clear expectations for what's to come
Speaker:while also reducing uncertainty.
Speaker:So you buy this product, and I'm gonna use collagen, and just to frame this
Speaker:for everybody, when I came into this company, they were selling this product.
Speaker:They were selling it on subscription, and their retention was three
Speaker:and a half months, and their LTV was $75 on a $49 product.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Somebody would buy the product.
Speaker:They'd get one email that said, Hey, welcome, we're shipping your product.
Speaker:Great drop on the newsletter.
Speaker:All I did was put five emails in place and retention went from three
Speaker:and a half months to 15 months,
Speaker:That's a hell of a change, brother.
Speaker:and the LTV went from 74 to 7,044 on the same customer.
Speaker:With five emails.
Speaker:Okay, so the first email was acknowledge, and I'm gonna
Speaker:give everybody an example this.
Speaker:Hey Matt, thank you so much for joining our family.
Speaker:How's it feel to have healthier hair, skin, and nails, even though
Speaker:we haven't shipped your product yet?
Speaker:The truth is, is that our product is not the solution.
Speaker:It's a tool to help you achieve this solution and get you there faster with
Speaker:some other changes in your life, like your movement, your sleep, your nutrition,
Speaker:which are things we're going to help you with as you're taking the product.
Speaker:But because it takes the team five days to get it to you, I included
Speaker:this guide at the bottom of the email for seven things you can do today.
Speaker:To get started, so when the product arrives, you're already in a new habit and
Speaker:we're here to guide you on the journey.
Speaker:But like I said, we're here to help you with this, whether
Speaker:you use our product or not.
Speaker:So if you have any questions, if you have any concerns, you can reply to this email.
Speaker:But we're really excited to see you in tomorrow's email where
Speaker:we're gonna tell you how to get the most out of the product.
Speaker:That was the acknowledge email.
Speaker:That was it.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Then I move into the prepare email and I'm like, well, what am I preparing them for?
Speaker:I'm like, well, they don't know how to use it.
Speaker:They don't know what to mix it with.
Speaker:They don't know where to store it.
Speaker:Things that we take for granted, and we make assumptions, but we don't
Speaker:communicate them, and one of the things I say to people is leadership
Speaker:is saying the same thing as many times as required to the last person gets it.
Speaker:Newsflash.
Speaker:Every personal trainer for the rest of your life will tell you to sleep,
Speaker:drink more water, and move your body.
Speaker:Okay, so in the prepare email, it was like, Hey, Matt, we're getting close to
Speaker:shipping your product, but I wanted to give you some tips and tricks to use this.
Speaker:So one of the things that we found effective is that when it arrives,
Speaker:we want you to open the box and put it on your counter right next to your
Speaker:coffee cup, because we think that mixing it in with your coffee or your
Speaker:morning smoothies is the best way.
Speaker:But if it goes in your pantry, you're gonna forget about it, and
Speaker:that's not gonna help your skin.
Speaker:Some of the other things that we found too, is if you wanna sneak
Speaker:it in your kids' food, we found mixing it with soups and stews.
Speaker:We'll give them the benefits of the collagen, but remember, it's
Speaker:tasteless and the one that you bought mixes with cold and warm water,
Speaker:and so you can't really go wrong.
Speaker:And so just make sure that you start setting up for when it arrives so
Speaker:you can get the most out of it.
Speaker:Just a simple prepare.
Speaker:I'm guiding them on the process.
Speaker:So then we move into project, and what project is doing is casting the vision
Speaker:of what their results are going to look like or what their expectations
Speaker:should be so that we can seed it, but they can also look forward to it.
Speaker:So in the project step, I was like, Matt, I'm super, super stoked.
Speaker:And one of the things that I've learned, especially with this
Speaker:product, is consistency trump's intensity every single time.
Speaker:And so the more that you take this, the better you're going to feel.
Speaker:And around 30 days, you're probably gonna notice this, and around 60
Speaker:days you're gonna notice this, and 90 days you're gonna notice this.
Speaker:And six months from now you're gonna be noticing this and this and this.
Speaker:And so, because that's the goal, here's a couple really easy recipes
Speaker:and ways that you can use it.
Speaker:And also.
Speaker:If you have any ideas, uh, you're gonna creatively reuse it.
Speaker:Will you hit reply this email and let me know, because I wanna share them with our
Speaker:audience so we can build a community here.
Speaker:Little tactical hack.
Speaker:The moment somebody replies to your email, you
Speaker:saw what you did.
Speaker:filter and you hit their inbox instantly, right?
Speaker:So the project is painting the picture of what they're going to achieve and what
Speaker:they're going to experience by taking it.
Speaker:And I'm operating under the presupposition that they're going to take it.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:I'm not leaving any leeway.
Speaker:I'm under understanding.
Speaker:This is the presupposition.
Speaker:When you take this in 60 days and 90 days in 120 days, if you cancel,
Speaker:great, totally fine, but I'm gonna operate like you're not going to.
Speaker:So then we move into the L and the L is let them know.
Speaker:And what I used to call this was the pre handle, but the APE framework doesn't
Speaker:sound as good as the Apple framework.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:There's way too many Ps in that framework.
Speaker:I taught that framework for three years until someone's like, dude, if you just
Speaker:call it Apple and change it to let them know, everybody will remember it better.
Speaker:And I was like, changed Apple.
Speaker:So let them know is really pre handling and what we're doing is we're
Speaker:giving them logistical and emotional clarity in relationship to a product
Speaker:of what potentially could go wrong.
Speaker:So think every complaint that customer service gets.
Speaker:You get those because we didn't let them know that it was going to happen.
Speaker:And so we think through what objections come up for people.
Speaker:What happens if I miss a day?
Speaker:Oh, totally fine.
Speaker:You can't really catch up.
Speaker:But what I would do is set a reminder in your phone to take it every day
Speaker:until you have an established habit.
Speaker:Oh, can I mix this in cold and warm water?
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:So here's a little shortcut for all you e-commerce people,
Speaker:whatever your FAQs are on your PDP.
Speaker:Are the things that go in this email.
Speaker:And the reason we do this is if you don't tell somebody they're going to get a
Speaker:flat tire, and they do, they blame you.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:If you tell somebody they're going to get a flat tire and
Speaker:they do, they call you for help.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:There's a big difference between communicating effectively.
Speaker:And so what we think through is what could get in the way.
Speaker:So we just guide them with a couple really easy challenge, solution,
Speaker:challenge, solution and let them know, and that's all that goes in that email.
Speaker:So then we move on to e
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:just, on that, George, before you jump forward, let them know how many, how
Speaker:many FAQs are you putting in that email?
Speaker:So this is really interesting.
Speaker:So this framework, I teach it in the lens of five, but what ends up
Speaker:happening is it normally ends up being between four to nine emails total,
Speaker:depending on the product itself.
Speaker:So sometimes we'll do an email that includes the ingredients that are in there
Speaker:because there's three unique ingredients and we want them to be able to tell their
Speaker:friends why they're taking it, right?
Speaker:So I use this to kind of collect, but my rule of thumb is that I don't want to
Speaker:be an inconvenience, and I have to earn the right to capitalize on your time.
Speaker:And so if it takes you more than 30 seconds to skim and read
Speaker:an email, I've sent too much because it's gonna overwhelm you.
Speaker:And so if I realize there are like three, like let's say.
Speaker:Three in one, but if I have like six or seven, I'm gonna break that
Speaker:up into two different emails with a different storyline to make sure
Speaker:that I'm hitting those wickets, but also not overwhelming you.
Speaker:And so the dose is dictated by the product or the challenge and then
Speaker:the audience who's receiving it.
Speaker:But when I teach this, I teach this in the five steps.
Speaker:So you can pull out the ingredients and then you can look at it and be like.
Speaker:How would this feel for me?
Speaker:Would this be too overwhelming?
Speaker:Should I split this up into two?
Speaker:Just like in the prepare email, if I'm preparing them for what
Speaker:to take and how to take it.
Speaker:Sometimes I have recipe ideas that come with it, but I'm not gonna put
Speaker:'em all in one email, so I'll prepare them for like what to do in it.
Speaker:Arrive.
Speaker:I'm like, oh, and by the way, tomorrow I'm gonna share with you our three favorite
Speaker:recipes where you probably have all the ingredients in your house already.
Speaker:I just split them up to make it feel like it's easy for somebody to consume.
Speaker:Like I'm their friend and they come see me every day and I get to give them one piece
Speaker:of coaching advice every day to do this.
Speaker:And so that's how I think about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Powerful.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:So then the L is let them know, and then the E is excite, and the E is the
Speaker:gun goes off, the race is here, right?
Speaker:So in e-comm, when I come consult you, I call these product fulfillment sequences
Speaker:because if I have three products and every one of them gets this fulfillment
Speaker:sequence when it's own Apple, once I've taught you how to use that product.
Speaker:Everything that follows is applicable to you.
Speaker:And so the E is letting them know what the next steps are.
Speaker:So it's completing that first mile.
Speaker:I've indoctrinated them or onboarded
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So like, Hey, Matt.
Speaker:Here.
Speaker:That's everything that you need to know about collagen, and we stay in your
Speaker:inbox because we love helping you achieve these healthier hair, skin, and nails.
Speaker:So we're gonna be sending you articles on health and nutrition and sleep.
Speaker:And if it resonates with you, I'd love for you to read it.
Speaker:But even if you don't wanna read it, when you see my name in your
Speaker:inbox, just use it as a reminder to take your collagen, right?
Speaker:And what I'm doing is closing that loop and then I'm transitioning
Speaker:them into whatever my ongoing newsletter or fulfillment sequence is.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Those are the five steps on how we do them.
Speaker:And a tangible example is like, I just did this with a supplement company.
Speaker:We acknowledged them and told them how much they love cacao.
Speaker:We prepared them with two different emails.
Speaker:One was about using the product, one was about the ingredients in
Speaker:the product, and then one was about recipes they could make with it.
Speaker:We projected out the peace that they would feel by having a ritual.
Speaker:Then we were like, oh, we should record a video on YouTube for how to
Speaker:have a morning and evening ritual.
Speaker:So then it linked there, and then we hit pre handle or let them know in two emails.
Speaker:And then on the Excite one, we were like, Hey, and by the way, that's all
Speaker:you need to know about the product.
Speaker:But if you want, we have a 21 day self-love series that if you click
Speaker:on this link, we will email you every morning with your cacao knowledge.
Speaker:On loving yourself over the next 21 days.
Speaker:And they could either opt in or not.
Speaker:And if they didn't, they just got our normal newsletter.
Speaker:And if they did, we had 'em an email a day for 21 days.
Speaker:But it follows the premise of acknowledge, prepare, project,
Speaker:let them know and excite.
Speaker:Now, one example for everybody listening, because I have to
Speaker:close the Zy Garic effect of, I'll give you an Instagram example.
Speaker:If you're doing lead gen on Instagram or on Facebook, or you have somebody
Speaker:emailing in to ask for a resource.
Speaker:What's the mistake most people make?
Speaker:Matt, you shoot me an email or a DM and you're like, George, I love
Speaker:your customer journey training.
Speaker:Send it to me.
Speaker:What do most people do?
Speaker:Copy, paste, send complete missed opportunity.
Speaker:So what do I do?
Speaker:I apple you.
Speaker:I'll write a message or record a quick video that I use over and over again.
Speaker:I'm like, Hey Matt, thank you so much for reaching out about customer journey.
Speaker:You'll be shocked at how many people have the problem and none of 'em ask.
Speaker:Acknowledge.
Speaker:I'm gonna send you a link to my customer journey series, and it's linked in a
Speaker:Google Doc with a 15 minute video and a worksheet that's associated with it.
Speaker:Prepare.
Speaker:Project.
Speaker:By the end of the video you'll know the three biggest mistakes everybody makes and
Speaker:where they're happening in your business.
Speaker:So you can plug them, project let you know.
Speaker:If at any point you have any questions, you can just shoot me a DM and I'll
Speaker:get back to you within 48 hours.
Speaker:And when you're done with this training, I have another one on the Five Steps
Speaker:Apple Framework, so you can go fix it.
Speaker:That's everything you need.
Speaker:Here's a link to the trading send.
Speaker:Now all of a sudden we're having the same conversation with people except
Speaker:one I'm guiding them and the other one, everyone's transacting with them.
Speaker:And so this Apple framework, and here's a bonus tip for everybody, use it on
Speaker:your spouse and use it on your team.
Speaker:My partner jokes with me that we never fight, but she was a client first, and
Speaker:then it took her six months to realize
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:but go on, go on.
Speaker:Tell me the story.
Speaker:I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm excited, George.
Speaker:I'm, I'm,
Speaker:appling her every single time we were communicating to now we apple each other.
Speaker:So like I was getting on this podcast with you today and she's
Speaker:off today, and so I opened my phone.
Speaker:I said, Hey honey, I just wanna say I love you.
Speaker:I'm getting ready to jump on Back to Back podcast for two
Speaker:hours, so my phone won't be on.
Speaker:Prepare.
Speaker:As soon as I'm done with the podcast, I'll shoot you a text to see if I can call you
Speaker:so we can catch up about this morning.
Speaker:Project.
Speaker:And by the way, if anything pops up, just text me and it'll be
Speaker:the first thing that I look at.
Speaker:So I love you.
Speaker:Excite out.
Speaker:You're offloading a task to a team member.
Speaker:Hey Matt, like, thank you so much.
Speaker:Like are you clear?
Speaker:A hundred percent?
Speaker:Hey, prepare, I want you to do this and do this because it will help us do this.
Speaker:And by the way, if you get stuck at any point, just shoot me a text
Speaker:or hit me up on Slack because I'm gonna be in and outta calls all day.
Speaker:But do you have everything you need?
Speaker:A thousand percent.
Speaker:Kids.
Speaker:Hey buddy.
Speaker:Good job getting this done.
Speaker:Hey, the next thing we have to do is this, so that we can do this
Speaker:and here's what might go wrong.
Speaker:Go do it.
Speaker:So it is the most ubiquitous thing, and I mean I use it everywhere and
Speaker:the more that you use it, the better you can communicate with people.
Speaker:But what you're really doing is clearly communicating, managing expectations
Speaker:and getting mutual buy-in so that the other person is just as bought
Speaker:in as you are, which allows them agency to complete this process.
Speaker:That's so powerful.
Speaker:How did you come up with this to start?
Speaker:Is this something you stumbled across or is this something
Speaker:that you.
Speaker:great question.
Speaker:So, because we talked about my story on the last podcast, after
Speaker:going through 10 years of trauma therapy, cognitive behavioral
Speaker:therapy, EMDR, personal development, it's how I overcame my trauma.
Speaker:And one day I had a client hire me and I'm writing all these emails.
Speaker:I looked at it and I was like, I'm doing the same thing every time,
Speaker:and this is how I've overcome every challenge in my life, and created a new
Speaker:habit, and then I started applying it.
Speaker:From the relational lens to e-commerce and business and coaches
Speaker:and programs and event facilitators.
Speaker:And then it was bananas and I had been using it without being
Speaker:aware of it for a couple of years.
Speaker:'cause it's how I naturally communicated.
Speaker:And so then I turned it into a framework.
Speaker:And so there's no place, it's not applicable.
Speaker:Like somebody buys an event ticket for me, I apple them for a couple of days.
Speaker:Until they're clear and the event might be in six months.
Speaker:And so what I tell everybody is the way that you use Apple is you communicate
Speaker:in relationship to the depth of the journey that somebody's taking.
Speaker:So if I have somebody in like a 12 month mastermind, I'm gonna take a week or two
Speaker:to onboard them in that ignite phase.
Speaker:To help them get in.
Speaker:If I'm sending you a 15 minute video that you can consume instantly,
Speaker:I'm not gonna apple you for five days to send you a 15 minute video.
Speaker:I'm gonna apple you for one minute to give you the best
Speaker:chance of completing that video.
Speaker:And so we use it in relationship to the depth of the journey
Speaker:that somebody's taking.
Speaker:But this is the number one thing I do for every client who calls me first.
Speaker:And it's how I've scaled every single company.
Speaker:And what I do is I always start with delivery because there's people
Speaker:that aren't being fed right now.
Speaker:Well, once delivery is done, now I know every next person that buys
Speaker:is going to be handled correctly.
Speaker:So then I move into sales and then I start applying it to lead
Speaker:magnets and sales messages and conversations, and they're like, Ooh.
Speaker:So now I know that this feeds this.
Speaker:When that's done, then I apply it to marketing because now I have a
Speaker:consistent and congruent journey all the way from somebody seeing a
Speaker:reel, and I'm like, comment collagen.
Speaker:I know the first message they get Apple's them.
Speaker:They give me their email, they get appled on the back.
Speaker:It leads to the product.
Speaker:They get appled with the product, and every product is the same.
Speaker:Creates a consistent, congruent and unconscious safety in their body, which
Speaker:allows them to achieve these results.
Speaker:And so we always work from the back to the front.
Speaker:George.
Speaker:What can I say?
Speaker:Man, you're a legend.
Speaker:Loved it.
Speaker:Absolutely loved it.
Speaker:I've got pages of notes, um, which is great.
Speaker:I'm acutely aware of time 'cause I know you're recording in
Speaker:another podcast in three minutes,
Speaker:such as the demand.
Speaker:Uh, if people wanna find out more about you, if they wanna reach you,
Speaker:what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:Yeah, I love it.
Speaker:So number one, if you do, you're crazy and you're my slice of crazy.
Speaker:I love you.
Speaker:I am a man of faith.
Speaker:Um, so if I've passed your litmus test, like thank you.
Speaker:Um, what I'll, what I'll tell for everybody is the easiest place is my
Speaker:website, which is mind of george.com.
Speaker:It's pink.
Speaker:It's loaded with podcasts about this, but my Instagram.
Speaker:Is, it's George Bryant and it's linked there.
Speaker:And if I opened any loops for you, if you're listening to this and you're
Speaker:like, I'm a little confused, or I have a clarifying question, shoot me a personal
Speaker:DM on Instagram and ask me whatever question you want about customer journey.
Speaker:And I'll either answer it or I'll send you a free resource that I have to,
Speaker:you can apply this to your business.
Speaker:Um, but I will be honest, and I'm letting you know right now, I'm pre handling
Speaker:you, that if you don't ask, I can't help.
Speaker:And there is no silly question.
Speaker:I have been teaching this for two decades now, and some of my team members have
Speaker:heard it for five years, and they're finally like getting it where they can
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:And so it's one of those games where it's the most powerful tool that you
Speaker:can have in your business, but it's a tool that you have to use every day.
Speaker:And so I'd rather you ask and me be able to help you so that you can
Speaker:achieve your goals than not ask.
Speaker:And so I would say shoot me a DM on Instagram.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:Well, you have not, 'cause you asked not.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Uh, so it's a, it's an, it's an ancient principle that works super well.
Speaker:So go connect with George.
Speaker:We would of course, put all the links that George mentioned in the show notes.
Speaker:So if you're on your podcast app to scroll down, click the link, go straight to his
Speaker:Instagram and, and have a conversation.
Speaker:George, man, listen, I. Love you.
Speaker:You're an absolute legend.
Speaker:Appreciate you coming on as always.
Speaker:Um, I'm gonna end the podcast there 'cause I've got like 30 seconds.
Speaker:Ladies and gentlemen, thank you so much for joining us this week.
Speaker:Make sure you like, subscribe to all of that sort of good stuff.
Speaker:Uh, and I'll be back next week, but George, you my friend.
Speaker:Oh, awesome.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:Thank you.